Publications by authors named "Helene Sancho-Garnier"

The breast is the leading cancer site in women throughout the world. That said, breast cancer incidence varies widely, ranging from 27/100,000 (Central-East Asia and Africa) to 85-94/100,000 (Australia, North America and Western Europe). Its frequency in France is among the highest in Europe.

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Background: Patients with breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy and radiotherapy experience fatigue and other treatment side effects. Integrative therapies combining physical activity and dietary counseling are recommended; however to date no large randomized controlled trial has been conducted during adjuvant therapy. The Adapted Physical Activity and Diet (APAD) intervention was evaluated for its ability to decrease fatigue (primary outcome), anxiety, depression, body mass index (BMI), and fat mass, and enhance muscular and cognitive performances, and quality-of-life (QoL).

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Background: In France smoking initiation rates amongst 11 to 16 year-olds are worryingly high. Several studies show that early initiation to psycho-active substances is a strong predictor of tobacco addiction. Decreasing the age at which tobacco use starts represents a key challenge for reducing tobacco usage.

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Article Synopsis
  • Organized screening programs significantly lower colorectal cancer (CRC) mortality, but France's national screening program, initiated in 2008, struggles with a low participation rate of just 29.8%.
  • An expert panel from the French National Cancer Institute examined ethical concerns regarding the effectiveness of CRC screening given the low uptake and proposed recommendations to address this issue.
  • The panel identified reasons for the low participation and suggested targeted awareness campaigns and educational strategies to encourage participation, particularly among subgroups with specific sociocultural challenges while respecting individual autonomy.
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Introduction: Successfully implementing cervical screening programmes requires them to be adapted to the local context and have broad stakeholder support. This can be achieved by actively engaging local stakeholders in planning as well as implementing the programmes. The Moldovan government started implementing an organised cervical screening programme in 2010 with the first step being stakeholder identification and engagement.

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Background: Study results have shown that chronic exposure to cigarette smoke affects the taste function in humans. However, neither the quantitative impact on taste sensitivity nor the time-course of taste recovery on stopping smoking have been precisely examined.

Methods: The experimental design included 2 phases, (i) a case-control phase comparing the taste sensitivity level measured by Electrogustometric (EGM) thresholds from various parts of the tongue (locus) between smokers ( = 83) and non-smokers ( = 48), (ii) a follow-up study looking at the taste sensitivity recovery in smokers after smoking cessation ( = 24) and compared with non-smokers.

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Low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) screening recommendations for lung cancer are contradictory. The French National Authority for Health commissioned experts to carry a systematic review on the effectiveness, acceptability and safety of lung cancer screening with LDCT in subjects highly exposed to tobacco. We used MEDLINE and Embase databases (2003-2014) and identified 83 publications representing ten randomised control trials.

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Background: HPV vaginal self-sampling can be an alternative for women refusing cytological screening.

Objectives: To describe HR-HPV types in 35-69 years old women from low socioeconomic groups not attending regular cytological screening in Marseille, France.

Study Design: A cervical screening campaign using HR-HPV self-sampling including 22,702 women aged 35-69 years living in low socioeconomic districts of Marseille was organized.

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Background: The EUROMED CANCER Network project aims to support non-EU Mediterranean countries in the development of cancer early detection and screening policies.

Methods: Through a structured questionnaire information from 15 countries (Albania, Algeria, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), Croatia, Egypt, Jordan, UN Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo, Lebanon, Montenegro, Morocco, Palestinian National Authority, Serbia, Syria, Tunisia and Turkey) were collected on cancer epidemiology and control.

Results: Large differences between countries are evident.

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Background: Breast cancer is a major public health challenge. Organized mammography screening (OS) is considered one way to reduce breast cancer mortality. EU recommendations prone mass deployment of OS, and back in 2004, France introduced a national OS programme for women aged 50-74 years.

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Organized colorectal screening in France was extended to the whole of the country in 2008. People aged from 50 to 74 years are offered fecal occult blood tests (FOBT) every two years. Patients with individual or familial risk factors for colorectal disease are excluded from the program.

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The aim of this work was to describe the prevalence of type-specific Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in women attending organized cervical cancer screening program in Uruguay. Nine hundred sixty-five liquid cervical cell samples obtained after collection of cervical smears for cytology were assessed for HPV DNA using the Papillocheck system (Greiner BioOne). The overall prevalence of High-Risk (HR) HPV infections was 20.

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To date, no studies have evaluated the cost-effectiveness of human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination in countries in the Extended Middle East and North Africa (EMENA) region. We synthesized population and epidemiologic data for 20 EMENA countries using a model-based approach to estimate averted cervical cancer cases and deaths, disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and cost-effectiveness ratios (I$ [international dollars] per DALY averted) associated with HPV vaccination of pre-adolescent girls. We utilized additional epidemiologic data from Algeria, Lebanon, and Turkey to evaluate select cervical cancer screening strategies either alone or in combination with vaccination.

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National Organized Cervical Cancer Screening (NOCCS) programs are lacking in most of the "Extended Middle East and North Africa" (EMENA) countries. Consequently, most cervical cancers are diagnosed late and are associated with high mortality. In fact, in most of these countries, national mortality data are unknown due to the absence of population-based mortality registries.

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Exercise practice and appropriate nutrition have been advanced as non pharmacological supportive care to reduce side effects related to cancer and its treatment, but large sample-sized randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm such results. The Adapted Physical Activity and Diet counseling (APAD) study is a prospective randomized controlled trial designed to evaluate the effectiveness of a 26-week hospital- and home-based lifestyle intervention on cancer-related fatigue in women receiving breast cancer adjuvant treatment (chemotherapy and radiotherapy). The aim of this paper is to describe the APAD study protocol.

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Over-exposure to sunlight increases the risk of skin cancers, particularly when exposure occurs during childhood. School teachers can play an active role in providing an education programme that can help prevent this. "Living with the Sun," (LWS) is a sun safety education program for school children based on a handy guide for classroom activities designed to improve children's knowledge, but moreover to positively modify their sun safety attitudes and behaviours.

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Organized national mammographic screening has been adopted as the gold standard for breast cancer early detection in western countries; however it may not be the most cost-effective approach to early detection in low and middle income countries (LMC) as it is very demanding in terms of human and financial resources. Moreover, its benefit to harm ratio has been questioned lately, particularly in women <50 years, the age group which produces the majority of breast cancer cases in LMC. In the past few years, evidence about alternatives to mammographic screening that would benefit LMC populations have been produced.

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The non-participation to cervical screening is the major determinant in the risk of mortality due to cervical cancer. In France, around 40% of women do not participate to regular screening. The cultural or economic barriers for performing screening by Pap test are numerous; one of the most frequent is the refusal of gynaecological examination.

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Self-sampling using vaginal swabs could be a valuable alternative to screen for cervical cancer for women who do not attend regular cytological screening. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of high and low-risk HPV types and of HPV type 16 and 18 DNA load in self-collected vaginal swabs from 35- to 69-year-old Southern French women of low socioeconomic level or migrant populations who do not attend regular cervical screening. A good concordance (93.

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A key determinant of breast cancer outcome in any population is the degree to which newly detected cancers can be diagnosed correctly so that therapy can be selected properly and provided in a timely fashion. A multidisciplinary panel of experts reviewed diagnosis guideline tables and discussed core implementation issues and process indicators based on the resource stratification guidelines. Issues were then summarized in the context of 1) clinical assessment, 2) diagnostic breast imaging, 3) tissue sampling, 4) surgical pathology, 5) laboratory tests and metastatic imaging, and 6) the healthcare system.

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The two new HPV vaccines (Gardasil quadrivalent and Cervarix bivalent 16,11) are both effective against HPV types 16 and 18, which are responsible for 70% of cervical cancers, and the quadrivalent vaccine is effective against HPV 6 and 11, responsible for genital warts. Their efficacy is 100% if they are administered before exposure to HPV 16,18. The proven duration of protection against high-grade cervical lesions is currently 5 years, and the need for boosters is unknown.

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Primary prevention of the most frequent and most lethal health disorders (cancer, cardiovascular disease, accidents) focuses mainly on changing at-risk behaviors, but this cannot be achieved simply by distributing information. Factors that subtend changes in individual behavior must also be taken into account, along with people's cultural, social, physical and economic environment. Thus, health prevention campaigns will be more effective if they reinforce the capacity to control determinants of individual and public health.

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Background: Non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC) is the most frequent tumour among Caucasian populations worldwide. Among the risk factors associated with this tumour, there are host-related factors and several environmental agents. A greater likelihood of high exposure to physical agents (with the exception of solar radiation) and chemical agents depends on the work setting.

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Cervical cancer remains a significant source of disease and death in Europe. However, we now have the means to prevent virtually every case of cervical cancer through comprehensive, population-based, organised cervical cancer prevention programmes that effectively integrate cervical screening with the new technologies and vaccines that are now available. Given the potential health benefits of these programmes in reducing disease incidence and mortality, their establishment is now an ethical imperative for all European countries.

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