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Featured researches published by Antonia Mancini.


Cancer | 1990

Primary chemotherapy and delayed surgery (neoadjuvant chemotherapy) for osteosarcoma of the extremities the istituto rizzoli experience in 127 patients treated preoperatively with intravenous methotrexate (high versus moderate doses) and intraarterial cisplatin

G. Bacci; Piero Picci; Pietro Ruggieri; Mario Mercuri; Maddalena Avella; Rodolfo Capanna; A. Brach del Prever; Antonia Mancini; F. Gherlinzoni; G. Padovani; C. Leonessa; R. Biagini; A. Ferraro; A. Ferruzzi; A. Cazzola; Marco Manfrini; Mario Campanacci

Between March 1983 and June 1986 127 patients with localized osteosarcoma of the extremity were treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Preoperative chemotherapy consisted of two cycles of methotrexate (MTX) (high or moderate doses) followed by 6 days by cisplatin (CDP). Surgery was an amputation or a rotation plasty, or a limb salvage. Necrosis was good in 52% of cases, fair in 36%, and poor in 12%. Postoperative chemotherapy consisted of Adriamycin (doxorubicin [ADM]) and bleomycin (BCD) for poor responders; and ADM, MTX, and CDP for fair responders. Good responders were treated as fair responders or with only MTX and CDP. At a 47‐month follow‐up, 66 patients remained continuously disease free and 61 patients developed metastases. Six of these patients had also a local recurrence. According to the grade of necrosis, the cumulative disease‐free probability at 5 years was 67% for good responders, 42% for fair responders, and for poor responders 10% at 45 months. According to the doses of MTX, survival at 5 years was 58% for patients who received high doses and 42% for patients treated with moderate doses. No differences in the rate of survivors were observed between amputated patients and patients treated with limb salvage. The authors conclude that (1) a limb salvage procedure is possible in about 70% of cases and as safe as demolitive surgery, if adequate surgical margins are achieved; (2) good responders have a better prognosis than fair and poor responders if postoperative chemotherapy is sufficiently prolonged and also includes ADM; (3) a different postoperative chemotherapy for poor responders did not improve their prognosis; and (4) a multidrug regimen using high doses of MTX is probably more effective than moderate doses.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1997

Chemotherapy-induced tumor necrosis as a prognostic factor in localized Ewing's sarcoma of the extremities.

Piero Picci; Tom Böhling; G. Bacci; Stefano Ferrari; L. Sangiorgi; Mario Mercuri; Pietro Ruggieri; Marco Manfrini; A. Ferraro; R. Casadei; M. S. Benassi; Antonia Mancini; Pasquale Rosito; A. Cazzola; Enza Barbieri; Amelia Tienghi; A. Brach del Prever; Alessandro Comandone; Patrizia Bacchini; Franco Bertoni

PURPOSE This study was performed to assess the prognostic value of the proposed histopathologic method to evaluate the response of the primary tumor to preoperative chemotherapy in Ewings sarcoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS The response to chemotherapy was evaluated from the specimens of 118 Ewings sarcoma patients, who were preoperatively treated by chemotherapy alone. Responses were graded I to III (macroscopic viable tumor, microscopic viable tumor, and no viable tumor cells, respectively). Follow-up data were available for all patients, with a mean follow-up duration of 86 months (range, 30 to 158). RESULTS A statistically highly significant difference was observed in outcome among the three groups of patients. For patients with total necrosis (grade III response), the estimated 5-year disease-free survival rate was 95%, in contrast to 68% for grade II responders and 34% for grade III responders (P < .0001). This difference was also confirmed when any single group was compared with the other groups. Among the parameters tested, patient age and the size of tumor had some prognostic value. CONCLUSION The proposed histopathologic grading, to evaluate the effect of chemotherapy on the primary tumor, had the strongest correlation to clinical outcome. This method could therefore be used to identify patients with a high risk of recurrent disease. These patients could be randomized to receive alternative postoperative treatments to investigate whether more aggressive therapies will improve outcome.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Renal Cell Carcinoma in Children: A Clinicopathologic Study

P. Indolfi; Monica Terenziani; Fiorina Casale; Modesto Carli; Gianni Bisogno; Amalia Schiavetti; Antonia Mancini; Roberto Rondelli; Andrea Pession; Alessandro Jenkner; Paolo Pierani; Paolo Tamaro; Bruno De Bernardi; Andrea Ferrari; Nicola Santoro; Maria Giuliano; Giovanni Cecchetto; Luigi Piva; Gianmarco Surico; M. Teresa Di Tullio

PURPOSE To identify the prognostic factors, treatment, and outcome of children affected by renal cell carcinoma (RCC). PATIENTS AND METHODS The series included 41 patients (18 males and 23 females) with a median age of 124 months observed at the 11 Italian Association for Pediatric Hematology and Oncology centers from January 1973 to January 2001. Clinical data, surgical notes, pathologic findings, and summaries of therapy were taken from the charts. RESULTS Seven (17%) of the 41 patients had a papillary histology, and 34 (82.4%) had nonpapillary histology. Eighteen patients (43.9%) had stage I, one patient (2.4%) had stage II, two patients (4.8%) had stage IIIA, 10 patients (24.3%) had stage IIIB, and nine patients (21.9%) had stage IV disease. One patient had a bilateral involvement at diagnosis. Seven patients experienced disease recurrence. Lung and liver were the most common distant lesions and usually were fatal. In this study, the major factor influencing the prognosis was the stage. Event-free survival at 20 years was 53.5% for all patients. Overall survival at 20 years was 54.9% for all patients. CONCLUSION RCC is a rare disease in children and adolescents. This neoplasm has a different clinical presentation in children compared with adults but the same outcome. In our experience, patients with localized disease could be cured by nephrectomy alone. Prospective studies in a larger number of patients are needed to confirm radiation therapy and biologic response modifiers as effective adjunct therapy in RCC stage III. The alternative therapy seems warranted in patients with advanced disease.


Tumori | 1999

Nonmetastatic osteosarcoma of the extremity: results of a neoadjuvant chemotherapy protocol (IOR/OS-3) with high-dose methotrexate, intraarterial or intravenous cisplatin, doxorubicin, and salvage chemotherapy based on histologic tumor response.

Stefano Ferrari; Mario Mercuri; Picci P; Bertoni F; Brach del Prever A; Tienghi A; Antonia Mancini; Alessandra Longhi; Rimondini S; Davide Donati; Marco Manfrini; Ruggieri P; R. Biagini; Bacci G

Aims and Background From 1986 to 1989, a study for the treatment of nonmetastatic osteosarcoma of the extremity (IOR/OS-2) was carried out at the Rizzoli Institute. The cumulative dose of doxorubicin delivered was 480 mg/m2, and severe heart failure developed in 5 (3%) of the 164 treated patients. The specific aim of the subsequent study was to assess the efficacy of a protocol, similar to IOR/OS-2, but with a reduced cumulative dose of doxorubicin (390 mg/m2). Additional aims were to assess the role of the route of infusion (intraarterial or intravenous) of cisplatin on histologic response of the primary tumor and the use of ifosfamide as salvage chemotherapy in poor responders. Methods The new chemotherapy regimen (IOR/OS-3) was comprised of a preoperative phase with methotrexate (10 g/m2), cisplatin (120 mg/m2 intraarterially or intravenously), and doxorubicin (60 mg/m2). After surgery, the same drugs were administered, with the addition of ifosfamide (10 g/m2) in patients who had a poor histologic response to primary chemotherapy. Results Ninety-five patients entered the study. The rate of good histologic response was 64% with intraarterial cisplatin and 43% with intravenous cisplatin (P = 0.05). The 8-year event-free survival and overall survival were 54% and 61%, respectively, with no significant difference according to the histologic response. No cases of clinical doxorubicin-induced cardiopathy were recorded. Event-free and overall survival did not significantly differ from those achieved with IOR/OS-2 (8-year disease-free and overall survival, respectively 63% and 72%). Conclusions The reduction in the doxorubicin cumulative dose avoided episodes of cardiotoxicity, without consequences on the efficacy of treatment. The addition of ifosfamide was an effective “salvage” therapy for poor responders. A better histologic response with intraarterial cisplatin was observed, but owing to the availability of an effective salvage therapy for poor responders, the advantages in terms of histologic response did not compensate for the cost and discomfort for the patients of this modality of infusion of cisplatin.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1993

Localized but unresectable neuroblastoma: treatment and outcome of 145 cases. Italian Cooperative Group for Neuroblastoma.

Alberto Garaventa; B. De Bernardi; Clotilde Pianca; A. Donfrancesco; L. Cordero di Montezemolo; M. T. Di Tullio; S. Bagnulo; Antonia Mancini; M. Carli; A Pession

PURPOSE To define factors that influence outcome in children with localized but unresectable neuroblastoma by retrospective investigation of response to therapy and outcome in 21 Italian institutions. PATIENTS AND METHODS Of 145 assessable children diagnosed between 1979 and 1990, 77 were treated between 1979 and 1984 with three consecutive standard-dose (SD) protocols, and 68 between 1985 and 1990 with a high-dose (HD) protocol. All protocols included chemotherapy, followed by resection of primary tumor if feasible. If at least partial resection was achieved, consolidation therapy followed, except that from 1985 onward, patients considered disease-free following surgery received no further treatment. RESULTS Ninety-four of 145 patients (65%) achieved a complete response (CR) or partial response (PR) with chemotherapy and 75 (52%) subsequently underwent complete resection of the primary tumor. Eighty-one patients are alive (73 without disease, eight with disease), 63 have died, and one is lost to follow-up. The 5-year overall survival (OS) rate is 55% and progression-free survival (PFS) rate 50%. Both OS and PFS correlated with response to chemotherapy, removal of primary tumor, HD therapy, and serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels. Infants (< 1 year), independent of primary tumor site, and children aged 1 to 15 years with a nonabdominal primary tumor, did better compared with children aged 1 to 15 years with an abdominal primary tumor (PFS, 72% and 64% v 30%; P < .001 and < .01, respectively). Outcome of this last group improved with the HD protocol (PFS, 40% v 23%; P = .01). CONCLUSION In children with unresectable neuroblastoma, risk categories can be defined by age and primary tumor site. HD chemotherapy should be investigated for the poor-risk category age 1 to 15 years with an abdominal primary tumor.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1990

Combined therapy of localized Ewing's sarcoma of bone: Analysis of results in 100 patients

Enza Barbieri; Ermanno Emiliani; G. Zini; Antonia Mancini; A. Toni; G. Frezza; Stefano Neri; Carlo Putti; Lucio Babini

From 1979 to 1986, 182 patients with biopsy proven diagnosis of Ewings sarcoma of bone were observed. One hundred of the 182 patients (72 males, 28 females, median age 15.8 years) with localized disease and no previous treatment were treated with chemotherapy (VCR, ADM, CTX, D-ACT) for 15-18 months. Local treatment was radiotherapy (42 patients), surgery (31 patients), or a combination of both (27 pts). Radiation doses ranged from 45 to 64 Gy given with conventional fractionation. Median follow-up was 51.2 months (24-106). Overall and disease-free survival were, respectively, 58.7 and 42.6%. Resected patients tended to have a better local control (Surgery 93.6%, Surgery + Radiation therapy 92.6%, Radiation therapy 69.1%). Disease-free survival was significantly related to the volume of the primary tumor (bulky: 33.2%, not-bulky: 57.7%), to site (extremities 54.6%, central sites 16.6%, other sites 40.9%), and to local treatment (Radiation therapy 30.3%, Surgery + Radiation therapy 47.9%, Surgery 59.1%). These results are, however, biased because resected patients tended to have smaller tumors in favorable sites.


European Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology | 1985

Localized Ewing's sarcoma of bone: ten years' experience at the Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli in 124 cases treated with multimodal therapy.

G. Bacci; Piero Picci; F. Gherlinzoni; Rodolfo Capanna; Pierina Calderoni; Carlo Putti; Antonia Mancini; Mario Campanacci

The results obtained in the treatment by multimodal therapy (surgery, radiation therapy and chemotherapy) of 124 cases of Ewings sarcoma are presented. At a medium follow-up of 65 months 48% of the patients are disease-free. One patient died of leukemia and two patients developed an irradiation-induced sarcoma. Analysing the data, three factors seem to be correlated to prognosis: location of the initial lesion outside the pelvis and sacrum, a four-drug chemotherapy protocol and the use of surgery in the treatment of the initial lesion seem to give better results.


European Journal of Cancer | 1995

Deferoxamine followed by cyclophosphamide, etoposide, carboplatin, thiotepa, induction regimen in advanced neuroblastoma: Preliminary results

A. Donfrancesco; B. De Bernardi; M. Carli; Antonia Mancini; M. Nigro; L. De Sio; F. Casale; S. Bagnulo; L. Helson; G. Deb

Based upon phase I and II studies of deferoxamine alone and in combination with cytotoxic agents cyclophosphamide, etoposide, carboplatin, and thiotepa (D-CECaT), we initiated a single arm multicentre trial in 1992 for advanced neuroblastoma. 57 of 65 patients who entered the trial were evaluable. Following 4 courses of the D-CECaT, almost all the patients underwent surgery. Toxicity was moderate and mainly reversible myelosuppression. The post-surgically defined responses in stage 3 high risk, stage 4 moderate risk and stage 4 high risk patients included 24 complete responses, 26 partial responses, and 3 minor responses, and 4 patients had progressive disease. These patients are being followed to determine the impact of this programme on their overall survival.


Journal of Chemotherapy | 1993

Influence of adriamycin dose in the outcome of patients with osteosarcoma treated with multidrug neoadjuvant chemotherapy: results of two sequential studies.

G. Bacci; Piero Picci; Stefano Ferrari; R. Casadei; A. Brach del Prever; Amelia Tienghi; Antonia Mancini

The results of two sequential studies of neoadjuvant chemotherapy for osteosarcoma of the extremities performed at Rizzoli Institute between 1986 and 1991 in 228 patients are presented. In both studies preoperative chemotherapy consisted of two cycles of high dose methotrexate (HDMTX), cisplatinum (CDP) and adriamycin (ADM). Postoperatively the good responder patients were treated with the same drugs used before surgery while in the poor responder patients ifosfamide was added to these three drugs. The preoperative treatment was the same in both studies while after surgery in the second protocol either the cumulative dose of ADM (270 mg/m2 instead of 360 mg/m2) or the single dose per cycle of this drug (60 mg/m2 instead of 90 mg/m2) was reduced. These changes in the last protocol were done to reduce the cardiotoxicity of ADM that was high in the first study (2 deaths and 1 heart transplantation). Since in the last protocol--in comparison with the first protocol--after surgery chemotherapy was restarted earlier and ADM was administered not as a single drug but in combination with the CDP the dose intensity of ADM was unchanged while the dose intensity of MTX, CDP and ifosfamide was higher than in the first study. The preliminary results of the 84 patients treated in the second study show a 2-year disease free survival significantly lower than that achieved in the 144 patients treated in the first study (37/51--73% vs 123/144--85%: P < 0.008). In addition, even if in the last study there were no cases of clinical cardiotoxicity due to ADM, there was a significantly higher percentage of severe myelodepression that led to two deaths for infectious complications. These results suggest that in neoadjuvant treatment of osteosarcoma the total dose of ADM and/or the single dose per cycle of the same drug are an important determinant of outcome and that increasing the dose-intensity of less toxic but less active agents, MTX, CDP and ifosfamide, at the expense of the more active and more toxic agent, ADM, can lead to a poorer outcome without reducing toxicity.


Tumori | 1987

Undifferentiated (embryonal) sarcoma of the liver in childhood: results of a retrospective Italian study.

Perilongo G; Carli M; Sainati L; Giovanni Cecchetto; Antonia Mancini; Cordero di Montezemolo L; Comelli A; Colella R; Paolo Tamaro; Colleselli P

The clinical features and the treatment of undifferentiated (embryonal) sarcoma of the liver in 8 patients younger than 19 years old were analyzed. AH these cases were registered in the retrospective multicentric study on childhood malignant tumors of the liver, conducted between 1983 and 1985 by the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology Oncology. The age of the patients ranged from 94 to 190 months (median = 113.5 months); all children were males. An abdominal mass was the common presenting features. Abnormalities in hemogram and common liver tests were rarely reported. Angiography revealed various degrees of vascularization in these tumors. Two patients achieved a surgical complete remission (CR) at diagnosis; one patient achieved surgical CR after primary chemotherapy with vincristine, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide and 5-fluorouracil, which reduced the tumor volume and permitted surgical resection. Two of these patients are still in CR at 14 and 60 months after diagnosis; the third patient died of liver failure without evidence of recurrence 6 months after diagnosis. All of the other patients, who never achieved CR, died of disease. One was lost to follow-up, and one surgical death occurred. Reports of childhood undifferentiated sarcoma are reviewed.

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G. Bacci

University of Bologna

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Bruno De Bernardi

Boston Children's Hospital

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