9 results on '"Peter Vavassis"'
Search Results
2. CLO23-025: Comparison of Outcomes Using NCCN Classification in Two Concurrent Phase III Trials in Intermediate and High Risk Prostate Cancer: Long-Term Data
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Abdenour Nabid, Nathalie Carrier, Eric Vigneault, André-Guy Martin, Thu Van Nguyen, Jean-Paul Bahary, Peter Vavassis, Marc-André Brassard, Sylvie Vass, Boris Bahoric, Robert Archambault, Francois Vincent, Redouane Bettahar, Marie Duclos, Derek Wilke, and Luis Souhami
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Oncology - Published
- 2023
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3. Testosterone recovery in patients with prostate cancer treated with radiotherapy and different ADT duration: Long-term data from two randomized trials
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Abdenour Nabid, Nathalie Carrier, André-Guy Martin, Eric Vigneault, Francois Vincent, Marc-Andre Brassard, Boris Bahoric, Jean-Paul Bahary, Robert Archambault, Marie Duclos, Peter Vavassis, Redouane Bettahar, Thu-Van Nguyen-Huynh, Derek R Wilke, and Luis Souhami
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
300 Background: To determine the rate and time of testosterone (T) recovery to normal level in patients (pts) with prostate cancer treated with radiotherapy plus 6, 18 or 36 months of androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and considered cured from their disease. Methods: We randomized 1230 pts with prostate cancer, into two phase III trials: 600 with intermediate risk and 630 with high-risk. We selected those considered cured to avoid subsequent T variations due to reintroduction of ADT for recurrence. We excluded the following pts: no ADT at all (126) or not receiving exactly 6, 18 or 36 months of ADT (69), survival less than one year (21), no T measured at baseline or during follow-up (75), biochemical failure (195) or evidence of metastatic/recurrent disease (137).T recovery rate was compared between baseline normal/abnormal T (values below biochemical normal range) and by ADT duration with Chi-square test or Fisher's exact test. A multivariable logistic regression model to predict the probability of recovering normal T was performed by including normal/abnormal T at baseline, age, Zubrod, comorbidities and ADT duration. A second model was performed by replacing ADT duration with baseline PSA, Gleason score and stage. The median time to T recovery was calculated only on pts who recovered normal T. Results: Results are reported with a median follow-up of 14 years. 607 pts fit the criteria and are available for analysis: 309 pts in the 6 months ADT schedule, 185 in the 18 and 113 in the 36. Overall, 76.7%, 54.6% and 45.1% pts recovered normal T on the 6, 18 or 36 months schedule, respectively (p
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- 2023
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4. 25: Oncologic Outcome, Toxicity and Cosmesis After Single-Fraction Neoadjuvant Radiotherapy for Low-Risk Breast Cancer
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Danny Lavigne, David Tiberi, Peter Vavassis, David Nguyen, Marie-Christine Guilbert, Alexis-Simon Cloutier, Pierre Dubé, Mai-Kim Gervais, Lucas Sideris, Guy Leblanc, Michel-Pierre Dufresne, Tarek Hijal, and Michael Yassa
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Oncology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Hematology - Published
- 2022
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5. 109: Prostate Cancer-Specific Death Rates in Localized Prostate Cancer: Data from Two Randomized Trials
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Abdenour Nabid, Nathalie Carrier, Eric Vigneault, Peter Vavassis, Marc-André Brassard, Boris Bahoric, Robert Archambault, François Vincent, Redouane Bettahar, Derek Wilke, Thu Van Nguyen, André-Guy Martin, Jean-Paul Bahary, Marie Duclos, Sylvie Vass, and Luis Souhami
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Oncology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Hematology - Published
- 2022
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6. External beam accelerated partial breast irradiation versus whole breast irradiation after breast conserving surgery in women with ductal carcinoma in situ and node-negative breast cancer (RAPID): a randomised controlled trial
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Barbara Strang, Michelle Bishop, Radhika Yelamanchili, Maria Vlachaki, Jon-Paul Voroney, Keith Tankel, Tanya Berrang, Wayne Koll, Jonathan Wan, Tarek Hijal, André Fortin, Francois Germain, David Nguyen, Vikash Patel, D. Voduc, Michael Lock, Janice Giesbrecht, Ivo A. Olivotto, Anupam Chaudhuri, Aisling Barry, Sophie Lavertu, D.I. Hodson, Chakiath Jose, Elaine Sze-Sze Wai, Paul-Émile Raymond, Bashir Bashir, Dorianne Elizabeth Rheaume, Farah Naz, Alan Nichol, David W. Petrik, Hosam (Sam) Kader, Pierre Chabot, Marjory Jolicoeur, Kalyani Vijayraghavan, Vamsee Torri, Caroline Chung, Woodrow A. Wells, Theresa Trotter, Susan Tyler, Boon Chua, Eric Vigneault, Martin Samosh, Hedley Krawitz, Susan Chafe, Philip Hughes, Isabelle Roy, Holly Campbell, Ken I. Mills, Sonia Nguyen, John Radwan, Som D. Mukherjee, Jim A. Julian, Lucie Blondeau, Jonathan Sussman, Khalil Sultanem, Christina Kim, Marie-Andrée Fortin, Nathalie Lessard, Isabelle Vallieres, Darin Gopaul, Fleur Huang, Mira Keyes, Jacqueline Lam, Celine Lemaire, Beverly Helen Lester, Kurian Joseph, Aminudin Rahman Mohd Mydin, Karen Chu, Maged Nashed, Carson Leong, Susan Gudelis, Michael Levesque, Wilson H. Miller, H. Abu-Zahra, Isabelle Germain, Brian Dingle, David Want, Mark Levine, Andre-Guy Martin, Robert E. Dinniwell, Ethel MacIntosh, Kathy Han, Mary K. Dwyer, Sudha Purchuri, Jennifer Goulart, Mohamed Akra, Hugh L. Prichard, Ken Schneider, Sarwat Shehata, S. Eshwar Kumar, Juanita Mary Crook, J. Bowen, Sally Smith, Benjamin Goldenberg, Michael Yassa, Michael Sia, Thierry Muanza, Harold I. Reiter, Peter Lim, Yongjin Wang, Bassam Abdul Karim, Medhat Zikry Abd-El-Malek, Wayne Beckham, Khalid Hirmiz, David D'Souza, Ruth Angell, Joanne Meng, Pierre Rousseau, Maha Almahmudi, Jose Ayllon, Paris-Ann Ingledew, Bernd Esche, Zsolt Gabos, Ramesh Arunachalam, Steven David, Olga Vujovic, Marc David, Lee Manchul, Chen Liu, William McMillan, Neil Kopek, Lorraine Walsh, Joycelin Canavan, Arthur Cheung, Claire Philips, JD (Jidong) Lian, Joelle Helou, Christine Elder, Caroline Holloway, Ian S. Dayes, Sawyna Provencher, Robert Olson, Christina Aquino Parsons, Medhat El-Mallah, Wladyslawa Cwajna, Francisco Perera, Gillian Campbell, Senti Senthelal, Christine Anne Koch, Paul Ahlgren, Peter S. Craighead, Nancy Grant, Julianna Caon, Brian Yaremko, Jasper Yuen, Fawaad Iqbal, Elizabeth Yan, Timothy J. Whelan, Suki Gill, Adrian Langleben, Richie Sinha, Chu Shu Gu, Pauline T. Truong, Wilfred Levin, Negin Shahid, Christopher Ford, Elizabeth Saettler, Pierre Del Vecchio, Thomas McGowan, David Wasserman, Do Hoon Kim, James Pinilla, Scott Morgan, Luis-Victor Diaz de Bedoya, Krystine Lupe, Roger Huang, Luleul Khan, Annie Carbonneau, Vimoj Nair, Behzad (Sayed) Banihashemi, Melanie Reed, Marisa Finlay, Steven Latosinsky, Charles Hayter, Peter Vavassis, Frances Lai-Wah Wong, Ramana Rachakonda, Levon Igidbashian, Andrew Cooke, Marie Larochelle, Susan Brooks, B. Findlay, Anne Dagnault, Sachi Voruganti, Olivier Ballivy, Jean-Marc Bourque, Rachel VanderMeer, Edward Yu, M.D. Mohiuddin, Jawaid Younus, Tracy Sexton, Rachel Bujold, Yiu-Keung (James) Lau, Catherine Lochrin, Glenn Jones, Paul Blood, Sofya Kobeleva, Glenys Round, Niluja Thiruthaneeswaran, Scott Tyldesley, Susan Balkwill, Michael J. McLean, J.A. (Jack) MacKinnon, Islam Gharib Mohamed, Catalin Mihalioiu, Bronwyn King, Sundeep Shahi, Philip C. Chan, Melanie Gaudreault, Samy El-Sayed, Dominique Lee, Diane Marie Severin, Tatiana Conrad, John Amanie, Christine Lambert, Linda Lee, Winkle Kwan, Annie Ebacher, Youssef M. Youssef, Paul Genest, Chang Shu Wang, Fei-Fei Liu, Jean-Pierre Guay, B.C. John Cho, Pamela Catton, Thayavalappil Hemanth, Tien Phan, Peter H. Dixon, Peter Cross, Roslyn Drummond, Abdenour Nabid, Joel Broomfield, Abraham Alexander, Theodore A. Vandenberg, Giuseppe Sasso, Barbara Krause, Marianne Krahn, Jimmy Mui, Nancy Read, Jane Wilson, Francois Patenaude, Cathy Menkarios, Nadeem Pervez, Donna Stern, Solveig Grenfell, Robert Nordal, Anthony Fyles, Valerie Panet-Raymond, David Melnychuk, James G. Wright, Vasanth Basrur, Toni Vu, Richard Dalfen, Maria Pearse, Valérie Théberge, Jonathan Tsao, Adam Andronowski, Hannah Mills Carolan, Chelleraj Benjamin, Lawrence Panasci, Robert Rutledge, Tracie Gleisner, Randall Bissett, Maureen C. Nolan, Lorna Weir, Siraj Husain, Laval Grimard, Jean-Michel Caudrelier, Francis Methot, and Kylea Potvin
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast surgery ,Brachytherapy ,Partial Breast Irradiation ,General Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,Whole Breast Irradiation ,medicine ,Breast-conserving surgery ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Radiology ,business ,Survival rate - Abstract
Summary Background Whole breast irradiation delivered once per day over 3–5 weeks after breast conserving surgery reduces local recurrence with good cosmetic results. Accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI) delivered over 1 week to the tumour bed was developed to provide a more convenient treatment. In this trial, we investigated if external beam APBI was non-inferior to whole breast irradiation. Methods We did this multicentre, randomised, non-inferiority trial in 33 cancer centres in Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Women aged 40 years or older with ductal carcinoma in situ or node-negative breast cancer treated by breast conserving surgery were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either external beam APBI (38·5 Gy in ten fractions delivered twice per day over 5–8 days) or whole breast irradiation (42·5 Gy in 16 fractions once per day over 21 days, or 50 Gy in 25 fractions once per day over 35 days). Patients and clinicans were not masked to treatment assignment. The primary outcome was ipsilateral breast tumour recurrence (IBTR), analysed by intention to treat. The trial was designed on the basis of an expected 5 year IBTR rate of 1·5% in the whole breast irradiation group with 85% power to exclude a 1·5% increase in the APBI group; non-inferiority was shown if the upper limit of the two-sided 90% CI for the IBTR hazard ratio (HR) was less than 2·02. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov , NCT00282035 . Findings Between Feb 7, 2006, and July 15, 2011, we enrolled 2135 women. 1070 were randomly assigned to receive APBI and 1065 were assigned to receive whole breast irradiation. Six patients in the APBI group withdrew before treatment, four more did not receive radiotherapy, and 16 patients received whole breast irradiation. In the whole breast irradiation group, 16 patients withdrew, and two more did not receive radiotherapy. In the APBI group, a further 14 patients were lost to follow-up and nine patients withdrew during the follow-up period. In the whole breast irradiation group, 20 patients were lost to follow-up and 35 withdrew during follow-up. Median follow-up was 8·6 years (IQR 7·3–9·9). The 8-year cumulative rates of IBTR were 3·0% (95% CI 1·9–4·0) in the APBI group and 2·8% (1·8–3·9) in the whole breast irradiation group. The HR for APBI versus whole breast radiation was 1·27 (90% CI 0·84–1·91). Acute radiation toxicity (grade ≥2, within 3 months of radiotherapy start) occurred less frequently in patients treated with APBI (300 [28%] of 1070 patients) than whole breast irradiation (484 [45%] of 1065 patients, p Interpretation External beam APBI was non-inferior to whole breast irradiation in preventing IBTR. Although less acute toxicity was observed, the regimen used was associated with an increase in moderate late toxicity and adverse cosmesis, which might be related to the twice per day treatment. Other approaches, such as treatment once per day, might not adversely affect cosmesis and should be studied. Funding Canadian Institutes for Health Research and Canadian Breast Cancer Research Alliance.
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- 2019
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7. 24 Subsequent Androgen Deprivation Therapy After Initial Treatment in Intermediate Risk Prostate Cancer: Prospective Data from a Phase III Trial
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Abdenour Nabid, Nathalie Carrier, Eric Vigneault, Thu Van Nguyen, Peter Vavassis, Marc-André Brassard, Boris Bahoric, Robert Archambault, François Vincent, Redouane Bettahar, Derek Wilke, and Luis Souhami
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Prospective data ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Androgen deprivation therapy ,Prostate cancer ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Initial treatment ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business ,Intermediate risk - Published
- 2019
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8. Whole-pelvic radiation therapy in the context of hypofractionation for high-risk prostate cancer patients: a step forward. In regard to Kaidar-Person et al
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Michael, Yassa, Peter, Vavassis, and Tamim, Niazi
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Male ,Lymphatic Irradiation ,Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Radiotherapy, Image-Guided - Published
- 2013
9. Phase 2 study of silver leaf dressing for treatment of radiation-induced dermatitis in patients receiving radiotherapy to the head and neck
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Peter, Vavassis, Michel, Gelinas, Jean, Chabot Tr, and Phuc Felix, Nguyen-Tân
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Wound Healing ,Silver ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,Anti-Infective Agents, Local ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Humans ,Radiodermatitis ,Bandages ,Silver Sulfadiazine - Abstract
The use of silver leaf dressing is common in the treatment of burn victims owing to its capacity to improve healing and inherent antimicrobial properties. The goal of this study was to investigate its effectiveness in the treatment of radiation-induced dermatitis in a patient population receiving radiotherapy with or without concurrent chemotherapy for various carcinomas of the head and neck compared with our current standard of care, silver sulfadiazine (Flamazine).Twelve patients presenting with cancers of the head and neck region with Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) grade 2 or more skin toxicity were offered topical treatment of silver sulfadiazine and silver leaf dressing. Each patient applied silver-leaf dressing on one side of the neck and silver sulfadiazine on the other. Three independent observers evaluated the patients based on standardized digital photography and regular follow-up by the treating physician. The sign test was used to evaluate whether the observed difference was statistically significant.There was no improvement in RTOG grade skin toxicity. However, within the same grade, two of three observers agreed on some degree of improvement in the dermatitis with silver leaf dressing compared with silver sulfadiazine. As well, 67% of patients reported improved pain control on the side treated with silver leaf dressing. Sign test analysis indicated that the use of silver-leaf dressing gave significantly superior results when compared with silver sulfadiazine (p = .035).Silver leaf dressing does not appear to be superior to our standard treatment for radiation-induced dermatitis when the RTOG grading system is used. It does, however, seem to reduce the severity of reaction within the same grade, accelerate healing, and provide improved pain control over standard treatment. It shows promise regarding symptom control and merits further investigation.
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- 2008
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