Adalberto Brach del Prever
Boston Children's Hospital
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Featured researches published by Adalberto Brach del Prever.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005
Stefano Ferrari; Sigbjørn Smeland; Mario Mercuri; Franco Bertoni; Alessandra Longhi; Pietro Ruggieri; Thor Alvegård; Piero Picci; Rodolfo Capanna; Gabriella Bernini; Cristoph Müller; Amelia Tienghi; Thomas Wiebe; Alessandro Comandone; Tom Böhling; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Otte Brosjö; Gaetano Bacci; Gunnar Sæter
PURPOSE To explore the effect of high-dose ifosfamide in first-line treatment for patients < or = 40 years of age with nonmetastatic osteosarcoma of the extremity. PATIENTS AND METHODS From March 1997 to September 2000, 182 patients were evaluated. Primary treatment consisted of two blocks of high-dose ifosfamide (15 g/m2), methotrexate (12 g/m2), cisplatin (120 mg/m2), and doxorubicin (75 mg/m2). Postoperatively, patients received two cycles of doxorubicin (90 mg/m2), and three cycles each of high-dose ifosfamide, methotrexate, and cisplatin (120 to 150 mg/m2). Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor support was mandatory after the high-dose ifosfamide/cisplatin/doxorubicin combination. RESULTS No disease progression was recorded during primary chemotherapy, 164 patients (92%) underwent limb-salvage surgery, four patients (2%) underwent rotation plasty, and 11 patients (6%) had limbs amputated. Three (1.6%) patients died as a result of treatment-related toxicity, and one died as a result of pulmonary embolism after pathologic fracture. Grade 4 neutropenia and thrombocytopenia followed 52% and 31% of all courses, respectively, and mild to severe nephrotoxicity was recorded in 19 patients (10%). The median received dose-intensity compared with protocol was 0.82. With a median follow-up of 55 months, the 5-year probability of event-free survival was 64% (95% CI, 57% to 71%) and overall survival was 77% (95% CI, 67% to 81%), whereas seven patients (4%) experienced local recurrence. CONCLUSION The addition of high-dose ifosfamide to methotrexate, cisplatin, and doxorubicin in the preoperative phase is feasible, but with major renal and hematologic toxicities, and survival rates similar to those obtained with four-drug regimens using standard-dose ifosfamide. Italian Sarcoma Group/Scandinavian Sarcoma Group study I showed that in a multicenter setting, more than 90% of patients with osteosarcoma of the extremity can undergo conservative surgery.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003
Stefano Ferrari; Antonio Briccoli; Mario Mercuri; Franco Bertoni; Piero Picci; Amelia Tienghi; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Franca Fagioli; Alessandro Comandone; Gaetano Bacci
PURPOSE To identify factors that influence postrelapse survival (PRS) in patients with nonmetastatic osteosarcoma of the extremity. PATIENTS AND METHODS One hundred sixty-two patients with recurrent osteosarcoma of the extremity were retrospectively reviewed. The first-line treatment included surgery of the primary lesion and chemotherapy with methotrexate, doxorubicin, cisplatin, and ifosfamide. RESULTS The projected 5-year PRS rate was 28%. Patients who had complete surgery of recurrence had a 5-year PRS of 39%, whereas for those who did not have complete surgery, PRS was 0% at 3 years (P <.0001). In the latter group, PRS was not influenced by site of recurrence and relapse-free interval (RFI), although it was influenced (P =.006) by the use of second-line chemotherapy (PRS, 53% at 12 months for patients who received chemotherapy v 12% for those who did not). In patients who had complete surgery, PRS was influenced by site of relapse (5-year PRS, lung 44%, other 19%; P <.06), RFI (5-year PRS at < or = 24 months, 20%; at > 24 months, 60%; P <.0001), and number of lung metastases (5-year PRS, two or fewer nodules, 59%; more than two nodules, 14%; P <.0001) but not by the use of a second-line chemotherapy treatment. CONCLUSION RFI, site of metastases, and number of pulmonary nodules are the main prognostic factors for PRS in osteosarcoma. Complete surgery of recurrence is pivotal in the strategy of treatment. Patients with unresectable recurrence benefit from second-line chemotherapy, whereas our data do not support a generalized use of chemotherapy after complete surgery of first recurrence.
Acta Oncologica | 1998
Gaetano Bacci; Stefano Ferrari; Mario Mercuri; Alessandra Longhi; Rodolfo Capanna; Amelia Tienghi; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Alessandro Comandone; Cesari Marilena; Gabriella Bernini; Piero Picci
A neoadjuvant chemotherapy protocol (1/93-1/95) for extremity osteosarcoma preoperatively using high-dose methotrexate (HDMTX) as single agent per cycle and three different combinations of other drugs (CDP/IFO,CDP/ADM,IFO/ADM) is reported. The four drugs were used postoperatively as single agents. Treatment was uniform, but suspended earlier if total necrosis was attained. An improvement was found in the results of the previous study using only IFO postoperatively, with 16/119 patients (97%) avoiding amputation, and 38 (32%) attaining complete necrosis. At a 3-year (2-4 years) mean follow-up, 92 patients (76%) remained continuously disease-free, 2 died of chemotherapy-related toxicity and 25 suffered relapse. Projected 3-year DFS also improved (75% vs. 60%; p = 0.04). Despite limb salvage, local recurrences (6.3%) and infections were few, although postoperative chemotherapy was restarted within a week. Therefore, until new effective drugs are found, expertise in using the four known drugs may improve cure rate and help to avoid amputation in almost all patients.
Journal of Translational Medicine | 2013
Stefano Ferrari; Francesca Perut; Franca Fagioli; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Cristina Meazza; Antonina Parafioriti; Piero Picci; Marco Gambarotti; Sofia Avnet; Nicola Baldini; Stefano Fais
BackgroundMajor goals in translational oncology are to reduce systemic toxicity of current anticancer strategies and improve effectiveness. An extremely efficient cancer cell mechanism to avoid and/or reduce the effects of highly cytotoxic drugs is the establishment of an acidic microenvironment, an hallmark of all malignant tumors. The H + −rich milieu that anticancer drugs meet once they get inside the tumor leads to their protonation and neutralization, therefore hindering their access into tumor cells. We have previously shown that proton pump inhibitors (PPI) may efficiently counterattack this tumor advantage leading to a consistent chemosensitization of tumors. In this study, we investigated the effects of PPI in chemosensitizing osteosarcoma.MethodMG-63 and Saos-2 cell lines were used as human osteosarcoma models. Cell proliferation after pretreatment with PPI and subsequent treatment with cisplatin was evaluated by using erythrosin B dye vital staining. Tumour growth was evaluated in xenograft treated with cisplatin after PPI pretreatment. Subsequently, a multi-centre historically controlled trial, was performed to evaluate the activity of a pre-treatment administration of PPIs as chemosensitizers during neoadjuvant chemotherapy based on methotrexate, cisplatin, and adriamycin.ResultsPreclinical experiments showed that PPI sensitize both human osteosarcoma cell lines and xenografts to cisplatin. A clinical study subsequently showed that pretreatment with PPI drug esomeprazole leads to an increase in the local effect of chemotherapy, as expressed by percentage of tumor necrosis. This was particularly evident in chondroblastic osteosarcoma, an histological subtype that normally shows a poor histological response. Notably, no significant increase in toxicity was recorded in PPI treated patients.ConclusionThis study provides the first evidence that PPI may be beneficially added to standard regimens in combination to conventional chemotherapy.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2012
Angela Cistaro; Egesta Lopci; Luca Gastaldo; Piercarlo Fania; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Franca Fagioli
The principal aim of this study was to identify the lowest nodule diameter and the SUVmax capable of characterizing lung nodules in pediatric patients with bone sarcoma.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2000
Gaetano Bacci; Stefano Ferrari; Franco Bertoni; Davide Donati; Patrizia Bacchini; Alessandra Longhi; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Cristiana Forni; Simonetta Rimondini
PURPOSE The results achieved in 44 patients with nonmetastatic peripheral neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) of bone treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy are reported. PATIENTS AND METHODS A six-drug regimen of chemotherapy (vincristine, doxorubicin, dactinomycin, cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide, and etoposide) was administered to all patients. Local treatment consisted of surgery in 20 patients, surgery followed by radiotherapy in 13, and radiotherapy only in 11. RESULTS At a mean follow-up of 4.5 years (range, 2 to 7 years), 23 patients (52%) remain event-free, 20 have relapsed (45%), and one has died of chemotherapy-related toxicity. The 5-year event-free survival and overall survival were 54.2% and 62.7%, respectively. To assess the prognostic significance of neural differentiation in the family of Ewings sarcoma, these results have been compared with the outcomes of 138 concomitant patients with typical Ewings sarcoma (TES) who were treated according to the same protocol. Of these, 103 (75%) remained continuously event-free, 34 (24%) relapsed, and one died of chemotherapy-related toxicity. It follows that PNET patients treated with this chemotherapy regimen have a significantly worse prognosis than typical ES patients (5-year event-free survival, 54.2% v 70.6%, P <.012; 5-year overall survival, 62.7% v 78.3%, P <.002). CONCLUSION The authors conclude that studies into new adjuvant therapy for Ewings sarcoma modulated according to risk of relapse should also consider neural differentiation as a risk factor.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2014
Kjetil Boye; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Mikael Eriksson; Gunnar Sæter; Amelia Tienghi; Paula Lindholm; Franca Fagioli; Sigmund Skjeldal; Stefano Ferrari; Kirsten Sundby Hall
Patients with metastatic osteosarcoma at diagnosis or axial primary tumors have a poor prognosis. The aim of the study was to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of intensified treatment with high‐dose chemotherapy (HDCT) and stem cell rescue in this group.
European Radiology | 2010
Armanda De Marchi; Elena Maria Brach Del Prever; A. Linari; Simona Pozza; Lucia Verga; U. Albertini; Marco Forni; G. Gino; Alessandro Comandone; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Raimondo Piana; Carlo Faletti
ObjectivePercutaneous biopsies are gaining acceptance in the diagnosis of soft-tissue tumours. Sampling in the most representative area is not easy in sarcomas of huge dimension. We hypothesised that ultrasound (US) contrast medium could identify the representative area for focus core-needle biopsy (CNB)MethodsThis is a retrospective cohort series of 115 soft-tissue masses treated from January 2007 to November 2008. Accuracy of US-guided CNB after contrast-enhanced US (CEUS) was determined by comparing the histology of the biopsy with the definitive diagnosis in 105 surgically excised samples (42 benign, 63 malignant) and with the expected outcome in the remaining ten malignant cases not surgically treated. A myxoid component was present in 21 sarcomas (34.4%).ResultsOf samples, 94.8% were adequate for diagnosis with 97.1% sensitivity and 92.5% specificity. Sensitivity and specificity in specific histopathological subgroupings were 100%, and in grading definition they were 100% and 96.8%.DiscussionUS-guided CNB is safe and effective. US contrast medium depicts tumour vascular supply and identifies the representative area(s) for sampling. Sensitivity and specificity are also high in subgrouping and grading, including myxoid types. Discussion about biopsy is part of the essential multidisciplinary strategy for these tumours.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2015
Stefano Ferrari; Roberto Luksch; Kirsten Sundby Hall; Franca Fagioli; Arcangelo Prete; Angela Tamburini; Amelia Tienghi; Stefania Digirolamo; Anna Paioli; Massimo Eraldo Abate; Marta Podda; Silvia Cammelli; Mikael Eriksson; Adalberto Brach del Prever
Post‐relapse survival (PRS) was evaluated in patients with Ewing sarcoma (EWS) enrolled in chemotherapy protocols based on the use of high‐dose chemotherapy with busulfan and melfalan (HDT) as a first‐line consolidation treatment in high‐risk patients.
Cancer | 1998
Gaetano Bacci; Piero Picci; Stefano Ferrari; Mario Mercuri; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Pasquale Rosito; Enza Barbieri; Amelia Tienghi; Cristiana Forni