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- Aparicio, Thomas2
- Bouché, Olivier2
- Manfredi, Sylvain2
- Afchain, Pauline1
- Ahmed, Shahid1
- Alvaro, Domenico1
- Benhaim, Leonor1
- Brixi-Benmansour, Hedia1
- Buecher, Bruno1
- Cacheux, Wulfran1
- Cadiot, Guillaume1
- Cannizzaro, Renato1
- Carrere, Nicolas1
- Chevallier, Patrick1
- Christou, Nikki1
- Collet, Denis1
- Cvitkovic, Frédérique1
- Desolneux, Grégoire1
- Dieumegard, Barbara1
- Dohan, Anthony1
- Dueck, Dorie-Anna1
- Dupré, Aurélien1
- Farinati, Fabio1
- Foubert, Fanny1
- Gordon, Lexis1
Keyword
- Targeted therapy4
- Prognosis2
- Radiotherapy2
- Surgery2
- Adjuvant therapy1
- Anal canal1
- Antiangiogenic1
- Cancer1
- Carcinogenesis1
- Chemoradiotherapy1
- Cholangiocellular carcinoma1
- Colorectal cancer1
- Diagnosis1
- Esophageal cancer1
- French clinical practice guidelines1
- Gastric neoplasms1
- Geriatric oncology1
- Hepatic embolization1
- Hepatocellular cancer1
- Immunotherapy1
- Intra-arterial therapies1
- Liver cancer1
- Lynch syndrome1
- Metastatic colorectal cancer1
Reviews
11 Results
- Review Article
Current status of systemic therapy in hepatocellular cancer
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 53Issue 4p397–402Published online: October 21, 2020- Shahid Ahmed
- Lexis Gordon
- Dorie-Anna Dueck
- Osama Souied
- Kamal Haider
Cited in Scopus: 2Hepatocellular cancer (HCC) is a common cancer and an important cause of cancer-related death globally. Although surgery is the primary curative treatment, most patients at diagnosis are not surgical candidates and are treated with liver-directed therapy and or systemic therapy. Over the past decade, the systemic treatment options for patients with advanced HCC have evolved. This paper reviews recent progress in systemic therapy and the results of major clinical trials involving novel compounds in patients with HCC. - Guidelines
Metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC): French intergroup clinical practice guidelines for diagnosis, treatments and follow-up (SNFGE, FFCD, GERCOR, UNICANCER, SFCD, SFED, SFRO, SFR)
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 51Issue 10p1357–1363Published online: July 15, 2019- Jean Marc Phelip
- David Tougeron
- David Léonard
- Leonor Benhaim
- Grégoire Desolneux
- Aurélien Dupré
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 63This document is a summary of the French intergroup guidelines regarding the management of metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) published in January 2019, and available on the French Society of Gastroenterology website (SNFGE) ( www.tncd.org ). - Review Article
Prognostic factors in esophageal cancer treated with curative intent
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 50Issue 10p991–996Published online: August 9, 2018- Véronique Vendrely
- Vincent Launay
- Haythem Najah
- Denis Smith
- Denis Collet
- Caroline Gronnier
Cited in Scopus: 21The overall prognosis of patients with esophageal cancer has improved in recent decades due to surgical and medical progress, but overall survival remains poor. Better patient selection and tailored treatment are needed. Different prognostic factors linked with the patient, tumoral characteristics and treatment with curative intent have been identified and are the purpose of this review. Tumor detection at an earlier stage, the advent of new molecules and therapeutic combinations, and the centralization of management in high-volume centers should help to improve the prognosis of esophageal cancer. - Review Article
Colorectal cancer care in elderly patients: Unsolved issues
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 48Issue 10p1112–1118Published online: May 31, 2016- Thomas Aparicio
- Frederic Pamoukdjian
- Laurent Quero
- Sylvain Manfredi
- Philippe Wind
- Elena Paillaud
Cited in Scopus: 34Colorectal cancers are common in elderly patients. However, cancer screening is poorly used after 75. Elderly patients form a heterogeneous population with specific characteristics. Standards of care cannot therefore be transposed from young to elderly patients. Tumour resection is frequently performed but adjuvant chemotherapy is rarely prescribed as there are no clearly established standards of care. In a metastatic setting, recent phase III studies have demonstrated that doublet front-line chemotherapy provided no survival benefit. - Review Article
Recent insights in the therapeutic management of patients with gastric cancer
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 48Issue 9p984–994Published online: May 4, 2016- Louis de Mestier
- Sophie Lardière-Deguelte
- Julien Volet
- Reza Kianmanesh
- Olivier Bouché
Cited in Scopus: 30Gastric cancer remains frequent and one of the most lethal malignancies worldwide. In this article, we aimed to comprehensively review recent insights in the therapeutic management of gastric cancer, with focus on the surgical and perioperative management of resectable forms, and the latest advances regarding advanced diseases. Surgical improvements comprise the use of laparoscopic surgery including staging laparoscopy, a better definition of nodal dissection, and the development of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy. - Review ArticleOpen Access
Prognostic and predictive markers in pancreatic adenocarcinoma
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 48Issue 3p223–230Published online: January 4, 2016- Nha Le
- Malin Sund
- Alessio Vinci
- on behalf of the GEMS collaborating group of Pancreas 2000
Cited in Scopus: 87Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma is characterized by a poor prognosis and a low median survival, despite improvements observed for many other solid tumours. Intensive research efforts have been undertaken during the last decades to discover new prognostic and treatment predictive biomarkers for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. The mainstay of medical treatment for the disease has been the well-tolerated nucleoside analogue, gemcitabine. The only targeted agent currently used in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma patients is the epithelial growth factor receptor inhibitor erlotinib in combination with gemcitabine. - Review articleOpen Access
Options for metastatic colorectal cancer beyond the second line of treatment
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 46Issue 2p105–112Published online: August 16, 2013- Fanny Foubert
- Tamara Matysiak-Budnik
- Yann Touchefeu
Cited in Scopus: 37Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer, with recent advances in the management of unresectable metastatic lesions. The aim of this review is to discuss the remaining options for heavily pretreated patients with unresectable metastatic colorectal cancer. Beyond second-line treatment, two epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors, cetuximab and panitumumab, have a demonstrated clinical interest in patients with KRAS wild-type tumours. However, few data exist in patients pretreated with an anti-EFGR and who are being rechallenged with anti-EGFR drugs. - Review ArticleOpen Access
Small bowel adenocarcinoma: Epidemiology, risk factors, diagnosis and treatment
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 46Issue 2p97–104Published online: June 24, 2013- Thomas Aparicio
- Aziz Zaanan
- Magali Svrcek
- Pierre Laurent-Puig
- Nicolas Carrere
- Sylvain Manfredi
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 189Small bowel adenocarcinomas are rare tumours, but their incidence is increasing. Their most common primary location is the duodenum. The few studies that have collected data regarding small bowel adenocarcinoma are not homogeneous and are widely spread over time. Even though these tumours are most often sporadic, some predisposing diseases have been identified, among which Crohn's disease and genetic syndromes. Early diagnosis of small bowel adenocarcinoma remains difficult despite significant radiological and endoscopic progress. - Review Article
Chemotherapy in the treatment of anal canal carcinoma
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 44Issue 10p803–811Published online: June 4, 2012- Wulfran Cacheux
- Astrid Lievre
- Anne De La Rochefordiere
- Barbara Dieumegard
- Frédérique Cvitkovic
- Alain Labib
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 8Squamous cell carcinomas of the anal canal are generally diagnosed at a localized or locally advanced stage and only 5% are metastatic at the time of diagnosis. Advanced forms are therefore much rarer than localized forms and usually correspond to metachronous metastases of initially localized disease. Systemic chemotherapy is indicated for the treatment of both localized disease, in combination with radiotherapy, and metastatic disease. The purpose of this article is to define the current indications and modalities of chemotherapy in the treatment of these cancers based on a review of the published data and in the light of available guidelines. - Review Article
New treatment strategies in advanced neuroendocrine tumours
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 44Issue 2p95–105Published online: October 10, 2011- Thomas Walter
- Hedia Brixi-Benmansour
- Catherine Lombard-Bohas
- Guillaume Cadiot
Cited in Scopus: 44Malignant well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumours of the pancreas and the gastrointestinal tract are rare and clinically challenging heterogeneous neoplasms. This review focuses on neuroendocrine tumours grade 1 and grade 2 (new WHO classification 2010), in comparison to the neuroendocrine tumours grade 3 group, corresponding to poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas. Surgical resection of the primary and metastases remains the only curative treatment, however many patients with neuroendocrine tumours are diagnosed once unresectable metastases have occurred; management of functioning syndromes with somatostatin analogues remains the priority. - Progress Report
Cholangiocarcinoma: A position paper by the Italian Society of Gastroenterology (SIGE), the Italian Association of Hospital Gastroenterology (AIGO), the Italian Association of Medical Oncology (AIOM) and the Italian Association of Oncological Radiotherapy (AIRO)
Digestive and Liver DiseaseVol. 42Issue 12p831–838Published online: August 12, 2010- Domenico Alvaro
- Renato Cannizzaro
- Roberto Labianca
- Francesca Valvo
- Fabio Farinati
Cited in Scopus: 28The incidence of Cholangiocellular carcinoma (CCA) is increasing, due to a sharp increase of the intra-hepatic form. Evidence-ascertained risk factors for CCA are primary sclerosing cholangitis, Opistorchis viverrini infection, Caroli disease, congenital choledocal cist, Vater ampulla adenoma, bile duct adenoma and intra-hepatic lithiasis. Obesity, diabetes, smoking, abnormal biliary-pancreatic junction, bilio-enteric surgery, and viral cirrhosis are emerging risk factors, but their role still needs to be validated.