99 results on '"Sciacero P"'
Search Results
2. Delineation of the larynx as organ at risk in radiotherapy: a contouring course within “Rete Oncologica Piemonte-Valle d’Aosta” network to reduce inter- and intraobserver variability
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Cante, Domenico, Petrucci, Edoardo, Piva, Cristina, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Sciacero, Piera, Bertodatto, Maurizio, Marta, Caterina, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Viale, Monica, La Valle, Giovanni, La Porta, Maria Rosa, Bertetto, Oscar, and On behlaf of Rete Oncologica Piemonte-Valle d’Aosta
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- 2016
- Full Text
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3. Hypofractionation and concomitant boost to deliver adjuvant whole-breast radiation in ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS): a subgroup analysis of a prospective case series
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Cante, Domenico, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Sciacero, Piera, Girelli, Giuseppe, Marra, Anna Maria, Pasquino, Massimo, Russo, Giuliana, Casanova Borca, Valeria, Mondini, Guido, Paino, Ovidio, Numico, Gianmauro, Tofani, Santi, La Porta, Maria Rosa, and Ricardi, Umberto
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- 2014
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4. Intensity-modulated and hypofractionated simultaneous integrated boost adjuvant breast radiation employing statics ports of tomotherapy (TomoDirect): a prospective phase II trial
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Franco, Pierfrancesco, Zeverino, Michele, Migliaccio, Fernanda, Cante, Domenico, Sciacero, Piera, Casanova Borca, Valeria, Torielli, Paolo, Arrichiello, Cecilia, Girelli, Giuseppe, La Porta, Maria Rosa, Tofani, Santi, Numico, Gianmauro, and Ricardi, Umberto
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
5. Intensity-modulated adjuvant whole breast radiation delivered with static angle tomotherapy (TomoDirect): a prospective case series
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Franco, Pierfrancesco, Zeverino, Michele, Migliaccio, Fernanda, Sciacero, Piera, Cante, Domenico, Casanova Borca, Valeria, Torielli, Paolo, Arrichiello, Cecilia, Girelli, Giuseppe, Numico, Gianmauro, La Porta, Maria Rosa, Tofani, Santi, and Ricardi, Umberto
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- 2013
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6. Five-year results of a prospective case series of accelerated hypofractionated whole breast radiation with concomitant boost to the surgical bed after conserving surgery for early breast cancer
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Cante, Domenico, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Sciacero, Piera, Girelli, Giuseppe, Marra, Anna Maria, Pasquino, Massimo, Russo, Giuliana, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Mondini, Guido, Paino, Ovidio, Barmasse, Roberto, Tofani, Santi, Numico, Gianmauro, La Porta, Maria Rosa, and Ricardi, Umberto
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- 2013
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7. Recent advances in neoadjuvant therapy for rectal cancer
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Panier Suffat, L., primary, Piva, C., additional, Sciacero, P., additional, Bombaci, S., additional, Scapino, B., additional, Bertotti, L., additional, Barengo, E., additional, and Rosato, L., additional
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- 2018
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8. PV-0326: Time to surgery and pCR after neoadjuvant CRT in rectal cancer: a population study on 2113 patients
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Macchia, G., primary, Gambacorta, M., additional, Chiloiro, G., additional, Mantello, G., additional, De Paoli, A., additional, Montesi, G., additional, Sainato, A., additional, Lupattelli, M., additional, Caravatta, L., additional, Perrotti, F., additional, Rosetto, M., additional, Filippone, F., additional, Niespolo, R., additional, Osti, M., additional, Belgioia, L., additional, Boso, C., additional, Fontana, A., additional, Parisi, S., additional, Galardi, A., additional, Turri, L., additional, Sciacero, P., additional, Giaccherini, L., additional, Masciocchi, C., additional, Morganti, A., additional, and Valentini, V., additional
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- 2017
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9. Image-guided Intensity-modulated Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer Employing Hypofractionation and Simultaneous Integrated Boost: Results of a Consecutive Case Series with Focus on Erectile Function
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Girelli, G., Pierfrancesco Franco, Sciacero, P., Cante, D., Borca, V. C., Pasquino, M., Annoscia, S., Tofani, S., La Porta, M. R., and Ricardi, U.
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Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,erectile dysfunction ,Hypofractionation ,IGRT ,IMRT ,prostate cancer ,simultaneous integrated boost ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Cone-Beam Computed Tomography ,Middle Aged ,Treatment Outcome ,Humans ,Dose Fractionation, Radiation ,Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated ,Radiation Injuries ,Aged ,Radiotherapy, Image-Guided - Abstract
To report on clinical outcomes of prostate cancer patients treated with hypofractionated radiotherapy employing a simultaneous integrated boost strategy.A consecutive series of 104 patients affected with prostate cancer was treated with intensity-modulated radiotherapy using a hypofractionated schedule and a simultaneous integrated boost consisting of 70 Gy (2.5 Gy daily) to the prostate gland, 63 Gy to the seminal vesicles (2.25 Gy daily) and 53.2 Gy to the pelvic nodes (1.9 Gy daily) when needed, delivered in 28 fractions. All patients underwent image-guided radiotherapy procedure consisting of daily cone-beam computed tomography.After a median observation time of 26 (range=15-48) months, the 3-year biochemical failure-free survival was 96.5% [95% confidence interval (CI)=89%-98%], 3-year cancer-specific survival was 98.5% (95% CI=91%-99%) and 3-year overall survival was 96.5% (95% CI=89%-98%). The gastrointestinal and genitourinary toxicity profiles were mild with fewer than 2% of grade 3 events. Erectile function was partially affected by radiation in men potent at baseline.Hypofractionation delivered with intensity-modulated radiotherapy and a simultaneous integrated boost approach proved to be a safe and effective treatment option for patients with prostate cancer. Patients with a preserved baseline erectile function experience a decrease in functionality correlated with the mean dose received by penile bulb.
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- 2015
10. Time to surgery and pathologic complete response after neoadjuvant chemoradiation in rectal cancer: A population study on 2094 patients
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Macchia, G., Gambacorta, Maria Antonietta, Masciocchi, Carlotta, Chiloiro, Giuditta, Mantello, G., Di Giambenedetto, Simona, Lupattelli, M., Palazzari, E., Belgioia, L., Bacigalupo, Andrea, Sainato, A., Montrone, S., Turri, L., Caroli, A., De Paoli, A., Matrone, F., Capirci, C., Montesi, G., Niespolo, R. M., Osti, M. F., Caravatta, L., Galardi, A., Genovesi, D., Rosetto, M. E., Boso, C., Sciacero, P., Giaccherini, L., Parisi, S., Fontana, A., Filippone, F. R., Picardi, V., Morganti, A. G., Valentini, Vincenzo, Gambacorta M. A. (ORCID:0000-0001-5455-8737), Masciocchi C., Chiloiro G., di Benedetto M. (ORCID:0000-0001-6990-5076), Bacigalupo A. (ORCID:0000-0002-9119-567X), Valentini V. (ORCID:0000-0003-4637-6487), Macchia, G., Gambacorta, Maria Antonietta, Masciocchi, Carlotta, Chiloiro, Giuditta, Mantello, G., Di Giambenedetto, Simona, Lupattelli, M., Palazzari, E., Belgioia, L., Bacigalupo, Andrea, Sainato, A., Montrone, S., Turri, L., Caroli, A., De Paoli, A., Matrone, F., Capirci, C., Montesi, G., Niespolo, R. M., Osti, M. F., Caravatta, L., Galardi, A., Genovesi, D., Rosetto, M. E., Boso, C., Sciacero, P., Giaccherini, L., Parisi, S., Fontana, A., Filippone, F. R., Picardi, V., Morganti, A. G., Valentini, Vincenzo, Gambacorta M. A. (ORCID:0000-0001-5455-8737), Masciocchi C., Chiloiro G., di Benedetto M. (ORCID:0000-0001-6990-5076), Bacigalupo A. (ORCID:0000-0002-9119-567X), and Valentini V. (ORCID:0000-0003-4637-6487)
- Abstract
Background To retrospectively evaluate the difference in terms of pathologic complete response (pCR) according to time elapsed between chemoradiation (CRT) and total mesorectal excision (TME) on a large unselected real-life dataset of locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) patients. Methods A multicentre retrospective cohort study of LARC patients from 21 Italian Radiotherapy Institutions was performed. Patients were stratified into 3 different time intervals from CRT. The 1st group included 300 patients who underwent TME within 6 weeks, the 2nd 1598 patients (TME within 7–12 weeks) and the 3rd 196 patients (TME within 13 or more weeks after CRT), respectively. Results Data on 2094 LARC patients treated between 1997 and 2016 were considered suitable for analysis. Overall, 578 patients had stage II while 1516 had stage III histological proven invasive rectal adenocarcinoma. A CRT schedule of one agent (N = 1585) or 2-drugs (N = 509) was administered. Overall, pCR was 22.3% (N = 468 patients). The proportion of patients achieving pCR with respect to time interval was, as follows: 12.6% (1st group), 23% (2nd group) and 31.1% (3rd group) (p < 0.001), respectively. The pCR relative risk comparison of 2nd to 1st group was 1.8, while 3rd to 2nd group was 1.3. Moreover, between the 3rd and 1st group, a pCR relative risk of 2.4 (p < 0.01) was noted. At univariate analysis, clinical stage III (p < 0.001), radiotherapy dose >5040 cGy (p = 0.002) and longer interval (p < 0.001) were significantly correlated to pCR. The positive impact of interval (p < 0.001) was confirmed at multivariate analysis as the only correlated factor. Conclusion We confirmed on a population-level that lengthening the interval (>13 weeks) from CRT to surgery improves the pathological response (pCR and pathologic partial response; pPR) in comparison to historic data. Furthermore, radiotherapy dose >5040 cGy and two drugs chemotherapy correlated with pPR rate.
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- 2017
11. Leptomeningeal metastasis from prostate cancer
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Cante, D., Casanova Borca, V., Franco, P., Girelli, G., Grassi, L., La Porta, M. R., Marra, A., Migliaccio, F., Ozzello, F., Pasquino, M., Umberto Ricardi, Sciacero, P., and Tofani, S.
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,Docetaxel ,Dexamethasone ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fatal Outcome ,0302 clinical medicine ,Leptomeningeal metastases ,Prostate cancer ,Radiotherapy ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Meningeal Neoplasms ,Humans ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Carcinoma ,Headache ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Nausea ,General Medicine ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Treatment Outcome ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Prednisone ,Radiotherapy, Adjuvant ,Taxoids ,Dose Fractionation, Radiation ,Neoplasm Grading ,Cognition Disorders ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Aims and background Metastatic prostate carcinoma commonly involves bones and extrapelvic lymph nodes, with occasional visceral deposits. Central nervous system involvement is unusual and particularly the occurrence of leptomeningeal metastasis (LM) is extremely rare, with few cases described in the medical literature. The clinical presentation is characterized by multifocal neurological deficit and the prognosis is generally dismal, with survival ranging between 3 and 6 months. We report on a patient affected by LM due to prostate cancer who was treated with a combined-modality approach consisting of sequential chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Methods A 70-year-old man was referred to our group for cognitive mental disorder, left-sided frontal headache and nausea; the patient had a previous history of metastatic prostate cancer. LM was diagnosed neuroradiologically with brain MRI and evidence of a detectable level of PSA in the cerebrospinal fluid. He was treated with docetaxel and prednisone for 3 cycles followed by external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) to the whole brain to a total dose of 30 Gy in 10 fractions with a simultaneous integrated boost to the macroscopic disease (total dose of 35 Gy in 10 fractions). No acute toxicity was observed. Results A substantial clinical response was obtained after EBRT with neurological improvement and radiologically stable disease at post-treatment imaging until 10 weeks after radiation. The patient died of sudden general condition deterioration 3 months after EBRT. Conclusion Since LM derived from prostate cancer is likely to become a more common clinical event, such patients would need to be included in clinical trials evaluating new therapeutic approaches, considering that the current treatment strategies have been shown to be rather ineffective.
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- 2013
12. Patterns of practice in the management of rectal cancer: survey of the Interregional Group Piedmont, Valle d’Aosta and Liguria of the 'Associazione Italiana di Radioterapia Oncologica'
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Di Genesio Pagliuca, M, Turri, L, Munoz, F, Melano, A, Bacigalupo, A, Franzone, P, Sciacero, P, Tseroni, V, Vitali, Ml, Delmastro, E, Scolaro, T, Marziano, C, Orsatti, M, Tessa, M, Rossi, A, Ballarè, A, Moro, G, Grasso, R, and Krengli, Marco
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- 2013
13. La Radioterapia dei Tumori Gastrointestinali. Indicazioni e Criteri Guida
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Genovesi, D, Turri, L, De Paoli, A, Mattiucci, Gc, Macchia, G, Sainato, A, Lupattelli, M, Osti, Mf, Friso, Ml, Gambacorta, Ma, Mantello, G, Valvo, F, Niespolo, R, Dionisi, F, Guarneri, A, Agolli, L, Arcangeli, G, Argurio, A, Bacigalupo, A, Boz, G, Capirci, C, Caravatta, L, Ciabattoni, A, Coppola, M, Corti, L, Dell'Acqua, V, Galardi, A, Giannini, M, Innocente, R, Leonardi, Mc, Musio, D, Pani, G, Rosetto, Me, Scandolaro, L, Sciacero, P, Aristei, C, Cionini, L, Corvò, R, Morganti, Ag, Pergolizzi, Stefano, Ricardi, U, and Valentini, V.
- Published
- 2012
14. TomoDirect: an efficient means to deliver radiation at static angles with tomotherapy
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Borca, V. C., Cante, D., Catuzzo, P., Franco, P., Girelli, G., Meloni, T., Numico, G., Ozzello, F., Pasquino, M., Porta, M. R. L., Umberto Ricardi, Sciacero, P., and Tofani, S.
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Cancer Research ,Radiotherapy ,Brain Neoplasms ,Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted ,Palliative Care ,Pain ,Bone Neoplasms ,Breast Neoplasms ,General Medicine ,Mastectomy, Segmental ,Tomotherapy ,Radiotherapy, Computer-Assisted ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Humans ,Female ,Radiotherapy, Adjuvant ,Dose Fractionation, Radiation ,Cranial Irradiation - Abstract
Aims and background The TomoTherapy Hi-Art II system is able to deliver dynamic intensity-modulated radiation therapy within a helical geometry providing robust conformality and modulation, abrupt dose falloff, and reliable accuracy. A new upgrade named TomoDirect was introduced recently, allowing delivery of radiation at discrete angles with a fixed gantry. We present our preliminary clinical experience with TomoDirect. Methods Three specific clinical contexts were chosen for the implementation of TomoDirect, namely palliation of bone metastasis pain (BP), whole brain radiation therapy for intracranial secondary lesions (WBRT), and adjuvant whole breast radiation therapy after conservative surgery for early stage breast cancer (AWBRT). After appropriate positioning, planning CT, contouring, and plan generation, all patients were treated with the TomoDirect upgrade of the TomoTherapy Hi-Art II system with different doses and fractionation according to clinical decision-making. Results Between May and December 2010, 41 patients were treated with TomoDirect. Eighteen patients were treated for BP (mainly vertebral metastases) with a predominant posterior field arrangement. Seven patients were treated for WBRT (multiple brain lesions) with a parallel-opposed latero-lateral approach and 16 patients were treated for conventionally fractionated AWBRT mainly with a 2-field tangential approach. Radiation treatments were generally well tolerated and the acute toxicity was mild. Conclusions While helical tomotherapy allows the delivery of very sophisticated treatment plans, in certain anatomical sites and clinical contexts where the number of beam directions is constrained and supposed not to affect plan quality, TomoDirect might be an efficient means to deliver radiation at static angles with consistent dosimetric and clinical results.
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- 2011
15. Accelerated hypofractionated adjuvant whole breast radiotherapy with concomitant photon boost after conserving surgery for early stage breast cancer: a prospective evaluation on 463 patients
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Cante, D, Rosa La Porta, M, Casanova Borca, V, Sciacero, P, Girelli, G, Pasquino, M, Franco, Pierfrancesco, and Ozzello, F.
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Adult ,Photons ,Radiotherapy ,Breast Neoplasms ,Breast cancer ,Hypofractionation ,Middle Aged ,Mastectomy, Segmental ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Humans ,Female ,Radiotherapy, Adjuvant ,Dose Fractionation, Radiation ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging - Abstract
The current standard therapeutic option for early stage breast cancer (EBC) employs a multimodality treatment approach including conservative surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and hormone therapy. The most common adjuvant radiotherapeutic strategy consists of external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) delivered to the whole breast using 1.8-2 Gy fractions given five times a week, up to a total dose of 45-50 Gy over a period of 5 weeks. In recent years, altered schedules employing larger dose per fraction delivered in fewer treatment sessions over a shorter overall treatment time began to be explored. We herein present clinical data on accelerated hypofractionated adjuvant whole-breast radiotherapy delivered on a daily basis for a total treatment time of 20 fractions. Between February 2005 and June 2009, a total of 463 patients underwent hypofractionated accelerated adjuvant radiation after conservative surgery for early breast cancer (pathological stage pTis, pT1 or pT2, pN0-N1). The basic course of radiotherapy consisted of 45 Gy, to the whole breast in 20 fractions with 2.25 Gy/fraction; an additional daily boost dose of 0.25 Gy was concomitantly delivered, to the lumpectomy cavity, for an additional total dose of 5 Gy. The cumulative nominal dose was 50 Gy. At follow-up, patients were examined at 3 and 6 months after the end of radiotherapy and twice a year afterward. Toxicity was scored according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, using the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group /European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer toxicity scale. Cosmetic results were assessed in agreement with the Harvard criteria. All the 463 patients treated with the accelerated hypofractionated adjuvant whole-breast radiotherapy schedule achieved at least 6 months' follow-up and subsequently were considered for the present analysis. With a median follow-up of 27 months, 5-year DFS is 93.1%. Only three patients experienced disease recurrence: two of them with an axillary nodal relapse; one patient with systemic spread. No local relapse occurred. No major toxicities (grade 3 or more) were detected during follow-up. Only 2% of the patients experienced grade 3 skin toxicity at the very end of the radiotherapy course. Cosmetic result was assessed and scored at 6 months, 1 year, 2 years: 100% of patients showed excellent or good cosmetic result. The explored accelerated hypofractionated adjuvant radiotherapeutic approach for early breast cancer with concomitant photon boost seems to be feasible providing consistent clinical results with excellent short-to-medium-term toxicity profile.
- Published
- 2011
16. Adjuvant chemoradiotherapy in gastric cancer: a pooled analysis of the AIRO gastrointestinal group experience
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Mattiucci, Gian Carlo, Valentini, Chiara, D'Agostino, Giuseppe Roberto, Augurio, A, Capirci, C, De Paoli, A, Genovesi, D, Huscher, A, Iannone, T, Pani, G, Rosetto, Me, Sciacero, P, Manfrida, Stefania, Corazzi, F, Fusco, V, Luppattelli, M, Mangiacotti, Maria Grazia, Melano, A, Murino, Paola, Niespolo, R, Osti, Mf, Picardi, Vincenzo, Morganti, Alessio Giuseppe, Valentini, Vincenzo, Mattiucci, Gian Carlo (ORCID:0000-0001-6500-0413), Valentini, Vincenzo (ORCID:0000-0003-4637-6487), Mattiucci, Gian Carlo, Valentini, Chiara, D'Agostino, Giuseppe Roberto, Augurio, A, Capirci, C, De Paoli, A, Genovesi, D, Huscher, A, Iannone, T, Pani, G, Rosetto, Me, Sciacero, P, Manfrida, Stefania, Corazzi, F, Fusco, V, Luppattelli, M, Mangiacotti, Maria Grazia, Melano, A, Murino, Paola, Niespolo, R, Osti, Mf, Picardi, Vincenzo, Morganti, Alessio Giuseppe, Valentini, Vincenzo, Mattiucci, Gian Carlo (ORCID:0000-0001-6500-0413), and Valentini, Vincenzo (ORCID:0000-0003-4637-6487)
- Abstract
Given the poor compliance with adjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT) in gastric cancer reported in previous studies, a survey was conducted among 18 Italian institutions within the AIRO Gastrointestinal Group to investigate current treatment modalities, toxicities, and compliance with adjuvant CRT.
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- 2015
17. Patterns of radiotherapy practice for pancreatic cancer: Results of the Gastrointestinal Radiation Oncology Study Group multi-institutional survey
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Macchia, Gabriella, Sainato, A, Talamini, R, Boz, G, Bacigalupo, A, Caravatta, Luciana, Fiore, M, Friso, Ml, Fusco, Vincenzo, Lupattelli, M, Mantello, G, Mattiucci, Gian Carlo, Slim, N, Sciacero, P, Turri, L, Valentini, Vincenzo, Morganti, Alessio Giuseppe, Genovesi, D., Mattiucci, Gian Carlo (ORCID:0000-0001-6500-0413), Valentini, Vincenzo (ORCID:0000-0003-4637-6487), Macchia, Gabriella, Sainato, A, Talamini, R, Boz, G, Bacigalupo, A, Caravatta, Luciana, Fiore, M, Friso, Ml, Fusco, Vincenzo, Lupattelli, M, Mantello, G, Mattiucci, Gian Carlo, Slim, N, Sciacero, P, Turri, L, Valentini, Vincenzo, Morganti, Alessio Giuseppe, Genovesi, D., Mattiucci, Gian Carlo (ORCID:0000-0001-6500-0413), and Valentini, Vincenzo (ORCID:0000-0003-4637-6487)
- Abstract
No information is currently available regarding pancreatic cancer (PC) pattern of care in Italy. In the present study, a nationwide survey using a questionnaire was performed to enquire the local standards for PC diagnosis and radiotherapy treatment. Fifty-seven percent of 140 Italian centres completed questionnaire. The main causes of no radiotherapy indication were poor general condition (45%) and lack of guidelines (25%). Physicians (38%) employed neoadjuvant therapy in locally advanced PC patients, while in other centres (62%) adjuvant chemoradiation was administered. Adjuvant gemcitabine-based chemotherapy was selected as the treatment of choice by 59% of centres. Patients were treated mostly with doses of 50-54.9 Gy on the tumour (or bed) plus lymph nodes. A 3D-CRT technique was used in 81.2% of centres, while IMRT and IGRT were available in 61.2 and 48.7% of cases, respectively. Extensive variation exists with regard to patterns of care for PC in Italy. Nevertheless, cooperative studies emerging from this survey appeared beneficial.
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- 2015
18. EP-1217: SIB-IMRT combined with concurrent chemotherapy for anal cancer: 4-year results of a consecutive case series
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Franco, P., primary, Arcadipane, F., additional, Segantin, M., additional, Munoz, F., additional, Migliaccio, F., additional, Sciacero, P., additional, Mistrangelo, M., additional, Angelini, V., additional, Racca, P., additional, Morino, M., additional, Cassoni, P., additional, and Ricardi, U., additional
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- 2015
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19. Palliative Radiation Therapy for Painful Bone Metastases From Solid Tumors Delivered With Static Ports of Tomotherapy
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Franco, P., primary, Migliaccio, F., additional, Torielli, P., additional, Arrichiello, C., additional, Peruzzo Cornetto, A., additional, Casanova Borca, V., additional, Cante, D., additional, Girelli, G., additional, Sciacero, P., additional, La Porta, M., additional, Tofani, S., additional, and Ricardi, U., additional
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- 2014
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20. Postoperative 5-FU based radiochemotherapy in rectal cancer: retrospective long term results and prognostic factors of a pooled analysis on 1,338 patients
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Genovesi, D, Myerson, Rj, Cèfaro, Ga, Vinciguerra, A, Augurio, A, Trignani, M, Di Tommaso, M, Nuzzo, M, Lupattelli, M, Aristei, C, Bellavita, R, Scandolaro, L, Cosentino, D, Pani, Giovambattista, Ziccarelli, L, Gambacorta, Maria Antonietta, Barba, Maria Cristina, Maranzano, E, Trippa, F, Sciacero, P, Niespolo, R, Leonardi, C, Iannone, T, Rosetto, Me, Fusco, Vincenzo, Sanpaolo, P, Melano, A, Valvo, F, Capirci, C, De Paoli, A, Di Nicola, Marco, Mantello, G, Valentini, Vincenzo, Pani, Giovambattista (ORCID:0000-0001-7133-8728), Gambacorta, Maria Antonietta (ORCID:0000-0001-5455-8737), Di Nicola, Marco (ORCID:0000-0001-7457-0426), Valentini, Vincenzo (ORCID:0000-0003-4637-6487), Genovesi, D, Myerson, Rj, Cèfaro, Ga, Vinciguerra, A, Augurio, A, Trignani, M, Di Tommaso, M, Nuzzo, M, Lupattelli, M, Aristei, C, Bellavita, R, Scandolaro, L, Cosentino, D, Pani, Giovambattista, Ziccarelli, L, Gambacorta, Maria Antonietta, Barba, Maria Cristina, Maranzano, E, Trippa, F, Sciacero, P, Niespolo, R, Leonardi, C, Iannone, T, Rosetto, Me, Fusco, Vincenzo, Sanpaolo, P, Melano, A, Valvo, F, Capirci, C, De Paoli, A, Di Nicola, Marco, Mantello, G, Valentini, Vincenzo, Pani, Giovambattista (ORCID:0000-0001-7133-8728), Gambacorta, Maria Antonietta (ORCID:0000-0001-5455-8737), Di Nicola, Marco (ORCID:0000-0001-7457-0426), and Valentini, Vincenzo (ORCID:0000-0003-4637-6487)
- Abstract
To evaluate survival outcomes of patients in pStage II-III rectal cancer treated with adjuvant 5-fluorouracil-based radiochemotherapy and to retrospectively analyze the impact of prognostic variables on local control, metastasis-free survival and cause-specific survival.
- Published
- 2013
21. Hypofractionated Adjuvant Breast Radiation and Simultaneous Integrated Boost Delivered With Static Angle Tomotherapy: A Prospective Phase 2 Trial
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Franco, P., primary, Migliaccio, F., additional, Zeverino, M., additional, Torielli, P., additional, Sciacero, P., additional, Girelli, G., additional, Arrichiello, C., additional, Casanova Borca, V., additional, Tofani, S., additional, and Ricardi, U., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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22. [Radiotherapy of non-neoplastic diseases: the situation in Piedmont]
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P Gabriele 1, Sciacero, P, Novella, V, G Ruo Redda, M, Nassisi, D, Melano, A, Giordana, C, Rovea, P, Pastore, G, and Negri, G
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Italy ,Radiotherapy ,Humans - Abstract
The authors report the results of a census among the Piedmont region radiation therapy departments during the period 1980-1991 concerning non antineoplastic radiotherapy. Eight out of eleven centers respond to the questionnaire. During the period considered 36,480 patients were treated, with an annual mean of 4056; the number of treated patients varies from 1.2% to over 71.3% in the different centers when compared to the number of neoplastic patients. Arthrosis, osseous angioma, cheloides and verruca were the most treated diseases. Plesioroentgentherapy and roentgentherapy were normally employed; telecesium and telecobalt therapy were also used; only two centers used electron beams or brachytherapy. The doses of radiotherapy were not uniform; also patients' information and follow-up criteria were quite different in the various centers. The authors conclude with a guidelines for future radiotherapy in benign diseases.
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- 1996
23. The Role of Radiation Therapy in Vulvar Cancer: Review of the Current Literature
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Sciacero, Piera, Cante, Domenico, Piva, Cristina, Casanova Borca, Valeria, Petrucci, Edoardo, Gastaldi, Luca, La Porta, Maria Rosa, and Franco, Pierfrancesco
- Abstract
The purpose of this article is to discuss the current role of radiation therapy in vulvar cancer and especially to review the recent literature relative to the use of intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) in disease management. Owing to the low incidence of vulvar cancer, at present there are no available results of cooperative prospective trials. As evidenced in dosimetric and preliminary retrospective clinical studies, the use of IMRT has resulted in superior normal tissue sparing and lower rates of acute and chronic toxicities compared to previous studies that used conventional approaches. Data on long-term outcomes in these patients remain limited.
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- 2017
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24. 1004 poster TOMODIRECT: AN EFFICIENT MEAN TO DELIVER PALLIATIVE RADIOTHERAPY WITH DISCRETE ANGLES TOMOTHERAPY FOR SKELETAL METASTASES
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Franco, P., primary, Sciacero, P., additional, Catuzzo, P., additional, Cante, D., additional, Girelli, G., additional, Casanova-Borca, V., additional, Pasquino, M., additional, Tofani, S., additional, La Porta, M.R., additional, Zenone, F., additional, Ricardi, U., additional, and Ozzello, F., additional
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- 2011
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25. 741 poster ADJUVANT WHOLE BREAST RADIATION THERAPY DELIVERED WITH STATIC ANGLE TOMOTHERAPY EMPLOYING TOMODIRECT: EARLY RESULTS AND TOXICITY
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Franco, P., primary, Cante, D., additional, Catuzzo, P., additional, Girelli, G., additional, Sciacero, P., additional, Casanova-Borca, V., additional, Pasquino, M., additional, Zenone, F., additional, Tofani, S., additional, La Porta, M.R., additional, Ricardi, U., additional, and Ozzello, F., additional
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- 2011
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26. Hypofractionated Whole-Breast Radiotherapy and Concomitant Boost after Breast Conservation in Elderly Patients
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Cante, Domenico, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Sciacero, Piera, Girelli, Giuseppe, Pasquino, Massimo, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Tofani, Santi, La Porta, Maria Rosa, and Ricardi, Umberto
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Aims To report the 5- and 10-year results of accelerated hypofractionated whole-breast radiotherapy (WBRT) with concomitant boost to the tumor bed in 83 consecutive patients with early breast cancer aged >70 years.Methods All patients were treated with breast conservation and hypofractionated WBRT. The prescription dose to the whole breast was 45 Gy (2.25 Gy/20 fractions) with an additional daily concomitant boost of 0.25 Gy to the surgical cavity (2.5 Gy/20 fractions up to 50 Gy). The maximum detected toxicity was scored according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, version 3.0. We considered as skin toxicity: erythema, edema, desquamation, ulceration, hemorrhage, necrosis, telangiectasia, fibrosis-induration, hyperpigmentation, retraction and atrophy. Cosmetic results were assessed as set by the Harvard criteria.Results With a median follow-up of 60 months (range 36-88), no local recurrence was observed. The maximum detected acute skin toxicity was G0 in 57% of patients, G1 in 40% and G2 in 3%. Late skin and subcutaneous toxicity was generally mild with no ≥G3 events. The cosmetic results were excellent in 69% of patients, good in 22%, fair in 5%, and poor in 4%.Conclusions The present results support the use of hypofractionation employing a concomitant boost to the lumpectomy cavity in women aged >70 years. This is a convenient treatment option for both this type of population and health-care providers.
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- 2016
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27. Bilateral Breast Radiation Delivered with Static Angle Tomotherapy (TomoDirect): Clinical Feasibility and Dosimetric Results of a Single Patient
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Franco, Pierfrancesco, Migliaccio, Fernanda, Torielli, Paolo, Sciacero, Piera, Girelli, Giuseppe, Cante, Domenico, Arrichiello, Cecilia, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Cornetto, Andrea Peruzzo, Numico, Gianmauro, La Porta, Maria Rosa, Tofani, Santi, and Ricardi, Umberto
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We herein report on a case of synchronous bilateral breast cancer patient undergoing adjuvant intensity-modulated whole breast with static angle tomotherapy (TomoDirect). The patient was treated with a hypofractionated schedule employing a simultaneous integrated boost approach. Radiotherapy schedule was 45 Gy/20 fractions (2.25 Gy daily) to the bilateral whole breast and 50 Gy/20 fractions (2.5 Gy daily) to the 2 lumpectomy cavities. Treatment was delivered over 4 weeks. Dosimetric results were robust with consistent target coverage and adequate normal tissue avoidance. Treatment was generally well-tolerated and acute toxicity profile was mild. The present report highlights the promising clinical feasibility of TomoDirect for bilateral breast irradiation.
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- 2015
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28. Cerebellar Glioblastoma Multiforme in an Adult Woman
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Sciacero, Piera, Girelli, Giuseppe Franco, Cante, Domenico, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Grosso, Pierangelo, Marra, Annamaria, Bombaci, Sebastiano, Tofani, Santi, La Porta, Maria Rosa, and Ricardi, Umberto
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Aims and Background Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most frequent primary central nervous system malignancy in adults, accounting for 50% of all primary intracranial malignancies. GBM mostly arises within the cerebral hemispheres and frequently affects patients in the fifth and sixth decades of life. Conversely, primary cerebellar GBM is a rather infrequent occurrence in the adult population, accounting for 1%-2.2% of all GBMs. Here we report a case of cerebellar GBM in an adult woman and provide an extensive review of the literature.Methods A 42-year-old woman was referred to our hospital for occipital constrictive headache, dizziness and gait disturbance. Multimodality imaging including computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a right cerebellar mass. Gross total resection was performed. Histological examination showed grade IV GBM according to the World Health Organization classification, with a synchronous component of low-grade glioma. Immunohistochemistry showed positivity for p53 and negativity for epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). After surgical tumor excision, the patient underwent adjuvant radiation to the posterior fossa with an intensity-modulated approach for a total dose of 60 Gy in 30 fractions. In addition, she received concurrent and adjuvant chemotherapy with temozolomide.Results Treatment was well tolerated, with mild acute toxicity. There was no evidence of recurrence on brain and spinal gadolinium-enhanced MRI scans 4, 8 and 12 months after primary surgery. No late side effects were recorded.Conclusion Our patient had several immunohistochemical characteristics of secondary glioblastoma such as p53 positivity, EGFR negativity and the presence of a low-grade glioma component. Intensity-modulated radiation therapy allowed us to safely deliver full-dose radiation with sparing of critical structures.
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- 2014
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29. Minimizing a Tricky Situation in Breast Irradiation with Helical Tomotherapy
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Franco, Pierfrancesco, Zeverino, Michele, Migliaccio, Fernanda, Torielli, Paolo, Angelini, Veronica, Sciacero, Piera, Girelli, Giuseppe, Cante, Domenico, Arrichiello, Cecilia, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Numico, Gianmauro, La Porta, Maria Rosa, Tofani, Santi, and Ricardi, Umberto
- Abstract
We report on a patient with breast cancer undergoing adjuvant intensity-modulated whole breast and lymph node irradiation with static angle tomotherapy (TomoDirect), who experienced a traumatic ipsilateral humeral fracture and was able to continue radiotherapy with helical tomotherapy and daily dosimetric monitoring by means of the Planned Adaptive module.
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- 2014
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30. Combined chemoradiation for head and neck region myxofibrosarcoma of the maxillary sinus
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Cante, Domenico, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Sciacero, Piera, Girelli, Giuseppe Franco, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Pasquino, Massimo, Tofani, Santi, Bombaci, Sebastiano, Migliaccio, Fernanda, Marra, Annamaria, Numico, Gianmauro, La Porta, Maria Rosa, and Ricardi, Umberto
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Aims and background Adult sarcomas of the head and neck region (HNSs) are considered a rare clinicopathological entity. They account for only 2–15% of all adult sarcomas and for less than 1% of all head and neck malignancies. The preferred initial treatment option is wide surgical excision. Whenever surgery is considered infeasible, a frontline combined-modality approach including radiotherapy and chemotherapy might be proposed. We here report on a case of localized sarcoma of the maxillary sinus treated with induction chemotherapy and subsequent intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), achieving a persistent complete remission status.Methods A 66-year-old man was referred to our institution hospital for left-sided facial pain with swollen left cheek and ipsilateral facial palsy. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a mass within the left maxillary sinus extending to the orbital floor and adjacent alveolar bones. Histological examination of the biopsy specimen demonstrated a myxofibrosarcoma. The patient underwent induction chemotherapy with gemcitabine 900 mg/m2(days 1–8) and taxotere 80 mg/m2every 3 weeks for 3 cycles and sequential simultaneous integrated boost (SIB) IMRT up to a total dose of 70 Gy/35 fractions to the macroscopic disease with 59.5 Gy/35 fractions to the level IB-II lymph nodes in the left neck.Results Treatment was well tolerated with mild acute toxicity. Complete remission was achieved at restaging MRI 6 months after the end of the combined modality approach. The patient remains in complete, unmaintained clinical and instrumental complete remission 18 months after treatment, with no late side effects.Conclusion Combination therapy with induction chemotherapy and sequential SIB-IMRT could therefore be a promising modality for head and neck sarcomas, allowing for simultaneous tumor control and normal tissue sparing.
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- 2013
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31. Patterns of Practice in the Radiation Therapy Management of Rectal Cancer: Survey of the Interregional Group Piedmont, Valle d'Aosta and Liguria of the “Associazione Italiana di Radioterapia Oncologica (AIRO)”
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Pagliuca, Milena Di Genesio, Turri, Lucia, Munoz, Fernando, Melano, Antonella, Bacigalupo, Almalina, Franzone, Paola, Sciacero, Piera, Tseroni, Vassiliki, Vitali, Maria Laura, Delmastro, Elena, Scolaro, Tindaro, Marziano, Corrado, Orsatti, Marco, Tessa, Maria, Rossi, Annalisa, Ballarè, Andrea, Moro, Gregorio, Grasso, Rachele, and Krengli, Marco
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Aims and background To report the survey about the main aspects on the use of radiotherapy for the treatment of rectal cancer in Piedmont and Liguria.Methods and study design Sixteen centers (11 from Piedmont and 5 from Liguria) received and answered by email a questionnaire data base about clinical and technical aspects of the treatment of rectal cancer. All data were incorporated in a single data base and analyzed.Results Data regarding 593 patients who received radiotherapy for rectal cancer during the year 2009 were collected and analyzed. Staging consisted in colonoscopy, thoracic and abdominal CT, pelvic MRI and endoscopic ultrasound. PET/CT was employed to complete staging and in the treatment planning in 12/16 centers (75%). Neoadjuvant radiotherapy was employed more frequently than adjuvant radiotherapy (50% vs 36.4%), using typically a total dose of 45 Gy with 1.8 Gy/fraction. Concurrent chemoradiation with 5-fluorouracil or capecitabine was mainly employed in neoadjuvant and adjuvant settings, whereas oxaliplatin alone or in combination with 5-FU or capecitabine and leucovorin was commonly employed as the adjuvant agent. The median interval from neoadjuvant treatment to surgery was 7 weeks after long-course radiotherapy and 8 days after short-course radiotherapy. The pelvic total dose of 45 Gy in the adjuvant setting was the same in all the centers. Doses higher than 45 Gy were employed with a radical intent or in case of positive surgical margins. Hypofractionated regimens (2.5, 3 Gy to a total dose of 35–30 Gy) were used in the palliative setting. No relevant differences were observed in target volume definition and patient setup. Twenty-six patients (4.4%) developed grade 3 acute toxicity. Follow-up was scheduled in a similar way in all the centers.Conclusions No relevant differences were found among the centers involved in the survey. The approach can help clinicians to address important clinical questions and to improve consistency and homogeneity of treatments.
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- 2013
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32. Leptomeningeal Metastasis from Prostate Cancer
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Cante, Domenico, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Sciacero, Piera, Girelli, Giuseppe, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Pasquino, Massimo, Migliaccio, Fernanda, Tofani, Santi, Grassi, Lucia, Marra, Annamaria, Ozzello, Franca, La Porta, Maria Rosa, and Ricardi, Umberto
- Abstract
Aims and background Metastatic prostate carcinoma commonly involves bones and extrapelvic lymph nodes, with occasional visceral deposits. Central nervous system involvement is unusual and particularly the occurrence of leptomeningeal metastasis (LM) is extremely rare, with few cases described in the medical literature. The clinical presentation is characterized by multifocal neurological deficit and the prognosis is generally dismal, with survival ranging between 3 and 6 months. We report on a patient affected by LM due to prostate cancer who was treated with a combined-modality approach consisting of sequential chemotherapy and radiotherapy.Methods A 70-year-old man was referred to our group for cognitive mental disorder, left-sided frontal headache and nausea; the patient had a previous history of metastatic prostate cancer. LM was diagnosed neuroradiologically with brain MRI and evidence of a detectable level of PSA in the cerebrospinal fluid. He was treated with docetaxel and prednisone for 3 cycles followed by external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) to the whole brain to a total dose of 30 Gy in 10 fractions with a simultaneous integrated boost to the macroscopic disease (total dose of 35 Gy in 10 fractions). No acute toxicity was observed.Results A substantial clinical response was obtained after EBRT with neurological improvement and radiologically stable disease at post-treatment imaging until 10 weeks after radiation. The patient died of sudden general condition deterioration 3 months after EBRT.Conclusion Since LM derived from prostate cancer is likely to become a more common clinical event, such patients would need to be included in clinical trials evaluating new therapeutic approaches, considering that the current treatment strategies have been shown to be rather ineffective.
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- 2013
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33. TomoDirect: An efficient means to deliver radiation at static angles with tomotherapy
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Franco, Pierfrancesco, Catuzzo, Paola, Cante, Domenico, La Porta, Maria Rosa, Sciacero, Piera, Girelli, Giuseppe, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Pasquino, Massimo, Numico, Gianmauro, Tofani, Santi, Meloni, Teodoro, Ricardi, Umberto, and Ozzello, Franca
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Aims and background The TomoTherapy Hi-Art II system is able to deliver dynamic intensity-modulated radiation therapy within a helical geometry providing robust conformality and modulation, abrupt dose falloff, and reliable accuracy. A new upgrade named TomoDirect was introduced recently, allowing delivery of radiation at discrete angles with a fixed gantry. We present our preliminary clinical experience with TomoDirect.Methods Three specific clinical contexts were chosen for the implementation of TomoDirect, namely palliation of bone metastasis pain (BP), whole brain radiation therapy for intracranial secondary lesions (WBRT), and adjuvant whole breast radiation therapy after conservative surgery for early stage breast cancer (AWBRT). After appropriate positioning, planning CT, contouring, and plan generation, all patients were treated with the TomoDirect upgrade of the TomoTherapy Hi-Art II system with different doses and fractionation according to clinical decision-making.Results Between May and December 2010, 41 patients were treated with TomoDirect. Eighteen patients were treated for BP (mainly vertebral metastases) with a predominant posterior field arrangement. Seven patients were treated for WBRT (multiple brain lesions) with a parallel-opposed latero-lateral approach and 16 patients were treated for conventionally fractionated AWBRT mainly with a 2-field tangential approach. Radiation treatments were generally well tolerated and the acute toxicity was mild.Conclusions While helical tomotherapy allows the delivery of very sophisticated treatment plans, in certain anatomical sites and clinical contexts where the number of beam directions is constrained and supposed not to affect plan quality, TomoDirect might be an efficient means to deliver radiation at static angles with consistent dosimetric and clinical results.
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- 2011
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34. Target Volume Delineation for Preoperative Radiotherapy of Rectal Cancer: Inter-Observer Variability and Potential Impact of FDG-PET/CT Imaging
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Krengli, Marco, Cannillo, Barbara, Turri, Lucia, Bagnasacco, Paolo, Berretta, Laura, Ferrara, Teresa, Galliano, Mario, Gribaudo, Sergio, Melano, Antonella, Munoz, Fernando, Sciacero, Piera, Tseroni, Vassiliki, Bassi, Maria Chiara, Brambilla, Marco, and Inglese, Eugenio
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To analyze the inter-observer variability and the potential impact of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) imaging for target volume delineation in preoperative radiotherapy of rectal cancer. Gross tumor volume (GTV) and clinical target volume (CTV) in 2 cases of rectal cancer were contoured by 10 radiation oncologists, 5 on CT and 5 on PET/CT images. Resulting volumes were analyzed by coefficient of variation (CV) and concordance index (CI). Mean GTV was 120 cc±20.4 cc in case A and 119 cc ± 35.7 cc in case B. Mean CTV was 723 cc ± 147.5 cc in case A and 739 cc ± 195.6 cc in case B. CV was lower and CI was similar or higher across the observers contouring GTV on PET/CT. CTV variability was less influenced by the use of PET/CT. PET/CT may allow reducing inter-observer variability in GTV delineation.
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- 2010
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35. Concomitant Chemotherapy and External Radiotherapy plus Brachytherapy for Locally Advanced Esophageal Cancer Results of a Retrospective Multicenter Study
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Tessa, Maria, Rotta, Paolo, Ragona, Riccardo, Sola, Barbara, Grassini, Mario, Nassisi, Daniela, Sciacero, Piera, Airoldi, Mario, Filippi, Andrea, Gianello, Luca, De Angelis, Claudio, Ozzello, Franca, Trotti, Alessandro Boidi, Ricardi, Umberto, and Sannazzari, Gian Luca
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Aims and Background In October 1995, the Piedmont AIRO (Italian Society of Radiation Oncology) Group started a multi-institutional study of radiochemotherapy on locally advanced esophageal cancer, characterized by external radiotherapy followed by an intraluminal high dose-rate brachytherapy boost. Most patients were re-evaluated for surgery at the end of the program. The primary aim of the study was to assess efficacy of curative radiochemotherapy regarding overall survival and local control rates. The secondary aim was to evaluate the ability of radiochemotherapy to make resectable lesions previously considered inoperable.Methods and Study Design Between January 1996 and March 2000, 75 patients with locally advanced esophageal cancer were enrolled. All were treated with definitive radiotherapy; due to age or high expected toxicity, chemotherapy was employed only in 53 of them. Treatment schedule consisted of 60 Gy external radiotherapy (180 cGy/d, 5 days/week for 7 weeks) concomitant with two 5-day cycles of chemotherapy with cisplatin and fluorouracil (weeks 1 and 5). One or two sessions of 5-7 Gy intraluminal high dose-rate brachytherapy were carried out on patients whose restaging showed a major tumor response. Surgery was performed in 14 patients.Results At the end of radiotherapy, dysphagia disappeared in 46/75 cases (61%), and in 20/75 (27%) a significant symptom reduction was recorded. Complete objective response at restaging after radiotherapy was obtained in 33% of patients and a partial response in 53%. At the end of the multimodal treatment program, including esophagectomy, complete responses were 34 (45%); 4 of 14 (28.5%) cases proved to be disease free (pTO) at pathological examination. No G3-G4 toxicity was recorded. Two- and 5-year overall survival rates of all patients were, respectively, 38% and 28%; 2- and 5-year local control rates were, respectively, 35% and 33%. In a subgroup of 20 nonsurgical patients in complete response after radiochemotherapy, the overall survival rate at 3 and 5 years was 65% and the local control rate at 3 and 5 years was 75%. According to multivariate analysis, prognostic factors for survival were Karnofsky index and esophagectomy.Conclusions For patients with locally advanced disease, radiochemotherapy showed improved clinical and pathologic tumor response and survival compared to surgery or radiotherapy alone. Intraluminal brachytherapy with a small fraction size allows an increased dose to the tumor without higher toxicity. Esophagectomy following radiochemotherapy could improve survival rates compared to definitive radiochemotherapy, but it is necessary to optimize selection criteria for surgery at the re-evaluation phase.
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- 2005
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36. Penile Metastasis from Prostate Cancer: A Case Report
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Cante, Domenico, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Sciacero, Piera, Girelli, Giuseppe, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Grosso, Pierangelo, Tofani, Santi, Marra, Annamaria, La Porta, Maria Rosa, and Ricardi, Umberto
- Abstract
Metastatic involvement of the penis is rare. About 80% of secondary lesions originate from pelvic primary tumors, mainly bladder and prostate. We present a case of prostatic mucinous adenocarcinoma with penile metastasis symptomatic for pain, which was treated with external-beam radiation (35 Gy/14 fractions; 2.5 Gy daily) combined with androgen deprivation, resulting in complete pain relief and objective response after treatment.
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- 2014
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37. Late Brain Metastases from Colorectal Cancer a Case Report and Review of the Literature
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Cante, Domenico, Girelli, Giuseppe, La Porta, Maria Rosa, Sciacero, Piera, La Sala, Simona, and Ozzello, Franca
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Metastatic brain tumors from colorectal cancer are relatively rare. In previous reports the incidence ranged from 1.9 to 3.5 percent of all metastatic brain tumors. In another recent article the cumulative incidence of brain metastasis was estimated at 1.2%. The prognosis for patients with even a single resectable brain metastasis is poor. This paper presents the case report of a 72-year-old woman with a solitary brain metastasis 16 years after a diagnosis of colorectal cancer. She remained asymptomatic for 16 years. The first sign of a secondary tumor was diplopia. Brain scan demonstrated a space-occupying lesion in the occipital area. A solitary tumor was removed by craniotomy. Histological examination showed that it was a metastasis from the intestinal primary tumor. The patient subsequently underwent whole brain radiotherapy for a total dose of 30 Gy in 10 fractions.
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- 2005
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38. Combined chemoradiation for head and neck region myxofibrosarcoma of the maxillary sinus
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Bombaci, S., Cante, D., Casanova Borca, V., Franco, P., Girelli, G. F., La Porta, M. R., Marra, A., Migliaccio, F., Numico, G., Pasquino, M., Umberto Ricardi, Sciacero, P., and Tofani, S.
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Male ,Cancer Research ,Head and neck sarcoma ,Radiotherapy ,Maxillary sinus ,Maxillary Sinus Neoplasms ,Docetaxel ,Histiocytoma, Malignant Fibrous ,Deoxycytidine ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Humans ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,General Medicine ,Induction Chemotherapy ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Gemcitabine ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Radiotherapy, Adjuvant ,Taxoids ,Dose Fractionation, Radiation ,Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated - Abstract
Aims and background Adult sarcomas of the head and neck region (HNSs) are considered a rare clinicopathological entity. They account for only 2–15% of all adult sarcomas and for less than 1% of all head and neck malignancies. The preferred initial treatment option is wide surgical excision. Whenever surgery is considered infeasible, a frontline combined-modality approach including radiotherapy and chemotherapy might be proposed. We here report on a case of localized sarcoma of the maxillary sinus treated with induction chemotherapy and subsequent intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), achieving a persistent complete remission status. Methods A 66-year-old man was referred to our institution hospital for left-sided facial pain with swollen left cheek and ipsilateral facial palsy. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a mass within the left maxillary sinus extending to the orbital floor and adjacent alveolar bones. Histological examination of the biopsy specimen demonstrated a myxofibrosarcoma. The patient underwent induction chemotherapy with gemcitabine 900 mg/m2 (days 1–8) and taxotere 80 mg/m2 every 3 weeks for 3 cycles and sequential simultaneous integrated boost (SIB) IMRT up to a total dose of 70 Gy/35 fractions to the macroscopic disease with 59.5 Gy/35 fractions to the level IB-II lymph nodes in the left neck. Results Treatment was well tolerated with mild acute toxicity. Complete remission was achieved at restaging MRI 6 months after the end of the combined modality approach. The patient remains in complete, unmaintained clinical and instrumental complete remission 18 months after treatment, with no late side effects. Conclusion Combination therapy with induction chemotherapy and sequential SIB-IMRT could therefore be a promising modality for head and neck sarcomas, allowing for simultaneous tumor control and normal tissue sparing.
39. Radiation treatment of the benign diseases: The results of a census among Piedmont region | La radioterapia delle affezioni non neoplastiche: La situazione in Piemonte
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Pietro Gabriele, Sciacero, P., Novella, V., Ruo Redda, M. G., Nassisi, D., Melano, A., Giordana, C., Rovea, P., Pastore, G., and Negri, G.
40. Penile metastasis from prostate cancer: A case report
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Cante, D., Pierfrancesco Franco, Sciacero, P., Girelli, G., Borca, V. C., Grosso, P., Tofani, S., Marra, A., La Porta, M. R., and Ricardi, U.
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Male ,Anemia, Hemolytic ,Prostate cancer ,Radiotherapy ,Palliative Care ,Pain ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Bone Neoplasms ,Penile metastasis ,Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation ,Middle Aged ,Adenocarcinoma, Mucinous ,Fatal Outcome ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Radiotherapy, Adjuvant ,Dose Fractionation, Radiation ,Penile Neoplasms - Abstract
Metastatic involvement of the penis is rare. About 80% of secondary lesions originate from pelvic primary tumors, mainly bladder and prostate. We present a case of prostatic mucinous adenocarcinoma with penile metastasis symptomatic for pain, which was treated with external-beam radiation (35 Gy/14 fractions; 2.5 Gy daily) combined with androgen deprivation, resulting in complete pain relief and objective response after treatment.
41. Postoperative 5-FU based Radiochemotherapy in Rectal Cancer: Retrospective Long Term Results and Prognostic Factors of a Pooled Analysis on 1,338 Patients
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Genovesi, D, Myerson, Rj, Cèfaro, Ga, Vinciguerra, A, Augurio, A, Trignani, M, DI Tommaso, M, Nuzzo, M, Lupattelli, M, Aristei, Cynthia, Bellavita, R, Scandolaro, L, Cosentino, D, Pani, G, Ziccarelli, L, Gambacorta, Ma, Barba, Mc, Maranzano, E, Trippa, F, Sciacero, P, Niespolo, R, Leonardi, C, Iannone, T, Rosetto, Me, Fusco, V, Sanpaolo, P, Melano, A, Valvo, F, Capirci, C, DE Paoli, A, DI Nicola, M, Mantello, G, Valentini, V, and WORKING GROUP, ON BEHALF OF THE G. I. A. I. R. O.
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Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic ,Antimetabolites ,Rectal Neoplasms ,prognostic factors ,adjuvant therapy ,staging ,Chemoradiotherapy ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Rectal cancer ,Prognosis ,Antineoplastic ,Disease-Free Survival ,Treatment Outcome ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Humans ,Fluorouracil ,Postoperative Period ,Settore MED/36 - DIAGNOSTICA PER IMMAGINI E RADIOTERAPIA ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
To evaluate survival outcomes of patients in pStage II-III rectal cancer treated with adjuvant 5-fluorouracil-based radiochemotherapy and to retrospectively analyze the impact of prognostic variables on local control, metastasis-free survival and cause-specific survival.A total of 1,338 patients, treated between 1985-2005 for locally advanced rectal cancer, who underwent surgery and postoperative 5-fluorouracil-based chemoradiation, were selected.The actuarial 5- and 10-year outcomes were: local control 87.0%-84.1%, disease-free survival 61.6%-52.1%, metastasis-free survival 72.0%-67.2%, cause-specific survival 70.4%-57.5%, and overall survival 63.8%-53.4%. Better outcomes were observed in patients with IIA, IIIA stage. Multivariate analyses showed that variables significantly affecting metastasis-free survival were pT4 and pN2, while for cancer-specific survival those variables were age65 years, pT4, pN1, pN2, distal tumors and number of lymph nodes removed ≤ 12.This study confirmed that among stage II-III rectal cancer patients there are subgroups of patients with different clinical outcomes.
42. PATTERN OF PRACTICE FOR PALLIATIVE TREATMENT OF GLIOBLASTOMA (GBM): A SURVEY PROMOTED BY THE ITALIAN ASSOCIATION OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY (AIRO)
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Farnetl, A., Amelio, D., Anselmo, P., Dall Oglio, S., Girlando, A., Ferro, M., Orsatti, M., Tramacere, E., Sciacero, P., Fillini, C., Trotti, A. Boidi, Guida, C., Tomio, L., Gregorio, M., Silvano, G., Stefano Pergolizzi, and Lupattelli, M.
43. Tester accuracy an important concern for link performance certification.
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Johnston, Mark and Sciacero, Jim
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TELECOMMUNICATIONS standards - Abstract
Reports that testing Category 5 cable for near-end crosstalk has led to accuracy issues that the Telecommunications Industry's Technical Systems Bulletin (TSB)-67 should resolve. Creation of an uncertainty zone because of accuracy variation in field test equipment; Need for standard methods.
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- 1995
44. Does TomoDirect 3DCRT represent a suitable option for post-operative whole breast irradiation? A hypothesis-generating pilot study
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Borca Valeria Casanova, Franco Pierfrancesco, Catuzzo Paola, Migliaccio Fernanda, Zenone Flora, Aimonetto Stefania, Peruzzo Andrea, Pasquino Massimo, Russo Giuliana, La Porta Maria Rosa, Cante Domenico, Sciacero Piera, Girelli Giuseppe, Ricardi Umberto, and Tofani Santi
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background This study investigates the use of TomoDirectTM 3DCRT for whole breast adjuvant radiotherapy (AWBRT) that represents a very attractive treatment opportunity, mainly for radiotherapy departments without conventional Linacs and only equipped with helical tomotherapy units. Methods Plans were created for 17 breast cancer patients using TomoDirect in 3DCRT and IMRT modality and field-in-field 3DCRT planning (FIF) and compared in terms of PTV coverage, overdosage, homogeneity, conformality and dose to OARs. The possibility to define patient-class solutions for TD-3DCRT employment was investigated, correlating OARs dose constraints to patient specific anatomic parameters. Results TD-3DCRT showed PTV coverage and homogeneity significantly higher than TD-IMRT and FIF. PTV conformality was significantly better for FIF, while no differences were found between TD-3DCRT and TD-IMRT. TD-3DCRT showed mean values of the OARs dosimetric endpoints significantly higher than TD-IMRT; with respect to FIF, TD-3DCRT showed values significantly higher for lung V20Gy, mean heart dose and V25Gy, while contralateral lung maximum dose and contralateral breast mean dose resulted significantly lower. The Central Lung Distance (CLD) and the maximal Heart Distance (HD) resulted as useful clinical tools to predict the opportunity to employ TD-3DCRT: positive correlations were found between CLD and both V20Gy and mean lung dose and between HD and both V25Gy and the mean heart dose. TD-3DCRT showed a significantly shorter mean beam-on time than TD-IMRT. Conclusions The present study showed that TD-3DCRT and TD-IMRT are two feasible and dosimetrically acceptable treatment approach for AWBRT, with an optimal PTV coverage and adequate OARs sparing. Some concerns might be raised in terms of dose to organs at risks if TD-3DCRT is applied to a general population. A correct patients clusterization according to simple quantitative anatomic measures, would help to correctly allocate patients to the appropriate treatment planning strategy in terms of target coverage, but also of normal tissue sparing.
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- 2012
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45. Head and neck region consolidation radiotherapy and prophylactic cranial irradiation with hippocampal avoidance delivered with helical tomotherapy after induction chemotherapy for non-sinonasal neuroendocrine carcinoma of the upper airways
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Franco Pierfrancesco, Numico Gianmauro, Migliaccio Fernanda, Catuzzo Paola, Cante Domenico, Ceroni Paola, Sciacero Piera, Carassai Pierpaolo, Canzi Paolo, La Porta Maria, Girelli Giuseppe, Borca Valeria, Pasquino Massimo, Tofani Santi, Ozzello Franca, and Ricardi Umberto
- Subjects
Radiotherapy ,Tomotherapy ,Non-sinonasal neuroendocrine carcinoma ,Head and neck ,Hippocampus avoidance ,Prophylactic cranial irradiation ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Non-sinonasal neuroendocrine carcinomas (NSNECs) of the head and neck are considered an unfrequent clinico-pathological entity. Combined modality treatment represents an established therapeutic option for undifferentiated forms where distant metastasis is a common pattern of failure. Methods We report on a case of NSNEC treated with sequential chemo-radiation consisting of 6 cycles of cisplatin and etoposide followed by loco-regional radiation to the head and neck and simultaneous prophylactic cranial irradiation to prevent from intracranial spread, delivered with helical tomotherapy with the 'hippocampal avoidance' technique in order to reduce neuro-cognitive late effects. Results One year after the end of the whole combined modality approach, the patient achieved complete remission, with no treatment-related sub-acute and late effects. Conclusions The present report highlights the importance of multidisciplinary management for NSNECs of the head and neck, as the possibility to achieve substantial cure rates with mild side effects with modern radiotherapy techniques.
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- 2012
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46. Moderately Hypofractionated Radiotherapy with Simultaneous Integrated Boost in Prostate Cancer: A Comparative Study with Conventionally Fractionated Radiation.
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Cante D, Piva C, Petrucci ETF, Sciacero P, Ferrario S, Pasquino M, Casanova Borca V, La Porta MR, and Franco P
- Abstract
Background: To report 5-year clinical outcomes and toxicity in organ-confined prostate cancer (PCa) for low- and intermediate-risk patients treated with a moderately hypofractionated schedule of radiotherapy (RT) delivered with simultaneous integrated boost (SIB) compared to a conventionally fractionated RT regimen., Methods: Data of 384 patients with PCa treated between August 2006 and June 2017 were retrospectively reviewed. The treatment schedule consisted of hypofractionated RT (HYPO FR) with SIB up to 70 Gy to the prostate gland and 63 Gy to seminal vesicles delivered in 28 fractions or in conventionally fractionated RT (CONV FR) up to a total dose of 80 Gy in 40 fractions. Patient allocation to treatment was based on the time period considered. For intermediate-risk patients, androgen deprivation was given for a median duration of 6 months. The 5-year biochemical relapse-free survival (bRFS), cancer-specific survival (CSS), and overall survival (OS) were assessed. Furthermore, we evaluated gastrointestinal (GI) and genitourinary (GU) toxicities. Uni- and multivariate Cox regression analyses were used to test the impact of clinical variables on both outcome and toxicity., Results: A total of 198 patients was treated with hypofractionated RT and 186 with the conventional schedule. At a median follow-up of 5 years, no significant differences were observed in terms of GI toxicity and outcome between the two groups. Early GU toxicity was significantly increased in HYPO FR, while late GU toxicity was significantly higher in CONV FR. In HYPO FR, a biochemical relapse occurred in 12 patients (6.1%), and 9 patients (4.5%) reported a clinical relapse (4 local, 2 locoregional, and 3 systemic recurrence). In CONV FR, 15 patients (8.1%) experienced a biochemical relapse and 11 patients (5.9%) showed a clinical relapse (5 local, 4 locoregional, and 3 systemic recurrences). Early grades 1-2 GU and GI toxicities were observed in 60 (30.3%) and 37 (18.7%) patients, respectively, in the hypofractionated group and in 33 (17.7%) and 27 (14.5%) patients, respectively, in the conventionally fractionated RT group. Late GU and GI toxicities occurred in 1 (0.51%) and 8 (4.1%) patients, respectively, in HYPO FR. In CONV FR, 5 (2.7%) and 6 (3.2%) patients experienced late GU and GI toxicities, respectively. The 5-year OS, bRFS, and CSS were 98.9%, 94.1%, and 99.5%, respectively, in HYPO FR, and 94.5%, 92.1%, and 99.0%, respectively, in CONV FR., Conclusions: Results obtained in this study showed that moderately hypofractionated RT employing SIB can be an effective approach providing valuable clinical outcomes with an acceptable toxicity profile., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2020 Domenico Cante et al.)
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- 2020
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47. Olfactory neuroblastoma treated with minimally invasive surgery and adjuvant radiotherapy: a case report and review of the literature.
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Cante D, Piva C, Sciacero P, Franco P, Petrucci E, Casanova Borca V, Marola F, Tubino L, Vellani G, and La Porta MR
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Olfactory neuroblastoma (ON) is a rare tumour of the olfactory neuroepithelium that is characterized by a pattern of slow growth and local recurrences. Combination of surgery and radiotherapy, with or without chemotherapy, is considered to be the standard of care for primary site disease. Recent literature supports the view that endoscopic resection followed by adjuvant radiotherapy correlates with better outcome. In this short communication, we present a case report of olfactory neuroblastoma arising in the right nasal sinus in a 34-year-old male. This patient was treated with endoscopic resection and external beam radiotherapy to the right nasal sinus with intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) technique. After 2 years follow-up, the patient is free of tumour without any late effect related to therapies. We believe that, in such patients, a treatment strategy including endoscopic resection followed by adjuvant radiotherapy may be effective and feasible and should be considered the gold standard of care.
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- 2018
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48. Correction to: Ten-year results of accelerated hypofractionated adjuvant whole-breast radiation with concomitant boost to the lumpectomy cavity after conserving surgery for early breast cancer.
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Cante D, Petrucci E, Sciacero P, Piva C, Ferrario S, Bagnera S, Patania S, Mondini G, Pasquino M, Casanova Borca V, Vellani G, La Porta MR, and Franco P
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An error inadvertently occurred in the discussion of the original publication when citing the local relapse rates of the EORTC 22881-10882 trial ('boost vs no boost trial').
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- 2017
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49. Time to surgery and pathologic complete response after neoadjuvant chemoradiation in rectal cancer: A population study on 2094 patients.
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Macchia G, Gambacorta MA, Masciocchi C, Chiloiro G, Mantello G, di Benedetto M, Lupattelli M, Palazzari E, Belgioia L, Bacigalupo A, Sainato A, Montrone S, Turri L, Caroli A, De Paoli A, Matrone F, Capirci C, Montesi G, Niespolo RM, Osti MF, Caravatta L, Galardi A, Genovesi D, Rosetto ME, Boso C, Sciacero P, Giaccherini L, Parisi S, Fontana A, Filippone FR, Picardi V, Morganti AG, and Valentini V
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Background: To retrospectively evaluate the difference in terms of pathologic complete response (pCR) according to time elapsed between chemoradiation (CRT) and total mesorectal excision (TME) on a large unselected real-life dataset of locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) patients., Methods: A multicentre retrospective cohort study of LARC patients from 21 Italian Radiotherapy Institutions was performed. Patients were stratified into 3 different time intervals from CRT. The 1st group included 300 patients who underwent TME within 6 weeks, the 2nd 1598 patients (TME within 7-12 weeks) and the 3rd 196 patients (TME within 13 or more weeks after CRT), respectively., Results: Data on 2094 LARC patients treated between 1997 and 2016 were considered suitable for analysis. Overall, 578 patients had stage II while 1516 had stage III histological proven invasive rectal adenocarcinoma. A CRT schedule of one agent ( N = 1585) or 2-drugs ( N = 509) was administered. Overall, pCR was 22.3% ( N = 468 patients). The proportion of patients achieving pCR with respect to time interval was, as follows: 12.6% (1st group), 23% (2nd group) and 31.1% (3rd group) ( p < 0.001), respectively. The pCR relative risk comparison of 2nd to 1st group was 1.8, while 3rd to 2nd group was 1.3. Moreover, between the 3rd and 1st group, a pCR relative risk of 2.4 ( p < 0.01) was noted. At univariate analysis, clinical stage III ( p < 0.001), radiotherapy dose >5040 cGy ( p = 0.002) and longer interval ( p < 0.001) were significantly correlated to pCR. The positive impact of interval ( p < 0.001) was confirmed at multivariate analysis as the only correlated factor., Conclusion: We confirmed on a population-level that lengthening the interval (>13 weeks) from CRT to surgery improves the pathological response (pCR and pathologic partial response; pPR) in comparison to historic data. Furthermore, radiotherapy dose >5040 cGy and two drugs chemotherapy correlated with pPR rate.
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- 2017
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50. Intensity-modulated radiation therapy with simultaneous integrated boost combined with concurrent chemotherapy for the treatment of anal cancer patients: 4-year results of a consecutive case series.
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Franco P, Mistrangelo M, Arcadipane F, Munoz F, Sciacero P, Spadi R, Migliaccio F, Angelini V, Bombaci S, Rondi N, Numico G, Ragona R, Cassoni P, Morino M, Racca P, and Ricardi U
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- Adult, Aged, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Anus Neoplasms mortality, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell mortality, Cyclophosphamide administration & dosage, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Fluorouracil administration & dosage, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Male, Melphalan administration & dosage, Middle Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, Semustine administration & dosage, Anus Neoplasms drug therapy, Anus Neoplasms radiotherapy, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell drug therapy, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell radiotherapy, Chemoradiotherapy methods, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated methods
- Abstract
Purpose: To report the 4-year outcomes of a consecutive series of anal cancer patients treated with concurrent chemo-radiation delivered with intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), employing a simultaneous integrated boost (SIB) approach., Methods: A consecutive series of 54 patients was enrolled between 2007 and 2013. Treatment schedule consisted of 50.4 Gy/28 fractions (1.8 Gy daily) to the gross tumor volume, while the elective nodal volumes were prescribed 42 Gy/28 fractions (1.5 Gy/daily) for patients having a cT2N0 disease. Patients with cT3-T4/N0-N3 tumors were prescribed 54 (T3) or 60 (T4) Gy/30 fractions (1.8-2 Gy daily) to the gross tumor volume; gross nodal volumes were prescribed 50.4 Gy/30 fr (1.68 Gy daily) if sized ≤ 3 cm or 54 Gy/30 fr (1.8 Gy daily) if > 3 cm; elective nodal regions were given 45 Gy/30 fractions (1.5 Gy daily). Chemotherapy was administered concurrently according to the Nigro's regimen. Primary endpoint was colostomy-free survival (CFS). Secondary endpoints were local control (LC), disease-free survival (DFS), cancer-specific survival (CSS), overall survival (OS), and toxicity profile., Results: Median follow up was 32.6 months (range 12-84). The actuarial probability of being alive at 4 years without a colostomy (CFS) was 68.9% (95% CI: 50.3%-84.7%). Actuarial 4-year OS, CSS, DFS, and LC were 77.7% (95% CI: 60.7-88.1%), 81.5% (95% CI: 64%-91%), 65.5% (95% CI: 47.7%-78.5%), and 84.6% (95% CI: 71.6%-92%). Actuarial 4-year metastasis-free survival was 74.4% (95% CI: 55.5%-86.2%). Maximum detected acute toxicities were as follows: dermatologic -G3: 13%; GI-G3: 8%; GU-G3: 2%; anemia-G3: 2%; neutropenia-G3:11%; G4: 2%; thrombocytopenia- G3:2%. Four-year G2 chronic toxicity rates were 2.5% (95% CI: 3.6-16.4) for GU, 14.4% (95% CI: 7.1-28) for GI, 3.9% (95% CI: 1%-14.5%) for skin, and 4.2% (95% CI: 1.1-15.9) for genitalia., Conclusions: Our study shows the feasibility of IMRT in the combined modality treatment of anal cancer, with comparable results to the literature with respect to LC, sphincter preservation and survival. Acute toxicity is lower if compared to series employing standard techniques. Our results support the use of IMRT on a routine basis for the treatment of anal cancer.
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- 2015
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