28 results on '"Di Donato, V"'
Search Results
2. CLINICAL OUTCOME OF SECONDARY SURGERY IN RECURRENT ENDOMETRIAL CANCER
- Author
-
Bellati, F., Papadia, A., Gasparri, M. L., Di Donato, V., Ditto, A., Fabio Martinelli, Lorusso, D., Merola, M., Panici, P. L. Benedetti, and Raspagliesi, F.
- Published
- 2014
3. Late Pleistocene-Holocene paleoclimate and related paleoenvironmental changes, as recorded by calcareous nannofossil and planktonic foraminifera assemblages in Salerno bay (Palinuro Cape, Tyrrenian Sea, Italy)
- Author
-
AMORE F. O., MASSA B., MORABITO S., BEGLIOMINI B., BERTOLDO M., BUCCHERI G., CAFFAU M., CAPRETTO G., CARELLA D., CIAMPO G., DI DONATO V., FERRUZZA G., GRECO A., MADONIA G., MARIOTTI M., MUNNO R., NAIMO D., PESCATORE T. S., PETROSINO P., SENATORE M. R., SPROVIERI M., STANZIONE, DAMIANO, Amore, F. O., Massa, B., Morabito, S., Begliomini, B., Bertoldo, M., Buccheri, G., Caffau, M., Capretto, G., Carella, D., Ciampo, G., DI DONATO, V., Ferruzza, G., Greco, A., Madonia, G., Mariotti, M., Munno, R., Naimo, D., Pescatore, T. S., Petrosino, P., Senatore, M. R., Sprovieri, M., and Stanzione, Damiano
- Published
- 2002
4. Manuale pratico di oncologia. Fondamenti per il medico non oncologo- Costanzo Francesco; Cognetti Francesco; Benedetti Panici Pierluigi
- Author
-
BENEDETTI PANICI, Pierluigi, Di Donato, V., Fischetti, M, Lo Prete, E, Musella, A, Plotti, F, Casorelli, A, and Bellati, Filippo
- Published
- 2011
5. Quality of Life and Sexual Function after Type c2/Type III Radical Hysterectomy for Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer: A Prospective Study. J Sex Med
- Author
-
Plotti, F, Sansone, M, Di Donato, V, Antonelli, E, Altavilla, T, Angioli, R, and BENEDETTI PANICI, Pierluigi
- Published
- 2010
6. Nuovi dati stratigrafici sul Pliocene affiorante tra il F. Ufita ed il T. Cervaro (Irpinia, Appennino meridionale)
- Author
-
AMORE O., BASSO C., CIAMPO G., CIARCIA S., DI DONATO V., ESPOSITO P., MATANO F., STAITI D., TORRE M., DI NOCERA, SILVIO, Amore, O., Basso, C., Ciampo, G., Ciarcia, S., DI DONATO, V., DI NOCERA, Silvio, Esposito, P., Matano, F., Staiti, D., and Torre, M.
- Published
- 1998
7. [Use of bulking agents in urinary incontinece]
- Author
-
Angioli R, Muzii L, Ma, Zullo, Battista C, Ruggiero A, Montera R, Guzzo F, Montone E, angela musella, Di Donato V, and Benedetti Panici P
- Subjects
Durapatite ,Treatment Outcome ,Urinary Incontinence ,Urethra ,Patient Selection ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Biocompatible Materials ,Dextrans ,Female ,Polyvinyls ,Collagen ,Injections - Abstract
Urinary incontinence consist in voluntary urine leakage. Female affected in the world are about 200 thousand. Urinary incontinence affect severely women quality of life. There are different kinds of urinary incontinence that can be treated in different ways. We can use pelvic floor rehabilitation, drug therapy, invasive and non-invasive surgical treatment. Different treatments are used for different incontinence types. Periurethral injection is the most common procedure between non-invasive surgery. The most recent bulking agents occasionally determine severe adverse reaction or complication. Frequently we can have just pain during injection and a temporary urine retention. During the latest years we used a lot of bulking agents: bovine collagen, autologous fat, carbon particles, macroplastique, calcium hydroxylapatite, ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer, dextranomer. Urethral injection have success in 40-90%. We can assert that macroplastique is the most efficacy and safe on the basis of literature data and of our experience data. This surgical procedure, in fact, has good percentage of success in accurately selected patients. In our experience Macroplastique can also be used in oncological patients, in elderly women, in patients with important comorbidity and with high surgical risk with good objective and subjective results.
- Published
- 2008
8. Caratteristiche geologico-geomorfologiche ed effetti di sito a San Giuliano di Puglia (CB) e in altri abitati colpiti dalla sequenza sismica dellOttobre-Novembre 2002
- Author
-
GIACCIO B, CIARCIA S, MESSINA P, PIZZI A, SAROLI M, SPOSATO A., CITTADINI A, DI DONATO V, and ESPOSITO P. GALADINI F.
- Published
- 2004
9. A multidisciplinary study of late Pleistocene-Holocene sediments of the Gaeta Bay continental shelf
- Author
-
Amore, F. O., Ciampo, G., Di Donato, V., Esposito, P., Pennetta, M., Russo Ermolli, E., Staiti, D., Alessio VALENTE, Amore, F. O., Ciampo, G., DI DONATO, Valentino, Esposito, P., Pennetta, Micla, RUSSO ERMOLLI, Elda, Staiti, D., and Valente, A.
- Subjects
Paleontologia ,geomorfologia marina ,Sediment transport - Published
- 1996
10. Continuous versus Cyclic Oral Contraceptives after Laparoscopic Excision of Ovarian Endometriomas: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
- Author
-
Muzii L, Di Tucci C, Achilli C, Di Donato V, angela musella, Palaia I, and Benedetti Panici P
11. Tumor infiltrating lymphocytes in ovarian cancer
- Author
-
Ml, Gasparri, Attar R, Innocenza Palaia, Perniola G, Marchetti C, Di Donato V, Aa, Farooqi, Papadia A, and Pb, Panici
12. Use of bulking agents in urinary incontinece | L'utilizzo dei bulking agents nel trattamento dell'incontinenza urinaria
- Author
-
Roberto Angioli, Muzii, L., Zullo, M. A., Battista, C., Ruggiero, A., Montera, R., Guzzo, F., Montone, E., Musella, A., Di Donato, V., and Panici, P. B.
13. The problem of lymphadenectomy: Contra
- Author
-
Panici, P. B., Di Donato, V., Basile, S., Bellati, F., Musella, A., Casorelli, A., Perniola, G., Palaia, I., Claudia Marchetti, and Salerno, G.
14. Holocene palaeo-geographical evolution of the Sele River coastal plain (Southern Italy): New morpho-sedimentary data from the Paestum area
- Author
-
Amato, V., Aucelli, P. P. C., Cinque, A., D Argenio, B., Di Donato, V., Gerardo Pappone, Petrosino, P., Rosskopf, C. M., and Ermolli, E. R.
- Subjects
Holocene ,Sele plain ,Holocene, Sea level rise, Sele plain ,Sea level rise
15. Vulvodynia: current opinion and treatment strategies
- Author
-
Domenici L, Perniola G, Giorgini M, Lecce F, Bracchi C, Musella A, Marchetti C, Di Donato V, Tomao F, Innocenza Palaia, Ciolli P, Recine N, Muzii L, and Benedetti Panici P
- Subjects
Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological ,Settore MED/40 - GINECOLOGIA E OSTETRICIA ,Cost of Illness ,Vulvodynia ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Pain ,Chronic pain ,Female ,Therapeutics ,Health Care Costs - Abstract
Vulvodynia is a women's health problem that may affect as many as 15% of women who seek gynecological care, and yet little attention is given to this condition and it is frequently dismissed as psychosomatic. Thus, vulvodynia still remains a major health problem in Western countries, leading to significant morbidity and a reduced quality of life for many women. This condition carries large costs incurred as a result of both medical treatment and lost productivity. Vulvodynia is becoming a universal priority in the prevention, care, education, and research areas of pain and its consequences and it remains one of the poorly understood complex chronic pain syndromes, representing a multifactorial clinical syndrome of unexplained vulvar pain and sexual dysfunction.
16. PARP inhibition: A promising therapeutic target in ovarian cancer
- Author
-
Musella A, Marchetti C, Ml, Gasparri, Salerno L, Casorelli A, Lavinia Domenici, Imperiale L, Ruscito I, Abdul Halim T, Palaia I, Di Donato V, Pecorini F, Monti M, Muzii L, and Pb, Panici
- Subjects
Bridged-Ring Compounds ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Settore MED/06 - ONCOLOGIA MEDICA ,Parp inhibitors ,Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase Inhibitors ,Settore MED/40 - GINECOLOGIA E OSTETRICIA ,Ovarian cancer ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Synthetic lethality 1 ,Animals ,Humans ,ovarian cancer ,PARP inhibitors ,target therapies ,synthetic lethality 1 ,Female ,Taxoids ,Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerases ,Target therapies - Abstract
Ovarian cancer is burdened by the highest mortality rate among gynecological cancers. Gold standard is represented by the association of platinum-taxane -based chemotherapy and radical surgery. Despite several adjustments occurred in cytotoxic drug in last decades, most patients continue to relapse, and no significant enhancement has been reached in the overall survival. The development of drug resistance and the recurrence of disease have prompted the investigations of other targets that can be used in the treatment of ovarian cancers. Among such targets, polyadenosine diphosphate-ribose polymerase (PARP) represents a novel way to target specific patways involved in tumor growth. PARP accelerates the reaction of the polyADP-ribosylation of proteins implicated in DNA repair. PARP inhibitors have shown activity in cancers with BRCA mutations, with other deficient DNA repair genes or signaling pathways that modulate DNA repair, or in association with DNA damaging agents not involved in DNA repair dysfunction. A number of inhibitors for PARP has been developed, and such drugs are under investigation in clinical trials to identify their impact in the treatment of ovarian cancers. This review aims to summarize the recent researches and clinical progress on PARP inhibitors as novel target agents in ovarian cancer.
17. HEPATIC SURGERY DURING CYTOREDUCTION FOR PRIMARY OR RECURRENT OVARIAN CANCER
- Author
-
Papadia, A., Bellati, F., Gasparri, M. L., Di Donato, V., Ditto, A., Fabio Martinelli, Lorusso, D., Zanaboni, F., Panici, P. L. Benedetti, and Raspagliesi, F.
18. Factors predicting morbidity in surgically-staged high-risk endometrial cancer patients
- Author
-
Francesco Raspagliesi, Anna Myriam Perrone, Alessandro Buda, Daniela Luvero, Maria Luisa Gasparri, Giorgio Bogani, Fabio Barra, Fabio Ghezzi, Andrea Papadia, Michael D. Mueller, Pierluigi Benedetti Panici, Francesco Plotti, Antonella Cromi, Innocenza Palaia, Simone Ferrero, Roberto Angioli, Fabio Landoni, Violante Di Donato, Ciro Pinelli, Ludovico Muzii, Jvan Casarin, Alice Indini, Chiara Cimmino, Pierandrea De Iaco, Giampaolo Di Martino, Bogani G., Papadia A., Buda A., Casarin J., Di Donato V., Plotti F., Gasparri M.L., Cimmino C., Pinelli C., Perrone A.M., Barra F., Cromi A., Di Martino G., Palaia I., Ferrero S., Indini A., De Iaco P., Angioli R., Luvero D., Muzii L., Ghezzi F., Landoni F., Mueller M.D., Benedetti Panici P., Raspagliesi F., Bogani, G, Papadia, A, Buda, A, Casarin, J, Di Donato, V, Plotti, F, Gasparri, M, Cimmino, C, Pinelli, C, Perrone, A, Barra, F, Cromi, A, Di Martino, G, Palaia, I, Ferrero, S, Indini, A, De Iaco, P, Angioli, R, Luvero, D, Muzii, L, Ghezzi, F, Landoni, F, Mueller, M, Benedetti Panici, P, and Raspagliesi, F
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Endometrium ,Endometrial cancer ,Retrospective Studie ,Humans ,Medicine ,610 Medicine & health ,Retrospective Studies ,Sentinel node mapping ,business.industry ,endometrial cancer ,lymphadenectomy ,morbidity ,sentinel node mapping ,endometrium ,female ,humans ,lymph node excision ,retrospective studies ,endometrial neoplasms ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Lymphadenectomy ,Retrospective cohort study ,Sentinel node ,medicine.disease ,Endometrial Neoplasms ,Surgery ,Reproductive Medicine ,Lymph Node Excision ,Female ,Morbidity ,business ,Complication ,Body mass index ,Human ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To investigate factors predicting the risk of developing 90-day postoperative complications and lymphatic-specific morbidity in patients undergoing surgical staging for high-risk endometrial cancer. METHODS This is a multi-institutional retrospective cohort study. Patients affected by apparent early-stage high-risk endometrial cancer (endometrioid FIGO grade 3 with deep myometrial invasion and non-endometrioid endometrial cancer) undergoing surgical staging between 2007 and 2019. Complications were graded according to the Clavien-Dindo classification system. Martin criteria were applied to improve quality of complications reporting. RESULTS Charts of 279 patients were evaluated. Lymphadenectomy, sentinel node mapping (SNM), and SNM followed by back-up lymphadenectomy were performed in 83 (29.7%), 50 (17.9%), and 146 (52.4%) patients, respectively. The former group of patients included 13 patients who had lymphadenectomy after the failure of the SNM technique. Thirteen (4.6%) patients developed severe postoperative events (grade 3 or worse). At multivariate analysis, body mass index (OR: 1.08 (95%CI: 1.01, 1.17)) and open abdominal surgery (OR: 2.27 (95%CI: 1.02, 5.32)) were the two independent factors predictive of surgery-related morbidity. Seven severe lymphatic complications occurred. The adoption of laparoscopic approach (p��
- Published
- 2021
19. Assessing the role of minimally invasive radical hysterectomy for early-stage cervical cancer
- Author
-
Giorgio Bogani, Violante Di Donato, Ludovico Muzii, Jvan Casarin, Fabio Ghezzi, Mario Malzoni, Stefano Greggi, Fabio Landoni, Luca Bazzurini, Vanna Zanagnolo, Francesco Multinu, Roberto Angioli, Francesco Plotti, Giuseppe Caruso, Margherita Fischetti, Gabriella Ferrandina, Innocenza Palaia, Pierluigi Benedetti Panici, Giovanni Scambia, Francesco Raspagliesi, Bogani, G, Di Donato, V, Muzii, L, Casarin, J, Ghezzi, F, Malzoni, M, Greggi, S, Landoni, F, Bazzurini, L, Zanagnolo, V, Multinu, F, Angioli, R, Plotti, F, Caruso, G, Fischetti, M, Ferrandina, G, Palaia, I, Benedetti Panici, P, Scambia, G, and Raspagliesi, F
- Subjects
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Hysterectomy ,Robotic ,Settore MED/40 - GINECOLOGIA E OSTETRICIA ,Reproductive Medicine ,Cervical cancer ,Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Radical hysterectomy ,Female ,Laparoscopy ,Neoplasm Staging ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Surgery is the mainstay of treatment in the management of early-stage cervical cancer. Until the publication of the Laparoscopic Approach to Cervical Cancer (LACC) trial, minimally invasive radical hysterectomy was the recommended approach to treat patients with early-stage disease. The results of the LACC trial questioned the adoption of minimally invasive surgery in cervical cancer. In comparison with the open approach, minimally invasive surgery correlated with worse disease-free and cancer-specific survival. Similarly, other retrospective studies highlighted this correlation, thus corroborating the results of the LACC trials. In the present review, we evaluated current evidence and further prospective of the adoption of minimally invasive radical hysterectomy in cervical cancer. Moreover, we sought to assess some unsolved issues regarding the role of minimally invasive surgery in early-stage cervical cancer patients.
- Published
- 2022
20. Clear cell carcinoma of the endometrium
- Author
-
Giorgio Bogani, Isabelle Ray-Coquard, Nicole Concin, Natalie Y.L. Ngoi, Philippe Morice, Takayuki Enomoto, Kazuhiro Takehara, Hannelore Denys, Domenica Lorusso, Robert Coleman, Michelle M. Vaughan, Masashi Takano, Diane Provencher, Satoru Sagae, Pauline Wimberger, Robert Póka, Yakir Segev, Se Ik Kim, Jae-Weon Kim, Francisco J. Candido dos Reis, Andrea Mariani, Mario M. Leitao, Viky Makker, Nadeem Abu Rustum, Ignace Vergote, Gian Franco Zannoni, David S.P. Tan, Mary McCormack, Marta Bini, Salvatore Lopez, Francesco Raspagliesi, Pierluigi Benedetti Panici, Violante di Donato, Ludovico Muzii, Nicoletta Colombo, Giovanni Scambia, Sandro Pignata, Bradley J. Monk, Bogani, G, Ray-Coquard, I, Concin, N, Ngoi, N, Morice, P, Enomoto, T, Takehara, K, Denys, H, Lorusso, D, Coleman, R, Vaughan, M, Takano, M, Provencher, D, Sagae, S, Wimberger, P, Poka, R, Segev, Y, Kim, S, Kim, J, Candido dos Reis, F, Mariani, A, Leitao, M, Makker, V, Rustum, N, Vergote, I, Zannoni, G, Tan, D, Mccormack, M, Bini, M, Lopez, S, Raspagliesi, F, Panici, P, di Donato, V, Muzii, L, Colombo, N, Scambia, G, Pignata, S, and Monk, B
- Subjects
Clear cell endometrial cancer ,Immunotherapy ,Target therapy ,Uterine cancer ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Prognosis ,Endometrial Neoplasms ,Endometrium ,Settore MED/40 - GINECOLOGIA E OSTETRICIA ,Oncology ,Uterine Neoplasms ,Humans ,Female ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 ,Adenocarcinoma, Clear Cell - Abstract
Clear cell endometrial carcinoma represents an uncommon and poorly understood entity. Data from molecular/genomic profiling highlighted the importance of various signatures in assessing the prognosis of endometrial cancer according to four classes of risk (POLE mutated, MMRd, NSMP, and p53 abnormal). Unfortunately, data specific to clear cell histological subtype endometrial cancer are lacking. More recently, data has emerged to suggest that most of the patients (more than 80%) with clear cell endometrial carcinoma are characterized by p53 abnormality or NSMP type. This classification has important therapeutic implications. Although it is an uncommon entity, clear cell endometrial cancer patients with POLE mutation seem characterized by a good prognosis. Chemotherapy is effective in patients with NSMP (especially in stage III and IV) and patients with p53 abnormal disease (all stages). While, preliminary data suggested that patients with MMRd are less likely to benefit from chemotherapy. The latter group appears to benefit much more from immune checkpoint inhibitors: recent data from clinical trials on pembrolizumab plus lenvatinib and nivolumab plus cabozantinib supported that immunotherapy plus tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) would be the most appropriate treatment for recurrent non-endometrioid endometrial cancer (including clear cell carcinoma) after the failure of platinum-based chemotherapy. Moreover, ongoing clinical trials testing the anti-tumor activity of innovative products will clarify the better strategies for advanced/recurrent clear cell endometrial carcinoma. Further prospective evidence is urgently needed to better characterize clear cell endometrial carcinoma.
- Published
- 2022
21. Evaluating long-term outcomes of three approaches to retroperitoneal staging in endometrial cancer
- Author
-
Giorgio Bogani, Violante Di Donato, Andrea Papadia, Alessandro Buda, Jvan Casarin, Francesco Multinu, Francesco Plotti, Ilaria Cuccu, Tullio Golia D'Auge, Maria Luisa Gasparri, Ciro Pinelli, Anna Myriam Perrone, Fabio Barra, Flavia Sorbi, Antonella Cromi, Giampaolo Di Martino, Innocenza Palaia, Giorgia Perniola, Simone Ferrero, Pierandrea De Iaco, Chiara Perrone, Roberto Angioli, Daniela Luvero, Ludovico Muzii, Fabio Ghezzi, Fabio Landoni, Michael D. Mueller, Pierluigi Benedetti Panici, Francesco Raspagliesi, Bogani, G, Di Donato, V, Papadia, A, Buda, A, Casarin, J, Multinu, F, Plotti, F, Cuccu, I, D'Auge, T, Gasparri, M, Pinelli, C, Perrone, A, Barra, F, Sorbi, F, Cromi, A, Di Martino, G, Palaia, I, Perniola, G, Ferrero, S, De Iaco, P, Perrone, C, Angioli, R, Luvero, D, Muzii, L, Ghezzi, F, Landoni, F, Mueller, M, Benedetti Panici, P, and Raspagliesi, F
- Subjects
Sentinel node mapping ,Staging surgery ,Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Lymphadenectomy ,Endometrial Neoplasms ,Oncology ,Endometrial cancer ,Humans ,Lymph Node Excision ,Laparoscopy ,Female ,Lymph Nodes ,610 Medicine & health ,Neoplasm Staging ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
OBJECTIVE Sentinel lymph node mapping (SNM) has gained popularity in managing apparent early-stage endometrial cancer (EC). Here, we evaluated the long-term survival of three different approaches of nodal assessment. METHODS This is a multi-institutional retrospective study evaluating long-term outcomes of EC patients having nodal assessment between 01/01/2006 and 12/31/2016. In order to reduce possible confounding factors, we applied a propensity-matched algorithm. RESULTS Overall, 940 patients meeting inclusion criteria were included in the study, of which 174 (18.5%), 187 (19.9%), and 579 (61.6%) underwent SNM, SNM followed by backup lymphadenectomy (LND) and LND alone, respectively. Applying a propensity score matching algorithm (1:1:2) we selected 500 patients, including 125 SNM, 125 SNM/backup LND, and 250 LND. Baseline characteristics of the study population were similar between groups. The prevalence of nodal disease was 14%, 16%, and 12% in patients having SNM, SNM/backup LND and LND, respectively. Overall, 19 (7.6%) patients were diagnosed with low volume nodal disease. The survival analysis comparing the three techniques did not show statistical differences in terms of disease-free (p = 0.750) and overall survival (p = 0.899). Similarly, the type of nodal assessment did not impact survival outcomes after stratification based on uterine risk factors. CONCLUSION Our study highlighted that SNM provides similar long-term oncologic outcomes than LND.
- Published
- 2022
22. MRI- and Histologic-Molecular-Based Radio-Genomics Nomogram for Preoperative Assessment of Risk Classes in Endometrial Cancer
- Author
-
Veronica Celli, Michele Guerreri, Angelina Pernazza, Ilaria Cuccu, Innocenza Palaia, Federica Tomao, Violante Di Donato, Paola Pricolo, Giada Ercolani, Sandra Ciulla, Nicoletta Colombo, Martina Leopizzi, Valeria Di Maio, Eliodoro Faiella, Domiziana Santucci, Paolo Soda, Ermanno Cordelli, Giorgia Perniola, Benedetta Gui, Stefania Rizzo, Carlo Della Rocca, Giuseppe Petralia, Carlo Catalano, Lucia Manganaro, Celli, V, Guerreri, M, Pernazza, A, Cuccu, I, Palaia, I, Tomao, F, Di Donato, V, Pricolo, P, Ercolani, G, Ciulla, S, Colombo, N, Leopizzi, M, Di Maio, V, Faiella, E, Santucci, D, Soda, P, Cordelli, E, Perniola, G, Gui, B, Rizzo, S, Della Rocca, C, Petralia, G, Catalano, C, and Manganaro, L
- Subjects
radiomic analysi ,Cancer Research ,magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) ,molecular classification ,risk classes ,endometrial cancer ,lymph-vascular space invasion ,radio-genomic analysis ,radiomic analysis ,texture analysis ,texture analysi ,risk classe ,radio-genomic analysi ,Oncology - Abstract
High- and low-risk endometrial carcinoma (EC) differ in whether or not a lymphadenectomy is performed. We aimed to develop MRI-based radio-genomic models able to preoperatively assess lymph-vascular space invasion (LVSI) and discriminate between low- and high-risk EC according to the ESMO-ESGO-ESTRO 2020 guidelines, which include molecular risk classification proposed by “ProMisE”. This is a retrospective, multicentric study that included 64 women with EC who underwent 3T-MRI before a hysterectomy. Radiomics features were extracted from T2WI images and apparent diffusion coefficient maps (ADC) after manual segmentation of the gross tumor volume. We constructed a multiple logistic regression approach from the most relevant radiomic features to distinguish between low- and high-risk classes under the ESMO-ESGO-ESTRO 2020 guidelines. A similar approach was taken to assess LVSI. Model diagnostic performance was assessed via ROC curves, accuracy, sensitivity and specificity on training and test sets. The LVSI predictive model used a single feature from ADC as a predictor; the risk class model used two features as predictors from both ADC and T2WI. The low-risk predictive model showed an AUC of 0.74 with an accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 0.74, 0.76, 0.94; the LVSI model showed an AUC of 0.59 with an accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 0.60, 0.50, 0.61. MRI-based radio-genomic models are useful for preoperative EC risk stratification and may facilitate therapeutic management.
- Published
- 2022
23. Development of a Nomogram Predicting the Risk of Persistence/Recurrence of Cervical Dysplasia
- Author
-
Giorgio Bogani, Luca Lalli, Francesco Sopracordevole, Andrea Ciavattini, Alessandro Ghelardi, Tommaso Simoncini, Francesco Plotti, Jvan Casarin, Maurizio Serati, Ciro Pinelli, Alice Bergamini, Barbara Gardella, Andrea Dell’Acqua, Ermelinda Monti, Paolo Vercellini, Innocenza Palaia, Giorgia Perniola, Margherita Fischetti, Giusi Santangelo, Alice Fracassi, Giovanni D’Ippolito, Lorenzo Aguzzoli, Vincenzo Dario Mandato, Luca Giannella, Cono Scaffa, Francesca Falcone, Chiara Borghi, Mario Malzoni, Andrea Giannini, Maria Giovanna Salerno, Viola Liberale, Biagio Contino, Cristina Donfrancesco, Michele Desiato, Anna Myriam Perrone, Giulia Dondi, Pierandrea De Iaco, Simone Ferrero, Giuseppe Sarpietro, Maria G. Matarazzo, Antonio Cianci, Stefano Cianci, Sara Bosio, Simona Ruisi, Lavinia Mosca, Raffaele Tinelli, Rosa De Vincenzo, Gian Franco Zannoni, Gabriella Ferrandina, Marco Petrillo, Giampiero Capobianco, Salvatore Dessiole, Annunziata Carlea, Fulvio Zullo, Barbara Muschiato, Stefano Palomba, Stefano Greggi, Arsenio Spinillo, Fabio Ghezzi, Nicola Colacurci, Roberto Angioli, Pierluigi Benedetti Panici, Ludovico Muzii, Giovanni Scambia, Francesco Raspagliesi, Violante Di Donato, Bogani, G., Lalli, L., Sopracordevole, F., Ciavattini, A., Ghelardi, A., Simoncini, T., Plotti, F., Casarin, J., Serati, M., Pinelli, C., Bergamini, A., Gardella, B., Dell'Acqua, A., Monti, E., Vercellini, P., Palaia, I., Perniola, G., Fischetti, M., Santangelo, G., Fracassi, A., D'Ippolito, G., Aguzzoli, L., Mandato, V. D., Giannella, L., Scaffa, C., Falcone, F., Borghi, C., Malzoni, M., Giannini, A., Salerno, M. G., Liberale, V., Contino, B., Donfrancesco, C., Desiato, M., Perrone, A. M., Dondi, G., De Iaco, P., Ferrero, S., Sarpietro, G., Matarazzo, M. G., Cianci, A., Cianci, S., Bosio, S., Ruisi, S., Mosca, L., Tinelli, R., De Vincenzo, R., Zannoni, G. F., Ferrandina, G., Petrillo, M., Capobianco, G., Dessiole, S., Carlea, A., Zullo, F., Muschiato, B., Palomba, S., Greggi, S., Spinillo, A., Ghezzi, F., Colacurci, N., Angioli, R., Panici, P. B., Muzii, L., Scambia, G., Raspagliesi, F., Di Donato, V., Bogani, Giorgio, Lalli, Luca, Sopracordevole, Francesco, Ciavattini, Andrea, Ghelardi, Alessandro, Simoncini, Tommaso, Plotti, Francesco, Casarin, Jvan, Serati, Maurizio, Pinelli, Ciro, Bergamini, Alice, Gardella, Barbara, Dell'Acqua, Andrea, Monti, Ermelinda, Vercellini, Paolo, Palaia, Innocenza, Perniola, Giorgia, Fischetti, Margherita, Santangelo, Giusi, Fracassi, Alice, D'Ippolito, Giovanni, Aguzzoli, Lorenzo, Mandato, Vincenzo Dario, Giannella, Luca, Scaffa, Cono, Falcone, Francesca, Borghi, Chiara, Malzoni, Mario, Giannini, Andrea, Salerno, Maria Giovanna, Liberale, Viola, Contino, Biagio, Donfrancesco, Cristina, Desiato, Michele, Perrone, Anna Myriam, Dondi, Giulia, De Iaco, Pierandrea, Ferrero, Simone, Sarpietro, Giuseppe, Matarazzo, Maria G, Cianci, Antonio, Cianci, Stefano, Bosio, Sara, Ruisi, Simona, Mosca, Lavinia, Tinelli, Raffaele, De Vincenzo, Rosa, Zannoni, Gian Franco, Ferrandina, Gabriella, Petrillo, Marco, Capobianco, Giampiero, Dessiole, Salvatore, Carlea, Annunziata, Zullo, Fulvio, Muschiato, Barbara, Palomba, Stefano, Greggi, Stefano, Spinillo, Arsenio, Ghezzi, Fabio, Colacurci, Nicola, Angioli, Roberto, Benedetti Panici, Pierluigi, Muzii, Ludovico, Scambia, Giovanni, Raspagliesi, Francesco, and Di Donato, Violante
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,conization ,HPV ,Settore MED/40 - GINECOLOGIA E OSTETRICIA ,recurrence ,Infectious Diseases ,Drug Discovery ,Immunology ,LEEP ,Pharmacology (medical) ,cervical dysplasia - Abstract
Background: Cervical dysplasia persistence/recurrence has a great impact on women’s health and quality of life. In this study, we investigated whether a prognostic nomogram may improve risk assessment after primary conization. Methods: This is a retrospective multi-institutional study based on charts of consecutive patients undergoing conization between 1 January 2010 and 31 December 2014. A nomogram assessing the importance of different variables was built. A cohort of patients treated between 1 January 2015 and 30 June 2016 was used to validate the nomogram. Results: A total of 2966 patients undergoing primary conization were analyzed. The median (range) patient age was 40 (18–89) years. At 5-year of follow-up, 6% of patients (175/2966) had developed a persistent/recurrent cervical dysplasia. Median (range) recurrence-free survival was 18 (5–52) months. Diagnosis of CIN3, presence of HR-HPV types, positive endocervical margins, HPV persistence, and the omission of HPV vaccination after conization increased significantly and independently of the risk of developing cervical dysplasia persistence/recurrence. A nomogram weighting the impact of all variables was built with a C-Index of 0.809. A dataset of 549 patients was used to validate the nomogram, with a C-index of 0.809. Conclusions: The present nomogram represents a useful tool for counseling women about their risk of persistence/recurrence after primary conization. HPV vaccination after conization is associated with a reduced risk of CIN2+.
- Published
- 2022
24. First-Line Treatment with Olaparib for Early Stage BRCA-Positive Ovarian Cancer: May It Be Possible? Hypothesis Potentially Generating a Line of Research
- Author
-
Pierluigi Benedetti Panici, Serena Maria Boccia, Carolina Maria Sassu, Nicoletta Colombo, Federica Tomao, Innocenza Palaia, Violante Di Donato, Martina Chirra, Maria Cristina Petrella, Tomao, F, Boccia, S, Chirra, M, Palaia, I, Petrella, M, Di Donato, V, Colombo, N, Panici, P, and Sassu, C
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,BRCA mutation ,early stage ovarian cancer ,newly diagnosed ovarian cancer ,olaparib ,PARPinhibitors ,Review ,Olaparib ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Early stage ovarian cancer ,Stage (cooking) ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Disease progression ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Newly diagnosed ovarian cancer ,First line treatment ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Ovarian cancer ,business - Abstract
Olaparib is currently approved in maintenance treatment of advanced ovarian cancer after response to first-line chemotherapy for breast related cancer antigens (BRCA) mutated patients. The use of this agent is based on data from SOLO1 study that observed a decreased risk of disease progression or death and a median progression-free survival about 36 months longer in case of therapy with olaparib. However, this trial recruited only patients with advanced stage ovarian cancer. The aim of this review is to retrace the available data in order to clarify the potential efficacy and feasibility of olaparib administration in newly diagnosed epithelial ovarian cancer also in early stages.
- Published
- 2020
25. Dealing Naturally with Stumbling Blocks on Highways and Byways of TRAIL Induced Signaling
- Author
-
Ammad Ahmad Farooqi, Aamir Rana, Violante Di Donato, Ghulam Muhammad Ali, Muhammad Zahid Qureshi, Rukset Attar, Maria Luisa Gasparri, Rana, A., Attar, Rukset, Qureshi, M.Z., Gasparri, M.L., Di Donato, V., Ali, G.M., Farooqi, A.A., and Yeditepe Üniversitesi
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Phenethyl isothiocyanate ,Epidemiology ,Cell ,TRAIL ,Apoptosis ,Coumarin ,Biology ,TNF-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand ,Psoralidin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Piperlongumine ,Autophagy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Signaling ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Cancer cell ,Piperlogumine ,Cancer research ,Signal transduction ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
In-depth analysis of how TRAIL signals through death receptors to induce apoptosis in cancer cells using high throughput technologies has added new layers of knowledge. However, the wealth of information has also highlighted the fact that TRAIL induced apoptosis may be impaired as evidenced by experimental findings obtained from TRAIL resistant cancer cell lines. Overwhelmingly, increasing understanding of TRAIL mediated apoptosis has helped in identifying synthetic and natural compounds which can restore TRAIL induced apoptosis via functionalization of either extrinsic or intrinsic pathways. Increasingly it is being realized that biologically active phytochemicals modulate TRAIL induced apoptosis, as evidenced by cell-based studies. In this review we have attempted to provide an overview of how different phytonutrients have shown efficacy in restoring apoptosis in TRAIL resistant cancer cells. We partition this review into how the TRAIL mediated signaling landscape has broadened over the years and how TRAIL induced signaling machinery crosstalks with autophagic protein networks. Subsequently, we provide a generalized view of considerable biological activity of coumarins against a wide range of cancer cell lines and how coumarins (psoralidin and esculetin) isolated from natural sources have improved TRAIL induced apoptosis in resistant cancer cells. We summarize recent updates on piperlongumine, phenethyl isothiocyanate and luteolin induced activation of TRAIL mediated apoptosis. The data obtained from pre-clinical studies will be helpful in translation of information from benchtop to the bedside.
- Published
- 2014
26. The Volsci Range in the kinematic evolution of the northern and southern Apennine orogenic system
- Author
-
Cosentino, D., Cipollari, P., Valentino DI DONATO, Sgrosso, I., Sgrosso, M., Cosentino, Domenico, Cipollari, P., DI DONATO, V., Sgrosso, I., Sgrosso, M., Cipollari, Paola, DI DONATO, V, and Sgrosso, I
27. Secondary analyses from a randomized clinical trial: age as the key prognostic factor in endometrial carcinoma
- Author
-
Violante Di Donato, Dionyssios Katsaros, Nicoletta Donadello, Giorgia Mangili, Giovanni Scambia, Francesco Raspagliesi, Roldano Fossati, Costantino Mangioni, Elio Campagnutta, Claudia Marchetti, Antonio Palagiano, Andrea Lissoni, Stefano Greggi, Valter Torri, Mauro Melpignano, Roberto Grassi, Gennaro Cormio, Clara Crocè, Mauro Signorelli, Pierluigi Benedetti Panici, Massimo Franchi, Saverio Tateo, Francesco Maneschi, Diana Giannarelli, Alessandra Perutelli, Stefano Basile, Maria Giovanna Salerno, Giorgia Perniola, Benedetti Panici, P, Basile, S, Salerno, M, Di Donato, V, Marchetti, C, Perniola, G, Palagiano, A, Perutelli, A, Maneschi, F, Lissoni, A, Signorelli, M, Scambia, G, Tateo, S, Mangili, G, Katsaros, D, Campagnutta, E, Donadello, N, Greggi, S, Melpignano, M, Raspagliesi, F, Cormio, G, Grassi, R, Franchi, M, Giannarelli, D, Fossati, R, Torri, V, Crocè, C, Mangioni, C, Salerno, Mg, Lissoni, Aa, Grassi, Roberto, and Mangioni, C.
- Subjects
Oncology ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,law.invention ,Body Mass Index ,Randomized controlled trial ,Older patients ,law ,Medicine ,Age Factor ,Stage (cooking) ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,prognostic factor ,Multivariate Analysi ,education.field_of_study ,Age Factors ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Prognosis ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Neoplasm Metastasi ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Obesity, Abdominal ,Female ,endometrial carcinoma ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prognostic factor ,Prognosi ,Population ,Internal medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Endometrial Neoplasm ,education ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Settore MED/06 - ONCOLOGIA MEDICA ,business.industry ,prognostic factors ,Lymphatic Metastasi ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Endometrial Neoplasms ,Settore MED/40 - GINECOLOGIA E OSTETRICIA ,age ,body mass index ,Multivariate Analysis ,Lymph Node Excision ,Neoplasm Grading ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to explore in greater depth the outcomes of the Italian randomized trial investigating the role of pelvic lymphadenectomy in clinical early stage endometrial cancer. In the attempt to identify the patients with poorer prognosis, the impact of age and body mass index were also thoroughly investigated by cancer-specific survival (CSS) analyses. STUDY DESIGN: Survival outcomes of trial patients were analyzed in relation to age (≤65 years and >65 years) in the 2 arms (lymphadenectomy and no lymphadenectomy) and in the whole population of the trial. RESULTS: Univariate and multivariable analyses of CSS and overall survival (OS) of patients showed that age >65 years is a strong independent poor prognostic factor (5-y OS 92.1% and 78.4% in ≤65 years and >65 years patients, respectively, P < .0001; 5-y CSS 93.8% and 83.5% in ≤65 years and >65 years patients, respectively, P = .003). Among women ≤65 years, node negative patients had 94.4% 5-y OS and 96.3% 5-y CSS vs 74.3% 5-y OS and 74.3% 5-y CSS for node positive patients (P = .009 and P = .002, respectively), while among women >65 y, node negative patients had 75.7% 5-y OS and 83.6% 5-y CSS vs 74.1% 5-y OS and 83.3% 5-y CSS for node positive patients (P = .55 and P = .58, respectively). Univariate and multivariable survival analyses in the whole trial population showed that older age, and higher tumor grade and stage were significantly associated to a worse prognosis. CONCLUSION: Older women faced an intrinsic poorer survival whether or not they underwent lymphadenectomy, and, unexpectedly, irrespective of the presence of nodal metastasis. Only in older patients was obesity (body mass index >30) significantly associated with scarce prognosis.
- Published
- 2013
28. Late Quaternary buried lagoons in the northern Campania plain (southern Italy): evolution of a coastal system under the influence of volcano-tectonics and eustatism
- Author
-
Elda Russo Ermolli, Francesco Toscano, Paola Romano, Valentino Di Donato, Igor M. Villa, Paola Petrosino, Antonio Santo, Nicoletta Santangelo, G. Ciampo, P. Esposito, Santangelo, N, Ciampo, I, Di Donato, V, Esposito, P, Petrosino, P, Romano, P, Russo Ermolli, E, Santo, A, Toscano, F, Villa, I, Santangelo, Nicoletta, Ciampo, Giuliano, DI DONATO, Valentino, P., Esposito, Petrosino, Paola, Romano, Paola, RUSSO ERMOLLI, Elda, Santo, Antonio, F., Toscano, and I. M., Villa
- Subjects
tephrostratigraphy ,geography ,Tectonic subsidence ,Tyrrhenian (OIS 5e) ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Pleistocene ,Coastal plain ,GEO/04 - GEOGRAFIA FISICA E GEOMORFOLOGIA ,Geology ,Paleontology ,Volcano ,Paleogeography ,GEO/08 - GEOCHIMICA E VULCANOLOGIA ,Volcano tectonics ,Sedimentary rock ,Paleoecology ,Tephrostratigraphy ,Quaternary ,Sea level - Abstract
The Campania Plain is a wide coastal plain characterized by a huge quaternary sedimentary record more than two thousand meters thick. In order to analyze the most superficial portion of the infilling succession an 80 m-long core was drilled in the northern sector of the plain. The upper part of the core is entirely made up of an ignimbrite formation (Campania Ignimbrite, 39 ka), lying unconformably above marine sediments alternating with volcanic products. Macro- and micro-paleontological analysis together with tephrostratigraphy and 39Ar/40Ar dating allowed the paleoenvironmental evolution of the studied area to be reconstructed. The paleogeography during OIS 7 and 5 was characterized by the presence of lagoon systems. These are now located 28 km inland from the present coastline and buried at –40 and –18 m with respect to the present sea level, as a consequence of tectonic subsidence. Two major periods of volcanic activity were recorded in the core prior to Campania Ignimbrite emplacement, confirming the existence of important phases of volcanic activity in the plain during the end of the Middle Pleistocene. The SME multiproxy record represents the first continuous record of volcanic products emplaced in the last 200 ka north of the Campania volcanic sources
- Published
- 2010
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.