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Dive into the research topics where Alberto Terzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Alberto Terzi.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2001

Immunoreactivity for thyroid transcription factor-1 in stage I non-small cell carcinomas of the lung

Giuseppe Pelosi; Filippo Fraggetta; Felice Pasini; Patrick Maisonneuve; Angelica Sonzogni; Antonio Iannucci; Alberto Terzi; Enrica Bresaola; F. Valduga; Carmelo Lupo; Giuseppe Viale

Thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1) is a nuclear protein regulating the transcriptional activity of lung-specific genes in the normal and neoplastic bronchioloalveolar cells. It has been implicated in the normal growth and development of the lung, and the disruption of the TTF-1 locus leads to neonatal death with pulmonary hypoplasia. We evaluated retrospectively the prevalence and clinical significance of TTF-1 immunoreactivity in 222 patients with stage I non–small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) with a follow-up time of at least 5 years, and we investigated its relationship with other markers of tumor growth, namely cell proliferation and angiogenesis. TTF-1 immunoreactivity was documented by using the commercially available monoclonal antibody 8G7G3/1 in 72% of 97 adenocarcinomas, 5% of 119 squamous cell carcinomas, and in the glandular component of two adenosquamous carcinomas. Four large cell carcinomas were completely unreactive. In adenocarcinomas, but not squamous cell carcinomas, TTF-1 immunoreactivity correlated significantly with microvessel density (p = 0.04) and inversely with the tumor proliferation fraction assessed by Ki-67 immunostaining (p = 0.03). Also, TTF-1-immunoreactive adenocarcinomas showed a trend for a size less than 3 cm (p = 0.08). TTF-1 expression was not related to specific growth patterns, tumor grade, or tumor cell typing. TTF-1 immunoreactivity did not significantly affect patient survival, although patients with more than 75% immunoreactive neoplastic cells showed a trend for longer overall and disease-free survival. Our findings suggest that TTF-1 could be involved in the development of small pulmonary adenocarcinomas, but it has not prognostic implications in patients with stage I NSCLC.


British Journal of Cancer | 2003

Independent prognostic value of fascin immunoreactivity in stage I nonsmall cell lung cancer

Giuseppe Pelosi; Ugo Pastorino; Felice Pasini; P Maissoneuve; Filippo Fraggetta; A lannucci; Angelica Sonzogni; G. de Manzoni; Alberto Terzi; Emilia Durante; E Bresaola; Francesco Pezzella; Giuseppe Viale

Fascin-1, the most expressed form of fascin in vertebrate tissues, is an actin-bundling protein that induces cell membrane protrusions and increases motility of normal and transformed epithelial cells. Very few data are available on the role of this protein in nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Two hundred and twenty patients with stage I NSCLC and long-term follow-up were evaluated immunocytochemically for fascin expression. Overall, variable fascin immunoreactivity was detected in 98% of 116 squamous cell carcinomas, in 78% of 96 adenocarcinomas, in 83% of six large cell carcinomas, and in the two adenosquamous carcinomas under study. Neoplastic emboli were commonly decorated by the antifascin antibody (P<0.001), also when the surrounding invasive carcinoma was unreactive. Fascin immunoreactivity correlated with high tumour grade (P=0.017) and, in adenocarcinomas, with high Ki-67 labelling index (P=0.021). Adenocarcinomas with a prevalent bronchiolo-alveolar in situ component were less commonly immunoreactive for fascin than invasive tumours (P=0.005). Contralateral thoracic or distant metastases were associated significantly with diffuse (>60% immunoreactive tumour cells) fascin expression in adenocarcinomas (P=0.043), and marginally with strong fascin immunostaining in squamous cell carcinomas (P=0.13). No associations were noted with any other clinicopathological variables tested. Patients with tumours showing diffuse (>60% immunoreactive neoplastic cells) and/or strong immunoreactivity for fascin had a shorter survival (P=0.006 for adenocarcinomas and P=0.026 for squamous cell carcinomas), even after multivariate analysis (P=0.014 and 0.050, respectively). The current study documents for the first time that fascin is upregulated in invasive and more aggressive NSCLC, being an independent prognostic predictor of unfavourable clinical course of the disease. Targetting the fascin pathway could be a novel therapeutic strategy of NSCLC.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2014

Tumours of the thymus: a cohort study of prognostic factors from the European Society of Thoracic Surgeons database

Enrico Ruffini; Frank C. Detterbeck; Dirk Van Raemdonck; Gaetano Rocco; Pascal Thomas; Walter Weder; Alessandro Brunelli; Andrea Evangelista; Federico Venuta; AlKattan Khaled; Alex Arame; Majed Refai; Caterina Casadio; Paolo Carbognani; Robert Cerfolio; Giovanni Donati; Christophoros N Foroulis; Cengiz Gebitekin; David Gomez de Antonio; Kemp H. Kernstine; Shaf Keshavjee; Bernhard Moser; Cosimo Lequaglie; Moishe Liberman; Eric Lim; Andrew G. Nicholson; Loic Lang-Lazdunski; Maurizio Mancuso; Nasser Altorki; Mario Nosotti

OBJECTIVES A retrospective database was developed by the European Society of Thoracic Surgeons, collecting patients submitted to surgery for thymic tumours to analyse clinico-pathological prognostic predictors. METHODS A total of 2151 incident cases from 35 institutions were collected from 1990 to 2010. Clinical-pathological characteristics were analysed, including age, gender, associated myasthenia gravis stage (Masaoka), World Health Organization histology, type of thymic tumour [thymoma, thymic carcinoma (TC), neuroendocrine thymic tumour (NETT)], type of resection (complete/incomplete), tumour size, adjuvant therapy and recurrence. Primary outcome was overall survival (OS); secondary outcomes were the proportion of incomplete resections, disease-free survival and the cumulative incidence of recurrence (CIR). RESULTS A total of 2030 patients were analysed for OS (1798 thymomas, 191 TCs and 41 NETTs). Ten-year OS was 0.73 (95% confidence interval 0.69-0.75). Complete resection (R0) was achieved in 88% of the patients. Ten-year CIR was 0.12 (0.10-0.15). Predictors of shorter OS were increased age (P < 0-001), stage [III vs I HR 2.66, 1.80-3.92; IV vs I hazard ratio (HR) 4.41, 2.67-7.26], TC (HR 2.39, 1.68-3.40) and NETT (HR 2.59, 1.35-4.99) vs thymomas and incomplete resection (HR 1.74, 1.18-2.57). Risk of recurrence increased with tumour size (P = 0.003), stage (III vs I HR 5.67, 2.80-11.45; IV vs I HR 13.08, 5.70-30.03) and NETT (HR 7.18, 3.48-14.82). Analysis using a propensity score indicates that the administration of adjuvant therapy was beneficial in increasing OS (HR 0.69, 0.49-0.97) in R0 resections. CONCLUSIONS Masaoka stages III-IV, incomplete resection and non-thymoma histology showed a significant impact in increasing recurrence and in worsening survival. The administration of adjuvant therapy after complete resection is associated with improved survival.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2003

Pleomorphic carcinomas of the lung show a selective distribution of gene products involved in cell differentiation, cell cycle control, tumor growth, and tumor cell motility: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 31 cases.

Giuseppe Pelosi; Filippo Fraggetta; Oscar Nappi; Ugo Pastorino; Patrick Maisonneuve; Felice Pasini; Antonio Iannucci; Piergiorgio Solli; Hossein S. Musavinasab; Giovanni de Manzoni; Alberto Terzi; Giuseppe Viale

We investigated 31 cases of pleomorphic carcinomas of the lung, with a double component of neoplastic epithelial cells and of spindle and/or giant cells. To correlate the morphologic diversity of these two cell components with their immunophenotype, we evaluated the expression of several gene products involved in cell differentiation (cytokeratins, epithelial membrane antigen, carcinoembryonic antigen, vimentin, S-100 protein, smooth muscle actin, desmin), cell cycle control and apoptosis (p53, p21Waf1, p27Kip1, FHIT), tumor growth (proliferative fraction, assessed by Ki-67 antigen, and microvascular density, assessed by CD34 immunostaining), and tumor cell motility (fascin). We found the epithelial component to be significantly more immunoreactive for cytokeratins, epithelial membrane antigen, carcinoembryonic antigen, cell cycle inhibitors p21Waf1, p27Kip1 and tumor suppressor gene FHIT, whereas the sarcomatoid component, independent of tumor stage and size, was more immunoreactive for vimentin, fascin, and microvascular density. Accordingly, we suggest a model of tumorigenesis whereby the mesenchymal phenotype of pleomorphic cells is likely induced by the selective activation and segregation of several molecules involved in cell differentiation, cell cycle control, and tumor cell growth and motility. Whether pleomorphic carcinomas of the lung are tumors with a dismal prognosis still remains an unsettled issue. In our series, however, stage I pleomorphic carcinomas have the same clinical behavior as ordinary non-small cell lung cancer, and only a high proliferative index (Ki-67 labeling index >35%) is associated with a worse prognosis in these tumors.


Cancer | 2003

Prognostic implications of neuroendocrine differentiation and hormone production in patients with Stage I nonsmall cell lung carcinoma

Giuseppe Pelosi; Felice Pasini; Angelica Sonzogni; Fausto Maffini; Patrick Maisonneuve; Antonio Iannucci; Alberto Terzi; Giovanni de Manzoni; Enrica Bresaola; Giuseppe Viale

Approximately 10–20% of nonsmall cell lung carcinomas (NSCLC) show neuroendocrine (NE) differentiation, as evaluated by panendocrine markers or ultrastructural evidence of dense‐core secretory granules. However, little is known regarding the prevalence and clinical implications of NE differentiation in patients with Stage I NSCLC.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Sleeve lobectomy for non-small cell lung cancer and carcinoids: results in 160 cases.

Alberto Terzi; Alessandro Lonardoni; Giovanni Falezza; G. Furlan; P. Scanagatta; Felice Pasini; Francesco Calabrò

OBJECTIVE To assess operative mortality (OM), morbidity and long-term results of sleeve lobectomies performed for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and carcinoids during a 35-year period. METHODS A retrospective review of patients who underwent a sleeve lobectomy for NSCLC and carcinoids was undertaken, univariate and multivariate analyses of factors influencing early mortality in NSCLC were performed and for this purpose the series was split into an early and a contemporary phase, the Kaplan-Meier method was used to calculate the cumulative survival rate, and statistical significance was calculated with the log-rank test. Causes of death were evaluated in relation to the stage of the disease. RESULTS OM for NSCLC was 14.6% in the early phase and 6% in the contemporary one; late stenosis occurred in 7.7% of NSCLC patients in the early phase and in 2% in the contemporary one. No OM or late stenosis occurred in carcinoid patients. Three, 5 and 10-year survival rates excluding carcinoids were 77, 62 and 31% for stage I(A-B), 45, 34 and 27% for stage II(A-B), 33, 22 and 0% for stage III(A-B). The 10-year survival rate for carcinoids was 100%. There was no significant difference in long-term survival between stages II and III, while the difference between stage I and stages II and III was significant (P<0.001). When survival was analyzed in relation to nodal status, 3, 5 and 10-year survival rates were 71, 57 and 33% for N0 disease, 42, 33 and 22% for N1 disease, and 34 and 19% with the last observation at 82 months of 19% for N2 disease; there was no significant difference in survival between N1 and N2 disease. A second primary lung cancer occurred in six patients (3.7%) who underwent resection. Late mortality was not related to cancer in most stage I patients while in stages II and III patients it was related to local and distant recurrences. CONCLUSIONS Sleeve lobectomy is a valid alternative to pneumonectomy: careful patient selection and surgical technique make it possible to achieve a mortality rate comparable to or lower than that for pneumonectomy along with a better quality of life. In addition, it allows further lung resection, if necessary.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2013

Geometrical characteristics of uniportal VATS

Luca Bertolaccini; Gaetano Rocco; Andrea Viti; Alberto Terzi

In terms of accuracy and efficacy Uniportal Video-Assisted Thoracic Surgery (VATS) resections are comparable to standard VATS. In standard three-ports VATS, the geometric configuration of a parallelogram generates interference with the optical source, creating a plane with a torsion angle not favorable on the flat two-dimensional vision of currently available monitors. The potential advantages of single-port VATS approach include not only the one intercostal space incision (reduction of postoperative pain) but also a translational approach of VATS instruments along a sagittal plane. Accordingly, the Uniportal approach enables VATS instruments to draw two parallel lines on the plane, bringing them to approach the target lesion from a caudo-cranial perspective thus achieving a projective plane. As a consequence, taking advantage of the unique spatial features specific to uniportal VATS, the surgeon is enabled to bring the operative fulcrum inside the chest to address the target lesion in a fashion similar to open surgery.


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2013

Lung Cancer Detection with Digital Chest Tomosynthesis: Baseline Results from the Observational Study SOS

Alberto Terzi; Luca Bertolaccini; Andrea Viti; Liliana Comello; Donatella Ghirardo; Roberto Priotto; Maurizio Grosso

Introduction: Observational studies consistently support strategies for early cancer diagnosis and treatment. Owing to its high prevalence, mortality rate, and easily identifiable at-risk population groups, lung cancer seems ideal for early detection programs. We present the baseline results of the SOS study, a single-arm observational study of digital chest tomosynthesis for lung cancer detection in an at-risk population. Methods: Accrual of study participants started in December 2010 and ended in December 2011. Participants considered eligible were smokers or former smokers aged 45 to 75 years, with a smoking history of at least 20 pack-years, without malignancy in the 5 years before the start of the study. A tomosynthesis examination was performed at baseline and another the year after. Results: Of the 1919 candidates assessed, 1843 (96%) were enrolled into the study: the mean age was 61 years (range, 48–73 years); 1419 (77%) were current smokers. The most prevalent comorbidities were hypertension, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and cardiovascular diseases. A total of 1843 tomosynthesis studies were obtained. Pulmonary abnormalities were detected in 268 subjects (14.5%). First-line basal computed tomography (CT) was subsequently carried out in 132 subjects (7.2%), 68 (4.9%) of which were referred for follow-up CT. Positron-emission tomography/CT was performed on 27 individuals (1.46%), and lung cancer was detected in 18 (0.98%) of them. Conclusion: The detection rate of noncalcified lung nodules for tomosynthesis was comparable with rates reported for CT. A small subgroup underwent low-dosage CT and entered a follow-up program. Overall, lung cancer was detected in approximately 1% of cases. Digital chest tomosynthesis holds promise as a first-line lung cancer screening tool.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2009

Role of fluorine-flurodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography in preoperative assessment of anterior mediastinal masses

Luca Luzzi; Andrea Campione; Alberto Gorla; Giuseppe Vassallo; Andrea Bianchi; Alberto Biggi; Alberto Terzi

OBJECTIVE The purpose of the study was to explore the usefulness of fluorine-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (F-FDG PET-CT) in the preoperative assessment of isolated anterior mediastinal lesions, especially in the planning of operative strategy (biopsy or upfront resection). METHODS During the last 36 months, 19 consecutive patients (10 males, mean age 54+/-16 years) underwent PET-CT in the preoperative work-up of isolated anterior mediastinal diseases. Maximal transverse diameter at CT and the postoperative histology and Masaoka staging for thymomas were collected and related to the maximum standardised uptake values (SUVs). Thymomas were divided into low-risk thymoma (LRT=A, AB and B1) and high-risk thymoma (HRT=B2, B3 and C). RESULTS There were 13 thymomas (six LRT and seven HRT), three lymphomas and three other primitive thymic tumours (one paraganglioma, two non-seminomatous germ cell tumours). In LRT, the mean SUV was 3.3+/-0.5 resulting significantly lower than HRT, 13.5+/-7 (p=0.009). The SUV in LRT was also significantly lower with respect to lymphoma, 12.4+/-4 (p=0.001), and the other primitive anterior mediastinal tumours, 8+/-0.8 (p=0.001). Between thymomas we found a significant correlation between Masaoka stage and SUV, r=0.718, p=0.006. No correlation was found between transverse diameters and SUV, r=0.141, p=0.6. CONCLUSIONS In our experience, low SUV (<5) is associated with LRT and minimal invasive thymoma (Masaoka stages I-II) and, therefore, susceptible to upfront surgery. For lesions with an infiltrative aspect on CT scan associated with a higher SUV (>5), an open biopsy is mandatory to exclude mediastinal lymphomas or, in case of HRT, to address a neoadjuvant treatment.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2011

‘Six Sigma approach’ — an objective strategy in digital assessment of postoperative air leaks: a prospective randomised study

Luca Bertolaccini; Giovanna Rizzardi; Mary Jo Filice; Alberto Terzi

OBJECTIVE Until now, only way to report air leaks (ALs) has been with an analogue score in an inherently subjective manner. The Six Sigma quality improvement methodology is a data-driven approach applicable to evaluate the quality of the quantification method of repetitive procedures. We applied the Six Sigma concept to improve the process of AL evaluation. METHODS A digital device for AL measurement (Drentech PALM, Redax S.r.l., Mirandola (MO), Italy) was applied to 49 consecutive patients, who underwent pulmonary intervention, compared with a similar population with classical chest drainage. Data recorded were postoperative AL, chest-tube removal days, number of chest roentgenograms, hospital length of stay; device setup time, average time rating AL and patient satisfaction. Bivariable comparisons were made using the Mann-Whitney test, the χ² test and Fishers exact test. Analysis of quality was conducted using the Six Sigma methodology. RESULTS There were no significant differences regarding AL (p=0.075), although not statistically significant; there was a reduction of postoperative chest X-rays (four vs five) and of hospital length of stay (6.5 vs 7.1 days); and a marginally significant difference was found between chest-tube removal days (p=0.056). There were significant differences regarding device setup time (p=0.001), average time rating AL (p=0.001), inter-observer variability (p=0.001) and patient satisfaction (p=0.002). Six Sigma analyses revealed accurate assessment of AL. CONCLUSIONS Continuous digital measurement of AL reduces degree of variability of AL score, gives more assurance for tube removal, and reports AL without the apprehension of observer error. Efficiency and effectiveness improved with the use of a digital device. We have noted that the AL curves depict actually sealing of AL. The clinical importance of AL curves requires further study.

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Paolo Scanagatta

European Institute of Oncology

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