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33
result(s) for
"Ingrosso Gianluca"
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Efficacy of stereotactic body radiotherapy in oligorecurrent and in oligoprogressive prostate cancer: new evidence from a multicentric study
by
Santoni, Riccardo
,
Bonetta, Alberto
,
Trippa, Fabio
in
692/4028/67/589/466
,
692/700/565/485
,
Aged
2017
Background:
The aim of the present study is to evaluate the impact of metastases-directed stereotactic body radiotherapy in two groups of oligometastatic prostate cancer (PC) patients: oligorecurrent PC and oligoprogressive castration-resistant PC (oligo-CRPC).
Methods:
Inclusion criteria of the present multicentre retrospective analysis were: (1) oligorecurrent PC, defined as the presence of 1–3 lesions (bone or nodes) detected with choline positron emission tomography or CT plus bone scan following biochemical recurrence; (2) oligo-CRPC, defined as metastases (bone or nodes) detected after a prostatic-specific antigen rise during androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). Primary end points were: distant progression-free survival (DPFS) and ADT-free survival in oligorecurrent PC patients; DPFS and second-line systemic treatment-free survival in oligo-CRPC patients.
Results:
About 100 patients with oligorecurrent PC (139 lesions) and 41 with oligo-CRPC (70 lesions), treated between March 2010 and April 2016, were analysed. After a median follow-up of 20.4 months, in the oligorecurrent group 1- and 2-year DPFS were 64.4 and 43%. The rate of LC was 92.8% at 2 years. At a median follow-up of 23.4 months, in the oligo-CRPC group 1- and 2-year DPFS were 43.2 and 21.6%. Limitations include the retrospective design.
Conclusions:
Stereotactic body radiotherapy seems to be a useful treatment both for oligorecurrent and oligo-CRPC.
Journal Article
Metastasis-directed stereotactic radiotherapy for oligoprogressive castration-resistant prostate cancer: a multicenter study
2019
PurposeHerein, we report the clinical outcomes of a multicenter study evaluating the role of SBRT in a cohort of patients affected by oligoprogressive castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC).Materials and methodsThis is a retrospective multicenter observational study including eleven centers. Inclusion criteria of the current study were: (a) Karnofsky performance status > 80, (b) histologically proven diagnosis of PC, (c) 1–5 oligoprogressive metastases, defined as progressive disease at bone or nodes levels (detected by means of choline PET/CT or CT plus bone scan) during ADT, (d) serum testosterone level under 50 ng/ml during ADT, (e) controlled primary tumor, (f) patients treated with SBRT with a dose of at least 5 Gy per fraction to a biologically effective dose (BED) of at least 80 Gy using an alpha-to-beta ratio of 3 Gy, (g) at least 6 months of follow-up post-SBRT.ResultsEighty-six patients for a total of 117 lesions were treated with SBRT. The median follow-up was 30.7 months (range 4–91 months). The median new metastasis-free survival after SBRT was 12.3 months (95% CI 5.5–19.1 months). One- and two-year distant progression-free survival was 52.3% and 33.7%, respectively. Twenty-six out of 86 patients underwent a second course of SBRT due to further oligoprogressive disease: This resulted in a median systemic treatment-free survival of 21.8 months (95% CI 17.8–25.8 months). One-year systemic treatment-free survival was 72.1%.ConclusionSBRT appears to be a promising approach in oligoprogressive castration-resistant prostate cancer. Further investigations are warranted.
Journal Article
Recent Advances in Androgen Receptor Pathway Inhibitors for Castration-Sensitive Prostate Cancer
by
La Mattina, Salvatore
,
Bonzano, Elisabetta
,
Camilli, Federico
in
androgen receptor pathway inhibitor
,
Androgens
,
Antiandrogens
2025
Prostate cancer (PCa) is the second most common cancer in men, and it is frequently diagnosed at an advanced stage of the disease. Androgen Deprivation Therapy (ADT) has traditionally represented the backbone of therapy for high-risk, recurrent, and metastatic disease; however, in the last ten years a new group of molecules known as androgen receptor pathway inhibitors (ARPIs) have been demonstrated to improve outcomes in metastatic patients when added to ADT. Developed and validated originally in the setting of castration-resistant disease, ARPIs have been implemented progressively earlier in the natural history of PCa, involving patients who have never received ADT before or that are still responsive to this treatment. Considering the strong evidence for treatment intensification in patients with high-risk features, with this review we aim to provide a complete overview of the current indications for the use of ARPIs through all the stages of castration-sensitive prostate cancer (CSPC).
Journal Article
PSMA-guided metastases directed therapy for bone castration sensitive oligometastatic prostate cancer: a multi-institutional study
2022
To assess the outcomes of a cohort of bone oligometastatic prostate cancer patients treated with PSMA-PET guided stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). From April 2017 to January 2021, 40 patients with oligorecurrent prostate cancer detected by PSMA-PET were treated with SBRT for bone oligometastases. Concurrent androgen deprivation therapy was an exclusion criterion. A total of 56 prostate cancer bone oligometastases were included in the present analysis. In 28 patients (70%), oligometastatic disease presented as a single lesion, two lesions in 22.5%, three lesions in 5%, four lesions in 2.5%. 30.3% were spine-metastases, while 69.7% were non-spine metastases. SBRT was delivered for a median dose of 30 Gy (24–40 Gy) in 3–5 fractions, with a median EQD2 = 85 Gy2 (64.3—138.9Gy2). With a median follow-up of 22 months (range 2–48 months), local control (LC) 1- and 2-years rates were 96.3% and 93.9%, while distant progression-free survival (DPFS) rates were 45.3% and 27%. At multivariate analysis, the lower PSA nadir value after SBRT remained significantly related to better DPFS rates (p = 0.03). In 7 patients, a second SBRT course was proposed with concurrent ADT, while 11 patients, due to polymetastatic spread, received ADT alone, resulting in 1- and 2-years ADT-free survival rates of 67.5% and 61.8%. At multivariate analysis, a lower number of treated oligometastases maintained a correlation with higher ADT-free survival rates (p = 0.04). In our experience, PSMA-PET guided SBRT resulted in excellent results in terms of clinical outcomes, representing a helpful tool with the aim to delay the start of ADT.
Journal Article
Physician And Patient Barriers To Radiotherapy Service Access: Treatment Referral Implications
by
Saldi, Simonetta
,
Stracci, Fabrizio
,
Chierchini, Sara
in
barriers
,
Breast cancer
,
Cancer patients
2019
Radiotherapy is one of the mainstays of cancer treatment, and about 60% of cancer patients receive this type of treatment during their course of treatment. An evident gap between optimal and actual radiotherapy utilization proportions has recently been reported, which has been ascribed to lack of referral to radiation oncology. There are many factors influencing the radiotherapy referral, including patient anxiety about toxicity, wrong perception of efficacy and side effects by physicians and patients, insufficient knowledge of referral process. These factors, defined as barriers can be categorized in health system barriers, physician and patient barriers. In the present brief narrative review, we discussed barriers to radiotherapy referral focusing on physician and patient barriers.
Journal Article
Breakdown of Symbiosis in Radiation-Induced Oral Mucositis
2021
Oral mucositis is an acute side effect of radiation therapy that is especially common with head and neck cancer treatment. In recent years, several studies have revealed the predisposing factors for mucositis, leading to the pre-treatment of patients to deter the development of opportunistic oral fungal infections. Although many clinical protocols already advise the use of probiotics to counteract inflammation and fungal colonization, preclinical studies are needed to better delineate the mechanisms by which a host may acquire benefits via co-evolution with oral microbiota, probiotics, and fungal commensals, such as Candida albicans, especially during acute inflammation. Here, we review the current understanding of radiation therapy-dependent oral mucositis in terms of pathology, prevention, treatment, and related opportunistic infections, with a final focus on the oral microbiome and how it may be important for future therapy.
Journal Article
The Evolving Landscape of Novel and Old Biomarkers in Localized High-Risk Prostate Cancer: State of the Art, Clinical Utility, and Limitations Toward Precision Oncology
by
Mignogna, Marcello
,
Sardaro, Angela
,
Ingrosso, Gianluca
in
Androgens
,
Antigens
,
Artificial intelligence
2025
High-risk prostate cancer (PC) accounts for 50–75% of 10-year relapse after primary treatment. Routine clinicopathological parameters for PC patient stratification have proven insufficient to inform clinical decisions in this setting. Tumor genomic profiling allowed overcoming the limits of diagnostic accuracy in the field of PC, integrated with radiomic features, automated platforms, evaluation of patient-related factors (age, performance status, comorbidity) and tumor-related factors (risk class, volume, T stage). In this scenario, the use of biomarkers to guide decision-making in localized, high-risk PC is evolving actively and rapidly. Additional tests for prostate-specific antigen have demonstrated superior sensitivity and specificity for detecting clinically significant PC, as well as commercially available genomic classifiers improving the risk prediction of disease recurrence/progression/metastasis, in combination with common clinical variables. This narrative review aimed to summarize the state of the art on the utility and evolution of old and emerging biomarkers in the diagnosis and prognosis of localized, high-risk PC, and the potential for their application in clinical practice. We focused on the theoretical molecular foundation of prostate carcinogenesis and explored the impact of genomic profiling, next-generation sequencing, and artificial intelligence in the extrapolation of customized features able to predict disease aggressiveness and possibly drive personalized therapeutic decisions.
Journal Article
Upfront metastasis-directed therapy in oligorecurrent prostate cancer does not decrease the time from initiation of androgen deprivation therapy to castration resistance
2021
The aim of the present study was to explore the potential impact of upfront metastases-directed therapy (MDT) in terms of prolongation of castration-sensitive phase in a series of oligorecurrent castration-sensitive prostate cancer (PC) patients. The present article is a multicenter retrospective study. The population of interest was castrate-sensitive oligorecurrent PC, defined as the presence of 1–3 uptakes in non-visceral sites such as bones or nodes detected by means of 18F-Choline PET/CT or 68-Gallium PSMA PET/CT. Primary endpoint was the time to castration resistance. Secondary endpoints were ADT-free survival, local progression-free survival, and overall survival. Eighty-two patients and 118 lesions were analyzed. The median time to castration resistance for the entire population of the study was 49 months (95% CI 43.6–54.4 months). The 1- and 2-year TTCR-free survival rates were 94% and 82%, respectively. At the time of analysis, 52 patients were still in the castration-sensitive phase of the disease. In this cohort of patients, the median ADT-free survival was 20 months (range 3–69 months). On the other hand, during follow-up 30 patients switched to the castration-resistant phase of disease. In this last group of patients, the median ADT-free survival was 20 months (range 4–50 months). After the ADT administration, the median castration-sensitive phase was 29 months (range 5–71 months). Castration resistance generally occurs at a median follow-up of 24–36 months following ADT. In the current study, upfront MDT does not decrease the time from initiation of ADT to castration resistance.
Journal Article
Radiotherapy for papillary tumor of the pineal region: A systematic review of the literature
by
Cancelli, Alessandro
,
Baki, Muhammed
,
Ingrosso, Gianluca
in
Brain cancer
,
Brain tumors
,
Cell adhesion & migration
2020
•Pineal tumors correspond.•to less than 1 % and 3–8 % of brain tumors in adults and children, respectively•According to 2016 WHO Classification of CNS tumors, papillary tumors of the pineal region are considered as grade II or III.•The main treatment options for pineal region tumors are surgery and radiotherapy.•Adjuvant radiotherapy is offered because of the high risk of local recurrence.•Very few data are available for chemotherapy.
Papillary tumor of the pineal region (PTPR) is a rare neuroepithelial brain tumor, characterized by a high risk of local recurrence (greater than 70 % at 6 years). The aim of our study was to review the available literature on radiotherapy for PTPR in order to evaluate timings, schedules, outcomes and toxicities of this treatment modality. In our review, 72.4 % (84) of the patients diagnosed with PTPR received radiation therapy. There is heterogeneity in the dose prescription, ranging from 45 Gy (25 × 1.8 Gy) to 60 Gy (30 × 2 Gy) for 3D Conformal Radiation Therapy and from 12 Gy to 36 Gy for Stereotactic Radiosurgery. Being considered as a grade II or III tumor, PTPR should receive higher total radiation dose in the adjuvant setting. Our analysis showed a very limited treatment-related toxicity with an expected 10-y OS of 72.5 %. At 5-years from the diagnosis, about 60 % of the patients experienced a local recurrence, whereas at 10 years the rate is higher than 80 %. In the literature, conflicting data about radiotherapy for PTPR are reported, in particular regarding disease progression. Although radiotherapy represents a fundamental treatment in the management of PTPR, prospective studies are required to better define its impact on overall survival and progression-free survival.
Journal Article
Whole breast external beam radiotherapy in elderly patients affected by left-sided early breast cancer: a dosimetric comparison between two simple free-breathing techniques
by
Carosi Alessandra
,
Bonzano Elisabetta
,
Aristei, Cynthia
in
Breast cancer
,
Dosimetry
,
Radiation therapy
2020
BackgroundElderly breast cancer patients are frequently affected by significant comorbidities that make sophisticated radiotherapy treatments particularly challenging.AimsWe dosimetrically analyzed two different simple free-breathing external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) techniques for the hypofractionated treatment of the left breast in elderly patients with a low compliance, to compare target coverage, and heart and left anterior descending coronary artery (LADCA) sparing.MethodsWe developed radiation plans for 24 elderly patients using 3D conformal (3DCRT) field-in-field tangential technique and intensity-modulated (IMRT) tangential beam technique. Dose-Volume-Histograms (DVHs) were used to provide a quantitative comparison between plans.ResultsThe median breast volume was 645 cm3. IMRT and 3DCRT plans comparison demonstrated no significant differences in terms of organ sparing for the heart. Regarding LADCA, mean dose (10.3 ± 9.5 Gy vs 11.9 ± 9.6 Gy, p = 0.0003), maximum dose (26.1 ± 16.1 Gy vs 29.1 ± 16.1 Gy, p = 0.004) and V17 Gy (21.5% ± 26.9% vs 25.0% ± 27.2%, p = 0.002) significantly decreased using IMRT compared with 3DCRT. IMRT plans showed a better target coverage compared with 3DCRT (0.91 ± 0.05 vs 0.93 ± 0.04, p = 0.05).DiscussionComparing the two different EBRT techniques, we demonstrated few, although substantial, dosimetric differences in terms of doses to the organs at risk characterized by a statistically significant dose reduction of LADCA in the IMRT plans.ConclusionsElderly patients with a low compliance to treatment might benefit from 3DCRT with field-in-field tangential arrangement or from a simple IMRT approach. IMRT should be preferred.
Journal Article