Publications by authors named "F Brunin"

Aims: The head and neck tumors are most often associated with a precarious nutritional status. Radiotherapy increases the risk of denutrition because of its secondary effects on the secretory and sensorial mucous membranes. The purpose of our retrospectively study was to evaluate the interest of a precocious and regular nutritional therapy on the ability to maintain the nutritional status of the patient during the radiotherapy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The conformal radiotherapy approach, three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy (3DCRT) or intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), is based on modern imaging modalities, efficient 3D treatment planning systems, sophisticated immobilization systems and rigorous quality assurance and treatment verification. The central objective of conformal radiotherapy is to ensure a high dose distribution tailored to the limits of the target volume while reducing exposure of normal tissues. These techniques would then allow further tumor dose escalation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Currently head and neck squamous cell-carcinomas are staged clinically, though this is not ideal. We did a multivariate prospective study of 234 patients with head and neck squamous-cell carcinoma and showed that high serum concentrations of sIL-2Ralpha at diagnosis were highly correlated with a shorter survival (p<0.0001).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Squamous cell carcinomas of the base of the tongue often are diagnosed at advanced stages, in a context of undernutrition with a history of smoking and alcoholism. The local treatment of these tumours is based on external irradiation, either alone or combined with brachytherapy, followed by salvage surgery in the case of failure. Surgery was rarely performed as first-line treatment in our institution until 1992.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The diagnosis and follow-up of head and neck carcinoma patients are based exclusively on clinical staging, which cannot always predict clinical outcome accurately. Because oral squamous cell carcinomas produce interleukin (IL)-6 and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and express IL-2 receptors, the authors assessed the prognostic value of the serum levels of these markers.

Methods: Serum levels of IL-6, TNF-alpha, soluble IL-2 receptors (s-IL-2-R), and acute phase proteins were measured at the time of diagnosis in a prospective study of 85 patients with primary squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF