30 results on '"Vigorito, Sabrina"'
Search Results
2. Single fraction ablative preoperative radiation treatment for early-stage breast cancer: the CRYSTAL study – a phase I/II clinical trial protocol
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Zerella, Maria Alessia, Zaffaroni, Mattia, Ronci, Giuseppe, Dicuonzo, Samantha, Rojas, Damaris Patricia, Morra, Anna, Fodor, Cristiana, Rondi, Elena, Vigorito, Sabrina, Botta, Francesca, Cremonesi, Marta, Garibaldi, Cristina, Penco, Silvia, Galimberti, Viviana Enrica, Intra, Mattia, Gandini, Sara, Barberis, Massimo, Renne, Giuseppe, Cattani, Federica, Veronesi, Paolo, Orecchia, Roberto, Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja, and Leonardi, Maria Cristina
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- 2022
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3. The dosimetric impact of axillary nodes contouring variability in breast cancer radiotherapy: An AIRO multi-institutional study
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Leonardi, Maria Cristina, Pepa, Matteo, Gugliandolo, Simone Giovanni, Luraschi, Rosa, Vigorito, Sabrina, Morra, Anna, Dicuonzo, Samantha, Gerardi, Marianna Alessandra, Isaksson, Lars Johannes, Zerella, Maria Alessia, Rosa La Porta, Maria, Cante, Domenico, Petrucci, Edoardo, Marino, Lorenza, Borzì, Giuseppina, Ippolito, Edy, Marrocco, Maristella, Huscher, Alessandra, Chieregato, Matteo, Argenone, Angela, Iadanza, Luciano, De Rose, Fiorenza, Lobefalo, Francesca, Cucciarelli, Francesca, Valenti, Marco, Carmen De Santis, Maria, Cavallo, Anna, Rossi, Francesca, Russo, Serenella, Prisco, Agnese, Guernieri, Marika, Guarnaccia, Roberta, Malatesta, Tiziana, Meaglia, Ilaria, Liotta, Marco, Tabarelli de Fatis, Paola, Palumbo, Isabella, Marcantonini, Marta, Pia Colangione, Sarah, Mezzenga, Emilio, Falivene, Sara, Mormile, Maria, Ravo, Vincenzo, Arrichiello, Cecilia, Fozza, Alessandra, Barbero, Maria Paola, Ivaldi, Giovanni Battista, Catalano, Gianpiero, Vidali, Cristiana, Aristei, Cynthia, Giannitto, Caterina, Ciardo, Delia, Ciabattoni, Antonella, Meattini, Icro, Orecchia, Roberto, Cattani, Federica, Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja, La Porta, Maria Rosa, De Santis, Maria Carmen, and Colangione, Sarah Pia
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- 2022
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4. Stereotactic radioablation for the treatment of ventricular tachycardia: preliminary data and insights from the STRA-MI-VT phase Ib/II study
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Carbucicchio, Corrado, Andreini, Daniele, Piperno, Gaia, Catto, Valentina, Conte, Edoardo, Cattani, Federica, Bonomi, Alice, Rondi, Elena, Piccolo, Consiglia, Vigorito, Sabrina, Ferrari, Annamaria, Pepa, Matteo, Giuliani, Mattia, Mushtaq, Saima, Scarà, Antonio, Calò, Leonardo, Gorini, Alessandra, Veglia, Fabrizio, Pontone, Gianluca, Pepi, Mauro, Tremoli, Elena, Orecchia, Roberto, Pompilio, Giulio, Tondo, Claudio, and Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja
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- 2021
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5. Multi-site evaluation of the Razor stereotactic diode for CyberKnife small field relative dosimetry
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Russo, Serenella, Masi, Laura, Francescon, Paolo, Dicarolo, Paolo, De Martin, Elena, Frassanito, Cristina, Redaelli, Irene, Vigorito, Sabrina, Stasi, Michele, and Mancosu, Pietro
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- 2019
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6. 1831: CyberKnife UH-SBRT for localized PCa: a preliminary report from the PRO-Speed prospective Trial
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Mazzola, Giovanni Carlo, Marvaso, Giulia, Corrao, Giulia, Amin, Karl, Zerini, Dario, Durante, Stefano, Vavassori, Andrea, Vincini, Maria Giulia, Zaffaroni, Mattia, Rondi, Elena, Vigorito, Sabrina, Ronci, Giuseppe, Cattani, Federica, Mistretta, Francesco Alessandro, Luzzago, Stefano, Musi, Gennaro, De Cobelli, Ottavio, and Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja
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- 2024
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7. Atlas-based segmentation in breast cancer radiotherapy: Evaluation of specific and generic-purpose atlases
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Ciardo, Delia, Gerardi, Marianna Alessandra, Vigorito, Sabrina, Morra, Anna, Dell'acqua, Veronica, Diaz, Federico Javier, Cattani, Federica, Zaffino, Paolo, Ricotti, Rosalinda, Spadea, Maria Francesca, Riboldi, Marco, Orecchia, Roberto, Baroni, Guido, Leonardi, Maria Cristina, and Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja
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- 2017
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8. Cyberknife Radiosurgery for Prostate Cancer after Abdominoperineal Resection (CYRANO): The Combined Computer Tomography and Electromagnetic Navigation Guided Transperineal Fiducial Markers Implantation Technique.
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Vavassori, Andrea, Mauri, Giovanni, Mazzola, Giovanni Carlo, Mastroleo, Federico, Bonomo, Guido, Durante, Stefano, Zerini, Dario, Marvaso, Giulia, Corrao, Giulia, Ferrari, Elettra Dorotea, Rondi, Elena, Vigorito, Sabrina, Cattani, Federica, Orsi, Franco, and Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja
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FIDUCIAL markers (Imaging systems) ,ABDOMINOPERINEAL resection ,PROSTATE cancer ,MAGNETIC induction tomography ,RADIOSURGERY ,PATIENT positioning ,PROSTATE cancer patients ,RECTAL cancer - Abstract
In this technical development report, we present the strategic placement of fiducial markers within the prostate under the guidance of computed tomography (CT) and electromagnetic navigation (EMN) for the delivery of ultra-hypofractionated cyberknife (CK) therapy in a patient with localized prostate cancer (PCa) who had previously undergone chemo-radiotherapy for rectal cancer and subsequent abdominoperineal resection due to local recurrence. The patient was positioned in a prone position with a pillow under the pelvis to facilitate access, and an electromagnetic fiducial marker was placed on the patient's skin to establish a stable position. CT scans were performed to plan the procedure, mark virtual points, and simulate the needle trajectory using the navigation system. Local anesthesia was administered, and a 21G needle was used to place the fiducial markers according to the navigation system information. A confirmatory CT scan was obtained to ensure proper positioning. The implantation procedure was safe, without any acute side effects such as pain, hematuria, dysuria, or hematospermia. Our report highlights the ability to use EMN systems to virtually navigate within a pre-acquired imaging dataset in the interventional room, allowing for non-conventional approaches and potentially revolutionizing fiducial marker positioning, offering new perspectives for PCa treatment in selected cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. CyberKnife Ultra-Hypofractionated SBRT for Localized Prostate Cancer with Dose Escalation to the Dominant Intraprostatic Lesion: In Silico Planning Study.
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Mazzola, Giovanni Carlo, Vincini, Maria Giulia, Rondi, Elena, Ronci, Giuseppe, Vigorito, Sabrina, Zaffaroni, Mattia, Corrao, Giulia, Gallo, Salvatore, Zerini, Dario, Durante, Stefano, Mistretta, Francesco Alessandro, Luzzago, Stefano, Ferro, Matteo, Vavassori, Andrea, Cattani, Federica, Musi, Gennaro, De Cobelli, Ottavio, Petralia, Giuseppe, Orecchia, Roberto, and Marvaso, Giulia
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PROSTATE cancer ,MEDIAN (Mathematics) ,CLINICAL trials ,RADIOSURGERY ,ABIRATERONE acetate - Abstract
The aim is to evaluate the feasibility of ultra-hypofractionated (UH) SBRT with CyberKnife
® (CK) radiosurgery (Accuray Inc., Sunnyvale, California, USA) for localized prostate cancer (PCa) with a concomitant focal boost to the dominant intraprostatic lesion (DIL). Patients with intermediate/high-risk PCa, with at least one visible DIL on multi-parametric MRI, were included. For each, two CK-SBRT in silico plans were calculated using 95% and 85% isodose lines (CK-95%, CK-85%) and compared with the UH-DWA plan delivered with VERO® . All plans simulated a SIB prescription of 40 Gy to PTV-DIL and 36.25 Gy to the whole prostate (PTV-prostate) in five fractions every other day. Fifteen patients were considered. All plans reached the primary planning goal (D95% > 95%) and compliance with organs at risk (OARs) constraints. DVH metrics median values increased (p < 0.05) from UH-DWA to CK-85%. The conformity index of PTV-DIL was 1.00 for all techniques, while for PTV-prostate was 0.978, 0.984, and 0.991 for UH-DWA, CK-95%, and CK-85%, respectively. The CK-85% plans were able to reach a maximum dose of 47 Gy to the DIL while respecting OARs constraints. CK-SBRT plus a focal boost to the DIL for localized PCa appears to be feasible. These encouraging dosimetric results are to be confirmed in upcoming clinical trials such as the phase-II "PRO-SPEED" IEO trial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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10. Volumetric Modulation Arc Radiotherapy Compared With Static Gantry Intensity-Modulated Radiotherapy for Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma Tumor: A Feasibility Study
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Scorsetti, Marta, Bignardi, Mario, Clivio, Alessandro, Cozzi, Luca, Fogliata, Antonella, Lattuada, Paola, Mancosu, Pietro, Navarria, Piera, Nicolini, Giorgia, Urso, Gaetano, Vanetti, Eugenio, Vigorito, Sabrina, and Santoro, Armando
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- 2010
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11. Critical Appraisal of Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy in Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy for Metastases to Abdominal Lymph Nodes
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Bignardi, Mario, Cozzi, Luca, Fogliata, Antonella, Lattuada, Paola, Mancosu, Pietro, Navarria, Piera, Urso, Gaetano, Vigorito, Sabrina, and Scorsetti, Marta
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- 2009
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12. Intensity-Modulated Radiotherapy (IMRT) following Conservative Surgery of the Supraglottic Region: Impact on Functional Outcomes.
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Alterio, Daniela, Marani, Simona, Zurlo, Valeria, Zorzi, Stefano Filippo, Ferrari, Annamaria, Volpe, Stefania, Bandi, Francesco, Vigorito, Sabrina, Vincini, Maria Giulia, Gandini, Sara, Gaeta, Aurora, Fodor, Cristiana Iuliana, Casbarra, Alessia, Zaffaroni, Mattia, Starzyńska, Anna, Belgioia, Liliana, Ansarin, Mohssen, Aristei, Cynthia, and Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja
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CONSERVATIVE treatment ,PHYSICAL diagnosis ,ENDOSCOPIC surgery ,RESEARCH methodology ,LARYNGEAL tumors ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,COMPARATIVE studies ,POSITRON emission tomography ,RADIOPHARMACEUTICALS ,RADIOTHERAPY ,COMPUTED tomography ,DEOXY sugars ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ENDOSCOPY - Abstract
Simple Summary: The present study has been suggested by the previous experience of our group showing that patients treated with conventional radiotherapy (named 3D conformal radiotherapy—3D-CRT) performed after conservative surgery (CS) for tumors of the supraglottic regions experienced a high rate of severe long-term toxicity. Therefore, we reported the toxicity profile of a similar cohort of patients treated with a high-precision radiotherapy technique (named intensity-modulated radiotherapy—IMRT). Moreover, to investigate the advantage of IMRT, we performed a comparison with a historical cohort treated with 3D-CRT. Results showed that patients treated with IMRT achieved a very low toxicity profile and comparison with 3D-CRT was in favor of IMRTs. Therefore, we believe that the results of the present study provide preliminary findings on the potential of IMRT in improving the toxicity profile of patients treated with surgical organ preservation strategies for laryngeal tumors. The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) on the toxicity profile of patients treated with conservative surgery (CS) of the supraglottic (SG) region. Data on patients treated with CS and postoperative radiotherapy (PORT)-IMRT were prospectively collected. Results. In total, 20 patients were analyzed. Of these, six patients (35%) required the positioning of a temporary tracheostomy. The functional larynx preservation rate was 95%. Females had a higher risk of both endoscopic intervention and chondronecrosis, while the median age was significantly higher in patients requiring enteral nutrition. The incidence of long-term severe toxicities was lower in patients treated with IMRT than in the historical 3D-CRT cohort. Patients who had received PORT-IMRT achieved a lower rate of permanent laryngeal and swallowing dysfunctions. Overall, results from the comparison with the historical 3D-CRT cohort favor the IMRTs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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13. Survey of computed tomography techniques and absorbed dose in Italian hospitals: a comparison between two methods to estimate the dose–length product and the effective dose and to verify fulfilment of the diagnostic reference levels
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Origgi, Daniela, Vigorito, Sabrina, Villa, Gaetano, Bellomi, Massimo, and Tosi, Giampiero
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- 2006
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14. CyberKnife radiotherapy for orbital metastases: A single-center experience on 24 lesions.
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Riva, Giulia, Augugliaro, Matteo, Piperno, Gaia, Ferrari, Annamaria, Rondi, Elena, Vigorito, Sabrina, Ciardo, Delia, Orecchia, Roberto, and Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja
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- 2019
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15. Evaluation of target coverage and margins adequacy during CyberKnife Lung Optimized Treatment.
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Ricotti, Rosalinda, Seregni, Matteo, Ciardo, Delia, Vigorito, Sabrina, Rondi, Elena, Piperno, Gaia, Ferrari, Annamaria, Zerella, Maria Alessia, Arculeo, Simona, Francia, Claudia Maria, Sibio, Daniela, Cattani, Federica, De Marinis, Filippo, Spaggiari, Lorenzo, Orecchia, Roberto, Riboldi, Marco, Baroni, Guido, and Jereczek‐Fossa, Barbara Alicja
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MOTION detectors ,KINECT (Motion sensor) ,TUMOR treatment ,TUMOR diagnosis ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging - Abstract
Purpose : Evaluation of target coverage and verification of safety margins, in motion management strategies implemented by Lung Optimized Treatment (LOT) module in CyberKnife system. Methods: Three fiducial‐less motion management strategies provided by LOT can be selected according to tumor visibility in the X ray images acquired during treatment. In 2‐view modality the tumor is visible in both X ray images and full motion tracking is performed. In 1‐view modality the tumor is visible in a single X ray image, therefore, motion tracking is combined with an internal target volume (ITV)‐based margin expansion. In 0‐view modality the lesion is not visible, consequently the treatment relies entirely on an ITV‐based approach. Data from 30 patients treated in 2‐view modality were selected providing information on the three‐dimensional tumor motion in correspondence to each X ray image. Treatments in 1‐view and 0‐view modalities were simulated by processing log files and planning volumes. Planning target volume (PTV) margins were defined according to the tracking modality: end‐exhale clinical target volume (CTV) + 3 mm in 2‐view and ITV + 5 mm in 0‐view. In the 1‐view scenario, the ITV encompasses only tumor motion along the non‐visible direction. Then, non‐uniform ITV to PTV margins were applied: 3 mm and 5 mm in the visible and non‐visible direction, respectively. We defined the coverage of each voxel of the CTV as the percentage of X ray images where such voxel was included in the PTV. In 2‐view modality coverage was calculated as the intersection between the CTV centred on the imaged target position and the PTV centred on the predicted target position, as recorded in log files. In 1‐view modality, coverage was calculated as the intersection between the CTV centred on the imaged target position and the PTV centred on the projected predictor data. In 0‐view modality coverage was calculated as the intersection between the CTV centred on the imaged target position and the non‐moving PTV. Similar to dose‐volume histogram, CTV coverage‐volume histograms (defined as CVH) were derived for each patient and treatment modality. The geometric coverages of the 90% and 95% of CTV volume (C90, C95, respectively) were evaluated. Patient‐specific optimal margins (ensuring C95 ≥ 95%) were computed retrospectively. Results: The median ± interquartile‐rage of C90 and C95 for upper lobe lesions was 99.1 ± 0.6% and 99.0 ± 3.1%, whereas they were 98.9 ± 4.2% and 97.8 ± 7.5% for lower and middle lobe tumors. In 2‐view, 1‐view and 0‐view modality, adopted margins ensured C95 ≥ 95% in 70%, 85% and 63% of cases and C95 ≥ 90% in 90%, 88% and 83% of cases, respectively. In 2‐view, 1‐view and 0‐view a reduction in margins still ensured C95 ≥ 95% in 33%, 78% and 59% of cases, respectively. Conclusions: CTV coverage analysis provided an a‐posteriori evaluation of the treatment geometric accuracy and allowed a quantitative verification of the adequacy of the PTV margins applied in CyberKnife LOT treatments offering guidance in the selection of CTV margins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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16. CyberKnife beam output factor measurements: A multi-site and multi-detector study.
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Masi, Laura, Russo, Serenella, Francescon, Paolo, Doro, Raffaela, Frassanito, Maria Cristina, Fumagalli, Maria Luisa, Reggiori, Giacomo, Marinelli, Marco, Redaelli, Irene, Pimpinella, Maria, Verona Rinati, Gianluca, Siragusa, Carmelo, Vigorito, Sabrina, and Mancosu, Pietro
- Abstract
Purpose New promising detectors are available for measuring small field size output factors (OFs). This study focused on a multicenter evaluation of two new generation detectors for OF measurements on CyberKnife systems. Methods PTW-60019 microDiamond and W1 plastic scintillation detector (PSD) were used to measure OFs on eight CyberKnife units of various generations for 5–60 mm fixed cones. MicroDiamond and PSD OF were compared to routinely used silicon diodes data corrected applying published Monte Carlo (MC) factors. PSD data were corrected for Čerenkov Light Ratio (CLR). The uncertainties related to CLR determination were estimated. Results Considering OF values averaged over all centers, the differences between MC corrected diode and the other two detectors were within 1.5%. MicroDiamond exhibited an over-response of 1.3% at 7.5 mm and a trend inversion at 5 mm with a difference of 0.2%. This behavior was consistent among the different units. OFs measured by PSD slightly under-responded compared to MC corrected diode for the smaller cones and the differences were within 1%. The observed CLR variability was 2.5% and the related variation in OF values was 1.9%. Conclusion This study indicates that CyberKnife microDiamond OF require corrections below 2%. The results are enhanced by the consistency observed among different units. Scintillator shows a good agreement to MC corrected diode but CLR determination remains critical requiring further investigations. The results emphasized the value of a multi-center validation over a single center approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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17. Re-irradiation of metastatic spinal cord compression: A feasibility study by volumetric-modulated arc radiotherapy for in-field recurrence creating a dosimetric hole on the central canal
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Mancosu, Pietro, Navarria, Piera, Bignardi, Mario, Cozzi, Luca, Fogliata, Antonella, Lattuada, Paola, Santoro, Armando, Urso, Gaetano, Vigorito, Sabrina, and Scorsetti, Marta
- Published
- 2010
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18. Multicenter evaluation of a synthetic single-crystal diamond detector for CyberKnife small field size output factors.
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Russo, Serenella, Masi, Laura, Francescon, Paolo, Frassanito, Maria Cristina, Fumagalli, Maria Luisa, Marinelli, Marco, Falco, Maria Daniela, Martinotti, Anna Stefania, Pimpinella, Maria, Reggiori, Giacomo, Verona Rinati, Gianluca, Vigorito, Sabrina, and Mancosu, Pietro
- Abstract
Purpose The aim of the present work was to evaluate small field size output factors (OFs) using the latest diamond detector commercially available, PTW-60019 microDiamond, over different CyberKnife systems. OFs were measured also by silicon detectors routinely used by each center, considered as reference. Methods Five Italian CyberKnife centers performed OFs measurements for field sizes ranging from 5 to 60 mm, defined by fixed circular collimators (5 centers) and by Iris ™ variable aperture collimator (4 centers). Setup conditions were: 80 cm source to detector distance, and 1.5 cm depth in water. To speed up measurements two diamond detectors were used and their equivalence was evaluated. MonteCarlo (MC) correction factors for silicon detectors were used for comparing the OF measurements. Results Considering OFs values averaged over all centers, diamond data resulted lower than uncorrected silicon diode ones. The agreement between diamond and MC corrected silicon values was within 0.6% for all fixed circular collimators. Relative differences between microDiamond and MC corrected silicon diodes data for Iris ™ collimator were lower than 1.0% for all apertures in the totality of centers. The two microDiamond detectors showed similar characteristics, in agreement with the technical specifications. Conclusions Excellent agreement between microDiamond and MC corrected silicon diode detectors OFs was obtained for both collimation systems fixed cones and Iris ™ , demonstrating the microDiamond could be a suitable detector for CyberKnife commissioning and routine checks. These results obtained in five centers suggest that for CyberKnife systems microDiamond can be used without corrections even at the smallest field size. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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19. Geometric contour variation in clinical target volume of axillary lymph nodes in breast cancer radiotherapy: an AIRO multi-institutional study.
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Leonardi, Maria Cristina, Pepa, Matteo, Gugliandolo, Simone Giovanni, Luraschi, Rosa, Vigorito, Sabrina, Rojas, Damaris Patricia, La Porta, Maria Rosa, Cante, Domenico, Petrucci, Edoardo, Marino, Lorenza, Borzì, Giuseppina, Ippolito, Edy, Marrocco, Maristella, Huscher, Alessandra, Chieregato, Matteo, Argenone, Angela, Iadanza, Luciano, De Rose, Fiorenza, Lobefalo, Francesca, and Cucciarelli, Francesca
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LYMPH node cancer ,MULTIHOSPITAL systems ,CANCER radiotherapy ,COMPUTED tomography ,BREAST cancer ,RADIOBIOLOGY - Abstract
To determine interobserver variability in axillary nodal contouring in breast cancer (BC) radiotherapy (RT) by comparing the clinical target volume of participating single centres (SC-CTV) with a gold-standard CTV (GS-CTV). The GS-CTV of three patients (P1, P2, P3) with increasing complexity was created in DICOM format from the median contour of axillary CTVs drawn by BC experts, validated using the simultaneous truth and performance-level estimation and peer-reviewed. GS-CTVs were compared with the correspondent SC-CTVs drawn by radiation oncologists, using validated metrics and a total score (TS) integrating all of them. Eighteen RT centres participated in the study. Comparative analyses revealed that, on average, the SC-CTVs were smaller than GS-CTV for P1 and P2 (by −29.25% and −27.83%, respectively) and larger for P3 (by +12.53%). The mean Jaccard index was greater for P1 and P2 compared to P3, but the overlap extent value was around 0.50 or less. Regarding nodal levels, L4 showed the highest concordance with the GS. In the intra-patient comparison, L2 and L3 achieved lower TS than L4. Nodal levels showed discrepancy with GS, which was not statistically significant for P1, and negligible for P2, while P3 had the worst agreement. DICE similarity coefficient did not exceed the minimum threshold for agreement of 0.70 in all the measurements. Substantial differences were observed between SC- and GS-CTV, especially for P3 with altered arm setup. L2 and L3 were the most critical levels. The study highlighted these key points to address. The present study compares, by means of validated geometric indexes, manual segmentations of axillary lymph nodes in breast cancer from different observers and different institutions made on radiotherapy planning CT images. Assessing such variability is of paramount importance, as geometric uncertainties might lead to incorrect dosimetry and compromise oncological outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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20. 2613: Preoperative single-fraction RT for earlystage BC: preliminary results from CRYSTAL phase I/II study.
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Zerella, Maria Alessia, Zaffaroni, Mattia, Mazzola, Giovanni Carlo, Ronci, Giuseppe, Dicuonzo, Samantha, Rojas, Damaris Patricia, Morra, Anna, Gerardi, Marianna Alessandra, Fodor, Cristiana, Rondi, Elena, Vigorito, Sabrina, Penco, Silvia, Sargenti, Manuela, Vicini, Elisa, Galimberti, Viviana Enrica, Gandini, Sara, Cursano, Giulia, De Camilli, Elisa, Cattani, Federica, and Veronesi, Paolo
- Subjects
- *
CRYSTALS - Published
- 2024
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21. 1009: PARP-i combined with SBRT in oligoprogressive ovarian cancer: a multicentre retrospective experience.
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Durante, Stefano, Cuccia, Francesco, Lazzari, Roberta, Rigo, Michele, Camminiti, Giovanni, Mastroleo, Federico, Vigorito, Sabrina, Cattani, Federica, Ferrera, Giuseppe, Chiantera, Vito, Alongi, Filippo, Colombo, Nicoletta, and Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja
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OVARIAN cancer - Published
- 2024
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22. Brain metastases from NSCLC treated with stereotactic radiotherapy: prediction mismatch between two different radiomic platforms.
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Carloni, Gianluca, Garibaldi, Cristina, Marvaso, Giulia, Volpe, Stefania, Zaffaroni, Mattia, Pepa, Matteo, Isaksson, Lars Johannes, Colombo, Francesca, Durante, Stefano, Lo Presti, Giuliana, Raimondi, Sara, Spaggiari, Lorenzo, de Marinis, Filippo, Piperno, Gaia, Vigorito, Sabrina, Gandini, Sara, Cremonesi, Marta, Positano, Vincenzo, and Jereczek-Fossa, Barbara Alicja
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STEREOTACTIC radiotherapy , *NON-small-cell lung carcinoma , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *RADIOMICS , *FEATURE extraction - Abstract
[Display omitted] • Using different platforms for radiomic extraction affects models' performance. • Variables' relevance is inconsistent among platforms. • MRI features are correlated to radiosurgery response in brain metastases from NSCLC. • Higher number of radiomic features does not necessarily imply better performance. Radiomics enables the mining of quantitative features from medical images. The influence of the radiomic feature extraction software on the final performance of models is still a poorly understood topic. This study aimed to investigate the ability of radiomic features extracted by two different radiomic platforms to predict clinical outcomes in patients treated with radiosurgery for brain metastases from non-small cell lung cancer. We developed models integrating pre-treatment magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-derived radiomic features and clinical data. Pre-radiotherapy gadolinium enhanced axial T1-weighted MRI scans were used. MRI images were re-sampled, intensity-shifted, and histogram-matched before radiomic extraction by means of two different platforms (PyRadiomics and SOPHiA Radiomics). We adopted LASSO Cox regression models for multivariable analyses by creating radiomic, clinical, and combined models using three survival clinical endpoints (local control, distant progression, and overall survival). The statistical analysis was repeated 50 times with different random seeds and the median concordance index was used as performance metric of the models. We analysed 276 metastases from 148 patients. The use of the two platforms resulted in differences in both the quality and the number of extractable features. That led to mismatches in terms of end-to-end performance, statistical significance of radiomic scores, and clinical covariates found significant in combined models. This study shed new light on how extracting radiomic features from the same images using two different platforms could yield several discrepancies. That may lead to acute consequences on drawing conclusions, comparing results across the literature, and translating radiomics into clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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23. Stereotactic radiotherapy for managing ovarian cancer oligoprogression under poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors (PARPi).
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Durante S, Cuccia F, Rigo M, Caminiti G, Mastroleo F, Lazzari R, Corrao G, Caruso G, Vigorito S, Cattani F, Ferrera G, Chiantera V, Alongi F, Colombo N, and Jereczek-Fossa BA
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Disease Progression, Aged, 80 and over, Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial drug therapy, Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial radiotherapy, Carcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial therapy, Progression-Free Survival, Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase Inhibitors administration & dosage, Ovarian Neoplasms drug therapy, Ovarian Neoplasms pathology, Ovarian Neoplasms therapy, Ovarian Neoplasms radiotherapy, Radiosurgery methods, Radiosurgery adverse effects
- Abstract
Objective: Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors (PARPi) have become a new standard of care for the maintenance treatment of advanced epithelial ovarian cancer. This study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of combining stereotactic body radiotherapy with PARPi continuation as a strategy to treat ovarian cancer oligoprogression on PARPi., Methods: This is a multicenter retrospective study including ovarian cancer patients treated with stereotactic body radiotherapy and PARPi continuation for oligoprogression under PARPi maintenance therapy between June 2012 and May 2023 in three Italian centers. PARPi treatment was continued until further disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. The primary endpoint was the next-line systemic therapy-free interval. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to assess local control, progression-free survival, and overall survival. Univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses were performed to evaluate potential clinical outcomes predictors., Results: 46 patients were included, with a total of 89 lesions treated over 63 radiotherapy treatments. Lymph nodes were the most frequently treated lesions (80, 89.9%), followed by visceral lesions (8, 9%) and one case with a bone lesion (1.1%). Median follow-up was 25.9 months (range 2.8-122). The median next-line systemic therapy-free interval was 12.4 months (95% CI 8.3 to 19.5). A number of prior chemotherapy lines greater than five was significantly associated with a reduced next-line systemic therapy-free interval (HR 3.21, 95% CI 1.11 to 9.32, p=0.032). At the time of analysis, 32 (69.6%) patients started a new systemic therapy regimen, while 14 (30.4%) remained on the PARPi regimen. The 2-year progression-free survival, local failure-free survival, and overall survival rates were 10.7%, 78.1%, and 76.5%, respectively. Four patients (8.7%) experienced acute toxicity with G1 gastrointestinal events., Conclusion: Stereotactic body radiotherapy combined with PARPi continuation may be an effective and safe strategy for managing ovarian cancer patients with oligoprogression on PARPi maintenance therapy. Prospective research is warranted to shed more light on this approach., Competing Interests: Competing interests: BAJ-F has received speakers fees from Roche, Bayer, Janssen, Carl Zeiss, Ipsen, Accuray, Astellas, Elekta, and IBA Astra Zeneca, all outside the current project., (© IGCS and ESGO 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2024
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24. Post-operative intensity-modulated vs 3D conformal radiotherapy after conservative surgery for laryngeal tumours of the supraglottic region: a dosimetric analysis on 20 patients.
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Alterio D, Marani S, Vigorito S, Zurlo V, Zorzi SF, Ferrari A, Volpe S, Bandi F, Vincini MG, Gandini S, Gaeta A, Fodor CI, Casbarra A, Zaffaroni M, Starzynska A, Belgioia L, Ansarin M, Aristei C, and Jereczek-Fossa BA
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Retrospective Studies, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Radiotherapy Dosage, Adult, Postoperative Care methods, Laryngeal Neoplasms radiotherapy, Laryngeal Neoplasms surgery, Radiotherapy, Conformal methods, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated methods
- Abstract
Objective: To perform a dosimetric comparison between intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) and 3D conformal radiotherapy in patients with locally advanced (stage III and IV) tumours of the supraglottic region treated with conservative surgery and post-operative radiotherapy., Methods: An in-silico plan using a 3D conformal shrinking field technique was retrospectively produced for 20 patients and compared with actually delivered IMRT plans. Eighteen structures (arytenoids, constrictor muscles, base of tongue, floor of mouth, pharyngeal axis, oral cavity, submandibular glands and muscles of the swallowing functional units [SFU]) were considered., Results: IMRT allowed a reduction of maximum and mean doses to 9 and 14 structures, respectively (p < .05)., Conclusions: IMRT achieved a reduction of unnecessary dose to the remnant larynx and the majority of surrounding SFUs. Further prospective analyses and correlations with functional clinical outcomes are required to confirm these dosimetric findings., (Copyright © 2024 Società Italiana di Otorinolaringoiatria e Chirurgia Cervico-Facciale, Rome, Italy.)
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- 2024
- Full Text
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25. Impact of inter-observer variability on first axillary level dosimetry in breast cancer radiotherapy: An AIRO multi-institutional study.
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Leonardi MC, Pepa M, Zaffaroni M, Vincini MG, Luraschi R, Vigorito S, Morra A, Dicuonzo S, Mazzola GC, Gerardi MA, Zerella MA, Cante D, Petrucci E, Borzì G, Marrocco M, Chieregato M, Iadanza L, Lobefalo F, Valenti M, Cavallo A, Russo S, Guernieri M, Malatesta T, Meaglia I, Liotta M, Palumbo I, Marcantonini M, Mezzenga E, Falivene S, Arrichiello C, Barbero MP, Ivaldi GB, Catalano G, Vidali C, Giannitto C, Ciabattoni A, Meattini I, Aristei C, Orecchia R, Cattani F, and Jereczek-Fossa BA
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted, Radiotherapy Dosage, Observer Variation, Breast, Breast Neoplasms radiotherapy, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated
- Abstract
This study quantified the incidental dose to the first axillary level (L1) in locoregional treatment plan for breast cancer. Eighteen radiotherapy centres contoured L1-L4 on three different patients (P1,2,3), created the L2-L4 planning target volume (single centre planning target volume, SC-PTV) and elaborated a locoregional treatment plan. The L2-L4 gold standard clinical target volume (CTV) along with the gold standard L1 contour (GS-L1) were created by an expert consensus. The SC-PTV was then replaced by the GS-PTV and the incidental dose to GS-L1 was measured. Dosimetric data were analysed with Kruskal-Wallis test. Plans were intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT)-based. P3 with 90° arm setup had statistically significant higher L1 dose across the board than P1 and P2, with the mean dose (Dmean) reaching clinical significance. Dmean of P1 and P2 was consistent with the literature (77.4% and 74.7%, respectively). The incidental dose depended mostly on L1 proportion included in the breast fields, underlining the importance of the setup, even in case of IMRT., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestThe authors declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Division of Radiotherapy IEO received research funding from AIRC (Italian Association for Cancer Research) and Fondazione IEO-CCM (Istituto Europeo di Oncologia-Centro Cardiologico Monzino) (all outside the current project). BAJF received speakers fee from Roche, Bayer, Janssen, Carl Zeiss, Ipsen, Accuray, Astellas, Elekta, IBA Astra Zeneca (all outside the current project). MCL received a speaker fee from Accuray Inc (outside the current project). SD received speakers fee from Accuray Asia (outside the current project). MGV was supported by a research fellowship from AIRC entitled “Radioablation ± hormonotherapy for prostate cancer oligorecurrences (RADIOSA trial): potential of imaging and biology”, registered at ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03940235, approved by the Ethics Committee of IRCCS Istituto Europeo di Oncologia and Centro Cardiologico Monzino (IEO-997). IEO, the European Institute of Oncology IRCCS, was partially supported by the Italian Ministry of Health with Ricerca Corrente and 5x1000 funds and by institutional grants from Accuray Inc. The sponsors did not play any role in the study design, collection, analysis and interpretation of data, nor in the writing of the manuscript, nor in the decision to submit the manuscript for publication. The remaining authors declare no conflict of interest that are relevant to the content of this article.
- Published
- 2023
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26. Neobladder and ablative pelvic radiotherapy: still a taboo?
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Bergamaschi L, Gerardi MA, Zaffaroni M, Augugliaro M, Vigorito S, Rondi E, Della Vigna P, Varano G, Fumagalli Romario U, Biffi R, Picardi EEE, Ferrari A, and Jereczek-Fossa BA
- Subjects
- Clinical Decision-Making, Cystectomy adverse effects, Cystectomy methods, Disease Management, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Metastasis, Neoplasm Staging, Organ Sparing Treatments, Organs at Risk, Pelvis radiation effects, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Treatment Outcome, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms complications, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms diagnosis, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms surgery, Postoperative Care, Radiofrequency Therapy adverse effects, Radiofrequency Therapy methods, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms radiotherapy
- Abstract
The presence of a neobladder constitutes a limitation for the radiation oncologist, as there is no clear evidence about its tolerance to radiotherapy (RT). The limited literature only concerns the conventional postoperative treatment in patients with bladder cancer after cystectomy. Here we report a case of a patient with neobladder who underwent a stereotactic RT for a pelvic recurrence of disease, with response to treatment and no toxicity to the neobladder. This case represents a promising example of the chance to perform RT with ablative intent, using advanced techniques, even on lesions close to the neobladder.
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- 2021
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27. Soft tissue necrosis in patients treated with transoral robotic surgery and postoperative radiotherapy: preliminary results.
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Alterio D, Tagliabue M, Muto M, Zorzi S, Volpe S, Gandini S, Sibio D, Bayır Ö, Marvaso G, Ferrari A, Bruschini R, Cossu Rocca M, Preda L, Marangoni R, Starzynska A, Vigorito S, Ansarin M, and Jereczek-Fossa BA
- Subjects
- Aged, Biopsy, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Head and Neck Neoplasms complications, Head and Neck Neoplasms surgery, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Necrosis diagnosis, Postoperative Care, Radiotherapy methods, Radiotherapy Dosage, Retrospective Studies, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Necrosis etiology, Postoperative Complications, Radiotherapy adverse effects, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects
- Abstract
Objective: Postoperative radiotherapy (PORT) is indicated in almost two-thirds of patients treated with transoral robotic surgery (TORS) for head and neck tumors. The aim of this study was to quantify the toxicity profile of patients treated with PORT after TORS in oropharyngeal and supraglottic laryngeal cancer focusing on soft tissue necrosis (STN)., Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 28 patients. Acute and late toxicity were examined. Incidence and severity of STN were recorded., Results: No patient experienced acute grade 3 skin or mucosal toxicity; 1 patient had grade 3 dysphagia. At 12 months, no evaluated patient required enteral nutrition and 2 patients had tracheostomy. STN occurred in 4 (14%) patients: 3 out of 4 (75%) patients with STN had diabetes, whereas 6 out of 13 (25%) patients without STN had diabetes ( p = 0.05)., Conclusion: We found an acceptable toxicity profile of PORT performed after a TORS procedure. Diabetes mellitus might be a risk factor for STN.
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- 2020
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28. Second pelvic recurrence of rectal cancer successfully treated with a re-reirradiation (3rd radiation course).
- Author
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Dell'Acqua V, Ferrari A, Ciardo D, Piperno G, Vigorito S, Leonardi M, Dicuonzo S, Orecchia R, and Jereczek-Fossa BA
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- Combined Modality Therapy methods, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Pelvis radiation effects, Radiotherapy Dosage, Re-Irradiation methods, Salvage Therapy methods, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local radiotherapy, Rectal Neoplasms radiotherapy
- Abstract
Introduction: In case of pelvic recurrence of colorectal cancer, reirradiation of previously irradiated patients may increase the rate of salvage radical resection. Due to the high cumulative dose, one of the main concerns is radiation-induced lumbosacral plexopathy. This report describes multiple irradiations of a lesion adjacent to the lumbosacral plexus, using a highly selective technique, which allows optimal sparing of such a critical structure., Case Description: A 53-year-old woman treated in 2008 for a locally advanced rectal adenocarcinoma with preoperative pelvic irradiation and concomitant chemotherapy followed by surgery had disease recurrence in 2011 and underwent a second course of pelvic radiotherapy. In December 2015, magnetic resonance imaging showed a single local recurrence infiltrating the muscle next to the right lumbosacral plexus and close to the cauda equina. Repeat reirradiation was planned. The total dose deriving from the previous treatment plans was assessed by nonrigid image registration using the dedicated tool implemented in MIM 6.1.7 (MIMvista Corp., Cleveland, OH). The treatment was performed with Cyberknife (Accuray, Sunnyvale, CA) with a schedule of 20 Gy in 5 fractions (4 Gy per fraction). The dose was prescribed to 70% isodose and target coverage was 97%. Two months after the treatment, magnetic resonance imaging showed a decreased signal and stable disease with no change in tumor size., Conclusions: This case report suggests that pelvic re-reirradiation might be a possibility in very carefully selected cases of rectal cancer, using high-precision radiation modalities.
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- 2018
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29. Hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy and radiosurgery for the treatment of patients with radioresistant brain metastases.
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Scorsetti M, Facoetti A, Navarria P, Bignardi M, De Santis M, Ninone SA, Lattuada P, Urso G, Vigorito S, Mancosu P, and Del Vecchio M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Brain Neoplasms radiotherapy, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Carcinoma, Renal Cell radiotherapy, Carcinoma, Renal Cell secondary, Carcinoma, Renal Cell surgery, Carcinoma, Renal Cell therapy, Combined Modality Therapy, Dose Fractionation, Radiation, Female, Humans, Kidney Neoplasms pathology, Kidney Neoplasms radiotherapy, Kidney Neoplasms surgery, Kidney Neoplasms therapy, Male, Melanoma radiotherapy, Melanoma secondary, Melanoma surgery, Melanoma therapy, Middle Aged, Radiosurgery, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted, Retrospective Studies, Sarcoma radiotherapy, Sarcoma secondary, Sarcoma surgery, Sarcoma therapy, Young Adult, Brain Neoplasms secondary, Brain Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Aim: To evaluate the efficacy of different radiotherapy treatment modalities in radioresistant brain metastasis., Patients and Methods: A retrospective analysis was conducted on 78 patients with brain metastases from melanoma, sarcoma, or renal cell carcinoma primary tumours who underwent radiosurgery (20 Gy) and/or hypofractionated stereotactic radiotherapy (6x4 Gy or 7x4 Gy) with or without whole-brain radiotherapy at our Center., Results: The actuarial median survival times for melanoma, renal cell carcinoma and sarcoma were 23, 22 and 7 months respectively, with a significant correlation to recursive partitioning analysis class., Discussion: Our results show that these treatments were effective both in symptom palliation and in improving survival, suggesting that although outcomes generally remained poor in this study population, it is possible and important to control intracranial brain metastases.
- Published
- 2009
30. Digital mammography: quality and dose control.
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Di Maggio C, Gambaccini M, Gennaro G, Baldelli P, Taibi A, Chersevani R, Aimonetto S, Rossetti V, Origgi D, Vigorito S, Contento G, Angelini L, and Maggi S
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- Humans, Phantoms, Imaging, Radiation Dosage, Reproducibility of Results, Time Factors, Mammography standards, Radiographic Image Enhancement
- Abstract
Purpose: For almost 3 years, Radiologists and Physicists from Padova and Ferrara Universities have collaborated together, with the aim of collecting and comparing experimental data useful to define the most significant parameters for quality controls in digital mammography. Successively, radiologists and physicists working in other sites where a digital mammography unit was installed joined the work-group., Materials and Methods: In this study we report the results obtained from measurements of linearity, uniformity, short- and long-term reproducibility, AEC stability performed on 5 digital equipment by using a simple test object. X-ray beam quality and tube yield were preliminarily checked in such a way that possible uncertainties of digital system responses could be separated from those due to differences among X-ray tubes., Results: Results showed that the equipment considered, comparable in terms of both beam quality (HVL) and tube yield, always displayed linear response and reproducibility errors lower than 5%. Uniformity was very good and the grey level compensation as a function of exposure parameters remained within 5%. Differences in choice of parameters by exposure control system (AOP) were emphasised, especially for crossing between track/filter combinations (from Mo/Mo to Mo/Rh and from Mo/Rh to Rh/Rh); those differences were attributed to the +/-2 mm tolerance of breast thickness measurement (mechanically obtained) greater than the AOP tolerance (+/-1 mm)., Discussion and Conclusions: Obtained results can be useful, as comparison and reference values, for users employing a digital mammography unit of the same kind reported in this paper. Moreover, the same results could be used as "orientation" also by other users having different digital mammography technologies, whose operation should be nevertheless specifically studied and understood in order to find the most useful parameters for quality controls. The acquired experience clearly showed us that years of investigations will be necessary in order to be able to write reliable protocols. This should induce people to contemplate the necessity of not improvising "theoretical" protocols, that are unreliable and dangerous for their negative clinical implications.
- Published
- 2004
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