19 results on '"G. Vallati"'
Search Results
2. Lung nodule detection confidence index (rating) optimization
- Author
-
L.P. Ordóñez, S. Giunta, L. Bogoni, G. Vallati, C. Mauro, K. Ramy, F. Quagliani, A. Bufalo, and S. Canitano
- Subjects
Biophysics ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. In vivo quantification of micro-balloon interventions (MBI) advantage: retrospective study of SIRT vs b-SIRT
- Author
-
S. Ungania, M. Masi, F. Cappelli, G. Vallati, G. Iaccarino, and A. Soriani
- Subjects
Biophysics ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,General Medicine - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. ICG marked off-clamp robotic partial nephrectomy for endophytic renal tumors: Proof of concept and initial series
- Author
-
G. Simone, L. Misuraca, G. Tuderti, M. Ferriero, F. Minisola, G. Vallati, G. Pizzi, S. Guaglianone, and M. Gallucci
- Subjects
Urology - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Detection of noncalcified pulmonary nodules on low-dose MDCT: comparison of the sensitivity of two CAD systems by using a double reference standard
- Author
-
Lorenzo Bonomo, Fabio Maggi, P. Ordóñez, L. Menchini, M. Crecco, G. Vallati, Lucio Calandriello, A. Caulo, M. Amato, Anna Rita Larici, and S. Giunta
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,CAD ,Radiation Dosage ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Multidetector computed tomography ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Sensitivity (control systems) ,Reference standards ,Settore MED/36 - DIAGNOSTICA PER IMMAGINI E RADIOTERAPIA ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Low dose ,Solitary Pulmonary Nodule ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Reference Standards ,Cad system ,N/A ,cardiovascular system ,Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Female ,Radiology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
This study compared the sensitivity of two commercial computer-aided detection (CAD) systems in identifying noncalcified pulmonary nodules on low-dose multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) scans by using a double reference standard.Three chest low-dose MDCT scans of patients who had undergone lung cancer screening were retrospectively analysed using two distinct commercial CAD systems: LungCAD VC10A, Siemens Medical Solutions (CAD1) and LungVCAR, GE Healthcare (CAD2). The exact location of each finding suggested by each system was recorded by an independent reader according to spatial coordinates (x, y, z). Two panels of experienced thoracic radiologists from two different institutions independently established two reference standards (RS1, RS2) by identifying the true positive findings with spatial coordinates without using CAD. Sensitivity of the two CAD systems, defined by lesionlevel analysis, was tested and sensitivities compared.RS1 identified 34 noncalcified pulmonary nodules, whereas RS2 identified 54. The total number of findings detected by the two CAD systems was 684. CAD1 correctly identified 13/34 nodules (sensitivity 38%) for RS1 and 17/54 (sensitivity 30%) for RS2, whereas CAD2 correctly identified 11/34 nodules (sensitivity 35%) for RS1 and 13/54 (sensitivity 23%) for RS2. Comparison between the two CAD systems did not show a statistically significant difference in terms of sensitivity (p0.05) for both RS1 (p=0.42) and RS2 (p=0.33).The two commercial CAD systems had similar sensitivity in detecting noncalcified pulmonary nodules on low-dose MDCT of the chest.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Robot assisted radical nephrectomy and inferior vena cava thrombectomy: Surgical technique, perioperative and mid-term oncologic outcomes
- Author
-
G. Simone, S. Guaglianone, F. Minisola, M. Ferriero, G. Tuderti, L. Misuraca, G. Vallati, G. Pizzi, M. Costantini, and M. Gallucci
- Subjects
Urology - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Neoadjuvant Gemox Followed by Gem-Based Chemoradiation for Locally advanced Unresectable Pancreatic Cancer
- Author
-
Alain Gelibter, Isabella Sperduti, Emilio Bria, B. Saracino, Vanja Vaccaro, G. Grazi, M. Milella, Maria Simona Pino, Francesco Cognetti, and G. Vallati
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Phases of clinical research ,Induction chemotherapy ,Hematology ,GemOx ,Gastroenterology ,Gemcitabine ,Oxaliplatin ,Regimen ,Oncology ,Concomitant ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Progression-free survival ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose To asses activity, safety and secondary resectability in unresectable locally advanced pancreatic cancer (LAPC) patients (pts). Methods Unresectable LAPC pts were eligible for this phase II study. Primary endpoint was clinical benefit (CB = CR + PR + SD). A sample size of 37 pts was considered sufficient to give an 80% probability of rejecting a baseline clinical benefit rate of 55%, with an exact 5% one-sided significance test when the true disease control rate was 75%. The drug regimen would have been considered interest if at least 26 patients showed clinical benefit. Neoadjuvant induction chemotherapy (CHT) encompassed gemcitabine (GEM) 1000 mg/m2 (100-min infusion on d1) and oxaliplatin 100 mg/m2 (2-hr infusion on d2) every 2 wks, for 6 cycles. After CHT pts were restaged for surgery and/or chemoradiation (CRT) consolidation (EBRT up to a total dose of 50.4 Gy plus concomitant GEM 300 mg/m2/week). After CRT completion, pts were restaged to evaluate secondary surgery. Results From January 2005 to January 2012, 35 pts (M/F: 17/18; median age: 68 yrs, range: 46-78; ECOG PS 0-1/2: 28/7) entered the study. A median of 5 (range 1-7) CHT induction cycles were delivered. Toxicity was mild, with G3-4 neutropenia in 2 pts (6%), G3 thrombocytopenia in 1 pt (3%), G3 transaminase elevation in 5 pts (14%), and G3 diarrhea in 2 pts (6%). CHT dose was reduced or delayed in 8 and 7 pts, respectively. Nine confirmed PR and 17 SD were observed for a CB of 74% (95% confidence interval [CI], 56.7-87.5%). A decrease in serum CA 19.9 ≥50% of the baseline was observed in 14 of 23 evaluable pts. Nine-teen pts completed CRT, including 5 pts who subsequently underwent surgery; 1 pt underwent surgery without CRT. Toxicity for the CRT phase was mild, with G3 thrombocytopenia in 1 pt (3%) and G3 neutropenia in 3 pts (8%). Median overall survival (OS) and progression free survival (PFS) for all 35 patients were 10 (95% CI, 8-12) and 9 mos (95% CI, 6-12), respectively. One-yr OS and PFS rates were 26% and 30%, respectively. Conclusions The regimen under study is active and well tolerated. Although an encouraging response rate was reported, OS remains poor, calling for a better selection strategy for LAPC pts who are candidates to neoadjuvant treatment. Disclosure All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. TH-302 + Gemcitabine (G + T) vs Gemcitabine (G) in Patients with Previously Untreated advanced Pancreatic Cancer (PAC)
- Author
-
Alain Duhamel, A. Tsuburaya, Mali Okada, S. Kuwabara, H. Hasegawa, A.L. Cohn, Anne Thirot-Bidault, J.R. Delgado, O.U. Unal, J. Isaacson, S. Khudayorov, Sue Ward, N. Mueller, Riccardo Lencioni, Giovanni Abbadessa, D. Takahari, T. Watanabe, Luca Faloppi, Y. Hamamoto, Julia Hocke, Elwyn Loh, M. Aizawa, E. Trejo, A. Novarino, A. Ohtsu, K. Okita, M.J. Flor, Riccardo Giampieri, C. Rose, D. Gonzalez-De-Castro, H. Isayama, M. Esaki, Jean-Pierre Bronowicki, S. Cereda, S. Hironaka, A. Sawaki, I. Iwanicki-Caron, L. Ferrari, J. Stephenson, F. Gerevini, E. Francois, T. Okusaka, S. De Minicis, Cristian Loretelli, S.Y. Roh, A. González-Vicente, F. Richard, H. Tuyev, A. Laforest, K. Lin, M. Milic´evic´, Chunming Li, Wolfgang Eisterer, P. Basile, Mohamed Gasmi, S. Hazama, M. Botta, Seiji Kawazoe, Jean-Luc Raoul, Y. Jiang, I. Trouilloud, B. Nagy, E. del Valle, Satoshi Yuki, K.W. Park, Hanno Riess, M. Bartosiewicz, L. Rolfe, H. Fang, E. Gardner, A. Benedetti, A. Carrato, E. Vasile, Takayuki Kii, N. Suzuki, Y. Shimada, S.F. Ang, S. Fushida, V. Vaccaro, Y. Liu, E. Castanon Alvarez, Y. Ozaki, D. Mirabelli, Ozgur Ozyilkan, J.E. Battley, C.H.S. Kim, N. Weijl, B. Bui, J.C. Sabourin, M. Hejna, Raymond Miller, N. Besova, Jinhui Xu, Ian Chau, J.-L. Van Laethem, Eric Vibert, Philippe Mathurin, H. Yabusaki, Melissa Frizziero, J. Soberino García, S. Salvagni, M. Zhu, Christoph Schuhmacher, Y. Yamada, A. Hubert, R. Libener, S.T. Dimoudis, Jonathan Wadsley, J. Martinez-Galan, Coskun U, V. Karavasilis, Cem Parlak, N. Jain, T. Gamucci, Elisa Giovannetti, R. Gupta, Suleyman Buyukberber, Jose Javier Sanchez, Taro Tokui, Kenneth K. Tanabe, V. Nerich, G. Dyson, Y. Kawachi, J. Reis-Filho, Junichi Sakamoto, A. Mohar-Betancourt, Masahide Mori, Aytug Uner, S. Martin Algarra, C.-J. Yen, J.J. Critchfield, Y. Naomoto, Julien Taieb, Young Seon Hong, Hironori Yamaguchi, S. Jiao, Alan P. Venook, C. Pericay, R.H. Wilson, D. Ferrari, Peter R. Galle, S. Falcon, Emilio Bria, L. Paz-Ares, Anna Tomezzoli, S. Al-Batran, G. Luppi, Jean-Marie Boher, I. Park, F. De Vita, Roland Leung, M. Abdelwahab, A. Ravaioli, Takuya Suzuki, C. Szczylik, C. González-Rivas, Sarita Dubey, Y. Miyashita, J.Y. Lim, Y. Chen, F. El Hajbi, Ichinosuke Hyodo, Tsutomu Chiba, C. Kondo, S. Ye, Thomas Aparicio, M. Nesrine, T. Ganten, T. Nishina, G. Grazi, A.C. Dupont-Gossard, I. Oze, F. Nosrati, J.H. Yook, C. Yoo, N.A. Adu-Aryee, M. Choi, Narikazu Boku, P. Chan, John Bridgewater, A. Gimenez-Capitan, Hamim Zahir, R. Hela, T. Villegas, Stefano Barbi, György Bodoky, D. Degiovanni, Y. Honma, A. Croitoru, K. Koufuji, Lorenza Rimassa, A. Tsuji, Yueyang Shen, Nathan Bahary, S. Abdelwahab, N. Matsuura, Parsee Tomar, L. Yu, Mohammed Elbassiouny, B. Ryoo, S. Adachi, Jean-Robert Delpero, V.D.N.K. Vanderpuye, S.T. Oh, E. Samantas, Amit Bahl, N. Karachaliou, Thierry Lecomte, S. Yoshino, H. Hahn, A. Matsuki, K. Nakamura, D.S. Johnston, M. Del Prete, Per Stål, R. Greil, Dirk Arnold, K. Ridwelski, J. Zhao, K. Shirouzu, Meltem Baykara, G. De Manzoni, I. Lang, K. Aoyagi, A. Fukutomi, Joji Kitayama, Antonieta Salud, K. Beecham, Y. Inoue, Armando Santoro, R. Rosell, P. Malfertheiner, Tsutomu Fujii, Jeong-Yeol Park, S. Taylor, K. Nakajima, Matus Studeny, H. Jiang, M. Shimada, O. Abdelrhman, Camillo Porta, P. Ballesteros, S. Lecleire, K. Han, G. Svegliati Baroni, Michitaka Nagase, François Paye, W. Rodriguez Pantigoso, M.M. Eatock, H.C. Toh, M. Ikeda, Hironori Ishigami, N. Stankovic, H. Kumada, K. Shitara, X. Zhang, E. Arevalo, R. Poon, M. Allard, Y.-Y. Lin, D. Egamberdiev, Shin'ichi Miyamoto, P. Afchain, Harpreet Wasan, Mitesh J. Borad, J. Blay, Dong Sup Yoon, H. Kawai, L. Jin, Margaret Sheehan, T. Otsuji, M. Lichinitser, Ahmet Ozet, R. Savage, Heind Smith, L. Zubiri, Tim Meyer, Erkan Topkan, Ross C. Donehower, Joanne Chiu, T. Tsuda, P. Jimenez Fonseca, U. Selek, N. Musha, B. Liu, A. Magnusson, S.C. Sharma, C. Purcell, H. Wong, E. Lucchini, Jean-Marc Phelip, E. Jeon, J. Fujita, Kelly S. Oliner, W. Schelman, W. Mao, S. Hato, A-L Cheng, D.-L. Ou, Tarek Sahmoud, J. Waters, Jorge A. Marrero, David Malka, P. Xavier, M. Haibo, S. Takiguchi, Q. Pan, S. Ohkawa, J. Kizaki, I.P. Le, A. Roveta, D.H. Koo, H.J. Kim, H. Choi, T. Göhler, A. Gelibter, C. Borg, X. Qiang, Masaya Suenaga, Ozan Cem Guler, Niall C. Tebbutt, M. Emi, S. Ota, N. Nagata, S. Iwasa, Mira Ayadi, K. Matsuo, Henk M.W. Verheul, Christoph C. Zielinski, S. Choo, M.W. Büchler, René Adam, M. Pistelli, J.A. Gonzalez, Charles S. Fuchs, G. Vallati, G. Pentheroudakis, S. Tokunaga, U. Demirci, Lin Shen, B. Heyd, X. Zhou, T. Ioka, Toshiyoshi Fujiwara, O. Testori, Y.S. Park, A. Allen, Rakesh Kapoor, Bruno Daniele, T. Hirai, Z. Lakkis, I.B. Tan, Y-K Kang, S.A. Aledavood, N. Reynoso, F. Serejo, Sergio Ricci, Jennifer Gansert, M. Miyagi, S. Santi, A. Parthan, A C Wotherspoon, L. Chaigneau, Sumera Rizvi, M.G. Fabrini, Véronique Vendrely, W. Su, V. Shalenkov, L. Tu, G. Numico, Joon Seong Park, J.H. Kim, Hope E. Uronis, Mustafa Benekli, I. Aoyama, M. Gauthier, S. Lazzarelli, W. Liguigli, N. Atsushi, H. Kastrissios, J. Thaler, Z. Zou, T. Tsujinaka, S. Barbero, F. Fiteni, Irene Kührer, Aldo Scarpa, C. Desauw, J.F. Seitz, Takahiro Horimatsu, R. von Roemeling, T. Yamamoto, H.R. Alexander, Timothy Iveson, F.M. Negri, Ermek Tangsakar, Pascal Artru, Jia Zhang, S. Lee, Satoshi Morita, E. Garralda, M. Moore, J. Lee, M. Seilanian Tousi, J. Gornet, Yasuhiro Kodera, Werner Scheithauer, L. Marthey, D. Atanackovic, P. Zhao, D. Wang, I. Davidenko, T.S. Waddell, S. Takeda, N. Fan, R. Kawabata, M. Raponi, Giampaolo Tortora, M. Ogasawara, B. Gruenberger, Guido Gerken, Ivan Borbath, N. Fuse, Denis Smith, Emmanuel Mitry, Vikki Tang, I. Stilidi, Min-Hee Ryu, Tulay Akman, C. Saffery, Roopinder Gillmore, K. Ligier, R. Coriat, T. Namikawa, L. Sun, R. Xu, Gary Middleton, W. Tröger, F. Keil, Bruno Chauffert, K. Achilles, David Cunningham, H. Raies, M.Y. Teo, Y. Hamai, S. Tjulandin, I. Boukovinas, J. Kazakin, J. Beebe-Dimmer, Pippa Corrie, J.A. Ortega, A. Cueff, C. Costa, V. Da Prat, Y. Tanaka, F. Rivera, K. Hashimoto, Tianshu Liu, K. Kato, J.C. Plaza, G. Fountzilas, N. Chaiet, Byung Sik Kim, K. Ueda, Pierre Laurent-Puig, Y.-C. Cheng, Mendel Jansen, T. Salman, C. Papandreou, T. Carothers, H. Van Vlierberghe, M. Rios, S. Barni, Y. Arai, G. Afc, Julia Klech, Bryan C. Fuchs, S.T. Fan, A. Falcone, J-B. Bachet, Y. Fujiwara, S. Navruzov, Fumihiko Kanai, H. Shiah, J. Xia, N. Xu, X. Garcia del Muro, M. Lucchesi, Jae Yong Cho, A. Leon, W. Jin, C. Eng, A.U. Yilmaz, L.-T. Chen, Laurent Bedenne, I. Vynnychenko, Brian Schwartz, J. Ruíz Vozmediano, Toshihiro Tanaka, Jinwan Wang, F. Musante, C. Belli, K. Imanaka, W. Fang, J.P. Fusco, S. Gupta, Daniel H. Palmer, M. Ninomiya, N. Ryuge, M. Djuraev, B. Benzidane, H. Yasui, P.G. Betta, M. Sanon, J. Mizusawa, M. Hou, H. Pan, Y. Osaki, Darren Sigal, E. Schott, J. Rodriguez, E. Wöll, S. Nakamori, Anthony F. Shields, Yasuo Ohashi, M. Raikou, M.W. Bennett, Zhilong Zhao, G. Colucci, R. Stauber, M. Nakamura, T. Nguyen, Xin Li, C. Greco, K. Hanazaki, C. Mao, Y. Matsumura, S. Emoto, Maristella Bianconi, Yoon Ho Ko, E. Trusilova, J. Coombs, H. Iwase, V.A. Gorbunova, M. Lencioni, M. Svrcek, S. Leo, Mahmoud Ellithy, N. Silvestris, Y.H. Min, N. Urata, A. Sainato, K. Yoshimura, U. Boggi, D.C. Huang, T. Tsuzuki, S.H. Hong, K. Ikeda, Mohammed Shaker, Olivier Turrini, Arsene-Bienvenu Loembe, Jaffer A. Ajani, G. Pelletier, Stefano Cascinu, F. Bergamo, I.T. Unek, T. Di Palma, H. Li, Maria Lamar, H. Inagaki, M. Ratti, M. Iida, F. Pons Valladares, S. Caponi, A. Sa-Cunha, A. Passardi, J. Wei, S. Azevedo, W. Wang, S. Luelmo, M. Brighenti, A. Mezlini, Y. Zheng, S. Reddy, M. Milella, S. Nered, D. Li, Carsten Bokemeyer, Manabu Muto, C. Krüger, X.J. Sun, T. Ueno, M. Harrison, F. Cognetti, Y. Kida, M. Kobayashi, S. Akamaru, G. Leonard, Y. Inaba, A. Jayaram, Özgür Ekinci, Y. Bai, F. Subtil, Wasaburo Koizumi, M.A. Fridrik, Pierre Michel, R.C. Turkington, D. Galun, N. De Lio, A. Le Cesne, L. Toppo, Thorsten Füreder, R. Poli, V. Moiseyenko, Jean-Louis Jouve, Y. Lu, A. Babaev, N. Okumura, Isamu Okamoto, G.C. Ruiz, I. Oztop, T. Isobe, W. Fischbach, A. Takashima, Alessandro Bittoni, Y-C Chang, K. Yamaguchi, Vincent J. Picozzi, K. Muro, M. Sebagh, Y. Shindo, S. Beghelli, M. Skoblar Vidmar, Alessandra Mandolesi, M. Reni, K. Nishikawa, Marine Gilabert, Y. Maeda, Francesco Massari, E.B. Ruiz, K. Pan, H. Lou, H.S. Won, C. Diaz, J.P. O'Brien, Shuichi Kaneko, C. Gomez-Martin, J. Sgouros, A. Funakoshi, W. Figg, F. Chai, M.S. Pino, X. Pivot, K. Anvari, J. Turnes, M. Reif, F. Lopez-Rios, W. Cheung, David P. Ryan, M. Oka, I. Varthalitis, A. Deptala, Masatoshi Kudo, F. Romeder, J. Qian, J. Hihara, T. Shibata, T. Yamatsuji, B. Gonzalez-Astorga, B. Allani, Y. Tsuji, J. Liu, Thomas Yau, S. Lim, F. Grosso, Y.D. Zheng, R. Passalacqua, J. Chen, I. Sperduti, H. C. Kwon, C. Cappelli, C. Guettier, O. Nematov, Lanjun Zhou, C. Caparello, F. Bonnetain, R. Ferrara, A. Nashimoto, A. Schumann, Richard Martin Bambury, C. Mazzara, T. Aramaki, B. Saracino, M. Takagi, G. Di Lucca, Philip A. Philip, A. Aloui, Philippe Bachellier, N. Hirabayashi, S. Osanto, S. So, N. Fukushima, K.-H. Yeh, Y. Aoki, M. Baretti, Y-L. Gong, Koichiro Yamakado, C.-H. Hsu, R. Buder, D.G. Power, H. Matsumoto, Chiara Costantini, Y. Xu, G. Tomasello, A. Lopez Pousa, D.K. Lee, F. Di Fiore, O. Polat, K. Suzuki, L. Arbea, R. McDermott, S.-H. Kim, E. Toure, O. Bouche, A. Zaanan, T. Hamaguchi, Mary Geitona, M.H. Tan, M. Antonietti, Italo Bearzi, Juan W. Valle, D. Castaing, H. Shoji, Eylem Pınar Eser, Mario Scartozzi, R. Abdul Rahman, Yukinori Kurokawa, F. Pardo, T. Sasatomi, Y. Kimura, Suguru Yamada, K. El Ouagari, F. Mosca, Yuichiro Doki, A.O. Singh, Goro Nakayama, Lara Lipton, H.J. An, B. Kato, Y. Ezoe, M. Salem, Samantha Bersani, B. Paule, O.E. Carranza Rua, Gabriela Kornek, L. Gray, S. Tamura, J.-F. Blanc, and L. Ginocchi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Gastrointestinal tumors ,Performance status ,business.industry ,Hematology ,Severe hypoxia ,Neutropenia ,medicine.disease ,Rash ,Gastroenterology ,Discontinuation ,Non colorectal ,Oncology ,Internal medicine ,Toxicity ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background TH-302 is a hypoxia targeted prodrug with a hypoxia-triggered 2-nitroimidazole component designed to release the DNA alkylator, bromo-isophosphoramide mustard (Br-IPM), when reduced in severe hypoxia. A randomized Phase 2B study (NCT01144455) was conducted to assess the benefit of G + T to standard dose G as first-line therapy of PAC. Materials and methods An open-label multi-center study of two dose levels of TH-302 (240 mg/m2 or 340 mg/m2) in combination with G versus G alone (randomized 1:1:1). G (1000 mg/m2) and T were administered IV over 30-60 minutes on Days 1, 8 and 15 of a 28-day cycle. Patients on the G could crossover after progression and be randomized to a G + T arm. The primary efficacy endpoint was a comparison of progression-free survival (PFS) between the combination arms and G alone (80% power to detect 50% improvement in PFS with one-sided alpha of 10%). Summary PFS outcome has previously been reported; more detailed PFS as well as the initial overall survival (OS) data are presented. Results 214 pts were treated; 164 (77%) Stage IV and 50 (23%) Stage IIIB. Median age 65 (range 29-86); 126 M/88 F; 40% ECOG 0/60% ECOG 1. Receiving 6 or more cycles: 32% G; 45% G + T240; 55% G + T340. Median PFS was 3.6 mo in G vs 5.5 mo in G + T240 (p = 0.031) and 6.0 mo in G + T340 (p = 0.008). Poorer prognostic factors (older age, poorer performance status, reduced albumin) were associated with larger treatment effect. Median OS was 7.0 mo in G vs 9.0 in G + T240 and 9.5 mo in G + T340. RECIST best response was 12% in G vs 17% in G + T240 and 27% in G + T340. CA19-9 decreases were significantly greater G + T340. A >50% CA19-9 decrease was 52% with G vs 50% with G + T240 and 70% with G + T340. AEs leading to discontinuation were: 16% G, 15% G + T240 and 11% G + T340. Rash (45% in G + T340) and stomatitis (36% in G + T340) were greater in combination, 4 pts Grade 3 rash. Grd 3/4 thrombocytopenia were 11% G, 39% G + T240 and 59% G + T340 and Grd 3/4 neutropenia were 28% G, 56% G + T240 and 59% G + T340. Conclusions The combination of G plus TH-302 improved the efficacy of G. A TH-302 dose of 340 mg2 was identified for future studies. Skin and mucosal toxicity and myelosuppression were the most common TH-302 related AEs with no increase in treatment discontinuation. Disclosure All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Microwave thermal ablation using CT-scanner for predicting the variation of ablated region over time: advantages and limitations.
- Author
-
L Strigari, S Minosse, D D'Alessio, L Farina, M Cavagnaro, B Cassano, R Pinto, G Vallati, and V Lopresto
- Subjects
MICROWAVES ,UNIVARIATE analysis ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,COMPUTED tomography ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems - Abstract
This study aims at investigating in real-time the structural and dynamical changes occurring in an ex vivo tissue during a microwave thermal ablation (MTA) procedure. The experimental set-up was based on ex vivo liver tissue inserted in a dedicated box, in which 3 fibre-optic (FO) temperature probes were introduced to measure the temperature increase over time. Computed tomography (CT) imaging technique was exploited to experimentally study in real-time the Hounsfield Units (HU) modification occurring during MTA. The collected image data were processed with a dedicated MATLAB tool, developed to analyse the FO positions and HU modifications from the CT images acquired over time before and during the ablation procedures. The radial position of a FO temperature probe (rFO) and the value of HU in the region of interest (ROI) containing the probe (HUo), along with the corresponding value of HU in the contralateral ROI with respect to the MTA antenna applicator (HUc), were determined and registered over time during and after the MTA procedure. Six experiments were conducted to confirm results. The correlation between temperature and the above listed predictors was investigated using univariate and multivariate analysis. At the multivariate analysis, the time, rFO and HUc resulted significant predictive factors of the logarithm of measured temperature. The correlation between predicted and measured temperatures was 0.934 (p < 0.001). The developed tool allows identifying and registering the image-based parameters useful for predicting the temperature variation over time in each investigated voxel by taking into consideration the HU variation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The Deterioration of Sarcopenia Post-Transarterial Radioembolization with Holmium-166 Serves as a Predictor for Disease Progression at 3 Months in Patients with Advanced Hepatocellular Carcinoma: A Pilot Study.
- Author
-
Trobiani C, Ubaldi N, Teodoli L, Tipaldi MA, Cappelli F, Ungania S, and Vallati G
- Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this pilot study is to explore the relationship between changes in sarcopenia before and after one to three months of Transarterial Radioembolization (TARE) treatment with Holmium-166 (166Ho) and its effect on the rate of local response. Our primary objective is to assess whether the worsening of sarcopenia can function as an early indicator of a subgroup of patients at increased risk of disease progression in cases of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)., Methods: A single-center retrospective analysis was performed on 25 patients with HCC who underwent 166Ho-TARE. Sarcopenia status was defined according to the measurement of the psoas muscle index (PMI) at baseline, one month, and three months after TARE. Radiological response according to mRECIST criteria was assessed and patients were grouped into responders and non-responders. The loco-regional response rate was evaluated for all patients before and after treatment, and was compared with sarcopenia status to identify any potential correlation., Results: A total of 20 patients were analyzed. According to the sarcopenia status at 1 month and 3 months, two groups were defined as follows: patients in which the deltaPMI was stable or increased (No-Sarcopenia group; n = 12) vs. patients in which the deltaPMI decreased (Sarcopenia group; n = 8). Three months after TARE, a significant difference in sarcopenia status was noted ( p = 0.041) between the responders and non-responders, with the non-responder group showing a decrease in the sarcopenia values with a median deltaPMI of -0.57, compared to a median deltaPMI of 0.12 in the responder group. Therefore, deltaPMI measured three months post-TARE can be considered as a predictive biomarker for the local response rate ( p = 0.028). Lastly, a minor deltaPMI variation (>-0.293) was found to be indicative of positive treatment outcomes ( p = 0.0001)., Conclusion: The decline in sarcopenia three months post-TARE with Holmium-166 is a reliable predictor of worse loco-regional response rate, as evaluated radiologically, in patients with HCC. Sarcopenia measurement has the potential to be a valuable assessment tool in the management of HCC patients undergoing TARE. However, further prospective and randomized studies involving larger cohorts are necessary to confirm and validate these findings.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Possible use of Digital Variance Angiography in Liver Transarterial Chemoembolization: A Retrospective Observational Study.
- Author
-
Lucatelli P, Rocco B, Ciaglia S, Teodoli L, Argirò R, Guiu B, Saba L, Vallati G, Spiliopoulos S, Patrone L, Gyánó M, Góg I, Osváth S, Szigeti K, Kiss JP, and Catalano C
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Female, Retrospective Studies, Angiography, Digital Subtraction methods, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular therapy, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms therapy, Liver Neoplasms blood supply, Chemoembolization, Therapeutic methods
- Abstract
Purpose: Digital variance angiography (DVA), a recently developed image processing technology, provided higher contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) and better image quality (IQ) during lower limb interventions than digital subtraction angiography (DSA). Our aim was to investigate whether this quality improvement can be observed also during liver transarterial chemoembolization (TACE)., Materials and Methods: We retrospectively compared the CNR and IQ parameters of DSA and DVA images from 25 patients (65% male, mean ± SD age: 67.5 ± 11.2 years) underwent TACE intervention at our institute. CNR was calculated on 50 images. IQ of every image set was evaluated by 5 experts using 4-grade Likert scales. Both single image evaluation and paired image comparison were performed in a blinded and randomized manner. The diagnostic value was evaluated based on the possibility to identify lesions and feeding arteries., Results: DVA provided significantly higher CNR (mean CNR
DVA /CNRDSA was 1.33). DVA images received significantly higher individual Likert score (mean ± SEM 3.34 ± 0,08 vs. 2.89 ± 0.11, Wilcoxon signed-rank p < 0.001) and proved to be superior also in paired comparisons (median comparison score 1.60 [IQR:2.40], one sample Wilcoxon p < 0.001 compared to equal quality level). DSA could not detect lesion and feeding artery in 28 and 36% of cases, and allowed clear detection only in 22% and 16%, respectively. In contrast, DVA failed only in 8 and 18% and clearly revealed lesions and feeding arteries in 32 and 26%, respectively., Conclusion: In our study, DVA provided higher quality images and better diagnostic insight than DSA; therefore, DVA could represent a useful tool in liver TACE interventions., Level of Evidence: III Non-consecutive study., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Cone-Beam CT-Guided Transarterial Tagging of Endophytic Renal Tumors with Indocyanine Green for Robot-Assisted Partial Nephrectomy.
- Author
-
Nardis PG, Cipollari S, Lucatelli P, Basilico F, Rocco B, Corona M, Cannavale A, Leonardo C, Flammia RS, Proietti F, Vallati G, Gallucci M, and Catalano C
- Subjects
- Cone-Beam Computed Tomography, Ethiodized Oil, Humans, Indocyanine Green, Margins of Excision, Nephrectomy adverse effects, Nephrectomy methods, Treatment Outcome, Kidney Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Kidney Neoplasms pathology, Kidney Neoplasms surgery, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Robotics
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the safety, efficacy, and clinical impact of preoperative cone-beam computed tomography (CT)-guided selective embolization of endophytic renal tumors with the fluorescent dye indocyanine green (ICG) and ethiodized oil in patients undergoing robot-assisted partial nephrectomy (RAPN) using near-infrared fluorescence imaging (NIR-FI)., Materials and Methods: Patients with renal endophytic tumors eligible for RAPN and transarterial embolization with ICG and ethiodized oil were prospectively enrolled. Technical success was defined as the completion of the embolization procedure. Radiographic success, defined as ethiodized oil accumulation in the nodule, was classified as poor, moderate, good, or optimal on the basis of postembolization cone-beam CT. Surgical visibility of the tumors during RAPN with the use of NIR-FI was classified as follows: (a) not visible, (b) visible with poorly defined margins, and (c) visible with well-defined margins., Results: Forty-one patients underwent preoperative selective embolization. Technical success was 100%. Ethiodized oil accumulation on cone-beam CT was poor in 2 (4.9%), moderate in 6 (14.6%), good in 25 (61.0%), and optimal in 8 (19.5%) of 41 patients. During RAPN with NIR-FI, tumors were visible with well-defined margins in 26 (63.4%), visible with blurred margins in 14 (34.1%), and not visible in 1 (2.4%) of 41 cases. There were no adverse events following endovascular embolization., Conclusions: Preoperative transarterial superselective embolization of endophytic renal tumors with ICG and ethodized oil in patients undergoing RAPN is safe and effective, allowing accurate intraoperative visualization and resection of endophytic tumors., (Copyright © 2022 SIR. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. In Vivo Comparison of Micro-Balloon Interventions (MBI) Advantage: A Retrospective Cohort Study of DEB-TACE Versus b-TACE and of SIRT Versus b-SIRT.
- Author
-
Lucatelli P, De Rubeis G, Trobiani C, Ungania S, Rocco B, De Gyurgyokai SZ, Masi M, Pecorella I, Cappelli F, Lai Q, Catalano C, and Vallati G
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular pathology, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular therapy, Chemoembolization, Therapeutic methods, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms pathology, Liver Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate in vivo the role of the micro-balloon by comparing trans-arterial chemoembolization (DEB-TACE) and selective internal radiotherapy (SIRT) procedures performed with and without balloon micro-catheter (b-DEB-TACE and DEB-TACE/SIRT and b-SIRT) for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)., Methods: The impact of a balloon micro-catheter on trans-arterial loco-regional treatment was analyzed using non-enhanced post-procedural cone-beam CT (Ne-CBCT) by comparing the attenuation values in the embolized area and the surrounding liver tissue before and after DEB-TACE versus b-DEB-TACE and by comparing 2D/3D dosimetry in single-photon emission computed tomography after SIRT versus b-SIRT, and by comparing the histological count of the beads following orthotopic liver transplantation in the DEB-TACE versus b-DEB-TACE subgroup., Results: We treated 84 HCC patients using trans-arterial loco-regional therapy. Fifty-three patients (26 DEB-TACE and 27 b-DEB-TACE) were analyzed in the TACE group. Contrast, signal-to-noise ratio, and contrast-to-noise ratio were all significantly higher in b-DEB-TACE subgroup than DEB-TACE (182.33 HU [CI95% 160.3-273.5] vs. 124 HU [CI95% 80.6-163.6]; 8.3 [CI95% 5.7-10.1] vs. 4.5 [CI95% 3.7-6.0]; 6.9 [CI95% 4.3-7.8] vs. 3.1 [CI95% 2.2-5.0] p < 0.05). Thirty-one patients (24 SIRT and 7 b-SIRT) were analyzed in the SIRT group. 2D dosimetry profile evaluation showed an activity intensity peak significantly higher in the b-SIRT than in the SIRT subgroup (987.5 ± 393.8 vs. 567.7 ± 302.2, p = 0.005). Regarding 3D dose analysis, the mean dose administered to the treated lesions was significantly higher in the b-SIRT than in the SIRT group (151.6 Gy ± 53.2 vs. 100.1 Gy ± 43.4, p = 0.01). In histological explanted liver analysis, there was a trend for higher intra-tumoral localization of embolic microspheres for b-DEB-TACE in comparison with DEB-TACE., Conclusions: Due to the use of three different methods, the results of this study demonstrate in vivo, a better embolization profile of oncological intra-arterial interventions performed with balloon micro-catheter regardless of the embolic agent employed., (© 2021. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature and the Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiological Society of Europe (CIRSE).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Transnephrostomic Indocyanine Green-Guided Robotic Ureteral Reimplantation for Benign Ureteroileal Strictures After Robotic Cystectomy and Intracorporeal Neobladder: Step-By-Step Surgical Technique, Perioperative and Functional Outcomes.
- Author
-
Tuderti G, Brassetti A, Minisola F, Anceschi U, Ferriero M, Leonardo C, Misuraca L, Vallati G, Guaglianone S, Gallucci M, and Simone G
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Ileum surgery, Indocyanine Green administration & dosage, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local surgery, Nephrostomy, Percutaneous adverse effects, Operative Time, Postoperative Complications etiology, Constriction, Pathologic surgery, Cystectomy methods, Postoperative Complications surgery, Replantation methods, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Ureter surgery, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Objectives: To describe our surgical technique of robotic ureteroileal reimplantation (RUIR) for ureteroileal anastomosis strictures with the use of near-infrared fluorescence imaging (NIFI) after transnephrostomic antegrade injection of indocyanine green in patients previously treated with robot-assisted radical cystectomy and intracorporeal orthotopic neobladder. Materials and Methods: From March 2015 to December 2017, 10 consecutive patients underwent RUIR in our tertiary referral center. All patients previously underwent percutaneous nephrostomy and at least one antegrade stenting and stricture dilatation attempt. Clinical data were prospectively collected into our institutional dataset. Both perioperative and functional outcomes were assessed. Results: Median time from robotic cystectomy to ureteroileal anastomosis strictures diagnosis was 5 months (interquartile range [IQR] 2-6). Median stricture length was 1.5 cm (IQR 1-2). Median operative time was 140 minutes (IQR 81-155), and median length of stay was 5 days (IQR 3-9). Two patients experienced Clavien grade 2 complications (urinary tract infection requiring antibiotics and blood transfusion, respectively). One patient underwent ileum resection and anastomosis due to bowel perforation (Clavien IIIb). At a median follow-up of 19 months (IQR 14-39), one patient developed a stricture recurrence. No patient developed worsening of renal function (newly onset chronic kidney disease stage 3b-4). Conclusions: Robotic reimplantation for ureteroileal anastomosis strictures is a safe and highly effective procedure, with a high success rate and excellent perioperative and functional outcomes. NIFI provides an easy guide to identify and progressively dissect the ureter.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. "Ride the Green Light": Indocyanine Green-marked Off-clamp Robotic Partial Nephrectomy for Totally Endophytic Renal Masses.
- Author
-
Simone G, Tuderti G, Anceschi U, Ferriero M, Costantini M, Minisola F, Vallati G, Pizzi G, Guaglianone S, Misuraca L, and Gallucci M
- Abstract
Background: Complexity of robot-assisted partial nephrectomy (RAPN) mostly depends on tumor size and location. Totally endophytic renal masses represent a surgical challenge in terms of both intraoperative identification and anatomical dissection., Objective: To detail a novel technique for marking preoperatively endophytic renal tumors with transarterial superselective intrarenal mass delivery of indocyanine green (ICG)-lipiodol mixture, in order to enhance surgical margins control during purely off-clamp (OC) RAPN with the use of near-infrared fluorescence imaging., Design, Setting, and Participants: Between June and July 2017, 10 consecutive patients with totally endophytic renal masses underwent preoperative ICG tumor marking immediately followed by RAPN., Surgical Procedure: Preoperative superselective transarterial delivery of a lipiodol-ICG mixture (1:2 volume ratio) into tertiary-order arterial branches feeding the renal mass prior to transperitoneal OC-RAPN., Measurements: Clinical data were prospectively collected in our institutional RAPN dataset. Perioperative, pathological, and functional outcomes of RAPN were assessed., Results and Limitations: Median tumor size was 3cm (interquartile range 2.3-3.8). The median PADUA score was 10 (9-11). Angiographic procedure was successful in all patients. Median operative time was 75min (65-85); median estimated blood loss was 250ml (200-350). No conversion to on-clamp PN or radical nephrectomy was needed. All patients had uneventful perioperative course; median hospital stay was 3 d (2-3). At discharge, median hemoglobin (Hgb) and percent estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) drop were 3.3g/dl (2.1-3.3) and 11% (10-20%), respectively. Surgical margins were negative in all cases. One-year median ipsilateral renal volume and 1-yr eGFR percent decreases were 11.7% (6-20.9%) and 12.2% (5.3-13.7%), respectively., Conclusions: We described a novel technique to simplify challenging RAPN based on ICG superselective transarterial tumor marking. Key benefits include quick intraoperative identification of the mass with improved visualization and real-time control of resection margins., Patient Summary: Robot-assisted partial nephrectomy (RAPN) for totally endophytic renal masses is a technically demanding surgical procedure, sometimes requiring radical nephrectomy. This novel technique significantly simplified surgical complexity in our Institution. Further studies with larger cohorts are warranted to confirm whether this technique provides relevant intraoperative and functional advantages., (Copyright © 2018 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Metachronous Isolated Splenic Metastasis in a Young Patient With Renal Cell Carcinoma: Case Report and Literature Review.
- Author
-
Costantini M, Tuderti G, Minisola F, Pompeo V, Sentinelli S, Amoreo CA, Vallati G, Poeta ML, Gallucci M, and Simone G
- Subjects
- Adult, Biopsy, Needle, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Laparoscopy methods, Male, Nephrectomy methods, Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography methods, Risk Assessment, Splenectomy methods, Splenic Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Splenic Neoplasms secondary, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Carcinoma, Renal Cell pathology, Carcinoma, Renal Cell surgery, Neoplasms, Second Primary diagnostic imaging, Neoplasms, Second Primary surgery, Splenic Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Splenic metastasis is uncommon and is usually associated with widespread disease.
1,2 Isolated splenic metastases from renal cancer are also rarer and are often an incidental finding. This eventuality may turn into a dangerous scenario due to a spontaneous splenic rupture leading to sudden death.2,3 At the best of our knowledge, only few cases of metastasis from renal cell carcinoma (RCC) have been documented in the literature.4-11 We hereby present a literature review of these cases and report a case of isolated splenic metastasis in a young man on active follow-up for a clear cell RCC clear cell Renal Cell Carcinoma (ccRCC)., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Robotic Intracorporeal Padua Ileal Bladder: Surgical Technique, Perioperative, Oncologic and Functional Outcomes.
- Author
-
Simone G, Papalia R, Misuraca L, Tuderti G, Minisola F, Ferriero M, Vallati G, Guaglianone S, and Gallucci M
- Subjects
- Aged, Blood Loss, Surgical, Cystectomy adverse effects, Disease-Free Survival, Diurnal Enuresis etiology, Female, Humans, Length of Stay, Lymph Node Excision, Male, Middle Aged, Nocturnal Enuresis etiology, Operative Time, Postoperative Complications etiology, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Survival Rate, Urinary Incontinence etiology, Carcinoma, Transitional Cell surgery, Cystectomy methods, Ileum transplantation, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms surgery, Urinary Reservoirs, Continent adverse effects, Urinary Reservoirs, Continent physiology
- Abstract
Background: Robot-assisted radical cystectomy (RARC) with intracorporeal neobladder reconstruction is a challenging procedure. The need for surgical skills and the long operative times have led to concern about its reproducibility., Objective: To illustrate our technique for RARC and totally intracorporeal orthotopic Padua ileal bladder., Design, Setting, and Participants: From August 2012 to February 2014, 45 patients underwent this technique at a single tertiary referral centre., Surgical Procedure: RARC, extended pelvic lymph node dissection, and intracorporeal partly stapled neobladder. Surgical steps are demonstrated in the accompanying video., Measurements: Demographics, clinical, and pathological data were collected. Perioperative, 2-yr oncologic and 2-yr functional outcomes were reported., Results and Limitations: Intraoperative transfusion or conversion to open surgery was not necessary in any case and intracorporeal neobladder was successfully performed in all 45 patients. Median operative time was 305min (interquartile range [IQR]: 282-345). Median estimated blood loss was 210ml (IQR: 50-250). Median hospital stay was 9 d (IQR: 7-12). The overall incidence of perioperative, 30-d and 180-d complications were 44.4%, 57.8%, and 77.8%, respectively, while severe complications occurred in17.8%, 17.8%, and 35.5%, respectively. Two-yr daytime and night-time continence rates were 73.3% and 55.5%, respectively. Two-yr disease free survival, cancer specific survival, and overall survival rates were 72.5%, 82.3%, and 82.4%, respectively. The small sample size and high caseload of the centre might affect the reproducibility of these results., Conclusions: Our experience supports the feasibility of totally intracorporeal neobladder following RARC. Operative times and perioperative complication rates are likely to be reduced with increasing experience., Patient Summary: We report the outcomes of our first 45 consecutive patients who underwent robot-assisted radical cystectomy with intracorporeal neobladders. Perioperative, oncologic, and functional outcomes support this technique as a feasible and safe surgical option in tertiary referral centres., (Copyright © 2016 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Impact of 3D Rotational Angiography on Liver Embolization Procedures: Review of Technique and Applications.
- Author
-
Lucatelli P, Corona M, Argirò R, Anzidei M, Vallati G, Fanelli F, Bezzi M, and Catalano C
- Subjects
- Humans, Liver blood supply, Liver diagnostic imaging, Cone-Beam Computed Tomography, Embolization, Therapeutic, Hepatic Artery diagnostic imaging, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Portal Vein diagnostic imaging, Radiography, Interventional
- Abstract
In the last years, the interest into interventional applications of C-arm cone-beam CT (CBCT) progressively raised, widening its clinical application from the original field of interventional neuroradiology to the field of peripheral procedures. Liver embolization procedures, due to their complexity and potential treatment-related life-threatening complications, represent one of the main clinical applications of this novel angiographic technique. CBCT has been demonstrated to render procedures safer and technically easier, and to predict outcome as well as to avoid major complications in different treatment scenarios (trans-arterial embolization, trans-arterial chemoembolization, selective internal radiation therapy, percutaneous portal vein embolization). This review summarizes all technical, dosimetric and procedural aspects of CBCT techniques, underlying all its potential clinical advantages in the field of liver embolization procedures. Moreover, the paper provides all the instructions to obtain the best diagnostic performance out of this novel angiographic technique.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Dose evaluation for skin and organ in hepatocellular carcinoma during angiographic procedure.
- Author
-
D'Alessio D, Giliberti C, Soriani A, Carpanese L, Pizzi G, Vallati G, and Strigari L
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Brachytherapy, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular radiotherapy, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular surgery, Female, Humans, Liver Neoplasms radiotherapy, Liver Neoplasms surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Radiation Dosage, Angiography adverse effects, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Skin radiation effects
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the radiation dose in patients undergoing liver angiographic procedure and verify the usefulness of different dose measurements to prevent deterministic effects. Gafchromic film, MicroMOSFET data and DIAMENTOR device of the X-ray system were used to characterize the examined interventional radiology (IR) procedure., Materials and Methods: A liver embolization procedure, the SIRT (Selective Internal Radiation Therapy), was investigated. The exposure parameters from the DIAMENTOR as well as patient and geometrical data were registered. Entrance skin dose map obtained using Gafchromic film (ESDGAF) in a standard phantom as well as in 12 patients were used to calculate the maximum skin dose (MSDGAF). MicroMOSFETs were used to assess ESD in relevant points/areas. Moreover, the maximum value of five MicroMOSFETs array, due to the extension of treated area and to the relative distance of 2-3 cm of two adjacent MicroMOSFETs, was useful to predict the MSD without interfering with the clinical practice. PCXMC vers.1.5 was used to calculate effective dose (E) and equivalent dose (H)., Results: The mean dose-area product (DAPDIAMENTOR) for SIRT procedures was 166 Gycm2, although a wide range was observed. The mean MSDGAF for SIRT procedures was 1090 mGy, although a wide range was experienced. A correlation was found between the MSDGAF measured on a patient and the DAPDIAMENTOR value for liver embolizations. MOSFET and Gafchromic data were in agreement within 5% in homogeneous area and within 20% in high dose gradient regions. The mean equivalent dose in critical organs was 89.8 mSv for kidneys, 22.9 mSv for pancreas, 20.2 mSv for small intestine and 21.0 mSv for spleen. Whereas the mean E was 3.7 mSv (range: 0.5-13.7)., Conclusions: Gafchromic films result useful to study patient exposure and determine localization and amplitude of high dose skin areas to better predict the skin injuries. Then, DAPDIAMENTOR or MOSFET data could offer real-time methods, as on-line dose alert, to avoid any side effects during liver embolization with prolonged duration.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.