6 results on '"Pedersini, Rebecca"'
Search Results
2. Bone-active drugs in premenopausal women with breast cancer under hormone-deprivation therapies.
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Birtolo, Maria Francesca, Pedersini, Rebecca, Palermo, Andrea, Vena, Walter, Morenghi, Emanuela, Cristofolini, Giacomo, Presciuttini, Barbara, Tabacco, Gaia, Naciu, Anda Mihaela, Pigni, Stella, Laganà, Marta, Mazzoleni, Federica, Cosentini, Deborah, Ciafardini, Antea, Pagani, Mauro, Farina, Davide, Balzarini, Luca, Zambelli, Alberto, Torrisi, Rosalba, and Cianferotti, Luisella
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VERTEBRAL fractures , *BONE health , *BONE density , *HIP fractures , *BONE fractures - Abstract
Background Bone health management in premenopausal women with breast cancer (BC) under hormone-deprivation therapies (HDTs) is often challenging, and the effectiveness of bone-active drugs is still unknown. Methods This retrospective multicenter study included 306 premenopausal women with early BC undergoing HDTs. Bone mineral density (BMD) and morphometric vertebral fractures (VFs) were assessed 12 months after HDT initiation and then after at least 24 months. Results After initial assessment, bone-active drugs were prescribed in 77.5% of women (151 denosumab 60 mg/6 months, 86 bisphosphonates). After 47.0 ± 20.1 months, new VFs were found in 16 women (5.2%). Vertebral fracture risk was significantly associated with obesity (odds ratio [OR] 3.87, P =.028), family history of hip fractures or VFs (OR 3.21, P =.040], chemotherapy-induced menopause (OR 6.48, P <.001), preexisting VFs (OR 25.36, P <.001), baseline T -score less than or equal to −2.5 standard deviation (SD) at any skeletal site (OR 4.14, P =.036), and changes at lumbar and total hip BMD (OR 0.94, P =.038 and OR 0.88, P <.001, respectively). New VFs occurred more frequently in women untreated compared to those treated with bone-active drugs (14/69, 20.8% vs 2/237, 0.8%; P <.001) and the anti-fracture effectiveness remained significant after correction for BMI (OR 0.03; P <.001), family history of fractures (OR 0.03; P <.001), chemotherapy-induced menopause (OR 0.04; P <.001), and preexisting VFs (OR 0.01; P <.001). Conclusions Premenopausal women under HDTs are at high risk of VFs in relationship with high BMI, densitometric diagnosis of osteoporosis, preexisting VFs, and family history of osteoporotic fractures. Vertebral fractures in this setting might be effectively prevented by bisphosphonates or denosumab. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Progression of Vertebral Fractures in Patients with Adrenocortical Carcinoma Undergoing Mitotane Therapy.
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Cosentini, Deborah, Grisanti, Salvatore, Hadoux, Julien, Libè, Rossella, Frigerio, Michele, Laganà, Marta, Deschamps, Frederic, Zamparini, Manuel, Lamartina, Livia, Pedersini, Rebecca, Valsecchi, Clara, Maroldi, Roberto, Ghuzlan, Abir Al, Terzolo, Massimo, Gasparotti, Roberto, Baudin, Eric, and Berruti, Alfredo
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VERTEBRAL fractures ,DISEASE progression - Abstract
Context: Patients with adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) are frequently on mitotane therapy for a long time period. The drug exerts adrenolytic activity requiring glucocorticoid supplementation, which can be potentially detrimental for bone. Objective: To explore whether mitotane with/without chemotherapy is associated with an increased proportion of morphometric vertebral fractures (VFs) in ACC patients. Secondary objectives were proportion of patients with VF progression, or worsening of the spinal deformity index (SDI) during mitotane therapy; and to explore predictive factors of VF progression and a prognostic role of VF progression. Methods: Multicenter, retrospective cohort study of patients with ACC who received mitotane alone or in association to chemotherapy, recruited from January 2010 to January 2020 in 2 reference centers in Italy and France. Results: A significant increase in the frequency of VFs before and after mitotane therapy was seen both in Italian (28.3% vs 47.8%, P = .04) and French (17.8% vs 35.6%, P = .04) series. VF progression was observed in 39.1%, and 28.9% of patients, respectively. Baseline VFs and increased patient body mass index, but not the dose of cortisol supplementation, showed an independent association with VF progression at multivariate analysis. Among the 72 advanced ACC patients, progression of VFs was associated with a poorer survival. Conclusion: The administration of mitotane with/without chemotherapy in ACC patients impairs bone health independently from cortisol supplementation. Appropriate preventive measures to decrease the fracture risk should be implemented in these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. The Interaction of Lean Body Mass With Fat Body Mass Is Associated With Vertebral Fracture Prevalence in Women With Early Breast Cancer Undergoing Aromatase Inhibitor Therapy.
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Monteverdi, Sara, Pedersini, Rebecca, Gallo, Fabio, Maffezzoni, Filippo, Dalla Volta, Alberto, Di Mauro, Pierluigi, Turla, Antonella, Vassalli, Lucia, Ardine, Mara, Formenti, Anna Maria, Simoncini, Edda Lucia, Giustina, Andrea, Maroldi, Roberto, Amoroso, Vito, and Berruti, Alfredo
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LEAN body mass ,BREAST cancer ,BODY composition ,AROMATASE inhibitors ,BONE density - Abstract
Aromatase inhibitors (AIs) induce depletion of estrogen levels, causing bone loss and increased fracture risk in women with breast cancer. High‐fat body mass (FBM) emerged as an independent factor associated with the prevalence of morphometric vertebral fractures (VFs) in patients undergoing AIs. We explored the role of lean body mass (LBM) and the interaction of LBM with FBM in predicting the occurrence of VFs in postmenopausal women who were either AI‐naïve or AI‐treated. A total of 684 consecutive breast cancer patients were enrolled in this cross‐sectional study. Each woman underwent a dual‐energy X‐ray absorptiometry (DXA) scan, measuring bone mineral density (BMD), LBM, and FBM; VFs were assessed using a quantitative morphometric analysis of DXA images. After propensity score matching, the study population was restricted to 480 women, 240 AI‐naïve and 240 AI‐treated. We used multivariable logistic regression models to explore the associations between baseline characteristics, VF prevalence and the interaction between LBM, FBM and AI therapy. No interaction between LBM and AI therapy on VF prevalence was shown. Conversely, we reported a significant interaction between LBM, FBM and AI therapy (p =.0311). Among AI‐treated women having LBM below and FBM above or equal the median value, VF prevalence was numerically higher (15/31; 48.4%) than in other subgroups (VF prevalence: 35.7% in high‐LBM and low‐FBM group, 23.2% in high‐LBM and high‐FBM group, and 19.8% in low‐LBM and low‐FBM group). Among AI‐naïve women, the greatest VF proportion was observed in the subgroup with LBM and FBM below median value (25/92; 27.2%). This study suggests a synergism between LBM and FBM in predicting the morphometric VF in women with early breast cancer undergoing AIs. This observation is new and deserves further investigation. The assessment of body composition by DXA might be useful when estimating fracture risk in this population. © 2020 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research © 2020 The Authors. JBMR Plus published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. Morphometric vertebral fractures in breast cancer patients treated with adjuvant aromatase inhibitor therapy: A cross-sectional study.
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Pedersini, Rebecca, Monteverdi, Sara, Mazziotti, Gherardo, Amoroso, Vito, Roca, Elisa, Maffezzoni, Filippo, Vassalli, Lucia, Rodella, Filippo, Formenti, Anna Maria, Frara, Stefano, Maroldi, Roberto, Berruti, Alfredo, Simoncini, Edda, and Giustina, Andrea
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ADJUVANT treatment of cancer , *BREAST cancer treatment , *BONE density , *AROMATASE inhibitors , *RISK factors of fractures , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background The impact of long-term adjuvant therapy with aromatase inhibitors (AIs) on vertebral fracture (VF) risk is still unclear. Objective In this cross-sectional study, we explored the prevalence and determinants of VFs in breast cancer (BC) patients before and during AI therapy. Each woman underwent a dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) to evaluate bone mineral density (BMD) and identify VFs by a quantitative morphometric approach. Blood samples were collected to measure serum hormone and calcium levels. Results We consecutively included 263 postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive early BC. One-hundred-sixty-nine women were AI-naïve, and 94 were AI-treated. AI-treated patients had lower BMD at total hip ( p = 0.01) and lumbar spine ( p = 0.03), higher serum vitamin D ( p < 0.001) and parathyroid hormone ( p = 0.006) values as compared to AI-naïve patients. The prevalence of VFs was 18.9% in AI-naïve patients, and 31.2% in those assessed during AI therapy (odds ratio 1.90, 95% CI 1.1–3.5, p = 0.03). In AI-naïve patients, VFs were associated with older age ( p = 0.002) and lower BMD values at femoral neck ( p = 0.04) and total hip ( p = 0.007), whereas VFs occurred without association with any parameter analyzed in AI-treated patients. In AI-treated group, the prevalence of VFs was not significantly different between patients with osteoporosis and those with normal BMD (36.7% vs. 20.0%; p = 0.31). Conclusions In women with early BC, AI therapy is associated with high prevalence of radiological VFs, which were shown to be independent of BMD values during the adjuvant treatment. These findings may be clinically relevant since they may lead to a change in management of AI-induced skeletal fragility. Specifically, the results of this study provide a rationale for performing a morphometric evaluation of VFs in all women undergoing treatment with AIs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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6. Prediction of vertebral fractures in cancer patients undergoing hormone deprivation therapies: Reliability of WHO fracture risk assessment tool (FRAX) and bone mineral density in real-life clinical practice.
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Mazziotti, Gherardo, Vena, Walter, Pedersini, Rebecca, Piccini, Sara, Morenghi, Emanuela, Cosentini, Deborah, Zucali, Paolo, Torrisi, Rosalba, Sporeni, Silvio, Simoncini, Edda L., Maroldi, Roberto, Balzarini, Luca, Lania, Andrea G., and Berruti, Alfredo
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• In females under estrogen-deprivation therapies, risk of vertebral fractures was associated with FRAX score for major fractures, with the best therapeutic threshold of 6.5%. • In males under androgen-deprivation therapy, risk of vertebral fractures was high when BMD T-score was lower than −1.0 SD or when subjects were treated with abiraterone. • High body mass index was an independent risk factor for vertebral fractures in males exposed to androgen-deprivation therapy. • In the setting of hormonal deprivation therapies, FRAX and BMD thresholds were lower than those used in post-menopausal osteoporosis and primary male osteoporosis. Prediction of fractures in cancer survivors exposed to hormone-deprivation therapies (HDTs) is a challenge since bone loss is rapid and severe, and determinants of fractures in this setting are still largely unknown. In this study we investigated reliability of the WHO Fracture Risk Assessment Tool (FRAX) and bone mineral density (BMD) to identify subjects developing vertebral fractures during HDTs. Five-hundred-twenty-seven consecutive subjects (429 females with breast cancer, 98 males with prostate cancer; median age 61 years), under HDTs for at least 6 months, were evaluated for vertebral fractures by a radiological and morphometric approach, in relationship with FRAX score, body mass index (BMI), BMD, age and duration of HDTs. Vertebral fractures were found in 140 subjects (26.6%) and spine deformity index was significantly associated with duration of HDTs (rho 0.38; p < 0.001). Only in females, vertebral fractures were significantly associated with FRAX score for major fractures [OR 1.08; P < 0.001]. The best cut-off of FRAX score for major fractures, as calculated by receiving operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was 6.35%. In males, however, vertebral fractures were significantly and independently associated with BMI ≥ 25 Kg/m
2 (OR 17.63; P < 0.001), BMD T-score below −1.0 SD at any skeletal site (OR 7.79; P < 0.001) and gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists (GnRHa) plus abiraterone treatment (OR 11.51; P = 0.001). FRAX and BMD may be useful for predicting vertebral fractures in subjects undergoing HDTs, but the thresholds seem to be lower than those used in the general population. High BMI is a determinant of vertebral fractures in males under HDT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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