19 results on '"Gasparri M.L."'
Search Results
2. Three Lymphadenectomy Strategies in Endometrial Carcinoma: Analysis of Long-Term Outcomes
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Bogani, G., primary, di Donato, V., additional, Casarin, J., additional, Plotti, F., additional, Papadia, A., additional, Buda, A., additional, Multinu, F., additional, Perrone, A.M., additional, De Iaco, P., additional, Gasparri, M.L., additional, Ghezzi, F., additional, Ferrero, S., additional, Sorbi, F., additional, Angioli, R., additional, Landoni, F., additional, Mueller, M.D., additional, Muzii, L., additional, Benedetti Panici, P., additional, and Raspagliesi, F., additional
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- 2022
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3. Analyse der Behandlungsverläufe nach rekonstruktiven und plastisch-ästhetischen Brustoperationen mittels Latissimus dorsi-Lappentechnik in der klinischen Routine in einem zertifizierten Brustzentrum
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Brus, L., additional, Paluchowski, P., additional, Krawczyk, N., additional, Bündgen, N., additional, Rody, A., additional, Hanker, L., additional, Gasparri, M.L., additional, and Banys-Paluchowski, M., additional
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- 2022
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4. Lymphadenectomy, Sentinel Node Mapping Plus Backup Lymphadenectomy and Sentinel Node Mapping Alone in Endometrial Cancer
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Bogani, G., primary, Ghezzi, F., additional, Malzoni, M., additional, di Donato, V., additional, Casarin, J., additional, Ferrero, S., additional, Angioli, R., additional, Plotti, F., additional, Muzii, L., additional, De Iaco, P., additional, Perrone, A.M., additional, Papadia, A., additional, Gasparri, M.L., additional, Buda, A., additional, Landoni, F., additional, Mueller, M.D., additional, Panici, P. Benedetti, additional, and Raspagliesi, F., additional
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- 2021
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5. Neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio and nodal pathologic complete response in node positive breast cancer patients undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy
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Gasparri, M.L., primary, Di Micco, R., additional, Bassi, V., additional, Sevas, V., additional, Meani, F., additional, Papadia, A., additional, and Gentilini, O.D., additional
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- 2021
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6. Maternal height combined with neonatal weight as a new anthropometric predictor for adverse delivery outcomes
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Gasparri, M.L, additional, Filippi, V, additional, Bolla, D, additional, Papadia, A, additional, Tschudi, R, additional, and Raio, L, additional
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- 2020
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7. P120 - Neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio and nodal pathologic complete response in node positive breast cancer patients undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy
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Gasparri, M.L., Di Micco, R., Bassi, V., Sevas, V., Meani, F., Papadia, A., and Gentilini, O.D.
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- 2021
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8. Tumor infiltrating lymphocytes in ovarian cancer
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Gasparri, M.L., Attar, Rukset, Palaia, I., Perniola, G., Marchetti, C., Di Donato, V., Panici, P.B., Gasparri, M.L., Attar, Rukset, Palaia, I., Perniola, G., Marchetti, C., Di Donato, V., Panici, P.B., and Yeditepe Üniversitesi
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chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Apoptosis ,Target therapy ,Cancer ,Tumor infiltrating lymphocytes - Abstract
Several improvements in ovarian cancer treatment have been achieved in recent years, both in surgery and in combination chemotherapy with targeting. However, ovarian tumors remain the women's cancers with highest mortality rates. In this scenario, a pivotal role has been endorsed to the immunological environment and to the immunological mechanisms involved in ovarian cancer behavior. Recent evidence suggests a loss of the critical balance between immune-activating and immune-suppressing mechanisms when oncogenesis and cancer progression occur. Ovarian cancer generates a mechanism to escape the immune system by producing a highly suppressive environment. Immune-activated tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) in ovarian tumor tissue testify that the immune system is the trigger in this neoplasm. The TIL mileau has been demonstrated to be associated with better prognosis, more chemosensitivity, and more cases of optimal residual tumor achieved during primary cytoreduction. Nowadays, scientists are focusing attention on new immunologically effective tumor biomarkers in order to optimize selection of patients for recruitment in clinical trials and to identify relationships of these biomarkers with responses to immunotherapeutics. Assessing this point of view, TILs might be considered as a potent predictive immunotherapy biomarker.
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- 2015
9. Preoperative c-reactive protein and thrombocyte count as potential markers for longterm survival in ovarian cancer
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Braicu, E.I., primary, Sehouli, J., additional, Richter, R., additional, Vergote, I.B., additional, Concin, N., additional, van Nieuwenhuysen, E., additional, Achimas, P., additional, Berger, A., additional, Fetica, B., additional, Mahner, S., additional, Glajzer, J., additional, Papadia, A., additional, Woelber, L., additional, Gasparri, M.L., additional, Vanderstichele, A., additional, Benedetti Panici, P., additional, Mueller, M., additional, Ruscito, I., additional, Zimmer, J., additional, and Woopen, H., additional
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- 2018
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10. Obesity is a key prognostic factor in stage IIIC-IV ovarian cancer diagnosed prior to 65 years of age: A 10-year survival analysis
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Ruscito, I., primary, Gasparri, M.L., additional, Marchetti, C., additional, Crispino, S., additional, La Russa, C., additional, Petriglia, G., additional, Di Donato, V., additional, Palaia, I., additional, Perniola, G., additional, Muzii, L., additional, and Benedetti Panici, P., additional
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- 2016
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11. 964P - Preoperative c-reactive protein and thrombocyte count as potential markers for longterm survival in ovarian cancer
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Braicu, E.I., Sehouli, J., Richter, R., Vergote, I.B., Concin, N., van Nieuwenhuysen, E., Achimas, P., Berger, A., Fetica, B., Mahner, S., Glajzer, J., Papadia, A., Woelber, L., Gasparri, M.L., Vanderstichele, A., Benedetti Panici, P., Mueller, M., Ruscito, I., Zimmer, J., and Woopen, H.
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- 2018
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12. Past, Present and Future Strategies of Immunotherapy in Gynecological Malignancies
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Bellati, F., primary, Napoletano, C., additional, Ruscito, I., additional, Visconti, V., additional, Antonilli, M., additional, Gasparri, M.L., additional, Zizzari, I.G., additional, Rahimi, H., additional, Palaia, I., additional, Rughetti, A., additional, Benedetti Panici, P., additional, and Nuti, M., additional
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- 2013
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13. 174 (PB-081) Poster - MELODY: A prospective non-interventional multicenter cohort study to evaluate different imaging-guided methods for localization of malignant breast lesions (EUBREAST-4/iBRA-NET, NCT 0555941 1).
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Cabíoğlu, N., Banys-Paluchowski, M., Kühn, T., Massannat, Y., Esgueva, A.A., Karadeniz Cakmak, G., Gulluoglu, B., Ditsch, N., Cantürk, N.Z., Gasparri, M.L., Murawa, D., Kontos, M., Rubio, I.T., Tvedskov, T.H.F., Khan, M.M., Rebaza, L.P., Lowery, A., Gentilini, O.D., Weber, W.P., and Harvey, J.
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BREAST tumors , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *COMPUTER-assisted surgery - Published
- 2024
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14. Factors predicting morbidity in surgically-staged high-risk endometrial cancer patients
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Francesco Raspagliesi, Anna Myriam Perrone, Alessandro Buda, Daniela Luvero, Maria Luisa Gasparri, Giorgio Bogani, Fabio Barra, Fabio Ghezzi, Andrea Papadia, Michael D. Mueller, Pierluigi Benedetti Panici, Francesco Plotti, Antonella Cromi, Innocenza Palaia, Simone Ferrero, Roberto Angioli, Fabio Landoni, Violante Di Donato, Ciro Pinelli, Ludovico Muzii, Jvan Casarin, Alice Indini, Chiara Cimmino, Pierandrea De Iaco, Giampaolo Di Martino, Bogani G., Papadia A., Buda A., Casarin J., Di Donato V., Plotti F., Gasparri M.L., Cimmino C., Pinelli C., Perrone A.M., Barra F., Cromi A., Di Martino G., Palaia I., Ferrero S., Indini A., De Iaco P., Angioli R., Luvero D., Muzii L., Ghezzi F., Landoni F., Mueller M.D., Benedetti Panici P., Raspagliesi F., Bogani, G, Papadia, A, Buda, A, Casarin, J, Di Donato, V, Plotti, F, Gasparri, M, Cimmino, C, Pinelli, C, Perrone, A, Barra, F, Cromi, A, Di Martino, G, Palaia, I, Ferrero, S, Indini, A, De Iaco, P, Angioli, R, Luvero, D, Muzii, L, Ghezzi, F, Landoni, F, Mueller, M, Benedetti Panici, P, and Raspagliesi, F
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Endometrium ,Endometrial cancer ,Retrospective Studie ,Humans ,Medicine ,610 Medicine & health ,Retrospective Studies ,Sentinel node mapping ,business.industry ,endometrial cancer ,lymphadenectomy ,morbidity ,sentinel node mapping ,endometrium ,female ,humans ,lymph node excision ,retrospective studies ,endometrial neoplasms ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Lymphadenectomy ,Retrospective cohort study ,Sentinel node ,medicine.disease ,Endometrial Neoplasms ,Surgery ,Reproductive Medicine ,Lymph Node Excision ,Female ,Morbidity ,business ,Complication ,Body mass index ,Human ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To investigate factors predicting the risk of developing 90-day postoperative complications and lymphatic-specific morbidity in patients undergoing surgical staging for high-risk endometrial cancer. METHODS This is a multi-institutional retrospective cohort study. Patients affected by apparent early-stage high-risk endometrial cancer (endometrioid FIGO grade 3 with deep myometrial invasion and non-endometrioid endometrial cancer) undergoing surgical staging between 2007 and 2019. Complications were graded according to the Clavien-Dindo classification system. Martin criteria were applied to improve quality of complications reporting. RESULTS Charts of 279 patients were evaluated. Lymphadenectomy, sentinel node mapping (SNM), and SNM followed by back-up lymphadenectomy were performed in 83 (29.7%), 50 (17.9%), and 146 (52.4%) patients, respectively. The former group of patients included 13 patients who had lymphadenectomy after the failure of the SNM technique. Thirteen (4.6%) patients developed severe postoperative events (grade 3 or worse). At multivariate analysis, body mass index (OR: 1.08 (95%CI: 1.01, 1.17)) and open abdominal surgery (OR: 2.27 (95%CI: 1.02, 5.32)) were the two independent factors predictive of surgery-related morbidity. Seven severe lymphatic complications occurred. The adoption of laparoscopic approach (p��
- Published
- 2021
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15. Maternal and perinatal outcomes following pre-Delta, Delta, and Omicron SARS-CoV-2 variants infection among unvaccinated pregnant women in France and Switzerland: a prospective cohort study using the COVI-PREG registry
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Guillaume Favre, Emeline Maisonneuve, Léo Pomar, Charlotte Daire, Christophe Poncelet, Thibaud Quibel, Cécile Monod, Begoña Martinez de Tejada, Leonhard Schäffer, Andrea Papadia, Anda Petronela Radan, Monya Todesco-Bernasconi, Yves Ville, Cora Alexandra Voekt, Béatrice Eggel-Hort, Romina Capoccia-Brugger, Silke Johann, Claudia Grawe, Sophie Defert, Nicolas Mottet, Christian R. Kahlert, Charles Garabedian, Loïc Sentilhes, Brigitte Weber, Steffi Leu, Dirk Bassler, Karine Lepigeon, Ursula Winterfeld, Alice Panchaud, David Baud, Irene Hoesli, Sonia Campelo, Véronique Othenin-Girard, Anett Hernadi, Maria Luisa Gasparri, Antonilli Morena, Christian Polli, Edoardo Taddei, Karoline Aebi-Popp, Luigi Raio, Daniel Surbek, Mirjam Moser, Laurent Salomon, Johana Sichitiu, Julien Stirnemann, Jérôme Dimet, Tina Fischer, Louise Ghesquiere, Amaury Brot, Clémence Houssin, Aurélien Mattuizzi, Stefanie Sturm, Caroline Eggemann, Edouard Ha, Jérôme Mathis, Marie-Claude Rossier, Andrea Bloch, Martin Kaufmann, Carina Britschgi, Panagiotis Kanellos, Bénédicte Breton, Carolin Blume, Stylianos Kalimeris, Arnaud Toussaint, Guillaume Ducarme, Chloé Moreau, Hélène Pelerin, Mohamed Derouich, Cecile Le Parco, Gaetan Plantefeve, Anis Feki, Gaston Grant, Kathrin Bütikofer, Ina Hoffmann, Jessica Maisel, Elke Barbara Prentl, Brigitte Frey Tirri, Grit Vetter, Lucie Sedille, Michel Boulvain, Annina Haessig, French and Swiss COVI-PREG group, Hoesli, I., Campelo, S., Othenin-Girard, V., Hernadi, A., Gasparri, M.L., Morena, A., Polli, C., Taddei, E., Aebi-Popp, K., Raio, L., Surbek, D., Moser, M., Salomon, L., Sichitiu, J., Stirnemann, J., Dimet, J., Fischer, T., Ghesquiere, L., Brot, A., Houssin, C., Mattuizzi, A., Sturm, S., Eggemann, C., Ha, E., Mathis, J., Rossier, M.C., Bloch, A., Kaufmann, M., Britschgi, C., Kanellos, P., Breton, B., Blume, C., Kalimeris, S., Toussaint, A., Ducarme, G., Moreau, C., Pelerin, H., Derouich, M., Le Parco, C., Plantefeve, G., Feki, A., Grant, G., Bütikofer, K., Hoffmann, I., Maisel, J., Prentl, E.B., Tirri, B.F., Vetter, G., Sedille, L., Boulvain, M., and Haessig, A.
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Oncology ,360 Social problems & social services ,Health Policy ,Internal Medicine ,COVID-19 ,Omicron ,Pregnancy ,Pregnant women ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Variant ,610 Medicine & health - Abstract
BACKGROUND SARS-CoV-2 positive pregnant women are at higher risk of adverse outcomes, but little evidence is available on how variants impact that risk. We aim to evaluate maternal and perinatal outcomes among unvaccinated pregnant women that tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, stratified by pre-Delta, Delta, and Omicron periods. METHODS This prospective study enrolled women from March 2020 to September 2022. Exposure to the different SARS-CoV-2 variants was defined by their periods of predominance. The primary outcome was severe maternal adverse outcome defined as either intensive care unit admission, acute respiratory distress syndrome, advanced oxygen supplementation, or maternal death. The secondary outcomes were preterm birth and other perinatal outcomes. FINDINGS Overall, 1402, 262, and 391 SARS-CoV-2 positive pregnant women were enrolled during the pre-Delta, Delta, and Omicron periods respectively. Severe maternal adverse outcome was reported in 3.4% (n = 947/1402; 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) 2.5-4.5), 6.5% (n = 7/262; 95%CI 3.8-10.2), and 1.0% (n = 4/391; 95%CI 0.3-2.6) of women during the pre-Delta, Delta, and Omicron periods. The risk of severe maternal adverse outcome was higher during the Delta vs pre-Delta period (adjusted risk ratio (aRR) = 1.8; 95%CI 1.1-3.2) and lower during the Omicron vs pre-Delta period (aRR = 0.3; 95%CI, 0.1-0.8). The risks of hospitalization for COVID-19 were 12.6% (n = 176/1402; 95%CI 10.9-14.4), 17.2% (n = 45/262; 95%CI 12.8-22.3), and 12.5% (n = 49/391; 95%CI 9.4-16.2), during the pre-Delta, Delta, and Omicron period, respectively. Pregnancy complications occurred after SARS-CoV-2 exposure in 30.0% (n = 363/1212; 95%CI 27.4-32.6), 35.2% (n = 83/236; 95%CI 29.1-41.6), and 30.3% (n = 105/347; 95%CI 25.5-35.4) of patients during the pre-Delta, Delta, and Omicron periods, respectively. Stillbirths were reported in 0.5% (n = 6/1159; 95%CI 0.2-1.1), 2.8% (n = 6/210; 95%CI 1.0-6.0), and 0.9% (n = 2/213; 95%CI 0.1-3.4) or patients during the pre-Delta, Delta, and Omicron periods respectively. INTERPRETATION The Delta period was associated with a higher risk of severe maternal adverse outcome and the Omicron period with a lower risk of severe adverse outcome compared to pre-Delta era. The reported risk of hospitalization was high during the Omicron period and should not be trivialized. FUNDING Swiss Federal Office of Public Health, Fondation CHUV.
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- 2023
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16. Sentinel node mapping vs. sentinel node mapping plus back-up lymphadenectomy in high-risk endometrial cancer patients: Results from a multi-institutional study
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Simone Ferrero, Valentina Chiapp, Francesco Raspagliesi, Maria Luisa Gasparri, Violante Di Donato, Ciro Pinelli, Pierandrea De Iaco, Salvatore Lopez, Debora Ferrari, Maria Chiara Paderno, Mauro Signorelli, Jvan Casarin, Andrea Papadia, Claudia Brusadelli, Pierluigi Benedetti Panici, Antonella Cromi, Alessandro Buda, Innocenza Palaia, Michael D. Mueller, Anna Myriam Perrone, Fabio Barra, Giorgio Bogani, Fabio Ghezzi, Umberto Maggiore, Fabio Landoni, Francesco Plotti, Roberto Angioli, Antonino Ditto, Rocco Guerrisi, Bogani, G, Papadia, A, Buda, A, Casarin, J, Di Donato, V, Gasparri, M, Plotti, F, Pinelli, C, Paderno, M, Lopez, S, Perrone, A, Barra, F, Guerrisi, R, Brusadelli, C, Cromi, A, Ferrari, D, Chiapp, V, Signorelli, M, Maggiore, U, Ditto, A, Palaia, I, Ferrero, S, De Iaco, P, Angioli, R, Panici, P, Ghezzi, F, Landoni, F, Mueller, M, Raspagliesi, F, Bogani G., Papadia A., Buda A., Casarin J., Di Donato V., Gasparri M.L., Plotti F., Pinelli C., Paderno M.C., Lopez S., Perrone A.M., Barra F., Guerrisi R., Brusadelli C., Cromi A., Ferrari D., Chiapp V., Signorelli M., Maggiore U.L.R., Ditto A., Palaia I., Ferrero S., De Iaco P., Angioli R., Panici P.B., Ghezzi F., Landoni F., Mueller M.D., and Raspagliesi F.
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survival rate ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endometrial neoplasms ,Staging ,disease-free survival ,Survival ,medicine.medical_treatment ,lymph node excision ,Nodal disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,sentinel lymph node ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endometrial cancer ,lymph nodes ,middle aged ,80 and over ,medicine ,Overall survival ,risk factors ,humans ,neoplasm staging ,sentinel lymph node biopsy ,610 Medicine & health ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,adult ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Small sample ,Retrospective cohort study ,Lymphadenectomy ,Sentinel node ,medicine.disease ,aged ,retrospective studies ,female ,030104 developmental biology ,endometrial cancer ,lymphadenectomy ,sentinel node ,staging ,survival ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Population study ,Radiology ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE Sentinel node mapping (SLN) has replaced lymphadenectomy for staging surgery in apparent early-stage low and intermediate risk endometrial cancer (EC). Only limited data about the adoption of SNM in high risk EC is still available. Here, we evaluate the outcomes of high-risk EC undergoing SNM (with or without back-up lymphadenectomy). METHODS This is a multi-institutional international retrospective study, evaluating data of high-risk (FIGO grade 3 endometrioid EC with myometrial invasion >50% and non-endometrioid histology) EC patients undergoing SNM followed by back-up lymphadenectomy and SNM alone. RESULTS Chart of consecutive 196 patients were evaluated. The study population included 83 and 113 patients with endometrioid and non-endometrioid EC, respectively. SNM alone and SNM followed by back-up lymphadenectomy were performed in 50 and 146 patients, respectively. Among patients having SNM alone, 14 (28%) were diagnosed with nodal disease. In the group of patients undergoing SNM plus back-up lymphadenectomy 34 (23.2%) were diagnosed with nodal disease via SNM. Back-up lymphadenectomy identified 2 (1%) additional patients with nodal disease (in the para-aortic area). Back-up lymphadenectomy allowed to remove adjunctive positive nodes in 16 (11%) patients. After the adoption of propensity-matched algorithm, we observed that patients undergoing SNM plus back-up lymphadenectomy experienced similar disease-free survival (p��=��0.416, log-rank test) and overall survival (p��=��0.940, log-rank test) than patients undergoing SLN alone. CONCLUSIONS Although the small sample size, and the retrospective study design this study highlighted that type of nodal assessment did not impact survival outcomes in high-risk EC. Theoretically, back-up lymphadenectomy would be useful in improving the removal of positive nodes, but its therapeutic value remains controversial. Further prospective evidence is needed.
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- 2021
17. Dealing Naturally with Stumbling Blocks on Highways and Byways of TRAIL Induced Signaling
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Ammad Ahmad Farooqi, Aamir Rana, Violante Di Donato, Ghulam Muhammad Ali, Muhammad Zahid Qureshi, Rukset Attar, Maria Luisa Gasparri, Rana, A., Attar, Rukset, Qureshi, M.Z., Gasparri, M.L., Di Donato, V., Ali, G.M., Farooqi, A.A., and Yeditepe Üniversitesi
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Cancer Research ,Phenethyl isothiocyanate ,Epidemiology ,Cell ,TRAIL ,Apoptosis ,Coumarin ,Biology ,TNF-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand ,Psoralidin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Piperlongumine ,Autophagy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Signaling ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Cancer cell ,Piperlogumine ,Cancer research ,Signal transduction ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
In-depth analysis of how TRAIL signals through death receptors to induce apoptosis in cancer cells using high throughput technologies has added new layers of knowledge. However, the wealth of information has also highlighted the fact that TRAIL induced apoptosis may be impaired as evidenced by experimental findings obtained from TRAIL resistant cancer cell lines. Overwhelmingly, increasing understanding of TRAIL mediated apoptosis has helped in identifying synthetic and natural compounds which can restore TRAIL induced apoptosis via functionalization of either extrinsic or intrinsic pathways. Increasingly it is being realized that biologically active phytochemicals modulate TRAIL induced apoptosis, as evidenced by cell-based studies. In this review we have attempted to provide an overview of how different phytonutrients have shown efficacy in restoring apoptosis in TRAIL resistant cancer cells. We partition this review into how the TRAIL mediated signaling landscape has broadened over the years and how TRAIL induced signaling machinery crosstalks with autophagic protein networks. Subsequently, we provide a generalized view of considerable biological activity of coumarins against a wide range of cancer cell lines and how coumarins (psoralidin and esculetin) isolated from natural sources have improved TRAIL induced apoptosis in resistant cancer cells. We summarize recent updates on piperlongumine, phenethyl isothiocyanate and luteolin induced activation of TRAIL mediated apoptosis. The data obtained from pre-clinical studies will be helpful in translation of information from benchtop to the bedside.
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- 2014
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18. Ovarian cancer: Interplay of vitamin D signaling and miRNA action
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Talha Abdul Halim, Ammad Ahmad Farooqi, Maria Luisa Gasparri, Ilhan Yaylim, Farrukh Zaman, Violante Di Donato, Rukset Attar, Attar, Rukset, Gasparri, M.L., Di Donato, V., Yaylim, I., Halim, T.A., Zaman, F., Farooqi, A.A., and Yeditepe Üniversitesi
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Cancer Research ,Epidemiology ,Population ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,Calcitriol receptor ,Ovarian cancer ,microRNA ,medicine ,Humans ,Vitamin D ,education ,miRNA ,VDR ,Regulation of gene expression ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,Signaling ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,MicroRNAs ,Oncology ,Cancer cell ,Receptors, Calcitriol ,Female ,Personalized medicine ,Signal transduction ,business ,Neuroscience ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Increasing attention is being devoted to the mechanisms by which cells receive signals and then translate these into decisions for growth, death, or migration. Recent findings have presented significant breakthroughs in developing a deeper understanding of the activation or repression of target genes and proteins in response to various stimuli and of how they are assembled during signal transduction in cancer cells. Detailed mechanistic insights have unveiled new maps of linear and integrated signal transduction cascades, but the multifaceted nature of the pathways remains unclear. Although new layers of information are being added regarding mechanisms underlying ovarian cancer and how polymorphisms in VDR gene influence its development, the findings of this research must be sequentially collected and re-interpreted. We divide this multi-component review into different segments: how vitamin D modulates molecular network in ovarian cancer cells, how ovarian cancer is controlled by tumor suppressors and oncogenic miRNAs and finally how vitamin D signaling regulates miRNA expression. Intra/inter-population variability is insufficiently studied and a better understanding of genetics of population will be helpful in getting a step closer to personalized medicine.
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- 2014
19. Drugs from marine sources: Modulation of TRAIL induced apoptosis in cancer cells
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Ammad Ahmad Farooqi, Rukset Attar, Maria Luisa Gasparri, Farooqi, A.A., Attar, Rukset, Gasparri, M.L., and Yeditepe Üniversitesi
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Biological Products ,Cancer Research ,Epidemiology ,Ecology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Cancer ,Tumor cells ,Apoptosis ,TRAIL ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Molecular oncology ,Porifera ,TNF-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand ,Oncology ,Neoplasms ,Influence of marine drugs ,Cancer cell ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Cancer research ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans - Abstract
There have been overwhelming advances in molecular oncology and data obtained through high-throughput technologies have started to shed light on wide ranging molecular mechanisms that underpin cancer progression. Increasingly it is being realized that marine micro-organisms and the biodiversity of plankton are rich sources of various anticancer compounds. Marine derived compounds play major roles in inducing apoptosis in cancer cells. More importantly, various agents have been noted to enhance TRAIL induced apoptosis in cancer cells by functionalizing intrinsic and extrinsic pathways. In this commentary, a list of marine derived compounds reported to induce apoptosis is discussed.
- Published
- 2014
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