125 results on '"GIORDANO, Carolina"'
Search Results
2. Computed tomography angiography in blunt cerebrovascular injury: navigating through perspectives and diagnostics
- Author
-
Matteucci, Andrea, Sangiorgi, Giuseppe, Giordano, Carolina, and Biondi-Zoccai, Giuseppe
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Development and validation of a MRI-radiomics-based machine learning approach in High Grade Glioma to detect early recurrence.
- Author
-
Pignotti, Fabrizio, Ius, Tamara, Russo, Rosellina, Bagatto, Daniele, Beghella Bartoli, Francesco, Boccia, Edda, Boldrini, Luca, Chiesa, Silvia, Ciardi, Chiara, Cusumano, Davide, Giordano, Carolina, La Rocca, Giuseppe, Mazzarella, Ciro, Mazzucchi, Edoardo, Olivi, Alessandro, Skrap, Miran, Tran, Houng Elena, Varcasia, Giuseppe, Gaudino, Simona, and Sabatino, Giovanni
- Subjects
MACHINE learning ,FEATURE extraction ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,DATABASES ,DISEASE relapse - Abstract
Purpose: Patients diagnosed with High Grade Gliomas (HGG) generally tend to have a relatively negative prognosis with a high risk of early tumor recurrence (TR) after post-operative radio-chemotherapy. The assessment of the pre-operative risk of early versus delayed TR can be crucial to develop a personalized surgical approach. The purpose of this article is to predict TR using MRI radiomic analysis. Methods: Data were retrospectively collected from a database. A total of 248 patients were included based on the availability of 6-month TR results: 188 were used to train the model, the others to externally validate it. After manual segmentation of the tumor, Radiomic features were extracted and different machine learning models were implemented considering a combination of T1 and T2 weighted MR sequences. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve was calculated with relative model performance metrics (accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV)) at the best threshold based on the Youden Index. Results: Models performance were evaluated based on test set results. The best model resulted to be the XGBoost, with an area under ROC curve of 0.72 (95% CI: 0.56 - 0.87). At the best threshold, the model exhibits 0.75 (95% CI: 0.63 - 0.75) as accuracy, 0.62 (95% CI: 0.38 - 0.83) as sensitivity 0.80 (95% CI: 0.66 - 0.89 as specificity, 0.53 (95% CI: 0.31 - 0.73) as PPV, 0.88 (95% CI: 0.72 - 0.94) as NPV. Conclusion: MRI radiomic analysis represents a powerful tool to predict late HGG recurrence, which can be useful to plan personalized surgical treatments and to offer pertinent patient pre-operative counseling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Possible Prognostic Role of Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings in Patients with Trigeminal Neuralgia and Multiple Sclerosis Who Underwent Percutaneous Balloon Compression: Report of Our Series and Literature Review
- Author
-
Montano, Nicola, Gaudino, Simona, Giordano, Carolina, Pignotti, Fabrizio, Ioannoni, Eleonora, Rapisarda, Alessandro, and Olivi, Alessandro
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Topography and Radiological Variables as Ancillary Parameters for Evaluating Tissue Adherence, Hypothalamic–Pituitary Dysfunction, and Recurrence in Craniopharyngioma: An Integrated Multidisciplinary Overview.
- Author
-
Calandrelli, Rosalinda, D'Apolito, Gabriella, Martucci, Matia, Giordano, Carolina, Schiarelli, Chiara, Marziali, Giammaria, Varcasia, Giuseppe, Ausili Cefaro, Luca, Chiloiro, Sabrina, De Sanctis, Simone Antonio, Serioli, Simona, Doglietto, Francesco, and Gaudino, Simona
- Subjects
BRAIN anatomy ,CANCER relapse ,FIBRIN tissue adhesive ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,COMPUTED tomography ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,HYPOTHALAMUS diseases ,CRANIOPHARYNGIOMA ,PITUITARY diseases - Abstract
Simple Summary: Craniopharyngiomas are benign but complex WHO grade I extra-axial epithelial neoplasms. Their infiltrative nature towards adjacent structures, such as the hypothalamic–pituitary axis, limits surgical excision and increases the rate of intra- and postoperative complications. An accurate depiction of the craniopharyngioma topography, craniopharyngioma–brain interface, and tumor morphology is valuable in the diagnostic work-up of craniopharyngiomas and may address treatment strategies, aiming to balance the risk of postsurgical hypothalamic dysfunction with recurrence rates. The purpose of this pictorial essay is to provide an overview of the role of imaging in both diagnosis and early post-treatment follow-up, highlighting its usefulness in the diagnostic process and its role in outcome prediction. Craniopharyngiomas continue to present a challenge in clinical practice due to their heterogeneity and unpredictable adherence to vital neurovascular structures, particularly the hypothalamus. This results in different degrees of hypothalamus–pituitary axis dysfunction and a lack of uniform consensus and treatment guidelines regarding optimal management. MRI and CT are complementary techniques in the preoperative diagnostic phase, enabling the precise definition of craniopharyngioma size, shape, and consistency, as well as guiding classification into histopathological subtypes and topographical categories. Meanwhile, MRI plays a crucial role in the immediate postoperative period and follow-up stages by identifying treatment-related changes and residual tumors. This pictorial essay aims to provide an overview of the role of imaging in identifying variables indicative of the adherence degree to the hypothalamus, hypothalamic–pituitary dysfunction, the extent of surgical excision, and prognosis. For a more comprehensive assessment, we choose to distinguish the following two scenarios: (1) the initial diagnosis phase, where we primarily discuss the role of radiological variables predictive of adhesions to the surrounding neurovascular structures and axis dysfunction which may influence the choice of surgical resection; (2) the early post-treatment follow-up phase, where we discuss the interpretation of treatment-related changes that impact outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Head CT Scans in the Emergency Department during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Use or Overuse?
- Author
-
Covino, Marcello, Piccioni, Andrea, Merra, Giuseppe, Giordano, Carolina, Russo, Rosellina, Infante, Amato, Ausili Cefaro, Luca, Natale, Luigi, Franceschi, Francesco, and Gaudino, Simona
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,COMPUTED tomography ,DISEASE incidence ,CEREBROVASCULAR disease ,NO-tillage ,RESPIRATORY organs - Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic seemed to mainly involve the respiratory system, but it was realized that it could affect any organ, including the CNS. The pandemic has followed a wave-like trend, with its peaks being due to the COVID-19 different variants and the introduction of the vaccine, which led to an apparent reduction in hospitalizations but also brought about perplexities related to its adverse effects. The aim of this study was to analyze the changes in the use of head CT/contrast CT and their impacts on the onset of cerebrovascular disease in our emergency department during the COVID-19 period and the vaccine rollout. Methods: Patients ≥ 18 years old admitted to our emergency department from January 2018 to September 2021 were enrolled. The patients were divided into three groups. The COVID-19 period included patients who visited our emergency department from 1 March 2020 to 31 January 2021; the vaccine period was considered to range from 1 February 2021 to 30 September 2021. The patients who visited the emergency department from 1 January 2018 to 31 January 2020 were considered the controls. Results: We found an increase in head CT/contrast CT requests during the COVID-19 period and increase in head contrast CT during the vaccine period, without an increase in the incidence of cerebrovascular disease. Conclusions: The uncertainty regarding the possible thrombotic events associated with COVID-19 and its vaccine increased the relative use of head CT/contrast CT by about 20% compared to the control period [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Brain metastases from ovarian cancer, a rare but not negligible entity
- Author
-
Giordano, Carolina
- Subjects
Health policy and practice ,MR ,Metastases ,Multidisciplinary cancer care ,Genital / Reproductive system female - Abstract
Learning objectives Background Findings and procedure details Conclusion Personal information and conflict of interest References, Learning objectives: Ovarian cancer (OC) is currently the leading cause of gynecological cancer deaths. Among malignant tumors of the ovary, epithelial forms have the highest incidence and affect women of both reproductive and old age. The most common metastatic sites...
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Nerve MR in the Differential Diagnosis of Neuropathies: A Case Series from a Single Center.
- Author
-
Giordano, Carolina, Sciarrone, Maria Ausilia, Vitali, Francesca, Romano, Angela, Guerri, Giulia, Perlangeli, Valentina, Gaudino, Simona, and Luigetti, Marco
- Subjects
- *
MAGNETIC resonance neurography , *DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis , *NERVES , *PERIPHERAL nervous system , *MAGNETIC resonance - Abstract
In the present study, through a case series, we highlighted the role of magnetic resonance (MR) in the identification and diagnosis of peripheral neuropathies. MR neurography allows the evaluation of the course of nerves through 2D and 3D STIR sequences with an isotropic voxel, whereas the relationship between nerves, vessels, osteo-ligamentous and muscular structures can be appraised with T1 sequences. Currently, DTI and tractography are mainly used for experimental purposes. MR neurography can be useful in detecting subtle nerve alterations, even before the onset of symptoms. However, despite being sensitive, MR neurography is not specific in detecting nerve injury and requires careful interpretation. For this reason, MR information should always be supported by instrumental clinical tests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Advanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging in the Evaluation of Treated Glioblastoma: A Pictorial Essay.
- Author
-
Martucci, Matia, Russo, Rosellina, Giordano, Carolina, Schiarelli, Chiara, D'Apolito, Gabriella, Tuzza, Laura, Lisi, Francesca, Ferrara, Giuseppe, Schimperna, Francesco, Vassalli, Stefania, Calandrelli, Rosalinda, and Gaudino, Simona
- Subjects
GLIOMA treatment ,THERAPEUTIC use of monoclonal antibodies ,NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,CANCER relapse ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,BRAIN tumors ,OVERALL survival ,CONTRAST media - Abstract
Simple Summary: Glioblastoma is the most common malignant primary tumor of the central nervous system, with a poor prognosis despite many available treatments, including surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy. The evaluation of treatment response is essential to optimize patient outcomes. While structural MRI remains the cornerstone of imaging evaluation, advanced MRI modalities have increasingly become crucial in characterizing treatment effects more comprehensively. The purpose of this pictorial essay is to provide an overview on the role of advanced MRI modalities at the different clinical-therapeutic timepoints, thus helping radiologists and clinicians to be more confident in their applicability in clinical practice and at the proper timepoint. MRI plays a key role in the evaluation of post-treatment changes, both in the immediate post-operative period and during follow-up. There are many different treatment's lines and many different neuroradiological findings according to the treatment chosen and the clinical timepoint at which MRI is performed. Structural MRI is often insufficient to correctly interpret and define treatment-related changes. For that, advanced MRI modalities, including perfusion and permeability imaging, diffusion tensor imaging, and magnetic resonance spectroscopy, are increasingly utilized in clinical practice to characterize treatment effects more comprehensively. This article aims to provide an overview of the role of advanced MRI modalities in the evaluation of treated glioblastomas. For a didactic purpose, we choose to divide the treatment history in three main timepoints: post-surgery, during Stupp (first-line treatment) and at recurrence (second-line treatment). For each, a brief introduction, a temporal subdivision (when useful) or a specific drug-related paragraph were provided. Finally, the current trends and application of radiomics and artificial intelligence (AI) in the evaluation of treated GB have been outlined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Scaffold proteins of cancer signaling networks: The paradigm of FK506 binding protein 51 (FKBP51) supporting tumor intrinsic properties and immune escape.
- Author
-
MARRONE, LAURA, D’AGOSTINO, MASSIMO, GIORDANO, CAROLINA, GIACOMO, VALERIA DI, URZINI, SIMONA, MALASOMMA, CHIARA, GAMMELLA, MARIA PAOLA, TUFANO, MARTINA, ROMANO, SIMONA, and ROMANO, MARIA FIAMMETTA
- Subjects
SCAFFOLD proteins ,CARRIER proteins ,TACROLIMUS ,ALTERNATIVE RNA splicing ,CANCER cells - Abstract
Scaffold proteins are crucial regulators of signaling networks, and their abnormal expression may favor the development of tumors. Among the scaffold proteins, immunophilin covers a unique role as ‘protein-philin’ (Greek ‘philin’ = friend) that interacts with proteins to guide their proper assembly. The growing list of human syndromes associated with the immunophilin defect underscores the biological relevance of these proteins that are largely opportunistically exploited by cancer cells to support and enable the tumor’s intrinsic properties. Among the members of the immunophilin family, the FKBP5 gene was the only one identified to have a splicing variant. Cancer cells impose unique demands on the splicing machinery, thus acquiring a particular susceptibility to splicing inhibitors. This review article aims to overview the current knowledge of the FKBP5 gene functions in human cancer, illustrating how cancer cells exploit the scaffolding function of canonical FKBP51 to foster signaling networks that support their intrinsic tumor properties and the spliced FKBP51s to gain the capacity to evade the immune system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Early Radiation-Induced Changes Evaluated by Intravoxel Incoherent Motion in the Major Salivary Glands
- Author
-
Marzi, Simona, Forina, Chiara, Marucci, Laura, Giovinazzo, Giuseppe, Giordano, Carolina, Piludu, Francesca, Landoni, Valeria, Spriano, Giuseppe, and Vidiri, Antonello
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Primary Adult Brain Tumors: State of the Art and Future Perspectives.
- Author
-
Martucci, Matia, Russo, Rosellina, Schimperna, Francesco, D'Apolito, Gabriella, Panfili, Marco, Grimaldi, Alessandro, Perna, Alessandro, Ferranti, Andrea Maurizio, Varcasia, Giuseppe, Giordano, Carolina, and Gaudino, Simona
- Subjects
MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,BRAIN tumors ,RADIOMICS ,BRAIN imaging ,ADULTS ,FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging - Abstract
MRI is undoubtedly the cornerstone of brain tumor imaging, playing a key role in all phases of patient management, starting from diagnosis, through therapy planning, to treatment response and/or recurrence assessment. Currently, neuroimaging can describe morphologic and non-morphologic (functional, hemodynamic, metabolic, cellular, microstructural, and sometimes even genetic) characteristics of brain tumors, greatly contributing to diagnosis and follow-up. Knowing the technical aspects, strength and limits of each MR technique is crucial to correctly interpret MR brain studies and to address clinicians to the best treatment strategy. This article aimed to provide an overview of neuroimaging in the assessment of adult primary brain tumors. We started from the basilar role of conventional/morphological MR sequences, then analyzed, one by one, the non-morphological techniques, and finally highlighted future perspectives, such as radiomics and artificial intelligence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Choice of imaging to evaluate carotid stenosis and guide management.
- Author
-
GIORDANO, Carolina, MORELLO, Alberto, CORCIONE, Nicola, GIORDANO, Salvatore, GAUDINO, Simona, and COLOSIMO, Cesare
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. FKBP51s: a new molecular biomarker for glioblastoma? Evaluation of pre- and post-operatory blood levels of the FKBP51s protein and correlation with the Magnetic Resonance phenotype
- Author
-
Giordano, Carolina
- Subjects
Prospective ,Neoplasia ,Diagnostic or prognostic study ,Oncologic Imaging ,CNS ,MR ,Multicentre study ,Imaging sequences - Abstract
Purpose Methods and materials Results Conclusion Personal information and conflict of interest References, Purpose: Recently,ourgrouphasidentifiedaproteinthatisasplicevariantof the FKBP51immunofillin.Immunophillisareproteinsphysiologicallyexpressedby thecellsof the immunesystem. Thesplicevariant,calledFKBP51s,isgeneratedby...
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Sturge-Weber Syndrome: pills of neuroimaging for young radiologist
- Author
-
Giordano, Carolina
- Subjects
Haemangioma ,Neuroradiology brain ,Not applicable ,Hyperplasia / Hypertrophy ,Dysplasias ,Neuro ,CNS ,MR ,Diagnostic procedure ,Imaging sequences ,CT - Abstract
Learning objectives Background Findings and procedure details Conclusion Personal information and conflict of interest References, Learning objectives: To introduce pathophysiology of Sturge-Weber Syndrome (SWS). To describe imaging findings that are highly specific for the diagnosis of SWS. To resume the most frequent differential diagnosis &...
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Asymptomatic Dysplasia Epiphysealis Hemimelica of the Shoulder in a Skeletally Mature Patient with Normal Function
- Author
-
Giordano, Vincenzo, Giordano, Marcos, Giordano, Carolina, Giordano, José, Mendonça, Renato, and Koch, Hilton Augusto
- Subjects
Article Subject ,musculoskeletal system - Abstract
Dysplasia epiphysealis hemimelica is a rare osteocartilaginous overgrowth syndrome of bone epiphysis, mostly encountered in the lower limbs of immature skeleton patients. We report a case of proximal humerus presentation in an adult male, with neither articular involvement nor clinical dysfunction. This case highlights the importance of stratification into intra- and extra-articular lesions, as this distinction ultimately influences both symptoms and treatment outcome. In addition, the case highlights the importance of specific imaging modalities, such as CT and MR images, which provide excellent anatomic location of the lesion, adequate extension of cartilaginous components, exact status of articular cartilage, and accurate assessment of neighboring structures, such as vessels, nerves, ligaments, tendons, and muscles. The imaging features are described, the relevant literature is reviewed, and salient features are discussed.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. SNPs in DNA repair or oxidative stress genes and late subcutaneous fibrosis in patients following single shot partial breast irradiation
- Author
-
Falvo Elisabetta, Strigari Lidia, Citro Gennaro, Giordano Carolina, Boboc Genoveva, Fabretti Fabiana, Bruzzaniti Vicente, Bellesi Luca, Muti Paola, Blandino Giovanni, and Pinnarò Paola
- Subjects
Radiotherapy ,Breast cancer ,Polymorphisms ,Late effects ,Fibrosis ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential association between single nucleotide polymorphisms related response to radiotherapy injury, such as genes related to DNA repair or enzymes involved in anti-oxidative activities. The paper aims to identify marker genes able to predict an increased risk of late toxicity studying our group of patients who underwent a Single Shot 3D-CRT PBI (SSPBI) after BCS (breast conserving surgery). Methods A total of 57 breast cancer patients who underwent SSPBI were genotyped for SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms) in XRCC1, XRCC3, GST and RAD51 by Pyrosequencing technology. Univariate analysis (ORs and 95% CI) was performed to correlate SNPs with the risk of developing ≥ G2 fibrosis or fat necrosis. Results A higher significant risk of developing ≥ G2 fibrosis or fat necrosis in patients with: polymorphic variant GSTP1 (Ile105Val) (OR = 2.9; 95%CI, 0.88-10.14, p = 0.047). Conclusions The presence of some SNPs involved in DNA repair or response to oxidative stress seem to be able to predict late toxicity. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01316328
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Toxicity and cosmesis outcomes after single fraction partial breast irradiation in early stage breast cancer
- Author
-
Pinnarò Paola, Arcangeli Stefano, Giordano Carolina, Arcangeli Giorgio, Impiombato Fabrizio, Pinzi Valentina, Iaccarino Giuseppe, Soriani Antonella, Landoni Valeria, and Strigari Lidia
- Subjects
Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background To report the clinical outcome after a Single Shot 3D-CRT PBI (SSPBI) in breast cancer patients after conservative surgery (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01316328). Methods A dose of 18Gy (in the first 4 patients) and 21Gy (in the remaining 60 patients) was prescribed in a single session and delivered to the index area (i.e. the area of breast including the primary tumor bed and the surrounding tissue) using 3D-CRT with patients in prone position. Acute and late toxicity was assessed using the National Cancer Institute's CTC for Adverse Events. Cosmesis was defined based on modified Harvard criteria. Differences between dosimetric or clinical parameters of patients with/without G2 or more late toxicity or unsatisfactory (poor or fair) cosmetic outcome were evaluated with the Mann-Whitney test. Odds ratios and 95% confidence interval were calculated for cosmesis and fibrosis. Univariate and multivariate analyses(UVA/MVA) were used to determine covariates associated with an increase in fibrosis or fat necrosis rate. Results Sixty four patients were enrolled. With a median follow-up of 3 years, G2 and G3 subcutaneous fibrosis was detected in 20(31%) and in 8(13%) patients, and ≥G2 fat necrosis was observed in 2(3%) patients. Good to excellent, fair and poor cosmesis was observed in 38(59%), 23(36%) and 3(5%) patients, respectively. Based on UVA, the breast volume receiving more than 21Gy (V21Gy) was found to be a predictor of the ≥G1 or ≥G2 fibrosis/fat necrosis. Based on MVA, V21Gy was confirmed as a predictor for ≥G1 fibrosis/fat necrosis, the results correlated as a trend for ≥G2. Cosmesis was correlated with whole breast (WB) mean dose (p = 0.030). Conclusion Our choice of a single dose of 21Gy significantly increased the treatment related toxicity. However, this should not discourage novel SSPBI approaches with lower equivalent doses.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Dose and polymorphic genes xrcc1, xrcc3, gst play a role in the risk of articledeveloping erythema in breast cancer patients following single shot partial breast irradiation after conservative surgery
- Author
-
Muti Paola, D'Alessio Daniela, Soriani Antonella, Arcangeli Stefano, Giordano Carolina, Citro Gennaro, Strigari Lidia, Falvo Elisabetta, Blandino Giovanni, Sperduti Isabella, and Pinnarò Paola
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background To evaluate the association between polymorphisms involved in DNA repair and oxidative stress genes and mean dose to whole breast on acute skin reactions (erythema) in breast cancer (BC) patients following single shot partial breast irradiation (SSPBI) after breast conservative surgery. Materials and Methods Acute toxicity was assessed using vers.3 criteria. single nucleotides polymorphisms(SNPs) in genes: XRCC1(Arg399Gln/Arg194Trp), XRCC3 (A4541G-5'UTR/Thr241Met), GSTP1(Ile105Val), GSTA1 and RAD51(untranslated region). SNPs were determined in 57 BC patients by the Pyrosequencing analysis. Univariate(ORs and 95% CI) and logistic multivariate analyses (MVA) were performed to correlate polymorphic genes with the risk of developing acute skin reactions to radiotherapy. Results After SSPBI on the tumour bed following conservative surgery, grade 1 or 2 acute erythema was observed in 19 pts(33%). Univariate analysis indicated a higher significant risk of developing erythema in patients with polymorphic variant wt XRCC1Arg194Trp, mut/het XRCC3Thr241Met, wt/het XRCC3A4541G-5'UTR. Similarly a higher erythema rate was also found in the presence of mut/het of XRCC1Arg194Trp or wt of GSTA1. Whereas, a lower erythema rate was observed in patients with mut/het of XRCC1Arg194Trp or wt of XRCC1Arg399Gln. The mean dose to whole breast(p = 0.002), the presence of either mut/het XRCC1Arg194Trp or wt XRCC3Thr241Met (p = 0.006) and the presence of either mut/het XRCC1Arg194Trp or wt GSTA1(p = 0.031) were confirmed as predictors of radiotherapy-induced erythema by MVA. Conclusions The Whole breast mean dose together with the presence of some polymorphic genes involved in DNA repair or oxidative stress could explain the erythema observed after SSPBI, but further studies are needed to confirm these results in a larger cohort. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01316328
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Implementation of a new cost efficacy method for blood irradiation using a non dedicated device
- Author
-
Foddai Maria, Giordano Carolina, D'Alessio Daniela, Soriani Antonella, Pinnarò Paola, Pinzi Valentina, and Strigari Lidia
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Objectives To implement a new cost efficacy internal Service for blood component irradiation, we carried out specific procedures and quality assurance reports using the linear accelerators (LINACs) of the Regina Elena Institute (IRE) Radiotherapy Department instead of a dedicated device. Methods The technical aspects, quality assurance and regulatory requirements of the internal procedure to set up a local irradiated blood bank have been defined. The LINACs of the IRE Radiotherapy Department were used to deliver a mean dose of 32 Gy and dose accuracy was checked with gafchromic film. The overall time/cost of this procedure was compared with the previous procedure, out-sourcing the irradiation of blood components. Results A total of 1996 blood component units were internally irradiated in the first year. Moreover, reducing the overall procedure time by a third. Overall cost/bag of external and internal procedures was approx. 66 € and 11 €, respectively. Thus the average saving of cost/bag was higher than 80%. The use of gafchromic films in all irradiated blood component bags allowed the accuracy of the dose delivered to blood to be checked. Conclusions By utilizing LINACs installed in the Radiotherapy Department it is possible to provide an internal blood component irradiation service, capitalizing on internal resources without any inconvenience/discomfort to patients undergoing radiotherapy and satisfying governmental regulatory requirements. The internal irradiation procedures has proven to be safe and feasible, and along with the significant cost/time reduction suggests that it is more advantageous than external procedures.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Accelerated hypofractionated radiotherapy as adjuvant regimen after conserving surgery for early breast cancer: interim report of toxicity after a minimum follow up of 3 years
- Author
-
Marucci Laura, Marsella Annelisa, Papale Maria, Giordano Carolina, Landoni Valeria, Soriani Antonella, Pinnarò Paola, Arcangeli Giorgio, and Strigari Lidia
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Accelerated hypofractionation is an attractive approach for adjuvant whole breast radiotherapy. In this study we evaluated the adverse effects at least 3 years post an accelerated hypofractionated whole breast radiotherapy schedule. Methods From October 2004 to March 2006, 39 consecutive patients aged over 18 years with pTis, pT1-2, pN0-1 breast adenocarcinoma who underwent conservative surgery were treated with an adjuvant accelerated hypofractionated radiotherapy schedule consisting of 34 Gy in 10 daily fractions over 2 weeks to the whole breast, followed after 1 week by an electron boost dose of 8 Gy in a single fraction to the tumour bed. Skin and lung radiation toxicity was evaluated daily during therapy, once a week for one month after radiotherapy completion, every 3 months for the first year and from then on every six months. In particular lung toxicity was investigated in terms of CT density evaluation, pulmonary functional tests, and clinical and radiological scoring. Paired t-test, Chi-square test and non-parametric Wilcoxon test were performed. Results After a median follow-up of 43 months (range 36-52 months), all the patients are alive and disease-free. None of the patients showed any clinical signs of lung toxicity, no CT-lung toxicity was denoted by radiologist on CT lung images acquired about 1 year post-radiotherapy, no variation of pulmonary density evaluated in terms of normalised Hounsfield numbers was evident. Barely palpable increased density of the treated breast was noted in 9 out of 39 patients (in 2 patients this toxicity was limited to the boost area) and teleangectasia (2) limited to the boost area was evident in 2 out of 39 patients. The compliance with the treatment was excellent (100%). Conclusion The radiotherapy schedule investigated in this study (i.e 34 Gy in 3.4 Gy/fr plus boost dose of 8 Gy in single fraction) is a feasible and safe treatment and does not lead to adjunctive acute and late toxicities. A longer follow up is necessary to confirm these favourable results.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. 5-Aminolevulinic Acid and Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound: The Combination of the Two Techniques to Optimize the Extent of Resection in Glioblastoma Surgery.
- Author
-
Pepa, Giuseppe Maria Della, Ius, Tamara, Rocca, Giuseppe La, Gaudino, Simona, Isola, Miriam, Pignotti, Fabrizio, Rapisarda, Alessandro, Mazzucchi, Edoardo, Giordano, Carolina, Dragonetti, Valentino, Chiesa, Silvia, Balducci, Mario, Gessi, Marco, Skrap, Miran, Olivi, Alessandro, Marchese, Enrico, and Sabatino, Giovanni
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Role of susceptibility-weighted imaging and intratumoral susceptibility signals in grading and differentiating pediatric brain tumors at 1.5 T: a preliminary study.
- Author
-
Gaudino, Simona, Marziali, Giammaria, Pezzullo, Giovanna, Guadalupi, Pamela, Giordano, Carolina, Infante, Amato, Benenati, Massimo, Ramaglia, Antonia, Massimi, Luca, Gessi, Marco, Frassanito, Paolo, Caldarelli, Massimo, and Colosimo, Cesare
- Subjects
BRAIN tumor diagnosis ,BRAIN tumors ,CEREBRAL ventricles ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,GERM cell tumors ,GLIOMAS ,HISTOLOGICAL techniques ,HOSPITAL medical staff ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,NEUROLOGISTS ,PEDIATRICS ,PINEAL gland tumors ,STATISTICS ,INTER-observer reliability ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,TUMOR grading - Abstract
Purpose: Susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) is useful for glioma grading and discriminating between brain tumor categories in adults, but its diagnostic value for pediatric brain tumors is unclear. Here we evaluated the usefulness of SWI for pediatric tumor grading and differentiation by assessing intratumoral susceptibility signal intensity (ITSS). Methods: We retrospectively enrolled 96 children with histopathologically diagnosed brain tumors, who underwent routine brain MRI exam with SWI (1.5 T scanner). Each tumor was assigned an ITSS score by a radiology resident and an experienced neuroradiologist, and subsequently by consensus. Statistical analyses were performed to differentiate between low-grade (LG) and high-grade (HG) tumors, histological categories, and tumor locations. Inter-reader agreement was assessed using Cohen's kappa (κ). Results: The interobserver agreement was 0.844 (0.953 between first reader and consensus, and 0.890 between second reader and consensus). Among all tumors, we found a statistically significant difference between LG and HG for ITSS scores of 0 and 2 (p = 0.002). This correlation was weaker among astrocytomas alone, and became significant when considering only off-midline astrocytomas (p = 0.05). Scores of 0 and 2 were a strong discriminating factor (p = 0.001) for astrocytomas (score 0) and for embryonal, choroid plexus, germ-cell, pineal, and ependymoma tumors (score 2). No medulloblastoma showed a score of 0. Conclusions: Our preliminary ITTS results in pediatric brain tumors somewhat differed from those obtained in adult populations. These findings highlight the potential valuable role of ITSS for tumor grading and discriminating between some tumor categories in the pediatric population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Short course hypofractionated whole breast irradiation after conservative surgery: a single institution phase II study.
- Author
-
Pinnarò, Paola, Giordano, Carolina, Farneti, Alessia, Faiella, Adriana, Iaccarino, Giuseppe, Landoni, Valeria, Giannarelli, Diana, Vici, Patrizia, Strigari, Lidia, and Sanguineti, Giuseppe
- Subjects
- *
IRRADIATION , *BREAST cancer patients , *RADIOTHERAPY , *CANCER relapse , *BREAST surgery - Abstract
Background: To assess the oncologic outcomes of hypofractionated whole breast irradiation (Hypo-WBI). Methods: Eligible patients had undergone breast conservative surgery for early breast cancer (pTis-2) and none/limited nodal involvement. Hypo-WBI consisted of 34 Gy in 10 daily fractions over 2 weeks to the whole breast three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy (3DCRT), followed by a single fraction of 8 Gy to the tumor bed after 1 week (electrons). Primary endpoint is freedom from ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR). Minimum follow up for living & event-free patients is 3 yrs.; median follow up time of the whole analyzed patient population is 5.4 yrs. (range: 1.8-11.4 yrs). Results: Two hundred fifty-one patients were accrued from 2004 to 2013. All patients underwent local excision of the primary tumor to negative margins. Four patients failed in the ipsilateral breast after a median time of 3.2 years (range: 1.7-5.7 yrs) for a 5-year IBTR-free survival of 98.7% (95%CI: 97.3%-100%). IBTR-free survival was significantly higher for patients with invasive cancer than for patients with intraductal carcinoma (p = 0.036). Within patients with invasive tumors, no clear trends or associations were detected between IBTR and age, grading, molecular subtype, pT or pN stage. At 5 years, the actuarial rates of GR2 fibrosis and GR2+ teleangectasia are 2.4% (95%CI: 0-6.5%) and 7.1% (95%CI: 0.4-13.7%), respectively. Cosmesis was scored as excellent/good by =95% of patients and =60% of clinicians. Conclusions: Hypo-WBI in 3 weeks allows excellent oncologic outcomes for invasive breast cancer after conservative surgery. Patients with intraductal carcinoma should be treated with Hypo-WBI only within a controlled study. Trial registration: IRE-IFO Ethical and Scientific Committee (cod. RS61/04). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Detection of ATM germline variants by the p53 mitotic centrosomal localization test in BRCA1/2-negative patients with early-onset breast cancer.
- Author
-
Prodosmo, Andrea, Buffone, Amelia, Mattioni, Manlio, Barnabei, Agnese, Persichetti, Agnese, De Leo, Aurora, Appetecchia, Marialuisa, Nicolussi, Arianna, Coppa, Anna, Sciacchitano, Salvatore, Giordano, Carolina, Pinnarò, Paola, Sanguineti, Giuseppe, Strigari, Lidia, Alessandrini, Gabriele, Facciolo, Francesco, Cosimelli, Maurizio, Luca Grazi, Gian, Corrado, Giacomo, and Vizza, Enrico
- Subjects
BREAST cancer ,GENETIC carriers ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,DIABETES ,GENETIC polymorphisms - Abstract
Background: Variant ATM heterozygotes have an increased risk of developing cancer, cardiovascular diseases, and diabetes. Costs and time of sequencing and ATM variant complexity make large-scale, general population screenings not cost-effective yet. Recently, we developed a straightforward, rapid, and inexpensive test based on p53 mitotic centrosomal localization (p53-MCL) in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) that diagnoses mutant ATM zygosity and recognizes tumor-associated ATM polymorphisms. Methods: Fresh PBMCs from 496 cancer patients were analyzed by p53-MCL: 90 cases with familial BRCA1/2- positive and -negative breast and/or ovarian cancer, 337 with sporadic cancers (ovarian, lung, colon, and post-menopausal breast cancers), and 69 with breast/thyroid cancer. Variants were confirmed by ATM sequencing. Results: A total of seven individuals with ATM variants were identified, 5/65 (7.7 %) in breast cancer cases of familial breast and/or ovarian cancer and 2/69 (2.9 %) in breast/thyroid cancer. No variant ATM carriers were found among the other cancer cases. Excluding a single case in which both BRCA1 and ATM were mutated, no p53-MCL alterations were observed in BRCA1/2-positive cases. Conclusions: These data validate p53-MCL as reliable and specific test for germline ATM variants, confirm ATM as breast cancer susceptibility gene, and highlight a possible association with breast/thyroid cancers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Impact of Sequencing Radiation Therapy and Chemotherapy on Long-Term Local Toxicity for Early Breast Cancer: Results of a Randomized Study at 15-Year Follow-Up.
- Author
-
Pinnarò, Paola, Giordano, Carolina, Farneti, Alessia, Strigari, Lidia, Landoni, Valeria, Marucci, Laura, Petrongari, Maria Grazia, and Sanguineti, Giuseppe
- Subjects
- *
CANCER radiotherapy , *BREAST surgery , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness ,BREAST cancer chemotherapy - Abstract
Purpose: To compare long-term late local toxicity after either concomitant or sequential chemoradiation therapy after breast-conserving surgery.Methods and Materials: From 1997 to 2002, women aged 18 to 75 years who underwent breast-conserving surgery and axillary dissection for early breast cancer and in whom CMF (cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, and 5-fluorouracil) chemotherapy was planned were randomized between concomitant and sequential radiation therapy. Radiation therapy was delivered to the whole breast through tangential fields to 50 Gy in 20 fractions over a period of 4 weeks, followed by an electron boost. Surviving patients were tentatively contacted and examined between March and September 2014. Patients in whom progressive disease had developed or who had undergone further breast surgery were excluded. Local toxicity (fibrosis, telangiectasia, and breast atrophy or retraction) was scored blindly to the treatment received. A logistic regression was run to investigate the effect of treatment sequence after correction for several patient-, treatment-, and tumor-related covariates on selected endpoints. The median time to cross-sectional analysis was 15.7 years (range, 12.0-17.8 years).Results: Of 206 patients randomized, 154 (74.8%) were potentially eligible. Of these, 43 (27.9%) refused participation and 4 (2.6%) had been lost to follow-up, and for 5 (3.2%), we could not restore planning data; thus, the final number of analyzed patients was 102. No grade 4 toxicity had been observed, whereas the number of grade 3 toxicity events was low (<8%) for each item, allowing pooling of grade 2 and 3 events for further analysis. Treatment sequence (concomitant vs sequential) was an independent predictor of grade 2 or 3 fibrosis according to both the National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (odds ratio [OR], 4.05; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.34-12.2; P=.013) and the SOMA (Subjective, Objective, Management and Analytic) scale (OR, 3.75; 95% CI, 1.19-11.79; P=.018), as well as grade 2 or 3 breast atrophy or retraction (OR, 3.87; 95% CI, 1.42-10.56; P=.008). No effect on telangiectasia was detected.Conclusions: At long-term follow-up, concomitant chemoradiation therapy has a detrimental effect on both fibrosis and retraction with an approximately 4-fold increase in the odds of grade 2 or 3 toxicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Orthopaedic surgeons can play important role in identifying victims of domestic violence in the emergency department – narrative review of Brazilian literature.
- Author
-
Giordano, Vincenzo, Giordano, Carolina, Lopes, Isadora Maria, Pires, Robinson Esteves, Godoy-Santos, Alexandre, and Giannoudis, Peter V.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Intensity-modulated pelvic radiation therapy and simultaneous integrated boost to the prostate area in patients with high-risk prostate cancer: a preliminary report of disease control.
- Author
-
Saracino, Biancamaria, Petrongari, Maria Grazia, Marzi, Simona, Bruzzaniti, Vicente, Sara, Gomellini, Arcangeli, Stefano, Arcangeli, Giorgio, Pinnarò, Paola, Giordano, Carolina, Ferraro, Anna Maria, and Strigari, Lidia
- Subjects
PREVENTIVE medicine ,INTENSITY modulated radiotherapy ,PROSTATE cancer risk factors ,LYMPH nodes ,ACUTE toxicity testing - Abstract
The aim of the study was to report the clinical results in patients with high-risk prostate cancer treated with pelvic intensity-modulated radiation therapy ( IMRT) and simultaneous integrated boost ( SIB) to the prostate area. A total of 110 patients entered our study, 37 patients presented with localized prostate cancer and radiological evidence of node metastases or ≥15% estimated risk of lymph node ( LN) involvement, while 73 patients underwent postoperative adjuvant or salvage irradiation for biochemical or residual/recurrent disease, LN metastases, or high risk of harboring nodal metastases. All patients received androgen deprivation therapy ( ADT) for 2 years. The median follow-up was 56.5 months. For the whole patient group, the 3- and 5-year freedom from biochemical failure were 82.6% and 74.6%, respectively, with a better outcome in patients treated with radical approach. The 3- and 5-year freedom from local failure were 94.4% and 90.2%, respectively, while the 3- and 5-year distant metastasis-free survival were 87.8% and 81.7%, respectively. For all study patients, the rate of freedom from G2 acute rectal, intestinal, and urinary toxicities was 60%, 77%, and 61%, respectively. There was no G3 acute toxicity, ≥G2 late intestinal toxicity, or G3 late urinary or rectal toxicity. The 3- and 5-year ≥G2 freedom from late rectal toxicity rate were 98% and 95%, respectively, while the 3- and 5-year ≥G2 freedom from late urinary toxicity rate were 95% and 88%, respectively. The study concludes that pelvic IMRT and SIB to the prostatic area in association with 2-year ADT was a well-tolerated technique, providing high disease control in patients with prostate cancer requiring LN treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Teaching NeuroImage: Nitromethane-Induced Acute Reversible Encephalopathy.
- Author
-
Palumbo, Giovanni, Besana, Michele, Ananiadou, Sofia, Giordano, Carolina, Maccabelli, Gloria, Riccio, Mario, Campana, Chiara, Giossi, Alessia, Piovan, Enrico, Lonati, Davide, and Pinelli, Lorenzo
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Evidence from a breast cancer hypofractionated schedule: late skin toxicity assessed by ultrasound.
- Author
-
Landoni, Valeria, Giordano, Carolina, Marsella, Annelisa, Saracino, Biancamaria, Petrongari, Maria Grazia, Ferraro, Anna Maria, Strigari, Lidia, and Pinnarò, Paola
- Subjects
- *
RADIOTHERAPY , *BREAST cancer diagnosis , *FIBROSIS , *ULTRASONIC imaging , *SKIN , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background Feasibility of whole breast hypofractionated radiotherapy schedules in breast conserving therapy is recognized however concerns remain about the role of the boost dose on the overall treatment’s potential toxicity. In this study we report on the possibility to quantitatively evaluate radiation induced toxicity in patients treated with an abbreviated course with major concern in the irradiated boost region. Methods Eighty-nine patients who underwent conservative surgery for early-stage breast cancer followed by adjuvant accelerated hypofractionated whole breast radiotherapy were included in this study to assess skin and subcutaneous tissue late toxicity by means of ultrasonographic quantitative examination. For each patient the skin thickness was measured at four positions: on the irradiated breast, in the boost region and in the corresponding positions in the contralateral not treated breast. All patients were scanned by the same radiologist to reduce potential inter-operator variability, the operator was blind to the scoring of the patient CTCv3 late toxicity as well as patient treatment characteristics. Ultrasound assessment and clinical evaluation were compared. Results The median time between the end of adjuvant radiotherapy and ultrasound examination was 20.5 months. The measured mean skin thickness in the irradiated breast was 2.13 ± 0.72 mm while in the mirror region of the contra-lateral healthy breast was 1.61 ± 0.29 mm. The measured mean skin thickness in the irradiated boost region was 2.25 ± 0.79 mm versus 1.63 ± 0.33 mm in the corresponding region of contra-lateral healthy breast. The mean increment in skin thickness respect to the counterpart in the healthy breast was 0.52 ± 0.67 mm and 0.62 ± 0.74 mm for the breast and the boost region respectively. A significant direct correlation was found between the increment in skin thickness in the irradiated breast and in the boost region with fibrosis (G ≥ 1). Conclusions In this study results from a breast cancer hypofractionated schedule in terms of late skin toxicity are reported. In particular our study confirms that late cutaneous reactions can be reliably assed by ultrasonographic examination, also discriminating between regions irradiated at different doses, and that this instrumental evaluation is in agreement with clinical stated toxicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The role of radiotherapy in bladder cancer.
- Author
-
Pinnarò, Paola, Giordano, Carolina, Giovinazzo, Giuseppe, and Saracino, Biancamaria
- Subjects
- *
BLADDER cancer patients , *BLADDER cancer treatment , *CANCER radiotherapy , *INVASIVE diagnosis , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *CANCER invasiveness - Abstract
In this article we report on the current role of radiotherapy in the management of non-muscle invasive as well as in muscle invasive bladder cancer. Radiotherapy seems to have no role in non-muscle invasive bladder cancer. In muscle invasive bladder tumors, the role of radiotherapy is under investigation in view of new radiotherapy techniques and novel cytotoxic and biological agents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Development and optimization of a beam shaper device for a mobile dedicated IOERT accelerator.
- Author
-
Soriani, Antonella, Iaccarino, Giuseppe, Felici, Giuseppe, Ciccotelli, Alessia, Pinnarò, Paola, Giordano, Carolina, Benassi, Marcello, D'Andrea, Marco, Bellesi, Luca, and Strigari, Lidia
- Subjects
INTRAOPERATIVE radiotherapy ,RADIATION dosimetry ,MONTE Carlo method ,SILICON diodes ,SIMULATION methods & models ,POLYTEF ,PARTICLE accelerators - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to design and build a prototype beam shaper to be used on a dedicated mobile accelerator that protects organs at risk within the radiation field and conforms the beam to the target geometry during intraoperative electron radiotherapy (IOERT). A dosimetric characterization of the beam shaper device was performed based on Monte Carlo (MC) simulations, as well as experimental data, at different energies, field sizes, and source to skin distances. Methods: A mobile light intraoperative accelerator (LIAC®, Sordina, Italy) was used. The design of the beam shaper prototype was based on MC simulations (BEAMnrc/OMEGA and DOSXYZnrc code) for a selection of materials and thicknesses, as well as for dosimetric characterization. Percentage depth dose (PDD) and profile measurements were performed using a p-type silicon diode and a commercial water phantom, while output factors were measured using a PinPoint ion chamber in a PMMA phantom. Planar doses in planes of interest were carried out using radiochromic films (GafchromicTM EBT and EBT2) in PMMA and in a Solid Water® phantom. Several experimental set-ups were investigated with the beam shaper device fixed on the top of the phantom, varying both the short side of the rectangular field and the air gap between the device and the phantom surface, simulating the clinical situation. The output factors (OFs) were determined using different geometrical set-ups and energies. Results: The beam shaper prototype consists of four blades sliding alongside each other and mounted on a special support at the end of the 10 cm diameter PMMA circular applicator. Each blade is made of an upper layer of 2.6 cm of Teflon® and a lower layer of 8 mm of stainless steel. All rectangles inscribed in a 5 cm diameter can be achieved in addition to any 'squircle-shaped' field. When one side of the rectangular field is held constant and the second side is reduced, both R50 and Rmax move towards the phantom surface. Comparing the PDDs obtained with the 5 cm circular applicator and with a 4.4 × 4.4 cm2 square field (that is the equivalent square of the 5 cm circular field) obtained with the beam shaper, a different behavior was observed in the region extending from the surface to a depth of 50% of the maximum dose. Isodoses measured for rectangular fields used for clinical cases (i.e., 4 × 9 cm2 8 MeV) are shown, with different air gaps. For each energy investigated, the normalized OFs slowly increase, when the length of the side decreases down to about 4 cm, and then rapidly decreases for smaller field widths. MC simulation showed an excellent agreement with experimental data (<2%). Conclusions: The beam shaper device is able to provide square/rectangular/squircle fields with adequate dose homogeneity for mobile dedicated accelerators, thus allowing conformal treatment with IOERT. Monte Carlo simulation can be a very useful tool to simulate any clinical set up and can be used to create a data set to calculate MUs, thereby increasing the accuracy of the delivered dose during IOERT procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Implementation of a new cost efficacy method for blood irradiation using a non dedicated device.
- Author
-
Pinnarò, Paola, Soriani, Antonella, D'Alessio, Daniela, Giordano, Carolina, Foddai, Maria Laura, Pinzi, Valentina, and Strigari, Lidia
- Subjects
BLOOD irradiation ,LINEAR accelerators in medicine ,RADIOTHERAPY ,BLOOD products ,MEDICAL radiology - Abstract
Objectives: To implement a new cost efficacy internal Service for blood component irradiation, we carried out specific procedures and quality assurance reports using the linear accelerators (LINACs) of the Regina Elena Institute (IRE) Radiotherapy Department instead of a dedicated device. Methods: The technical aspects, quality assurance and regulatory requirements of the internal procedure to set up a local irradiated blood bank have been defined. The LINACs of the IRE Radiotherapy Department were used to deliver a mean dose of 32 Gy and dose accuracy was checked with gafchromic film. The overall time/cost of this procedure was compared with the previous procedure, out-sourcing the irradiation of blood components. Results: A total of 1996 blood component units were internally irradiated in the first year. Moreover, reducing the overall procedure time by a third. Overall cost/bag of external and internal procedures was approx. 66 € and 11 €, respectively. Thus the average saving of cost/bag was higher than 80%. The use of gafchromic films in all irradiated blood component bags allowed the accuracy of the dose delivered to blood to be checked. Conclusions: By utilizing LINACs installed in the Radiotherapy Department it is possible to provide an internal blood component irradiation service, capitalizing on internal resources without any inconvenience/discomfort to patients undergoing radiotherapy and satisfying governmental regulatory requirements. The internal irradiation procedures has proven to be safe and feasible, and along with the significant cost/time reduction suggests that it is more advantageous than external procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Accelerated hypofractionated radiotherapy asadjuvant regimen after conserving surgery forearly breast cancer: interim report of toxicity aftera minimum follow up of 3 years.
- Author
-
Pinnarò, Paola, Soriani, Antonella, Landoni, Valeria, Giordano, Carolina, Papale, Maria, Marsella, Annelisa, Marucci, Laura, Arcangeli, Giorgio, and Strigari, Lidia
- Subjects
RADIOTHERAPY ,BREAST cancer ,PHYSIOLOGICAL therapeutics ,ADENOCARCINOMA ,MEDICAL screening ,ELECTRONS ,DRUG dosage ,CANCER patients ,SKIN - Abstract
Background: Accelerated hypofractionation is an attractive approach for adjuvant whole breast radiotherapy. In this study we evaluated the adverse effects at least 3 years post an accelerated hypofractionated whole breast radiotherapy schedule. Methods: From October 2004 to March 2006, 39 consecutive patients aged over 18 years with pTis, pT1-2, pN0-1 breast adenocarcinoma who underwent conservative surgery were treated with an adjuvant accelerated hypofractionated radiotherapy schedule consisting of 34 Gy in 10 daily fractions over 2 weeks to the whole breast, followed after 1 week by an electron boost dose of 8 Gy in a single fraction to the tumour bed. Skin and lung radiation toxicity was evaluated daily during therapy, once a week for one month after radiotherapy completion, every 3 months for the first year and from then on every six months. In particular lung toxicity was investigated in terms of CT density evaluation, pulmonary functional tests, and clinical and radiological scoring. Paired t-test, Chisquare test and non-parametric Wilcoxon test were performed. Results: After a median follow-up of 43 months (range 36-52 months), all the patients are alive and disease-free. None of the patients showed any clinical signs of lung toxicity, no CT-lung toxicity was denoted by radiologist on CT lung images acquired about 1 year post-radiotherapy, no variation of pulmonary density evaluated in terms of normalised Hounsfield numbers was evident. Barely palpable increased density of the treated breast was noted in 9 out of 39 patients (in 2 patients this toxicity was limited to the boost area) and teleangectasia (<1/cm
2 ) limited to the boost area was evident in 2 out of 39 patients. The compliance with the treatment was excellent (100%). Conclusion: The radiotherapy schedule investigated in this study (i.e 34 Gy in 3.4 Gy/fr plus boost dose of 8 Gy in single fraction) is a feasible and safe treatment and does not lead to adjunctive acute and late toxicities. A longer follow up is necessary to confirm these favourable results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Neuro-Oncology Multidisciplinary Tumor Board: The Point of View of the Neuroradiologist.
- Author
-
Gaudino, Simona, Giordano, Carolina, Magnani, Francesca, Cottonaro, Simone, Infante, Amato, Sabatino, Giovanni, La Rocca, Giuseppe, Della Pepa, Giuseppe Maria, D'Alessandris, Quintino Giorgio, Pallini, Roberto, Olivi, Alessandro, Balducci, Mario, Chiesa, Silvia, Gessi, Marco, Guadalupi, Pamela, Russo, Rosellina, Schiarelli, Chiara, Ausili Cefaro, Luca, Di Lella, Giuseppe Maria, and Colosimo, Cesare
- Subjects
- *
BRAIN tumors , *ELECTRONIC records , *CANCER treatment , *TUMORS , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
Background: The multi-disciplinary tumor board (MTB) is essential to quality cancer care and currently recommended to offer the best personalized clinical approach, but little has been published regarding MTBs in neuro-oncology (nMTBs). The aim of the present paper is to describe our nMTB, to evaluate its impact on clinical management decisions, and to assess the role of neuroradiologists. Methods: The retrospective evaluation of the cases discussed at our nMTB from March 2017 to March 2020. From the electronic records, we extracted epidemiological, clinical and other specific data of nMTB. From the radiological records, we calculated data relating to the number, time for revision, and other specifications of MRI re-evaluation. Statistical analysis was performed. Results: a total of 447 discussions were analyzed, representing 342 patients. The requests for case evaluations came from radiation oncologists (58.8%) and neurosurgeons (40.5%), and were mainly addressed to the neuroradiologist (73.8%). The most frequent questions were about the treatment's changes (64.4%). The change in patient treatment was reported in 40.5% of cases, 76.8% of these were based on the neuroradiologic assessment. A total of 1514 MRI examinations were re-evaluated, employing approximately 67 h overall. The median of the MRI exams reviewed per patient was 3 (min–max 1–12). Conclusions: Our study supported that the multidisciplinary approach to patient care can be particularly effective in managing brain tumors. A review by an expert neuroradiologist impacts patient management in the context of nMTBs, but has costs in terms of the time and effort spent preparing for it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. PD-L1 Expression Fluctuates Concurrently with Cyclin D in Glioblastoma Cells.
- Author
-
Tufano, Martina, D'Arrigo, Paolo, D'Agostino, Massimo, Giordano, Carolina, Marrone, Laura, Cesaro, Elena, Romano, Maria Fiammetta, and Romano, Simona
- Subjects
PROGRAMMED death-ligand 1 ,GLIOBLASTOMA multiforme ,CYCLINS ,CELL growth ,FIBROBLASTS - Abstract
Despite Glioblastoma (GBM) frequently expressing programmed cell death ligand-1 (PD-L1), treatment with anti-programmed cell death-1 (PD1) has not yielded brilliant results. Intratumor variability of PD-L1 can impact determination accuracy. A previous study on mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) reported a role for cyclin-D in control of PD-L1 expression. Because tumor-cell growth within a cancer is highly heterogeneous, we looked at whether PD-L1 and its cochaperone FKBP51s were influenced by cell proliferation, using U251 and SF767 GBM-cell-lines. PD-L1 was measured by Western blot, flow cytometry, confocal-microscopy, quantitative PCR (qPCR), CCND1 by qPCR, FKBP51s by Western blot and confocal-microscopy. Chromatin-Immunoprecipitation assay (xChIp) served to assess the DNA-binding of FKBP51 isoforms. In the course of cell culture, PD-L1 appeared to increase concomitantly to cyclin-D on G1/S transition, to decrease during exponential cell growth progressively. We calculated a correlation between CCND1 and PD-L1 gene expression levels. In the temporal window of PD-L1 and CCND1 peak, FKBP51s localized in ER. When cyclin-D declined, FKBP51s went nuclear. XChIp showed that FKBP51s binds CCND1 gene in a closed-chromatin configuration. Our finding suggests that the dynamism of PD-L1 expression in GBM follows cyclin-D fluctuation and raises the hypothesis that FKBP51s might participate in the events that govern cyclin-D oscillation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Reassessing the Role of Brain Tumor Biopsy in the Era of Advanced Surgical, Molecular, and Imaging Techniques—A Single-Center Experience with Long-Term Follow-Up.
- Author
-
Di Bonaventura, Rina, Montano, Nicola, Giordano, Martina, Gessi, Marco, Gaudino, Simona, Izzo, Alessandro, Mattogno, Pier Paolo, Stumpo, Vittorio, Caccavella, Valerio Maria, Giordano, Carolina, Lauretti, Liverana, Colosimo, Cesare, D'Alessandris, Quintino Giorgio, Pallini, Roberto, and Olivi, Alessandro
- Subjects
BRAIN tumors ,PROGNOSIS ,OVERALL survival ,SURVIVAL rate ,NEEDLE biopsy ,FORCEPS - Abstract
Brain biopsy is the gold standard in order to establish the diagnosis of unresectable brain tumors. Few studies have investigated the long-term outcomes of biopsy patients. The aim of this single-institution-based study was to assess the concordance between radiological and histopathological diagnoses, and the long-term patient outcome. Ninety-three patients who underwent brain biopsy in the last 5 years were analyzed. We included patients treated with stereotactically guided needle, open, and neuroendoscopic biopsies. Most patients (86%) received needle biopsy. Gliomas and primary brain lymphomas comprised 88.2% of cases. The diagnostic yield was 95.7%. Serious complication and death rates were 3.2% and 2.1%, respectively. The concordance rate between radiological and histological diagnoses was 93%. Notably, the positive predictive value of radiological diagnosis of lymphoma was 100%. Biopsy allowed specific treatment in 72% of cases. Disease-related neurological worsening was the main reason that precluded adjuvant treatment. Adjuvant treatment, in turn, was the strongest prognostic factor, since the median overall survival was 11 months with vs. 2 months without treatment (p = 0.0002). Finally, advanced molecular evaluations can be obtained on glioma biopsy specimens to provide integrated diagnoses and individually tailored treatments. We conclude that, despite the huge advances in imaging techniques, biopsy is required when an adjuvant treatment is recommended, particularly in gliomas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Combining Magnetic Resonance Imaging with Systemic Monocyte Evaluation for the Implementation of GBM Management.
- Author
-
Giordano, Carolina, Sabatino, Giovanni, Romano, Simona, Della Pepa, Giuseppe Maria, Tufano, Martina, D'Alessandris, Quintino Giorgio, Cottonaro, Simone, Gessi, Marco, Balducci, Mario, Romano, Maria Fiammetta, Olivi, Alessandro, Gaudino, Simona, Colosimo, Cesare, and Brito, Maria Alexandra
- Subjects
- *
MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *GLIOBLASTOMA multiforme , *MONOCYTES , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the gold standard for glioblastoma (GBM) patient evaluation. Additional non-invasive diagnostic modalities are needed. GBM is heavily infiltrated with tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) that can be found in peripheral blood. FKBP51s supports alternative-macrophage polarization. Herein, we assessed FKBP51s expression in circulating monocytes from 14 GBM patients. The M2 monocyte phenotype was investigated by qPCR and flow cytometry using antibodies against PD-L1, CD163, FKBP51s, and CD14. MRI assessed morphologic features of the tumors that were aligned to flow cytometry data. PD-L1 expression on circulating monocytes correlated with MRI tumor necrosis score. A wider expansion in circulating CD163/monocytes was measured. These monocytes resulted in a dramatic decrease in patients with an MRI diagnosis of complete but not partial surgical removal of the tumor. Importantly, in patients with residual tumor, most of the peripheral monocytes that in the preoperative stage were CD163/FKBP51s− had turned into CD163/FKBP51s+. After Stupp therapy, CD163/FKBP51s+ monocytes were almost absent in a case of pseudoprogression, while two patients with stable or true disease progression showed sustained levels in such circulating monocytes. Our work provides preliminary but meaningful and novel results that deserve to be confirmed in a larger patient cohort, in support of potential usefulness in GBM monitoring of CD163/FKBP51s/CD14 immunophenotype in adjunct to MRI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. ColorViz, a New and Rapid Tool for Assessing Collateral Circulation during Stroke.
- Author
-
Verdolotti, Tommaso, Pilato, Fabio, Cottonaro, Simone, Monelli, Edoardo, Giordano, Carolina, Guadalupi, Pamela, Benenati, Massimo, Ramaglia, Antonia, Costantini, Alessandro Maria, Alexandre, Andrea, Di Iorio, Riccardo, and Colosimo, Cesare
- Subjects
COLLATERAL circulation ,STROKE patients ,RAPID tooling ,ARTERIAL occlusions ,STROKE - Abstract
Prognosis of patients with acute ischemic stroke is strictly related to the patency and prominence of the collateral leptomeningeal pathways distal to the arterial occlusion. The gold standard for assessment of collateral circulation is conventional angiography, but it is invasive and used in selected cases. To date, the most reliable technique is multiphase CTA; currently, the available classifications of collateral circles are often complex, time-consuming, and require a trained observer. The purpose of our work is to establish the effectiveness of a new semi-automatic post-processing software (ColorViz FastStroke, GE Healthcare, Milwaukee, Wisconsin) in evaluation of collateral circulation compared to the six-point classifications of multiphase CTA already validated in literature. We selected 86 patients with anterior ischemic stroke symptoms who underwent multiphasic CTA in our emergency department. Two radiologists separately evaluated the collateral leptomeningeal vessels, analyzing respectively, the multiphase CTA (using the six-point scale and its trichotomized form) and ColorViz (using a three-point scale). Then the results were matched. We found a good correlation between the two different analyses; the main advantage of ColorViz is that, while maintaining fast diagnostic times, it allows a simpler and more immediate evaluation of collateral circulation, especially for less experienced radiologists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Metastatic tumor of the hand of unknown primary origin.
- Author
-
Giordano, Vincenzo, Giordano, Marcos, Giordano, Carolina, Giordano, José, Koch, Hilton Augusto, and Knackfuss, Irocy Guedes
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Dose and polymorphic genes xrcc1, xrcc3, gst play a role in the risk of articledeveloping erythema in breast cancer patients following single shot partial breast irradiation after conservative surgery.
- Author
-
Falvo, Elisabetta, Strigari, Lidia, Citro, Gennaro, Giordano, Carolina, Arcangeli, Stefano, Soriani, Antonella, D'Alessio, Daniela, Muti, Paola, Blandino, Giovanni, Sperduti, Isabella, and Pinnarò, Paola
- Abstract
Background: To evaluate the association between polymorphisms involved in DNA repair and oxidative stress genes and mean dose to whole breast on acute skin reactions (erythema) in breast cancer (BC) patients following single shot partial breast irradiation (SSPBI) after breast conservative surgery.Materials and Methods: Acute toxicity was assessed using vers.3 criteria. single nucleotides polymorphisms(SNPs) in genes: XRCC1(Arg399Gln/Arg194Trp), XRCC3 (A4541G-5'UTR/Thr241Met), GSTP1(Ile105Val), GSTA1 and RAD51(untranslated region). SNPs were determined in 57 BC patients by the Pyrosequencing analysis. Univariate(ORs and 95% CI) and logistic multivariate analyses (MVA) were performed to correlate polymorphic genes with the risk of developing acute skin reactions to radiotherapy.Results: After SSPBI on the tumour bed following conservative surgery, grade 1 or 2 acute erythema was observed in 19 pts(33%). Univariate analysis indicated a higher significant risk of developing erythema in patients with polymorphic variant wt XRCC1Arg194Trp, mut/het XRCC3Thr241Met, wt/het XRCC3A4541G-5'UTR. Similarly a higher erythema rate was also found in the presence of mut/het of XRCC1Arg194Trp or wt of GSTA1. Whereas, a lower erythema rate was observed in patients with mut/het of XRCC1Arg194Trp or wt of XRCC1Arg399Gln. The mean dose to whole breast(p = 0.002), the presence of either mut/het XRCC1Arg194Trp or wt XRCC3Thr241Met (p = 0.006) and the presence of either mut/het XRCC1Arg194Trp or wt GSTA1(p = 0.031) were confirmed as predictors of radiotherapy-induced erythema by MVA.Conclusions: The Whole breast mean dose together with the presence of some polymorphic genes involved in DNA repair or oxidative stress could explain the erythema observed after SSPBI, but further studies are needed to confirm these results in a larger cohort. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A New Model for Predicting Acute Mucosal Toxicity in Head-and-Neck Cancer Patients Undergoing Radiotherapy With Altered Schedules
- Author
-
Strigari, Lidia, Pedicini, Piernicola, D’Andrea, Marco, Pinnarò, Paola, Marucci, Laura, Giordano, Carolina, and Benassi, Marcello
- Subjects
- *
CANCER radiotherapy complications , *HEAD & neck cancer treatment , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of radiation , *RADIATION tolerance , *STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Purpose: One of the worst radiation-induced acute effects in treating head-and-neck (HN) cancer is grade 3 or higher acute (oral and pharyngeal) mucosal toxicity (AMT), caused by the killing/depletion of mucosa cells. Here we aim to testing a predictive model of the AMT in HN cancer patients receiving different radiotherapy schedules. Methods and Materials: Various radiotherapeutic schedules have been reviewed and classified as tolerable or intolerable based on AMT severity. A modified normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) model has been investigated to describe AMT data in radiotherapy regimens, both conventional and altered in dose and overall treatment time (OTT). We tested the hypothesis that such a model could also be applied to identify intolerable treatment and to predict AMT. This AMT NTCP model has been compared with other published predictive models to identify schedules that are either tolerable or intolerable. The area under the curve (AUC) was calculated for all models, assuming treatment tolerance as the gold standard. The correlation between AMT and the predicted toxicity rate was assessed by a Pearson correlation test. Results: The AMT NTCP model was able to distinguish between acceptable and intolerable schedules among the data available for the study (AUC = 0.84, 95% confidence interval = 0.75-0.92). In the equivalent dose at 2 Gy/fraction (EQD2) vs OTT space, the proposed model shows a trend similar to that of models proposed by other authors, but was superior in detecting some intolerable schedules. Moreover, it was able to predict the incidence of ≥G3 AMT. Conclusion: The proposed model is able to predict ≥G3 AMT after HN cancer radiotherapy, and could be useful for designing altered/hypofractionated schedules to reduce the incidence of AMT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The FKBP51s Splice Isoform Predicts Unfavorable Prognosis in Patients with Glioblastoma.
- Author
-
Giordano C, Marrone L, Romano S, Della Pepa GM, Donzelli CM, Tufano M, Capasso M, Lasorsa VA, Quintavalle C, Guerri G, Martucci M, Auricchio A, Gessi M, Sala E, Olivi A, Romano MF, and Gaudino S
- Subjects
- Humans, Prognosis, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Tumor-Associated Macrophages immunology, Tumor-Associated Macrophages metabolism, Aged, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Adult, Glioblastoma genetics, Glioblastoma pathology, Glioblastoma immunology, Glioblastoma metabolism, Glioblastoma mortality, Glioblastoma diagnostic imaging, Tacrolimus Binding Proteins genetics, Tacrolimus Binding Proteins metabolism, Tumor Microenvironment immunology, Protein Isoforms genetics, Protein Isoforms metabolism, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Brain Neoplasms metabolism, Brain Neoplasms immunology, Brain Neoplasms mortality
- Abstract
The primary treatment for glioblastoma (GBM) is removing the tumor mass as defined by MRI. However, MRI has limited diagnostic and predictive value. Tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) are abundant in GBM tumor microenvironment (TME) and are found in peripheral blood (PB). FKBP51 expression, with its canonical and spliced isoforms, is constitutive in immune cells and aberrant in GBM. Spliced FKBP51s supports M2 polarization. To find an immunologic signature that combined with MRI could advance in diagnosis, we immunophenotyped the macrophages of TME and PB from 37 patients with GBM using FKBP51s and classical M1-M2 markers. We also determined the tumor levels of FKBP51s, PD-L1, and HLA-DR. Tumors expressing FKBP51s showed an increase in various M2 phenotypes and regulatory T cells in PB, indicating immunosuppression. Tumors expressing FKBP51s also activated STAT3 and were associated with reduced survival. Correlative studies with MRI and tumor/macrophages cocultures allowed to interpret TAMs. Tumor volume correlated with M1 infiltration of TME. Cocultures with spheroids produced M1 polarization, suggesting that M1 macrophages may infiltrate alongside cancer stem cells. Cocultures of adherent cells developed the M2 phenotype CD163/FKBP51s expressing pSTAT6, a transcription factor enabling migration and invasion. In patients with recurrences, increased counts of CD163/FKBP51s monocyte/macrophages in PB correlated with callosal infiltration and were accompanied by a concomitant decrease in TME-infiltrating M1 macrophages. PB PD-L1/FKBP51s connoted necrotic tumors. In conclusion, FKBP51s identifies a GBM subtype that significantly impairs the immune system. Moreover, FKBP51s marks PB macrophages associated with MRI features of glioma malignancy that can aid in patient monitoring., Significance: Our research suggests that by combining imaging with analysis of monocyte/macrophage subsets in patients with GBM, we can enhance our understanding of the disease and assist in its treatment. We discovered a similarity in the macrophage composition between the TME and PB, and through association with imaging, we could interpret macrophages. In addition, we identified a predictive biomarker that drew more attention to immune suppression of patients with GBM., (© 2024 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Regorafenib in Glioblastoma Recurrence: How to Deal With MR Imaging Treatments Changes.
- Author
-
Gaudino S, Marziali G, Giordano C, Gigli R, Varcasia G, Magnani F, Chiesa S, Balducci M, Costantini AM, Della Pepa GM, Olivi A, Russo R, and Colosimo C
- Abstract
The treatment of recurrent high-grade gliomas remains a major challenge of daily neuro-oncology practice, and imaging findings of new therapies may be challenging. Regorafenib is a multi-kinase inhibitor that has recently been introduced into clinical practice to treat recurrent glioblastoma, bringing with it a novel panel of MRI imaging findings. On the basis of the few data in the literature and on our personal experience, we have identified the main MRI changes during regorafenib therapy, and then, we defined two different patterns, trying to create a simple summary line of the main changes of pathological tissue during therapy. We named these patterns, respectively, pattern A (less frequent, similar to classical progression disease) and pattern B (more frequent, with decreased diffusivity and decrease contrast-enhancement). We have also reported MR changes concerning signal intensity on T1-weighted and T2-weighted images, SWI, and perfusion imaging, derived from the literature (small series or case reports) and from our clinical experience. The clinical implication of these imaging modifications remains to be defined, taking into account that we are still at the dawn in the evaluation of such imaging modifications., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Gaudino, Marziali, Giordano, Gigli, Varcasia, Magnani, Chiesa, Balducci, Costantini, Della Pepa, Olivi, Russo and Colosimo.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Effect of ultrasound-guided continuous erector spinae plane block on severe post-herpetic neuralgia in adolescent without skin rash.
- Author
-
Giordano C, Prussiani V, Brabillasca P, Fianelli F, Nardella A, and Sonzogni V
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Ultrasonography, Interventional, Anesthesia, Conduction, Exanthema, Nerve Block, Neuralgia, Postherpetic
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. 5-Aminolevulinic Acid and Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound: The Combination of the Two Techniques to Optimize the Extent of Resection in Glioblastoma Surgery.
- Author
-
Della Pepa GM, Ius T, La Rocca G, Gaudino S, Isola M, Pignotti F, Rapisarda A, Mazzucchi E, Giordano C, Dragonetti V, Chiesa S, Balducci M, Gessi M, Skrap M, Olivi A, Marchese E, and Sabatino G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Glioblastoma diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm, Residual surgery, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Aminolevulinic Acid, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Contrast Media, Glioblastoma surgery, Intraoperative Neurophysiological Monitoring methods, Levulinic Acids, Ultrasonography, Interventional methods
- Abstract
Background: The survival benefit in maximizing resection in glioblastomas (GBMs) has been demonstrated by numerous studies. The true limit of infiltration of GBMs has been an overwhelming obstacle, and several technological advances have been introduced to improve the identification of residual tumors., Objective: To evaluate whether the integration of 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) with microbubble contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) improves residual tumor identification and has an impact on the extent of resection (EOR), overall survival (OS), and progression-free survival (PFS)., Methods: A total of 230 GBM procedures were retrospectively studied. Cases were stratified according to the surgical procedure into 4 groups: 5-ALA- and CEUS-guided surgeries, 5-ALA-guided surgeries, CEUS-guided surgeries, and conventional microsurgical procedures., Results: Patients undergoing conventional microsurgical procedures showed the worst EORs compared to the assisted techniques (5-ALA and CEUS procedures). Both 5-ALA and CEUS techniques improved the EOR compared to conventional microsurgical procedures. However, their combination gave the best results in terms of the EOR (P = .0003). The median EOR% and the number of supramarginal resections are hence superior in the 5-ALA + CEUS + group compared to the others; this observation had consequences on PFS and OS in our series., Conclusion: In terms of the EOR, the best results can be achieved through a combination of both techniques, where the 5-ALA-guided procedure is followed by a final survey with CEUS. Compared with other intraoperative imaging techniques, CEUS is a real-time, readily repeatable, safe, and inexpensive technique that provides valuable information to the surgeon before, during, and after resection., (Copyright © 2020 by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Ultrasound-guided erector spinae plane block and dexmedetomidine cooperative sedation for non-intubated chest wall surgery.
- Author
-
Ranocchia S, Scimia P, Giordano C, Danzi V, and Bignami E
- Subjects
- Aged, Humans, Male, Paraspinal Muscles innervation, Conscious Sedation methods, Dexmedetomidine therapeutic use, Hypnotics and Sedatives therapeutic use, Nerve Block methods, Thoracic Wall surgery, Ultrasonography, Interventional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Ultrasound-guided quadratus lumborum block type 2 associated to continuous intravenous infusion of dexmetomidine for anesthesiologic management in laparoscopic adrenalectomy for pheochromocytoma: could it be a safe strategy?
- Author
-
Giordano C, Bassoricci E, Fusco P, and Scimia P
- Subjects
- Adrenal Gland Neoplasms surgery, Adrenalectomy methods, Humans, Infusions, Intravenous, Laparoscopy methods, Male, Middle Aged, Pheochromocytoma surgery, Analgesics, Non-Narcotic administration & dosage, Dexmedetomidine administration & dosage, Lumbosacral Region, Nerve Block methods, Ultrasonography, Interventional methods
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The ultrasound-guided C2-C4 compartment block combined to dexmedetomidine sedation: an ideal approach for carotid endarterectomy in awake patients.
- Author
-
Scimia P, Giordano C, Basso Ricci E, Petrucci E, and Fusco P
- Subjects
- Aged, 80 and over, Cervical Vertebrae, Female, Humans, Ultrasonography, Interventional, Wakefulness, Conscious Sedation, Dexmedetomidine administration & dosage, Endarterectomy, Carotid, Hypnotics and Sedatives administration & dosage, Nerve Block methods
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Erratum to: Detection of ATM germline variants by the p53 mitotic centrosomal localization test in BRCA1/2-negative patients with early-onset breast cancer.
- Author
-
Prodosmo A, Buffone A, Mattioni M, Barnabei A, Persichetti A, De Leo A, Appetecchia M, Nicolussi A, Coppa A, Sciacchitano S, Giordano C, Pinnarò P, Sanguineti G, Strigari L, Alessandrini G, Facciolo F, Cosimelli M, Grazi GL, Corrado G, Vizza E, Giannini G, and Soddu S
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.