5 results on '"Simone Bonfarnuzzo"'
Search Results
2. Head and neck cancers survival in Europe, Taiwan, and Japan: results from RARECAREnet Asia based on a privacy-preserving federated infrastructure
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Laura Botta, Tomohiro Matsuda, Hadrien Charvat, Chun-ju Chiang, Wen-Chung Lee, Anna Jacoba van Gestel, Frank Martin, Gijs Geleijnse, Matteo Cellamare, Simone Bonfarnuzzo, Rafael Marcos-Gragera, Marcela Guevara, Mohsen Mousavi, Stephanie Craig, Jessica Rodrigues, Jordi Rubió-Casadevall, Lisa Licitra, Stefano Cavalieri, Carlo Resteghini, Gemma Gatta, Annalisa Trama, and the RARECAREnet working group
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population-based cancer registry ,survival ,head and neck cancers ,geographical differences ,federated learning approach ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
BackgroundThe head and neck cancers (HNCs) incidence differs between Europe and East Asia. Our objective was to determine whether survival of HNC also differs between European and Asian countries.MethodsWe used population-based cancer registry data to calculate 5-year relative survival (RS) for the oral cavity, hypopharynx, larynx, nasal cavity, and major salivary gland in Europe, Taiwan, and Japan. We modeled RS with a generalized linear model adjusting for time since diagnosis, sex, age, subsite, and histological grouping. Analyses were performed using federated learning, which enables analyses without sharing sensitive data.FindingsFive-year RS for HNC varied between geographical areas. For each HNC site, Europe had a lower RS than both Japan and Taiwan. HNC subsites and histologies distribution and survival differed between the three areas. Differences between Europe and both Asian countries persisted even after adjustments for all HNC sites but nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses, when comparing Europe and Taiwan.InterpretationSurvival differences can be attributed to different factors including different period of diagnosis, more advanced stage at diagnosis, or different availability/access of treatment. Cancer registries did not have stage and treatment information to further explore the reasons of the observed survival differences. Our analyses have confirmed federated learning as a feasible approach for data analyses that addresses the challenges of data sharing and urge for further collaborative studies including relevant prognostic factors.
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- 2023
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3. The observational clinical registry (cohort design) of the European Reference Network on Rare Adult Solid Cancers: The protocol for the rare head and neck cancers.
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Annalisa Trama, Lisa Licitra, Stefano Cavalieri, Simone Bonfarnuzzo, Paolo Baili, Antonio Ciarfella, Pablo Parente, Giovanni Almadori, Mohssen Ansarin, Almalina Bacigalupo, Philipp Baumeister, Bertrand Baujat, Paolo Bossi, Elisa Cavalera, Maria Cecilia Cercato, Francois Dieleman, Nicolas Fakhry, Virginia Ferraresi, Francesca Gaino, Danilo Galizia, Jana Halamkova, Elina Halme, Jose Hardillo, Benedikt Hofauer, Emma Kinloch, Lorenzo Livi, Laura Deborah Locati, Stefan Mattheis, Giuseppe Mercante, Aurora Mirabile, Gabriele Molteni, Ester Orlandi, Roberto Persio, Stefania Sciallero, Ludi Smeele, Marta Tagliabue, Valentino Valentini, Carla Van Harpen, Christoph Benedikt Westphalen, and Laura Botta
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
IntroductionCare for head and neck cancers is complex in particular for the rare ones. Knowledge is limited and histological heterogeneity adds complexity to the rarity. There is a wide consensus that to support clinical research on rare cancer, clinical registries should be developed within networks specializing in rare cancers. In the EU, a unique opportunity is provided by the European Reference Networks (ERN). The ERN EURACAN is dedicated to rare adults solid cancers, here we present the protocol of the EURACAN registry on rare head and neck cancers (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05483374).Study designRegistry-based cohort study including only people with rare head and neck cancers.Objectivesto help describe the natural history of rare head and neck cancers;to evaluate factors that influence prognosis;to assess treatment effectiveness;to measure indicators of quality of care.MethodsSettings and participants It is an hospital based registry established in hospitals with expertise in head and neck cancers. Only adult patients with epithelial tumours of nasopharynx; nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses; salivary gland cancer in large and small salivary glands; and middle ear will be included in the registry. This registry won't select a sample of patients. Each patient in the facility who meets the above mentioned inclusion criteria will be followed prospectively and longitudinally with follow-up at cancer progression and / or cancer relapse or patient death. It is a secondary use of data which will be collected from the clinical records. The data collected for the registry will not entail further examinations or admissions to the facility and/or additional appointments to those normally provided for the patient follow-up. Variables Data will be collected on patient characteristics (eg. patient demographics, lifestyle, medical history, health status); exposure data (eg. disease, procedures, treatments of interest) and outcomes (e.g. survival, progression, progression-free survival, etc.). In addition, data on potential confounders (e.g. comorbidity; functional status etc.) will be also collected. Statistical methods The data analyses will include descriptive statistics showing patterns of patients' and cancers' variables and indicators describing the quality of care. Multivariable Cox's proportional hazards model and Hazard ratios (HR) for all-cause or cause specific mortality will be used to determine independent predictors of overall survival, recurrence etc. Variables to include in the multivariable regression model will be selected based on the results of univariable analysis. The role of confounding or effect modifiers will be evaluated using stratified analysis or sensitivity analysis. To assess treatment effectiveness, multivariable models with propensity score adjustment and progression-free survival will be performed. Adequate statistical (eg. marginal structural model) methods will be used if time-varying treatments/confounders and confounding by indication (selective prescribing) will be present.ResultsThe registry initiated recruiting in May 2022. The estimated completion date is December 2030 upon agreement on the achievement of all the registry objectives. As of October 2022, the registry is recruiting. There will be a risk of limited representativeness due to the hospital-based nature of the registry and to the fact that hospital contributing to the registry are expert centres for these rare cancers. Clinical Follow-up could also be an issue but active search of the life status of the patients will be guaranteed.
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- 2023
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4. Long-term survival and cure fraction estimates for childhood cancer in Europe (EUROCARE-6): results from a population-based study
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Laura Botta, Gemma Gatta, Riccardo Capocaccia, Charles Stiller, Adela Cañete, Luigino Dal Maso, Kaire Innos, Ana Mihor, Friederike Erdmann, Claudia Spix, Brigitte Lacour, Rafael Marcos-Gragera, Deirdre Murray, Silvia Rossi, Monika Hackl, Elizabeth Van Eycken, Nancy Van Damme, Zdravka Valerianova, Mario Sekerija, Vasos Scoutellas, Anna Demetriou, Ladislav Dušek, Denisa Krejci, Hans Storm, Margit Mägi, Keiu Paapsi, Nea Malila, Janne Pitkäniemi, Valerie Jooste, Jacqueline Clavel, Claire Poulalhon, Emmanuel Desandes, Alain Monnereau, Alexander Katalinic, Eleni Petridou, Georgios Markozannes, Miklos Garami, Helgi Birgisson, Paul M Walsh, Guido Mazzoleni, Fabio Vittadello, Francesco Cuccaro, Rocco Galasso, Giuseppe Sampietro, Stefano Rosso, Cinzia Gasparotto, Giovanni Maifredi, Margherita Ferrante, Antonina Torrisi, Antonella Sutera Sardo, Maria Letizia Gambino, Monica Lanzoni, Paola Ballotari, Erica Giacomazzi, Stefano Ferretti, Adele Caldarella, Gianfranco Manneschi, Milena Sant, Paolo Baili, Franco Berrino, Annalisa Trama, Roberto Lillini, Alice Bernasconi, Simone Bonfarnuzzo, Claudia Vener, Fabio Didonè, Paolo Lasalvia, Giulia Del Monego, Lucia Buratti, Diego Serraino, Martina Taborelli, Roberta De Angelis, Elena Demuru, Corrado Di Benedetto, Mariano Santaquilani, Serenella Venanzi, Marco Tallon, Luca Boni, Silvia Iacovacci, Antonio Giampiero Russo, Federico Gervasi, Gianbattista Spagnoli, Luca Cavalieri d'Oro, Mario Fusco, Maria Francesca Vitale, Mario Usala, Francesco Vitale, Maria Michiara, Giorgio Chiranda, Carlotta Sacerdote, Milena Maule, Giuseppe Cascone, Eugenia Spata, Lucia Mangone, Fabio Falcini, Rossella Cavallo, Daniela Piras, Ylenia Dinaro, Marine Castaing, Anna Clara Fanetti, Sante Minerba, Giuseppina Candela, Tiziana Scuderi, Roberto Vito Rizzello, Fabrizio Stracci, Giovanna Tagliabue, Massimo Rugge, Angelita Brustolin, Santa Pildava, Giedre Smailyte, Miriam Azzopardi, Tom Børge Johannesen, Joanna Didkowska, Urszula Wojciechowska, Magdalena Bielska-Lasota, Ana Pais, Ana Maria Ferreira, Maria José Bento, Ana Miranda, Chakameh Safaei Diba, Vesna Zadnik, Tina Zagar, Carmen Sánchez-Contador Escudero, Paula Franch Sureda, Arantza Lopez de Munain, Marta De-La-Cruz, Marìa Dolores Rojas, Araceli Aleman, Ana Vizcaino, Fernando Almela, Arantza Sanvisens, Maria Josè Sanchez, Maria Dolores Chirlaque, Antonia Sanchez-Gil, Marcela Guevara, Eva Ardanaz, Adela Cañete-Nieto, Rafael Peris-Bonet, Jaume Galceran, Maria Carulla, Claudia Kuehni, Shelagh Redmond, Otto Visser, Henrike Karim-Kos, Sarah Stevens, Anna Gavin, David Morrison, Dyfed Wyn Huws, Botta, L, Gatta, G, Capocaccia, R, Stiller, C, Canete, A, Dal Maso, L, Innos, K, Mihor, A, Erdmann, F, Spix, C, Lacour, B, Marcos-Gragera, R, Murray, D, Rossi, S, Hackl, M, Van Eycken, E, Van Damme, N, Valerianova, Z, Sekerija, M, Scoutellas, V, Demetriou, A, Dusek, L, Krejci, D, Storm, H, Magi, M, Paapsi, K, Malila, N, Pitkaniemi, J, Jooste, V, Clavel, J, Poulalhon, C, Desandes, E, Monnereau, A, Katalinic, A, Petridou, E, Markozannes, G, Garami, M, Birgisson, H, Walsh, P, Mazzoleni, G, Vittadello, F, Cuccaro, F, Galasso, R, Sampietro, G, Rosso, S, Gasparotto, C, Maifredi, G, Ferrante, M, Torrisi, A, Sutera Sardo, A, Gambino, M, Lanzoni, M, Ballotari, P, Giacomazzi, E, Ferretti, S, Caldarella, A, Manneschi, G, Sant, M, Baili, P, Berrino, F, Trama, A, Lillini, R, Bernasconi, A, Bonfarnuzzo, S, Vener, C, Didone, F, Lasalvia, P, Del Monego, G, Buratti, L, Serraino, D, Taborelli, M, De Angelis, R, Demuru, E, Di Benedetto, C, Santaquilani, M, Venanzi, S, Tallon, M, Boni, L, Iacovacci, S, Russo, A, Gervasi, F, Spagnoli, G, Cavalieri d'Oro, L, Fusco, M, Vitale, M, Usala, M, Vitale, F, Michiara, M, Chiranda, G, Sacerdote, C, Maule, M, Cascone, G, Spata, E, Mangone, L, Falcini, F, Cavallo, R, Piras, D, Dinaro, Y, Castaing, M, Fanetti, A, Minerba, S, Candela, G, Scuderi, T, Rizzello, R, Stracci, F, Tagliabue, G, Rugge, M, Brustolin, A, Pildava, S, Smailyte, G, Azzopardi, M, Johannesen, T, Didkowska, J, Wojciechowska, U, Bielska-Lasota, M, Pais, A, Ferreira, A, Bento, M, Miranda, A, Safaei Diba, C, Zadnik, V, Zagar, T, Sanchez-Contador Escudero, C, Franch Sureda, P, Lopez de Munain, A, De-La-Cruz, M, Rojas, M, Aleman, A, Vizcaino, A, Almela, F, Sanvisens, A, Sanchez, M, Chirlaque, M, Sanchez-Gil, A, Guevara, M, Ardanaz, E, Canete-Nieto, A, Peris-Bonet, R, Galceran, J, Carulla, M, Kuehni, C, Redmond, S, Visser, O, Karim-Kos, H, Stevens, S, Gavin, A, Morrison, D, and Huws, D
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Retinal Neoplasms ,Retinoblastoma ,Bone Neoplasms ,Sarcoma, Ewing ,EUROCARE-6 ,survival ,Burkitt Lymphoma ,population-based cancer registrie ,Europe ,Oncology ,Humans ,cure fraction, childhood cancer, EUROCARE ,Child ,chidlhood cancer - Abstract
Background: The EUROCARE-5 study revealed disparities in childhood cancer survival among European countries, giving rise to important initiatives across Europe to reduce the gap. Extending its representativeness through increased coverage of eastern European countries, the EUROCARE-6 study aimed to update survival progress across countries and years of diagnosis and provide new analytical perspectives on estimates of long-term survival and the cured fraction of patients with childhood cancer. Methods: In this population-based study, we analysed 135 847 children (aged 0–14 years) diagnosed during 2000–13 and followed up to the end of 2014, recruited from 80 population-based cancer registries in 31 European countries. We calculated age-adjusted 5-year survival differences by country and over time using period analysis, for all cancers combined and for major cancer types. We applied a variant of standard mixture cure models for survival data to estimate the cure fraction of patients by childhood cancer and to estimate projected 15-year survival. Findings: 5-year survival for all childhood cancer combined in Europe in 2010–14 was 81% (95% CI 81–82), showing an increase of three percentage points compared with 2004–06. Significant progress over time was observed for almost all cancers. Survival remained stable for osteosarcomas, Ewing sarcoma, Burkitt lymphoma, non-Hodgkin lymphomas, and rhabdomyoscarcomas. For all cancers combined, inequalities still persisted among European countries (with age-adjusted 5-year survival ranging from 71% [95% CI 60–79] to 87% [77–93]). The 15-year survival projection for all patients with childhood cancer diagnosed in 2010–13 was 78%. We estimated the yearly long-term mortality rate due to causes other than the diagnosed cancer to be around 2 per 1000 patients for all childhood cancer combined, but to approach zero for retinoblastoma. The cure fraction for patients with childhood cancer increased over time from 74% (95% CI 73–75) in 1998–2001 to 80% (79–81) in 2010–13. In the latter cohort, the cure fraction rate ranged from 99% (95% CI 74–100) for retinoblastoma to 60% (58–63) for CNS tumours and reached 90% (95% CI 87–93) for lymphoid leukaemia and 70% (67–73) for acute myeloid leukaemia. Interpretation: Childhood cancer survival is increasing over time in Europe but there are still some differences among countries. Regular monitoring of childhood cancer survival and estimation of the cure fraction through population-based registry data are crucial for evaluating advances in paediatric cancer care. Funding: European Commission.
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- 2022
5. [Turn-over of non-tenured public health research personnel in an Italian public research institute (IRCCS).]
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Elisabetta, Meneghini, Roberto, Lillini, Rossella, Ballarini, Antonio, Florita, Ilaria, Cavallo, Francesco, Funaro, Simone, Bonfarnuzzo, Agata, Cifalà, Chiara, Margutti, Ilaria, Perrotta, Paolo, Bonacci, Fabrizio, Carletti, Valentina, Fracchiolla, Monica, Morelli, Antonietta, Aiello, Federica, Pizzo, Paola, Gabaldi, Giovanni, Apolone, and Paolo, Baili
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Adult ,Male ,Italy ,Research ,Age Factors ,Humans ,Personnel Turnover ,Female ,Public Health ,Research Personnel - Abstract
The objective is to show variations in the number of non-tenured personnel (NTP) in a public health research centre (IRCCS) between 30th June 2016 and 31st December 2017. In this time interval, the issue of NTP was at the centre of governmental discussions.Data collection was performed from CVs and scientific publications of NTP working at the Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori (INT). We compared the characteristics of NTP entering or leaving INT and those of NTP who remained in the considered time interval.NTP in INT counted 465 members of staff at 30th June 2016 and 472 at 31st December 2017. 75% of these works in the research. 26% of NTP left INT and their position resulted entirely substituted by other NTP. NTP staff who left are mainly aged under 40 and show fewer publications than those who stayed. Newly acquired NTP are younger and show a fewer number of publications compared to the personnel who left.1 out of 4 NTP members of staff moved to a new job during a period in which the uncertain future of NTP research staff was under the spotlight. It appears that IRCCS are progressively being identified as suitable for hands-on, post university internships from which researchers would then choose to move, in search of a new job in public or private centres, with a consequent decline of IRCCS' role in health research.
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- 2019
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