524 results on '"Filippo Alongi"'
Search Results
2. Repeated HyperArc radiosurgery for recurrent intracranial metastases and dosimetric analysis of recurrence pattern to account for diffuse dose effect on microscopical disease
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Luca Nicosia, Andrea Gaetano Allegra, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Reyhaneh Bayani, Nima Mousavi Darzikolaee, Rosario Mazzola, Edoardo Pastorello, Paolo Ravelli, Francesco Ricchetti, Michele Rigo, Ruggero Ruggieri, Davide Gurrera, Riccardo Filippo Borgese, Simona Gaito, Giuseppe Minniti, Pierina Navarria, Marta Scorsetti, and Filippo Alongi
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Brain metastases ,SRS ,Radiosurgery ,HyperArc ,Radiotherapy ,Stereotactic radiotherapy ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Aims: Evaluate effectiveness and safety of multiple HyperArc courses and patterns of progression in patients affected by BMs with intracranial progression. Methods: 56 patients were treated for 702 BMs with 197 (range 2–8) HyperArc courses in case of exclusive intracranial progression. Primary end-point was the overall survival (OS), secondary end-points were intracranial progression-free survival (iPFS), toxicity, local control (LC), neurological death (ND), and whole-brain RT (WBRT)-free survival. Site of progression was evaluated against isodoses levels (0, 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 10, 13, 15, 20, and 24 Gy.). Results: The 1-year OS was 70 %, and the median was 20.8 months (17–36). At the univariate analysis (UVA) biological equivalent dose (BED) > 51.3 Gy and non-melanoma histology significantly correlated with OS. The median time to iPFS was 4.9 months, and the 1-year iPFS was 15 %. Globally, 538 new BMs occurred after the first HA cycle in patients with extracranial disease controlled. 96.4 % of them occurred within the isodoses range 0–7 Gy as follows: 26.6 % (0 Gy), 16.5 % (1 Gy), 16.5 % (2 Gy), 20.1 % (3 Gy), 13.1 % (5 Gy), 3.4 % (7 Gy) (p = 0.00). Radionecrosis occurred in 2 metastases (0.28 %). No clinical toxicity of grade 3 or higher occurred during follow-up. One- and 2-year LC was 90 % and 79 %, respectively. At the UVA BED > 70 Gy and non-melanoma histology were significant predictors of higher LC. The 2-year WBRT-free survival was 70 %. After a median follow-up of 17.4 months, 12 patients deceased by ND. Conclusion: Intracranical relapses can be safely and effectively treated with repeated HyperArc, with the aim to postpone or avoid WBRT. Diffuse dose by volumetric RT might reduce microscopic disease also at relatively low levels, potentially acting as a virtual CTV. Neurological death is not the most common cause of death in this population, which highlights the impact of extracranial disease on overall survival.
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- 2024
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3. Health-related quality of life in men with oligometastatic prostate cancer following metastases-directed stereotactic body radiotherapy: Real-world data from the E2-RADIatE OligoCare cohort
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Renée Bultijnck, Mieke Van Hemelrijck, Valérie Fonteyne, Lorenzo Livi, Barbara Alicja Jereczek-Fossa, Hossein Hemmatazad, Michael Mayinger, Heike Peulen, Luc Verbeke, Sara Ramella, Pablo Castro, Pelagia Tsoutsou, Karin Stellamans, Adnan Shaukat, Miha Orazem, Paul Jeene, Pètra Braam, Helena Verkooijen, Inga-Malin Simek, Filippo Alongi, Enrico Clementel, Catherine Fortpied, Abigirl Machingura, Felix Boakye Oppong, Matthias Guckenberger, and Piet Ost
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the impact of metastases-directed stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in men with oligometastatic prostate cancer (PCa) using real-world data from the OligoCare cohort. Materials and methods: OligoCare is a pragmatic, observational cohort designed to assess the impact of metastases-directed SBRT on patients with oligometastatic disease (OMD). We report an interim analyses of the secondary endpoint HRQoL, assessed using the EORTC QLQ-C30, within six months of metastases-directed SBRT for oligometastatic disease in men with PCa among the first 1600 registered patients. HRQoL data collection was optional within the OligoCare cohort. To compare HRQoL between baseline and first follow-up assessment, a Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used. A multiple linear regression model was used to explore the HRQoL associations with predefined factors. Results: Out of the 1600 registered patients, 658 were treated for oligometastatic PCa, of which 233 had baseline QoL data and 132 patients had both baseline and follow-up HRQoL data. At baseline, most patients had a WHO performance status of 0 or 1 (87 %), were de-novo oligometastatic (79 %), had one metastasis (90 %), and had a good overall global health status (mean 80.81, SD16.11, IQR 75–92). 51 % received hormonal therapy as concomitant systemic treatment. Patients with comorbidities as assessed by the Charlson Comorbidity index had a worse global health status at baseline (-4.88, 95 % CI:-9.35, −0.42). No clinically meaningful significant difference in global health status was observed at first assessment following SBRT (median 3.0 months) compared with baseline (mean difference 2.27, 95 % CI:-1.54, 6.08). Upon evaluating the proportions, meaningful clinically important differences (a 10-point or more difference) was observed in, 17 % and 11 % of the patients reporting deterioration and improvement of global health status, respectively. Conclusion: Metastases-directed stereotactic body radiotherapy had no negative impact on global HRQoL within the first six months after treatment.
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- 2024
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4. The state‐of‐the‐art technic of stereotactic radioablation for the treatment of cardiac arrhythmias: An overview
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Farzad MasoudKabir, Reyhaneh Bayani, Nima Mousavi Darzikolaee, Alireza Abdshah, Mahsa Moshtaghian, Farshid Farhan, Mahdi Aghili, Ali Kazemian, Luca Nicosia, Francesco Cuccia, Ana Vitoria Rocha, Fatemeh Jafari, and Filippo Alongi
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arrhythmia ,atrial fibrillation ,radiation therapy ,radioablation ,ventricular tachycardia ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Cardiac arrhythmias, including ventricular tachycardia (VT), stand as a significant threat to health, often leading to mortality and sudden cardiac death. While conventional treatments for VT exhibit efficacy, cases of refractory VT pose challenges. Stereotactic Arrhythmia Radioablation (STAR) offers a novel approach, delivering precise high‐dose radiation to well‐defined targets with minimal collateral damage. This study explores the potential of STAR as an alternative therapy, especially for high‐risk patients or those with refractory VT. Methods This research reviews ongoing studies and preliminary investigations into the evaluation of the efficacy and safety of STAR. The method involves targeted radiation delivery, assessing reductions in VT recurrence and the early safety profile in refractory VT patients. However, given STAR's early stage and limited clinical evidence, cautious interpretation is advised. Results Preliminary findings indicate a reduction in VT recurrence with STAR, suggesting promise as a therapeutic option. Early safety profiles are encouraging, but definitive statements on efficacy and safety require further investigation. Positive initial outcomes underscore the need for additional data and long‐term studies. Conclusion Stereotactic Arrhythmia Radioablation is recently emerging as a promising treatment for refractory VT. While early results are encouraging, careful interpretation is needed, due to STAR's early stages. Ongoing investigations are critical for a comprehensive understanding of its long‐term efficacy and tolerability. This review provides fundamental insights into STAR's background, principles, pre‐treatment procedures, clinical implications, and toxicity, setting the stage for future research in this evolving therapeutic field.
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- 2023
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5. Development of a comprehensive cardiac atlas on a 1.5 Tesla Magnetic Resonance Linear Accelerator
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Aronne M. Schottstaedt, Eric S. Paulson, Jason C. Rubenstein, Xinfeng Chen, Eenas A. Omari, X Allen Li, Chris J. Schultz, Lindsay L. Puckett, Clifford G. Robinson, Filippo Alongi, Elizabeth M. Gore, and William A. Hall
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Radiation Oncology Cardiac Atlas ,MRgRT ,1.5T MRL ,Cardiac conduction system ,Contouring guidelines ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background and purpose: The 1.5 Tesla (T) Magnetic Resonance Linear Accelerator (MRL) provides an innovative modality for improved cardiac imaging when planning radiation treatment. No MRL based cardiac atlases currently exist, thus, we sought to comprehensively characterize cardiac substructures, including the conduction system, from cardiac images acquired using a 1.5 T MRL and provide contouring guidelines. Materials and methods: Five volunteers were enrolled in a prospective protocol (NCT03500081) and were imaged on the 1.5 T MRL with Half Fourier Single-Shot Turbo Spin-Echo (HASTE) and 3D Balanced Steady-State Free Precession (bSSFP) sequences in axial, short axis, and vertical long axis. Cardiac anatomy was contoured by (AS) and confirmed by a board certified cardiologist (JR) with expertise in cardiac MR imaging. Results: A total of five volunteers had images acquired with the HASTE sequence, with 21 contours created on each image. One of these volunteers had additional images obtained with 3D bSSFP sequences in the axial plane and additional images obtained with HASTE sequences in the key cardiac planes. Contouring guidelines were created and outlined. 15–16 contours were made for the short axis and vertical long axis. The cardiac conduction system was demonstrated with eleven representative contours. There was reasonable variation of contour volume across volunteers, with structures more clearly delineated on the 3D bSSFP sequence. Conclusions: We present a comprehensive cardiac atlas using novel images acquired prospectively on a 1.5 T MRL. This cardiac atlas provides a novel resource for radiation oncologists in delineating cardiac structures for treatment with radiotherapy, with special focus on the cardiac conduction system.
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- 2023
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6. Activity of sotorasib against brain metastases from NSCLC harboring KRAS p.G12C mutation: a case report
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Alessandro Inno, Fabiana Marchetti, Matteo Valerio, Niccolò Giaj Levra, Filippo Alongi, Giovanni Foti, and Stefania Gori
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Brain metastases ,Central nervous system ,KRAS ,NSCLC ,Sotorasib ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
In the CodeBreaK 100 phase 2 study, sotorasib was active for patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) harboring Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homologue (KRAS) p.G12C mutation. However, patients with untreated and/or active brain metastases were excluded from the trial, and the activity of sotorasib in the setting of brain metastases should be further investigated. Here we report the case of a KRAS p.G12C mutant NSCLC patient with three brain metastases, of whom one was untreated and the other two had progressed after radiotherapy with symptoms requiring steroids, that responded to sotorasib. Our report suggests that sotorasib may be active against untreated or progressive brain metastases, supporting further evaluation of sotorasib in this setting.
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- 2023
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7. Stereotactic radiosurgery for the treatment of brainstem metastases: a multicenter retrospective study
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Luca Nicosia, Piera Navarria, Valentina Pinzi, Martina Giraffa, Ivana Russo, Paolo Tini, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Filippo Alongi, and Giuseppe Minniti
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Brainstem metastases ,SRS, stereotactic radiosurgery ,SRT, stereotactic radiotherapy ,Brain metastases ,Linac ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Brainstem metastases (BSM) are associated with a poor prognosis and their management represents a therapeutic challenge. BSM are often inoperable and, in absence of randomized trials, the optimal radiation treatment of BSM remains to be defined. We evaluated the efficacy and toxicity of linear accelerator (linac)-based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) and hypofractionated steretotactic radiotherapy (HSRT) in the treatment of BSM in a series of patients treated in different clinical centers. Methods We conducted a multicentric retrospective study of patients affected by 1–2 BSM from different histologies who underwent SRS/HSRT. Freedom from local progression (FLP), cancer-specific survival (CSS), overall survival (OS), and treatment-related toxicity were evaluated. In addition, predictors of treatment response and survivals were evaluated. Results Between 2008 and 2021, 105 consecutive patients with 111 BMS who received SRS or HSRT for 1–2 BSM were evaluated. Median follow-up time was 10 months (range 3–130). One-year FLP rate was 90.4%. At the univariate analysis, tumor volume ≤ 0.4 cc, and concurrent targeted therapy were associated with longer FLP, with combined treatment that remained a significant independent predictor [0.058, HR 0.139 (95% CI 0.0182–1.064]. Median OS and CSS were 11 months and 14.6 months, respectively. At multivariate analysis, concurrent targeted therapy administration was significantly associated with longer OS [HR 0.514 (95%CI 0.302–0.875); p = 0.01]. Neurological death occurred in 30.4% of patients, although this was due to local progression in only 3 (2.8%) patients. Conclusion Linac-based SRS/HSRT offers excellent local control to patients with BSM, with low treatment-related toxicity and no apparent detrimental effects on OS. When treated with ablative intent, BSM are an uncommon cause of neurological death. The present results indicates that patients with BSM should not be excluded a priori from clinical trials.
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- 2022
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8. Achieving Consensus for Management of Hormone-Sensitive, Low-Volume Metastatic Prostate Cancer in Italy
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Elena Verzoni, Giovanni Pappagallo, Filippo Alongi, Stefano Arcangeli, Giulio Francolini, Daniele Galanti, Luca Galli, Marco Maruzzo, Sabrina Rossetti, Giambattista Siepe, Luca Triggiani, Paolo Andrea Zucali, and Rolando Maria D’Angelillo
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prostate ,hormone-sensitive ,low-volume ,oligometastatic ,ARTA ,chemotherapy ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC) is usually categorized as high- or low-volume disease. This is relevant because low- and high-volume metastatic disease are associated with different outcomes, and thus management of the two forms should differ. Although some definitions have been reported, the concept of oligometastatic disease is not so clearly defined, giving rise to further variability in the choice of treatment, mainly between systemic agents and radiotherapy, especially in the era of metastasis-directed therapy. With the aim of providing clinicians with guidance on best practice, a group of medical and radiation oncologists, experts in prostate cancer, used the round robin method to generate a series of consensus statements on management of low-volume mHSPC. Consensus was obtained on three major areas of controversy: (1) with regard to clinical definitions of mHSPC, it was held that oligometastatic and low-volume disease refer to different concepts and should not be used interchangeably; (2) regarding therapy of de novo low-volume metastatic disease, androgen deprivation therapy alone can be considered undertreatment, and all patients should be evaluated for systemic treatment combinations; local therapy should not be denied in patients with mHSPC, regardless of the intensity of systemic therapy, and metastasis-directed therapy can be proposed in selected cases; (3) with regard to treatment of metachronous metastatic disease, patients should be evaluated for systemic treatment combinations. Metastasis-directed therapy can be proposed to delay systemic treatment in selected cases, especially if prostate-specific membrane antigen positron emission tomography staging has been performed and when indolent disease occurs. It is hoped that clinicians treating patients with mHSPC in daily practice will find this expert opinion of value.
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- 2022
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9. First multicentre experience of SABR for lymph node and liver oligometastatic disease on the unity MR-Linac
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Tomas M. Janssen, Katharine Aitken, Filippo Alongi, Aisling Barry, Uffe Bernchou, Simon Boeke, William A. Hall, Ali Hosni, Petra.S. Kroon, Marcel Nachbar, Hina Saeed, Ina M. Jürgenliemk-Schulz, Tine Schytte, Helena M. Verkooijen, and Marlies.E. Nowee
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(3–6): oligometastases ,MR-guided radiotherapy ,SABR ,MR-Linac ,MOMENTUM ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Summary: The treatment of oligometastatic disease using MR guidance is an evolving field. Since August 2018 patients are treated on a 1.5 Tesla MR-Linac (MRL). We present current workflows and practice standards from seven institutions for the initial patients treated for lymph node and liver metastases.
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- 2022
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10. Current practices and perspectives on the integration of contrast agents in MRI-guided radiation therapy clinical practice: A worldwide survey
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Luca Boldrini, Filippo Alongi, Angela Romano, Diepriye Charles Davies, Michael Bassetti, Giuditta Chiloiro, Stefanie Corradini, Maria Antonietta Gambacorta, Lorenzo Placidi, Alison C. Tree, Rosalyne Westley, and Luca Nicosia
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Magnetic resonance guided radiation therapy ,MRI contrast agents ,Radiotherapy planning ,Target delineation ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Aims: The introduction of on-line magnetic resonance image-guided radiotherapy (MRIgRT) has led to an improvement in the therapeutic workflow of radiotherapy treatments thanks to the better visualization of therapy volumes assured by the higher soft tissue contrast. Magnetic Resonance contrast agents (MRCA) could improve the target delineation in on-line MRIgRT planning as well as reduce inter-observer variability and enable innovative treatment optimization protocols. The aim of this survey is to investigate the utilization of MRCA among centres that clinically implemented on-line MRIgRT technology. Methods: In September 2021, we conducted an online survey consisting of a sixteen-question questionnaire that was distributed to the all the hospitals around the world equipped with MR Linacs. The questionnaire was developed by two Italian 0.35 T and 1.5 T MR-Linac centres and was validated by four other collaborating centres, using a Delphi consensus methodology. Results: The survey was distributed to 52 centres and 43 centres completed it (82.7%). Among these centres, 23 institutions (53.5%) used the 0.35T MR-Linac system, while the remaining 20 (46.5%) used the 1.5T MR-Linac system.According to results obtained, 25 (58%) of the centres implemented the use of MRCA for on-line MRIgRT. Gadoxetate (Eovist®; Primovist®) was reported to be the most used MRCA (80%) and liver the most common site of application (58%). Over 70% of responders agreed/strongly agreed to the need for international guidelines. Conclusions: The use of MRCA in clinical practice presents several pitfalls and future research will be necessary to understand the actual advantage derived from the use of MRCA in clinical practice, their toxicity profiles and better define the need of formulating guidelines for standardising the use of MRCA in MRIgRT workflow.
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- 2023
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11. A predictive model of polymetastatic disease from a multicenter large retrospectIve database on colorectal lung metastases treated with stereotactic ablative radiotherapy: The RED LaIT-SABR study
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Luca Nicosia, Davide Franceschini, Francesca Perrone-Congedi, Alessandro Molinari, Marianna Alessandra Gerardi, Michele Rigo, Rosario Mazzola, Marco Perna, Vieri Scotti, Andrei Fodor, Aurelia Iurato, Francesco Pasqualetti, Giovanni Gadducci, Silvia Chiesa, Rita Marina Niespolo, Alessio Bruni, Anna Cappelli, Elisa D'Angelo, Paolo Borghetti, Alessandro Di Marzo, Andrea Ravasio, Berardino De Bari, Matteo Sepulcri, Dario Aiello, Gianluca Mortellaro, Claudia Sangalli, Marzia Franceschini, Giampaolo Montesi, Francesco Maria Aquilanti, Gianluigi Lunardi, Riccardo Valdagni, Ivan Fazio, Giovanni Scarzello, Vittorio Vavassori, Ernesto Maranzano, Stefano Maria Magrini, Stefano Arcangeli, Maria Antonietta Gambacorta, Vincenzo Valentini, Fabiola Paiar, Sara Ramella, Nadia Gisella Di Muzio, Mauro Loi, Barbara Alicja Jereczek-Fossa, Franco Casamassima, Mattia Falchetto Osti, Marta Scorsetti, and Filippo Alongi
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Stereotactic ablative radiotherapy ,SABR ,SBRT ,Colorectal cancer ,Oligometastatic disease ,Predictive factors ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Aim: Stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) showed increasing survival in oligometastatic patients. Few studies actually depicted oligometastatic disease (OMD) evolution and which patient will remain disease-free and which will rapidly develop a polymetastatic disease (PMD) after SABR. Therefore, apart from the number of active metastases, there are no clues on which proven factor should be considered for prescribing local treatment in OMD. The study aims to identify predictive factors of polymetastatic evolution in lung oligometastatic colorectal cancer patients. Methods: This international Ethical Committee approved trial (Prot. Negrar 2019-ZT) involved 23 Centers and 450 lung oligometastatic patients. Primary end-point was time to the polymetastatic conversion (tPMC). Additionally, oligometastases number and cumulative gross tumor volume (cumGTV) were used as combined predictive factors of tPMC. Oligometastases number was stratified as 1, 2–3, and 4–5; cumGTV was dichotomized to the value of 10 cc. Results: The median tPMC in the overall population was 26 months. Population was classified in the following tPMC risk classes: low-risk (1–3 oligometastases and cumGTV ≤ 10 cc) with median tPMC of 35.1 months; intermediate-risk (1–3 oligometastases and cumGTV > 10 cc), with median tPMC of 13.9 months, and high-risk (4–5 oligometastases, any cumGTV) with median tPMC of 9.4 months (p = 0.000). Conclusion: The present study identified predictive factors of polymetastatic evolution after SABR in lung oligometastatic colorectal cancer. The results demonstrated that the sole metastases number is not sufficient to define the OMD since patients defined oligometastatic from a numerical point of view might rapidly progress to PMD when the cumulative tumor volume is high. A tailored approach in SABR prescription should be pursued considering the expected disease evolution after SABR, with the aim to avoid unnecessary treatment and toxicity in those at high risk of polymetastatic spread, and maximize local treatment in those with a favorable disease evolution.
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- 2023
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12. Reduction of inter-observer differences in the delineation of the target in spinal metastases SBRT using an automatic contouring dedicated system
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Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Vanessa Figlia, Francesco Cuccia, Rosario Mazzola, Luca Nicosia, Francesco Ricchetti, Michele Rigo, Giorgio Attinà, Claudio Vitale, Gianluisa Sicignano, Antonio De Simone, Stefania Naccarato, Ruggero Ruggieri, and Filippo Alongi
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Radiotherapy ,Stereotactic ,Software ,Spine ,Metastases ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Approximately one third of cancer patients will develop spinal metastases, that can be associated with back pain, neurological symptoms and deterioration in performance status. Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) and stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) have been offered in clinical practice mainly for the management of oligometastatic and oligoprogressive patients, allowing the prescription of high total dose delivered in one or few sessions to small target volumes, minimizing the dose exposure of normal tissues. Due to the high delivered doses and the proximity of critical organs at risk (OAR) such as the spinal cord, the correct definition of the treatment volume becomes even more important in SBRT treatment, thus making it necessary to standardize the method of target definition and contouring, through the adoption of specific guidelines and specific automatic contouring tools. An automatic target contouring system for spine SBRT is useful to reduce inter-observer differences in target definition. In this study, an automatic contouring tool was evaluated. Methods Simulation CT scans and MRI data of 20 patients with spinal metastases were evaluated. To evaluate the advantage of the automatic target contouring tool (Elements SmartBrush Spine), which uses the identification of different densities within the target vertebra, we evaluated the agreement of the contours of 20 spinal target (2 cervical, 9 dorsal and 9 lumbar column), outlined by three independent observers using the automatic tool compared to the contours obtained manually, and measured by DICE similarity coefficient. Results The agreement of GTV contours outlined by independent operators was superior with the use of the automatic contour tool compared to manually outlined contours (mean DICE coefficient 0.75 vs 0.57, p = 0.048). Conclusions The dedicated contouring tool allows greater precision and reduction of inter-observer differences in the delineation of the target in SBRT spines. Thus, the evaluated system could be useful in the setting of spinal SBRT to reduce uncertainties of contouring increasing the level of precision on target delivered doses.
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- 2021
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13. Patient positioning and immobilization procedures for hybrid MR-Linac systems
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Francesco Cuccia, Filippo Alongi, Claus Belka, Luca Boldrini, Juliane Hörner-Rieber, Helen McNair, Michele Rigo, Maartje Schoenmakers, Maximilian Niyazi, Judith Slagter, Claudio Votta, and Stefanie Corradini
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Hybrid magnetic resonance (MR)-guided linear accelerators represent a new horizon in the field of radiation oncology. By harnessing the favorable combination of on-board MR-imaging with the possibility to daily recalculate the treatment plan based on real-time anatomy, the accuracy in target and organs-at-risk identification is expected to be improved, with the aim to provide the best tailored treatment. To date, two main MR-linac hybrid machines are available, Elekta Unity and Viewray MRIdian. Of note, compared to conventional linacs, these devices raise practical issues due to the positioning phase for the need to include the coil in the immobilization procedure and in order to perform the best reproducible positioning, also in light of the potentially longer treatment time. Given the relative novelty of this technology, there are few literature data regarding the procedures and the workflows for patient positioning and immobilization for MR-guided daily adaptive radiotherapy. In the present narrative review, we resume the currently available literature and provide an overview of the positioning and setup procedures for all the anatomical districts for hybrid MR-linac systems.
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- 2021
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14. Editorial: Stereotactic body radiotherapy for prostate cancer
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Amar U. Kishan, Joseph Kaminski, and Filippo Alongi
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prostate SBRT ,prostate ,active surveillance ,spacer ,MRI ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2022
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15. Current status and recent advances in reirradiation of glioblastoma
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Giuseppe Minniti, Maximilian Niyazi, Filippo Alongi, Piera Navarria, and Claus Belka
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Target delineation ,Recurrent glioblastoma ,Reirradiation ,Stereotactic radiosurgery ,Hypofractionated radiotherapy ,Radionecrosis ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Despite aggressive management consisting of maximal safe surgical resection followed by external beam radiation therapy (60 Gy/30 fractions) with concomitant and adjuvant temozolomide, approximately 90% of WHO grade IV gliomas (glioblastomas, GBM) will recur locally within 2 years. For patients with recurrent GBM, no standard of care exists. Thanks to the continuous improvement in radiation science and technology, reirradiation has emerged as feasible approach for patients with brain tumors. Using stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) or stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT), either hypofractionated or conventionally fractionated schedules, several studies have suggested survival benefits following reirradiation of patients with recurrent GBM; however, there are still questions to be answered about the efficacy and toxicity associated with a second course of radiation. We provide a clinical overview on current status and recent advances in reirradiation of GBM, addressing relevant clinical questions such as the appropriate patient selection and radiation technique, optimal dose fractionation, reirradiation tolerance of the brain and the risk of radiation necrosis.
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- 2021
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16. Automated Planning for Prostate Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy on the 1.5 T MR-Linac
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Stefania Naccarato, PhD, Michele Rigo, MD, Roberto Pellegrini, PhD, Peter Voet, PhD, Hafid Akhiat, BSc, Davide Gurrera, PhD, Antonio De Simone, PhD, Gianluisa Sicignano, PhD, Rosario Mazzola, MD, Vanessa Figlia, MD, Francesco Ricchetti, MD, Luca Nicosia, MD, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, MD, Francesco Cuccia, MD, Nadejda Stavreva, PhD, Dobromir S. Pressyanov, PhD, Pavel Stavrev, PhD, Filippo Alongi, MD, and Ruggero Ruggieri, PhD
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Purpose: Adaptive stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for prostate cancer (PC) by the 1.5 T MR-linac currently requires online planning by an expert user. A fully automated and user-independent solution to adaptive planning (mCycle) of PC-SBRT was compared with user's plans for the 1.5 T MR-linac. Methods and Materials: Fifty adapted plans on daily magnetic resonance imaging scans for 10 patients with PC treated by 35 Gy (prescription dose [Dp]) in 5 fractions were reoptimized offline from scratch, both by an expert planner (manual) and by mCycle. Manual plans consisted of multicriterial optimization (MCO) of the fluence map plus manual tweaking in segmentation, whereas in mCycle plans, the objectives were sequentially optimized by MCO according to an a-priori assigned priority list. The main criteria for planning approval were a dose ≥95% of the Dp to at least 95% of the planning target volume (PTV), V33.2 (PTV) ≥ 95%, a dose less than the Dp to the hottest cubic centimeter (V35 ≤ 1 cm3) of rectum, bladder, penile bulb, and urethral planning risk volume (ie, urethra plus 3 mm isotropically), and V32 ≤ 5%, V28 ≤ 10%, and V18 ≤ 35% to the rectum. Such dose-volume metrics, plus some efficiency and deliverability metrics, were used for the comparison of mCycle versus manual plans. Results: mCycle plans improved target dose coverage, with V33.2 (PTV) passing on average (±1 SD) from 95.7% (±1.0%) for manual plans to 97.5% (±1.3%) for mCycle plans (P < .001), and rectal dose sparing, with significantly reduced V32, V28, and V18 (P ≤ .004). Although at an equivalent number of segments, mCycle plans consumed moderately more monitor units (+17%) and delivery time (+9%) (P < .001), whereas they were generally faster (–19%) in terms of optimization times (P < .019). No significant differences were found for the passing rates of locally normalized γ (3 mm, 3%) (P = .059) and γ (2 mm, 2%) (P = .432) deliverability metrics. Conclusions: In the offline setting, mCycle proved to be a trustable solution for automated planning of PC-SBRT on the 1.5 T MR-linac. mCycle integration in the online workflow will free the user from the challenging online-optimization task.
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- 2022
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17. Immunotherapy in NSCLC Patients With Brain and Leptomeningeal Metastases
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Thomas Pierret, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Anne-Claire Toffart, Filippo Alongi, Denis Moro-Sibilot, and Elisa Gobbini
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lung cancer ,immunotherapy ,brain ,leptomeningeal ,metastases ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Immunotherapy has now been integrated as a treatment strategy for most patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, the pivotal clinical trials that demonstrated its impressive efficacy often did not include patients with active, untreated brain metastases or leptomeningeal carcinomatosis. Nevertheless, NSCLC is the most common tumor to metastasize to the brain, and patients develop brain and meningeal involvement in approximately 40 and 10% of cases, respectively. Consequently, the appropriate care of these patients is a recurrent clinical concern. Although there are many aspects that would merit further investigation to explain the mechanism of intracranial response to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPs), some data suggest that they are able to cross the blood–brain barrier, resulting in local tumor microenvironment modification. This results in a similar clinical benefit in patients with stable, previously treated brain metastases compared to the general population. Despite important limitations, some real-life studies have described that the ICPs’ efficacy was maintained also in less selected patients with untreated or symptomatic brain metastases. In contrast, few data are available about patients with leptomeningeal carcinomatosis. Nevertheless, neurological complications due to ICP treatment in patients with brain metastases have to be evaluated and carefully monitored. Despite the fact that limited data are available in the literature, the purpose of this review is to show that the multimodal treatment of these patients with brain metastases and/or leptomeningeal disease should be discussed during tracing of the history of the disease, participating in the local and possibly systemic control of NSCLC.
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- 2022
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18. 1.5T MR-Guided Daily Adaptive Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy for Prostate Re-Irradiation: A Preliminary Report of Toxicity and Clinical Outcomes
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Francesco Cuccia, Michele Rigo, Vanessa Figlia, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Rosario Mazzola, Luca Nicosia, Francesco Ricchetti, Giovanna Trapani, Antonio De Simone, Davide Gurrera, Stefania Naccarato, Gianluisa Sicignano, Ruggero Ruggieri, and Filippo Alongi
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MR-guided ,stereotactic ablative body radiation ,prostate ,re-irradiation ,MR-linac ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
BackgroundProstate re-irradiation is an attractive treatment option in the case of local relapse after previous radiotherapy, either in the definitive or in the post-operative setting. In this scenario, the introduction of MR-linacs may represent a helpful tool to improve the accuracy and precision of the treatment.MethodsThis study reports the preliminary data of a cohort of 22 patients treated with 1.5T MR-Linacs for prostate or prostate bed re-irradiation. Toxicity was prospectively assessed and collected according to CTCAE v5.0. Survival endpoints were measured using Kaplan-Meier method.ResultsFrom October 2019 to October 2021, 22 patients received 1.5T MR-guided stereotactic body radiotherapy for prostate or prostate-bed re-irradiation. In 12 cases SBRT was delivered to the prostate, in 10 to the prostate bed. The median time to re-RT was 72 months (range, 12-1460). SBRT was delivered concurrently with ADT in 4 cases. Acute toxicity was: for GU G1 in 11/22 and G2 in 4/22; for GI G1 in 7/22, G2 in 4/22. With a median follow-up of 8 months (3-21), late G1 and G2 GU events were respectively 11/22 and 4/22. Regarding GI toxicity, G1 were 6/22, while G2 3/22. No acute/late G≥3 GI/GU events occurred. All patients are alive. The median PSA-nadir was 0.49 ng/ml (0.08-5.26 ng/ml), for 1-year BRFS and DPFS rates of 85.9%. Twenty patients remained free from ADT with 1-year ADT-free survival rates of 91.3%.ConclusionsOur experience supports the use of MR-linacs for prostate or prostate bed re-irradiation as a feasible and safe treatment option with minimal toxicity and encouraging results in terms of clinical outcomes.
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- 2022
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19. Initial Experience With Single-Isocenter Radiosurgery to Target Multiple Brain Metastases Using an Automated Treatment Planning Software: Clinical Outcomes and Optimal Target Volume Margins Strategy
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Giuseppe Minniti, MD, PhD, Luca Capone, PhD, Filippo Alongi, MD, Vanessa Figlia, MD, Barbara Nardiello, PhD, Randa El Gawhary, PhD, Claudia Scaringi, MD, Federico Bianciardi, MD, Barbara Tolu, MD, Piercarlo Gentile, MD, and Sergio Paolini, MD
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Purpose: Our purpose was to assess the clinical outcomes and target positioning accuracy of frameless linear accelerator single-isocenter multiple-target (SIMT) dynamic conformal arc (DCA) stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for multiple brain metastases (BM). Methods and Materials: Between October 2016 and September 2018, 31 consecutive patients ≥18 years old with 204 BM
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- 2020
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20. Two months of radiation oncology in the heart of Italian 'red zone' during COVID-19 pandemic: paving a safe path over thin ice
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Michela Buglione, Luigi Spiazzi, Andrea Emanuele Guerini, Fernando Barbera, Nadia Pasinetti, Ludovica Pegurri, Luca Triggiani, Davide Tomasini, Diana Greco, Gianluca Costantino, Alessandra Bragaglio, Nadia Bonometti, Mara Liccioli, Lorella Mascaro, Radiation Oncology Department Staff, Filippo Alongi, and Stefano Maria Magrini
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COVID-19 ,Radiotherapy ,Radiation oncology ,Cancer ,Coronavirus ,Anticancer ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic had an overwhelming impact on healthcare worldwide. Outstandingly, the aftermath on neoplastic patients is still largely unknown, and only isolated cases of COVID-19 during radiotherapy have been published. We will report the two-months experience of our Department, set in Lombardy “red-zone”. Methods Data of 402 cancer patients undergoing active treatment from February 24 to April 24, 2020 were retrospectively reviewed; several indicators of the Department functioning were also analyzed. Results Dedicated measures allowed an overall limited reduction of the workload. Decrease of radiotherapy treatment number reached 17%, while the number of administration of systemic treatment and follow up evaluations kept constant. Conversely, new treatment planning faced substantial decline. Considering the patients, infection rate was 3.23% (13/402) and mortality 1.24% (5/402). Median age of COVID-19 patients was 69.7 years, the large majority were male and smokers (84.6%); lung cancer was the most common tumor type (61.5%), 84.6% of subjects were stage III-IV and 92.3% had comorbidities. Remarkably, 92.3% of the cases were detected before March 24. Globally, only 2.5% of ongoing treatments were suspended due to suspect or confirmed COVID-19 and 46.2% of positive patients carried on radiotherapy without interruption. Considering only the last month, infection rate among patients undergoing treatment precipitated to 0.43% (1/232) and no new contagions were reported within our staff. Conclusions Although mortality rate in COVID-19 cancer patients is elevated, our results support the feasibility and safety of continuing anticancer treatment during SARS-Cov-2 pandemic by endorsing consistent preventive measures.
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- 2020
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21. Intra-fraction and Inter-fraction analysis of a dedicated immobilization device for intracranial radiation treatment
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Chin Loon Ong, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Luca Nicosia, Vanessa Figlia, Davide Tomasini, Eric M. Franken, and Filippo Alongi
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Radiotherapy ,Immobilization ,Inter-fraction ,Intra-fraction ,Brain ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Immobilization devices are crucial to minimize patient positioning uncertainties in radiotherapy (RT) treatments. Accurate inter and intra-fraction motions is particularly important for intracranial and stereotactic radiation treatment which require high precision in dose delivery. Recently, a new immobilization device has been developed specifically for the radiation treatment of intracranial malignancies. To date, no data are available on the use of this device in daily clinical practice. The aim of this study is to investigate the intra and inter-fraction variations, patient comfort and radiographer confidence of the immobilization system from two distinct institutions: HagaZiekenhuis, Den Haag, Netherlands and IRCCS Ospedale Sacro Cuore Don Calabria, Negrar, Italy. Material and method Sixteen patients (10 diagnosed with brain metastases and 6 with primary central nervous systemic tumor) from IRCCS Ospedale Sacro Cuore Don Calabria and 17 patients (all diagnosed with brain metastases tumor) from HagaZiekenhuis were included in this study. The median target volume was 436 cc (range 3.2–1628 cc) and 4.58 cc (range 0.4–27.19 cc) for IRCCS and Haga, respectively. For patients treated in IRCCS Sacro Cuore Don Calabria, the median dose prescription was 30 Gy (range 27–60 Gy) and median number of fractions 10 (range 3–30). In Haga the median dose prescription was 21 Gy (range 8–21 Gy) and the median number of fraction was 1 (range 1–3). The immobilization device was assembled during CT simulation. A short interview to the patient regarding the device’s comfort level was conducted at the end of the simulation procedure. Additionally, simulation setup time and radiographer (RTT) procedures (i.e. mask preparation) were evaluated. Prior to radiation treatment delivery, an automatic rigid match on the cranial bones between cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) and planning-CT was performed. A couch shift was performed subsequently. An extra post-treatment CBCT was acquire after the treatment delivery. This post-treatment CBCT was matched with pre-treatment CBCT to identify any possible intra-fraction motion. All online matches were validated by experienced radiation oncologist or RTT. A total of 126 CBCT’s were analyzed offline by radiation oncologist/medical physicist. The data of the pre-treatment CBCT match was used to quantify inter-fraction motion. The post-treatment CBCT was matched with pre-treatment CBCT to identify any possible intra-fraction motion. Results During the molding of the mask, all patients responded positive to the comfort. Median time required by the RTTs to assemble the immobilization system was 9 min (range 6–12 min). In terms of comfort, all patients reported a good-to high level of satisfaction. The RTTs also respond positively towards the use of the locking mechanism and clips. Results of positioning uncertainties were comparable between the two institutes. The mean inter-fraction motion for all translational and rotational directions were
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- 2020
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22. Impact of hydrogel peri-rectal spacer insertion on prostate gland intra-fraction motion during 1.5 T MR-guided stereotactic body radiotherapy
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Francesco Cuccia, Rosario Mazzola, Luca Nicosia, Vanessa Figlia, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Francesco Ricchetti, Michele Rigo, Claudio Vitale, Beatrice Mantoan, Antonio De Simone, Gianluisa Sicignano, Ruggero Ruggieri, Stefano Cavalleri, and Filippo Alongi
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Prostate cancer ,Stereotactic body radiotherapy ,Organ motion ,Mri-linac ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The assessment of organ motion is a crucial feature for prostate stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). Rectal spacer may represent a helpful device in order to outdistance rectal wall from clinical target, but its impact on organ motion is still a matter of debate. MRI-Linac is a new frontier in radiation oncology as it allows a superior visualization of the real-time anatomy of the patient and the current highest level of adaptive radiotherapy. Methods We present data regarding a total of 100 fractions in 20 patients who underwent MRI-guided prostate SBRT for low-to-intermediate risk prostate cancer with or without spacer. Translational and rotational shifts were computed on the pre- and post-treatment MRI acquisitions referring to the delivery position for antero-posterior, latero-lateral and cranio-caudal direction, and assessed using the Mann-Whitney U-Test. Results All patients were treated with a five sessions schedule (35 Gy/5fx) using MRI-Linac for a median fraction treatment time of 50 min (range, 46–65). In the entire study sample, median rotational displacement was 0.1° in cranio-caudal, − 0.002° in latero-lateral and 0.01° in antero-posterior direction; median translational shift was 0.11 mm in cranio-caudal, − 0.24 mm in latero-lateral and − 0.22 mm in antero-posterior. A significant difference between spacer and no-spacer patients in terms of rotational shifts in the antero-posterior direction (p = 0.033) was observed; also for translational shifts a positive trend was detected in antero-posterior direction (p = 0.07), although with no statistical significance. We observed statistically significant differences in the pre-treatment planning phase in favor of the spacer cohort for several rectum dose constraints: rectum V32Gy 95% was higher in the spacer cohort compared to the no-spacer one (p = 0.036). Conclusion In our experience, the application of rectal hydrogel spacer for prostate SBRT resulted in a significant impact on rotational antero-posterior shifts contributing to limit prostate intra-fraction motion. Further studies with larger sample size and longer follow-up are required to confirm this ideally favorable effect and to assess any potential impact on clinical outcomes.
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- 2020
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23. Expression levels of circulating miRNAs as biomarkers during multimodal treatment of rectal cancer - TiMiSNAR-mirna: a substudy of the TiMiSNAR Trial (NCT03962088)
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Igor Monsellato, Elisabetta Garibaldi, Elisa Cassinotti, Ludovica Baldari, Luigi Boni, Ugo Elmore, Roberto Delpini, Riccardo Rosati, Roberto Perinotti, Filippo Alongi, Elisa Bertocchi, Stefania Gori, Giacomo Ruffo, Graziano Pernazza, Fabio Pulighe, Carlo De Nisco, Emilio Morpurgo, Tania Contardo, Enzo Mammano, Federico Perna, Benedetta Menegatti, Andrea Coratti, Piero Buccianti, Riccardo Balestri, Cristina Ceccarelli, Davide Cavaliere, Leonardo Solaini, Giorgio Ercolani, Elena Traverso, Vittorio Fusco, Valter Torri, and Sara Orecchia
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Colorectal cancer ,miRNA ,Neoadjuvant treatment ,Biomarkers ,Translational research ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery is the mainstay treatment for locally advanced rectal cancer, leading to significant decrease in tumor size (downsizing) and a shift towards earlier disease stage (downstaging). Extensive histopathological work-up of the tumor specimen after surgery including tumor regression grading and lymph node status helped to visualize individual tumor sensitivity to chemoradiotherapy, retrospectively. As the response to neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy is heterogeneous, however, valid biomarkers are needed to monitor tumor response. A relevant number of studies aimed to identify molecular markers retrieved from tumor tissue while the relevance of blood-based biomarkers is less stringent assessed. MicroRNAs are currently under investigation to serve as blood-based biomarkers. To date, no screening approach to identify relevant miRNAs as biomarkers in blood of patients with rectal cancer was undertaken. The aim of the study is to investigate the role of circulating miRNAs as biomarkers in those patients included in the TiMiSNAR Trial (NCT 03465982). This is a biomolecular substudy of TiMiSNAR Trial (NCT03962088). Methods All included patients in the TiMiSNAR Trial are supposed to undergo blood collection at the time of diagnosis, after neoadjuvant treatment, after 1 month from surgery, and after adjuvant chemotherapy whenever indicated. Discussion TiMiSNAR-MIRNA will evaluate the association of variation between preneoadjuvant and postneoadjuvant expression levels of miRNA with pathological complete response. Moreover, the study will evaluate the role of liquid biopsies in the monitoring of treatment, correlate changes in expression levels of miRNA following complete surgical resection with disease-free survival, and evaluate the relation between changes in miRNA during surveillance and tumor relapse. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03962088 . Registered on 23 May 2019.
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- 2020
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24. Oligometastasis and local ablation in the era of systemic targeted and immunotherapy
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Rosario Mazzola, Barbara Alicja Jereczek-Fossa, Davide Franceschini, Slavisa Tubin, Andrea Riccardo Filippi, Maria Tolia, Andrea Lancia, Giuseppe Minniti, Stefanie Corradini, Stefano Arcangeli, Marta Scorsetti, and Filippo Alongi
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Oligometastasis ,Immunotherapy ,Target therapy ,Metastases-directed therapy ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background During these last years, new agents have dramatically improved the survival of the metastatic patients. Oligometastases represent a continuous field of interest in which the integration of metastases-directed therapy and drugs could further improve the oncologic outcomes. Herein a narrative review is performed regarding the main rationale in combining immunotherapy and target therapies with SBRT looking at the available clinical data in case of oligometastatic NSCLC, Melanoma and Kidney cancer. Material and method Narrative Review regarding retrospective and prospective studies published between January 2009 to November 2019 with at least 20 patients analyzed. Results Concerning the combination between SBRT and Immunotherapy, the correct sequence of remains uncertain, and seems to be drug-dependent. The optimal patients’ selection is crucial to expect substantial benefits to SBRT/Immunotherapy combination and, among several factors. A potential field of interest is represented by the so-called oligoprogressed disease, in which SBRT could improve the long-term efficacy of the existing target therapy. Conclusions A low tumor burden seems to be the most relevant, thus making the oligometastatic disease represent the ideal setting for the use of combination therapies with immunological drugs.
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- 2020
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25. 1.5 T MR-guided and daily adapted SBRT for prostate cancer: feasibility, preliminary clinical tolerability, quality of life and patient-reported outcomes during treatment
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Filippo Alongi, Michele Rigo, Vanessa Figlia, Francesco Cuccia, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Luca Nicosia, Francesco Ricchetti, Gianluisa Sicignano, Antonio De Simone, Stefania Naccarato, Ruggero Ruggieri, and Rosario Mazzola
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Prostate cancer ,SBRT ,MRI-guided radiotherapy ,Adaptive radiotherapy ,QoL ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Unity Elekta is a unique magnetic resonance (MR)-linac that conjugates a 1.5 Tesla MR unit with a 7 MV flattening filter free accelerator.A prospective observational study for the clinical use of Elekta Unity is currently ongoing in our department. Herein, we present our preliminary report on the feasibility, quality of life, and patient-reported outcomes measures (PROMs) for localized prostate cancer (PC) treated with stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). Methods The SBRT protocol consisted of a 35 Gy schedule delivered in 5 fractions within 2 weeks. Toxicity and quality of life (QoL) were assessed at baseline and after treatment using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events v5.0, International Prostatic Symptoms Score (IPSS), ICIQ-SF, IIEF-5, and EORTC-QLQ-C30 and PR-25 questionnaires. Results Between October 2019 and January 2020, 25 patients with localized PC were recruited. The median age was 68 years (range, 54–82); 4 were low risk, 11 favorable intermediate risk (IR) and 10 unfavorable IR. Median iPSA was 6.8 ng/ml (range, 1–19), and 9 of these patients (36%) received concurrent androgen deprivation therapy. Median prostate volume was 36 cc (range, 20–61); median baseline IPSS was 5 (range, 0–10). Median time for fraction was 53 min (range, 34–86); adaptive strategy with daily critical structure and target re-contouring and daily replanning (adapt to shape) was performed in all cases. No grade ≥ 3 adverse event was observed, three patients (12%) reported grade 2 acute genitourinary toxicity (urinary frequency, urinary tract pain and urinary retention), while only one patient reported mild rectal pain. No relevant deteriorations were reported in PROMs. Conclusion To the best of our knowledge, this is the first experience reporting feasibility, clinician-reported outcome measurements, and PROMs for 1.5 T MR-guided adaptive SBRT for localized prostate cancer. The preliminary data collected here report optimal safety and excellent tolerability, as also confirmed by PROMs questionnaires. Moreover, the data on technical feasibility and timing of online daily adapted planning and delivery are promising. More mature data are warranted. Trial registration Date of approval April 2019 and numbered MRI/LINAC n°23,748.
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- 2020
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26. Standard (8 weeks) vs long (12 weeks) timing to minimally-invasive surgery after NeoAdjuvant Chemoradiotherapy for rectal cancer: a multicenter randomized controlled parallel group trial (TiMiSNAR)
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Igor Monsellato, Filippo Alongi, Elisa Bertocchi, Stefania Gori, Giacomo Ruffo, Elisa Cassinotti, Ludovica Baldarti, Luigi Boni, Graziano Pernazza, Fabio Pulighe, Carlo De Nisco, Roberto Perinotti, Emilio Morpurgo, Tania Contardo, Enzo Mammano, Ugo Elmore, Roberto Delpini, Riccardo Rosati, Federico Perna, Andrea Coratti, Benedetta Menegatti, Sergio Gentilli, Paolo Baroffio, Piero Buccianti, Riccardo Balestri, Cristina Ceccarelli, Valter Torri, Davide Cavaliere, Leonardo Solaini, Giorgio Ercolani, Elena Traverso, Vittorio Fusco, Maura Rossi, Fabio Priora, G. Numico, Paola Franzone, and Sara Orecchia
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Radiation therapy ,Minimally invasive surgery ,Rectal cancer ,Neoadjuvant treatment ,Robotic surgery ,TaTME ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The optimal timing of surgery in relation to chemoradiation is still controversial. Retrospective analysis has demonstrated in the recent decades that the regression of adenocarcinoma can be slow and not complete until after several months. More recently, increasing pathologic Complete Response rates have been demonstrated to be correlated with longer time interval. The purpose of the trial is to demonstrate if delayed timing of surgery after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy actually affects pathologic Complete Response and reflects on disease-free survival and overall survival rather than standard timing. Methods The trial is a multicenter, prospective, randomized controlled, unblinded, parallel-group trial comparing standard and delayed surgery after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy for the curative treatment of rectal cancer. Three-hundred and forty patients will be randomized on an equal basis to either robotic-assisted/standard laparoscopic rectal cancer surgery after 8 weeks or robotic-assisted/standard laparoscopic rectal cancer surgery after 12 weeks. Discussion To date, it is well-know that pathologic Complete Response is associated with excellent prognosis and an overall survival of 90%. In the Lyon trial the rate of pCR or near pathologic Complete Response increased from 10.3 to 26% and in retrospective studies the increase rate was about 23–30%. These results may be explained on the relationship between radiation therapy and tumor regression: DNA damage occurs during irradiation, but cellular lysis occurs within the next weeks. Study results, whether confirmed that performing surgery after 12 weeks from neoadjuvant treatment is advantageous from a technical and oncological point of view, may change the current pathway of the treatment in those patient suffering from rectal cancer. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT3465982.
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- 2019
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27. Feasibility and preliminary clinical results of linac-based Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy for spinal metastases using a dedicated contouring and planning system
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Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Maximilian Niyazi, Vanessa Figlia, Giuseppe Napoli, Rosario Mazzola, Luca Nicosia, Stefanie Corradini, Ruggero Ruggieri, Giuseppe Minniti, and Filippo Alongi
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Spinal ,Metastases ,Software ,Stereotactic ,Radiotherapy ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) and stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) are well established local treatment approaches in several cancer settings. Although SBRT is still under investigation for spinal metastases, promising results in terms of a high effectiveness and optimal tolerability have been recently published on this topic. For spinal SBRT, one of the most relevant issues is represented by the inter-observer variability in target definition. Recently, several technological innovations, including specific tools such as multimodality-imaging (computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET-CT), automated volumes contouring and planning, could allow clinicians to minimize the uncertainties related to spinal SBRT workflow. Aim of this study is to report the feasibility of the clinical application of a dedicated software (Element®, Brainlab™ Germany) for spinal metastases SBRT. Material and method The patient selection criteria for SBRT in spinal metastases were the following: age > 18 years, diagnosis of spinal metastases (n ≤ 3), life expectancy > 3 months, controlled primary tumor or synchronous diagnosis and Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) ≤ 12 points. All radiation target volumes were defined and planned with the support of the dedicated software Elements® (Brainlab™ Germany). Different dose prescription have been used: 12 Gy in single fraction, 12 Gy, 18 Gy, 21 Gy and 24 Gy in 3 fractions. Toxicity was assessed according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) v4.0. SPSS version 20 was used for statistical analysis. Results From April 2018 to April 2019, 54 spinal metastases in 32 recruited patients were treated with Linac-based SBRT. With a median follow-up of 6 months (range 3–12), local control rates at 6 months and 9 months were 86 and 86%, respectively. No adverse events ≥3 grade were observed. Conclusions This preliminary experience shows that with respect to acute toxicity and early clinical response, linac-based using Elements® Spine SRS is a feasible and effective approach.
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- 2019
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28. In reply to Simcock et al.
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Stefano Maria Magrini, Rosario Mazzola, Diana Greco, Filippo Alongi, and Michela Buglione
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2020
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29. ONE SHOT - single shot radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer: study protocol of a single arm, multicenter phase I/II trial
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Thomas Zilli, Marta Scorsetti, Daniel Zwahlen, Ciro Franzese, Robert Förster, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Nikolaos Koutsouvelis, Aurelie Bertaut, Michel Zimmermann, Giuseppe Roberto D’Agostino, Filippo Alongi, Matthias Guckenberger, and Raymond Miralbell
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Prostate cancer ,Stereotactic body radiotherapy ,Urethra-sparing ,Single fraction ,Quality of life ,Electromagnetic transponders ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) is an emerging treatment alternative for patients with localized prostate cancer. Promising results in terms of disease control and toxicity have been reported with 4 to 5 SBRT fractions. However, question of how far can the number of fractions with SBRT be reduced is a challenging research matter. As already explored by some authors in the context of brachytherapy, monotherapy appears to be feasible with an acceptable toxicity profile and a promising outcome. The aim of this multicenter phase I/II prospective trialis to demonstrate early evidence of safety and efficacy of a single-fraction SBRT approach for the treatment of localized disease. Methods Patients with low- and intermediate-risk localized prostate cancer without significant tumor in the transitional zone will be treated with a single SBRT fraction of 19 Gy to the whole prostate gland with urethra-sparing (17 Gy). Intrafractional motion will be monitored with intraprostatic electromagnetic transponders. The primary endpoint of the phase I part of the study will be safety as assessed by CTCAE 4.03 grading scale, while biochemical relapse-free survival will be the endpoint for the phase II. The secondary endpoints include acute and late toxicity, quality of life, progression-free survival, and prostate-cancer specific survival. Discussion This is the first multicenter phase I/II trial assessing the efficacy and safety of a single-dose SBRT treatment for patients with localized prostate cancer. If positive, results of ONE SHOT may help to design subsequent phase III trials exploring the role of SBRT monotherapy in the exclusive radiotherapy treatment of localized disease. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03294889; Registered 27 September 2017.
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- 2018
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30. Linac-based VMAT radiosurgery for multiple brain lesions: comparison between a conventional multi-isocenter approach and a new dedicated mono-isocenter technique
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Ruggero Ruggieri, Stefania Naccarato, Rosario Mazzola, Francesco Ricchetti, Stefanie Corradini, Alba Fiorentino, and Filippo Alongi
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SRS ,VMAT ,Brain metastases ,HyperArc ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Linac-based stereotactic radiosurgery or fractionated stereotactic radiotherapy (SRS/FSRT) of multiple brain lesions using volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) is typically performed by a multiple-isocenter approach, i.e. one isocenter per lesion, which is time-demanding for the need of independent setup verifications of each isocenter. Here, we present our initial experience with a new dedicated mono-isocenter technique with multiple non-coplanar arcs (HyperArc™, Varian Inc.) in terms of a plan comparison with a multiple-isocenter VMAT approach. Methods From August 2017 to October 2017, 20 patients with multiple brain metastases (mean 5, range 2–10) have been treated by HyperArc in 1–3 fractions. The prescribed doses (Dp) were 18–25 Gy in single-fraction, and 21–27 Gy in three-fractions. Planning Target Volume (PTV), defined by a 2 mm isotropic margin from each lesion, had mean dimension of 9.6 cm3 (range 0.5–27.9 cm3). Mono-isocenter HyperArc VMAT plans (HA) with 5 non-coplanar 180°-arcs (couch at 0°, ±45°, ±90°) were generated and compared to multiple-isocenter VMAT plans (RA) with 2 coplanar 360°-arcs per isocenter. A dose normalization of 100%Dp at 98%PTV was adopted, while D2%(PTV)
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- 2018
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31. Reply to Ghaffari et al. 'In regard to Cuccia et al.: impact of hydrogel peri-rectal spacer insertion on prostate gland intra-fraction motion during 1.5 T MR-guided stereotactic body radiotherapy.'
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Francesco Cuccia and Filippo Alongi
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2020
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32. Role of Radiosurgery/Stereotactic Radiotherapy in Oligometastatic Disease: Brain Oligometastases
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Rosario Mazzola, Stefanie Corradini, Fabiana Gregucci, Vanessa Figlia, Alba Fiorentino, and Filippo Alongi
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oligometastases ,radiosurgery ,stereotactic radiotherapy ,brain metastases ,radiotherapy ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
During the natural history of oncologic diseases, approximately 20–40% of patients affected by cancer will develop brain metastases. Non-small lung cancer, breast cancer, and melanoma are the primaries that are most likely to metastasize into the brain. To date, the role of Radiosurgery/Stereotactic Radiotherapy (SRS/SRT) without Whole brain irradiation (WBRT) is a well-recognized treatment option for patients with limited intracranial disease (1–4 BMs) and a life-expectancy of more than 3–6 months. In the current review, we focused on randomized studies that evaluate the potential benefit of radiosurgery/stereotactic radiotherapy for brain oligometastases. To date, no difference in overall survival has been observed between SRS/SRT alone compared to WBRT plus SRS. Notably, SRS alone achieved higher local control rates compared to WBRT. A possible strength of SRS adoption is the potential decreased neurocognitive impairment.
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- 2019
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33. Combinatorial Effect of Magnetic Field and Radiotherapy in PDAC Organoids: A Pilot Study
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Luca Nicosia, Filippo Alongi, Silvia Andreani, Ruggero Ruggieri, Borislav Rusev, Beatrice Mantoan, Rita Teresa Lawlor, Antonio Pea, Aldo Scarpa, Linda Agolli, Vincenzo Corbo, and Sabrina D’Agosto
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patient-derived models ,3D organoids ,MR-guided radiotherapy ,MR-Linac ,radiotherapy ,magnetic field ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is highly refractory to systemic treatment, including radiotherapy (RT) either as alone or in combination with chemotherapy. Magnetic resonance (MR)-guided RT is a novel treatment technique which conjugates the high MR imaging contrast resolution to the possibility of re-adapting treatment plan to daily anatomical variations. Magnetic field (MF) might exert a biological effect that could be exploited to enhance radiation effect. The aim of the present study was to lay the preclinical basis of the MF effect by exploring how it modifies the response to radiation in organoid cultures established from PDAC. The short-term effect of radiation, alone or in combination with MF, was evaluated in patient-derived organoids (PDOs) and monolayer cell cultures. Cell viability, apoptotic cell death, and organoid size following exposure to the treatment were evaluated. PDOs demonstrated limited sensitivity at clinically relevant doses of radiation. The combination of radiation and MF demonstrated superior efficacy than monotherapy in almost all the PDOs tested. PDOs treated with combination of radiation and MF were significantly smaller in size and some showed increased cell death as compared to the monotherapy with radiation. Long-time exposure to 1.5T MF can increase the therapeutic efficacy of radiation in PDAC organoids.
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- 2020
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34. Correction to: Standard (8 weeks) vs long (12 weeks) timing to minimally-invasive surgery after NeoAdjuvant Chemoradiotherapy for rectal cancer: a multicenter randomized controlled parallel group trial (TiMiSNAR)
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Igor Monsellato, Filippo Alongi, Elisa Bertocchi, Stefania Gori, Giacomo Ruffo, Elisa Cassinotti, Ludovica Baldari, Luigi Boni, Graziano Pernazza, Fabio Pulighe, Carlo De Nisco, Roberto Perinotti, Emilio Morpurgo, Tania Contardo, Enzo Mammano, Ugo Elmore, Roberto Delpini, Riccardo Rosati, Federico Perna, Andrea Coratti, Benedetta Menegatti, Sergio Gentilli, Paolo Baroffio, Piero Buccianti, Riccardo Balestri, Cristina Ceccarelli, Valter Torri, Davide Cavaliere, Leonardo Solaini, Giorgio Ercolani, Elena Traverso, Vittorio Fusco, Maura Rossi, Fabio Priora, G. Numico, Paola Franzone, and Sara Orecchia
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Following publication of the original article [1], the authors reported that the family name of the author, Ludovica Baldari, was misspelled.
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- 2020
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35. Correction to: ONE SHOT - single shot radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer: study protocol of a single arm, multicenter phase I/II trial
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Thomas Zilli, Marta Scorsetti, Daniel Zwahlen, Ciro Franzese, Robert Förster, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Nikolaos Koutsouvelis, Aurelie Bertaut, Michel Zimmermann, Giuseppe Roberto D’Agostino, Filippo Alongi, Matthias Guckenberger, and Raymond Miralbell
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Following publication of the original article [1], the authors reported that one of the authors’ names is spelled incorrectly. In this Correction the incorrect and correct author name are shown. The original publication of this article has been corrected.
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- 2018
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36. Linac-based versus MR-guided SBRT for localized prostate cancer: a comparative evaluation of acute tolerability
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Luca Nicosia, Rosario Mazzola, Michele Rigo, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Edoardo Pastorello, Francesco Ricchetti, Claudio Vitale, Vanessa Figlia, Francesco Cuccia, Ruggero Ruggieri, and Filippo Alongi
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
37. Recommendations for radiation therapy in oligometastatic prostate cancer
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Thomas Zilli, Vérane Achard, Alan Dal Pra, Nina Schmidt-Hegemann, Barbara Alicja Jereczek-Fossa, Andrea Lancia, Gianluca Ingrosso, Filippo Alongi, Shafak Aluwini, Stefano Arcangeli, Pierre Blanchard, Antonio Conde Moreno, Felipe Couñago, Gilles Créhange, Piet Dirix, Alfonso Gomez Iturriaga, Matthias Guckenberger, David Pasquier, Paul Sargos, Marta Scorsetti, Stéphane Supiot, Alison C. Tree, Almudena Zapatero, Jennifer Le Guevelou, Piet Ost, Claus Belka, Producción Científica UCH 2022, UCH. Departamento de Medicina y Cirugía, and Guided Treatment in Optimal Selected Cancer Patients (GUTS)
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Male ,Consensus ,Prostate cancer ,SBRT ,Delphi Technique ,Radiotherapy ,Elective nodal radiotherapy ,Próstata - Cáncer - Tratamiento ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Prostate - Cancer - Radiotherapy ,Hematology ,Prostate - Cancer - Treatment ,Oncology ,Próstata - Cáncer - Radioterapia ,ESTRO-ACROP ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Oligometastases ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Este artículo se encuentra disponible en la siguiente URL: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167814022044991?via%3Dihub En este artículo de investigación también participan:Gianluca Ingrosso, Filippo Alongi, Shafak Aluwini, Stefano Arcangeli, Pierre Blanchard, Felipe Couñago, Gilles Créhange, Piet Dirix, Alfonso Gomez Iturriaga, Matthias Guckenberger, David Pasquier, Paul Sargos, Marta Scorsetti, Stéphane Supiot, Alison C. Tree, Almudena Zapatero, Jennifer Le Guevelou, Piet Ost y Claus Belka. Background and purpose: Oligometastatic prostate cancer is a new and emerging treatment field with only few prospective randomized studies published so far. Despite the lack of strong level I evidence, metastasis-directed therapies (MDT) are widely used in clinical practice, mainly based on retrospective and small phase 2 studies and with a large difference across centers. Pending results of ongoing prospective randomized trials, there is a clear need for more consistent treatment indications and radiotherapy practices. Material and methods: A European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology (ESTRO) Guidelines Committee consisting of radiation oncologists’ experts in prostate cancer was asked to answer a dedicated questionnaire, including 41 questions on the main controversial issues with regard to oligometastatic prostate cancer. Results: The panel achieved consensus on patient selection and routine use of prostate-specific membrane antigen positron emission tomography (PSMA PET) imaging as preferred staging and restaging imaging. MDT strategies are recommended in the de novo oligometastatic, oligorecurrent and oligoprogressive disease setting for nodal, bone and visceral metastases. Radiation therapy doses, volumes and techniques were discussed and commented. Conclusion: These recommendations have the purpose of providing standardization and consensus to optimize the radiotherapy treatment of oligometastatic prostate cancer until mature results of randomized trials are available.
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- 2022
38. Hypofractionated Postoperative Radiotherapy in Prostate Cancer with Ialuril Soft Gels®: Toxicity and Efficacy Analysis on a Retrospective Series of 305 Patients
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Luca Nicosia, Claudio Vitale, Francesco Cuccia, Vanessa Figlia, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Rosario Mazzola, Francesco Ricchetti, Michele Rigo, Ruggero Ruggieri, Stefano Cavalleri, and Filippo Alongi
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Oncology ,Cancer Management and Research - Abstract
Luca Nicosia,1 Claudio Vitale,1 Francesco Cuccia,1 Vanessa Figlia,1 Niccolò Giaj-Levra,1 Rosario Mazzola,1 Francesco Ricchetti,1 Michele Rigo,1 Ruggero Ruggieri,1 Stefano Cavalleri,2 Filippo Alongi1,3 1Advanced Radiation Oncology Department, IRCCS Sacro Cuore Don Calabria Hospital, Cancer Care Center, Verona, Negrar, Italy; 2Urology Division, IRCCS Sacro Cuore Don Calabria Hospital, Verona, Negrar, Italy; 3University of Brescia, Brescia, ItalyCorrespondence: Luca Nicosia, Advanced Radiation Oncology Department, IRCCS Sacro Cuore Don Calabria Hospital, Cancer Care Center, via Don Sempreboni 5, 37034, Verona, Negrar, Italy, Tel +39 045-6014800, Fax +045-60148071, Email lucanicosia.rg@gmail.comAim: To evaluate the impact of Ialuril soft Gels® (HA) in reducing acute genito-urinary (GU) toxicity in patients treated with adjuvant or salvage radiotherapy for a prostate cancer relapse.Material and Methods: The data of 305 patients were retrospectively collected. One hundred and five patients underwent adjuvant radiotherapy (aRT), while 200 a salvage treatment (sRT). GU toxicity was evaluated according to CTCAE v5.0. Every patient received RT combined with HA.Results: Grade 1â 2 GU toxicity during RT was represented by: urgency (36%), dysuria (23%), increased urinary frequency (12.1%), and urinary retention (11.8%). Nevertheless, the majority of symptoms were present at the baseline. Grade 3 severe toxicity was represented by 10 (3.2%) cases of incontinence and 3 (1%) cases of urgency. The incidence of any-grade RT-related GU toxicity was significantly higher in the aRT group than the salvage group (esRT + sRT) (83.8% versus 64.5%). When comparing the incidence of any-grade RT-related GU toxicity in the aRT, esRT, and sRT groups we observed a significant correlation favoring sRT, over esRT, and aRT.Conclusion: Postoperative hypofractionated radiotherapy is safe and not correlated with increase of unexpected toxicity when administered with oral hyaluronic acid. A prospective study is necessary to confirm these results.Keywords: prostate cancer, hyaluronic acid, postoperative radiotherapy, salvage radiotherapy, hypofractionation, toxicity
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- 2022
39. Activity of sotorasib against brain metastases from NSCLC harboring KRAS p.G12C mutation: a case report
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Inno, Alessandro, Fabiana Marchetti, Matteo Valerio, Niccolò Giaj Levra, Filippo Alongi, Giovanni Foti, Stefania Gori, Inno, Alessandro, Fabiana Marchetti, Matteo Valerio, Niccolò Giaj Levra, Filippo Alongi, Giovanni Foti, and Stefania Gori
- Abstract
In the CodeBreaK 100 phase 2 study, sotorasib was active for patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) harboring Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homologue (KRAS) p.G12C mutation. However, patients with untreated and/or active brain metastases were excluded from the trial, and the activity of sotorasib in the setting of brain metastases should be further investigated. Here we report the case of a KRAS p.G12C mutant NSCLC patient with three brain metastases, of whom one was untreated and the other two had progressed after radiotherapy with symptoms requiring steroids, that responded to sotorasib. Our report suggests that sotorasib may be active against untreated or progressive brain metastases, supporting further evaluation of sotorasib in this setting.
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- 2023
40. Postoperative moderately hypofractionated radiotherapy in prostate cancer: a mono-institutional propensity-score-matching analysis between adjuvant and early-salvage radiotherapy
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Luca Nicosia, Rosario Mazzola, Claudio Vitale, Francesco Cuccia, Vanessa Figlia, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Francesco Ricchetti, Michele Rigo, Ruggiero Ruggeri, Stefano Cavalleri, and Filippo Alongi
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Male ,Prostatectomy ,Salvage Therapy ,Prostate cancer ,Post-operative radiotherapy ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,General Medicine ,Moderate hypofractionation ,Humans ,Salvage ,Radiation Dose Hypofractionation ,Radiotherapy, Adjuvant ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated ,Propensity Score ,Adjuvant - Abstract
To evaluate the impact of moderately hypofractionated postoperative radiotherapy (RT) in prostate cancer (PCa).The data of 304 surgically resected PCa patients were analyzed. One hundred and five patients underwent adjuvant RT (aRT), 77 early-savage RT (esRT), and 123 salvage RT (sRT). Biochemical relapse-free survival (BRFS), progression-free survival (PFS) and toxicity were analyzed. A propensity score matching (PSM) was performed to account for potential confounders between aRT and esRT groups.The median follow-up was 33 months. Three-year BRFS and PFS were 82 and 85.2%, respectively, in the overall population. At the multivariate analysis, Gleason score and hormone therapy were factors independently correlated with BRFS and PFS. After PSM, there was no difference in BRFS and PFS between aRT and esRT patients. Severe toxicity was represented by grade 3 urinary incontinence (3.5%) and urgency (1%), and aRT correlated with increased any-grade acute toxicity. Severe grade 3 gastrointestinal late toxicity occurred in 1.3% of cases.Postoperative moderately hypofractionated RT achieved acceptable disease control rate and demonstrated no increased or unexpected toxicity. Future prospective studies should evaluate the role of postoperative RT in patients with unfavorable disease characteristics.
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- 2022
41. The state-of-the-art technic of stereotactic radioablation for the treatment of cardiac arrhythmias: An overview
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Alireza Abdshah, Farzad Masoudkabir, Reyhaneh Bayani, Nima Mousavi Darzikolaee, Mahsa Moshtaghian, Farshid Farhan, Mahdi Aghili, Ali Kazemian, Luca Nicosia, Francesco Cuccia, Ana Vitoria Rocha, Fatemeh Jafari, and Filippo Alongi
- Abstract
Cardiac arrhythmias are a leading cause of mortality, morbidity, and sudden cardiac death (SCD). Current treatment strategies for ventricular tachycardia (VT) are effective for many patients; however, in several cases, this does not result in a cure. Despite significant clinical improvements, conventional catheter ablation remains relatively unsuccessful in achieving the best outcomes in some challenging cases. Stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation (STAR), which delivers precise high-dose radiation to well-defined targets with minimal damage to surrounding tissue, is emerging as a new potential treatment option, having the potential to be used for patients at high risk for catheter ablation or who have refractory VT. Ongoing studies and preliminary experiences on f the efficacy of STAR in patients with refractory VT have shown a reduction in VT recurrence and a promising early safety profile. However, STAR is in its infancy, and clinical evidence on its efficacy and safety is limited; thus, conclusions regarding the efficacy of STAR should be drawn with caution. Further investigation of long-term efficacy and tolerability is ongoing to substantiate this promising therapeutic option better. The present review describes the background and general principles, pretreatment procedures, clinical implications, and toxicity of STAR therapy.
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- 2022
42. Radiomic analysis to predict local response in locally advanced pancreatic cancer treated with stereotactic body radiation therapy
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Francesco Ricchetti, I. Bonaparte, Fabiana Gregucci, Ruggero Ruggieri, Alba Fiorentino, Alessia Surgo, Roberta Carbonara, Filippo Alongi, Rosario Mazzola, M. Caliandro, Maria Paola Ciliberti, and Vanessa Figlia
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Oncology ,Predictive analysis ,Multivariate statistics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Contrast Media ,Radiosurgery ,Cohort Studies ,Internal medicine ,Pancreatic cancer ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Progression-free survival ,Prospective cohort study ,Pancreas ,Retrospective Studies ,Univariate analysis ,Radiomics ,business.industry ,Area under the curve ,Local control ,Stereotactic body radiation therapy ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,Progression-Free Survival ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,Radiographic Image Enhancement ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
PURPOSE Aim of this study is to assess the ability of contrast-enhanced CT image-based radiomic analysis to predict local response (LR) in a retrospective cohort of patients affected by pancreatic cancer and treated with stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT). Secondary aim is to evaluate progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) at long-term follow-up. METHODS Contrast-enhanced-CT images of 37 patients who underwent SBRT were analyzed. Two clinical variables (BED, CTV volume), 27 radiomic features were included. LR was used as the outcome variable to build the predictive model. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to evaluate PFS and OS. RESULTS Three variables were statistically correlated with the LR in the univariate analysis: Intensity Histogram (StdValue feature), Gray Level Cooccurrence Matrix (GLCM25_Correlation feature) and Neighbor Intensity Difference (NID25_Busyness feature). Multivariate model showed GLCM25_Correlation (P = 0.007) and NID25_Busyness (P = 0.03) as 2 independent predictive variables for LR. The odds ratio values of GLCM25_Correlation and NID25_Busyness were 0.07 (95%CI 0.01-0.49) and 8.10 (95%CI 1.20-54.40), respectively. The area under the curve for the multivariate logistic regressive model was 0.851 (95%CI 0.724-0.978). At a median follow-up of 30 months, median PFS was 7 months (95%CI 6-NA); median OS was 11 months (95%CI 10-22 months). CONCLUSIONS This analysis identified a radiomic signature that correlates with LR. To confirm these results, prospective studies could identify patient sub-groups with different rates of radiation dose-response to define a more personalized SBRT approach.
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- 2021
43. SBRT for elderly oligometastatic patients as a feasible, safe and effective treatment opportunity
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Francesco Ricchetti, Michele Rigo, G. Attinà, Ruggero Ruggieri, Claudio Vitale, Filippo Alongi, Rosario Mazzola, Vanessa Figlia, Francesco Cuccia, E. Pastorello, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, and Luca Nicosia
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Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,Stereotactic body radiotherapy ,Colorectal cancer ,Older age ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Radiosurgery ,Elderly ,Surgical oncology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Adverse effect ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Univariate analysis ,Frailty ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Progression-Free Survival ,Radiation therapy ,Oncology ,Cohort ,Oligometastases ,Life expectancy ,Female ,business - Abstract
The constantly increasing life expectancy is raising the issue of treating oncological older patients, who were traditionally candidates to best supportive care or palliative treatments. Several literature data support SBRT in the treatment of the oligometastatic patient as a potentially curable therapeutic option. However, data on older patients are lacking. This study presents the outcomes of a cohort of 61 oligometastatic patients over the age of 80 years who received SBRT, that was proposed to all patients with a minimum Karnofsky Performance Status ≥ 70 and a life expectancy of at least 6 months, with up to five oligometastatic lesions. Radiotherapy was delivered in 3-10 fractions with VMAT-IGRT technique. Toxicity was retrospectively collected according to CTCAE v4.0. Data were retrospectively collected and analyzed. Univariate and multivariate analysis were performed for assessing any potential predictive factor for clinical outcomes. A total of 90 oligometastases were treated in 61 patients with median age 82 years (range, 80-90). The most frequent histology was colorectal cancer (27% of cases). Median follow-up was 20 months (range, 2-63). Local control rates at 1- and 2-years were 98.8% and 88.2%, with colorectal histology being associated with worse LC rates (p = 0.014) at univariate analysis. Progression-free survival rates at 1- and 2-years were 48.6% and 30.5%. Oligorecurrent lesions and single oligometastases were associated with better PFS rates (respectively, p = 0.04 and p = 0.011). Overall survival rates were 75% and 60.5%, polymetastatic spread being predictive of worse survival outcomes at multivariate analysis (p = 0.012). No G2 or higher adverse events were recorded. Our study supports the role of SBRT for the treatment of elderly oligometastatic patients, highlighting the possibility to further explore this therapeutic option in the management of older oncological patients.
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- 2021
44. 1.5T MR-Guided Daily-Adapted SBRT on Lymphnode Oligometastases from Prostate Cancer
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Luca Nicosia, Giovanna Trapani, Michele Rigo, Matilde Fiorini, Niccolò Giaj-Levra, Rosario Mazzola, Edoardo Pastorello, Francesco Ricchetti, and Filippo Alongi
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oncology_oncogenics - Abstract
Introduction: The aim of our study was to evaluate the efficacy and toxicity of a daily-adaptive MR-guided SBRT on 1.5 T MR-linac in patients affected by lymphnode oligometastases from PCa. Materials and Methods: The present study is a prospective observational study conducted in a single institution (protocol n°: MRI / LINAC n. 23748). Patients with oligometastatic lymphnodes from PCa treated with daily-adaptive MR-guided SBRT on 1.5T MR-linac were included in the study. Minimum required follow-up of 3 months after SBRT. Primary end-point was local progression-free survival (LPFS). Secondary end-points were: nodal progression-free survival (NPFS), and progression-free survival (PFS), and toxicity. Results: 118 lymphnode oligometastases from PCa were treated with daily-adaptive 1.5T MR-guided SBRT in 63 oligometastatic patients. 63.5% patients were oligoprogressive and 36.5% oligoprogressive. Two-year LPFS was 94.5%. Median NPFS was 22.3 months, and the 2-year NPFS was 46.5%. Having received hormone therapy before SBRT was correlated with lower NPFS at the multivariate analysis (1-y NPFS 87.1% versus 42.8%; p= 0.002 - HR 0.199, 95% CI 0.073-0.549). Furthermore, the oligorecurrent state during ADT was correlated with a lower NPFS than the oligoprogressive state. Median PFS was 10.3 months, the 2-year PFS was 32.4%. Patients treated with hormone therapy before SBRT had a significantly lower 1-year PFS the others (28% versus 70.4%; p= 0.01 - HR 0.259, 95% CI 0.117-0.574). No acute and late toxicities occurred during treatment. Conclusion: the present is the largest prospective study of 1.5T lymphnode SBRT on MR-linac in patients with PCa. Lymphnode SBRT by 1.5T MR-linac provides high local control rates with an excellent toxicity profile.
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- 2022
45. Metastasis-directed Therapy (SBRT) Guided by PET-CT 18F-CHOLINE Versus PET-CT 68Ga-PSMA in Castration-sensitive Oligorecurrent Prostate Cancer: A Comparative Analysis of Effectiveness
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Giuseppe Napoli, Luca Nicosia, Giulio Francolini, Lorenzo Livi, Matteo Salgarello, Luca Triggiani, Francesco Cuccia, Rosario Mazzola, Filippo Alongi, and Stefano Maria Magrini
- Subjects
Metastasis-directed therapy ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Oligometastases ,Prostate cancer ,PSMA-PET ,Stereotactic body radiation therapy ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Metastasis ,Androgen deprivation therapy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,PET-CT ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Primary tumor ,Oncology ,Positron emission tomography ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cohort ,Hormone therapy ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
Background The present analysis aims to compare the impact of 18F-fluorocholine (18F-choline) and gallium-68 prostate-specific membrane antigen (68Ga-PSMA) positron emission tomography (PET)-computed tomography (CT)–guided metastases-directed therapies (MDTs) in patients with castration-sensitive oligorecurrent prostate cancer (PC). Materials and Methods Inclusion criteria were: (1) histologically proven prostate adenocarcinoma; (2) evidence of biochemical relapse after primary tumor treatment; (3) ≤ 3 hypermetabolic oligorecurrent lesions detected by 18F-choline or 68Ga-PSMA PET-CT; (4) PET-CT imaging performed in a single nuclear medicine department; (5) patients treated with upfront stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) without hormone therapy; and (6) SBRT delivered with a dose per fraction ≥ 5 Gy. In the case of oligoprogression (≤ 3 lesions outside the previous RT field) after MTD, a further course of SBRT was proposed; otherwise, androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) was administered. Results A total of 118 lesions in 88 patients were analyzed. Forty-four (50%) patients underwent 68Ga-PSMA PET-guided SBRT, and the remaining underwent choline PET-based SBRT. The median follow-up was 25 months (range, 5-87 months) for the entire cohort. Overall survival and local control were both 100%. Distant progression occurred in 48 (54.5%) patients, for a median distant progression-free survival of 22.8 months (range, 14.4-28.8 months). The median pre-SBRT prostate-specific antigen was 2.04 ng/mL in the choline PET cohort and 0.58 ng/mL in the PSMA-PET arm. Disease-free survival rates were 63.6% and 34%, respectively, in the 68Ga-PSMA and choline PET group (P = .06). The ADT administration rate was higher after choline-PET–guided SBRT (P = .00) owing to the higher incidence of polymetastatic disease after first-course SBRT compared with 68Ga-PSMA-based SBRT. Conclusion In the setting of oligorecurrent castration-sensitive PC, PSMA-PET-guided SBRT produced a higher rate of ADT-free patients when compared with the 18F-choline-PET cohort. Randomized trials are advocated.
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- 2021
46. Effectiveness of tapentadol prolonged release for the management of painful mucositis in head and neck cancers during intensity modulated radiation therapy
- Author
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Rosario, Mazzola, Francesco, Ricchetti, Sergio, Fersino, Niccolò, Giaj Levra, Alba, Fiorentino, Maurizio, Nicodemo, Sergio, Albanese, Stefania, Gori, and Filippo, Alongi
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- 2016
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47. Radiation-Induced Oral Mucositis in Head and Neck Cancer Patients. Five Years Literature Review
- Author
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Efthymios Kyrodimos, Jozsef Lövey, Davide Mauri, Haytham Hamed Saraireh, Maria Tolia, Emmanouil Vardas, Nikolaos Charalampakis, Konstantinos Tsanadis, Areti Gkantaifi, Nikolaos Tsoukalas, George Iliadis, Christos Christopoulos, Filippo Alongi, and Jiannis Hajiioannou
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Mucositis ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Intensive care medicine ,Retrospective Studies ,Pharmacology ,Stomatitis ,business.industry ,Head and neck cancer ,Cancer ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,Clinical trial ,Systematic review ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Quality of Life ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Observational study ,business - Abstract
Backround: Radiation-induced oral mucositis consists of a series of relatively frequent side effects after head and neck cancer radiotherapy and has an adverse impact on both regular treatment process and the quality of life of patients. Objective: The purpose of the present review is to optimize the current management of radiation-induced oral mucositis in head and neck cancer patients. Methods: PubMed database research was performed on articles published since 2015 that demonstrated efficacy in the management of radiation induced oral mucositis in head and neck cancer patients.The study selection included observa-tional, prospective, comparative, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled or uncontrolled, and retrospective studies, as well as systematic reviews and metanalyses. Results: From the 931 citations of our search only 94 articles met our inclusion criteria including mucosal protectants, anti-inflammatory agents, growth factors, and various miscellaneous and natural agents. Several methods including both pharmacological and natural agents have been proposed for the management of oral mucositis. In addition to the already known interventions with high evidence, according to Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer and International Society of Oral Oncology guidelines, further agents have been used. However, a great number of them are lacking of clear evidence, which surely requires the design of more controlled clinical trials for the better assessment of the most ideal methods. Conclusion: The management of oral mucositis constitutes an active area of research. In the light of our results we aim to illustrate those treatment strategies that are most effective regarding the treatment approach of oral mucositis.
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- 2021
48. Metastasis Directed Therapy and/or Systemic Therapy in Hormone-naive Oligometastatic Prostate Cancer Patient: an Emerging Dilemma
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Filippo Alongi and Francesco Cuccia
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Dilemma ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostate cancer ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Hormone naive ,business ,medicine.disease ,Systemic therapy ,Metastasis - Abstract
"The hormone-naive oligometastatic prostate cancer is a challenging setting for the radiation oncology community, as it represents a sort of transition scenario potentially suitable for two different approaches: a local ablative treatment alone vs a metastasisdirected treatment with the addition of hormone therapy. The choice to add androgen deprivation therapy in the oligorecurrent hormone-sensitive patient is a matter of debate, given the detrimental impact on quality of life and the number of adverse events. To date, there is no clear agreement on the optimal management of this subset of patients. As some authors highlight the attractiveness of a local approach alone, as well tolerated, easily repeatible and with very limited costs, on the other hand, other authors focus the need to cover the micrometastatic disease, often not detectable, even with the newly available imaging modalities. In this commentary, we briefly summarize the literature data in support of both therapeutic strategies."
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- 2021
49. PSMA-PET/CT-Based Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) in the Treatment of Uncomplicated Non-Spinal Bone Oligometastases from Prostate Cancer
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Edoardo Pastorello, Luca Nicosia, Francesco Cuccia, Laura Olivari, Matilde Fiorini, Niccolò Giaj Levra, Rosario Mazzola, Francesco Ricchetti, Michele Rigo, Paolo Ravelli, Salvatore D’Alessandro, Matteo Salgarello, Ruggero Ruggieri, and Filippo Alongi
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Oncology ,non-spinal bone metastases ,SBRT ,stereotactic body radiotherapy ,SABR ,PSMA PET/CT ,oligometastases ,prostate cancer - Abstract
Background and purpose: Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) has a consolidated role in the treatment of bone oligometastases from prostate cancer (PCa). While the evidence for spinal oligometastases SBRT was robust, its role in non-spinal-bone metastases (NSBM) is not standardized. In fact, there was no clear consensus about dose and target definition in this setting. The aim of our study was to evaluate efficacy, toxicity, and the pattern of relapse in SBRT delivered to NSBM from PCa. Materials and methods: From 2016 to 2021, we treated a series of oligo-NSBM from PCa with 68Ga-PSMA PET/CT-guided SBRT. The primary endpoint was local progression-free survival (LPFS). The secondary endpoints were toxicity, the pattern of intraosseous relapse, distant progression-free survival (DPFS), polimetastases-free survival (PMFS), and overall survival (OS). Results: a total of 150 NSBM in 95 patients were treated with 30–35 Gy in five fractions. With a median follow-up of 26 months, 1- and 3 years LPFS was 96.3% and 89%, respectively. A biologically effective dose (BED) ≥ 198 Gy was correlated with improved LPFS (p = 0.007). Intraosseous relapse occurred in eight (5.3%) cases. Oligorecurrent disease was associated with a better PMFS compared to de novo oligometastatic disease (p = 0.001) and oligoprogressive patients (p = 0.007). No grade ≥ 3 toxicity occurred. Conclusion: SBRT is a safe and effective tool for NSBM from PCa in the oligometastatic setting. Intraosseous relapse was a relatively rare event. Predictive factors of the improved outcomes were defined.
- Published
- 2023
50. Honey Against Radiation-induced Oral Mucositis in Head and Neck Cancer Patients. An Umbrella Review of Systematic Reviews and Meta- Analyses of the Literature
- Author
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Maria Tolia, Efthymios Kyrodimos, Filippo Alongi, Jiannis Hajiioannou, George Iliadis, Davide Mauri, Francesco Cuccia, Emmanouil Vardas, Nikolaos Trogkanis, Areti Gkantaifi, Nikolaos Tsoukalas, Nikolaos Charalampakis, and Christos Christopoulos
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Side effect ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Manuka Honey ,Oral mucositis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,prevention ,medicine ,Mucositis ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Radiation Injuries ,Intensive care medicine ,radiotherapy ,Pharmacology ,head and neck cancer ,honey ,treatment ,Stomatitis ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Head and neck cancer ,Cancer ,Honey ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,Systematic review ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business ,Systematic Reviews as Topic - Abstract
Backround: Oral mucositis (OM) consists of a major side effect of radiotherapy (RT) in head and neck (H-N) cancer patients and natural honey is gaining more and more scientific interest due to its beneficial effects in tissue repair. Objective: The aim of this review is to better clarify the preventive/therapeutic role of honey in the management of OM in patients with H-N cancer undergoing RT with or without chemotherapy (CT). Methods: We used the PubMed database to retrieve journal articles and the inclusion criteria were only reviews and meta-analyses that illustrated the effective use of honey for either the prevention or treatment of OM in H-N cancer patients receiving either RT alone or in combination with CT. Results: Our search resulted in 92 citations, of which 12 eventually fulfilled the inclusion criteria of our study. Decreased incidence and severity of OM, extended time of occurrence of mucositis, less weight loss and less treatment interruptions were occasionally documented with conventional honey use in the included reviews and meta-analyses. In contrast to conventional honey, manuka honey proved to be weak in improving OM management in the small number of included reviews in our search. Conclusion: Conventional honey might constitute a highly promising natural product against OM attracting much scientific interest due to its easy accessibility and low financial cost. Hence, the lack of studies with high evidence requires further advanced research to enhance the existing knowledge about the potential value of honey in radiation-induced OM in H-N cancer patients.
- Published
- 2021
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