111 results on '"DI MAIO, M"'
Search Results
2. Overall Survival is not the only Endpoint to Measure Clinical Relevance
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Addeo A, Picardi C, and Di Maio M
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Overall survival ,Measure (physics) ,Clinical significance ,business - Published
- 2018
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3. QoL is a cool tool
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Procaccio, L., Lonardi, S., Loupakis, F., Di Maio, M., and Oncology, Medical
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychometrics ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Quality of Life ,Oncology ,Quality of life ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,medicine ,business - Published
- 2017
4. Is epirubicin effective in first-line chemotherapy of metastatic breast cancer (MBC) after an epirubicin-containing adjuvant treatment? A single centre phase III trial
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PACILIO C, MORABITO A, NUZZO F, GRAVINA A, LABONIA V, LANDI G, ROSSI E, MAIO E, DI MAIO M, D'AIUTO G, BOTTI G, NORMANNO N, CHIODINI, Paolo, GALLO, Ciro, PERRONE, F, DE MATTEIS A, NCI NAPLES BREAST CANCER GROUP, Pacilio, C, Morabito, A, Nuzzo, F, Gravina, A, Labonia, V, Landi, G, Rossi, E, De, Maio, E, DI MAIO, M, D'Aiuto, G, Botti, G, Normanno, N, Chiodini, Paolo, Gallo, Ciro, Perrone, F, DE MATTEIS, A, and NCI NAPLES BREAST CANCER, Group
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Adult ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Anthracycline ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast Neoplasms ,Docetaxel ,Metastasis ,Breast cancer ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Clinical Studies ,Humans ,Medicine ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,adjuvant anthracyclines ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Neoadjuvant therapy ,randomised trials ,Chemotherapy ,Antibiotics, Antineoplastic ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,epirubicin ,Metastatic breast cancer ,Female ,Taxoids ,metastatic breast cancer ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,medicine.drug ,Epirubicin - Abstract
The aim of the study was to demonstrate the superiority of docetaxel and epirubicin vs docetaxel alone as first-line therapy in metastatic breast cancer patients pretreated with adjuvant or neoadjuvant epirubicin. We compared single agent docetaxel 100 mg m−2 (D) with the combination of docetaxel 80 mg m−2 and epirubicin 75 mg m−2 (ED). The response rate (72 vs 79%), the progression-free survival (median 9 vs 11 months) and the overall survival (median 18 vs 21 months) were not significantly different between the ED (n=26) and D arms (n=25), respectively. Leucopaenia, nausea and stomatitis were significantly worse with ED. In conclusion, epirubicin should not be administered in combination with taxanes in metastatic breast cancer patients relapsed after an anthracycline-based adjuvant or neoadjuvant therapy.
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- 2006
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5. Phase I-II trial of gemcitabine-based first-line chemotherapies for small cell lung cancer in elderly patients with performance status 0-2: the G-STEP trial
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Gridelli C., Gallo C., Morabito A., Iaffaioli R. V., Favaretto A., Isa L., Barbera S., Gamucci T., Ceribelli A., Filipazzi V., Maione P., Rossi A., Barletta E., Signoriello S., De Maio E., Piccirillo M. C., Di Maio M., Rocco G., Vecchione A., Perrone F., Cesare Gridelli, Paolo Maione, Antonio Rossi, Ciro Gallo, Giuseppe Signoriello, Paolo Chiodini, Simona Signoriello, Francesco Perrone, Massimo Di Maio, Maria Carmela Piccirillo, Ermelinda De Maio, Jane Bryce, Alessandro Morabito, Raffaele Costanzo, Gaetano Rocco, Rosario Vincenzo Iaffaioli, Emiddio Barletta, Roberta Formato, Aldo Vecchione, Adolfo Favaretto, Giulia Pasello, Cristina Magro, Luciano Isa, Raffaele Venezia, Mario Comandè, Santi Barbera, Francesco Renda, Antonio Volpintesta, Teresa Gamucci, Maria Anna Giampaolo, Giovanni Mansueto, Anna Ceribelli, Ilaria Carbone, Domenica Pellegrini, Virginio Filipazzi, Elena Piazza, Sabrina Ferrario, Vittorina Zagonel, Giuditta di Isernia, Marco Ciaparrone, Francovito Piantedosi, Fabiana Vitiello, Nicolò Borsellino, Maria Elia Vitale, Luigi Brancaccio, Sergio Spina, Maria Rosaria Valerio, Raffaella Felletti, Salvatore Tafuto, Marianna Giampaglia, Rita Migliorino, Francesco Rosetti, Francesco Carrozza, Nestore Rossi, Mario Spatafora, Manlio Mencoboni, Ernest Marshall, Gridelli, C, Gallo, Ciro, Morabito, A, Iaffaioli, Rv, Favaretto, A, Isa, L, Barbera, S, Gamucci, T, Ceribelli, A, Filipazzi, V, Maione, P, Rossi, A, Barletta, E, Signoriello, Simona, De Maio, E, Piccirillo, Mc, Di Maio, M, Rocco, G, Vecchione, A, Perrone, F., Gridelli C., Gallo C., Morabito A., Iaffaioli R.V., Favaretto A., Isa L., Barbera S., Gamucci T., Ceribelli A., Filipazzi V., Maione P., Rossi A., Barletta E., Signoriello S., De Maio E., Piccirillo M.C., Di Maio M., Rocco G., Vecchione A., Perrone F., and Cesare Gridelli, Paolo Maione, Antonio Rossi, Ciro Gallo, Giuseppe Signoriello, Paolo Chiodini, Simona Signoriello, Francesco Perrone, Massimo Di Maio, Maria Carmela Piccirillo, Ermelinda De Maio, Jane Bryce, Alessandro Morabito, Raffaele Costanzo, Gaetano Rocco, Rosario Vincenzo Iaffaioli, Emiddio Barletta, Roberta Formato, Aldo Vecchione, Adolfo Favaretto, Giulia Pasello, Cristina Magro, Luciano Isa, Raffaele Venezia, Mario Comandè, Santi Barbera, Francesco Renda, Antonio Volpintesta, Teresa Gamucci, Maria Anna Giampaolo, Giovanni Mansueto, Anna Ceribelli, Ilaria Carbone, Domenica Pellegrini, Virginio Filipazzi, Elena Piazza, Sabrina Ferrario, Vittorina Zagonel, Giuditta di Isernia, Marco Ciaparrone, Francovito Piantedosi, Fabiana Vitiello, Nicolò Borsellino, Maria Elia Vitale, Luigi Brancaccio, Sergio Spina, Maria Rosaria Valerio, Raffaella Felletti, Salvatore Tafuto, Marianna Giampaglia, Rita Migliorino, Francesco Rosetti, Francesco Carrozza, Nestore Rossi, Mario Spatafora, Manlio Mencoboni, Ernest Marshall
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Oncology ,Male ,Lung Neoplasms ,Deoxycytidine ,Carboplatin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Elderly ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,80 and over ,Carcinoma, Small Cell ,Multivariate Analysi ,Etoposide ,Platinum compounds ,Aged, 80 and over ,Area under the curve ,SCLC ,Vinorelbine ,Prognosis ,Gemcitabine ,Aged ,Cisplatin ,Disease-Free Survival ,Female ,Humans ,Multivariate Analysis ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Quality of Life ,Treatment Outcome ,Vinblastine ,Platinum compound ,Toxicity ,medicine.drug ,Human ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prognosi ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocol ,Performance status ,business.industry ,Carcinoma ,Small Cell ,Surgery ,Lung Neoplasm ,chemistry ,Proportional Hazards Model ,business - Abstract
Introduction: Treatment of elderly patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is based on scanty evidence. Methods: Patients with extensive SCLC, age >70 years, and performance status 0-2 were eligible for a study looking for optimal two-drug combination of gemcitabine (Gem) with vinorelbine (Vin), etoposide (Eto), cisplatin (Cis), or carboplatin (Car). Gemcitabine dose was the same (1000 mg/m2, days 1-8) in all combinations. A two-stage minimax flexible design for response was applied to GemVin combination (Vin 25 mg/m2, days 1-8). For GemCar, GemCis, GemEto, a phase I-II Bayesian design was applied, looking for the optimal dose of the partner drugs. Objective response rate ≥60% and unacceptable toxicity ≤25% were required to define a combination worthy of further studies. Results: Median age of 78 eligible patients was 74 years. GemVin produced a 36.7% objective response rate. GemEto and GemCis arms were found not sufficiently active. GemCar produced 16 responses (14 with area under the curve [AUC] 3.5 and 2 with AUC 4.0) in 26 patients (61.5%) and 6 cases of unacceptable toxicity (3 at each Car dose). Conclusions: In elderly patients with extensive SCLC, GemVin, GemEto, and GemCis are not enough active and do not merit further studies. Gem plus Car might deserve further attention. © 2011 by the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer.
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- 2012
6. Quality of Life Analysis of TORCH, a Randomized Trial Testing First-Line Erlotinib Followed by Second-Line Cisplatin/Gemcitabine Chemotherapy in Advanced Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer
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Di Maio, M, Leighl, Nb, Gallo, C, Feld, R, Ciardiello, F, Butts, C, Maione, P, Gebbia, V, Morgillo, F, Wierzbicki, R, Favaretto, A, Alam, Y, Cinieri, S, Siena, S, Bianco, R, Riccardi, F, Spatafora, M, Ravaioli, A, Felletti, R, Fregoni, V, Genestreti, G, Rossi, A, Mancuso, G, Fasano, M, Morabito, A, Tsao, Ms, Signoriello, S, Perrone, F, Gridelli, C, Torch, Investigators, Calabro', L, Di Maio, M., Leighl, N. B., Gallo, C., Feld, R., Ciardiello, F., Butts, C., Maione, P., Gebbia, V., Morgillo, F., Wierzbicki, R., Favaretto, A., Alam, Y., Cinieri, S., Siena, S., Bianco, Roberto, Riccardi, F., Spatafora, M., Ravaioli, A., Felletti, R., Fregoni, V., Genestreti, G., Rossi, A., Mancuso, G., Fasano, M., Morabito, A., Tsao, M. S., Signoriello, S., Perrone, F., Gridelli, C., Di Maio, M, Leighl, N, Gallo, C, Feld, R, Ciardiello, F, Butts, C, Maione, P, Gebbia, V, Morgillo, F, Wierzbicki, R, Favaretto, A, Alam, Y, Cinieri, S, Siena, S, Bianco, R, Riccardi, F, Spatafora, M, Ravaioli, A, Felletti, R, Fregoni, V, Genestreti, G, Rossi, A, Mancuso, G, Fasano, M, Morabito, A, Tsao, M, Signoriello, S, Perrone, F, Gridelli, C, and Leighl, Nb
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Oncology ,Male ,erlotinib ,Lung Neoplasms ,Health-related quality of life ,NSCLC ,chemotherapy ,Deoxycytidine ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Quality of life ,law ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Surveys and Questionnaire ,Quality of life analysis of TORCH ,Erlotinib Hydrochloride ,Prognosis ,humanities ,Research Design ,Advanced non–small-cell lung cancer ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Female ,Erlotinib ,Randomized trial ,medicine.drug ,Human ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prognosi ,EGFR ,First-line treatment ,first-line erlotinib ,second-line cisplatin/gemcitabine chemotherapy ,Adenocarcinoma ,NO ,Follow-Up Studie ,Internal medicine ,advanced non-small-cell lung cancer ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung cancer ,Advanced non-small-cell lung cancer ,Chemotherapy ,Quality of life analysis of TORCH , first-line erlotinib , second-line cisplatin/gemcitabine chemotherapy, advanced non-small-cell lung cancer ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Salvage Therapy ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocol ,business.industry ,Questionnaire ,Cancer ,Quinazoline ,medicine.disease ,Interim analysis ,Gemcitabine ,Surgery ,Lung Neoplasm ,quality of life ,Quinazolines ,Carcinoma, Large Cell ,Cisplatin ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
INTRODUCTION:: The TORCH (Tarceva or Chemotherapy) trial randomized patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer to first-line erlotinib followed by second-line cisplatin/gemcitabine versus. standard inverse sequence. The trial, designed to test noninferiority in overall survival, was stopped at interim analysis because of inferior survival in the experimental arm. Quality of life (QoL), a secondary outcome, is reported here. METHODS:: QoL was assessed at baseline and every 3 weeks during first-line, using European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire - Core 30 and QLQ-lung cancer specific module (LC13). Mean changes from baseline within arms were reported. QoL response and time-to-deterioration of QoL using a competing-risk approach were compared between treatment arms. RESULTS:: Six hundred and thirty patients (83%) completed baseline questionnaires. Compliance was affected by differential treatment efficacy, but was similar between arms for patients without progression or death. Significant differences in QoL responses were observed favoring chemotherapy for pain, sleeping, dyspnea, diarrhea, and favoring erlotinib for vomiting, constipation, sore mouth, and alopecia. In the small subset of patients with EGFR-mutated tumors, all selected items (global QoL, physical functioning, cough, dyspnea and pain) improved, whereas worsening or no change was observed in wild-type patients. Improvement was particularly evident in the first-line erlotinib arm as for global QoL and physical functioning. CONCLUSIONS:: QoL was impacted by differential toxicity and efficacy between arms. Functional domains and global QoL did not differ, although some symptoms were better controlled with chemotherapy in unselected non-small-cell lung cancer patients. © 2012 by the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer.
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- 2012
7. Addition of Either Lonidamine or Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor Does Not Improve Survival in Early Breast Cancer Patients Treated With High-Dose Epirubicin and Cyclophosphamide
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Papaldo, P., Lopez, M., Cortesi, Enrico, Cammilluzzi, E., Antimi, M., Terzoli, E., Lepidini, G., Vici, P., Barone, C., Ferretti, G., Di Cosimo, S., Nistico, C., Carlini, P., Conti, F., Di Lauro, L., Botti, C., Vitucci, C., Fabi, A., Giannarelli, D., Marolla, P., Di Maio, M., Perrone, F., Gallo, C., Iaffaioli, R. V., Manzione, L., Piantedosi, F. V., Cigolari, S., Illiano, A., Barbera, S., Robbiati, S. F., Piazza, E., Ianniello, G. P., Frontini, L., Veltri, E., Castiglione, F., Rosetti, F., De Maio, E., Maione, P., Gridelli, C., Rossi, A., Barletta, E., Barzelloni, M. L., Signoriello, G., Bilancia, D., Dinota, A., Rosati, G., Germano, D., Lamberti, A., Pontillo, V., Brancacio, L., Crispino, C., Esposito, M., Battiloro, C., Tufano, G., Cioffi, A., Guardasole, V., Angelini, V., Guidetti, G., Renda, F., Romano, F., Volpintesta, A., Sannicolo, M., Filipazzi, V., Esani, G., Gambaro, A., Ferrario, S., Tinessa, V., Caprio, M. G., Zonato, S., Cabiddu, M., Raina, A., D'Aprile, M., Pistillucci, G., Porcile, G., Ostellino, O., Vinante, O., Azzarello, G., Gebbia, V., Borsellino, N., Testa, A., Gasparini, G., Morabito, A., Gattuso, D., Romito, S., Carrozza, F., Fava, S., Calcagno, A., Grimi, E., Bertetto, O., Ciuffreda, L., Parello, G., Maiorino, L., Santoro, A., Santoro, M., Failla, G., Aiello, R. A., Bearz, A., Sorio, R., Scalone, S., Clerici, M., Bollina, R., Belloni, P., Sacco, C., Sibau, A., Adamo, V., Altavilla, G., Scimone, A., Spatafora, M., Bellia, V., Hopps, M. R., Monfardini, S., Favaretto, A., Stefani, M., Corradini, G. M., Pavia, G., Scagliotti, G., Novello, S., Selvaggi, G., Tonato, M., Darwish, S., Michetti, G., Belometti, M. O., Labianca, R., Quadri, A., De Marinis, F., Migliorino, M. R., Martelli, O., Colucci, G., Galetta, D., Giotta, F., Isa, L., Candido, P., Rossi, N., Calandriello, A., Ferrau, F., Malaponte, E., Barni, S., Cazzaniga, M., Gebbia, N., Valerio, Mr, Belli, M., Colantuoni, G., Capuano, M. A., Angiolillo, M., Sollitto, F., Ardizzoia, A., Luporini, G., Locatelli, M. C., Pari, F., Aitini, E., Pedicini, T., Febbraro, A., Zollo, C., Di Costanzo, F., Bartolucci, R., Gasperoni, S., Gaion, F., Palazzolo, G., Galligioni, E., Caffo, O., Cortesi, E., D'Auria, G., Curcio, C., Vasta, M., Bumma, C., Celano, A., Bretti, S., Nettis, G., Anselmo, A., Mattioli, R., Aschelter, A., and Foa, P.
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Adult ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Indazoles ,Filgrastim ,Cyclophosphamide ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast Neoplasms ,Gastroenterology ,Disease-Free Survival ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor ,medicine ,Humans ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Epirubicin ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Lonidamine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Metastatic breast cancer ,Recombinant Proteins ,Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor ,Surgery ,Survival Rate ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Female ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose: Lonidamine (LND) can enhance the activity of anthracyclines in patients with metastatic breast cancer. A multicenter, prospective, randomized trial was designed to determine whether the association of LND with high-dose epirubicin plus cyclophosphamide (EC) could improve disease-free survival (DFS) in patients with early breast cancer (BC) compared with EC alone. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) was added to maintain the EC dose-intensity. Patients and Methods: From October 1991 to April 1994, 506 patients with stage I/II BC were randomly assigned to four groups: (A) epirubicin 120 mg/m2 and cyclophosphamide 600 mg/m2 administered intravenously on day 1 every 21 days for four cycles (124 patients); (B) EC plus LND 450 mg/d administered orally (125 patients); (C) EC plus G-CSF administered subcutaneously (129 patients); (D) EC plus LND plus G-CSF (128 patients). Results: Median follow-up was 55 months. Five-year DFS rate was similar for LND (B+D groups; 69.6%) versus non-LND arms (A+C groups; 70.3%) and G-CSF (C+D groups; 67.2%) versus non–G-CSF arms (A+B groups; 72.9%). Five-year overall survival (OS) was comparable in LND (79.1%) versus non-LND arms (81.3%) and in G-CSF (80.6%) versus non–G-CSF arms (79.6%). DFS and OS distributions in LND and G-CSF arms did not change according to tumor size, node, receptor, and menopausal status. G-CSF dramatically reduced hematologic toxicity without having a significant impact on dose-intensity (98.1% v 95.5% for C+D and A+B groups, respectively). Conclusion: EC is active and well tolerated in patients with early breast cancer. The addition of LND or G-CSF does not improve DFS or OS.
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- 2003
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8. Incidence of breast cancer in Italy: mastectomies and quadrantectomies performed between 2000 and 2005
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Piscitelli, P, Santoriello, A, Buonaguro, Fm, DI MAIO, M, Iolascon, G, Gimigliano, F, Marinelli, A, Distante, Alessandro, Serravezza, G, Sordi, E, Cagossi, K, Artioli, F, Santangelo, M, Fucito, A, Gimigliano, R, Brandi, Ml, Crespi, M, Giordano, A, Crom, HUMAN HEALTH FOUNDATION STUDY GROUP, Piscitelli, P, Santoriello, A, Buonaguro, Fm, DI MAIO, M, Iolascon, Giovanni, Gimigliano, Francesca, Marinelli, Alessandra, Distante, A, Serravezza, G, Sordi, E, Cagossi, K, Artioli, F, Santangelo, M, Fucito, A, Gimigliano, Raffaele, Brandi, Ml, Crespi, M, Giordano, A, Crom, HUMAN HEALTH FOUNDATION STUDY, Group, Prisco, Piscitelli, Antonio, Santoriello, Franco M., Buonaguro, Massimo, Dimaio, Giovanni, Iolascon, Francesca, Gimigliano, Alessandra, Marinelli, Alessandro, Distante, Giuseppe, Serravezza, Emiliano, Sordi, Katia, Cagossi, Fabrizio, Artioli, Santangelo, Michele, Alfredo, Fucito, Raffaele, Gimigliano, Maria Luisa, Brandi, Massimo, Crespi, and Antonio, Giordano
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cancer Research ,Time Factors ,Databases, Factual ,Time Factor ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast surgery ,Breast Neoplasms ,Mastectomy, Segmental ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Young Adult ,Breast cancer ,Age groups ,medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,Aged ,Mastectomy, Simple ,Gynecology ,business.industry ,Obstetrics ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Research ,Incidence ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Italy ,Oncology ,Christian ministry ,Female ,Databases ,Factual ,Mastectomy ,Segmental ,Simple ,business ,Breast Neoplasm ,Human - Abstract
Objectives: We aimed to determine the incidence of women's breast cancer in Italy without using statistical approximations. Methods: We analyzed the national hospitalizations database at the Ministry of Health to calculate the number of major surgeries in Italian women (mastectomies and quadrantectomies) due to breast cancer between 2000 and 2005, overall and by age groups (= 75 years old). Results: Over the six years examined, an overall number of 100,745 mastectomies and 168,147 quadrantectomies were performed. A total of 41,608 major surgeries due to breast cancer were performed in the year 2000 and this number rose to 47,200 in 2005, with a 13.4% increase over six years. Conclusion: by analyzing the hospitalizations database concerning major breast surgery, incidence of breast cancer in Italy was found to be 26.5% higher than the official estimations which have been computed using statistical models (namely 47,200 vs. 37,300 cases in year 2005). Objectives. We aimed to determine the incidence of women's breast cancer in Italy without using statistical approximations. Methods. We analyzed the national hospitalizations database at the Ministry of Health to calculate the number of major surgeries in Italian women (mastectomies and quadrantectomies) due to breast cancer between 2000 and 2005, overall and by age groups (
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- 2009
9. Tamoxifen is not effective in good prognosis patients with hepatocellular carcinoma
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GALLO, Ciro, DE MAIO E, DI MAIO M, SIGNORIELLO, Giuseppe, DANIELE B, PIGNATA S, ANNUNZIATA A, PERRONE F, CLIP CANCER OF THE LIVER ITALIAN PROGRAMME, INVESTIGATORS, Gallo, Ciro, DE MAIO, E, DI MAIO, M, Signoriello, Giuseppe, Daniele, B, Pignata, S, Annunziata, A, Perrone, F, CLIP CANCER OF THE LIVER ITALIAN, Programme, and Investigators
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Oncology ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cancer Research ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,medicine.medical_treatment ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Genetics ,Humans ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Prognosis ,Survival Analysis ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,Supportive psychotherapy ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,Female ,Liver function ,Percutaneous ethanol injection ,business ,Tamoxifen ,medicine.drug ,Follow-Up Studies ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Large randomised clinical trials and systematic reviews substantiate that tamoxifen is ineffective in improving survival of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). However, a recent report suggested that the drug might prolong survival among patients with well preserved liver function. The aim of this paper is to validate this hypothesis. Methods We used the updated database of the phase 3 randomised CLIP-1 trial that compared tamoxifen with supportive therapy. Primary endpoint was overall survival. Treatment arms were compared within strata defined according to the Okuda stage and the CLIP-score. Survival differences were tested by the Log-rank test. Results Tamoxifen was not effective in prolonging survival in Okuda I-II subgroup (p = 0.501). Median survival times were equal to 16.8 (95%CI 12.7–18.5) months for tamoxifen and 16.8 (95%CI 13.5–22.4) months for the control arms; 1-year survival probabilities were equal to 58.8% (95%CI 51.7–65.8) and 59.4 (95%CI 52.5–66.2), respectively. Similar results were observed in the better CLIP subgroup (score 0/1), without evidence of difference between the two treatment arms (p = 0.734). Median survival times were equal to 29.2 (95%CI 20.1–36.4) months with tamoxifen and 29.0 (95%CI 23.3–35.2) months without; 1-year survival probabilities were equal to 80.9% (95%CI 72.5–89.3) with tamoxifen and 77.1% (95%CI 68.6–85.7) for the control arm. Conclusion The recent suggestion that tamoxifen might be effective in the subgroup of patients with better prognosis is not supported by a reanalysis of the CLIP-1 trial. Tamoxifen should no longer be considered for the treatment of HCC patients and future trials of medical treatment should concentrate on different drugs.
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- 2006
10. Pretreatment quality of life and functional status assessment significantly predict survival of elderly patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer receiving chemotherapy: a prognostic analysis of the multicenter Italian lung cancer in the elderly study
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Maione, P, Perrone, F, Gallo, C, Manzione, L, Piantedosi, F, Barbera, S, Cigolari, S, Rosetti, F, Piazza, E, Robbiati, Sf, Bertetto, O, Novello, S, Migliorino, Mr, Favaretto, A, Spatafora, M, Ferraù, F, Frontini, L, Bearz, A, Repetto, L, Gridelli, C, Barletta, E, Barzelloni, Ml, Iaffaioli, Rv, DE MAIO, E, DI MAIO, M, DE FEO, G, Sigoriello, G, Chiodini, P, Cioffi, A, Guardasole, V, Angelini, V, Rossi, A, Bilancia, D, Germano, D, Lamberti, A, Pontillo, V, Brancaccio, L, Renda, F, Romano, F, Esani, G, Gambaro, A, Vinante, O, Azzarello, G, Clerici, M, Bollina, R, Belloni, P, Sannicolò, M, Ciuffreda, L, Parello, G, Cabiddu, M, Sacco, C, Sibau, A, Porcile, G, Castiglione, F, Ostellino, O, Monfardini, S, Stefani, M, Scagliotti, G, Selvaggi, G, DE MARINIS, F, Martelli, O, Gasparini, G, Morabito, A, Gattuso, D, Colucci, G, Galetta, D, Giotta, F, Gebbia, V, Borsellino, N, Testa, A, Malaponte, E, Capuano, Ma, Angiolillo, M, Sollitto, F, Tirelli, U, Spazzapan, S, Adamo, V, Altavilla, G, Scimone, A, Hopps, Mr, Tartamella, F, Ianniello, Gp, Tinessa, V, Failla, G, Bordonaro, R, Gebbia, N, Valerio, Mr, D'Aprile, M, Veltri, E, Tonato, M, Darwish, S, Romito, S, Carrozza, F, Barni, S, Ardizzoia, A, Corradini, Gm, Pavia, G, Belli, M, Colantuoni, G, Galligioni, E, Caffo, O, Labianca, R, Quadri, A, Cortesi, Enrico, D'Auria, Giuliana, Fava, S, Calcagno, A, Luporini, G, Locatelli, Mc, DI COSTANZO, F, Gasperoni, S, Isa, L, Candido, P, Gaion, F, Palazzolo, G, Nettis, G, Annamaria, A, Rinaldi, M, Lopez, M, Felletti, R, DI NEGRO GB, Rossi, N, Calandriello, A, Maiorino, L, Mattioli, R, Celano, A, Schiavon, S, Illiano, A, Raucci, Ca, Caruso, M, Foa, P, Tonini, G, Curcio, C, Cazzaniga, M., MAIONE P, PERRONE F, GALLO C, MANZIONE L, PIANTEDOSI F, BARBERA S, CIGOLARI, ROSETTI F, PIAZZA E, ROBBIATI SF, BERTETTO O, NOVELLO S, MIGLIORINO MR, FAVARETTO A, SPATAFORA M, FERRAU F, FRONTINI L, BEARZ A, REPETTO L, GRIDELLI C, BARLETTA E, BARZELLONI ML, IAFFAIOLI RV, DE MAIO E, DI MAIO M, DE FEO G, SIGORIELLO G, CHIODINI P, CIOFFI A, GUARDASOLE V, ANGELINI V, ROSSI A, BILANCIA, GERMANO D, LAMBERTI A, PONTILLO V, BRANCACCIO L, RENDA F, ROMANO F, ESANI G, GAMBARO A, VINANTE O, AZZARELLO G, CLERICI M, BOLLINA R, BELLONI P, SANNICOLO M, CIUFFREDA L, PARELLO G, CABIDDU M, SACCO C, SIBAU A, PORCILE G, CASTIGLIONE F, OSTELLINO O, MONFARDINI S, STEFANI M, SCAGLIOTTI G, SELVAGGI G, DE MARINIS F, MARTELLI O, GASPARINI G, MORABITO A, GATTUSO D, COLUCCI G, GALETTA D, GIOTTA F, GEBBIA V, ET AL, Maione, P, Perrone, F, Gallo, Ciro, Manzione, L, Piantedosi, F, Barbera, S, Cigolari, S, Rosetti, F, Piazza, E, Robbiati, Sf, Bertetto, O, Novello, S, Migliorino, Mr, Favaretto, A, Spatafora, M, Ferrau, F, Frontini, L, Bearz, A, Repetto, L, and Gridelli, C.
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Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Activities of daily living ,Health Status ,carcinoma ,Vinblastine ,Vinorelbine ,Deoxycytidine ,older people ,Quality of life ,Instrumental activitie ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Internal medicine ,Activities of Daily Living ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung cancer ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,validation ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,QLQ-C30 ,Age Factors ,Cancer ,clinical trial ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Gemcitabine ,Comorbidity ,humanities ,comorbidity ,Oncology ,Quartile ,Quality of Life ,Physical therapy ,impact ,Geriatric oncology ,Female ,business ,Randomized-trial ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose To study the prognostic value for overall survival of baseline assessment of functional status, comorbidity, and quality of life (QoL) in elderly patients with advanced non—small-cell lung cancer treated with chemotherapy. Patients and Methods Data from 566 patients enrolled onto the phase III randomized Multicenter Italian Lung Cancer in the Elderly Study (MILES) study were analyzed. Functional status was measured as activities of daily living (ADL) and instrumental ADL (IADL). The presence of comorbidity was assessed with a checklist of 33 items; items 29 and 30 of the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) core questionnaire QLQ-C30 (EORTC QLQ-C30) were used to estimate QoL. ADL was dichotomized as none versus one or more dependency. For IADL and QoL, three categories were defined using first and third quartiles as cut points. Comorbidity was summarized using the Charlson scale. Analysis was performed by Cox model, and stratified by treatment arm. Results Better values of baseline QoL (P = .0003) and IADL (P = .04) were significantly associated with better prognosis, whereas ADL (P = .44) and Charlson score (P = .66) had no prognostic value. Performance status 2 (P = .006) and a higher number of metastatic sites (P = .02) also predicted shorter overall survival. Conclusions Pretreatment global QoL and IADL scores, but not ADL and comorbidity, have significant prognostic value for survival of elderly patients with advanced non—small-cell lung cancer who were treated with chemotherapy. Using these scores in clinical practice might improve prognostic prediction for treatment planning.
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- 2005
11. Coronary-artery bypass surgery in patients with left ventricular dysfunction
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Velazquez, E, Lee, K, Deja, Ma:, J, A, Sopko, G, Marchenko, A, Ali, I, Pohost, G, Gradinac, S, Abraham, W, Yii, M, Prabhakaran, D, Szwed, H, Ferrazzi, P, Petrie, M, O'Connor, C, Panchavinnin, P, She, L, Bonow, R, Rankin, G, Jones, R, Rouleau, J, Cherniavsky, A, Romanov, A, Wos, S, Deja, M, Golba, K, Malinowski, M, Kosevic, D, Vukovic, M, Djokovic, L, Krzeminska Pakula, M, Jaszewski, R, Drozdz, J, Chrzanowski, L, Rajda, M, Howlett, J, Macfarlane, M, Jain, A, Shah, H, Rakshak, D, Saxena, A, Zembala, M, Przybylski, R, Kukulski, T, Wasilewski, J, Wiechowski, S, Brykczynski, M, Kurowski, M, Mokrzycki, K, Sadowski, J, Kapelak, B, Sobczyk, D, Plicner, D, Wrobel, K, Piegas, L, Paulista, P, Farsky, P, Veiga Kantorowitz, C, Sadowski, Z, Juraszynski, Z, Dabrowski, R, Rogowski, J, Pawlaczyk, R, Rynkiewicz, A, Betlejewski, P, Siepe, M, Geibel Zehender, A, Cuerten, C, Higgins, R, Crestanello, J, Binkley, P, Jones, D, Sun, B, Smith, P, Milano, C, Adams, P, Hill, J, Beaver, T, Leach, D, Airan, B, Das, S, Prior, D, Mack, J, Rao, V, Iwanochko, R, Renton, J, Phuangkaew, N, Bochenek, A, Krejca, M, Trusz Gluza, M, Wita, K, Gavazzi, A, Senni, M, Natarajan, S, Padmanabhan, C, Racine, N, Bouchard, D, Ducharme, A, Brown, H, Alotti, N, Lupkovics, G, Kumar, S, Agarwal, S, Sinha, N, Rai, H, Andersson, B, Janssen, A, Lamy, A, Demers, C, Rizzo, T, Doenst, T, Garbade, J, Thiele, H, Richter, M, Murday, A, Shaw, M, Raju, K, Mannam, G, Reddy, G, Rao, K, Nicolau, J, Stolf, N, Vieira, A, Chua, Y, Lim, C, Kwok, B, Gan, Y, Cleland, J, Cale, A, Thackray, S, Lammiman, M, Michler, R, Swayze, R, Maurer, G, Grimm, M, Lang, I, Adlbrecht, C, Daly, R, Rodeheffer, R, Nelson, S, Larbalestier, R, Wang, X, Haddad, H, Hendry, P, Donaldson, J, Menicanti, L, Di Donato, M, Castelvecchio, S, Sirvydis, V, Voluckiene, E, Di Benedetto, G, Attisano, T, Favaloro, R, Favaloro, L, Diez, M, Riccitelli, M, Picone, V, Koslowski, P, Gaito, M, Al mohammad, A, Braidley, P, Steele, H, Nawarawong, W, Woragidpoonpol, S, Kuanprasert, S, Mekara, W, Kon, N, Hammon, J, Wells, G, Tilley, W, Drazner, M, Di Maio, M, Peschka, S, Pasquale, D, Knight, C, J, Aylward, P, Thomas, C, Gullestad, L, Sorensen, G, Kaul, U, Gupta, R, Schmedtje, Jj, Arnold, S, Wilson, V, Grayburn, P, Hamman, B, Hebeler, R, Aston, S, Birjiniuk, V, Harrington, M, Dupree, C, Sheridan, B, Schuler, C, Helou, J, Denis, I, Bigalli, D, Gutierrez, F, Russo, N, Batlle, C, White, H, Alison, P, Stewart, R, Borthwick, L, Philippides, G, Shemin, R, Fitzgerald, C, Dagenais, F, Dussault, G, Kamath, P, Busmann, C, Ferrari, G, Botto, M, Horkay, F, Hartyanszky, I, Bartha, E, Simor, T, Papp, L, Toth, L, Varga Szemes, A, Szekely, L, Keltai, M, Edes, I, Szathmarine, V, Yakub, M, Sarip, S, Maitland, A, Isaac, D, Holland, M, Bogats, G, Csepregi, L, Maia, L, Soares, M, Mouco, O, Souza, A, da Rocha, A, Brito, J, Pitella, F, Camara, A, Horowitz, J, Knight, J, Rose, J, Mcrae, Rj, Geiss, D, Clemson, B, Pierson, M, Kron, I, Kern, J, Bergin, J, Phillips, J, Rich, J, Herre, J, Pine, L, Chin, D, Spyt, T, Logtens, E, Amuchastegui, L, Bracco, D, Ruengsakulrach, P, Pitiguagool, V, Sukhum, P, Srinualta, D, Hayward, C, Herrera, C, Zimmermann, R, Patterson, G, Stephens, W, Dignan, R, French, J, Sequalino, N, Vaishnav, S, Panda, R, Chavan, A, Benetis, R, Jankauskiene, L, Kalil, R, Nesralla, I, Santos, M, de Moraes, M, Friedrich, I, Buerke, M, Paraforos, A, Konda, S, Leone, C, Murphy, E, Ravichandran, P, Avalos, K, Hetzer, R, Knosalla, C, Hoffmann, K, Landolfo, K, Landolfo, C, Park, M, Chiariello, L, Nardi, P, Stapleton, D, Hoey, K, Hasaniya, N, Wang, N, Bijou, R, Naka, Y, Ascheim, D, Mikati, I, Arnold, M, Mckenzie, N, Smith, J, Gheorghiade, M, Fullerton, D, Roberts, L, Carson, P, Miller, A, Pina, I, Selzman, C, Wertheimer, J, Goldstein, S, Cohn, F, Hlatky, M, Kennedy, K, Rankin, S, Robbins, R, Zaret, B, Barfield, T, Desvigne Nickens, P, Oh, J, Panza, J, Apte, P, Doyle, M, Forder, J, Ocon, M, Pai, R, Reddy, V, Santos, N, Tripathi, R, Varadarajan, P, Pellikka, P, Miller, Fj, Lin, G, Borgeson, D, Ommen, S, Casaclang Verzosa, G, Miller, D, Springer, R, Blahnik, F, Manahan, B, Welper, J, Wiste, H, Mark, D, Anstrom, K, Baloch, K, Burnette, A, Cowper, P, Davidson Ray, N, Drew, L, Harding, T, Hunt, V, Knight, D, Patterson, A, Redick, T, Sanderford, B, Feldman, A, Bristow, M, Chan, T, Maisel, A, Mann, D, Mcnamara, D, Holly, T, Berman, D, Leonard, S, Helmer, D, Woods, M, Mcnulty, M, Asch, F, Rumsey, M, Bieganski, S, Roberts, B, Handschumacher, M, Mccormick, A, Albright, J, Dandridge, R, Rittenhouse, L, Wagstaff, D, Williams, M, Bailey, D, Glover, D, Parrish, L, Wakeley, N, Jackson, V, Nicholson, B, Mcdaniel, A, Al Khalidi, H, Greene, D, and Moore, V
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,law.invention ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Coronary artery bypass surgery ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,03.02. Klinikai orvostan ,cardiovascular diseases ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Coronary Artery Bypass ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Heart Failure ,Intention-to-treat analysis ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,Settore MED/23 - Chirurgia Cardiaca ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,3. Good health ,Surgery ,Intention to Treat Analysis ,Hospitalization ,surgical procedures, operative ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Heart failure ,Cardiology ,Female ,business - Abstract
The role of coronary-artery bypass grafting (CABG) in the treatment of patients with coronary artery disease and heart failure has not been clearly established.Between July 2002 and May 2007, a total of 1212 patients with an ejection fraction of 35% or less and coronary artery disease amenable to CABG were randomly assigned to medical therapy alone (602 patients) or medical therapy plus CABG (610 patients). The primary outcome was the rate of death from any cause. Major secondary outcomes included the rates of death from cardiovascular causes and of death from any cause or hospitalization for cardiovascular causes.The primary outcome occurred in 244 patients (41%) in the medical-therapy group and 218 (36%) in the CABG group (hazard ratio with CABG, 0.86; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.72 to 1.04; P=0.12). A total of 201 patients (33%) in the medical-therapy group and 168 (28%) in the CABG group died from an adjudicated cardiovascular cause (hazard ratio with CABG, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.66 to 1.00; P=0.05). Death from any cause or hospitalization for cardiovascular causes occurred in 411 patients (68%) in the medical-therapy group and 351 (58%) in the CABG group (hazard ratio with CABG, 0.74; 95% CI, 0.64 to 0.85; P
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- 2011
12. Indication for Venous Ports in Oncology Comparing Different Experiences in Europe
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Di Maio M and Gridelli C
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Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Antineoplastic Agents ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Veins ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Europe ,03 medical and health sciences ,Catheters, Indwelling ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,Neoplasms ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Humans ,Medicine ,Medical emergency ,business ,Intensive care medicine - Published
- 2001
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13. Significance of erb-B2 immunoreactivity in cervical cancer
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Daniela Califano, Di Maio M, Stefano Greggi, Vincenzo Rosario Iaffaioli, Simona Losito, Rosa Tambaro, C. Pisano, Giovanni Santelli, Giustino Silvestro, R. Formato, F. Iodice, Sandro Pignata, and DiVagno G
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Adult ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Receptor, ErbB-2 ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Adenocarcinoma ,Gastroenterology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Cervix ,Grading (tumors) ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cervical cancer ,Chemotherapy ,Performance status ,business.industry ,Histology ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Survival Analysis ,Radiation therapy ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Disease Progression ,Female ,business - Abstract
C-erbB2 is over-expressed or amplified in many carcinomas. We assessed the relationship between erb-B2 immunoreactivity, and its predictive role in progression-free survival and treatment outcome in patients with cervical carcinoma. Sections from 65 cervical carcinoma were immunostained with antibody to p185 erbB2. Immunoreactive ErbB2 was found in 25 patients (38%) [+ 15 pts. (23%); ++ 10 pts. (15%)]. There were no correlation with age, performance status, grading and histology. Erb-B2 immunoreactivity significantly correlated with stage of the disease. Positive immunoreactivity was found in 63%, 44%, 14% and 0% of stage I, II, III and IV carcinomas, (p = 0.0045). Progression-free survival was longer in erb-B2 positive patients without reaching significance. No correlation was found between erbB2 and response to radiotherapy or chemotherapy. In conclusion, a significant proportion of stage I and II cervical cancer express erb-B2 compared to more advanced stages. Expression of the oncogene does not appear to be related to prognosis or treatment outcome.
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- 2006
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14. Safety of a 3-weekly schedule of carboplatin plus pegylated liposomal doxorubicin as first line chemotherapy in patients with ovarian cancer: preliminary results of the MITO-2 randomized trial
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PIGNATA S., SCAMBIA G., SAVARESE A., BREDA E., SCOLLO P., DE VIVO R., ROSSI E., GEBBIA V., NATALE D., DEL GAIZO F., NAGLIERI E., FERRO A., MUSSO P., D'ARCO A., SORIO R., PISANO C., DI MAIO M., ANNUNZIATA A., PERRONE F., MITO INVESTIGATORS . ., SIGNORIELLO, Giuseppe, Pignata, S., Scambia, G., Savarese, A., Breda, E., Scollo, P., DE VIVO, R., Rossi, E., Gebbia, V., Natale, D., DEL GAIZO, F., Naglieri, E., Ferro, A., Musso, P., D'Arco, A., Sorio, R., Pisano, C., DI MAIO, M., Signoriello, Giuseppe, Annunziata, A., Perrone, F., MITO INVESTIGATORS, . ., PIGNATA S, SCAMBIA G, SAVARESE A, BREDA E, SCOLLO P, DE VIVO R, ROSSI E, GEBBIA V, NATALE D, DEL GAIZO F, NAGLIERI E, FERRO A, MUSSO P, D'ARCO AM, SORIO, PISANO C, DI MAIO M, SIGNORIELLO G, ANNUNZIATA A, PERRONE F, MITO, and INVESTIGATORS
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,endocrine system diseases ,Settore MED/06 - Oncologia Medica ,medicine.medical_treatment ,PACLITAXEL ,law.invention ,Polyethylene Glycols ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Randomized controlled trial ,STAGE-III ,law ,CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,STERICALLY STABILIZED LIPOSOMES ,Middle Aged ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Combined Modality Therapy ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Paclitaxel ,MITO-2 randomized trial ,carboplatin ,SURVIVAL ,Female ,Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury ,medicine.drug ,Agranulocytosis ,Research Article ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,CARCINOMA ,Ovariectomy ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Drug Hypersensitivity ,CISPLATIN ,preliminary result ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Genetics ,XENOGRAFTS ,Humans ,Doxorubicin ,Paresthesia ,neoplasms ,METAANALYSIS ,Aged ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Alopecia ,medicine.disease ,PHASE-III ,Thrombocytopenia ,Carboplatin ,Surgery ,Clinical trial ,chemistry ,Liposomes ,Feasibility Studies ,Topotecan ,Ovarian cancer ,business - Abstract
Background The MITO-2 (Multicentre Italian Trials in Ovarian cancer) study is a randomized phase III trial comparing carboplatin plus paclitaxel to carboplatin plus pegylated liposomal doxorubicin in first-line chemotherapy of patients with ovarian cancer. Due to the paucity of published phase I data on the 3-weekly experimental schedule used, an early safety analysis was planned. Methods Patients with ovarian cancer (stage Ic-IV), aged < 75 years, ECOG performance status ≤ 2, were randomized to carboplatin AUC 5 plus paclitaxel 175 mg/m2, every 3 weeks or to carboplatin AUC 5 plus pegylated liposomal doxorubicin 30 mg/m2, every 3 weeks. Treatment was planned for 6 cycles. Toxicity was coded according to the NCI-CTC version 2.0. Results The pre-planned safety analysis was performed in July 2004. Data from the first 50 patients treated with carboplatin plus pegylated liposomal doxorubicin were evaluated. Median age was 60 years (range 34–75). Forty-three patients (86%) completed 6 cycles. Two thirds of the patients had at least one cycle delayed due to toxicity, but 63% of the cycles were administered on time. In most cases the reason for chemotherapy delay was neutropenia or other hematological toxicity. No delay due to palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia (PPE) was recorded. No toxic death was recorded. Reported hematological toxicities were: grade (G) 3 anemia 16%, G3/G4 neutropenia 36% and 10% respectively, G3/4 thrombocytopenia 22% and 4% respectively. Non-haematological toxicity was infrequent: pulmonary G1 6%, heart rhythm G1 4%, liver toxicity G1 6%, G2 4% and G3 2%. Complete hair loss was reported in 6% of patients, and G1 neuropathy in 2%. PPE was recorded in 14% of the cases (G1 10%, G2 2%, G3 2%). Conclusion This safety analysis shows that the adopted schedule of carboplatin plus pegylated liposomal doxorubicin given every 3 weeks is feasible as first line treatment in ovarian cancer patients, although 37% of the cycles were delayed due to haematological toxicity. Toxicities that are common with standard combination of carboplatin plus paclitaxel (neurotoxicity and hair loss) are infrequent with this experimental schedule, and skin toxicity appears manageable.
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15. Prognostic Role of a New Index Tested in European and Korean Advanced Biliary Tract Cancer Patients: the PECS Index
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Luca Faloppi, Hyungwoo Cho, Federico Nichetti, Francesco Leone, Giuseppe Aprile, Daniele Santini, Giulia Orsi, Mariaelena Casagrande, Mario Scartozzi, Jae Ho Jeong, Nicola Silvestris, Giovanni Brandi, Eleonora Lai, Stefania De Lorenzo, Changhoon Yoo, Filippo de Braud, Monica Niger, Elisabetta Fenocchio, Lorenzo Fornaro, Stefano Cascinu, Caterina Vivaldi, Massimo Di Maio, Giulia Rovesti, Enrico Vasile, Andrea Casadei-Gardini, Francesco Caputo, Massimo Aglietta, Andrea Palloni, Roberto Filippi, Nicoletta Pella, Rovesti, G., Leone, F., Brandi, G., Fornaro, L., Scartozzi, M., Niger, M., Yoo, C., Caputo, F., Filippi, R., Casagrande, M., Silvestris, N., Santini, D., Faloppi, L., Palloni, A., Aglietta, M., Vivaldi, C., Cho, H., Lai, E., Fenocchio, E., Nichetti, F., Pella, N., De Lorenzo, S., Di Maio, M., Vasile, E., de Braud, F., Jeong, J. H., Aprile, G., Orsi, G., Cascinu, S., Casadei-Gardini, A., Rovesti G., Leone F., Brandi G., Fornaro L., Scartozzi M., Niger M., Yoo C., Caputo F., Filippi R., Casagrande M., Silvestris N., Santini D., Faloppi L., Palloni A., Aglietta M., Vivaldi C., Cho H., Lai E., Fenocchio E., Nichetti F., Pella N., De Lorenzo S., Di Maio M., Vasile E., de Braud F., Jeong J.H., Aprile G., Orsi G., Cascinu S., and Casadei-Gardini A.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Index (economics) ,Multivariate analysis ,Survival ,Prognosi ,Neutrophils ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Locally advanced ,Gastroenterology ,Prognostic index ,Biliary tract cancer ,Chemotherapy ,Cholangiocarcinoma ,Gallbladder cancer ,Prognosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Republic of Korea ,Medicine ,Humans ,Lymphocytes ,Survival analysis ,Retrospective Studies ,Inflammation ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,Biliary Tract Neoplasms ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Absolute neutrophil count ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business - Abstract
Background and Aim: The aim of the present study is to evaluate a new index (PECS (PsECogSii)index) influenced by PS ECOG and systemic immune-inflammation index (SII) in unresectable locally advanced or metastatic BTC patients treated with first-line chemotherapy. Methods: This multicenter, international, study was conducted on a training cohort of 130 patients and in three European and Korean validation cohorts The PECS index was calculated as ECOG × SII index (neutrophil count × platelet count/lymphocyte count). Event-time distributions were estimated using the Kaplan–Meier method and survival curves were compared using the log-rank test. Results: In the training cohort, the median overall survival (mOS) was 13.2months, 8.7months, and 3.8months for patients with PECS-0, PECS-1, and PECS-2, respectively (PECS-0: HR=1; PECS-1: HR 1.41; PECS-2: HR 3.23) (p 
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- 2021
16. Clinical profile of direct oral anticoagulants versus vitamin K anticoagulants in octogenarians with atrial fibrillation: a multicentre propensity score matched real-world cohort study
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Antonio D'Onofrio, Andreina Carbone, Valentina Parisi, Marco Di Maio, Emilio Attena, Paolo Golino, Anna Rago, Carmine Mazzone, Vincenzo Russo, Gerardo Nigro, Russo, V., Attena, E., Di Maio, M., Mazzone, C., Carbone, A., Parisi, V., Rago, A., D'Onofrio, A., Golino, P., Nigro, G., Russo, V, Attena, E, Di Maio, M, Mazzone, C, Carbone, A, Parisi, V, Rago, A, D'Onofrio, A, Golino, P, and Nigro, G
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Vitamin K ,Databases, Factual ,Administration, Oral ,Hemorrhage ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Major bleeding ,Disease-Free Survival ,Net clinical benefit ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Thromboembolism ,Internal medicine ,Octogenarian ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Propensity Score ,Stroke ,Aged, 80 and over ,Thromboembolic events ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Thromboembolic event ,Hazard ratio ,Effectivene ,Anticoagulants ,Atrial fibrillation ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Survival Rate ,Concomitant ,Propensity score matching ,Safety ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,Kidney disease ,Cohort study ,Direct oral anticoagulant - Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common arrhythmia in clinical practice and its prevalence increases with age. Few data are available about the clinical performance of direct oral anticoagulant (DOACs) in patients aged ≥ 80years with AF. The aim of our propensity score matched cohort study was to compare the safety and efficacy of DOACs versus well-controlled VKA therapy among octogenarians with AF in real life setting. Data for this study were sourced from the multicenter prospectively maintained Atrial Fibrillation Research Database (NCT03760874), which includes all AF patients followed by the participating centers, through outpatient visits every 3 to 6months. The database was queried for AF patients aged ≥ 80years who received DOACs or VKAs treatment. The primary effectiveness endpoint was the occurrence of thromboembolic events (a composite of stroke, transient ischemic attack, systemic embolism); the primary safety endpoint was the occurrence of major bleeding; the secondary endpoint was all-cause mortality. The database query identified 774 AF patients aged ≥ 80years treated with VKAs and 279 with DOACs. Propensity score (2:1) matching selected 252 DOAC and 504 VKA recipients. The mean follow-up was 31.07 ± 14.09months. The incidence rate of thromboembolic events was 13.79 per 1000 person-years [14.80 in DOAC vs 13.34 in VKA group, Hazard Ratio 1.10; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.49 to 2.45; P = 0.823]. The incidence rate of intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) was 8.06 per 1000 person-years (3.25 in DOAC vs 10.23 in VKA group, HR 0.33; 95% CI 0.07 to 1.45; P = 0.600). Through these incidence rates, we found a positive net clinical benefit (NCB) of DOACs over VKAs, equal to + 9.01. The incidence rate of all-cause mortality was 105.05 per 1000 person-years (74.67 in DOAC vs 118.67 in VKA group, Hazard Ratio 0.65; 95% CI 0.47 to 0.90; P = 0.010). The concomitant use of antiinflammatory drugs (HR 7.90; P
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- 2019
17. AISF position paper on HCV in immunocompromised patients
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Gabriele Missale, Mauro Viganò, Marco Astegiano, Mauro Salizzoni, C. Chialà, Angelo Pera, Patrizia Racca, Massimo Di Maio, Mario Salomone, M. Puoti, Simone Parisi, Paolo Bironzo, M. Rendina, Carla Pasquina, Clodoveo Ferri, Luisa Pasulo, Rita Tozzi, A. Tucci, Pietro Lampertico, Emanuele Angelucci, Bruno Daniele, Patrizia Burra, Franco Riccardini, Marco Lagget, Fabio Salvatore Macaluso, Davide Giuseppe Ribaldone, Luca Miele, Clara Lisa Peroni, Raffaele Bruno, Anna Linda Zignego, Ambrogio Orlando, Giovanni Battista Gaeta, Giuseppe Montrucchio, Daniela Libertucci, Massimo Marignani, Agostino Colli, Enrico Fusaro, Antonio Craxì, Giorgio Maria Saracco, Barbara Imperatrice, Paolo Caraceni, Luisa Giaccone, Chiara Baratelli, Giuliano Torre, Luigi Biancone, Elisabetta De Gasperi, Mario Rizzetto, Maria Grazia Clemente, Francesco Paolo Russo, Aldo Giacardi, Riccardo Volpes, Edoardo G. Giannini, Daniele Curci, Rossella Della Valle, Salvatore Petta, Pierluigi Toniutto, Alessandro Busca, Pietro Vajro, Giorgio Verme, Chiara Mazzarelli, Paolo Grossi, Maria Chiara Ditto, Lorella Orsucci, Umberto Vitolo, Alberto Mella, Salvatore Madonia, Federica Cavallo, Maria Giuseppina Cabras, Stefano Bonora, Massimiliano Conforti, Vito Di Marco, Mario Pirisi, Giuseppe Cariti, Marta Coscia, Giuseppina Brancaccio, L. Scaglione, Stefano Fagiuoli, Alfredo Marzano, Stefano Cusinato, Roberto Minutolo, Giuseppe Rossi, Enrico Brignardello, Maurizia Rossana Brunetto, Marzano A., Angelucci E., Astegiano M., Baratelli C., Biancone L., Bironzo P., Brancaccio G., Brunetto M.R., Bruno R., Burra P., Cabras M.G., Caraceni P., Chiala C., Clemente M.G., Colli A., Daniele B., De Gasperi E., Di Marco V., Ditto M.C., Fagiuoli S., Ferri C., Gaeta G.B., Grossi P.A., Imperatrice B., Lampertico P., Macaluso F.S., Madonia S., Marignani M., Mazzarelli C., Mella A., Missale G., Parisi S., Pasulo L., Puoti M., Rendina M., Ribaldone D., Rossi G., Toniutto P., Tucci A., Vajro P., Vigano M., Volpes R., Zignego A.L., Giannini E.G., Miele L., Russo F.P., Petta S., Bonora S., Brignardello E., Busca A., Cariti G., Cavallo F., Conforti M., Coscia M., Craxi A., Curci D., Cusinato S., Di Maio M., Valle R.D., Fusaro E., Giacardi A., Giaccone L., Lagget M., Libertucci D., Minutolo R., Montrucchio G., Orlando A., Orsucci L., Pasquina C., Pera A., Peroni C.L., Pirisi M., Racca P., Riccardini F., Rizzetto M., Salizzoni M., Salomone M., Saracco G.M., Scaglione L., Torre G., Tozzi R., Vitolo U., Verme G., Angelucci, E, Astegiano, M, Baratelli, C, Biancone, L, Bironzo, P, Brancaccio, G, Brunetto, M, Bruno, R, Burra, P, Cabras, M, l Caraceni, P, Chialà, C, Clemente, M, Colli, A, Daniele, B, De Gasperi, E, Di Marco, V, Ditto, M, Fagiuoli, S, Ferri, C, Gaeta, G, Grossi, P, Imperatrice, B, Lampertico, P, Macaluso, F, Madonia, S, Marignani, M, Mazzarelli, C, Mella, A, Missale, G, Parisi, S, Pasulo, L, Puoti, M, Rendina, M, Ribaldone, D, Rossi, G, Toniutto, P, Tucci, A, Vajro, P, Viganò, M, Volpes, R, Zignego, A, Giannini, E, Miele, L, Russo, F, Petta, S, Bonora, S, Brignardello, E, Busca, A, Cariti, G, Cavallo, F, Conforti, M, Coscia, M, Craxì, A, Curci, D, Cusinato, S, Di Maio, M, Valle, R, Fusaro, E, Giacardi, A, Giaccone, L, Lagget, M, Libertucci, D, Minutolo, R, Montrucchio, G, Orlando, A, Orsucci, L, Pasquina, C, Pera, A, Peroni, C, Pirisi, M, Racca, P, Riccardini, F, Rizzetto, M, Salizzoni, M, Salomone, M, Saracco, G, Scaglione, L, Torre, G, Tozzi, R, Vitolo, U, Verme, G, Marzano, Alfredo, Angelucci, Emanuele, Astegiano, Marco, Baratelli, Chiara, Biancone, Luigi, Bironzo, Paolo, Brancaccio, Giuseppina, Brunetto, Maurizia Rossana, Bruno, Raffaele, Burra, Patrizia, Cabras, Maria Giuseppina, Caraceni, Paolo, Chialà, Claudia, Clemente, Maria Grazia, Colli, Agostino, Daniele, Bruno, De Gasperi, Elisabetta, Di Marco, Vito, Ditto, Maria Chiara, Fagiuoli, Stefano, Ferri, Clodoveo, Gaeta, Giovanni Battista, Grossi, Paolo Antonio, Imperatrice, Barbara, Lampertico, Pietro, Macaluso, Fabio Salvatore, Madonia, Salvatore, Marignani, Massimo, Mazzarelli, Chiara, Mella, Alberto, Missale, Gabriele, Parisi, Simone, Pasulo, Luisa, Puoti, Massimo, Rendina, Maria, Ribaldone, Davide, Rossi, Giuseppe, Toniutto, Pierluigi, Tucci, Alessandra, Vajro, Pietro, Viganò, Mauro, Volpes, Riccardo, Zignego, Anna Linda, Giannini, Edoardo G., Miele, Luca, Russo, Francesco Paolo, Petta, Salvatore, Bonora, Stefano, Brignardello, Enrico, Busca, Alessandro, Cariti, Giuseppe, Cavallo, Federica, Conforti, Massimiliano, Coscia, Marta, Craxì, Antonio, Curci, Daniele, Cusinato, Stefano, Di Maio, Massimo, Valle, Rossella Della, Fusaro, Enrico, Giacardi, Aldo, Giaccone, Luisa, Lagget, Marco, Libertucci, Daniela, Minutolo, Roberto, Montrucchio, Giuseppe, Orlando, Ambrogio, Orsucci, Lorella, Pasquina, Carla, Pera, Angelo, Peroni, Clara Lisa, Pirisi, Mario, Racca, Patrizia, Riccardini, Franco, Rizzetto, Mario, Salizzoni, Mauro, Salomone, Mario, Saracco, Giorgio Maria, Scaglione, Luca, Torre, Giuliano, Tozzi, Rita, Vitolo, Umberto, Verme, Giorgio, and Ditto, MARIA CHIARA
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Transplant Recipient ,Comorbidity ,Antiviral Agents ,Organ transplantation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immunocompromised Host ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Immunocompromised patient ,Humans ,Chronic ,Intensive care medicine ,Antiviral Agent ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,medicine.disease ,Hepatitis C ,Organ transplant ,HCV ,Immunocompromised patients ,Transplant Recipients ,Immunocompetence ,Italy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,HCV, Immunocompromised patients, Organ transplant ,Position paper ,Neoplasm ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Direct acting ,Human - Abstract
This report summarizes the clinical features and the indications for treating HCV infection in immunocompromised and transplanted patients in the Direct Acting Antiviral drugs era.
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- 2018
18. Weekly docetaxel versus CMF as adjuvant chemotherapy for older women with early breast cancer: final results of the randomized phase III ELDA trial
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G. Botti, Carmen Pacilio, Ferdinando Riccardi, Massimiliano D’Aiuto, F. Di Rella, Maria Carmela Piccirillo, F. Perrone, Rossella Lauria, Ciro Gallo, M. Di Maio, Agnese Montanino, Vincenza Tinessa, G. Landi, Bruno Daniele, Sandro Barni, Simona Signoriello, Valeria Forestieri, Elisa Rossi, Francesco Nuzzo, Giovanni Iodice, E. De Maio, Adriano Gravina, G. Colantuoni, Gennaro Daniele, Stefania Gori, A. De Matteis, S. De Placido, Alessandro Morabito, V. Labonia, M. De Laurentiis, Perrone, F, Nuzzo, F, Di Rella, F, Gravina, A, Iodice, G, Labonia, V, Landi, G, Pacilio, C, Rossi, E, De Laurentiis, M, D'Aiuto, M, Botti, G, Forestieri, V, Lauria, R, De Placido, S, Tinessa, V, Daniele, B, Gori, S, Colantuoni, G, Barni, S, Riccardi, F, De Maio, E, Montanino, A, Morabito, A, Daniele, G, Di Maio, M, Piccirillo, Mc, Signoriello, Simona, Gallo, Ciro, de Matteis, A., Nuzzo, F., Di Rella, F., Gravina, A., Iodice, G., Labonia, V., Landi, G., Pacilio, C., Rossi, E., De Laurentiis, M., D'Aiuto, M., Botti, G., Forestieri, V., Lauria, R., De Placido, S., Tinessa, V., Daniele, B., Gori, S., Colantuoni, G., Barni, S., Riccardi, F., De Maio, E., Montanino, A., Morabito, A., Daniele, G., Di Maio, M., Piccirillo, M. C., Signoriello, S., Gallo, C., and De Matteis, Ma.
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ductal ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,CMF ,docetaxel ,Breast ,Adjuvant ,Medicine (all) ,Carcinoma, Ductal, Breast ,Hazard ratio ,Hematology ,Prognosis ,Chemotherapy regimen ,Survival Rate ,Local ,Docetaxel ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,Taxoids ,Female ,Fluorouracil ,Breast Neoplasm ,Human ,medicine.drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Randomized phase III trial ,Cyclophosphamide ,Prognosi ,Breast Neoplasms ,elderly ,Lobular ,Follow-Up Studie ,Breast cancer ,breast cancer ,Taxoid ,Internal medicine ,Mucositis ,medicine ,Chemotherapy ,Humans ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocol ,business.industry ,Carcinoma ,medicine.disease ,Carcinoma, Lobular ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Methotrexate ,Elderly ,Follow-Up Studies ,Neoplasm Grading ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business - Abstract
Evidence on adjuvant chemotherapy for elderly early breast cancer patients is poor, due to the low number of phase 3 trials. ELDA shows that weekly docetaxel does not prolong DFS compared with standard CMF and worsens quality of life. Non-hematological toxicity is worse with weekly docetaxel. Age, comorbidities and functioning geriatric scales may be predictive of non-hematological side effects. Background Evidence on adjuvant chemotherapy in older women with breast cancer is poor. We tested whether weekly docetaxel is more effective than standard chemotherapy. Patients and methods We carried out a multicenter, randomized phase III study. Women aged 65–79, operated for breast cancer, with average to high risk of recurrence, were allocated 1 : 1 to CMF (cyclophosphamide 600 mg/m², methotrexate 40 mg/m², fluorouracil 600 mg/m², days 1, 8) or docetaxel (35 mg/m2 days 1, 8, 15) every 4 weeks, for four or six cycles according to hormone receptor status. Primary end point was disease-free survival (DFS). A geriatric assessment was carried out. Quality of life (QoL) was assessed with EORTC C-30 and BR-23 questionnaires. Results From July 2003 to April 2011, 302 patients were randomized and 299 (152 allocated CMF and 147 docetaxel) were eligible. After 70-month median follow-up, 109 DFS events were observed. Unadjusted hazard ratio (HR) of DFS for docetaxel versus CMF was 1.21 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.83–1.76,P = 0.32]; DFS estimate at 5 years was 0.69 with CMF and 0.65 with docetaxel. HR of death was 1.34 (95% CI 0.80–2.22,P = 0.26). There was no interaction between treatment arms and geriatric scales measuring patients' ability or comorbidities. Hematological toxicity, mucositis and nausea were worse with CMF; allergy, fatigue, hair loss, onychopathy, dysgeusia, diarrhea, abdominal pain, neuropathy, cardiac and skin toxicity were worse with docetaxel. One death was attributed to CMF and two to docetaxel. Increasing age, impairment in instrumental daily living activities, number of comorbidities and docetaxel treatment were independently associated with severe nonhematological toxicity. QoL was worse with docetaxel for nausea-vomiting, appetite loss, diarrhea, body image, future perspective, treatment side-effects and hair loss items. Conclusions Weekly docetaxel is not more effective than standard CMF as adjuvant treatment of older women with breast cancer and worsens QoL and toxicity. ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00331097.
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- 2015
19. Prevalence and management of pain in Italian patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer
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Ciro Gallo, F. Perrone, Santi Barbera, F. Ferraù, E. Piazza, Luigi Manzione, M. Di Maio, G P Ianniello, Alessandra Bearz, Rosario Vincenz Iaffaioli, Cesare Gridelli, E. Di Salvo, Vincenzo Adamo, Mario Spatafora, L. Brancaccio, L. Isa, Sergio Federico Robbiati, Francesco Rosetti, Francesco Carrozza, Luciano Frontini, Di Maio, M, Gridelli, C, Gallo, C, Manzione, L, Brancaccio, L, Barbera, S, Robbiati, Sf, Ianniello, Gp, Ferraù, F, Piazza, E, Frontini, L, Rosetti, F, Carrozza, F, Bearz, A, Spatafora, M, Adamo, V, Isa, L, Iaffaioli, Rv, DI SALVO, Enrico, Perrone, F., DI MAIO, M, Gallo, Ciro, Ferra, F, DI SALVO, E, DI MAIO M, GRIDELLI C, GALLO C, MANZIONE L, BRANCACCIO L, BARBERA S, ROBBIATI SF, IANNIELLO GP, FERRA F, PIAZZA E, FRONTINI L, ROSETTI F, CARROZZA F, BEARZ A, SPATAFORA M, ADAMO V, ISA L, IAFFAIOIL V, DI SALVO E, and PERRONE F
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Adult ,Male ,cancer pain ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Analgesic ,Pain ,Bone Neoplasms ,Severity of Illness Index ,law.invention ,Clinical ,Pain Management Index ,Randomized controlled trial ,Quality of life ,law ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Severity of illness ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Pain Management ,Aged ,Pain Measurement ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Guideline ,analgesic ,Middle Aged ,Clinical trial ,lung cancer ,Italy ,Oncology ,analgesics ,Quality of Life ,Physical therapy ,Female ,business ,Cancer pain - Abstract
Pain is a highly distressing symptom for patients with advanced cancer. WHO analgesic ladder is widely accepted as a guideline for its treatment. Our aim was to describe pain prevalence among patients diagnosed with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), impact of pain on quality of life (QoL) and adequacy of pain management. Data of 1021 Italian patients enrolled in three randomised trials of chemotherapy for NSCLC were pooled. QoL was assessed by EORTC QLQ-C30 and LC-13. Analgesic consumption during the 3 weeks following QoL assessment was recorded. Adequacy of pain management was evaluated by the Pain Management Index (PMI). Some pain was reported by 74% of patients (42% mild, 24% moderate and 7% severe); 50% stated pain was affecting daily activities (30% a little, 16% quite a bit, 336 very much). Bone metastases strongly affected presence of pain. Mean global QoL linearly decreased from 64.9 to 36.4 from patients without pain to those with severe pain (P < 0.001). According to PMI, 616 out of 752 patients reporting pain (82%) received inadequate analgesic treatment. Bone metastases were associated with improved adequacy and worst pain with reduced adequacy at multivariate analysis. In conclusion, pain is common in patients with advanced NSCLC, significantly affects QoL, and is frequently undertreated. We recommend that: (i) pain self-assessment should be part of oncological clinical practice; (ii) pain control should be a primary goal in clinical practice and in clinical trials; (iii) physicians should receive more training in pain management; (iv) analgesic treatment deserves greater attention in protocols of anticancer treatment. © 2004 Cancer Research UK.
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- 2004
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20. Carboplatin plus paclitaxel versus carboplatin plus pegylated liposomal doxorubicin as first-line treatment for patients with ovarian cancer: the MITO-2 randomized phase III trial
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Francesco Perrone, Giovanni Scambia, Alessandro Morabito, Vanda Salutari, Francesco Legge, Enrico Aitini, Stefano Greggi, Paolo Scollo, Alberto Ravaioli, Roberto Sorio, Laura Scaltriti, L. Frigerio, Antonella Savarese, Donato Natale, Gabriella Ferrandina, Carmela Pisano, Alba A. Brandes, Massimo Di Maio, Antonio Febbraro, Enrico Breda, Ciro Gallo, Alessandra Vernaglia Lombardi, Maria Rosaria Valerio, Vittorio Gebbia, Pietro Del Medico, Pietro Musso, Stefano Tamberi, Domenica Lorusso, Sandro Pignata, Antonella Ferro, Pignata, S, Scambia, G, Ferrandina, G, Savarese, A, Sorio, R, Breda, E, Gebbia, V, Musso, P, Frigerio, L, Del Medico, P, Lombardi, Av, Febbraro, A, Scollo, P, Ferro, A, Tamberi, S, Brandes, A, Ravaioli, A, Valerio, Mr, Aitini, E, Natale, D, Scaltriti, L, Greggi, S, Pisano, C, Lorusso, D, Salutari, V, Legge, F, Di Maio, M, Morabito, A, Gallo, Ciro, Perrone, F., Pignata, S., Scambia, G., Ferrandina, G., Savarese, A., Sorio, R., Breda, E., Gebbia, V., Musso, P., Frigerio, L., Del Medico, P., Lombardi, A., Febbraro, A., Scollo, P., Ferro, A., Tamberi, S., Brandes, A., Ravaioli, A., Valerio, M., Aitini, E., Natale, D., Scaltriti, L., Greggi, S., Pisano, C., Lorusso, D., Salutari, V., Legge, F., Di Maio, M., Morabito, A., Gallo, C., and Perrone, F
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Oncology ,Adult ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Settore MED/06 - Oncologia Medica ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Polyethylene Glycol ,Disease-Free Survival ,law.invention ,Carboplatin ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Antineoplastic Agent ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Doxorubicin ,Aged ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Chemotherapy ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocol ,business.industry ,Ovarian Neoplasm ,Area under the curve ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Settore MED/40 - GINECOLOGIA E OSTETRICIA ,chemistry ,Paclitaxel ,Quality of Life ,Female ,business ,Ovarian cancer ,Human ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose Carboplatin/paclitaxel is the standard first-line chemotherapy for patients with advanced ovarian cancer. Multicentre Italian Trials in Ovarian Cancer-2 (MITO-2), an academic multicenter phase III trial, tested whether carboplatin/pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) was more effective than standard chemotherapy. Patients and Methods Chemotherapy-naive patients with stage IC to IV ovarian cancer (age ≤ 75 years; Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status ≤ 2) were randomly assigned to carboplatin area under the curve (AUC) 5 plus paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 or to carboplatin AUC 5 plus PLD 30 mg/m2, every 3 weeks for six cycles. Primary end point was progression-free survival (PFS). With 632 events in 820 enrolled patients, the study would have 80% power to detect a 0.80 hazard ratio (HR) of PFS. Results Eight hundred twenty patients were randomly assigned. Disease stages III and IV were prevalent. Occurrence of PFS events substantially slowed before obtaining the planned number. Therefore, in concert with the Independent Data Monitoring Committee, final analysis was performed with 556 events, after a median follow-up of 40 months. Median PFS times were 19.0 and 16.8 months with carboplatin/PLD and carboplatin/paclitaxel, respectively (HR, 0.95; 95% CI, 0.81 to 1.13; P = .58). Median overall survival times were 61.6 and 53.2 months with carboplatin/PLD and carboplatin/paclitaxel, respectively (HR, 0.89; 95% CI, 0.72 to 1.12; P = .32). Carboplatin/PLD produced a similar response rate but different toxicity (less neurotoxicity and alopecia but more hematologic adverse effects). There was no relevant difference in global quality of life after three and six cycles. Conclusion Carboplatin/PLD was not superior to carboplatin/paclitaxel, which remains the standard first-line chemotherapy for advanced ovarian cancer. However, given the observed CIs and the different toxicity, carboplatin/PLD could be considered an alternative to standard therapy.
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- 2011
21. Cetuximab and gemcitabine in elderly or adult PS2 patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: The cetuximab in advanced lung cancer (CALC1-E and CALC1-PS2) randomized phase II trials
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Cesare Gridelli, Vittorio Gebbia, Maria Grazia Viganò, G. Valmadre, Manlio Mencoboni, Alessandro Morabito, Massimo Di Maio, Ciro Gallo, Claudio Verusio, Maria Carmela Piccirillo, Maria Rosaria Valerio, Antonio Rossi, Roberto Bollina, Floriana Morgillo, Rodolfo Mattioli, Francesco Carrozza, Tina Cascone, Fortunato Ciardiello, Francesco Perrone, Paolo Maione, Gridelli, C, Morabito, A, Gebbia, V, Mencoboni, M, Carrozza, F, Viganò, Mg, Verusio, C, Bollina, R, Mattioli, R, Valerio, Mr, Valmadre, G, Maione, P, Rossi, A, Cascone, T, Morgillo, Floriana, DI MAIO, M, Piccirillo, Mc, Gallo, Ciro, Perrone, F, Ciardiello, Fortunato, Viganò, MG, Valerio, MR, Morgillo, F, Di Maio, M, Piccirillo, MC, Gallo, C, and Ciardiello, F
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Oncology ,Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Adolescent ,Settore MED/06 - Oncologia Medica ,Cetuximab ,NSCLC ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Deoxycytidine ,law.invention ,Young Adult ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung cancer ,PS2 patient ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Gemcitabine ,Surgery ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,Concomitant ,Patient Compliance ,Female ,business ,Elderly patient ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background:Two parallel randomized phase 2 trialswere performed to choose the optimal way of combining cetuximab with gemcitabine in the first-line treatment of elderly (CALC1-E) and adult PS2 (CALC1-PS2) patients with advanced NSCLC. Methods: Stage IV or IIIB NSCLC patients, aged ≥70 years with PS 0–2 for CALC1-E or aged
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- 2010
22. Chemotherapy-induced neutropenia and treatment efficacy in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: a pooled analysis of 6 randomized trials
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Floriana Morgillo, Giovanna Esposito, Gianfranco Mancuso, Francesco Perrone, Fortunato Ciardiello, Maria Carmela Piccirillo, Paolo Maione, Clorinda Schettino, Cesare Gridelli, Raimondo Di Liello, Piera Gargiulo, Vittorio Gebbia, Giuliano Palumbo, Massimo Di Maio, Adriano Gravina, Alessia Spagnuolo, Laura Arenare, Alessandro Morabito, Carminia Maria Della Corte, Ciro Gallo, Gargiulo, P., Arenare, L., Gridelli, C., Morabito, A., Ciardiello, F., Gebbia, V., Maione, P., Spagnuolo, A., Palumbo, G., Esposito, G., Della Corte, C. M., Morgillo, F., Mancuso, G., Di Liello, R., Gravina, A., Schettino, C., Di Maio, M., Gallo, C., Perrone, F., and Piccirillo, M. C.
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,Retrospective-prospective design ,Lung Neoplasms ,law.invention ,Chemotherapy-induced neutropenia (CIN) ,Lung cancer ,Overall survival ,Prognostic factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Clinical endpoint ,Prospective Studies ,RC254-282 ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Prognostic factor ,education.field_of_study ,Hazard ratio ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Middle Aged ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neutropenia ,Population ,Antineoplastic Agents ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,neoplasms ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Research ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,business - Abstract
Background Chemotherapy-induced neutropenia (CIN) has been demonstrated to be a prognostic factor in several cancer conditions. We previously found a significant prognostic value of CIN on overall survival (OS), in a pooled dataset of patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) receiving first line chemotherapy from 1996 to 2001. However, the prognostic role of CIN in NSCLC is still debated. Methods We performed a post hoc analysis pooling data prospectively collected in six randomized phase 3 trials in NSCLC conducted from 2002 to 2016. Patients who never started chemotherapy and those for whom toxicity data were missing were excluded. Neutropenia was categorized on the basis of worst grade during chemotherapy: absent (grade 0), mild (grade 1–2), or severe (grade 3–4). The primary endpoint was OS. Multivariable Cox model was applied for statistical analyses. In the primary analysis, a minimum time (landmark) at 180 days from randomization was applied in order to minimize the time-dependent bias. Results Overall, 1529 patients, who received chemotherapy, were eligible; 572 of them (who received 6 cycles of treatment) represented the landmark population. Severe CIN was reported in 143 (25.0%) patients and mild CIN in 135 (23.6%). At multivariable OS analysis, CIN was significantly predictive of prognosis although its prognostic value was entirely driven by severe CIN (hazard ratio [HR] of death 0.71; 95%CI: 0.53–0.95) while it was not evident with mild CIN (HR 1.21; 95%CI: 0.92–1.58). Consistent results were observed in the out-of-landmark group (including 957 patients), where both severe and mild CIN were significantly associated with a reduced risk of death. Conclusion The pooled analysis of six large trials of NSCLC treatment shows that CIN occurrence is significantly associated with a longer overall survival, particularly in patients developing severe CIN, confirming our previous findings.
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- 2021
23. Residual neurotoxicity in ovarian cancer patients in clinical remission after first-line chemotherapy with carboplatin and paclitaxel: the Multicenter Italian Trial in Ovarian cancer (MITO-4) retrospective study
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Giovanni Scambia, Giampietro Gasparini, S. Danese, Giuseppe Colucci, Luigi Manzione, Maria Rosaria Valerio, Alessandra Vernaglia Lombardi, Mario Nardi, Francesco Perrone, R. Biamonte, Giovanni Di Vagno, Sandro Pignata, Marco Marinaccio, Massimo Di Maio, Antonio Febbraro, Bruno Massidda, Giacomo Cartenì, Sabino De Placido, Andrea de Matteis, Carmela Pisano, PIGNATA, S, DE PLACIDO, S, BIAMONTE, R, SCAMBIA, G, DI VAGNO, G, COLUCCI, G, FEBBRARO, A, MARINACCIO, M, LOMBARDI, AV, MANZIONE, L, CARTENI, G, NARDI, M, DANESE, S, VALERIO, MR, DE MATTEIS, A, MASSIDDA, B, GASPARINI, G, DI MAIO, M, PISANO, C, PERRONE, F, Sandro, Pignata, DE PLACIDO, Sabino, Rosalbino, Biamonte, Giovanni, Scambia, Giovanni Di, Vagno, Giuseppe, Colucci, Antonio, Febbraro, Marco, Marinaccio, Alessandra Vernaglia, Lombardi, Luigi, Manzione, Giacomo, Cartenì, Mario, Nardi, Saverio, Danese, Maria Rosaria, Valerio, Andrea de, Mattei, Bruno, Massidda, Giampietro, Gasparini, Massimo Di, Maio, Carmela, Pisano, Francesco, Perrone, Pignata, S, De Placido, S, Biamonte, R, Scambia, G, Di Vagno, G, Colucci, G, Febbraro, A, Marinaccio, M, Lombardi, Av, Manzione, L, Carteni, G, Nardi, M, Danese, S, Valerio, Mr, de Matteis, A, Massidda, B, Gasparini, G, Di Maio, M, Pisano, C, and Perrone, F
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Oncology ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cancer Research ,Time Factors ,endocrine system diseases ,Paclitaxel ,medicine.medical_treatment ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Severity of Illness Index ,Carboplatin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Median follow-up ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Genetics ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Peripheral Nervous System Diseases ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Clinical trial ,chemistry ,Topotecan ,Female ,business ,Ovarian cancer ,medicine.drug ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Carboplatin/paclitaxel is the chemotherapy of choice for advanced ovarian cancer, both in first line and in platinum-sensitive recurrence. Although a significant proportion of patients have some neurotoxicity during treatment, the long-term outcome of chemotherapy-induced neuropathy has been scantly studied. We retrospectively assessed the prevalence of residual neuropathy in a cohort of patients in clinical remission after first-line carboplatin/paclitaxel for advanced ovarian cancer. Methods 120 patients have been included in this study (101 participating in a multicentre phase III trial evaluating the efficacy of consolidation treatment with topotecan, and 19 treated at the National Cancer Institute of Naples after the end of the trial). All patients received carboplatin (AUC 5) plus paclitaxel (175 mg/m2) every 3 weeks for 6 cycles, completing treatment between 1998 and 2003. Data were collected between May and September 2004. Residual sensory and motor neurotoxicity were coded according to the National Cancer Institute – Common Toxicity Criteria. Results 55 patients (46%) did not experience any grade of neurological toxicity during chemotherapy and of these none had signs of neuropathy during follow-up. The other 65 patients (54%) had chemotherapy-induced neurotoxicity during treatment and follow-up data are available for 60 of them. Fourteen out of 60 patients (23%) referred residual neuropathy at the most recent follow-up visit, after a median follow up of 18 months (range, 7–58 months): 12 patients had grade 1 and 2 patients grade 2 peripheral sensory neuropathy; 3 patients also had grade 1 motor neuropathy. The remaining 46/60 patients (77%) had no residual neuropathy at the moment of interview: recovery from neurotoxicity had occurred in the first 2 months after the end of chemotherapy in 22 (37%), between 2 and 6 months in 15 (25%), or after more than 6 months in 9 patients (15%). Considering all 120 treated patients, there was a 15% probability of persistent neurological toxicity 6 months after the end of chemotherapy. Conclusion A significant proportion of patients with advanced ovarian cancer treated with first-line carboplatin/paclitaxel suffer long-term residual neuropathy. This issue should be carefully taken into account before considering re-treatment with the same agents in sensitive recurrent disease.
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- 2006
24. Chemotherapy-induced neutropenia and treatment efficacy in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: a pooled analysis of three randomised trials
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Lesley Seymour, S. Cigolari, Santi Barbera, Frances A. Shepherd, Ciro Gallo, Francesco Perrone, Franco Vito Piantedosi, Giovanni Pietro Ianniello, Paolo Chiodini, Luigi Manzione, Massimo Di Maio, Alfonso Illiano, Federico Castiglione, Sergio Federico Robbiati, E. Piazza, Enzo Veltri, Francesco Rosetti, Luciano Frontini, Cesare Gridelli, Vittorio Gebbia, DI MAIO M, GRIDELLI C, GALLO C, SHEPHERD F, PIANTEDOSI FV, CIGOLARI S, MANZIONE L, ILLIANO A, BARBERA S, ROBBIATI SF, FRONTINI L, PIAZZA E, IANNIELLO, GP, VELTRI E, CASTIGLIONE F, ROSETTI F, GEBBIA V, SEYMOUR L, CHIODINI P, PERRONE, DI MAIO, M., Gridelli, C., Gallo, Ciro, Shepherd, F., Piantedosi, F., Cigolari, S., Manzione, L., Illiano, A., Barbera, S., Robbiati, S., Frontini, L., Piazza, E., Ianniello, G., Veltri, E., Castiglione, F., Rosetti, F., Gebbia, V., Seymour, L., Chiodini, Paolo, and Perrone, F.
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Adult ,Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Neutropenia ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Vinorelbine ,Severity of Illness Index ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung cancer ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Aged, 80 and over ,Chemotherapy ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Standard treatment ,Hazard ratio ,Middle Aged ,randomized clinical trial ,medicine.disease ,Gemcitabine ,Surgery ,Survival Rate ,landmark analysis ,non-small-cell lung cancer ,Italy ,chemotherapy-induced neutropenia ,Female ,Drug Monitoring ,business ,Biomarkers ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Background Chemotherapy is the standard treatment for advanced non-small-cell lung cancer, and myelosuppression is a common side-effect. We aimed to assess whether haematological toxic effects could be a biological measure of drug activity and a marker of efficacy. Methods We analysed data for 1265 patients who received chemotherapy (vinorelbine, gemcitabine, gemcitabine and vinorelbine, cisplatin and vinorelbine, or cisplatin and gemcitabine) within three randomised trials. Primary landmark analyses were restricted to 436 patients who received all six planned chemotherapy cycles and who were alive 180 days after randomisation. Neutropenia was categorised on the basis of worst WHO grade during chemotherapy: absent (grade 0), mild (grade 1–2), or severe (grade 3–4). All statistical analyses were stratified by treatment allocation. Analyses were repeated in the out-of-landmark group (829 patients), stratifying by treatment allocation and number of chemotherapy cycles. The primary endpoint was overall survival. Findings In the landmark group, hazard ratios of death were 0·65 (0·46–0·93) for patients with severe neutropenia and 0·74 (0·56–0·98) for those with mild neutropenia. Median survival after the landmark time of 180 days was 31·4 weeks (95% CI 25·7–39·6) for patients without neutropenia compared with 42·0 weeks (32·7–59·7) for patients with severe neutropenia, and with 43·7 weeks (36·6–66·0) for those with mild neutropenia (severe vs mild vs no neutropenia p=0·0118). Findings were much the same for the out-of-landmark group. Interpretation Neutropenia during chemotherapy is associated with increased survival of patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer, and its absence might be a result of underdosing. Prospective trials are needed to assess whether drug dosing guided by the occurrence of toxic effects could improve efficacy of standard regimens.
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- 2005
25. A qualitative analysis and development of a conceptual model assessing financial toxicity in cancer patients accessing the universal healthcare system
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Ciro Gallo, Elisabetta Iannelli, Lorenzo Guizzaro, Lucia Sparavigna, Claudio Jommi, Fabio Efficace, Silvia Riva, Maria Carmela Piccirillo, Giuliana Canzanella, Francesco Perrone, Francesco De Lorenzo, Jane Bryce, Diana Giannarelli, Laura Del Campo, Massimo Di Maio, Vincenzo Montesarchio, Laura Arenare, Fiorella Romano, Lara Gitto, Anna Gimigliano, Luciano Frontini, Francesca Traclò, Concetta Maria Vaccaro, Alfonso Savio, Riva, S., Efficace, F., Di Maio, M., Bryce, J., Del Campo, L., De Lorenzo, F., Frontini, L., Giannarelli, D., Gitto, L., Iannelli, E., Jommi, C., Montesarchio, V., Traclo, F., Vaccaro, C. M., Arenare, L., Canzanella, G., Gimigliano, A., Romano, F., Savio, A., Sparavigna, L., Piccirillo, M. C., Guizzaro, L., Gallo, C., and Perrone, F.
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Male ,Patient experience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Financial toxicity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Qualitative research ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Conceptual model ,Cancer ,media_common ,Finance ,business.industry ,Nursing research ,Debriefing ,Focus Groups ,Focus group ,Comprehension ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Quality of Life ,Universal Health Care ,Female ,business - Abstract
Purpose\ud This paper illustrates a conceptual model for a new patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) aimed at measuring financial toxicity (FT) in oncological setting in Italy, where citizens are provided universal healthcare coverage.\ud \ud Methods\ud Focus groups with overall 34 patients/caregivers in three different Italian centers (from Northern, Centre, and Southern Italy) and an open-ended survey with 97 medical oncologists were undertaken. Transcripts from focus groups and the open-ended survey were analyzed to identify themes and links between themes. Themes from the qualitative research were supplemented with those reported in the literature; concepts identified formed the basis for item development that were then tested through the importance analysis (with 45 patients) and the cognitive debriefing (with other 45 patients) to test relevance and comprehension of the first draft PRO instrument.\ud \ud Results\ud Ten domains were extracted by analyzing 156 concepts generated from focus groups and the open-ended survey. After controlling for redundancy, 55 items were generated and tested through the importance analysis. After controlling comprehension and feasibility through cognitive debriefing interviews, a first version of the questionnaire consisting of 30 items was devised.\ud \ud Conclusions\ud This qualitative study represents the first part of a study conducted to develop a new PROM to assess FT in Italy, by using a bottom-up approach that makes the most of patients’ experiences and the health system analysis.\ud \ud Trial registration\ud clinicaltrials.gov NCT03473379 first posted on March 22, 2018.
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- 2020
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26. COVID-19 Emergency and the Need to Speed Up the Adoption of Electronic Patient-Reported Outcomes in Cancer Clinical Practice
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Massimo Aglietta, Laura Marandino, Massimo Di Maio, Andrea Necchi, Marandino, L., Necchi, A., Aglietta, M., and Di Maio, M.
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2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Pneumonia, Viral ,MEDLINE ,Hospital ,Betacoronavirus ,Neoplasms ,Humans ,Medicine ,Viral therapy ,Viral ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Pandemics ,Emergency Service ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Oncology (nursing) ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,COVID-19 ,Cancer ,Pneumonia ,medicine.disease ,Clinical Practice ,Oncology ,Coronavirus Infections ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Medical emergency ,business ,EDITORIALS - Published
- 2020
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27. Sacubitril/valsartan in patients listed for heart transplantation: effect on physical frailty
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Valentina Mercurio, Vittorio Palmieri, Ciro Maiello, Pasquale Abete, Claudio Napoli, Giuditta Benincasa, Francesco Cacciatore, Gemma Salerno, Flora Pirozzi, Cristiano Amarelli, Marco Di Maio, Domenico Bonaduce, Paolo Golino, Irene Mattucci, Francesco Curcio, Cacciatore, F., Amarelli, C., Maiello, C., Mattucci, I., Salerno, G., Di Maio, M., Palmieri, V., Curcio, F., Pirozzi, F., Mercurio, V., Benincasa, G., Golino, P., Bonaduce, D., Napoli, C., and Abete, P.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Short Communication ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Short Communications ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Ventricular Function, Left ,Sacubitril ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pulmonary wedge pressure ,Heart Failure ,Heart transplantation ,Ejection fraction ,Frailty ,business.industry ,Aminobutyrates ,Biphenyl Compounds ,Stroke Volume ,Sacubitril/Valsartan ,medicine.disease ,Drug Combinations ,Blood pressure ,Valsartan ,RC666-701 ,Heart failure ,Cardiology ,Heart Transplantation ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,human activities ,Sacubitril, Valsartan ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Aims The aim of this study was to investigate prospectively the effect of sacubitril/valsartan in advanced heart failure (HF) patients in waiting list for heart transplantation (HT) and the effect on physical frailty (PF). Methods and results We treated 37 consecutive patients with advanced HF with sacubitril/valsartan. Patients were followed up until HT, device implant, or last follow‐up visit after 2 years of follow‐up. At baseline, mean New York Heart Association (NYHA) class was 3.1 ± 0.4, with 64.9% in NYHA III and 35.1% NYHA IIIB. Left ventricular ejection fraction was 23.5 ± 5.8%, VO2 max was 10.3 ± 2.3 mL/kg/min, cardiac index was 2.3 ± 0.5 L/min/m2, and N‐terminal pro‐brain natriuretic peptide (NT‐pro‐BNP) was 4943.0 ± 5326.8 pg/mL. After a mean follow‐up of 17.1 ± 4.4 months, no deaths were observed, but NYHA class improved significantly with 56.8% in NYHA II, 40.5% in NYHA III, and 2.7% in NYHA IIIB (P < 0.001). VO2 max and 6 min walk test (6MWT) increased, whereas pulmonary systolic blood pressure, E/E′, VE/VCO2 slope, and NT‐pro‐BNP decreased. At right heart catheterization performed after 1 year of follow‐up, cardiac index and pulmonary vascular resistance remained stable, while a decrease in systolic pulmonary artery pressure and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure is observed. Furosemide dosage decrease from 102.7 ± 69.4 to 78.7 ± 66.3 mg (P = 0.040). PF decreased from 3.35 ± 1.0 at baseline to 1.57 ± 1.3 at the end of follow‐up (P < 0.001), with a reduction in all PF domains. Conclusions Our study showed a rapid improvement in PF in HT waiting list patients treated with sacubitril/valsartan. The improvement in all PF domains was paralleled by VO2 and 6MWT increase and together with an NT‐pro‐BNP reduction constant over the follow‐up.
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- 2020
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28. Association of atrial fibrillation and left atrial volume index with mortality in patients with COVID-19 pneumonia
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Michele D'Alto, Fabio Crescibene, Antonello D'Andrea, Gianluca Manzo, Valerio Giordano, Eduardo Bossone, Vincenzo Russo, Marco Di Maio, D'Andrea, A., Russo, V., Manzo, G., Giordano, V., Di Maio, M., Crescibene, F., D'Alto, M., Bossone, E., D'Andrea, Antonello, Russo, Vincenzo, Manzo, Gianluca, Giordano, Valerio, Di Maio, Marco, Crescibene, Fabio, D'Alto, Michele, and Bossone, Eduardo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Epidemiology ,business.industry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,COVID-19 ,Atrial fibrillation ,medicine.disease ,Pneumonia ,Left atrial ,Internal medicine ,Atrial Fibrillation ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Research Letter ,Humans ,In patient ,Heart Atria ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Published
- 2022
29. Prognostic Implications of Right Ventricular Function and Pulmonary Pressures Assessed by Echocardiography in Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19
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Carmine Vecchione, Marco Di Maio, Guido Parodi, Rodolfo Citro, Barbara Rasile, Michele Bellino, Fernando Scudiero, Carmine Alfano, Gennaro Galasso, Vincenzo Russo, Maria Vincenza Polito, Angelo Silverio, Polito, M. V., Silverio, A., Di Maio, M., Bellino, M., Scudiero, F., Russo, V., Rasile, B., Alfano, C., Citro, R., Parodi, G., Vecchione, C., and Galasso, G.
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TAPSE ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronaviru ,Population ,COVID-19 ,coronavirus ,right ventricular dysfunction ,pulmonary hypertension ,RV–arterial coupling ,outcome ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Logistic regression ,Article ,law.invention ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Risk of mortality ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,medicine.disease ,Intensive care unit ,Pulmonary hypertension ,Pulmonary embolism ,Pulmonary artery ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,business - Abstract
Aims: Pulmonary involvement in Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) may affect right ventricular (RV) function and pulmonary pressures. The prognostic value of tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE), systolic pulmonary artery pressure (PAPS), and TAPSE/PAPS ratios have been poorly investigated in this clinical setting. Methods and results: This is a multicenter Italian study, including consecutive patients hospitalized for COVID-19. In-hospital mortality and pulmonary embolism (PE) were identified as the primary and secondary outcome measures, respectively. The study included 227 (16.1%) subjects (mean age 68 ± 13 years); intensive care unit (ICU) admission was reported in 32.2%. At competing risk analysis, after stratifying the population into tertiles, according to TAPSE, PAPS, and TAPSE/PAPS ratio values, patients in the lower TAPSE and TAPSE/PAPS tertiles, as well as those in the higher PAPS tertiles, showed a significantly higher incidence of death vs. the probability to be discharged during the hospitalization. At univariable logistic regression analysis, TAPSE, PAPS, and TAPSE/PAPS were significantly associated with a higher risk of death and PE, both in patients who were and were not admitted to ICU. At adjusted multivariable regression analysis, TAPSE, PAPS, and TAPSE/PAPS resulted in independently associated risk of in-hospital death (TAPSE: OR 0.85, CI 0.74–0.97; PAPS: OR 1.08, CI 1.03–1.13; TAPSE/PAPS: OR 0.02, CI 0.02 × 10−1–0.2) and PE (TAPSE: OR 0.7, CI 0.6–0.82; PAPS: OR 1.1, CI 1.05–1.14; TAPSE/PAPS: OR 0.02 × 10−1, CI 0.01 × 10−2–0.04). Conclusions: Echocardiographic evidence of RV systolic dysfunction, increased PAPS, and poor RV-arterial coupling may help to identify COVID-19 patients at higher risk of mortality and PE during hospitalization.
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- 2021
30. Clinical conditions and echocardiographic parameters associated with mortality in COVID‐19
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Carmine Vecchione, Antonio D'Amato, Antonello D'Andrea, Emilio Attena, Salvatore Pezzullo, Marco Di Maio, Antonio Silvestro, Michele Bellino, Anna Borrelli, Angelo Silverio, Patrizia Iannece, Vincenzo Russo, Gennaro Galasso, Davide Di Vece, Luca Esposito, Guido Parodi, Fernando Scudiero, Rodolfo Citro, Silverio, A., Di Maio, M., Scudiero, F., Russo, V., Esposito, L., Attena, E., Pezzullo, S., Parodi, G., D'Andrea, A., Damato, A., Silvestro, A., Iannece, P., Bellino, M., Di Vece, D., Borrelli, A., Citro, R., Vecchione, C., and Galasso, G.
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Male ,ARDS ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Myocarditis ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Right ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Disease ,Logistic regression ,Biochemistry ,Risk Assessment ,SARS‐CoV‐2 ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,Retrospective Studie ,COVID‐19 ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,echocardiography ,Humans ,Hospital Mortality ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Risk Factor ,COVID-19 ,Retrospective cohort study ,left ventricular ejection fraction ,tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion ,Stroke Volume ,General Medicine ,Original Articles ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary embolism ,Italy ,Cardiology ,outcome ,Population study ,Original Article ,Female ,business ,Human - Abstract
Background: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a recently recognized viral infective disease which can be complicated by acute respiratory stress syndrome (ARDS) and cardiovascular complications including severe arrhythmias, acute coronary syndromes, myocarditis and pulmonary embolism. The aim of the present study was to identify the clinical conditions and echocardiographic parameters associated with in-hospital mortality in COVID-19. Methods: This is a multicentre retrospective observational study including seven Italian centres. Patients hospitalized with COVID-19 from 1 March to 22 April 2020 were included into study population. The association between baseline variables and risk of in-hospital mortality was assessed through multivariable logistic regression and competing risk analyses. Results: Out of 1401 patients admitted at the participating centres with confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19, 226 (16.1%) underwent transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) and were included in the present analysis. In-hospital death occurred in 68 patients (30.1%). At multivariable analysis, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF, P17mm (HR: 5.08; CI: 3.15-8.19) and in patients with LVEF ≤50% vs those with LVEF >50% (HR: 4.06; CI: 2.50-6.59). Conclusions: TTE might be a useful tool in risk stratification of patients with COVID-19. In particular, reduced LVEF and reduced TAPSE may help to identify patients at higher risk of death during hospitalization.
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- 2021
31. Impact of lipoprotein(a) levels on recurrent cardiovascular events in patients with premature coronary artery disease
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Arturo Cesaro, Giuseppe Limongelli, Fabio Fimiani, Davide Cattano, Marco Di Maio, Felice Gragnano, Paolo Calabrò, Gragnano, F., Fimiani, F., Di Maio, M., Cesaro, A., Limongelli, G., Cattano, D., and Calabro, P.
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Adult ,Male ,Acute coronary syndrome ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Predictive Value of Test ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Follow-Up Studie ,Coronary artery disease ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,In patient ,Prospective Studies ,Analysis of Variance ,Chi-Square Distribution ,biology ,business.industry ,Premature coronary artery disease ,Lipoprotein(a) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prospective Studie ,Dyslipidemia ,Emergency Medicine ,biology.protein ,Cardiology ,Female ,business ,Human ,Follow-Up Studies - Published
- 2019
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32. Pulmonary embolism in COVID-19 patients: prevalence, predictors and clinical outcome
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Guido Parodi, Andrea Cafro, Davide Personeni, Fernando Scudiero, Mario Enrico Canonico, Rodolfo Citro, Antonello D'Andrea, Marco Di Maio, Salvatore Pezzullo, Angelo Silverio, Vincenzo Russo, Gennaro Galasso, Antonino Pitì, Emilio Attena, Scudiero, F., Silverio, A., Di Maio, M., Russo, V., Citro, R., Personeni, D., Cafro, A., D'Andrea, A., Attena, E., Pezzullo, S., Canonico, M. E., Galasso, G., Piti, A., and Parodi, G.
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Registrie ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prognosi ,Hypertension, Pulmonary ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Right ,Letter to the Editors-in-Chief ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Risk Assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Retrospective Studie ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,COVID-19 ,Echocardiography ,Pulmonary embolism ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Female ,Humans ,Italy ,Middle Aged ,Prevalence ,Prognosis ,Pulmonary Embolism ,Registries ,Retrospective Studies ,80 and over ,Ventricular Dysfunction ,Risk of mortality ,medicine ,business.industry ,Risk Factor ,Mortality rate ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Retrospective cohort study ,Pulmonary ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary hypertension ,Right ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Hypertension ,Population study ,business ,Complication ,Human - Abstract
Introduction: The incidence, characteristics, and prognosis of pulmonary embolism (PE) in Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have been poorly investigated. We aimed to investigate the prevalence and the correlates with the occurrence of PE as well as the association between PE and the risk of mortality in COVID-19. Methods: Retrospective multicenter study on consecutive COVID-19 patients hospitalized at 7 Italian Hospitals. At admission, all patients underwent medical history, laboratory and echocardiographic evaluation. Results: The study population consisted of 224 patients (mean age 69 ± 14, male sex 62%); PE was diagnosed in 32 cases (14%). Patients with PE were hospitalized after a longer time since symptoms onset (7 IQR 3–11 days, 3 IQR 1–6 days; p = 0.001) and showed higher D-dimers level (1819 IQR 568–5017 ng/ml vs 555 IQR 13–1530 ng/ml; p < 0.001) and higher prevalence of myocardial injury (47% vs 28%, p = 0.033). At multivariable analysis, tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE; HR = 0.84; 95% CI 0.66–0.98; p = 0.046) and systolic pulmonary arterial pressure (sPAP; HR = 1.12; 95% CI 1.03–1.23; p = 0.008) resulted the only parameters independently associated with PE occurrence. Mortality rates (50% vs 27%; p = 0.010) and cardiogenic shock (37% vs 14%; p = 0.001) were significantly higher in PE as compared with non-PE patients. At multivariate analysis PE was significant associated with mortality. Conclusion: PE is relatively common complication in COVID-19 and is associated with increased mortality risk. TAPSE and sPAP resulted the only parameters independently associated with PE occurrence in COVID-19 patients.
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- 2021
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33. COVID-19 infection in cancer patients: what has been the contribution of Associazione Italiana Oncologia Medica (AIOM) to oncological care since the beginning of the first pandemic wave?
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A. Russo, N. La Verde, Saverio Cinieri, Dario Giuffrida, L. Del Mastro, Marco Tucci, Nicola Silvestris, Rita Chiari, M. Di Maio, U. De Giorgi, F. Perrone, Giordano D. Beretta, Silvestris N., Di Maio M., Russo A., Chiari R., De Giorgi U., Del Mastro L., Giuffrida D., La Verde N., Perrone F., Tucci M., Beretta G.D., and Cinieri S.
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Cancer Research ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,medicine.medical_specialty ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,FAVO, Federazione delle Associazioni di Volontariato in Oncologia ,Review ,WHO, World Health Organization ,CIPOMO, Italian College of Primary Hospital Medical Oncologists ,SICO, Società Italiana di Chirurgia Oncologica ,Medical ,Neoplasms ,Health care ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,cancer ,Central Venous Catheters ,Humans ,FNOPI, Federazione Nazionale Ordini Professioni Infermieristiche ,Societies, Medical ,AIRO, Associazione Italiana Radioterapia e Oncologia clinica ,Oncologists ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,treatment ,business.industry ,High mortality ,AIOM, Associazione Italiana di Oncologia medica ,Cancer ,Neoplasms therapy ,AIOM ,COVID-19 ,vaccination ,Influenza Vaccines ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,medicine.disease ,COMU, College of University Medical Oncologists ,Oncology ,Family medicine ,FOCE, ConFederazione degli Oncologi, Cardiologi e Ematologi ,ESMO, European Society for Medical Oncology ,business ,Societies ,SIPO, Società Italiana di Psico-Oncologia - Abstract
High mortality rates in elderly patients or in those with underlying chronic illnesses and/or a compromised immune system is a peculiar feature of COVID-19 infection. The possible coexistence of a cancer and COVID-19 infection in the same individual prompted concerns regarding their synergistic effect on prognosis. In order to balance patients’ needs with the risks related to the infection, the question oncologists have asked from the beginning of the first wave of the pandemic has been: ‘how can we deal with COVID-19 infection in cancer patients?’ In pursuing its mission, the Associazione Italiana Oncologia Medica (AIOM) has made every possible effort to support cancer patients, health care professionals and institutions in the decision-making processes the pandemic has engendered within this scenario. The relevant documents as well as the educational and institutional initiatives the AIOM has taken are reported in this article.
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- 2021
34. Impact of Regular Physical Activity on Aortic Diameter Progression in Paediatric Patients with Bicuspid Aortic Valve
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Marco Di Maio, Adelaide Fusco, Eduardo Bossone, Maria Giovanna Russo, Marta Rubino, Felice Gragnano, Giuseppe Palmiero, Rodolfo Citro, Simon C. Body, Marcellino Monda, Augusto Esposito, Martina Caiazza, Alessandro Della Corte, Emanuele Monda, Arturo Cesaro, Stefano Nistri, Paolo Calabrò, Giulia Frisso, Maria Pina Giugliano, Francesco Di Fraia, Annapaola Cirillo, Giuseppe Limongelli, Monda, Emanuele, Fusco, Adelaide, Della Corte, Alessandro, Caiazza, Martina, Cirillo, Annapaola, Gragnano, Felice, Giugliano, Maria Pina, Citro, Rodolfo, Rubino, Marta, Esposito, Augusto, Cesaro, Arturo, Di Fraia, Francesco, Palmiero, Giuseppe, Di Maio, Marco, Monda, Marcellino, Calabrò, Paolo, Frisso, Giulia, Nistri, Stefano, Bossone, Eduardo, Body, Simon C., Russo, Maria Giovanna, Limongelli, Giuseppe, Monda, E., Fusco, A., Della Corte, A., Caiazza, M., Cirillo, A., Gragnano, F., Giugliano, M. P., Citro, R., Rubino, M., Esposito, A., Cesaro, A., Di Fraia, F., Palmiero, G., Di Maio, M., Monda, M., Calabro, P., Frisso, G., Nistri, S., Bossone, E., Body, S. C., Russo, M. G., and Limongelli, G.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Bicuspid aortic valve ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bicuspid Aortic Valve Disease ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,Ascending aorta ,Aortopathy ,Medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Exercise ,Paediatric patients ,Retrospective Studies ,Aortic dissection ,Aorta ,business.industry ,Paediatrics ,Vascular surgery ,medicine.disease ,Cardiac surgery ,Echocardiography ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Aortic Valve ,Case-Control Studies ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,Cardiology ,cardiovascular system ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Original Article ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Patients with bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) have an increased risk of aortic dilation and aortic dissection or rupture. The impact of physical training on the natural course of aortopathy in BAV patients remains unclear. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of regular physical activity on aortic diameters in a consecutive cohort of paediatric patients with BAV. Consecutive paediatric BAV patients were evaluated and categorized into two groups: physically active and sedentary subjects. Only the subjects with a complete 2-year follow-up were included in the study. To evaluate the potential impact of physical activity on aortic size, aortic diameters were measured at the sinus of Valsalva and mid-ascending aorta using echocardiography. We defined aortic diameter progression the increase of aortic diameter ≥ 10% from baseline. Among 90 BAV patients (11.5 ± 3.4 years of age, 77% males), 53 (59%) were physically active subjects. Compared to sedentary, physically active subjects were not significantly more likely to have > 10% increase in sinus of Valsalva (13% vs. 8%, p-value = 0.45) or mid-ascending aorta diameter (9% vs. 13%, p-value = 0.55) at 2 years follow-up, both in subjects with sinus of Valsalva diameter progression (3.7 ± 1.0 mm vs. 3.5 ± 0.8 mm, p-value = 0.67) and in those with ascending aorta diameter progression (3.0 ± 0.8 mm vs. 3.2 ± 1.3 mm, p-value = 0.83). In our paediatric cohort of BAV patients, the prevalence and the degree of aortic diameter progression was not significantly different between physically active and sedentary subjects, suggesting that aortic dilation is unrelated to regular physical activity over a 2-year period.
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- 2021
35. Cross-sectional study to develop and describe psychometric characteristics of a patient-reported instrument (PROFFIT) for measuring financial toxicity of cancer within a public healthcare system
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Francesco Perrone, Concetta Maria Vaccaro, Lorenzo Guizzaro, Saverio Cinieri, Elisabetta Iannelli, Laura Del Campo, Fabio Efficace, Francesco De Lorenzo, Lucia Del Mastro, Maria Carmela Piccirillo, Silvia Riva, Diana Giannarelli, Jane Bryce, Roberto Bordonaro, Ciro Gallo, Luciano Frontini, Alessio Aligi Cogoni, Daniela Barberio, Claudio Jommi, Lara Gitto, Francesca Traclò, Massimo Di Maio, Vittorina Zagonel, Vincenzo Montesarchio, Laura Arenare, Camillo Porta, Anna Gimigliano, Riva, S., Arenare, L., Di Maio, M., Efficace, F., Montesarchio, V., Frontini, L., Giannarelli, D., Bryce, J., Del Campo, L., De Lorenzo, F., Iannelli, E., Traclo, F., Gitto, L., Jommi, C., Vaccaro, C. M., Barberio, D., Cinieri, S., Porta, C., Del Mastro, L., Zagonel, V., Cogoni, A. A., Bordonaro, R., Gimigliano, A., Piccirillo, M. C., Guizzaro, L., Gallo, C., and Perrone, F.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Intraclass correlation ,Cross-sectional study ,HEALTH ECONOMICS ,Reproducibility of Result ,REPRODUCIBILITY OF RESULTS ,Cohen's kappa ,QUALITY IN HEALTH CARE ,Cronbach's alpha ,Surveys and Questionnaire ,Medicine ,Internal validity ,health economics ,oncology ,qualitative research ,quality in health care ,CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDIES ,Cross-Sectional Studie ,Finance ,PATIENT REPORTED OUTCOME MEASURES ,HEALTH ECONOMICS, ONCOLOGY, QUALITATIVE RESEARCH, QUALITY IN HEALTH CARE, CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDIES, DELIVERY OF HEALTH CARE, FEMALE, HUMANS, MALE, PSYCHOMETRICS, REPRODUCIBILITY OF RESULTS, SURVEYS AND QUESTIONNAIRES, NEOPLASMS, PATIENT REPORTED OUTCOME MEASURES ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,MALE ,business.industry ,HUMANS ,General Medicine ,health economic ,QUALITATIVE RESEARCH ,ONCOLOGY ,DELIVERY OF HEALTH CARE ,Exploratory factor analysis ,SURVEYS AND QUESTIONNAIRES ,Test (assessment) ,FEMALE ,Neoplasm ,Outcomes research ,business ,Psychometric ,Human ,NEOPLASMS - Abstract
ObjectivesTo measure and explain financial toxicity (FT) of cancer in Italy, where a public healthcare system exists and patients with cancer are not expected (or only marginally) to pay out-of-pocket for healthcare.SettingTen clinical oncological centres, distributed across Italian macroregions (North, Centre, South and Islands), including hospitals, university hospitals and national research institutes.ParticipantsFrom 8 October 2019 to 11 December 2019, 184 patients, aged 18 or more, who were receiving or had received within the previous 3 months active anticancer treatment were enrolled, 108 (59%) females and 76 (41%) males.InterventionA 30-item prefinal questionnaire, previously developed within the qualitative tasks of the project, was administered, either electronically (n=115) or by paper sheet (n=69).Primary and secondary outcome measuresAccording to the protocol and the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research methodology, the final questionnaire was developed by mean of explanatory factor analysis and tested for reliability, internal consistency (Cronbach’s α test and item-total correlation) and stability of measurements over time (test–retest reliability by intraclass correlation coefficient and weighted Cohen’s kappa coefficient).ResultsAfter exploratory factor analysis, a score measuring FT (FT score) was identified, made by seven items dealing with outcomes of FT. The Cronbach’s alpha coefficient for the FT score was 0.87 and the item-total correlation coefficients ranged from 0.53 to 0.74. Further, nine single items representing possible determinants of FT were also retained in the final instrument. Test–retest analysis revealed a good internal validity of the FT score and of the 16 items retained in the final questionnaire.ConclusionsThe Patient-Reported Outcome for Fighting FInancial Toxicity (PROFFIT) instrument consists of 16 items and is the first reported instrument to assess FT of cancer developed in a country with a fully public healthcare system.Trial registration numberNCT03473379.
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- 2021
36. Left ventricular deformation and vortex analysis in heart failure: From ultrasound technique to current clinical application
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Roberta Bottino, Francesco Giallauria, Marco Di Maio, Federica Ilardi, Valeria Pergola, Eduardo Bossone, Vincenzo Russo, Paolo Golino, Donato Mele, Andreina Carbone, Antonello D'Andrea, Simona Sperlongano, Sperlongano, S., D'Andrea, A., Mele, D., Russo, V., Pergola, V., Carbone, A., Ilardi, F., Di Maio, M., Bottino, R., Giallauria, F., Bossone, E., and Golino, P.
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cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medicine (General) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Cardiac resynchronization therapy ,Speckle tracking echocardiography ,Context (language use) ,Review ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Intracardiac injection ,Color Doppler flow mapping (CDFM) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,R5-920 ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Modalities ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) ,medicine.disease ,Review article ,Left ventricular vortex ,Left ventricular strain ,Heart failure (HF) ,Cardiac resyn-chronization therapy (CRT) ,Heart failure ,Cardiology ,color Doppler flow mapping (CDFM) ,heart failure (HF) ,heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) ,left ventricular strain ,left ventricular vortex ,speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) ,business - Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is a leading cause of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. However, its symptoms and signs are not specific or can be absent. In this context, transthoracic echocardiography plays a key role in diagnosing the various forms of HF, guiding therapeutic decision making and monitoring response to therapy. Over the last few decades, new ultrasound modalities have been introduced in the field of echocardiography, aiming at better understanding the morpho-functional abnormalities occurring in cardiovascular diseases. However, they are still struggling to enter daily and routine use. In our review article, we turn the spotlight on some of the newest ultrasound technologies; in particular, analysis of myocardial deformation by speckle tracking echocardiography, and intracardiac flow dynamics by color Doppler flow mapping, highlighting their promising applications to HF diagnosis and management. We also focus on the importance of these imaging modalities in the selection of responses to cardiac resynchronization therapy.
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- 2021
37. Chronic Oral Anticoagulation and Clinical Outcome in Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients
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Mario Enrico Canonico, Roberta Bottino, Emilio Attena, Paolo Golino, Marco Di Maio, Antonello D'Andrea, Gennaro Galasso, Fernando Scudiero, Angelo Silverio, Gerardo Nigro, Orazio Valsecchi, Vincenzo Russo, Guido Parodi, Russo, V., Bottino, R., D'Andrea, A., Silverio, A., Di Maio, M., Golino, P., Nigro, G., Valsecchi, O., Attena, E., Canonico, M. E., Galasso, G., Parodi, G., and Scudiero, F.
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ARDS ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vitamin K ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Administration, Oral ,Coronary artery disease ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Atrial Fibrillation ,medicine ,Risk of mortality ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,NOAC ,Retrospective Studies ,Outcome ,Pharmacology ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Confounding ,VKA ,Anticoagulants ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Heparin ,medicine.disease ,Propensity score matching ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose The clinical course of COVID-19 may be complicated by acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and thromboembolic events, which are associated with high risk of mortality. Although previous studies reported a lower rate of death in patients treated with heparin, the potential benefit of chronic oral anticoagulation therapy (OAT) remains unknown. We aimed to investigate the association between OAT with the risk of ARDS and mortality in hospitalized patients with COVID-19. Methods This is a multicenter retrospective Italian study including consecutive patients hospitalized for COVID-19 from March 1 to April 22, 2020, at six Italian hospitals. Patients were divided into two groups according to the chronic assumption of oral anticoagulants. Results Overall, 427 patients were included; 87 patients (19%) were in the OAT group. Of them, 54 patients (13%) were on treatment with non-vitamin k oral anticoagulants (NOACs) and 33 (8%) with vitamin-K antagonists (VKAs). OAT patients were older and had a higher rate of hypertension, diabetes, and coronary artery disease compared to No-OAT group. The rate of ARDS at admission (26% vs 28%, P=0.834), or developed during the hospitalization (9% vs 10%, P=0.915), was similar between study groups; in-hospital mortality (22% vs 26%, P=0.395) was also comparable. After balancing for potential confounders by using the propensity score matching technique, no differences were found in term of clinical outcome between OAT and No-OAT patients Conclusion Oral anticoagulation therapy, either NOACs or VKAs, did not influence the risk of ARDS or death in patients hospitalized with COVID-19.
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- 2021
38. Biventricular dysfunction and lung congestion in athletes on anabolic androgenic steroids: a speckle tracking and stress lung echocardiography analysis
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Andreina Carbone, Francesco Giallauria, Michele D'Alto, Eduardo Bossone, Antonello D'Andrea, Marco Di Maio, Eugenio Picano, Vincenzo Russo, Lucia Riegler, Simona Sperlongano, Juri Radmilovic, Federica Ilardi, D'Andrea, A., Radmilovic, J., Russo, V., Sperlongano, S., Carbone, A., Di Maio, M., Ilardi, F., Riegler, L., D'Alto, M., Giallauria, F., Bossone, E., Picano, E., D'Andrea, Antonello, Radmilovic, Juri, Russo, Vincenzo, Sperlongano, Simona, Carbone, Andreina, Di Maio, Marco, Ilardi, Federica, Riegler, Lucia, D'Alto, Michele, Giallauria, Francesco, Bossone, Eduardo, and Picano, Eugenio
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,Speckle tracking echocardiography ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Doppler echocardiography ,Athlete’s heart ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Strain ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Athlete ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Doping ,Humans ,Mass index ,Athlete's heart ,Lung ,Steroid ,Anabolic–androgenic steroids abuse ,Ejection fraction ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Anabolic-androgenic steroids abuse ,Blood pressure ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Athletes ,Echocardiography ,Pulmonary artery ,Cardiology ,Right ventricle ,Steroids ,Exercise stress echocardiography ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Sport training ,Human ,Echocardiography, Stress - Abstract
Aims The real effects of the chronic consumption of anabolic-androgenic steroids (AASs) on cardiovascular structures are subjects of intense debate. The aim of the study was to detect by speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) right ventricular (RV) and left ventricular (LV) dysfunction at rest and during exercise stress echocardiography (ESE) in athletes abusing AAS. Methods and results One hundred and fifteen top-level competitive bodybuilders were selected (70 males), including 65 athletes misusing AAS for at least 5 years (users), 50 anabolic-free bodybuilders (non-users), compared to 50 age- and sex-matched healthy sedentary controls. Standard Doppler echocardiography, STE analysis, and lung ultrasound at rest and at peak supine-bicycle ESE were performed. Athletes showed increased LV mass index, wall thickness, and RV diameters compared with controls, whereas LV ejection fraction was comparable within the groups. left atrial volume index, LV and RV strain, and LV E/Em were significantly higher in AAS users. Users showed more B-lines during stress (median 4.4 vs. 1.25 in controls and 1.3 in non-users, P Conclusions In athletes abusing steroids, STE analysis showed an impaired RV systolic deformation, closely associated with reduced functional capacity during physical effort, and—during exercise—more pulmonary congestion.
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- 2021
39. Preadmission Statin Therapy and Clinical Outcome in Hospitalized Patients With COVID-19: An Italian Multicenter Observational Study
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Luigi Nunziata, Stefano Albani, Marco Di Maio, Guido Parodi, Angelo Silverio, Ferdinando Varbella, Fernando Scudiero, Antonello D'Andrea, Giuseppe Musumeci, Pierpaolo Di Micco, Emilio Attena, Vincenzo Russo, Dario Celentani, Russo, V., Silverio, A., Scudiero, F., Attena, E., D'Andrea, A., Nunziata, L., Parodi, G., Celentani, D., Varbella, F., Albani, S., Musumeci, G., Di Micco, P., and Di Maio, M.
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Male ,ARDS ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Time Factor ,Prognosi ,acute distress respiratory syndrome ,Comorbidity ,Risk Assessment ,Coronary artery disease ,Risk Factors ,Retrospective Studie ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Hospital Mortality ,Dyslipidemias ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged ,Pharmacology ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Risk Factor ,COVID-19 ,Retrospective cohort study ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,mortality ,Hospitalization ,Dyslipidemia ,Italy ,statin therapy ,Disease Progression ,Population study ,Original Article ,Female ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitor ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Risk assessment ,Kidney disease ,Human - Abstract
Statin therapy has been recently suggested as possible adjuvant treatment to improve the clinical outcome in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The aim of this study was to describe the prevalence of preadmission statin therapy in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 and to investigate its potential association with acute distress respiratory syndrome (ARDS) at admission and in-hospital mortality. We retrospectively recruited 467 patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 admitted to the emergency department of 10 Italian hospitals. The study population was divided in 2 groups according to the ARDS diagnosis at admission and in-hospital mortality. A multivariable regression analysis was performed to assess the risk of ARDS at admission and death during hospitalization among patients with COVID-19. A competing risk analysis in patients taking or not statins before admission was also performed. ARDS at admission was reported in 122 cases (26.1%). There was no statistically significant difference for clinical characteristics between patients presenting with and without ARDS. One hundred seven patients (18.5%) died during the hospitalization; they showed increased age (69.6 ± 13.1 vs. 66.1 ± 14.9; P = 0.001), coronary artery disease (23.4% vs. 12.8%; P = 0.012), and chronic kidney disease (20.6% vs. 11.1%; P = 0.018) prevalence; moreover, they presented more frequently ARDS at admission (48.6% vs. 19.4%; P < 0.001). At multivariable regression model, statin therapy was not associated neither with ARDS at admission nor with in-hospital mortality. Preadmission statin therapy does not seem to show a protective effect in severe forms of COVID-19 complicated by ARDS at presentation and rapidly evolving toward death.
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- 2021
40. Second medical opinion in oncological setting
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Roberto Bordonaro, Ornella Gonzato, Fabrizio Nicolis, Antonio Galvano, Gaetano Lanzetta, Nicla La Verde, Antonio Russo, Saverio Cinieri, Alessandro Comandone, Francesco Perrone, Giordano D. Beretta, Vittorina Zagonel, Massimo Di Maio, Stefania Gori, Simone Scagnoli, Paolo Marchetti, Marco Maruzzo, Maruzzo M., La Verde N., Russo A., Marchetti P., Scagnoli S., Gonzato O., Di Maio M., Zagonel V., Galvano A., Lanzetta G., Perrone F., Beretta G., Bordonaro R., Comandone A., Cinieri S., Nicolis F., and Gori S.
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0301 basic medicine ,Decalogue ,Ethics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Meeting ,business.industry ,Foundation (evidence) ,Hematology ,Medical Oncology ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,Italy ,Second medical opinions ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Physicians ,medicine ,Position paper ,Humans ,AIOM ,Referral and Consultation ,business - Abstract
Oncological patients increasingly require second medical opinions to feel more likely confident with their oncologists and treatments, although this could lead to wrong opinions and delay in the start of treatments. Second opinions can be required also by physicians to obtain advices, especially in case of rare tumors. The request of new opinions is documented in radiology and pathology settings too, with not negligible discrepancy rate. Conversely, the role in general medical/surgical conditions has not been well established. Literature is poor of studies relative to second opinions or they are more focused on patient's motivations. For these reasons, AIOM (Italian Association of Medical Oncology) and AIOM Foundation faced this topic during the 7th Annual Meeting on Ethics in Oncology (Ragusa, 4–5 t h May 2018). In this position paper we report reasons, limits, advantages and outcomes of second medical opinion and the respective Decalogue in the oncological setting.
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- 2021
41. INfluenza Vaccine Indication during therapy with Immune checkpoint inhibitors: A multicenter prospective observational study (INVIDIa-2)
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Diana Giannarelli, Sandro Pignata, Vincenzo Montesarchio, Massimo Di Maio, Melissa Bersanelli, Sebastiano Buti, Raffaele Giusti, Marcello Tiseo, Marco Filetti, Corrado Ficorella, Elena Verzoni, Ugo De Giorgi, Carmine Pinto, Ernesto Rossi, Evaristo Maiello, Maria R Migliorino, Annamaria Catino, Francesca Mazzoni, Francesco Grossi, Giorgia Guaitoli, Marco Maruzzo, Giuseppe Aprile, Marilena Di Napoli, Giorgia Negrini, Antonio Russo, Saverio Cinieri, Mimma Rizzo, Fable Zustovich, Vieri Scotti, Alberto Clemente, Paola Ermacora, Pamela Francesca Guglielmini, Antonello Veccia, Chiara Casadei, Francesco Verderame, Lucia Fratino, Caterina Accettura, Manlio Mencoboni, Cinzia Baldessari, Andrea Camerini, Letizia Laera, Mariella Sorarù, Paolo Andrea Zucali, Valentina Guadalupi, Francesco Leonardi, Michele Tognetto, Francesco Di Costanzo, Francesco di Costanzo, Roberto Labianca, Luigi Bernardi, Bersanelli M., Giannarelli D., De Giorgi U., Pignata S., Di Maio M., Clemente A., Verzoni E., Giusti R., Di Napoli M., Aprile G., Ermacora P., Catino A., Scotti V., Mazzoni F., Guglielmini P.F., Veccia A., Maruzzo M., Rossi E., Grossi F., Casadei C., Ficorella C., Montesarchio V., Verderame F., Rizzo M., Guaitoli G., Fratino L., Accettura C., Mencoboni M., Zustovich F., Baldessari C., Cinieri S., Camerini A., Laera L., Soraru M., Zucali P.A., Guadalupi V., Leonardi F., Tiseo M., Tognetto M., Di Costanzo F., Pinto C., Negrini G., Russo A., Migliorino M.R., Filetti M., and Buti S.
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Male ,Cancer Research ,Time Factors ,immunogenicity ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Neoplasms ,vaccine ,Clinical endpoint ,Immunology and Allergy ,antibodies ,immunization ,immunotherapy ,neoplasm ,vaccination ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors ,RC254-282 ,Clinical/Translational Cancer Immunotherapy ,Aged, 80 and over ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,virus diseases ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Middle Aged ,Vaccination ,Treatment Outcome ,Italy ,Oncology ,Influenza Vaccines ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Molecular Medicine ,Female ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Influenza vaccine ,Immunology ,Vaccine Efficacy ,Risk Assessment ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Influenza, Human ,medicine ,Humans ,Lung cancer ,Adverse effect ,Aged ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Immunization ,business - Abstract
BackgroundUntil now, no robust data supported the efficacy, safety and recommendation for influenza vaccination in patients with cancer receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).MethodsThe prospective multicenter observational INfluenza Vaccine Indication During therapy with Immune checkpoint inhibitors (INVIDIa-2) study investigated the clinical effectiveness of influenza vaccination in patients with advanced cancer receiving ICIs, enrolled in 82 Italian centers from October 2019 to January 2020. The primary endpoint was the time-adjusted incidence of influenza-like illness (ILI) until April 30, 2020. Secondary endpoints regarded ILI severity and vaccine safety.ResultsThe study enrolled 1279 patients; 1188 patients were evaluable for the primary endpoint analysis. Of them, 48.9% (581) received influenza vaccination. The overall ILI incidence was 8.2% (98 patients). Vaccinated patients were significantly more frequently elderly (pvs 29.8%, p=0.027). ILI lethality was, respectively, 0% in vaccinated and 4.3% in unvaccinated patients. Vaccine-related adverse events were rare and mild (1.5%, grades 1–2).ConclusionThe INVIDIa-2 study results support a positive recommendation for influenza vaccination in patients with advanced cancer receiving immunotherapy.
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- 2021
42. Clinical characteristics and prognosis of hospitalized COVID‐19 patients with incident sustained tachyarrhythmias: A multicenter observational study
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Filiberto Fausto Mottola, Vincenzo Russo, Luigi Nunziata, Marco Di Maio, Antonello D'Andrea, Fernando Scudiero, Nunzia Fele, Paolo Scacciatella, Gerardo Nigro, Angelo Silverio, Sergio Severino, Nicoletta Verde, Emilio Attena, Stefano Albani, Pierpaolo Di Micco, Gianpiero Pagnano, Guido Parodi, Russo, V., Di Maio, M., Mottola, F. F., Pagnano, G., Attena, E., Verde, N., Di Micco, P., Silverio, A., Scudiero, F., Nunziata, L., Fele, N., D'Andrea, A., Parodi, G., Albani, S., Scacciatella, P., Nigro, G., and Severino, S.
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Male ,ARDS ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Focus Theme Issue: Regular Articles ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Biochemistry ,0302 clinical medicine ,Recurrence ,Atrial Fibrillation ,Focus Theme Issue: Regular Article ,Tachycardia, Supraventricular ,Covid-19 and arrhythmia ,Hospital Mortality ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged, 80 and over ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,SARSCoV-2 and ventricular arrhythmias ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Age Factors ,Atrial fibrillation ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Hospitalization ,Italy ,Female ,Covid-19 and cardiovascular complication ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Covid-19 and cardiovascular System ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Adverse effect ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Supraventricular arrhythmia ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,Arrhythmias, Cardiac ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Multivariate Analysis ,Tachycardia, Ventricular ,Observational study ,business - Abstract
Introduction: Little is still known about the prognostic impact of incident arrhythmias in hospitalized patients with COVID-19. The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence and predictors of sustained tachyarrhythmias in hospitalized patients with COVID-19, and their potential association with disease severity and in-hospital mortality. Materials and methods: This was a retrospective multicenter observation study including consecutive patients with laboratory confirmed COVID-19 admitted to emergency department of ten Italian Hospitals from 15 February to 15 March 2020. The prevalence and the type of incident sustained arrhythmias have been collected. The correlation between the most prevalent arrhythmias and both baseline characteristics and the development of ARDS and in-hospital mortality has been evaluated. Results: 414 hospitalized patients with COVID-19 (66.9±15.0years, 61.1% male) were included in the present study. During a median follow-up of 28days (IQR: 12-45), the most frequent incident sustained arrhythmia was AF (N: 71; 17.1%), of which 50 (12.1%) were new-onset and 21 (5.1%) were recurrent, followed by VT (N: 14, 3.4%) and supraventricular arrhythmias (N: 5, 1.2%). Incident AF, both new-onset and recurrent, did not affect the risk of severe adverse events including ARDS and death during hospitalization; in contrast, incident VT significantly increased the risk of in-hospital mortality (RR: 2.55; P:.003). Conclusions: AF is the more frequent incident tachyarrhythmia; however, it not seems associated to ARDS development and death. On the other hand, incident VT is a not frequent but independent predictor of in-hospital mortality among hospitalized COVID-19 patients.
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- 2020
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43. Clinical impact of pre-admission antithrombotic therapy in hospitalized patients with COVID-19: A multicenter observational study
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Emilio Attena, Angelo Silverio, Fernando Scudiero, Dario Celentani, Marco Di Maio, Pierpaolo Di Micco, Corrado Lodigiani, Vincenzo Russo, Russo, V., Di Maio, M., Attena, E., Silverio, A., Scudiero, F., Celentani, D., Lodigiani, C., and Di Micco, P.
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,ARDS ,Coronary artery disease ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient Admission ,Antithrombotic ,Hospital Mortality ,Aged, 80 and over ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Fibrinolytic Agent ,Anticoagulant ,Atrial fibrillation ,Middle Aged ,Italy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Population study ,Female ,Coronavirus Infections ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Anticoagulation ,Betacoronavirus ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Mortality ,Anticoagulant therapy ,Pandemics ,Acute distress respiratory syndrome ,Aged ,Pharmacology ,Pandemic ,business.industry ,Coronavirus Infection ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Antiplatelet therapy ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Adult ,COVID-19 ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment ,030104 developmental biology ,business ,Fibrinolytic agent - Abstract
Little is still known about the clinical features associated with the occurrence of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in hospitalized patients with Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The aim of the present study was to describe the prevalence of pre-admission antithrombotic therapies in patients with COVID-19 and to investigate the potential association between antithrombotic therapy and ARDS, as disease clinical presentation, or in-hospital mortality. We enrolled 192 consecutive patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 admitted to emergency department of five Italian hospitals. The study population was divided in two groups according to the evidence of ARDS at chest computed tomography at admission. Propensity score weighting adjusted regression analysis was performed to assess the risk ARDS at admission, and death during hospitalization, in patients treated or not with antiplatelet and anticoagulant agents. ARDS was reported in 73 cases (38 %), who showed more likely hypertension compared to those without ARDS (57.8 % vs 49.6 %; P = 0.005). Thirty-five patients (18.5 %) died during the hospitalization. Not survived COVID-19 patients showed a statistically significant increased age (77 ± 8.31 vs 65.57 ± 8.31; P = 0.001), hypertension (77.1 % vs 53.5 %; P = 0.018) and coronary artery disease prevalence (28.6 % vs 10.2 %; P = 0.009). Both unadjusted and adjusted regression analyses showed no difference in the risk of ARDS at admission, or death during hospitalization, between patients treated or not with antiplatelets or anticoagulants. Pre-admission antithrombotic therapy, both antiplatelet and anticoagulant, does not seem to show a protective effect in severe forms of COVID-19 with ARDS at presentation and rapidly evolving toward death.
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- 2020
44. The Shifting Landscape of Genitourinary Oncology During the COVID-19 Pandemic and how Italian Oncologists Reacted: Results from a National Survey
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Giordano D. Beretta, Massimo Di Maio, Andrea Necchi, Saverio Cinieri, Giuseppe Procopio, Laura Marandino, Marandino, L., Di Maio, M., Procopio, G., Cinieri, S., Beretta, G. D., and Necchi, A.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Urology ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Global Health ,Medical Oncology ,Betacoronavirus ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Global health ,Humans ,Viral ,Disease management (health) ,Pandemics ,Oncologists ,Genitourinary system ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,Disease Management ,Pneumonia ,Health Surveys ,Coronavirus Infections ,Italy ,Urogenital Neoplasms ,Family medicine ,business - Published
- 2020
45. Improving adherence to ticagrelor in patients after acute coronary syndrome: Results from the progress trial
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Felice Gragnano, Marco Di Maio, Arturo Cesaro, Elisabetta Moscarella, Plinio Cirillo, Claudia Concilio, Paolo Calabrò, Dario Di Maio, Fabio Fimiani, Mario Crisci, Vittorio Taglialatela, Ivana Pariggiano, Vincenzo Diana, Crisci, M., Gragnano, F., Di Maio, M., Diana, V., Moscarella, E., Pariggiano, I., Di Maio, D., Concilio, C., Taglialatela, V., Fimiani, F., Cesaro, A., Cirillo, P. L., Calabro, P., Crisci, Mario, Gragnano, Felice, Di Maio, Marco, Diana, Vincenzo, Moscarella, Elisabetta, Pariggiano, Ivana, Di Maio, Dario, Concilio, Claudia, Taglialatela, Vittorio, Fimiani, Fabio, Cesaro, Arturo, Cirillo, Plinio Lorenzo, and Calabrò, Paolo
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Male ,Acute coronary syndrome ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ticagrelor ,Outpatient Clinics, Hospital ,Time Factors ,Hemorrhage ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Drug Administration Schedule ,law.invention ,Medication Adherence ,03 medical and health sciences ,Appointments and Schedules ,0302 clinical medicine ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Outpatient clinic ,Humans ,In patient ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,Pharmacology ,Aspirin ,business.industry ,Dual Anti-Platelet Therapy ,Bleeding ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Discontinuation ,Telephone ,Treatment Outcome ,Italy ,Adherence ,Dual antiplatelet therapy ,Disruption ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) with aspirin and ticagrelor is recommended for at least 12 months in patients after an acute coronary syndrome (ACS). However, its underuse and premature discontinuation are common in clinical practice. We aimed to investigate the impact of a dedicated follow-up strategy with clinical visits and counselling on adherence levels to ticagrelor in patients after ACS. Methods: PROGRESS (PROmotinG dual antiplatelet therapy adheREnce in the setting of acute coronary Syndromes) is a prospective, randomized trial enrolling 400 ACS patients treated with ticagrelor. Patients were randomized to be followed-up in a dedicated outpatient clinic (In-person follow-up group, [IN-FU], n=200), or with scheduled for phone interviews only (Telephone follow-up group [TEL-FU], n=200), to assess ticagrelor adherence and related complications. DAPT disruption was defined as an interruption of the administration of the drug due to complications or other reasons of non-adherence, and divided according to the duration into short (1-5 days), temporary (6-30 days) and permanent (≥30 days) disruption. The primary endpoint was the rate of DAPT disruption at 1-year follow-up. Results: The rate of ticagrelor disruption at 1 year follow-up was higher in the TEL-FU group than in the IN-FU group (19.6 vs 5.5%; p Conclusion: The PROGRESS trial showed a net reduction in DAPT disruption in patients followed-up with clinical (in-person) follow-up visits in a dedicated outpatient clinic compared with those scheduled for phone interviews only.
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- 2020
46. Non-vitamin K vs vitamin K oral anticoagulants in patients aged > 80 year with atrial fibrillation and low body weight
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Fabrizio Vincenzo Grieco, Paolo Golino, Vincenzo Russo, Marco Di Maio, Agostino Buonauro, Gerardo Nigro, Emilio Attena, Andreina Carbone, Valentina Parisi, Anna Rago, Russo, V., Attena, E., Di Maio, M., Carbone, A., Parisi, V., Rago, A., Grieco, F. V., Buonauro, A., Golino, P., and Nigro, G.
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Male ,Clinical Biochemistry ,direct oral anticoagulant ,Comorbidity ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Vitamin k ,Biochemistry ,Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Atrial Fibrillation ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged, 80 and over ,COPD ,education.field_of_study ,Hazard ratio ,Atrial fibrillation ,Diabetes Mellitu ,General Medicine ,low body weight ,Stroke ,Female ,stroke prevention ,Low body weight ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Hemorrhage ,elderly ,03 medical and health sciences ,Thinness ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Humans ,Risk factor ,Mortality ,education ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Thinne ,business.industry ,Risk Factor ,Body Weight ,Anticoagulant ,Anticoagulants ,medicine.disease ,Proportional Hazards Model ,business ,Factor Xa Inhibitor ,Factor Xa Inhibitors - Abstract
Background: Octogenarian patients are at high risk of both ischaemic and bleeding events, and the low body weight is considered a risk factor for major bleeding in atrial fibrillation (AF) patients on anticoagulation therapy. The aim of our study was to compare the safety and effectiveness of NOACs versus well-controlled VKA therapy among patients aged>80year with AF and low body weight in real-life setting. Methods: Data for this study were sourced from the multicenter prospectively maintained Atrial Fibrillation Research Database (NCT03760874). From this, we selected AF patients aged≥80years and weighted≤60kg who received NOACs or VKAs treatment (only those with a time in therapeutic range>70%). 279 patients (136 in NOAC group and 143 in VKA group) were selected. Results: A total of 71 patients (17 in NOAC vs 54 in VKA group) died during the follow-up. The incidence rate of all-cause mortality was 27.70 per 100 person-years (14.91 in NOAC vs 37.94 in VKA group, adjusted hazard ratio 0.43; 95% CI 0.25 to 0.975; P=.003). 22 patients (9 in NOAC vs 13 in VKA group, P=.6) had major bleeding events. Diabetes mellitus, COPD and age resulted positively associated with death, whereas NOACs, parossistic AF and weight negatively associated with mortality. Conclusions: Our real-world data might suggest the safe and efficacy use of NOACs in this setting of population, justified by a reduction in overall mortality over VKAs. Further studies are needed to confirm these data.
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- 2020
47. First-line pembrolizumab in advanced non–small cell lung cancer patients with poor performance status
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Alessandra Bearz, Antonio Rossi, Roberta Camisa, Chiara Bennati, Francesca Mazzoni, Diego Cortinovis, Silvia Novello, Lorenza Landi, Marina Chiara Garassino, Elio Gregory Pizzutilo, Emilio Bria, Emanuele Vita, Giorgia Guaitoli, Giulio Rossi, Giulia Mazzaschi, Massimo Di Maio, Cinzia Baldessari, Giuseppe Luigi Banna, Fabiana Letizia Cecere, L.P. Ciccone, Giulia Sartori, Francesco Passiglia, Gabriele Bartoli, Luca Toschi, Marcello Tiseo, Andrea Camerini, F. Zanelli, Francesco Facchinetti, Elisa Sala, Giulio Cerea, Alessandro Del Conte, Filippo Gustavo Dall'Olio, Vieri Scotti, Elisa De Carlo, Maria Rita Migliorino, Claudia Proto, Fausto Barbieri, Sara Pilotto, Rossana Berardi, Andrea Ardizzoni, Sabrina Rossi, Facchinetti F., Mazzaschi G., Barbieri F., Passiglia F., Mazzoni F., Berardi R., Proto C., Cecere F.L., Pilotto S., Scotti V., Rossi S., Del Conte A., Vita E., Bennati C., Ardizzoni A., Cerea G., Migliorino M.R., Sala E., Camerini A., Bearz A., De Carlo E., Zanelli F., Guaitoli G., Garassino M.C., Ciccone L.P., Sartori G., Toschi L., Dall'Olio F.G., Landi L., Pizzutilo E.G., Bartoli G., Baldessari C., Novello S., Bria E., Cortinovis D.L., Rossi G., Rossi A., Banna G.L., Camisa R., Di Maio M., and Tiseo M.
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor ,Pembrolizumab ,Immune checkpoint inhibitor ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,NSCLC ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune checkpoint inhibitors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,PD-1 ,medicine ,Humans ,Progression-free survival ,Adverse effect ,Lung cancer ,Survival rate ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,ECOG PS 2 ,Immunotherapy ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,business - Abstract
Background Pembrolizumab is the first-line standard of care for advanced non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with a PD-L1 tumour proportion score (TPS) ≥ 50%. Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status (PS) 2 patients may receive pembrolizumab, despite the absence of sustaining evidence. Patients and methods GOIRC-2018-01 is a multicentre, retrospective, observational study. PS 2 NSCLC patients with a PD-L1 TPS ≥50% receiving first-line pembrolizumab from June 2017 to December 2018 at 21 Italian institutions were included. Clinical-pathological characteristics were correlated with disease response and survival outcomes; adverse events were recorded. The primary objective was 6-months progression-free rate (6-months PFR). Results One hundred fifty-three patients (median age 70 years) were enrolled. At a median follow-up of 18.2 months, median progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were 2.4 (95% confidence interval, 95% CI, 1.6–2.5) and 3.0 months (95% CI 2.4–3.5), respectively. 6-months PFR was 27% (95% CI 21–35%). Patients with a PS 2 determined by comorbidities (n = 41) had significantly better outcomes compared with disease burden-induced PS 2 (n = 112). Indeed, 6-months PFR was 49% versus 19%, median PFS 5.6 versus 1.8 months and OS 11.8 versus 2.8 months, respectively. Additional potential prognostic factors (radiotherapy, antibiotics, steroids received before pembrolizumab) correlated with clinical outcomes. The determinant of PS 2 resulted the only factor independently impacting on both PFS and OS. No toxicity issues emerged. Conclusions Outcomes of PS 2 NSCLC patients with PD-L1 TPS ≥50% receiving first-line pembrolizumab were globally dismal but strongly dependent on the reason conditioning the poor PS itself.
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- 2020
48. Prognostic value of clinical, echocardiographic and angiographic indicators in patients with large anterior ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction as a first acute coronary event
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Marco Mirra, Rodolfo Citro, Paolo Chiodini, Pietro Giudice, Rosario Farina, Federico Piscione, Renato De Vecchis, Marco Di Maio, Francesco Vigorito, Michele Roberto Di Muro, Maria Vincenza Polito, Tiziana Attisano, Gennaro Galasso, Eduardo Bossone, Cesare Baldi, Baldi, C, Polito, Mv, Citro, R, Farina, R, Attisano, T, Mirra, M, Chiodini, P, Di Muro, Mr, Di Maio, M, Vigorito, F, De Vecchis, R, Bossone, E, Piscione, F, Giudice, P, Galasso, G, Baldi, Cesare, Polito, Maria V., Citro, Rodolfo, Farina, Rosario, Attisano, Tiziana, Mirra, Marco, Chiodini, Paolo, Di Muro, Michele R., Di Maio, Marco, Vigorito, Francesco, De Vecchis, Renato, Bossone, Eduardo, Piscione, Federico, Giudice, Pietro, and Galasso, Gennaro
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,large anterior ST-elevation segment myocardial infarction ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Anterior Descending Coronary Artery ,Coronary Angiography ,Electrocardiography ,03 medical and health sciences ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Hospital Mortality ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,Anterior Wall Myocardial Infarction ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Univariate analysis ,Intra-Aortic Balloon Pumping ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,primary percutaneous coronary intervention ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,mortality ,Treatment Outcome ,Italy ,Echocardiography ,intra-aortic balloon pump ,Heart failure ,Multivariate Analysis ,Conventional PCI ,Cardiology ,ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,prognosi - Abstract
Background The risk of death in patients affected by ST-elevation segment myocardial infarction (STEMI) is well known, but more data are required to define the in-hospital mortality in special subsets. We sought to assess the prognostic value of indicators in patients with large anterior STEMI as a first acute coronary event, undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP). Methods and results We evaluated 48 consecutive large anterior STEMI patients admitted as first acute coronary event, undergoing in acute phase both PCI and IABP. Patient demographics, clinical, noninvasive and invasive findings, together with in-hospital complications, were collected. Moreover, findings obtained after a 24-month follow-up were reported. The primary endpoint was in-hospital mortality, whereas the secondary endpoints were out of hospital mortality, rehospitalization for heart failure or reinfarction, and New York Heart Association (NYHA) class at least 2 at follow-up visit. The univariate analysis showed a significant association with symptom to balloon, left anterior descending coronary artery, myocardial blush grade, and wall motion score index. Results of the multivariable analysis revealed the strongest predictive power for in-hospital mortality of proximal left anterior descending coronary artery (odds ratio: 6.9; 95% confidence interval: 1.1-67.7) and of myocardial blush grade 0-1 (odds ratio: 5.5; 95% confidence interval: 1.0-38.8). In-hospital death occurred in 13 patients (27% of total cases), whereas, at follow-up, the mean of survival was 66.7 ± 7.0%. Conclusion The patients with large anterior STEMI as a first acute coronary event, undergoing PCI and IABP, had a very high in-hospital mortality, whereas the mortality rate over the follow-up period was lower. The involvement of a large territory at risk and the ineffective treatment in terms of myocardial reperfusion were the main predictors of in-hospital mortality.
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- 2017
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49. Biomarker analysis of the phase 3 TORCH trial for first line erlotinib versus chemotherapy in advanced non-small cell lung cancer patients
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Dengxiao Cheng, Cesare Gridelli, Lucia Kim, Vittorio Gebbia, Francesco Perrone, Ronald Feld, Ciro Gallo, Paolo Maione, Ming-Sound Tsao, Simona Signoriello, Geoffrey Liu, Massimo Di Maio, Marco Angelo Burgio, Antonio Rossi, Fortunato Ciardiello, Charles Butts, Natasha B. Leighl, Mauro Saieg, Alessandro Morabito, Yasmin Alam, Kim, L, Saieg, M, Di Maio, M, Gallo, C, Butts, C, Ciardiello, Fortunato, Feld, R, Cheng, D, Gebbia, V, Burgio, Ma, Alam, Y, Signoriello, Simona, Rossi, A, Leighl, N, Maione, P, Morabito, A, Liu, G, Tsao, M, Perrone, F, and Gridelli, C.
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Gerontology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,EGFR TKI ,NSCLC ,predictive factor ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Biomarker Analysis ,Lung cancer ,Biomarker analysis ,Predictive factors ,Prognostic factors ,Preventive healthcare ,Chemotherapy ,Hematology ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,prognostic factors ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,biomarker analysi ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Erlotinib ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
// Lucia Kim 1,12,* , Mauro Saieg 1,13,* , Massimo Di Maio 2,14,* , Ciro Gallo 3,* , Charles Butts 4 , Fortunato Ciardiello 5 , Ronald Feld 6 , Dengxiao Cheng 6 , Vittorio Gebbia 7 , Marco Angelo Burgio 8 , Yasmin Alam 9 , Simona Signoriello 3 , Antonio Rossi 10 , Natasha Leighl 6 , Paolo Maione 10 , Alessandro Morabito 2 , Geoffrey Liu 6,** , Ming-Sound Tsao 1,** , Francesco Perrone 2,** and Cesare Gridelli 10,11,** 1 Department of Pathology, University Health Network, Princess Margaret Cancer Center and Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada 2 National Cancer Institute, G. Pascale Foundation, IRCCS, Naples, Italy 3 Department of Mental Health and Preventive Medicine, Chair of Statistics, Second University of Naples, Naples, Italy 4 Medical Oncology, Cross Cancer Institute, Edmonton, Canada 5 Medical Oncology, Second University, Naples, Italy 6 Division of Hematology and Oncology, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada 7 Medical Oncology, Casa di Cura La Maddalena, Palermo, Italy 8 Department of Medical Oncology, Istituto Scientifico Romagnolo per lo Studio e la Cura dei Tumori IRCCS, Meldola, Italy 9 Medical Oncology, Windsor Regional Cancer Centre, Windsor, Canada 10 Department of Oncology/Hematology, Division of Medical Oncology, “S.G. Moscati” Hospital, Avellino, Italy 11 On behalf of the TORCH Investigators 12 Department of Pathology, Inha University School of Medicine, Incheon, South Korea 13 Santa Casa Medical School, Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil 14 University of Turin, Turin, Italy * Co-first author ** Co-last author Correspondence to: Cesare Gridelli, email: // Keywords : NSCLC, EGFR TKI, biomarker analysis, predictive factors, prognostic factors Received : November 09, 2016 Accepted : February 01, 2017 Published : February 25, 2017 Abstract Background: The TORCH phase III trial compared the efficacy of first-line erlotinib followed by chemotherapy at progression (experimental arm) with the reverse sequence (standard arm) in unselected advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. Here we report biomarker analyses. Methods: EGFR and KRAS mutation, expression of EGFR family members and of cMET and PTEN and EGFR and ABCG2 germline polymorphisms were tested on tumor tissue or blood samples to either confirm previously proposed predictive role or describe it in an explorative setting. Progression-free survival (PFS) was the primary end-point, overall survival, response rate and side effects (diarrhoea and skin toxicity) were secondary end-points. Interactions between biomarkers and treatment were studied with multivariable models (either Cox model or logistic regression). Statistical analyses accounted for multiple comparisons. Results: At least one biomarker was assessed in 324 out of 760 patients in the TORCH study. EGFR mutation was more common in female ( P = 0.0001), East Asians ( P < 0.0001) and never smoker ( P < 0.0001) patients; low MET protein expression by IHC (H-score
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- 2017
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50. The prognostic nutritional index predicts survival and response to first-line chemotherapy in advanced biliary cancer
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Elisa Sperti, Ilaria Depetris, Andrea Casadei-Gardini, Andrea Spallanzani, Celeste Cagnazzo, Fabio Gelsomino, Giandomenico Roviello, Giuseppe Aprile, Francesco Caputo, Massimiliano Salati, Pasquale Lombardi, Caterina Vivaldi, Mario Scartozzi, Massimo Aglietta, Nicola Silvestris, Roberto Filippi, Massimo Di Maio, Elisabetta Fenocchio, Cinzia Ortega, Francesco Leone, Daniele Santini, Lorenzo Fornaro, Francesca Salani, Stefano Cascinu, Krisida Cerma, Salati, M., Filippi, R., Vivaldi, C., Caputo, F., Leone, F., Salani, F., Cerma, K., Aglietta, M., Fornaro, L., Sperti, E., Di Maio, M., Ortega, C., Fenocchio, E., Lombardi, P., Cagnazzo, C., Depretis, I., Gelsomino, F., Spallanzani, A., Santini, D., Silvestris, N., Aprile, G., Roviello, G., Scartozzi, M., Cascinu, S., and Casadei Gardini, A.
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,chemotherapy ,survival ,gallbladder cancer ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,biliary tract cancer ,Neoplasms ,Medicine ,Humans ,Gallbladder cancer ,Biliary tract cancer, chemotherapy, cholangiocarcinoma, gallbladder cancer, prognosis, prognostic nutritional index, response prediction, survival ,Retrospective Studies ,Chemotherapy ,Hepatology ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Univariate ,prognostic nutritional index ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,cholangiocarcinoma ,prognosis ,response prediction ,Gemcitabine ,Nutrition Assessment ,ROC Curve ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cohort ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: An accurate risk-stratification is key to optimize the benefit-to-risk ratio of palliative treatment in advanced biliary cancer. We aimed at assessing the impact of the prognostic nutritional index (PNI) on survival and treatment response in advanced biliary cancer (ABC) receiving first-line chemotherapy. Methods: Medical records of ABC treated with standard chemotherapy at the Modena Cancer Centre were retrospectively reviewed for variables deemed of potential interest, including the PNI. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to investigate the association between the covariates and overall survival (OS). Results: 114 ABC fulfilled the inclusion criteria and made up the training cohort. A PNI cut-off value of 36.7 was established using the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. At both the univariate and the multivariate analysis, low PNI value (1 (P36.7 resulted in a higher disease control in patients treated with gemcitabine/platinum combination (61.4% vs 34.3%). These results were validated in an independent cohort of 253 ABC. Conclusions: We demonstrated and externally validated a prognostic role for the PNI in ABC treated with first-line chemotherapy. Although the PNI turned out to be predictive in the subset of patients receiving platinum/gemcitabine combination, future prospective confirmation is needed.
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- 2019
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