Henri Coutard
Henri Coutard (27 August 1876 – 16 March 1950) was a French radiation therapist. He is known for his studies of radiation therapy for the treatment of laryngeal cancer and the development of the "protracted-fractional method" of radiation dosing.
Henri Coutard | |
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![]() Coutard in 1937 | |
Born | Marolles-les-Braults, Sarthe, France | 27 August 1876
Died | 16 March 1950 73) Le Mans, Sarthe, France | (aged
Education | University of Paris |
Known for | Advances in radiation therapy |
Signature | |
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Born in Marolles-les-Braults, Sarthe, Coutard attended medical school at University of Paris and graduated in 1902. He served in the French Army and lived for several years in the Jura Mountains before returning to Paris to study the medical applications of radium. During World War I, he worked in one of Marie Curie's radiological ambulance units. He became the chief of the X-ray department at the Radium Institute of the University of Paris in 1919, working closely with Claudius Regaud and other scientists. Coutard's early work demonstrating the efficacy of radiating patients with laryngeal cancer led to the adoption of radiation therapy as a primary course of cancer treatment. The protracted-fractional method consisted of long durations of radiation applied over an extended period of several weeks.
In the late 1930s, Coutard moved to the United States, first working at the California Institute of Technology and then at the Chicago Tumor Institute. During this time, he accompanied the American entrepreneur Spencer Penrose to Colorado Springs to treat Penrose's esophageal cancer. After Penrose's death in 1939, his radiotherapy equipment was donated to Penrose Hospital and Coutard became a radiotherapist at the newly-established Penrose Tumor Clinic. In the last decade of his life, Coutard's research became more erratic. He published a monograph in 1949 that was largely ignored by reputable journals and his peers. He experienced an intracerebral hemorrhage in 1949 and died in Le Mans a few months later.
Early life and education
Henri Coutard was born on 27 August 1876 in Marolles-les-Braults, Sarthe, France. His father, Louis Coutard, was a local government official, and his mother, Mélanie Marie Joséphine Coutard (née Ragot), sold novelty items.[1][2] He had an older brother, Louis, and a younger sister, Helène.[1]
In 1887, Coutard enrolled at the Lycée Montesquieu, a state boarding school in Le Mans. He received a baccalauréat in literature in 1893 and another in mathematics the following year. During this time, he was recognised by the Minister of War for distinction in the school's military program. After secondary school, he entered medical school at the University of Paris, training in Parisian hospitals and completing an internship in Nantes.[1] His doctoral thesis was titled Lesions extrapéritonéales de la vessie et du rectum dans les fractures du bassin ("Extraperitoneal lesions of the bladder and rectum observed in cases of pelvic fracture").[3] It summarised eight cases from the literature and one from his previous patients. On 17 July 1902, he successfully defended his thesis before a committee that included the surgeon Paul Berger.[1]
Career
Military service and interest in radium
After medical school, Coutard was a medical officer and captain in the Chasseurs Alpins, the elite mountain infantry force of the French Army.[4] He became ill with pulmonary tuberculosis and decided to settle in a town in the Jura Mountains to practice general medicine while recovering.[2] In 1912, he returned to Paris after becoming interested in the potential medical applications of radioactivity. He began studying radium at an experimental laboratory co-founded by the physicist Jacques Danne.[1][2] His research centred on therapeutic applications of radium in animals, and he presented his work at the 1912 meeting of the French Association for the Advancement of Science.[1]
Coutard was drafted during World War I and worked as a radiation therapist in a military hospital near Baccarat, Meurthe-et-Moselle, on the Eastern Front.[1][5] In Baccarat, he met the radiobiologist Claudius Regaud, with whom he later collaborated.[1] He also worked in one of Marie Curie's radiological ambulance units and attained the rank of major by the end of the war.[4][6] He married Anne-Marie Adèle Rougier in Paris on 25 March 1919.[7][8]
Radium Institute

In 1919, Coutard became the chief of the X-ray department at the Radium Institute of the University of Paris, working with other scientists including Regaud and Antoine Lacassagne.[2][6] Using a single X-ray unit in the basement of the institute, he conducted experiments in animals, administered radiation therapy to patients, and performed diagnostic imaging of the pharynx and larynx.[6][9] In his early work, he observed the recurrence of cancer when tumours were insufficiently irradiated and the need to avoid excessive irradiation of the eyes. He believed that the dose of radiation needed to be high enough to cause an observable reaction in the mucous membrane, and coined the term radioepithelitis to describe this reaction.[10] At the 1921 International Congress of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology in Paris, Coutard presented data from six patients with laryngeal cancer who he had treated with radiation. His work was well received, and physicians began adopting radiation therapy as a primary course of treatment for cancer.[2]
Scientists had differing opinions on the optimal timing of radiation doses.[11] Coutard believed that long durations of radiation, applied over an extended period of several weeks, produced the best results and theorised that this technique allowed tissue to recover between sessions.[7][11] He presented his method at the 1928 International Congress of Radiology, and it subsequently became known as "Coutard's method" or the "protracted-fractional method".[11][12] Using this technique, Coutard achieved the first reported cures of laryngeal cancer using radiation, and published five-year survival data around 1930.[13][14] Though he never published rigid standards for radiation doses, he meticulously recorded the treatments that he administered to each patient, using a radiometer that he constructed.[9][15] Over the next decade, he continued experimenting with different modes of dose fractionation regimens.[9] Many radiotherapists visited the Radium Institute to meet Coutard and train with him,[6] including Simeon T. Cantril, who later became the first president of the American Society for Radiation Oncology.[16][17]
Caltech and the Chicago Tumor Institute

Coutard grew interested in radiotherapy research in the United States, where supervoltage units were being produced.[18] Charles Christian Lauritsen, on behalf of Robert Andrews Millikan, invited him to work at the Kellogg Research Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology. At the same time, Max Cutler of the Chicago Tumor Institute offered Coutard a leading position there. Coutard accepted both offers in late 1937.[19] He resigned his position at the Radium Institute and was succeeded by François Baclesse.[20] At Caltech, he studied high-voltage therapy and worked closely with Millikan and Seeley G. Mudd.[7][19]
After working at Caltech for six months, Coutard moved to Chicago and studied the use of short, concentrated doses of radiation for treating laryngeal cancer at the Chicago Tumor Institute, while teaching graduate courses there.[7] Cutler's ambitions for the institute were curtailed as a result of the Great Depression.[19] He was unable to secure a supervoltage unit for Coutard, and the institute did not receive many patients.[21] During this time, he treated the American entrepreneur and philanthropist Spencer Penrose for esophageal cancer, having previously treated Penrose for laryngopharyngeal cancer in Paris in 1932. Penrose bought a radiotherapy unit for his home in Colorado Springs, Colorado, and Coutard accompanied him there to continue his treatment.[22]
Coutard's wife, Anne-Marie, died of leukemia in Paris in 1940.[22] After her death, Coutard remarried to Suzanne Rosalie Jourgeon (née Mathot), the widow of one of his former patients.[7]
Penrose Tumor Clinic and decline
Penrose died in 1939, and stipulated that his radiotherapy equipment be donated to the local Glockner Hospital (now Penrose Hospital). His wife, Julie Penrose, used funds from their El Pomar Foundation to establish the Penrose Tumor Clinic at the hospital and invited Coutard to practice radiotherapy at the new clinic.[23] He accepted, and moved to Colorado Springs in 1941. In the last decade of his life, Coutard's research became more erratic. He conducted strange experiments, including the use of blocks of gold as X-ray filters and homeopathic theories of beta particles, and stopped publishing papers in scientific journals.[7] His fanciful ideas were criticised by his peers and he became increasingly isolated.[23]
His second wife, Suzanne, died in 1949. Coutard published a monograph that same year, reporting on his findings from Colorado Springs.[23] The book was a "rambling mixture of clinical observations, working hypotheses, and fantastic assumptions"; it was largely ignored by reputable journals as well as his peers.[7]
Death
In late 1949 Coutard traveled to the Radium Station of Copenhagen, where the director was one of his few remaining followers.[23] He experienced an intracerebral hemorrhage on his return trip to France.[24] After several months of illness, Coutard died at his sister's home in Le Mans on 16 March 1950.[25]
Selected publications
- Coutard, Henri (1932). "Roentgen Therapy of Epitheliomas of the Tonsillar Region, Hypopharynx and Larynx from 1920 to 1926". American Journal of Roentgenology. 28: 313–331.
- Coutard, Henri (1934). "Principles of X Ray Therapy of Malignant Diseases". The Lancet. 224 (5784): 1–8. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(00)90085-0.
- Coutard, Henri (1936). "Roentgenotherapy of Epitheliomas of the Upper Air Passages". The Laryngoscope. 46 (6): 407–414. doi:10.1288/00005537-193606000-00001. S2CID 71983284.
- Coutard, Henri (1937). "The Results and Methods of Treatment of Cancer by Radiation". Annals of Surgery. 106 (4): 584–598. doi:10.1097/00000658-193710000-00010. PMC 1390613. PMID 17857061.
- Coutard, Henri (1940). "Present Conception of the Treatment of Cancer of the Larynx". Radiology. 34 (2): 136–145. doi:10.1148/34.2.136.
References
- del Regato 1987, p. 433.
- Grigg 1974, p. 185.
- del Regato 1987, pp. 433, 442.
- del Regato 1987, pp. 433–434.
- Pinell 2002, p. 87.
- del Regato 1950, p. 758.
- Grigg 1974, p. 186.
- del Regato 1987, p. 434.
- Holsti 1995, p. 996.
- del Regato 1987, p. 435.
- del Regato 1987, p. 436.
- Loap, Huynh & Kirova 2021, p. 335.
- Marks 1998, p. 2258.
- Kaplan 1977, p. 689.
- Grigg 1974, pp. 185–186.
- del Regato 1987, p. 437.
- Parker 1960, p. 650.
- del Regato 1987, p. 438.
- del Regato 1987, p. 439.
- Holsti 1995, p. 997.
- del Regato 1987, pp. 439–440.
- del Regato 1987, p. 440.
- del Regato 1987, p. 441.
- del Regato 1987, p. 441–442.
- del Regato 1987, p. 442.
Sources
- del Regato, Juan A. (1950). "Henry Coutard, M.D.: 1876–1950". Radiology. 54 (5): 758–759. doi:10.1148/54.5.758. PMID 15417771.
- del Regato, Juan A. (1987). "Henri Coutard". International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics. 13 (3): 433–443. doi:10.1016/0360-3016(87)90017-4. PMID 3549647.
- Grigg, E. R. N. (1974). "Coutard, Henri". In Garraty, John A.; James, Edward T. (eds.). Dictionary of American Biography: Supplement Four, 1946–1950. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 185–186. ISBN 978-0-684-14126-8. OCLC 1151413801.
- Holsti, Lars R. (1995). "Development of clinical radiotherapy since 1896". Acta Oncologica. 34 (8): 995–1003. doi:10.3109/02841869509127225. PMID 8608037.
- Loap, Pierre; Huynh, Renaud; Kirova, Youlia (2021). "The Centenary of the Fondation Curie (1921–2021)". International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics. 110 (2): 331–336. doi:10.1016/j.ijrobp.2020.12.013. PMID 33989573. S2CID 234595491.
- Kaplan, Henry S. (1977). "Basic principles in radiation oncology". Cancer. 39 (S2): 689–693. doi:10.1002/1097-0142(197702)39:2+<689::AID-CNCR2820390702>3.0.CO;2-W. PMID 402191.
- Marks, James E. (1998). "Radiotherapy of the Larynx and Hypopharynx". In Cummings, Charles; Fredrickson, John M.; Harker, Lee A.; Krause, Charles A.; Schuller, David E.; Richardson, Mark A. (eds.). Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. Vol. 3. St. Louis: Mosby. pp. 2258–2284. ISBN 978-0-8151-2067-4. OCLC 1176440660.
- Parker, H. M. (1960). "Simeon T. Cantril, M.D.: 1908–1959". Radiology. 74 (4): 650–651. doi:10.1148/74.4.650.
- Pinell, Patrice (2002). The Fight Against Cancer: France 1890–1940. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-27923-9. OCLC 1280728682.