26 results on '"Preda, Lorenzo"'
Search Results
2. Role of cardiac magnetic resonance in the differential diagnosis between arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy with left ventricular involvement and previous infectious myocarditis.
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Colombo, Davide, Turco, Annalisa, Lomi, Sara, Valentini, Adele, Bassi, Emilio, Scelsi, Laura, Greco, Alessandra, Schirinzi, Sandra, Zacchino, Michela, Acquaro, Mauro, Oliveri, Federico, Preda, Lorenzo, and Ghio, Stefano
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- 2023
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3. Carotid blowout syndrome after reirradiation for head and neck malignancies: a comprehensive systematic review for a pragmatic multidisciplinary approach
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Alterio, Daniela, Turturici, Irene, Volpe, Stefania, Ferrari, Annamaria, Russell-Edu, Samuel William, Vischioni, Barbara, Mardighian, Dikran, Preda, Lorenzo, Gandini, Sara, Marvaso, Giulia, Augugliaro, Matteo, Durante, Stefano, Arculeo, Simona, Patti, Filippo, Boccuzzi, Dario, Casbarra, Alessia, Starzynska, Anna, Santoni, Riccardo, and Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja
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- 2020
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4. RBE-weighted dose in carbon ion therapy for ACC patients: Impact of the RBE model translation on treatment outcomes
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Molinelli, Silvia, Bonora, Maria, Magro, Giuseppe, Casale, Silvia, Dale, Jon Espen, Fossati, Piero, Hasegawa, Azusa, Mirandola, Alfredo, Ronchi, Sara, Russo, Stefania, Preda, Lorenzo, Valvo, Francesca, Orecchia, Roberto, Ciocca, Mario, and Vischioni, Barbara
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- 2019
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5. MRI-based tumour control probability in skull-base chordomas treated with carbon-ion therapy
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Buizza, Giulia, Molinelli, Silvia, D'Ippolito, Emma, Fontana, Giulia, Pella, Andrea, Valvo, Francesca, Preda, Lorenzo, Orecchia, Roberto, Baroni, Guido, and Paganelli, Chiara
- Published
- 2019
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6. 1917: multimodal imaging in protontherapy: accuracy in contouring of organs at risk in skull base chordoma
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Anemoni, Luca, Imparato, Sara, Iannalfi, Alberto, Riva, Giulia, Ciccone, Lucia Pia, Orlandi, Ester, Preda, Lorenzo, Paganelli, Chiara, Morelli, Letizia, Tampellini, Sara, and Piazzolla, Maria Elena
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- 2024
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7. 1872: Apparent diffusion coefficient maps as early biomarker for carbon ion RT in adenoid cystic carcinoma
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Fontana, Giulia, Bonora, Maria, Donatelli, Antonella, Vischioni, Barbara, Ronchi, Sara, Ingargiola, Rossana, Camarda, Anna Maria, Lillo, Sara, Molinelli, Silvia, Russo, Stefania, Vitolo, Viviana, Fiore, Maria Rosaria, Iannalfi, Alberto, Barcellini, Amelia, Riva, Giulia, Ciccone, Lucia P., Chalaszczyk, Agnieszka, Rotondi, Marco, Franzetti, Jessica, Colombo, Francesca, Ciocca, Mario, Preda, Lorenzo, Imparato, Sara, and Orlandi, Ester
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- 2024
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8. MRI evaluation of sacral chordoma treated with carbon ion radiotherapy alone
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Preda, Lorenzo, Stoppa, Davide, Fiore, Maria Rosaria, Fontana, Giulia, Camisa, Sofia, Sacchi, Roberto, Ghitti, Michele, Viselner, Gisela, Fossati, Piero, Valvo, Francesca, Vitolo, Viviana, Bonora, Maria, Iannalfi, Alberto, Vischioni, Barbara, Vai, Alessandro, Mastella, Edoardo, Baroni, Guido, and Orecchia, Roberto
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- 2018
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9. Organ motion quantification and margins evaluation in carbon ion therapy of abdominal lesions.
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Kalantzopoulos, Charalampos, Meschini, Giorgia, Paganelli, Chiara, Fontana, Giulia, Vai, Alessandro, Preda, Lorenzo, Vitolo, Viviana, Valvo, Francesca, and Baroni, Guido
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• 2DcineMRI estimates tumour motion in carbon ion therapy of abdominal site. • The estimated motion from cineMRI and 4DCT are significant different. • Tumor margins built on cineMRI were compared to the clinical margin. • The clinical margin was not significant different from the cineMRI one for gating. • Gating treatment is robust to inter-fraction and intra-fraction motion. In image-guided particle radiotherapy of abdominal lesions, respiratory motion hinders treatment accuracy. In this study, 2D cineMRI data were used to quantify the tumor (GTV) motion and to evaluate the clinical approach based on deriving an internal target volume (ITV) from a planning 4DCT for gating treatments. Seven patients with abdominal lesions were treated with carbon-ion therapy at the National Centre of Oncological Hadron-therapy (Italy). The MR scan was performed on the same day of the 4DCT acquisition. For four patients, an additional MR was acquired approximately after 1 week. The cineMRI combined with deformable image registration algorithm was used to quantify tumor motion. Afterwards, two ITVs were defined considering (1) all phases (ITV FB) and (2) only phases within the gating window (ITV G), and then compared with the clinical (4DCT-derived) ITVs (ITV CG and ITV CFB). Tumor residual motion estimated by cineMRI data in the two MRI sessions resulted not significantly different from 4DCT, although cineMRI accounted for cycle-to-cycle variations. The ITV normalized for the GTV median values were higher for ITV FB with respect to ITV G , ITV CFB and ITV CG. The Hausdorff distances with respect to the GTV were up to 10.55 mm, 3.13 mm, 5.56 mm and 2.51 mm, for ITV FB , ITV G , ITV CFB and ITV CG , respectively. According to both metrics, ITV CG and ITV G were not found significantly different. CineMRI acquisitions allowed to quantify organ motion without delivering additional dose to the patient and to verify treatment margins in gated carbon-ion therapy of abdominal lesions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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10. Langerhans' cell histiocytosis
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Fazio, Nicola, Spaggiari, Lorenzo, Pelosi, Giuseppe, Presicci, Fabio, and Preda, Lorenzo
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Chest pain -- Risk factors ,Chest pain -- Diagnosis ,Chest pain -- Care and treatment ,Langerhans-cell histiocytosis -- Research ,Medical research ,Medicine, Experimental - Published
- 2005
11. Towards mm-wave spectroscopy for dielectric characterization of breast surgical margins.
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Summers, Paul E., Vingiani, Andrea, Di Pietro, Salvatore, Martellosio, Andrea, Espin-Lopez, Pedro F., Di Meo, Simona, Pasian, Marco, Ghitti, Michele, Mangiacotti, Marco, Sacchi, Roberto, Veronesi, Paolo, Bozzi, Maurizio, Mazzanti, Andrea, Perregrini, Luca, Svelto, Francesco, Preda, Lorenzo, Bellomi, Massimo, and Renne, Giuseppe
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SURGICAL site ,DIELECTRIC properties ,BREAST ,DIELECTRICS ,SPECTROMETRY - Abstract
The evaluation of the surgical margin in breast conservative surgery is a matter of general interest as such treatments are subject to the critical issue of margin status as positive surgical margins can undermine the effectiveness of the procedure. The relatively unexplored ability of millimeter-wave (mm-wave) spectroscopy to provide insight into the dielectric properties of breast tissues was investigated as a precursor to their possible use in assessment of surgical margins. We assessed the ability of a mm-wave system with a roughly hemispherical sensitive volume of ∼3 mm radius to distinguish malignant breast lesions in prospectively and consecutively collected tumoral and non-tumoral ex-vivo breast tissue samples from 91 patients. We characterized the dielectric properties of 346 sites in these samples, encompassing malignant, fibrocystic disease and normal breast tissues. An expert pathologist subsequently evaluated all measurement sites. At multivariate analysis, mm-wave dielectric properties were significantly correlated to histologic diagnosis and fat content. Further, using 5-fold cross-validation in a Bayesian logistic mixed model that considered the patient as a random effect, the mm-wave dielectric properties of neoplastic tissues were significantly different from normal breast tissues, but not from fibrocystic tissue. Reliable discrimination of malignant from normal, fat-rich breast tissue to a depth compatible with surgical margin assessment requirements was achieved with mm-wave spectroscopy. • Mm-wave dielectric properties of breast cancer differed from normal tissues. • Benign lesions had mm-wave dielectric properties of intermediate to normal and malignant tissues. • Mm-wave spectroscopy may have a role in surgical margin management. • Future studies should account for inter-individual differences in breast dielectric properties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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12. Set-up errors in head and neck cancer patients treated with intensity modulated radiation therapy: Quantitative comparison between three-dimensional cone-beam CT and two-dimensional kilovoltage images.
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Ciardo, Delia, Alterio, Daniela, Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja, Riboldi, Marco, Zerini, Dario, Santoro, Luigi, Preve, Eleonora, Rondi, Elena, Comi, Stefania, Serafini, Flavia, Laudati, Antonio, Ansarin, Mohssen, Preda, Lorenzo, Baroni, Guido, and Orecchia, Roberto
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Objectives To compare the patient set-up error detection capabilities of three-dimensional cone beam computed tomography (3D-CBCT) and two-dimensional orthogonal kilovoltage (2D-kV) techniques. Methods 3D-CBCT and 2D-kV projections were acquired on 29 head-and-neck (H&N) patients undergoing Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy (IMRT) on the first day of treatment (time 0) and after the delivery of 40 Gy and 50 Gy. Set-up correction vectors were analyzed after fully automatic image registration as well as after revision by radiation oncologists. The dosimetric effects of the different sensitivities of the two image guidance techniques were assessed. Results A statistically significant correlation among detected set-up deviations by the two techniques was found along anatomical axes (0.60 < ρ < 0.72, p < 0.0001); no correlation was found for table rotation (p = 0.41). No evidence of statistically significant differences between the indications provided along the course of the treatment was found; this was also the case when full automatic versus manually refined correction vectors were compared. The dosimetric effects analysis revealed slight statistically significant differences in the median values of the maximum relative dose to mandible, spinal cord and its 5 mm Planning Organ at Risk Volume (0.95%, 0.6% and 2.45%, respectively), with higher values (p < 0.01) observed when 2D-kV corrections were applied. Conclusion A similar sensitivity to linear set-up errors was observed for 2D-kV and 3D-CBCT image guidance techniques in our H&N patient cohort. Higher rotational deviations around the table vertical axis were detected by the 3D-CBCT with respect to the 2D-kV method, leading to a consistent better sparing of organs at risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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13. Computed Tomography-Guided Preoperative Radiotracer Localization of Nonpalpable Lung Nodules.
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Bellomi, Massimo, Veronesi, Giulia, Trifirò, Giuseppe, Brambilla, Sarah, Bonello, Luke, Preda, Lorenzo, Casiraghi, Monica, Borri, Alessandro, Paganelli, Giovanni, and Spaggiari, Lorenzo
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LUNG disease diagnosis ,PREOPERATIVE care ,POSITRON emission tomography ,RADIOACTIVE tracers ,MEDICAL screening ,OXIMES ,SURGICAL complications ,MEDICAL statistics - Abstract
Background: We describe preoperative computed tomography (CT)–guided injection of radiotracer technetium
99m macroaggregates (99m Tc-MAA) in challenging small lung nodules, intraoperative localization, and resection. Methods: Between November 2007 and February 2010, 44 patients with 47 lung nodules which were detected incidentally or at screening and that were18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18 F FDG-PET) positive or increasing in size at subsequent CT scans were candidates for surgical biopsy. Inclusion criteria for preoperative percutaneous CT-guided (low-dose technique)99m Tc-MAA localization included having at least one of the following characteristics: nodule size less than 1 cm, subsolid morphology, or distance from the pleura greater than 1 cm. Results: Mean nodule size was 11 mm (range, 5 to 24 mm); 24 nodules were nonsolid, 15 nodules were partially solid, and 8 nodules had a solid morphology. Mean distance from the pleura was 11 mm (range, 0 to 35 mm). Localization complications included 13 minor asymptomatic pneumothoraces, 9 parenchymal hemorrhage suffusions, 1 mild allergic reaction to contrast medium, and 2 patients with chest pain after the procedure. Nine patients had mild extravasation of radiotracer into the pleura. In 2 cases, there was an extravasation of a significant quantity of radiotracer into the pleural cavity. Thoracoscopic biopsy was performed in 30 cases, 2 cases were converted to thoracotomy, and 12 patients underwent intentional thoracotomy. Conclusions: Asymptomatic subjects with suspicious nodules detected by screening or incidental CT are best candidates due to small lesion size and high percentage of nonsolid morphology, making thoracoscopic biopsy potentially difficult. Radiotracer localization is a safe, versatile, simple technique to help perform diagnosis with a minimally invasive approach in nonpalpable lung lesions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
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14. Difficulties encountered managing nodules detected during a computed tomography lung cancer screening program.
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Veronesi, Giulia, Bellomi, Massimo, Scanagatta, Paolo, Preda, Lorenzo, Rampinelli, Cristiano, Guarize, Juliana, Pelosi, Giuseppe, Maisonneuve, Patrick, Leo, Francesco, Solli, Piergiorgio, Masullo, Michele, and Spaggiari, Lorenzo
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LUNG cancer ,CANCER patients ,TOMOGRAPHY ,MEDICAL imaging systems - Abstract
Objective: The main challenge of screening a healthy population with low-dose computed tomography is to balance the excessive use of diagnostic procedures with the risk of delayed cancer detection. We evaluated the pitfalls, difficulties, and sources of mistakes in the management of lung nodules detected in volunteers in the Cosmos single-center screening trial. Methods: A total of 5201 asymptomatic high-risk volunteers underwent screening with multidetector low-dose computed tomography. Nodules detected at baseline or new nodules at annual screening received repeat low-dose computed tomography at 1 year if less than 5 mm, repeat low-dose computed tomography 3 to 6 months later if between 5 and 8 mm, and fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography if more than 8 mm. Growing nodules at the annual screening received low-dose computed tomography at 6 months and computed tomography-positron emission tomography or surgical biopsy according to doubling time, type, and size. Results: During the first year of screening, 106 patients underwent lung biopsy and 91 lung cancers were identified (70% were stage I). Diagnosis was delayed (false-negative) in 6 patients (stage IIB in 1 patient, stage IIIA in 3 patients, and stage IV in 2 patients), including 2 small cell cancers and 1 central lesion. Surgical biopsy revealed benign disease (false-positives) in 15 cases (14%). Positron emission tomography sensitivity was 88% for prevalent cancers and 70% for cancers diagnosed after first annual screening. No needle biopsy procedures were performed in this cohort of patients. Conclusion: Low-dose computed tomography screening is effective for the early detection of lung cancers, but nodule management remains a challenge. Computed tomography-positron emission tomography is useful at baseline, but its sensitivity decreases significantly the subsequent year. Multidisciplinary management and experience are crucial for minimizing misdiagnoses. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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15. Parosteal chondrosarcoma, a very rare condition of the mandibular condyle
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Bernasconi, Giorgio, Preda, Lorenzo, Padula, Ernesto, Baciliero, Ugo, Sammarchi, Luigi, and Bellomi, Massimo
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CORTICAL deafness , *SYMPTOMS , *MEDICAL imaging systems , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
We present a rare case of parosteal chondrosarcoma of the madibular condyle. The patient was referred for a functional limitation of the left temporo-mandibular joint. CT and MRI examinations demonstrated a 3.5-cm cystic mass with a peripheral rim of contrast enhancement located in the left pterygo-maxillary space. The mass had partial intraarticular spread causing deformation and focal cortical erosion of the medial aspect of the condylar head. The lesion was surgically removed; the histological diagnosis was of low-grade chondrosarcoma. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2004
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16. Predictive role of Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) from Diffusion Weighted MRI in patients with sacral chordoma treated with carbon ion radiotherapy (CIRT) alone.
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Preda, Lorenzo, Casale, Silvia, Fanizza, Marianna, Fiore, Maria Rosaria, Viselner, Gisela, Paganelli, Chiara, Buizza, Giulia, Fontana, Giulia, Vitolo, Viviana, Barcellini, Amelia, Baroni, Guido, Fossati, Piero, and Valvo, Francesca
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CHORDOMA , *DIFFUSION magnetic resonance imaging , *DIFFUSION coefficients , *RADIOTHERAPY - Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate if baseline ADC from DWI sequences could predict response to treatment in patients with sacral chordoma not suitable for surgery treated with carbon ion radiotherapy (CIRT) alone compared with volume changes.Methods: Fifty-nine patients with sacral chordoma not suitable for surgery underwent one cycle of CIRT alone and a minimum of 12-months follow-up. All patients underwent MRI before treatment (baseline), every three months in the first two years after treatment, and every six months afterwards. For each MRI, lesion volume was obtained and median, kurtosis, and skewness ADC were analyzed within the whole lesion volume. Volume changes between baseline and the last available follow-up were used to divide patients with partial response, progression of disease and stable disease (PR, PD, and SD).Results: Ten patients were excluded since DWI sequences from baseline MRI were not available. ADC maps obtained from baseline DWI examinations of 50 lesions in the remaining 49 patients were considered. Seven lesions were categorized as PD, 30 PR, and 13 SD. PD showed significantly higher median ADC values at baseline (p = 0.003) compared with both PR and SD (1665vs1253vs1263 *10-6 mm²/s), and more negative skewness values (-0.26vs0.26vs0.08), although not significantly different (p = 0.16).Conclusions: Preliminary results suggest that baseline ADC could predict response to treatment with CIRT, particularly to detect potential non-responder patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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17. [OA044] Quantitative DW-MRI for treatment evaluation in particle therapy: ROLE of ADC maps estimation.
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Buizza, Giulia, Paganelli, Chiara, Fontana, Giulia, Franconeri, Andrea, Raciti, Maria Vittoria, Viselner, Gisela, Anemoni, Luca, Iannalfi, Alberto, Preda, Lorenzo, and Baroni, Guido
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Purpose Apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) plays a key-role in the context of quantitative diffusion-weighted MRI (DW-MRI) for response assessment in particle-therapy. With this purpose, threshold values defined on ADC could be clinically used to discriminate respondent and not-respondent patients. However, concordant ADC measurements are required for their acceptance as quantitative biomarkers [1] . This study aims at retrospectively investigating the role of ADC maps estimation by comparing different offline strategies with respect to an online map, directly derived from the clinical scanner. Methods DW-MRI at 7 b-values (0, 50, 100, 150, 200, 400, 1000 s/mm 2 ) were acquired during 58 examinations of the brain using a clinical MR scanner (3T). ADC was computed online and offline. For the latter case, DW-MR images at two (ADC_2b: 0–1000 s/mm 2 ; ADC_200b: 200–1000 s/mm 2 ), three (ADC_3b: 50-400–1000 s/mm 2 ) and all (ADC_7b) b-values were used to linearly fit a mono-exponential model exploiting least-square optimization. Voxel-wise absolute differences were computed between any offline and the online ADC for each exam (ΔADC_∗∗b), both on the whole image and on the manually delineated gross tumour volume (GTV). Median values of such differences were then compared using the Friedman test ( α = 0.01). Results Evaluating the whole DW-MRI images, ΔADC_2b did not show any statically significant difference with respect to ΔADC_3b, whereas all other pairs did. Focusing on the GTV, differences between any pair were found to be significantly different. The smallest differences were found for ΔADC_7b ( median WHOLE [iqr] = 0.011 [0.009] and median GTV [iqr] = 0.006 [0.001] 10 - 3 mm 2 /s) and the highest for Δ ADC_200b ( median WHOLE [iqr] = 0.274 [0.034] and median GTV [iqr] = 0.231 [0.034] 10 - 3 mm 2 /s), whereas Δ ADC_3b and Δ ADC_2b showed intermediate results. Conclusions From this preliminary evaluation, online ADC seems to make use of all available DW images, thus better relating to ADC_7b. Attention must be paid when comparing discriminative threshold values based on online ADC maps and studies aiming at defining the optimal b-values combination for different target tissues should be encouraged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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18. 2361: Voxel-wise analysis of DWI lung MR images using deep learning to predict PD-L1 expression.
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Seetha, Sithin Thulasi, Bortolotto, Chandra, Podrecca, Chiara, Messana, Gaia, Marrocco, Alessandra, Bellazzi, Riccardo, Filippi, Andrea Riccardo, and Preda, Lorenzo
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DEEP learning , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *PROGRAMMED death-ligand 1 , *LUNGS , *FORECASTING - Published
- 2024
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19. Prevalence and Complications of Aberrant Subclavian Artery in Patients With Heritable and Nonheritable Arteriopathies.
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Giuliani, Lorenzo, Di Toro, Alessandro, Urtis, Mario, Narula, Nupoor, Grasso, Maurizia, Pelenghi, Stefano, Belliato, Mirko, Bozzani, Antonio, Arici, Vittorio, Pellegrini, Carlo, Serio, Alessandra, Pilotto, Andrea, Fergnani, Viola, Antoniazzi, Elena, Magrassi, Lorenzo, Dore, Roberto, Valentini, Adele, Preda, Lorenzo, Calliada, Fabrizio, and Quaretti, Pietro
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SUBCLAVIAN artery , *MARFAN syndrome , *THORACIC aorta , *GENETIC counseling , *EHLERS-Danlos syndrome , *MECKEL diverticulum - Abstract
An aberrant subclavian artery (ASA) (or lusoria) is the most common congenital anomaly of the aortic arch (0.5%-2.2%; female-to-male ratio 2:1 to 3:1). ASA can become aneurysmal and result in dissection, involving Kommerell's diverticulum when present and the aorta. Data of its significance in genetic arteriopathies are not available. The purpose of this study was to assess the prevalence and complications of ASA in gene-positive and -negative nonatherosclerotic arteriopathies. The series includes 1,418 consecutive patients with gene-positive (n = 854) and gene-negative arteriopathies (n = 564) diagnosed as part of institutional work-up for nonatherosclerotic syndromic and nonsyndromic arteriopathies. Comprehensive evaluation includes genetic counseling, next-generation sequencing multigene testing, cardiovascular and multidisciplinary assessment, and whole-body computed tomography angiography. ASA was found in 34 of 1,418 cases (2.4%), with a similar prevalence in gene-positive (n = 21 of 854, 2.5%) and gene-negative (n = 13 of 564, 2.3%) arteriopathies. Of the former 21 patients, 14 had Marfan syndrome, 5 had Loeys-Dietz syndrome, 1 had type-IV Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, and 1 had periventricular heterotopia type 1. ASA did not segregate with genetic defects. Dissection occurred in 5 of 21 patients with genetic arteriopathies (23.8%; 2 Marfan syndrome and 3 Loeys-Dietz syndrome), all with associated Kommerell's diverticulum. No dissections occurred in gene-negative patients. At baseline, none of the 5 patients with ASA dissection fulfilled criteria for elective repair according to guidelines. The risk of complications of ASA is higher in patients with genetic arteriopathies and is difficult to predict. In these diseases, imaging of the supra-aortic trunks should enter baseline investigations. Determination of precise indications for repair can prevent unexpected acute events such as those described. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Contouring of the Pharyngeal Superior Constrictor Muscle (PSCM). A cooperative study of the Italian Association of Radiation Oncology (AIRO) Head and Neck Group.
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Alterio, Daniela, Ciardo, Delia, Preda, Lorenzo, Argenone, Angela, Caspiani, Orietta, Micera, Renato, Ruo Redda, Maria G., Russi, Elvio G., Bianchi, Ernestina, Orlandi, Ester, Bacigalupo, Almalina, Busetto, Mario, Cante, Domenico, Deantonio, Letizia, De Sanctis, Vitaliana, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Lastrucci, Luciana, Marucci, Laura, Merlotti, Anna, and Molteni, Marinella
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PHARYNGEAL muscles , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging of cancer , *CANCER tomography , *HEAD & neck cancer treatment - Abstract
Background and purpose Irradiation of the Pharyngeal Superior Constrictor Muscle (PSCM) seems to play a crucial role in radiation-related swallowing dysfunctions. Purpose of our study was to quantify operator-related variability in the contouring of PSCM on Computed Tomography (CT) scans and adherence with contours derived from MR images. Materials and methods Three sets of treatment planning CT and their corresponding MR images were selected. Contouring of the PSCM was performed using both a literature-based method, derived from literature review, and an optimized method, derived from Magnetic Resonance (MR) images thus obtaining “literature-based” and “optimized” contours. Each operator contoured the PSCM on CT scans according to both methods for three times in three different days. Inter- and intra-operator variability and adherence to a contour obtained from MR images (named “MR-derived” contour) were analyzed. Results Thirty-four operators participated and 612 contours were obtained. Both intra- and inter-operator variability and adherence to the “MR-derived” contour were significantly different between the two methods ( p ⩽ 0.05). The “optimized” method showed a lower intra- and inter-operator variability and a higher adherence to the “MR-derived” contour. Conclusions The “optimized” method ameliorates both operator-related variability and adherence with MR images. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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21. Lung Ultrasound in Patients with Acute Respiratory Failure Reduces Conventional Imaging and Health Care Provider Exposure to COVID-19.
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Mongodi, Silvia, Orlando, Anita, Arisi, Eric, Tavazzi, Guido, Santangelo, Erminio, Caneva, Luca, Pozzi, Marco, Pariani, Eleonora, Bettini, Giada, Maggio, Giuseppe, Perlini, Stefano, Preda, Lorenzo, Iotti, Giorgio Antonio, and Mojoli, Francesco
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MEDICAL personnel , *ADULT respiratory distress syndrome , *COVID-19 , *PERSONAL protective equipment , *VENTILATOR-associated pneumonia , *FOUR-dimensional imaging , *DIAGNOSTIC ultrasonic imaging - Abstract
Lung ultrasound gained a leading position in the last year as an imaging technique for the assessment and management of patients with acute respiratory failure. In coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), its role may be of further importance because it is performed bedside and may limit chest X-ray and the need for transport to radiology for computed tomography (CT) scan. Since February 21, we progressively turned into a coronavirus-dedicated intensive care unit and applied an ultrasound-based approach to avoid traditional imaging and limit contamination as much as possible. We performed a complete daily examination with lung ultrasound score computation and systematic search of complications (pneumothorax, ventilator-associated pneumonia); on-duty physicians were free to perform CT or chest X-ray when deemed indicated. We compared conventional imaging exams performed in the first 4 wk of the COVID-19 epidemic with those in the same time frame in 2019: there were 84 patients in 2020 and 112 in 2019; 64 and 22 (76.2% vs. 19.6%, p < 0.001) had acute respiratory failure, respectively, of which 55 (85.9%) were COVID-19 in 2020. When COVID-19 patients in 2020 were compared with acute respiratory failure patients in 2019, the median number of chest X-rays was 1.0 (1.0-2.0) versus 3.0 (1.0-4.0) (p = 0.0098); 2 patients 2 (3.6%) versus 7 patients (31.8%) had undergone at least one thoracic CT scan (p = 0.001). A self-imposed ultrasound-based approach reduces the number of chest X-rays and thoracic CT scans in COVID-19 patients compared with patients with standard acute respiratory failure, thus reducing the number of health care providers exposed to possible contamination and sparing personal protective equipment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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22. Perfusion and diffusion in meningioma tumors: a preliminary multiparametric analysis with Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast and IntraVoxel Incoherent Motion MRI.
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Zampini, Marco Andrea, Buizza, Giulia, Paganelli, Chiara, Fontana, Giulia, D'Ippolito, Emma, Valvo, Francesca, Preda, Lorenzo, and Baroni, Guido
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PERFUSION , *TUMOR classification , *TUMOR markers , *BRAIN tumors , *MOTION , *DIFFUSION - Abstract
Multiparametric MRI is a remarkable imaging method for the assessment of patho-physiological processes. In particular, brain tumor characterization has taken advantage of the development of advanced techniques such as Diffusion- (DWI) and Perfusion- (PWI) Weighted Imaging, but a thorough analysis of meningiomas is still lacking despite the variety of computational methods proposed. We compute perfusion and diffusion parametric maps relying on a well-defined methodological workflow, investigating possible correlations between pure and diffusion-based perfusion parameters in a cohort of 26 patients before proton therapy. A preliminary investigation of meningioma staging biomarkers based on IntraVoxel Incoherent Motion and Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast is also reported. We observed significant differences between the gross target volume and the normal appearing white matter for every investigated parameter, confirming the higher vascularization of the neoplastic tissue. DWI and PWI parameters appeared to be weakly correlated and we found that diffusion parameters – the perfusion fraction in particular – could be promising biomarkers for tumor staging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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23. Evaluation of inter-observer variability according to RECIST 1.1 and its influence on response classification in CT measurement of liver metastases.
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Bellomi, Massimo, De Piano, Francesca, Ancona, Eleonora, Lodigiani, Alessandra Ferla, Curigliano, Giuseppe, Raimondi, Sara, and Preda, Lorenzo
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LIVER metastasis , *COMPUTED tomography , *CANCER chemotherapy , *CANCER patients , *DIAGNOSIS , *PATIENTS , *BREAST tumors , *COLON tumors , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LIVER tumors , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RESEARCH bias ,RECTUM tumors ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study is the evaluation of inter-observer variability in the measurement of liver metastases according to RECIST and its influence on response classification.Patients and Methods: A total of 100 radiologists measured liver target lesions, on pre- and post-chemotherapy CT scans of three patients. Each observer filled out a questionnaire about his personal and work features. The evaluations of a well experienced radiologist, considered as "the gold standard", were compared to those taken by the observers. The percentage of the observers in agreement with the reviewer, in terms of the response category and in terms of inter-observer variability, was calculated for each patient.Results: The percentage of the inter-observer agreement was elevated. Most of the observers in agreement with the reviewer were senior radiologists, while those who disagreed were junior radiologist, but this result did not reach a statistical significance. More than 30% of observers disagreed with the reviewer at least in one of the three cases.Conclusions: RECIST measurements are reproducible on a large and heterogeneous population of radiologists. Age and expertise of the radiologist remain the most critical factors: this suggests a revision by well-experienced radiologists in clinical trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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24. The role of ultrasound-guided transcutaneous tru-cut biopsy in diagnosing untreated and recurrent laryngo-hypopharyngeal masses.
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De Fiori, Elvio, Conte, Giorgio, Ansarin, Mohssen, De Benedetto, Luigi, Bonello, Luke, Alterio, Daniela, Maffini, Fausto, Bellomi, Massimo, and Preda, Lorenzo
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HYPOPHARYNGEAL cancer , *LARYNGEAL cancer diagnosis , *ULTRASONIC imaging , *CANCER relapse , *BIOPSY , *CANCER patients , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *COMPUTER-assisted surgery ,LARYNGEAL tumors ,PHARYNX tumors ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the diagnostic performance of Ultrasound-guided Transcutaneous Tru-Cut biopsy (USGTCB) of laryngo-hypopharyngeal masses suspicious for malignancy. Furthermore we investigated whether USGTCB is accurate for both untreated masses and suspected recurrences.Materials and Methods: From August 2004 to July 2014 we prospectively enrolled 66 patients for a total of 68 USGTCBs: 38 USGTCB were performed for a suspicious untreated mass and in 30 for a suspected recurrence. We calculated the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value for all procedures and separately for untreated masses and suspected recurrences.Results: USGTCB diagnosed 57 malignancies (51 squamous cell carcinomas, 6 other tumors) and 11 benign lesions. There were no false positives reported, whereas five false negatives were observed: two in patients with an untreated mass, three in patients with a suspected recurrence. Overall, the sensitivity of the technique was 91.9% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 82.2-97.3%); the specificity was 100% (95% CI: 54.1-100%); positive and negative predictive values were 100% (95% CI: 93.7-100%) and 54.5% (95% CI: 23.5-83.1%) respectively, with similar performances in untreated masses and suspected recurrences of SCC.Conclusion: USGTCB is an effective procedure for the histological diagnosis of laryngo-hypopharyngeal masses suspicious for malignancy in patients showing contraindications to biopsy via microlaryngoscopy under general, with similar performances for untreated masses and suspected recurrences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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25. Compartmental tongue surgery: Long term oncologic results in the treatment of tongue cancer
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Calabrese, Luca, Bruschini, Roberto, Giugliano, Gioacchino, Ostuni, Angelo, Maffini, Fausto, Massaro, Maria Angela, Santoro, Luigi, Navach, Valeria, Preda, Lorenzo, Alterio, Daniela, Ansarin, Mohssen, and Chiesa, Fausto
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TONGUE cancer , *OPERATIVE surgery , *CANCER relapse , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *DISEASE management ,TONGUE surgery - Abstract
Summary: Compartmental tongue surgery (CTS) is a surgical technique that removes the compartments (anatomo-functional units) containing the primary tumor, eliminating the disease and potential muscular, vascular, glandular and lymphatic pathways of spread and recurrence. Compartment boundaries are defined as each hemi-tongue bounded by the lingual septum, the stylohyoid ligament and muscle, and the mylohyoid muscle. In this non-randomized retrospective study we evaluated the oncologic efficacy of CTS in patients with squamous cell carcinoma (SCCA) of the tongue treated from 1995 to 2008. We evaluated 193 patients with primary, previously untreated cT2-4a, cN0, cN+, M0 SCCA with no contraindication to anesthesia and able to give informed consent. Fifty patients treated between October 1995 and July 1999 received standard surgery (resection margin >1cm); 143 patients treated between July 1999 and January 2008 received CTS. Study endpoints were: 5-year local disease-free, locoregional disease-free and overall survival. After 5years, local disease control was achieved in 88.4% of CTS patients (16.8% improvement on standard surgery); locoregional disease control in 83.5% (24.4% improvement) and overall survival was 70.7% (27.3% improvement). The markedly improved outcomes in CTS patients, compared to those treated by standard surgery, suggest CTS as an important new approach in the surgical management of tongue cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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26. Lung cancer screening with low-dose computed tomography: A non-invasive diagnostic protocol for baseline lung nodules
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Veronesi, Giulia, Bellomi, Massimo, Mulshine, James L., Pelosi, Giuseppe, Scanagatta, Paolo, Paganelli, Giovanni, Maisonneuve, Patrick, Preda, Lorenzo, Leo, Francesco, Bertolotti, Raffaella, Solli, Piergiorgio, and Spaggiari, Lorenzo
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LUNG cancer diagnosis , *MEDICAL screening , *POSITRON emission tomography , *SPIRAL computed tomography , *TOMOGRAPHY , *CIGARETTE smokers - Abstract
Summary: Background: Indeterminate non-calcified lung nodules are frequent when low-dose spiral computed tomography (LD-CT) is used for lung cancer screening. We assessed the diagnostic utility of a non-invasive work-up protocol for nodules detected at baseline in volunteers enrolled in our single-centre screening trial, and followed for at least 1 year. Methods: 5201 high-risk volunteers, recruited over 1 year from October 2004, underwent baseline LD-CT; 4821 (93%) returned for the first repeat LD-CT. Nodules ≤5mm underwent repeat LD-CT at 1 year; nodules 5.1–8mm underwent LD-CT 3 months later; lesions >8mm received combined CT-positron emission tomography (CT-PET). A subset of nodules >8mm was studied by CT with contrast. Protocol failures were delayed diagnosis with disease progression beyond stage I, and negative surgical biopsy. Results: 2754 (53%) volunteers presented one or more non-calcified nodules. Ninety-two lung cancers were diagnosed: 55 at baseline and 37 at annual screening (66% stage I). Among the 37 incident cancers, 17 had a baseline nodule that remained stage I, 7 had a baseline nodule that progressed beyond stage I, and 13 presented a new malignant nodule. Baseline and annual cancers were 79 (1.5%) and 13 (0.2%), respectively. In 15 of 104 (14%) invasive diagnostic procedures, the lesion was benign. Sensitivity, and specificity were 91 and 99.7%, respectively, for the entire protocol; 88 and 93% for CT-PET; and 100 and 59% for CT with contrast. Conclusions: The protocol limits invasive diagnostic procedures while few patients have diagnosis delay, supporting the feasibility of lung cancer screening in high-risk subjects by LD-CT. Nevertheless further optimization of the clinical management of screening-detected nodules is necessary. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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