37 results on '"Cuccu, I"'
Search Results
2. Primary neuroendocrine neoplasms of the vulva: A review of the MITO rare cancer group
- Author
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Barcellini, A, Golia D'Augè, T, Mandato, V, Cuccu, I, Musella, A, Fruscio, R, Vitale, M, Martinello, R, Mangili, G, Pignata, S, Palaia, I, Barcellini, Amelia, Golia D'Augè, Tullio, Mandato, Vincenzo Dario, Cuccu, Ilaria, Musella, Angela, Fruscio, Robert, Vitale, Maria Giuseppa, Martinello, Ruby, Mangili, Giorgia, Pignata, Sandro, Palaia, Innocenza, Barcellini, A, Golia D'Augè, T, Mandato, V, Cuccu, I, Musella, A, Fruscio, R, Vitale, M, Martinello, R, Mangili, G, Pignata, S, Palaia, I, Barcellini, Amelia, Golia D'Augè, Tullio, Mandato, Vincenzo Dario, Cuccu, Ilaria, Musella, Angela, Fruscio, Robert, Vitale, Maria Giuseppa, Martinello, Ruby, Mangili, Giorgia, Pignata, Sandro, and Palaia, Innocenza
- Abstract
Gynecological neuroendocrine neoplasms are rare entities and can be divided into two groups: carcinoids and neuroendocrine carcinomas. Due to their rarity their management is not standardized. The aim of this work is to summarize and discuss the current literature evidence on this pathology. A scoping literature review was performed in multiple databases. Thirty-one studies were included: 30 case reports and one case series. Patients’ age ranged between 28 and 92 years. Surgery was the most used treatment and the surgical approach included local excision (N = 16/31; 51.6%) with (N = 5/16; 31.25%) or without (N = 11/16; 68.75%) inguinal lymphadenectomy. Adjuvant radiotherapy was delivered in 12 (38.7%) cases; instead, platinum-based therapies were frequently used when chemotherapy was chosen for adjuvant treatment. The overall survival ranged between 20 days to 4 years. However, further research is needed; currently, multimodal approach including surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy appeared safe and feasible for the treatment of these rare and aggressive diseases.
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- 2024
3. MRI- and Histologic-Molecular-Based Radio-Genomics Nomogram for Preoperative Assessment of Risk Classes in Endometrial Cancer
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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, Manganaro, L, 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., Manganaro L., 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, Manganaro, L, 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.
- 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
4. Practice patterns and 90-day treatment-related morbidity in early-stage cervical cancer
- Author
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Bogani, G, Donato, V, Scambia, G, Landoni, F, Ghezzi, F, Muzii, L, Panici, P, Raspagliesi, F, Casarin, J, Di Martino, G, Grassi, T, Perrone, A, De Iaco, P, Multinu, F, Berretta, R, Capozzi, V, Zupi, E, Centini, G, Pellegrino, A, Corso, S, Stevenazzi, G, Boschi, A, Comerci, G, Greco, P, Scutiero, G, Sopracordevole, F, Giorda, G, Fichera, M, Simoncini, T, Caretto, M, Sartori, E, Ferrari, F, Cianci, A, Sarpietro, G, Matarazzo, M, Giampaolino, P, Bifulco, G, Morelli, M, Dio, M, Ferrero, A, Biglia, N, Barra, F, Ferrero, S, Cianci, S, Chiantera, V, Sozzi, G, Ercoli, A, Schettini, S, Orlando, T, Cannone, F, Ettore, G, Puppo, A, Olearo, E, Leone Roberti Maggiore, U, Artuso, V, Palaia, I, Perniola, G, Tripodi, R, D'Auge, T, Cuccu, I, Fischetti, M, Santangelo, G, Casorelli, A, Giannini, A, D'Oria, O, Vizzielli, G, Restaino, S, Bergamini, A, Bocciolone, L, Plotti, F, Angioli, R, Mantovani, G, Ceccaroni, M, Cassini, C, Dominoni, M, Giambanco, L, Amodeo, S, Leo, L, Thommaset, R, Raimondo, D, Seracchioli, R, Malzoni, M, Falcone, F, Gorlero, F, Di Luca, M, Busato, E, Kilzie, S, Dell'Acqua, A, Scarfone, G, Vercellini, P, Petrillo, M, Capobianco, G, Ciavattini, A, Mereu, L, Scollo, P, Sorbi, F, Fambrini, M, Romano, F, Ricci, G, Trojano, G, Damiani, G, Consonni, R, Di Lorenzo, N, Lippolis, A, Tinelli, R, Aguzzoli, L, Mandato, V, Palomba, S, Tripodi, M, Calandra, D, Pellegrini, F, Zullo, F, Surico, D, Remorgida, V, Ruscitto, F, Beretta, P, Vizza, E, Bogani G., Donato V. D., Scambia G., Landoni F., Ghezzi F., Muzii L., Panici P. B., Raspagliesi F., Casarin J., Di Martino G., Grassi T., Perrone A. M., De Iaco P., Multinu F., Berretta R., Capozzi V. A., Zupi E., Centini G., Pellegrino A., Corso S., Stevenazzi G., Boschi A. C., Comerci G., Greco P., Scutiero G., Sopracordevole F., Giorda G., Fichera M., Simoncini T., Caretto M., Sartori E., Ferrari F., Cianci A., Sarpietro G., Matarazzo M. G., Giampaolino P., Bifulco G., Morelli M., Dio M. D., Ferrero A., Biglia N., Barra F., Ferrero S., Cianci S., Chiantera V., Sozzi G., Ercoli A., Schettini S., Orlando T., Cannone F. G., Ettore G., Puppo A., Olearo E., Leone Roberti Maggiore U., Artuso V., Palaia I., Perniola G., Tripodi R., D'Auge T. G., Cuccu I., Fischetti M., Santangelo G., Casorelli A., Giannini A., D'Oria O., Vizzielli G., Restaino S., Bergamini A., Bocciolone L., Plotti F., Angioli R., Mantovani G., Ceccaroni M., Cassini C., Dominoni M., Giambanco L., Amodeo S., Leo L., Thommaset R., Raimondo D., Seracchioli R., Malzoni M., Falcone F., Gorlero F., Di Luca M., Busato E., Kilzie S., Dell'Acqua A., Scarfone G., Vercellini P., Petrillo M., Capobianco G., Ciavattini A., Mereu L., Scollo P., Sorbi F., Fambrini M., Romano F., Ricci G., Trojano G., Damiani G. R., Consonni R., Di Lorenzo N., Lippolis A., Tinelli R., Aguzzoli L., Mandato V. D., Palomba S., Tripodi M., Calandra D., Pellegrini F., Zullo F., Surico D., Remorgida V., Ruscitto F., Beretta P., Vizza E., Bogani, G, Donato, V, Scambia, G, Landoni, F, Ghezzi, F, Muzii, L, Panici, P, Raspagliesi, F, Casarin, J, Di Martino, G, Grassi, T, Perrone, A, De Iaco, P, Multinu, F, Berretta, R, Capozzi, V, Zupi, E, Centini, G, Pellegrino, A, Corso, S, Stevenazzi, G, Boschi, A, Comerci, G, Greco, P, Scutiero, G, Sopracordevole, F, Giorda, G, Fichera, M, Simoncini, T, Caretto, M, Sartori, E, Ferrari, F, Cianci, A, Sarpietro, G, Matarazzo, M, Giampaolino, P, Bifulco, G, Morelli, M, Dio, M, Ferrero, A, Biglia, N, Barra, F, Ferrero, S, Cianci, S, Chiantera, V, Sozzi, G, Ercoli, A, Schettini, S, Orlando, T, Cannone, F, Ettore, G, Puppo, A, Olearo, E, Leone Roberti Maggiore, U, Artuso, V, Palaia, I, Perniola, G, Tripodi, R, D'Auge, T, Cuccu, I, Fischetti, M, Santangelo, G, Casorelli, A, Giannini, A, D'Oria, O, Vizzielli, G, Restaino, S, Bergamini, A, Bocciolone, L, Plotti, F, Angioli, R, Mantovani, G, Ceccaroni, M, Cassini, C, Dominoni, M, Giambanco, L, Amodeo, S, Leo, L, Thommaset, R, Raimondo, D, Seracchioli, R, Malzoni, M, Falcone, F, Gorlero, F, Di Luca, M, Busato, E, Kilzie, S, Dell'Acqua, A, Scarfone, G, Vercellini, P, Petrillo, M, Capobianco, G, Ciavattini, A, Mereu, L, Scollo, P, Sorbi, F, Fambrini, M, Romano, F, Ricci, G, Trojano, G, Damiani, G, Consonni, R, Di Lorenzo, N, Lippolis, A, Tinelli, R, Aguzzoli, L, Mandato, V, Palomba, S, Tripodi, M, Calandra, D, Pellegrini, F, Zullo, F, Surico, D, Remorgida, V, Ruscitto, F, Beretta, P, Vizza, E, Bogani G., Donato V. D., Scambia G., Landoni F., Ghezzi F., Muzii L., Panici P. B., Raspagliesi F., Casarin J., Di Martino G., Grassi T., Perrone A. M., De Iaco P., Multinu F., Berretta R., Capozzi V. A., Zupi E., Centini G., Pellegrino A., Corso S., Stevenazzi G., Boschi A. C., Comerci G., Greco P., Scutiero G., Sopracordevole F., Giorda G., Fichera M., Simoncini T., Caretto M., Sartori E., Ferrari F., Cianci A., Sarpietro G., Matarazzo M. G., Giampaolino P., Bifulco G., Morelli M., Dio M. D., Ferrero A., Biglia N., Barra F., Ferrero S., Cianci S., Chiantera V., Sozzi G., Ercoli A., Schettini S., Orlando T., Cannone F. G., Ettore G., Puppo A., Olearo E., Leone Roberti Maggiore U., Artuso V., Palaia I., Perniola G., Tripodi R., D'Auge T. G., Cuccu I., Fischetti M., Santangelo G., Casorelli A., Giannini A., D'Oria O., Vizzielli G., Restaino S., Bergamini A., Bocciolone L., Plotti F., Angioli R., Mantovani G., Ceccaroni M., Cassini C., Dominoni M., Giambanco L., Amodeo S., Leo L., Thommaset R., Raimondo D., Seracchioli R., Malzoni M., Falcone F., Gorlero F., Di Luca M., Busato E., Kilzie S., Dell'Acqua A., Scarfone G., Vercellini P., Petrillo M., Capobianco G., Ciavattini A., Mereu L., Scollo P., Sorbi F., Fambrini M., Romano F., Ricci G., Trojano G., Damiani G. R., Consonni R., Di Lorenzo N., Lippolis A., Tinelli R., Aguzzoli L., Mandato V. D., Palomba S., Tripodi M., Calandra D., Pellegrini F., Zullo F., Surico D., Remorgida V., Ruscitto F., Beretta P., and Vizza E.
- Abstract
Background: To evaluate the impact of the Laparoscopic Approach to Cervical Cancer (LACC) Trial on patterns of care and surgery-related morbidity in early-stage cervical cancer. Methods: This is a retrospective, a multi-institutional study evaluating 90-day surgery-related outcomes of patients undergoing treatment for early-stage cervical cancer before (period I: 01/01/2016–06/01/2018) and after (period II: 01/01/2019–06/01/2021) the publication of the results of the LACC trial. Results: Charts of 1295 patients were evaluated: 581 (44.9%) and 714 (55.1%) before and after the publication of the LACC trial, respectively. After the publication of the LACC trial, the number of patients treated with minimally invasive radical hysterectomy decreased from 64.9% to 30.4% (p < 0.001). Overall, 90-day complications occurred in 110 (18.9%) and 119 (16.6%) patients in the period I and period II, respectively (p = 0.795). Similarly, the number of severe (grade 3 or worse) complications did not differ between the two periods (38 (6.5%) vs. 37 (5.1%); p = 0.297). Overall and severe 90-day complications were consistent between periods even evaluating stage IA (p = 0.471), IB1 (p = 0.929), and IB2 (p = 0.074), separately. Conclusions: The present investigation highlighted that in referral centers the shift from minimally invasive to open radical hysterectomy does not influence 90-day surgery-related morbidity.
- Published
- 2022
5. Evolution of retroperitoneal staging in endometrial cancer: narrative review and overview of literature
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Cuccu, I., primary, Sgamba, L., additional, Cannicchio, A., additional, De Angelis, E., additional, Golia D’Augè, T., additional, Di Bartolomeo, G., additional, Di Dio, C., additional, Firulli, I., additional, Trezza, A., additional, Azenkoud, I., additional, and Muzii, L., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Outcomes of High-Grade Cervical Dysplasia with Positive Margins and HPV Persistence after Cervical Conization
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Giannini, A., Di Donato, V., Sopracordevole, F., Ciavattini, A., Ghelardi, A., Vizza, E., D’Oria, O., Simoncini, T., Plotti, F., Casarin, J., Golia D’Augè, T., Cuccu, I., Serati, M., Pinelli, C., Bergamini, A., Gardella, B., Dell’Acqua, A., Monti, E., Vercellini, P., D’Ippolito, G., Aguzzoli, L., Dario Mandato, V., Giannella, L., Scaffa, C., Ditto, A., Falcone, F., Borghi, C., Malzoni, M., Di Giovanni, A., Salerno, M. G., Liberale, V., Contino, B., Donfrancesco, C., Desiato, M., Perrone, A. M., De Iaco, P., Ferrero, S., Sarpietro, G., Matarazzo, M. G., Cianci, A., Cianci, S., Bosio, S., Ruisi, S., Mosca, L., Tinelli, R., De Vincenzo, Rosa Pasqualina, Zannoni, Gian Franco, Ferrandina, Maria Gabriella, Petrillo, M., Capobianco, G., Carlea, A., Zullo, F., Muschiato, B., Palomba, S., Greggi, S., Spinillo, A., Ghezzi, F., Colacurci, N., Angioli, R., Benedetti Panici, P., Muzii, L., Scambia, Giovanni, Raspagliesi, F., Bogani, G., De Vincenzo R. (ORCID:0000-0001-7408-0435), Zannoni G. F. (ORCID:0000-0003-1809-129X), Ferrandina G. (ORCID:0000-0003-4672-4197), Scambia G. (ORCID:0000-0003-2758-1063), Giannini, A., Di Donato, V., Sopracordevole, F., Ciavattini, A., Ghelardi, A., Vizza, E., D’Oria, O., Simoncini, T., Plotti, F., Casarin, J., Golia D’Augè, T., Cuccu, I., Serati, M., Pinelli, C., Bergamini, A., Gardella, B., Dell’Acqua, A., Monti, E., Vercellini, P., D’Ippolito, G., Aguzzoli, L., Dario Mandato, V., Giannella, L., Scaffa, C., Ditto, A., Falcone, F., Borghi, C., Malzoni, M., Di Giovanni, A., Salerno, M. G., Liberale, V., Contino, B., Donfrancesco, C., Desiato, M., Perrone, A. M., De Iaco, P., Ferrero, S., Sarpietro, G., Matarazzo, M. G., Cianci, A., Cianci, S., Bosio, S., Ruisi, S., Mosca, L., Tinelli, R., De Vincenzo, Rosa Pasqualina, Zannoni, Gian Franco, Ferrandina, Maria Gabriella, Petrillo, M., Capobianco, G., Carlea, A., Zullo, F., Muschiato, B., Palomba, S., Greggi, S., Spinillo, A., Ghezzi, F., Colacurci, N., Angioli, R., Benedetti Panici, P., Muzii, L., Scambia, Giovanni, Raspagliesi, F., Bogani, G., De Vincenzo R. (ORCID:0000-0001-7408-0435), Zannoni G. F. (ORCID:0000-0003-1809-129X), Ferrandina G. (ORCID:0000-0003-4672-4197), and Scambia G. (ORCID:0000-0003-2758-1063)
- Abstract
The objective of this work is to assess the 5-year outcomes of patients undergoing conization for high-grade cervical lesions that simultaneously present as risk factors in the persistence of HPV infection and the positivity of surgical resection margins. This is a retrospective study evaluating patients undergoing conization for high-grade cervical lesions. All patients included had both positive surgical margins and experienced HPV persistence at 6 months. Associations were evaluated with Cox proportional hazard regression and summarized using hazard ratio (HR). The charts of 2966 patients undergoing conization were reviewed. Among the whole population, 163 (5.5%) patients met the inclusion criteria, being at high risk due to the presence of positive surgical margins and experiencing HPV persistence. Of 163 patients included, 17 (10.4%) patients developed a CIN2+ recurrence during the 5-year follow-up. Via univariate analyses, diagnosis of CIN3 instead of CIN2 (HR: 4.88 (95%CI: 1.10, 12.41); p = 0.035) and positive endocervical instead of ectocervical margins (HR: 6.44 (95%CI: 2.80, 9.65); p < 0.001) were associated with increased risk of persistence/recurrence. Via multivariate analyses, only positive endocervical instead of ectocervical margins (HR: 4.56 (95%CI: 1.23, 7.95); p = 0.021) were associated with worse outcomes. In this high-risk group, positive endocervical margins is the main risk factor predicting 5-year recurrence.
- Published
- 2023
7. The role of immunotherapy in advanced and recurrent MMR deficient and proficient endometrial carcinoma
- Author
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Di Dio, C., Bogani, G., Di Donato, V., Cuccu, I., Muzii, L., Musacchio, L., Scambia, Giovanni, Lorusso, Domenica, Scambia G. (ORCID:0000-0003-2758-1063), Lorusso D., Di Dio, C., Bogani, G., Di Donato, V., Cuccu, I., Muzii, L., Musacchio, L., Scambia, Giovanni, Lorusso, Domenica, Scambia G. (ORCID:0000-0003-2758-1063), and Lorusso D.
- Abstract
Endometrial cancer is the most common gynecological disease in developed countries. Although it is considered an indolent disease, advanced and recurrent endometrial carcinomas are characterized by poor prognosis. In the metastatic setting, after the failure of first-line platinum-based chemotherapy, patients have limited therapeutic options. However, endometrial cancer should not be considered as a single entity but as a group of heterogeneous diseases with specific genomic, molecular, and biological features by suggested the analysis of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Accumulating data highlighted the effectiveness and safety of the adoption of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) for several types of solid tumors. In particular, immunotherapy showed promising results in MSI-H/dMMR solid tumors. Endometrial cancer is not an exception. Endometrial cancer has the highest prevalence of MSI across human cancer types, and approximately 30% of primary endometrial cancers are MSI-H/dMMR and 13% to 30% of recurrent endometrial cancers are MSI-H/dMMR. The preliminary results of the KEYNOTE-158, the Australian NCT03015129 and the GARNET trial strongly supported the adoption of ICIs as monotherapy in patients with advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer, after the failure of first-line treatments. Unfortunately, those impressive results are not achieved in patients with MMR proficient disease. Hence, other combinations were tested. In particular, the adoption of ICIs plus tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) showed very compelling results. Recently, the updated results of the KEYNOTE-775 showed that pembrolizumab plus lenvatinib led to significantly longer progression-free and overall survival than chemotherapy among patients with advanced endometrial cancer, irrespective of MMR status. After EMA approval, pembrolizumab plus lenvatinib represents the new standard second-line treatment in endometrial cancer patients, regardless MMR status. Further studies are investigating the ro
- Published
- 2023
8. Evaluating long-term outcomes of three approaches to retroperitoneal staging in endometrial cancer
- Author
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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, Raspagliesi, F, Bogani, Giorgio, Di Donato, Violante, Papadia, Andrea, Buda, Alessandro, Casarin, Jvan, Multinu, Francesco, Plotti, Francesco, Cuccu, Ilaria, D'Auge, Tullio Golia, Gasparri, Maria Luisa, Pinelli, Ciro, Perrone, Anna Myriam, Barra, Fabio, Sorbi, Flavia, Cromi, Antonella, Di Martino, Giampaolo, Palaia, Innocenza, Perniola, Giorgia, Ferrero, Simone, De Iaco, Pierandrea, Perrone, Chiara, Angioli, Roberto, Luvero, Daniela, Muzii, Ludovico, Ghezzi, Fabio, Landoni, Fabio, Mueller, Michael D, Benedetti Panici, Pierluigi, Raspagliesi, Francesco, 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, Raspagliesi, F, Bogani, Giorgio, Di Donato, Violante, Papadia, Andrea, Buda, Alessandro, Casarin, Jvan, Multinu, Francesco, Plotti, Francesco, Cuccu, Ilaria, D'Auge, Tullio Golia, Gasparri, Maria Luisa, Pinelli, Ciro, Perrone, Anna Myriam, Barra, Fabio, Sorbi, Flavia, Cromi, Antonella, Di Martino, Giampaolo, Palaia, Innocenza, Perniola, Giorgia, Ferrero, Simone, De Iaco, Pierandrea, Perrone, Chiara, Angioli, Roberto, Luvero, Daniela, Muzii, Ludovico, Ghezzi, Fabio, Landoni, Fabio, Mueller, Michael D, Benedetti Panici, Pierluigi, and Raspagliesi, Francesco
- 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
9. Liposomes and micellar solutions for the delivery of some benzoheterocyclic derivatives of distamycin A
- Author
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Cortesi, Rita, Esposito, Elisabetta, Cuccu, I., Zaid, A. N., Romagnoli, Romeo, Menegatti, Enea, and Nastruzzi, Claudio
- Subjects
antiproliferative activity ,specialized delivery systems ,distamycins ,liposome ,micelle - Published
- 2007
10. Liposomes and Micellar Dispersions For Delivery of Benzoheterocyclic Derivatives of Distamycin A
- Author
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Cortesi, R., primary, Esposito, E., additional, Cuccu, I., additional, Romagnoli, R., additional, Menegatti, E., additional, Zaid, A. N., additional, and Nastruzzi, C., additional
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Evaluating long-term outcomes of three approaches to retroperitoneal staging in endometrial cancer
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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
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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.
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- 2022
12. Practice patterns and 90-day treatment-related morbidity in early-stage cervical cancer
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Giorgio Bogani, Violante Di Donato, Giovanni Scambia, Fabio Landoni, Fabio Ghezzi, Ludovico Muzii, Pierluigi Benedetti Panici, Francesco Raspagliesi, Jvan Casarin, Giampaolo Di Martino, Tommaso Grassi, Anna Myriam Perrone, Pierandrea De Iaco, Francesco Multinu, Roberto Berretta, Vito A. Capozzi, Errico Zupi, Gabriele Centini, Antonio Pellegrino, Silvia Corso, Guido Stevenazzi, Anna Chiara Boschi, Giuseppe Comerci, Pantaleo Greco, Gennaro Scutiero, Francesco Sopracordevole, Giorgio Giorda, Mariasole Fichera, Tommaso Simoncini, Marta Caretto, Enrico Sartori, Federico Ferrari, Antonio Cianci, Giuseppe Sarpietro, Maria Grazia Matarazzo, Pierluigi Giampaolino, Giuseppe Bifulco, Michele Morelli, Michele Di Dio, Annamaria Ferrero, Nicoletta Biglia, Fabio Barra, Simone Ferrero, Stefano Cianci, Vito Chiantera, Giulio Sozzi, Alfredo Ercoli, Sergio Schettini, Teresa Orlando, Francesco G. Cannone, Giuseppe Ettore, Andrea Puppo, Elena Olearo, Umberto Leone Roberti Maggiore, Valeria Artuso, Innocenza Palaia, Giorgia Perniola, Rossana Tripodi, Tullio Golia D'Augè, Ilaria Cuccu, Margherita Fischetti, Giusi Santangelo, Assunta Casorelli, Andrea Giannini, Ottavia D’Oria, Giuseppe Vizzielli, Stefano Restaino, Alice Bergamini, Luca Bocciolone, Francesco Plotti, Roberto Angioli, Giulia Mantovani, Marcello Ceccaroni, Chiara Cassini, Mattia Dominoni, Laura Giambanco, Silvia Amodeo, Livio Leo, Raphaël Thommaset, Diego Raimondo, Renato Seracchioli, Mario Malzoni, Francesca Falcone, Franco Gorlero, Martina Di Luca, Enrico Busato, Sami Kilzie, Andrea Dell'Acqua, Giovanna Scarfone, Paolo Vercellini, Marco Petrillo, Giampiero Capobianco, Andrea Ciavattini, Liliana Mereu, Paolo Scollo, Flavia Sorbi, Massimiliano Fambrini, Federico Romano, Giuseppe Ricci, Giuseppe Trojano, Gianluca Raffaello Damiani, Roberto Consonni, Nadia Di Lorenzo, Antonio Lippolis, Raffaele Tinelli, Lorenzo Aguzzoli, Vincenzo D. Mandato, Stefano Palomba, Marcello Tripodi, Davide Calandra, Franco Pellegrini, Fulvio Zullo, Daniela Surico, Valentino Remorgida, Francesco Ruscitto, Paolo Beretta, Enrico Vizza, Bogani, Giorgio, Donato, Violante Di, Scambia, Giovanni, Landoni, Fabio, Ghezzi, Fabio, Muzii, Ludovico, Panici, Pierluigi Benedetti, Raspagliesi, Francesco, Giampaolino, Pierluigi, Bogani, G, Donato, V, Scambia, G, Landoni, F, Ghezzi, F, Muzii, L, Panici, P, Raspagliesi, F, Casarin, J, Di Martino, G, Grassi, T, Perrone, A, De Iaco, P, Multinu, F, Berretta, R, Capozzi, V, Zupi, E, Centini, G, Pellegrino, A, Corso, S, Stevenazzi, G, Boschi, A, Comerci, G, Greco, P, Scutiero, G, Sopracordevole, F, Giorda, G, Fichera, M, Simoncini, T, Caretto, M, Sartori, E, Ferrari, F, Cianci, A, Sarpietro, G, Matarazzo, M, Giampaolino, P, Bifulco, G, Morelli, M, Dio, M, Ferrero, A, Biglia, N, Barra, F, Ferrero, S, Cianci, S, Chiantera, V, Sozzi, G, Ercoli, A, Schettini, S, Orlando, T, Cannone, F, Ettore, G, Puppo, A, Olearo, E, Leone Roberti Maggiore, U, Artuso, V, Palaia, I, Perniola, G, Tripodi, R, D'Auge, T, Cuccu, I, Fischetti, M, Santangelo, G, Casorelli, A, Giannini, A, D'Oria, O, Vizzielli, G, Restaino, S, Bergamini, A, Bocciolone, L, Plotti, F, Angioli, R, Mantovani, G, Ceccaroni, M, Cassini, C, Dominoni, M, Giambanco, L, Amodeo, S, Leo, L, Thommaset, R, Raimondo, D, Seracchioli, R, Malzoni, M, Falcone, F, Gorlero, F, Di Luca, M, Busato, E, Kilzie, S, Dell'Acqua, A, Scarfone, G, Vercellini, P, Petrillo, M, Capobianco, G, Ciavattini, A, Mereu, L, Scollo, P, Sorbi, F, Fambrini, M, Romano, F, Ricci, G, Trojano, G, Damiani, G, Consonni, R, Di Lorenzo, N, Lippolis, A, Tinelli, R, Aguzzoli, L, Mandato, V, Palomba, S, Tripodi, M, Calandra, D, Pellegrini, F, Zullo, F, Surico, D, Remorgida, V, Ruscitto, F, Beretta, P, Vizza, E, Casarin, Jvan, Di Martino, Giampaolo, Grassi, Tommaso, Perrone, Anna Myriam, De Iaco, Pierandrea, Multinu, Francesco, Berretta, Roberto, Capozzi, Vito A., Zupi, Errico, Centini, Gabriele, Pellegrino, Antonio, Corso, Silvia, Stevenazzi, Guido, Boschi, Anna Chiara, Comerci, Giuseppe, Greco, Pantaleo, Scutiero, Gennaro, Sopracordevole, Francesco, Giorda, Giorgio, Fichera, Mariasole, Simoncini, Tommaso, Caretto, Marta, Sartori, Enrico, Ferrari, Federico, Cianci, Antonio, Sarpietro, Giuseppe, Matarazzo, Maria Grazia, Bifulco, Giuseppe, Morelli, Michele, Dio, Michele Di, Ferrero, Annamaria, Biglia, Nicoletta, Barra, Fabio, Ferrero, Simone, Cianci, Stefanoa, Chiantera, Vitoa, Ercoli, Alfredo, Schettini, Sergio, Orlando, Teresa, Cannone, Francesco G., Ettore, Giuseppe, Puppo, Andrea, Olearo, Elena, Maggiore, Umberto Leone Roberti, Artuso, Valeria, Palaia, Innocenza, Perniola, Giorgia, Tripodi, Rosanna, D'Augè, Tullio Golia, Cuccu, Ilaria, Fischetti, Margherita, Santangelo, Giusi, Casorelli, Assunta, Giannini, Andrea, D’Oria, Ottvaio, Vizzielli, Giuseppe, Restaino, Stefano, Bergamini, Alice, Bocciolone, Luca, Plotti, Francesco, Angioli, Roberto, Mantovani, Giulia, Ceccaroni, Marcello, Cassini, Chiara, Dominoni, Mattia, Giambanco, Laura, Amodeo, Silvia, Leo, Livio, Thommaset, Raphaël, Raimondo, Diego, Seracchioli, Renato, Malzoni, Mario, Falcone, Francesca, Gorlero, Franco, Di Luca, Martina, Busato, Enrico, Kilzie, Sami, Dell'Acqua, Andrea, Scarfone, Giovanna, Vercellini, Paolo, Petrillo, Marco, Capobianco, Giampiero, Ciavattini, Andrea, Mereu, Liliana, Scollo, Paolo, Sorbi, Flavia, Fambrini, Massimiliano, Romano, Federico, Ricci, Giuseppe, Trojano, Giuseppe, Damiani, Gianluca Raffaello, Consonni, Roberto, Di Lorenzo, Nadia, Lippolis, Antonio, Tinelli, Raffaele, Aguzzoli, Lorenzo, Mandato, Vincenzo D., Palomba, Stefano, Tripodi, Marcello, Calandra, Davide, Pellegrini, Franco, Zullo, Fulvio, Surico, Daniela, Remorgida, Valentino, Ruscitto, Francesco, Beretta, Paolo, and Vizza, Enrico.
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Complications ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Hysterectomy ,Settore MED/40 - GINECOLOGIA E OSTETRICIA ,Oncology ,Retrospective Studie ,Laparoscopy ,Morbidity ,Radical hysterectomy ,Female ,Humans ,Neoplasm Staging ,Retrospective Studies ,Complication ,Human - Abstract
Background. To evaluate the impact of the Laparoscopic Approach to Cervical Cancer (LACC) Trial on patterns of care and surgery-related morbidity in early-stage cervical cancer. Methods. This is a retrospective, a multi-institutional study evaluating 90-day surgery-related outcomes of patients undergoing treatment for early-stage cervical cancer before (period I: 01/01/2016-06/01/2018) and after (period II: 01/01/2019-06/01/2021) the publication of the results of the LACC trial. Results. Charts of 1295 patients were evaluated: 581 (44.9%) and 714 (55.1%) before and after the publication of the LACC trial, respectively. After the publication of the LACC trial, the number of patients treated with minimally invasive radical hysterectomy decreased from 64.9% to 30.4% (p < 0.001). Overall, 90-day complications occurred in 110 (18.9%) and 119 (16.6%) patients in the period I and period II, respectively (p = 0.795). Similarly, the number of severe (grade 3 or worse) complications did not differ between the two periods (38 (6.5%) vs. 37 (5.1%); p = 0.297). Overall and severe 90-day complications were consistent between periods even evaluating stage IA (p = 0.471), IB1 (p = 0.929), and IB2 (p = 0.074), separately. Conclusions. The present investigation highlighted that in referral centers the shift from minimally invasive to open radical hysterectomy does not influence 90-day surgery-related morbidity. (c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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- 2022
13. MRI- and Histologic-Molecular-Based Radio-Genomics Nomogram for Preoperative Assessment of Risk Classes in Endometrial Cancer
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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
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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.
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- 2022
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14. Vision-related quality of life and symptom perception change over time in newly-diagnosed primary open angle glaucoma patients
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Riva, I, Legramandi, L, Rulli, E, Konstas, Ag, Katsanos, A, Oddone, F, Weinreb, Rn, Quaranta, L, Varano, L, Carchedi, T, Talarico, S, Parravano, F, Motolese, I, Bagaglia, Sa, Rossi, Gcm, Lateri, S, Bossolesi, L, Carmassi, L, Rolle, T, Piccini, R, Ratiglia, R, Rossi, A, Gandolfi, S, Tagliavini, Ungaro, N, Fossarello, M, Cuccu, A, Zucca, I, Uva, M, Bonacci, E, Cardarella, G, Tognetto, D, Vattovani, O, Vallon, P, Iannacone, F, Fontana, L, Marchi, S, Manni, G, Iannetta, D, Roberti, G, Rossetti, L, Maggiolo, E, Oneta, O, Sborgia, C, Cantatore, F, Mastropasqua, L, Agnifili, L, Campos, E, Gizzi, C, Giannaccare, G, Pucci, Cassamali, M, Costagliola, C, Traverso, C, Scotto, R, Musolino, M, Landi, L, Bagnis, A, Riva I, Legramandi L, Rulli E, Konstas AG, Katsanos A, Oddone F, Weinreb RN, Quaranta L, Italian Study Group on QoL in Glaucoma: L Varano, T Carchedi, S Talarico, F Parravano, I Motolese, SA Bagaglia, GCM Rossi, S Lateri, L Bossolesi, L Carmassi, T Rolle, R Piccini, R Ratiglia, A Rossi, S Gandolfi, V Tagliavini, N Ungaro, M Fossarello, A Cuccu, I Zucca, M Uva, E Bonacci, G Cardarella, D Tognetto, O Vattovani, P Vallon, F Iannacone, L Fontana, S Marchi, GL Manni, D Jannetta, G Roberti, L Rossetti, E Maggiolo, O Oneta, C Sborgia, F Cantatore, L Mastropasqua, L Agnifili, E Campos, C Gizzi, G Giannaccare, V Pucci, M Cassamali, C Costagliola, C Traverso, R Scotto, M Musolino, L Landi, A Bagnis, Riva, Ivano, Legramandi, Lorenzo, Rulli, Eliana, Konstas, Anastasios G, Katsanos, Andrea, Oddone, Francesco, Weinreb, Robert N, Quaranta, Luciano, Varano, L, Carchedi, T, Talarico, S, Parravano, F, Motolese, I, Bagaglia, Sa, Rossi, Gcm, Lateri, S, Bossolesi, L, Carmassi, L, Rolle, T, Piccini, R, Ratiglia, R, Rossi, A, Gandolfi, S, Tagliavini, Ungaro, N, Fossarello, M, Cuccu, A, Zucca, I, Uva, M, Bonacci, E, Cardarella, G, Tognetto, D, Vattovani, O, Vallon, P, Iannacone, F, Fontana, L, Marchi, S, Manni, Gl, Jannetta, D, Roberti, G, Rossetti, L, Maggiolo, E, Oneta, O, Sborgia, C, Cantatore, F, Mastropasqua, L, Agnifili, L, Campos, E, Gizzi, C, Giannaccare, G, Pucci, Cassamali, M, Costagliola, C, Traverso, C, Scotto, R, Musolino, M, Landi, L, and Bagnis, A.
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0301 basic medicine ,Change over time ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Visual acuity ,Open angle glaucoma ,genetic structures ,Population ,lcsh:Medicine ,Glaucoma ,Diseases ,Italian Study Group on QoL in Glaucoma ,Neurodegenerative ,Eye ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical research ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Clinical Research ,Settore MED/30 ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,POAG ,lcsh:Science ,education ,Prospective cohort study ,Author Correction ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Neurosciences ,medicine.disease ,primary open angle glaucoma ,humanities ,eye diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,Symptom perception ,glaucoma ,quality of life ,lcsh:Q ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
To evaluate the change over time of vision-related quality of life (QoL) and glaucoma symptoms in a population of newly-diagnosed primary open angle glaucoma (POAG) patients. Multicenter, prospective study. Consecutive newly-diagnosed POAG patients were enrolled and followed-up for one year. Follow-up visits were scheduled at 6 and 12 months from baseline. At each visit, vision-related QoL and glaucoma-related symptoms were assessed by the means of the 25-item National Eye Institute Visual Function Questionnaire (NEI-VFQ-25) and the Glaucoma Symptom Scale (GSS), respectively. Trends over time for NEI-VFQ-25 and GSS scores were evaluated with longitudinal linear mixed models. One-hundred seventy-eight patients were included in the analysis. At baseline, early to moderate glaucoma stages were associated with higher scores for most GSS and NEI-VFQ-25 items, while lower best-corrected visual acuity was associated with lower scores for 4 of the 12 NEI-VFQ-25 items. During the follow-up, all the GSS scores, the NEI-VFQ-25 total score, and 7 of the 12 NEI-VFQ-25 scores significantly improved (p
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- 2019
15. The Role of Tumor Biomarkers in Tailoring the Approach to Advanced Ovarian Cancer.
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Tonti N, Golia D'Augè T, Cuccu I, De Angelis E, D'Oria O, Perniola G, Laganà AS, Etrusco A, Ferrari F, Saponara S, Di Donato V, Bogani G, and Giannini A
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- Humans, Female, BRCA1 Protein genetics, BRCA1 Protein metabolism, Mutation, BRCA2 Protein genetics, BRCA2 Protein metabolism, Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial genetics, Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial metabolism, Precision Medicine methods, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Ovarian Neoplasms genetics, Ovarian Neoplasms metabolism
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Growing evidence has demonstrated the role of mutations of tumor biomarkers in diagnosing and treating epithelial ovarian cancer. This review aims to analyze recent literature on the correlation between tumor biomarkers and chemotherapy in nonmucinous ovarian cancer, providing suggestions for personalized treatment approaches. An extensive literature search was conducted to identify relevant studies and trials. BRCA1/2 mutations are central in homologous recombination repair deficiency (HRD) in ovarian cancer, but several other genetic mutations also contribute to varying cancer risks. While the role of MMR testing in ovarian cancer is debated, it is more commonly linked to non-serous ovarian cancer, often associated with Lynch syndrome. A significant proportion of ovarian cancer patients have HRD, affecting treatment decisions in both first-line (especially in advanced stages) and second-line therapy due to HRD's connection with platinum-based therapy and PARP inhibitors' response. However, validated genetic tests to identify HRD have not yet been universally implemented. There is no definitive therapeutic algorithm for advanced ovarian cancer, despite ongoing efforts and multiple proposed tools. Future research should focus on expanding the utility of biomarkers, reducing resistance, and increasing the actionable biomarker pool.
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- 2024
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16. Laparoscopic prediction of primary cytoreducibility of epithelial ovarian cancer.
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Golia D'Augè T, Cuccu I, DE Angelis E, DI Donato V, Muzii L, D'Oria O, Chiantera V, Gerli S, Caserta D, Besharat AR, Laganà AS, Bogani G, Favilli A, and Giannini A
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Ovarian cancer affects thousands of women every year and represents the female cancer with the highest mortality rate. Effectively, it is a severe disease that requires a multidisciplinary approach for optimal treatment. Surgery currently is the cornerstone of its treatment and numerous methods have been analyzed and developed to predict the possibility of obtaining a residual tumor of 0 (RT=0). This review aimed to analyze the available data in the literature about minimally invasive surgical methods to predict an RT=0 in patients with advanced epithelial ovarian carcinoma undergoing primary debulking surgery. An accurate review of the literature has been performed on the available data about the surgical criteria of cytoreducibility during primary debulking surgery. An accurate assessment of the extent of intra- and extra-abdominal pathology is essential to guide the surgeon in the most appropriate therapeutic choice for patients with ovarian cancer and multidisciplinary approaches that combine different methodologies such as radiological methods (magnetic resonance imaging, positron emission tomography and computed tomography), surgical (mini-laparotomy, laparoscopy) and serological (CA-125, HE4) data provide a complete picture in determining the extent of the tumor and an enormous aid in personalizing the therapeutic approach.
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- 2024
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17. Robotic-assisted, laparoscopic, and vaginal hysterectomy in morbidly obese patients with endometrial hyperplasia and endometrial cancer.
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Giannini A, D'Oria O, Vizza E, Congiu MA, Cuccu I, Golia D'Augè T, Saponara S, Capalbo G, Di Donato V, Raspagliesi F, and Bogani G
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Background: Hysterectomy for endometrial hyperplasia and endometrial cancer in morbidly obese patients is challenging. Here, we reported data regarding three minimally invasive approaches., Method: This is a multicenter retrospective study evaluating 30-day and 90-day surgery-related outcomes of morbidly obese patients (those with BMI > 40kg/m
2 ) undergoing robotic-assisted, laparoscopic, and vaginal hysterectomy., Results: Charts of 95 morbidly obese patients who underwent surgery for endometrial cancer were retrieved. Overall, robotic-assisted, laparoscopic, and vaginal surgeries were performed in 35 (36.8%), 38 (40%), and 22 (23.2%) patients, respectively. Patients having robotic-assisted surgery experienced longer operative time than patients having vaginal and laparoscopic approaches ( p < 0.001). Surgical approaches did not influence the risk of having intraoperative and severe (Clavien-Dindo grade 3 or more) postoperative complications. No 90-day mortality occurred., Conclusions: Robotic-assisted, laparoscopic, and vaginal surgery represent three safe and feasible minimally invasive approaches to manage morbidly obese patients with endometrial hyperplasia and endometrial cancer.- Published
- 2024
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18. Sentinel node mapping, sentinel node mapping plus back-up lymphadenectomy, and lymphadenectomy in Early-sTage cERvical caNcer scheduled for fertilItY-sparing approach: The ETERNITY project.
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Bogani G, Scambia G, Fagotti A, Fanfani F, Ciavattini A, Sopracordevole F, Malzoni M, Casarin J, Ghezzi F, Vizza E, Cosentino F, Berretta R, Cuccu I, Ferrari FA, Chiappa V, Vizzielli G, and Raspagliesi F
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- Humans, Female, Adult, Retrospective Studies, Lymphatic Metastasis, Sentinel Lymph Node pathology, Conization methods, Young Adult, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell surgery, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell pathology, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms pathology, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms surgery, Lymph Node Excision methods, Fertility Preservation methods, Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy methods, Neoplasm Staging
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Objective: To investigate the safety of sentinel node mapping for patients with early-stage cervical cancer undergoing cervical conization plus nodal evaluation., Methods: The ETERNITY project is a retrospective, multi-institutional study collecting data of patients with early-stage cervical cancer undergoing fertility-sparing treatment. Here, we compared outcomes related to three methods of nodal assessment: sentinel node mapping (SNM), SNM plus backup lymphadenectomy (SNM + LND); pelvic lymphadenectomy (LND)., Results: Charts of 123 patients (with stage IA1-IB1 cervical cancer) were evaluated. Median patients' age was 34 (range, 22-44) years. SNM, SNM + LND, and LND were performed in 32 (26 %), 31 (25.2 %), and 60 (48.8 %) patients, respectively. Overall, eight (6.5 %) patients were diagnosed with positive nodes. Two (3.3 %), three (9.7 %), and three (9.4 %) patients were detected in patients who had LND, SNM + LND, and SNM respectively. Considering the 63 patients undergoing SNM (31 SNM + LND and 32 SNM alone), macrometastases, micrometastases, and isolated tumor cells were detected in four (3.2 %), three (2.4 %), and one (0.8 %) patients, respectively. All patients with positive nodes discontinued the fertility sparing treatment. Other two patients (one (1.7 %) in the LND group and one (3.1 %) in the SNM group) required hysterectomy even after negative nodal evaluation. After a median follow-up of 53.6 (range, 1.3, 158.0) months, nine (7.3 %) and two (1.6 %) patients developed cervical and pelvic nodes recurrences, respectively. Disease-free (p = 0.332, log-rank test) and overall survival (p = 0.769, log-rank test) were similar among groups., Conclusions: In this retrospective experience, SNM upholds long-term oncologic effectiveness of LND, reducing morbidity., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2024
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19. Role of V-Y flap reconstruction in vulvar cancer patients: multicenter retrospective study.
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Di Donato V, Giannini A, Galli V, Di Donna MC, Congiu MA, Garganese G, Plotti F, Sorbi F, Golia D'Augè T, Laganà AS, Gentileschi S, Caretto AA, Cuccu I, Falcone F, Malzoni M, Ricciardi E, Perniola G, Turetta C, Plett H, Fambrini M, Chiantera V, Vizza E, Angioli R, Raspagliesi F, Muzii L, Scambia G, Benedetti Panici P, and Bogani G
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- Humans, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Aged, 80 and over, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell surgery, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell pathology, Vulvar Neoplasms surgery, Vulvar Neoplasms pathology, Surgical Flaps, Plastic Surgery Procedures methods
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Objective: To assess if the use of a V-Y reconstructive flap after excisional radical surgery positively influences the surgical outcomes in patients with vulvar cancer., Methods: This was a multicenter, retrospective, controlled study. Surgical outcomes and complication rates of women with invasive vulvar cancer who underwent radical surgery and vulvar reconstruction and those who underwent radical surgery without the reconstruction step were compared. Only patients who underwent bilateral or unilateral V-Y advancement fascio-cutaneous flaps were included in the reconstruction group. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression models were used to analyze predicting variables for their association with complication rates., Results: Overall, 361 patients were included: 190 (52%) underwent the reconstructive step after the excisional radical procedure and were compared with 171 (47.4%) who did not undergo the reconstructive step. At multivariate analysis, body mass index >30 kg/m
2 (odds ratio (OR) 3.36, p=0.007) and diabetes (OR 2.62, p<0.022) were independently correlated with wound infection. Moreover, increasing age (OR 1.52, p=0.009), body mass index >30 kg/m2 (OR 3.21, p=0.002,) and International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stages III-IV (OR 2.25, p=0.017) were independent predictors of wound dehiscence. A significant reduction in the incidence of postoperative wound complications among patients who underwent V-Y reconstructive flaps was demonstrated. This was correlated more significantly in women with lesions >4 cm., Conclusions: The adoption of V-Y flaps in vulvar surgery was correlated with reduced surgical related complications, particularly in vulnerable patients involving large surgical defects following excisional radical procedures., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© IGCS and ESGO 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)- Published
- 2024
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20. Targeting BRAF pathway in low-grade serous ovarian cancer.
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Perrone C, Angioli R, Luvero D, Giannini A, Di Donato V, Cuccu I, Muzii L, Raspagliesi F, and Bogani G
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- Humans, Female, Protein Kinase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Protein Kinase Inhibitors pharmacology, Molecular Targeted Therapy, Neoplasm Grading, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols pharmacology, MAP Kinase Signaling System drug effects, Sulfonamides therapeutic use, Imidazoles therapeutic use, Imidazoles pharmacology, Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Kinases antagonists & inhibitors, Oximes, Ovarian Neoplasms drug therapy, Ovarian Neoplasms genetics, Ovarian Neoplasms pathology, Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf antagonists & inhibitors, Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous drug therapy, Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous genetics, Cystadenocarcinoma, Serous pathology
- Abstract
Mutations in genes encoding for proteins along the RAS-RAF-MEK-ERK pathway have been detected in a variety of tumor entities including ovarian carcinomas. In the recent years, several inhibitors of this pathway have been developed, whose antitumor potential is currently being assessed in different clinical trials. Low grade serous ovarian carcinoma, is a rare gynecological tumor which shows favorable overall survival, compared to the general ovarian cancer population, but worrying resistance to conventional chemotherapies. The clinical behavior of low grade serous ovarian carcinoma reflects the different gene profile compared to high-grade serous carcinoma: KRAS / BRAF mutations. BRAF inhibitors as single agents were approved for the treatment of BRAF mutated tumors. Nevertheless, many patients face progressive disease. The understanding of the mechanisms of resistance to BRAF inhibitors therapy and preclinical studies showing that BRAF and mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitors combined therapy delays the onset of resistance compared to BRAF inhibitor single agent, led to the clinical investigation of combined therapy. The aim of this paper is to review the efficacy and safety of the combination of BRAF plus MEK inhibitors on ovarian carcinomas, in particularly focusing on low grade serous ovarian carcinoma., Competing Interests: No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported., (© 2024. Asian Society of Gynecologic Oncology, Korean Society of Gynecologic Oncology, and Japan Society of Gynecologic Oncology.)
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- 2024
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21. The great debate: Surgical outcomes of laparoscopic versus laparotomic myomectomy. A meta-analysis to critically evaluate current evidence and look over the horizon.
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Giannini A, Cuccu I, D'Auge TG, De Angelis E, Laganà AS, Chiantera V, Caserta D, Vitale SG, Muzii L, D'Oria O, Perniola G, Bogani G, and Di Donato V
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Leiomyoma surgery, Laparotomy adverse effects, Laparotomy methods, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Treatment Outcome, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Blood Loss, Surgical statistics & numerical data, Uterine Myomectomy methods, Uterine Myomectomy adverse effects, Laparoscopy adverse effects, Laparoscopy methods, Uterine Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Myomectomy is one of the most common surgical procedure in the field of gynecology. However, the role of laparoscopic myomectomy is still debated for many factors, including surgical considerations, safety and fertility concerns, long-term outcomes, and cost-related issues. The aim of this study is to evaluate the surgical peri- and post-operative outcomes of laparoscopic and abdominal myomectomy. A systematic search for studies was performed up to June 2023 through MEDLINE, Pubmed, Embase. Studies reporting the comparison of surgical and obstetrical outcomes in laparoscopic versus laparotomic myomectomy were included for the following outcomes: time of surgery, estimated blood loss, decrease of postoperative hemoglobin, hospital stay, intra-operative complication rates, postoperative complications rates, postoperative analgesic use, postoperative pain at 24 h and pregnancy rate. The meta-analysis was performed using the Cochrane Review software. Fifty-six relevant articles were retrieved through the process of evidence acquisition. Eleven articles met inclusion criteria, for a total of 2,133 patients undergoing laparoscopic or laparotomic myomectomy. The estimated blood loss [standard mean differences (SMD) 0.72, IC 95 % 0.22 to 1.22], the hospital stays [SMD 3.12, IC 95 % 0.57 to 4.28], were significantly lower in laparoscopic than in open group. No statistically significant difference in intra-operative and post-operative complication rates, in pregnancy rate and others obstetrical outcomes between two surgical approaches were found. The findings of present metanalysis suggest that laparoscopic myomectomy offers multiple benefits, including reduced blood loss, shorter hospital stays, and less postoperative analgesic need, without a significant increase in complication rates and similar results in obstetrical outcomes when compared to abdominal myomectomy. However, the presence of few randomized studies on selected population may limit the generalizability of the findings to the entire population. Therefore, more well-designed studies or large population programdata to draw definitive conclusions are therefore warranted., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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22. Sentinel node mapping in high-intermediate and high-risk endometrial cancer: Analysis of 5-year oncologic outcomes.
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Cuccu I, Raspagliesi F, Malzoni M, Vizza E, Papadia A, Di Donato V, Giannini A, De Iaco P, Perrone AM, Plotti F, Angioli R, Casarin J, Ghezzi F, Cianci S, Vizzielli G, Restaino S, Petrillo M, Sorbi F, Multinu F, Schivardi G, De Vitis LA, Falcone F, Lalli L, Berretta R, Mueller MD, Tozzi R, Chiantera V, Benedetti Panici P, Fanfani F, Scambia G, and Bogani G
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- Female, Humans, Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy methods, Retrospective Studies, Lymph Node Excision methods, Neoplasm Staging, Lymph Nodes surgery, Lymph Nodes pathology, Endometrial Neoplasms pathology, Sentinel Lymph Node pathology
- Abstract
Objective: To assess 5-year oncologic outcomes of apparent early-stage high-intermediate and high-risk endometrial cancer undergoing sentinel node mapping versus systematic lymphadenectomy., Methods: This is a multi-institutional retrospective, propensity-matched study evaluating data of high-intermediate and high-risk endometrial cancer (according to ESGO/ESTRO/ESP guidelines) undergoing sentinel node mapping versus systematic pelvic lymphadenectomy (with and without para-aortic lymphadenectomy). Survival outcomes were assessed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox proportional hazard methods., Results: Overall, the charts of 242 patients with high-intermediate and high-risk endometrial cancer were retrieved. Data on 73 (30.1%) patients undergoing hysterectomy plus sentinel node mapping were analyzed. Forty-two (57.5%) and 31 (42.5%) patients were classified in the high-intermediate and high-risk groups, respectively. Unilateral sentinel node mapping was achieved in all patients. Bilateral mapping was achieved in 67 (91.7%) patients. Three (4.1%) patients had site-specific lymphadenectomy (two pelvic areas only and one pelvic plus para-aortic area), while adjunctive nodal dissection was omitted in the hemipelvis of the other three (4.1%) patients. Sentinel nodes were detected in the para-aortic area in eight (10.9%) patients. Twenty-four (32.8%) patients were diagnosed with nodal disease. A propensity-score matching was used to compare the aforementioned group of patients undergoing sentinel node mapping with a group of patients undergoing lymphadenectomy. Seventy patient pairs were selected (70 having sentinel node mapping vs. 70 having lymphadenectomy). Patients undergoing sentinel node mapping experienced similar 5-year disease-free survival (HR: 1.233; 95%CI: 0.6217 to 2.444; p = 0.547, log-rank test) and 5-year overall survival (HR: 1.505; 95%CI: 0.6752 to 3.355; p = 0.256, log-rank test) than patients undergoing lymphadenectomy., Conclusions: Sentinel node mapping does not negatively impact 5-year outcomes of high-intermediate and high-risk endometrial cancer. Further prospective studies are warranted., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2024 Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2024
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23. Pharmacotherapy for the treatment of recurrent cervical cancer: an update of the literature.
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D'Oria O, Bogani G, Cuccu I, D'Auge TG, Di Donato V, Caserta D, and Giannini A
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- Female, Humans, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local drug therapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local prevention & control, Immunotherapy methods, Prognosis, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms drug therapy, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Introduction: Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cause of cancer-related death worldwide. High-risk locally advanced or recurrent/metastatic cervical cancers have a poor prognosis with routine treatments. The objective of this study is to analyze the data available in the literature on therapies and molecules currently in use to improve the prognosis of recurrent cervical cancer., Areas Covered: An extensive literature search was conducted by authors to identify relevant trials on various databases. Articles in English published until September 2023 that investigate different pharmacotherapy strategies for the treatment of recurrent cervical cancer, were included. Results of various pharmacological regimens including different combinations of chemotherapy, immune checkpoint inhibitors, DNA damage repair inhibitors and antibody-drug conjugates were analyzed., Expert Opinion: In recent years, there have been significant improvements in the outcomes of recurrent/metastatic cervical cancer. However, these improvements do not address the unmet need in terms of oncological outcomes. The introduction of immunotherapy and targeted therapies showed advantages in cervical cancer patients. New therapies and combination strategies must be implemented. Centralization of care and enrollment in clinical trials are of paramount importance. Primary and secondary prevention remains the fundamental goal to reduce the burden of cervical cancer.
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- 2024
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24. Primary neuroendocrine neoplasms of the vulva: A review of the MITO rare cancer group.
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Barcellini A, Golia D'Augè T, Mandato VD, Cuccu I, Musella A, Fruscio R, Vitale MG, Martinello R, Mangili G, Pignata S, and Palaia I
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- Female, Humans, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Neoplasm Staging, Vulva pathology, Vulva surgery, Lymph Node Excision, Vulvar Neoplasms diagnosis, Vulvar Neoplasms epidemiology, Vulvar Neoplasms therapy, Neuroendocrine Tumors pathology
- Abstract
Gynecological neuroendocrine neoplasms are rare entities and can be divided into two groups: carcinoids and neuroendocrine carcinomas. Due to their rarity their management is not standardized. The aim of this work is to summarize and discuss the current literature evidence on this pathology. A scoping literature review was performed in multiple databases. Thirty-one studies were included: 30 case reports and one case series. Patients' age ranged between 28 and 92 years. Surgery was the most used treatment and the surgical approach included local excision (N = 16/31; 51.6%) with (N = 5/16; 31.25%) or without (N = 11/16; 68.75%) inguinal lymphadenectomy. Adjuvant radiotherapy was delivered in 12 (38.7%) cases; instead, platinum-based therapies were frequently used when chemotherapy was chosen for adjuvant treatment. The overall survival ranged between 20 days to 4 years. However, further research is needed; currently, multimodal approach including surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy appeared safe and feasible for the treatment of these rare and aggressive diseases., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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25. PARP Inhibitors in Newly Diagnosed and Recurrent Ovarian Cancer.
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Giannini A, Di Dio C, Di Donato V, D'oria O, Salerno MG, Capalbo G, Cuccu I, Perniola G, Muzii L, and Bogani G
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- Humans, Female, Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial drug therapy, Ovarian Neoplasms drug therapy, Ovarian Neoplasms genetics, Ovarian Neoplasms pathology, Genital Neoplasms, Female drug therapy
- Abstract
Ovarian cancer is the most lethal gynecologic malignancy, characterized by a high death-to-incidence ratio. Platinum-based chemotherapy is the mainstay of treatment for newly diagnosed and platinum-sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer. Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors (PARP inhibitors) have been incorporated into the treatment strategy for ovarian cancer. PARP inhibitors showed particular benefit for patients harboring defects in DNA repair pathways. Accumulating evidence showed that PARP inhibitors provide a benefit in newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer, even in the absence of BRCA mutation, as reported in the PRIMA, PRIME, and ATHENA-mono trials. Interestingly, the PAOLA-1 study provides another important finding, supporting the adoption of olaparib plus bevacizumab in patients with homologous recombination deficiency. Although those results are exciting, several patients develop resistance to PARP inhibitors. Hence, new combinations are under investigation to identify new treatment strategies to overcome this resistance. Currently, researchers are focused on the possibility to adopt PARP inhibitors even in the setting of platinum-resistant disease. The present critical review aims to report the current landscape and further perspective for strengthening PARP inhibitors' effectiveness in newly diagnosed and recurrent ovarian cancer., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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26. Magnetic resonance imaging-radiomics in endometrial cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Di Donato V, Kontopantelis E, Cuccu I, Sgamba L, Golia D'Augè T, Pernazza A, Della Rocca C, Manganaro L, Catalano C, Perniola G, Palaia I, Tomao F, Giannini A, Muzii L, and Bogani G
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Lymphatic Metastasis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Sensitivity and Specificity, Neoplasm Grading, Neoplasm Invasiveness, Endometrial Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Objective: Endometrial carcinoma is the most common gynecological tumor in developed countries. Clinicopathological factors and molecular subtypes are used to stratify the risk of recurrence and to tailor adjuvant treatment. The present study aimed to assess the role of radiomics analysis in pre-operatively predicting molecular or clinicopathological prognostic factors in patients with endometrial carcinoma., Methods: Literature was searched for publications reporting radiomics analysis in assessing diagnostic performance of MRI for different outcomes. Diagnostic accuracy performance of risk prediction models was pooled using the metandi command in Stata., Results: A search of MEDLINE (PubMed) resulted in 153 relevant articles. Fifteen articles met the inclusion criteria, for a total of 3608 patients. MRI showed pooled sensitivity and specificity 0.785 and 0.814, respectively, in predicting high-grade endometrial carcinoma, deep myometrial invasion (pooled sensitivity and specificity 0.743 and 0.816, respectively), lymphovascular space invasion (pooled sensitivity and specificity 0.656 and 0.753, respectively), and nodal metastasis (pooled sensitivity and specificity 0.831 and 0.736, respectively)., Conclusions: Pre-operative MRI-radiomics analyses in patients with endometrial carcinoma is a good predictor of tumor grading, deep myometrial invasion, lymphovascular space invasion, and nodal metastasis., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© IGCS and ESGO 2023. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2023
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27. Early-stage cervical cancer treatment - what's new?
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Dio CD, Azenkoud I, Trezza A, Lentini E, D'Augè TG, Cuccu I, Bartolomeo GD, Firulli I, Canicchio A, Sgamba L, and Muzii L
- Abstract
The gold standard of treatment for patients with early-stage cervical cancer is radical hysterectomy, in agreement with the entire scientific community. During the last decade, growing evidence has supported the minimally invasive approach. Several studies have suggested that the minimally invasive approach could improve surgical and perioperative outcomes. Because of these findings, ESCO/ESTRO/ESP guidelines state that a "minimally invasive approach is favoured" in comparison with open surgery, as a grade B recommendation. Because of the lack of a grade A recommendation, this randomized Laparoscopic Approach to Cervical Cancer trial evaluated open vs. minimally invasive approach in the early stage. It demonstrated an increase in mortality among patients treated with minimally invasive surgery, revolutionizing current thinking on the primary surgical approach to early cervical cancer. The aim of this study is to analyse which is the best treatment for early cervical cancer and which approach is the most effective at the moment. Further studies are needed to state with certainty the appropriateness of the treatments offered to patients with early cervical cancer., (Copyright © 2023 Termedia.)
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- 2023
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28. Outcomes of High-Grade Cervical Dysplasia with Positive Margins and HPV Persistence after Cervical Conization.
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Giannini A, Di Donato V, Sopracordevole F, Ciavattini A, Ghelardi A, Vizza E, D'Oria O, Simoncini T, Plotti F, Casarin J, Golia D'Augè T, Cuccu I, Serati M, Pinelli C, Bergamini A, Gardella B, Dell'Acqua A, Monti E, Vercellini P, D'Ippolito G, Aguzzoli L, Mandato VD, Giannella L, Scaffa C, Ditto A, Falcone F, Borghi C, Malzoni M, Di Giovanni A, Salerno MG, Liberale V, Contino B, Donfrancesco C, Desiato M, Perrone AM, De Iaco P, Ferrero S, Sarpietro G, Matarazzo MG, Cianci A, Cianci S, Bosio S, Ruisi S, Mosca L, Tinelli R, De Vincenzo R, Zannoni GF, Ferrandina G, Petrillo M, Capobianco G, Carlea A, Zullo F, Muschiato B, Palomba S, Greggi S, Spinillo A, Ghezzi F, Colacurci N, Angioli R, Benedetti Panici P, Muzii L, Scambia G, Raspagliesi F, and Bogani G
- Abstract
The objective of this work is to assess the 5-year outcomes of patients undergoing conization for high-grade cervical lesions that simultaneously present as risk factors in the persistence of HPV infection and the positivity of surgical resection margins. This is a retrospective study evaluating patients undergoing conization for high-grade cervical lesions. All patients included had both positive surgical margins and experienced HPV persistence at 6 months. Associations were evaluated with Cox proportional hazard regression and summarized using hazard ratio (HR). The charts of 2966 patients undergoing conization were reviewed. Among the whole population, 163 (5.5%) patients met the inclusion criteria, being at high risk due to the presence of positive surgical margins and experiencing HPV persistence. Of 163 patients included, 17 (10.4%) patients developed a CIN2+ recurrence during the 5-year follow-up. Via univariate analyses, diagnosis of CIN3 instead of CIN2 (HR: 4.88 (95%CI: 1.10, 12.41); p = 0.035) and positive endocervical instead of ectocervical margins (HR: 6.44 (95%CI: 2.80, 9.65); p < 0.001) were associated with increased risk of persistence/recurrence. Via multivariate analyses, only positive endocervical instead of ectocervical margins (HR: 4.56 (95%CI: 1.23, 7.95); p = 0.021) were associated with worse outcomes. In this high-risk group, positive endocervical margins is the main risk factor predicting 5-year recurrence.
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- 2023
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29. Novel Insights into Molecular Mechanisms of Endometrial Diseases.
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Golia D'Augè T, Cuccu I, Santangelo G, Muzii L, Giannini A, Bogani G, and Di Donato V
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- Female, Humans, Endometrial Neoplasms genetics, Endometrial Neoplasms pathology, Uterine Diseases
- Abstract
Endometrial diseases are the most common gynecological pathologies in Western Countries [...].
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- 2023
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30. Role of Genomic and Molecular Biology in the Modulation of the Treatment of Endometrial Cancer: Narrative Review and Perspectives.
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Cuccu I, D'Oria O, Sgamba L, De Angelis E, Golia D'Augè T, Turetta C, Di Dio C, Scudo M, Bogani G, Di Donato V, Palaia I, Perniola G, Tomao F, Muzii L, and Giannini A
- Abstract
Endometrial cancer (EC) is one of the most common gynecological malignancies in Western countries. Traditionally, loco-reginal dissemination and histological characteristics are the main prognostic factors. Nowadays, molecular and genomic profiling showed exciting results in terms of prognostication. According to the data provided by The Cancer Genome Atlas and other studies, molecular and genomic profiling might be useful in identifying patients al low, intermediate, and high risk of recurrence. However, data regarding the therapeutic value are scant. Several prospective studies are ongoing to identify the most appropriate adjuvant strategy in EC patients, especially for those with positive nodes and low volume disease. The molecular classification has offered the possibility to improve the risk stratification and management of EC. The aim of this review is to focus on the evolution of molecular classification in EC and its impact on the research approach and on clinical management. Molecular and genomic profiling might be useful to tailor the most appropriate adjuvant strategies in apparent early-stage EC.
- Published
- 2023
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31. The role of immunotherapy in advanced and recurrent MMR deficient and proficient endometrial carcinoma.
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Di Dio C, Bogani G, Di Donato V, Cuccu I, Muzii L, Musacchio L, Scambia G, and Lorusso D
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- Female, Humans, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local drug therapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local genetics, Australia, Immunotherapy methods, Microsatellite Instability, DNA Mismatch Repair, Endometrial Neoplasms drug therapy, Endometrial Neoplasms genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Endometrial cancer is the most common gynecological disease in developed countries. Although it is considered an indolent disease, advanced and recurrent endometrial carcinomas are characterized by poor prognosis. In the metastatic setting, after the failure of first-line platinum-based chemotherapy, patients have limited therapeutic options. However, endometrial cancer should not be considered as a single entity but as a group of heterogeneous diseases with specific genomic, molecular, and biological features by suggested the analysis of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Accumulating data highlighted the effectiveness and safety of the adoption of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) for several types of solid tumors. In particular, immunotherapy showed promising results in MSI-H/dMMR solid tumors. Endometrial cancer is not an exception. Endometrial cancer has the highest prevalence of MSI across human cancer types, and approximately 30% of primary endometrial cancers are MSI-H/dMMR and 13% to 30% of recurrent endometrial cancers are MSI-H/dMMR. The preliminary results of the KEYNOTE-158, the Australian NCT03015129 and the GARNET trial strongly supported the adoption of ICIs as monotherapy in patients with advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer, after the failure of first-line treatments. Unfortunately, those impressive results are not achieved in patients with MMR proficient disease. Hence, other combinations were tested. In particular, the adoption of ICIs plus tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) showed very compelling results. Recently, the updated results of the KEYNOTE-775 showed that pembrolizumab plus lenvatinib led to significantly longer progression-free and overall survival than chemotherapy among patients with advanced endometrial cancer, irrespective of MMR status. After EMA approval, pembrolizumab plus lenvatinib represents the new standard second-line treatment in endometrial cancer patients, regardless MMR status. Further studies are investigating the role of ICIs and TKIs in the first line and are testing new combinations (e.g. ICIs plus PARP inhibitors)., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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32. Chemo-surgical approach in vulvar leiomyosarcoma: A case report.
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Capalbo G, Logoteta A, Gallo R, Cuccu I, Gentile G, Arienzo F, Musella A, Pernazza A, Perniola G, Di Donato V, Manganaro L, Bogani G, and Palaia I
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Aged, Vulva pathology, Vulva surgery, Neoadjuvant Therapy, Leiomyosarcoma diagnosis, Leiomyosarcoma drug therapy, Leiomyosarcoma surgery, Vulvar Neoplasms drug therapy, Vulvar Neoplasms surgery, Sarcoma pathology
- Abstract
Introduction: Primary sarcoma of the vulva is an extremely rare entity, representing only 1%-3% of all vulvar malignant neoplasms. Among sarcomas, leiomyosarcoma (LMS) is the most prevalent histologic variant. Due to the rarity of LMS, guidelines are lacking and phase III trials have not been carried out, so clinical management is based on local clinical practice and physician experience., Case Presentation: Here, we described a case of primary LMS of the vulva and its successful management, with the adoption of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and surgery. We report a case of a 74-year-old woman with 12.5 cm vulvar LMS. The patient received three cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with a partial response. Radical vulvectomy with vulvar reconstruction with V-F flap was carried out. Surgical margins were negative. Three additional cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy were delivered., Results: One year after treatment, the patient was disease-free., Conclusion: There are no approved therapeutic protocols for this rare neoplasia. Surgery is the mainstay of treatment. However, it is not always feasible, so neoadjuvant chemotherapy was delivered for downstaging the vulvar lesion. We suppose that neoadjuvant chemotherapy has optimized the possibilities of radical surgery. Despite the anectodical nature of this case presentation, neoadjuvant chemotherapy seems a valid therapeutic option for managing patients with bulky vulvar sarcoma. Further large collaborative studies are warranted to identify the best therapeutic option for these patients.
- Published
- 2022
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33. MRI- and Histologic-Molecular-Based Radio-Genomics Nomogram for Preoperative Assessment of Risk Classes in Endometrial Cancer.
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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
- 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.
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- 2022
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34. Evaluating long-term outcomes of three approaches to retroperitoneal staging in endometrial cancer.
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Bogani G, Di Donato V, Papadia A, Buda A, Casarin J, Multinu F, Plotti F, Cuccu I, D'Auge TG, Gasparri ML, Pinelli C, Perrone AM, 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 MD, Benedetti Panici P, and Raspagliesi F
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Lymph Node Excision methods, Lymph Nodes pathology, Lymph Nodes surgery, Retrospective Studies, Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy methods, Endometrial Neoplasms pathology, Neoplasm Staging
- 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., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no conflicts of interest. No funding sources supported this investigation., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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35. Assessing the role of low volume disease in endometrial cancer.
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Bogani G, Palaia I, Perniola G, Fracassi A, Cuccu I, Golia D'Auge T, Casorelli A, Santangelo G, Fischetti M, Muzii L, Benedetti Panici P, and Di Donato V
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Lymph Node Excision, Lymph Nodes pathology, Neoplasm Staging, Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy, Endometrial Neoplasms pathology, Sentinel Lymph Node pathology
- Abstract
The role of retroperitoneal staging in endometrial cancer is still unclear. Although the prognostic value of lymphadenectomy has been demonstrated no data support the therapeutic value of nodal dissection. Sentinel node mapping represents an evolution of lymphadenectomy. Sentinel node mapping allows a more accurate identification of low-volume diseases (i.e., micrometastasis and isolated tumor cells) that are not always detectable via conventional histopathological evaluation. Adjuvant therapy might play a role in patients with low-volume disease. However, the presence of isolated tumor cells alone seems to not impact outcomes of endometrioid endometrial cancer patients. Hence, the choice to deliver adjuvant therapies has to be tailored based on uterine factors only. The introduction of molecular and genomic profiling would be useful in selecting appropriate surgical and adjuvant treatments. The molecular-integrated risk profile should be integrated in clinical practice to overcome the need of retroperitoneal staging (in case of non-bulky nodes) in patients at low risk., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Endometrial Cancer and BRCA Mutations: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Gasparri ML, Bellaminutti S, Farooqi AA, Cuccu I, Di Donato V, and Papadia A
- Abstract
This systematic review identifies, evaluates, and summarises the findings of all relevant individual studies on the prevalence of BRCA mutation (BRCAm) in endometrial cancer patients and the incidence of endometrial cancer in BRCAm women patients. Consequently, the benefits and limits of a prophylactic hysterectomy at the time of the risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy are analysed and discussed. A systematic literature search was performed in the databases of PubMed, Cochrane, and Web of Science until May 2022; 13 studies met the eligibility criteria. Overall, 1613 endometrial cancer patients from 11 cohorts were tested for BRCA1/2 mutation. BRCA1/2m were identified in 4.3% of women with endometrial cancer (70/1613). BRCA1m was the most represented (71.4%) pathogenic variant. Alongside, a total of 209 BRCAm carriers from 14 studies were diagnosed with endometrial cancer. Only 5 out of 14 studies found a correlation between BRCAm and an increased risk of endometrial cancer. Nevertheless, two studies found a statistical difference only for BRCA1m women. The present systematic review does not provide strong evidence in favour of performing routine hysterectomy at the time of risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy; however, it provides epidemiological data that can be useful for counselling patients in order to offer a tailored approach.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. HPV Vaccination after Primary Treatment of HPV-Related Disease across Different Organ Sites: A Multidisciplinary Comprehensive Review and Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Di Donato V, Caruso G, Bogani G, Cavallari EN, Palaia G, Perniola G, Ralli M, Sorrenti S, Romeo U, Pernazza A, Pierangeli A, Clementi I, Mingoli A, Cassoni A, Tanzi F, Cuccu I, Recine N, Mancino P, de Vincentiis M, Valentini V, d'Ettorre G, Della Rocca C, Mastroianni CM, Antonelli G, Polimeni A, Muzii L, and Palaia I
- Abstract
Objective: To assess evidence on the efficacy of adjuvant human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination in patients treated for HPV-related disease across different susceptible organ sites., Methods: A systematic review was conducted to identify studies addressing the efficacy of adjuvant HPV vaccination on reducing the risk of recurrence of HPV-related preinvasive diseases. Results were reported as mean differences or pooled odds ratios (OR) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI)., Results: Sixteen studies were identified for the final analysis. Overall, 21,472 patients with cervical dysplasia were included: 4132 (19.2%) received the peri-operative HPV vaccine, while 17,340 (80.8%) underwent surgical treatment alone. The recurrences of CIN 1+ (OR 0.45, 95% CI 0.27 to 0.73; p = 0.001), CIN 2+ (OR 0.33, 95% CI 0.20 to 0.52; p < 0.0001), and CIN 3 (OR 0.28, 95% CI 0.13 to 0.59; p = 0.0009) were lower in the vaccinated than in unvaccinated group. Similarly, adjuvant vaccination reduced the risk of developing anal intraepithelial neoplasia ( p = 0.005) and recurrent respiratory papillomatosis ( p = 0.004). No differences in anogenital warts and vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia recurrence rate were observed comparing vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals., Conclusions: Adjuvant HPV vaccination is associated with a reduced risk of CIN recurrence, although there are limited data regarding its role in other HPV-related diseases. Further research is warranted to shed more light on the role of HPV vaccination as adjuvant therapy after primary treatment.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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