8 results on '"Deandrea M"'
Search Results
2. Reappraising the role of thyroid scintigraphy in the era of TIRADS: A clinically-oriented viewpoint.
- Author
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Trimboli P, Bojunga J, Deandrea M, Frasca F, Imperiale A, Leoncini A, Paone G, Pitoia F, Rotondi M, Sadeghi R, Scappaticcio L, Treglia G, and Piccardo A
- Subjects
- Humans, Ultrasonography methods, Thyroid Nodule diagnostic imaging, Radionuclide Imaging methods, Thyroid Gland diagnostic imaging, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Thyroid nodules (TNs) are a common entity, with the majority being benign. Therefore, employing an accurate rule-out strategy in clinical practice is essential. In the thyroid field, the current era is significantly marked by the worldwide diffusion of ultrasound (US)-based malignancy risk stratification systems of TN, usually reported as Thyroid Imaging Reporting And Data System (TIRADS). With the advent of US (and later TIRADS), the role of thyroid scintigraphy (TS) in clinical practice has gradually diminished. The authors of the present paper believe that the role of TS should be reappraised, also considering its essential role in detecting autonomously functioning thyroid nodules and its limited contribution to detecting thyroid cancers. Thus, this document aims to furnish endocrinologists, radiologists, surgeons, and nuclear medicine physicians with practical information to appropriately use TS., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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3. Continuous subcutaneous rhPTH infusion for managing difficult chronic hypoparathyroidism. A systematic review.
- Author
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Gamarra E, Retta F, Lucatello B, Ragazzoni F, Camponovo C, Deandrea M, and Trimboli P
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- Adult, Humans, Child, Calcium therapeutic use, Vitamin D therapeutic use, Infusions, Subcutaneous, Injections, Subcutaneous, Parathyroid Hormone therapeutic use, Hypoparathyroidism drug therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: Standard treatment for chronic hypoparathyroidism is represented by long-life per os supplementation of calcium and vitamin D. Since 90s, exogenous PTH is also available, but a not negligible number of patients experience a poor control. Starting from the experience with pumps in diabetes, it has been hypothesized that the infusion of PTH through pump might result in a better disease control. The aim of this systematic review is to summarize the published data about continuous subcutaneous PTH infusion in chronic hypoPTH patients and achieve conclusions for clinical practice., Methods: A comprehensive computer literature search of the PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, and Scopus databases was conducted by two authors independently (last search on November 30, 2022). All findings were summarized and critically discussed., Results: We included 14 of the 103 retrieved articles, 2 RCTs, 8 case reports, and 4 case series, published between 2008 and 2022. Of the total 40 patients, 17 were adults, and 23 pediatric. The etiology was postsurgical in 50% of cases and genetic in the other 50%. All had a failure of standard care and a rapid improvement of clinical and biochemical parameters on PTH pump therapy, without severe adverse events., Conclusions: Based on literature, pump PTH infusion may represent an effective, safe, and feasible option for patients with chronic hypoparathyroidism refractory to standard therapy. From a clinical perspective, careful patient selection, a skilled healthcare team, the assessment of the local setting and the collaboration with pump suppliers are essential., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
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4. Head-to-head comparison of FNA cytology vs. calcitonin measurement in FNA washout fluids (FNA-CT) to diagnose medullary thyroid carcinoma. A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Trimboli P, Giannelli J, Marques B, Piccardo A, Crescenzi A, and Deandrea M
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- Biopsy, Fine-Needle, Calcitonin, Humans, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine diagnosis, Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine pathology, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnosis, Thyroid Neoplasms pathology, Thyroid Nodule pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: The sensitivity of cytology after fine needle aspiration (FNA-cytology) in detecting medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) is low. To overcome this problem, measuring calcitonin (CT) in washout fluid of FNA (FNA-CT) has been largely diffused and showed good performance. However, no evidence-based study exists comparing systematically the sensitivity of FNA-cytology and FNA-CT. This study aimed to systematically review the literature and collect data allowing a head-to-head comparison meta-analysis between FNA-cytology and FNA-CT in detecting MTC lesions., Methods: The online databases of PubMed/MEDLINE and Scopus were searched until June 2021. Original articles reporting the use of both FNA-cytology and FNA-CT in the same series of histologically proven MTC lesions were included They were extracted general features of each study, number of MTC lesions (nodule and neck lymph nodes), and true positive and false negatives of both FNA-cytology and FNA-CT., Results: Six studies were included. The sensitivity of FNA-cytology varied from 20% to 86% with a pooled value of 54% (95% CI 35-73%) and significant heterogeneity. The sensitivity of FNA-CT was higher than 95% in almost all studies with a pooled value of 98% (95% CI 96-100%) without heterogeneity. The sensitivity of FNA-CT was significantly higher than that of FNA-cytology., Conclusions: FNA-CT is significantly more sensitive than FNA-cytology in detecting MTC. Accordingly, FNA-CT represents the standard method to use in patients with suspicious MTC lesions, combined with cytology., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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5. Treating thyroid nodules by radiofrequency: is the delivered energy correlated with the volume reduction rate? A pilot study.
- Author
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Trimboli P and Deandrea M
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Pilot Projects, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Radiofrequency Ablation, Thyroid Nodule surgery
- Abstract
Objective: Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) was proven as effective in reducing thyroid nodules' volume. However, whether technical procedure aspects could influence the volume reduction rate (VRR) has not been clarified. This retrospective pilot study aimed to analyze the correlation of RFA power, duration, and energy with VRR., Methods: During the period from June to December 2018 two primary-care centers treated benign thyroid nodules of adult outpatients according to the same RFA procedure. Technical parameters to be investigated were the following: median power (P
median ), effective time of treatment (Teff ), energy calculated as Pmedian × Teff (Ecalc ), and energy delivered per mL as Kcal × 4184 × nodule's volume (Edel ). Continuous variables were analyzed by the Mann-Whitney test. Data of 1-year posttreatment follow-up were collected on December 2019 and the correlation of the above parameters with VRR was analyzed by linear regression., Results: Forty-one nodules were included and their 1-year VRR was 66.6%. RFA was performed with a Pmedian of 55 W, Teff 10.24 min, Ecalc 31,380 J, and Edel 1473 J/mL. Edel was significantly correlated with VRR (p = 0.014) while Pmedian , Teff , and Ecalc not. A strong correlation of Edel with VRR was found in nodules <10 mL (p = 0.001) while no significant correlation was observed in nodules >10 mL., Conclusions: This study showed that the energy delivered with RFA is the only technical parameter significantly correlated with the VRR of thyroid nodules.- Published
- 2020
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6. Prognosis of patients with differentiated thyroid carcinomas having a preoperative cytological report of indeterminate at low or high risk. A multicenter study.
- Author
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Trimboli P, Palermo A, Deandrea M, Piccardo A, Campennì A, Valabrega S, Grani G, Santolamazza G, Bottoni G, Barnabei A, Ramundo V, Lauretta R, Monte L, Ferrarazzo G, Paone G, Crosetto C, Ruggeri RM, Baldari S, Chiefari A, Vottari S, Giarnieri E, Perrella E, Limone P, Durante C, Giovanella L, Appetecchia M, and Crescenzi A
- Subjects
- Adult, Carcinoma pathology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Thyroid Gland pathology, Thyroid Neoplasms pathology, Carcinoma diagnosis, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Italian cytology system for thyroid fine-needle aspiration (FNA) includes indeterminate lesions at low- (Tir 3A) and high-risk (Tir 3B). The present retrospective multicenter study was undertaken to compare the histological type of cancers and disease-free survival in these two groups., Methods: Eight institutions participated. Thyroid cancer patients diagnosed and followed-up after Tir 3A or Tir 3B were reviewed. Histological diagnosis was adopted as the gold standard. Patients were defined with cancer recurrence or no evidence of disease. Disease-free survival (DFS) was calculated. A non-parametric statistical analysis was used. DFS was estimated by Kaplan-Meier method and Hazard Ratio (HR) defined the slope of curves., Results: Two hundred and nine patients (median DFS 24 months) were enrolled and a 6.3% of these recurred. Tir 3B group had higher age (p = 0.014), larger cancer size (p = 0.0002), shorter DFS (p = 0.003), higher number of aggressive cancers (p = 0.006), and relapse frequency double than Tir 3A. At survival curves analysis, Tir 3B group had HR of 2.37 with respect to Tir 3A. At Cox's proportional hazard regression analysis histology was the only significant predictor of relapse., Conclusions: While patients with thyroid FNA of Tir 3B should be addressed to surgery due to high likelihood of more aggressive cancer, a diagnostic surgery could be avoided in patients with Tir 3A if concurrent unsuspicious clinical features are found.
- Published
- 2019
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7. Diagnostic performance of elastography in cytologically indeterminate thyroid nodules.
- Author
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Garino F, Deandrea M, Motta M, Mormile A, Ragazzoni F, Palestini N, Freddi M, Gasparri G, Sgotto E, Pacchioni D, and Limone PP
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Sensitivity and Specificity, Thyroid Nodule pathology, Thyroid Nodule surgery, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Elasticity Imaging Techniques standards, Thyroid Nodule diagnosis
- Abstract
Cytological examination of material from fine-needle aspiration biopsy is the mainstay of diagnosis of thyroid nodules, thanks to its remarkable accuracy and scarcity of complications. However, follicular lesions (also called indeterminate lesions or Thy3 in the current classification), a heterogeneous group of lesions in which cytology is unable to give a definitive diagnosis to, represent its main limit. Elastography has been proposed as a potential diagnostic tool to define the risk of malignancy in the aforementioned nodules, but at present there is no conclusive data due to the small number of specifically addressed studies and the lack of concordance among them. The objective of our study was to evaluate the role of real-time elastography (RTE) for refining diagnosis of Thy3 nodules, by integrating diagnostic information provided by traditional ultrasound (US). The study included 108 patients with Thy3 nodules awaiting for surgery, which were evaluated by US (considering hypoecogenicity, irregular margins, microcalcifications, halo sign, and intranodular vascularization) and RTE. Nodules were classified at RTE using a four-class color scale. At histologic examination, 75 nodules were benign and 33 malignant. As expected, none of the ultrasound parameters alone was adequate in predicting malignancy or benignity of the nodules; in the presence of at least two US risk factors, we obtained 61 % sensitivity, 83 % specificity, and 77 % accuracy with 6.8 OR (95 % CI 2.4-20.4). RTE scores 3 and 4 showed 76 % sensitivity, 88 % specificity, 74 % PPV, and 89 % NPV with diagnostic accuracy of 84 %; the data are statistically significant (p < 0.0001) with a OR of 21.9 (95 % CI 7.1-76). By combining RTE with US parameters, the presence of at least 2 characters of suspicion had 88 % sensitivity and 94 % NPV with 23.8 OR (95 % CI 7-106.3). The use of combined RTE and US leads to the identification of two patients subpopulations which have a significantly different malignancy risk (6 vs. 63 %); further studies are needed to verify if it is possible to send only the first group to thyroidectomy and the other to follow-up.
- Published
- 2015
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8. BRAF (V600E) associates with cytoplasmatic localization of p27kip1 and higher cytokeratin 19 expression in papillary thyroid carcinoma.
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Guerra A, Marotta V, Deandrea M, Motta M, Limone PP, Caleo A, Zeppa P, Esposito S, Fulciniti F, and Vitale M
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- Amino Acid Substitution, Carcinoma, Papillary, Galectin 3 metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Gene Frequency, Glutamic Acid genetics, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Thyroid Cancer, Papillary, Valine genetics, Carcinoma epidemiology, Carcinoma genetics, Carcinoma metabolism, Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p27 metabolism, Cytoplasm metabolism, Keratin-19 metabolism, Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf genetics, Thyroid Neoplasms epidemiology, Thyroid Neoplasms genetics, Thyroid Neoplasms metabolism
- Abstract
The genetic alterations are responsible for the altered protein expression in tumors. The knowledge of the link between the altered protein expression and genetic alterations may provide potentially important biological and clinical information. In this study, the expression of some protein markers (Gal-3, p21Kip1, CK19) known to be associated to the papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) was assessed in a series of surgical samples by immunohistochemistry, and the association between expression of these markers and the BRAF (V600E) mutation was investigated. Gal-3 positive staining was evident in 26 % of benign nodules. The BRAF (V600E) mutation and Gal-3 expression, were found in 55.5 and 87 % of PTC respectively, and were unlinked. The expression of CK19 in benign nodules was weak and limited to scattered follicular cells. Diffuse cytoplasmatic expression of CK19 was present in malignant tumors in a variable percentage of cells. A higher percentage of CK19 expressing cells was associated with BRAF (V600E) (P ≤ 0.001). All benign nodules displayed nuclear p27kip1 in more than 15 % of the cells. Twenty-nine PTC showed a cytoplasmatic staining with negative nuclei. PTC with cytoplasmatic or 0-5 % of cells with nuclear staining, 6-15 % or >15 % of cells with nuclear staining were 72 (66.7 %), 24 (22.2 %), and 12 (11.1 %) respectively. In BRAF (V600E) positive tumors, the cytoplasmatic localization of p27kip1 was significantly more frequent (P = 0.024). In conclusion, we provide evidences that BRAF (V600E) is non-associated with Gal-3 expression, whereas it is associated with cytoplasmatic localization of p27kip1 and higher CK19 expression in PTC.
- Published
- 2013
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