Antonio Crucitti
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
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Radiology | 2009
Brunella Barbaro; Cecilia Fiorucci; Carmela Tebala; Vincenzo Valentini; Maria Antonietta Gambacorta; Fabio Maria Vecchio; Gianluca Rizzo; Claudio Coco; Antonio Crucitti; Carlo Ratto; Lorenzo Bonomo
PURPOSE To prospectively differentiate, at magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, patients with locally advanced nonmucinous rectal cancer who will respond to long-course chemotherapy and radiation therapy (CRT) from those who will not respond, with histopathologic results as the reference standard. MATERIALS AND METHODS Institutional review board approval for this study was obtained, and all patients provided written informed consent. High-spatial-resolution T2-weighted MR images were acquired before and 6-8 weeks after CRT in 53 patients (33 men, 20 women; mean age, 63 years; age range, 42-79 years). Patients were categorized as responders to CRT (patients with T3 cancer that converted to T2 or a lower stage, patients with T4 cancer that converted to T3 or a lower stage) or as nonresponders (patients with stable or progressive disease). At the posttreatment MR imaging examination, a decrease in signal intensity was considered to represent a morphologic response with fibrosis. Before CRT and surgery, tumor volume was calculated at MR imaging by multiplying cross-sectional area by section thickness. Tumor length was measured at MR imaging and in the histopathologic specimen. Nodal downstaging was evaluated. The relationship between pathologic response, morphologic MR imaging response, and percentage volume reduction was evaluated with the Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon two-sample test. RESULTS Morphologic response assessment with MR imaging achieved a positive predictive value (PPV) of 84.2% (32 of 38) and a negative predictive value (NPV) of 66.7% (10 of 15). Volume reduction extent (> or = 70%) was significantly different between patients in whom disease was downstaged and those in whom it was not downstaged (P = .000005) and showed additional diagnostic value, with an overall accuracy of 86.8% (46 of 53). Presurgical MR imaging and histopathologic tumor length did not show a significant difference. MR imaging accuracy for lymph node (N) stage was 86.8% (46 of 53) on the basis of morphologic criteria. CONCLUSION After CRT, morphologic and volumetric evaluation at MR imaging had a high PPV and a low NPV for response assessment. The detection of small clusters of residual tumor cells within fibrosis remains a problem. SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL http://radiology.rsnajnls.org/cgi/content/full/250/3/730/DC1.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2012
Brunella Barbaro; Renata Vitale; Vincenzo Valentini; Sonia Illuminati; Fabio Maria Vecchio; G. Rizzo; Maria Antonietta Gambacorta; Claudio Coco; Antonio Crucitti; Roberto Persiani; Luigi Sofo; Lorenzo Bonomo
PURPOSE To prospectively monitor the response in patients with locally advanced nonmucinous rectal cancer after chemoradiotherapy (CRT) using diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging. The histopathologic finding was the reference standard. METHODS AND MATERIALS The institutional review board approved the present study. A total of 62 patients (43 men and 19 women; mean age, 64 years; range, 28-83) provided informed consent. T(2)- and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging scans (b value, 0 and 1,000 mm(2)/s) were acquired before, during (mean 12 days), and 6-8 weeks after CRT. We compared the median apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCs) between responders and nonresponders and examined the associations with the Mandard tumor regression grade (TRG). The postoperative nodal status (ypN) was evaluated. The Mann-Whitney/Wilcoxon two-sample test was used to evaluate the relationships among the pretherapy ADCs, extramural vascular invasion, early percentage of increases in ADCs, and preoperative ADCs. RESULTS Low pretreatment ADCs (<1.0 × 10(-3)mm(2)/s) were correlated with TRG 4 scores (p = .0011) and associated to extramural vascular invasion with ypN+ (85.7% positive predictive value for ypN+). During treatment, the mean percentage of increase in tumor ADC was significantly greater in the responders than in the nonresponders (p < .0001) and a >23% ADC increase had a 96.3% negative predictive value for TRG 4. In 9 of 16 complete responders, CRT-related tumor downsizing prevented ADC evaluations. The preoperative ADCs were significantly different (p = .0012) between the patients with and without downstaging (preoperative ADC ≥1.4 × 10(-3)mm(2)/s showed a positive and negative predictive value of 78.9% and 61.8%, respectively, for response assessment). The TRG 1 and TRG 2-4 groups were not significantly different. CONCLUSION Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging seems to be a promising tool for monitoring the response to CRT.
Radiographics | 2010
Brunella Barbaro; Renata Vitale; Lucia Leccisotti; Fabio Maria Vecchio; Luisa Santoro; Vincenzo Valentini; Claudio Coco; Fabio Pacelli; Antonio Crucitti; Roberto Persiani; Lorenzo Bonomo
In recent years, preoperative therapy has become standard procedure for locally advanced rectal cancer. Tumor shrinkage due to preoperative chemotherapy-radiation therapy (CRT) is now a reality, and pathologically complete responses are not uncommon. Some researchers are now addressing organ preservation, thus increasing the demand for both functional and morphologic radiologic evaluation of response to CRT to distinguish responding from nonresponding tumors. On magnetic resonance (MR) images, post-CRT tumor morphologic features and volume changes have a high positive predictive value but a low negative predictive value for assessing response. Preliminary results indicate that diffusion-weighted MR imaging, especially at high b values, would be effective for prediction of treatment outcome and for early detection of tumor response. Some authors have reported that the use of apparent diffusion coefficient values in combination with other MR imaging criteria significantly improves discrimination between malignant and benign lymph nodes. Sequential determination of fluorodeoxyglucose uptake at positron emission tomography/computed tomography has proved useful in differentiating responding from nonresponding tumors during and at the end of CRT. However, radionuclide techniques have limitations, such as low spatial resolution and high cost. Large studies will be needed to verify the most effective morphologic and functional imaging modalities for post-CRT restaging of rectal cancer. Supplemental material available at http://radiographics.rsna.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1148/rg.303095085/-/DC1.
Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2000
Paolo Magistrelli; Armando Antinori; Antonio Crucitti; Antonio La Greca; Riccardo Masetti; Roberto Coppola; Gennaro Nuzzo; Aurelio Picciocchi
Surgical resection offers the only potential cure for pancreatic carcinoma. Several recent series have reported an encouraging increase in 5‐year survival rate exceeding 20% and have emphasized the importance of patient selection based on reproducible prognostic factors. The impact on survival of demographic, intraoperative, and histopatologic factors are investigated in this study.
Tumori | 1990
Simonetta Rossi; C Cinini; C Di Pietro; Celestino Pio Lombardi; Antonio Crucitti; Rocco Domenico Alfonso Bellantone; F. Crucitti
Diagnostic delay in a group of 189 women with breast cancer was studied and correlated with first symptom, stage of disease, histologic grade and prognosis. Diagnostic delay was divided into patient delay (time from the patients discovery of a symptom to the first medical consultation) and system delay (time from medical diagnosis to treatment). Patients were divided into five groups by patient-delay time: 0 to 30 days; 31 to 90 days; 91 to 180 days; 181 to 365 days; and > 365 days. The median diagnostic delay was 60 days (range, 4-980) and was not influenced by patient age, marital status or nature of first symptom. A consistent and direct relationship was found between delay and tumor size, nodal involvement, presence of metastases, and histologic grade of disease at diagnosis. No correlation was found between diagnostic delay and histologic type distribution. The three-year survival rate after treatment was significantly lower for patients with a longer delay. Our data indicate that diagnostic delay appears to be an important determinant of stage at diagnosis in women with breast cancer and that it has an important influence on survival. In most cases, delay was mainly patient dependent (60 days); the median system-dependent delay was 15 days (range, 4-47). Since early treatment is generally accepted to be one of the most important determinants of prognosis in breast cancer patients, a reduction in diagnostic delay may lengthen survival time.
Surgery Today | 1996
Riccardo Masetti; Armando Antinori; Roberto Coppola; Claudio Coco; Claudio Mattana; Antonio Crucitti; Antonio La Greca; Guido Fadda; Paolo Magistrelli; Aurelio Picciochi
Eighty-four patients with choledochocele collected from the world literature and one personal observation are reviewed. The main issues regarding clinical presentation, diagnostic work-up, and the treatment of this uncommon lesion are discussed. Abdominal pain was the most common clinical feature (91% of cases), followed by pancreatitis (38%), nausea or vomiting (35%), and jaundice (26%). In addition, associated lithiasis was found in 43% of the cases. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography was the most useful diagnostic procedure and resulted in a correct diagnosis in all but one of the patients investigated by this method. Surgical excision of the duodenal luminal portion of the choledochocele was the treatment most commonly used (65% of cases). In recent years, operative endoscopy has also been increasingly used, with good results.
European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2011
Giuseppe Brisinda; Serafino Vanella; Anna Crocco; Andrea Mazzari; Pasquina Maria Carmen Tomaiuolo; Francesco Santullo; Ugo Grossi; Antonio Crucitti
The patients with acute pancreatitis are at risk to develop different complications from ongoing pancreatic inflammation. Often, there is no correlation between the degree of structural damage to pancreas and clinical manifestation of the disease. The effectiveness of any treatment is related to the ability to predict severity accurately, but there is no ideal predictive system or biochemical marker. Severity assessment is indispensable to the selection of proper initial treatment in the management of acute pancreatitis. The use of multiparametric criteria and the evaluation of severity index permit us to select high-risk patients. Furthermore, contrast-enhanced computed tomographic scanning and contrast-enhanced MRI play an important role in severity assessment. The adoption of multiparametric criteria proposed together with morphological evaluation consents the formulation of a discreetly reliable prognosis on the evolution of the disease a few days from onset.
Surgery | 2009
Vincenzo Valentini; Claudio Coco; Gianluca Rizzo; Alberto Manno; Antonio Crucitti; Claudio Mattana; Carlo Ratto; Alessandro Verbo; Fabio Maria Vecchio; Brunella Barbaro; Maria Antonietta Gambacorta; Caterina Montoro; M.C. Barba; Luigi Sofo; Valerio Papa; Roberta Menghi; Domenico D'Ugo; Giovanni Battista Doglietto
BACKGROUND Our objective was evaluate the outcome of primary clinical T4M0 extraperitoneal rectal cancer treated by neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy. Prognosis of clinical T4 rectal cancer is poor. Preoperative chemoradiation therapy may be beneficial. The results obtained are unclear due to lack of objective and strictly applied staging methods. METHODS Patients with primary, clinical, T4MO, extraperitoneal rectal cancer, defined by transrectal ultrasonography, computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging, were considered. Intraoperative radiotherapy and adjuvant chemotherapy were employed in some patients after curative resection (R0). Variables influencing the possibility to perform an R0 resection and a sphincter-saving procedure were investigated as predictors of outcome. RESULTS 100 patients were included. R0 resection was performed in 78 patients. R0 resection rate was greater in females (93% vs 67%) and in responders to neoadjuvant chemoradiation (94% vs 60%). The ability to perform a sphincter-saving procedure was 57%, greater in middle rectal location (85% vs 51%) and in responders to the chemoradiation (70% vs 47%). Median follow-up was 31 months (range, 4-136). Local recurrences were found in 7 patients (10%). Five-year local control in R0 patients was 90% and better in the IORT group (100%). Distant relapse occurred in 24 patients (30%). Five-year overall survival was 59%, and was better after an R0 versus an R1 or R2 resection (68% vs 22%). Overall and disease free survival in R0 patients improved after overall downstaging. Adjuvant chemotherapy given in addition to the neoadjuvant therapy did not appear to offer benefit in improving survival. CONCLUSION A multimodal approach enabled us to obtain a 5-year overall survival of about 60%. IORT increased local control. The role of adjuvant chemotherapy needs to be further investigated.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2010
G.C. Mattiucci; Alessio G. Morganti; Vincenzo Valentini; Edy Ippolito; Sergio Alfieri; Armando Antinori; Antonio Crucitti; G.R. D'Agostino; Liberato Di Lullo; Stefano Luzi; Giovanna Mantini; Daniela Smaniotto; Gian B. Doglietto; Numa Cellini
PURPOSE To evaluate the efficacy of gemcitabine-based chemoradiation (CT-RT) in treating patients (pts) affected by locally advanced pancreatic cancers (LAPC). METHODS AND MATERIALS Weekly gemcitabine (100 mg/m(2)) was given as a 24-hour infusion during the course of three-dimensional radiotherapy (50.4 Gy to the tumor, 39.6 Gy to the nodes). After CT-RT, pts received five cycles of sequential chemotherapy with gemcitabine (1000 mg/m(2); 1, 8, q21). Response rate was assessed according to World Health Organization criteria 6 weeks after the end of CT-RT. Local control (LC), time to progression (TTP), metastases-free survival (MFS), and overall survival (OS) were analyzed by the Kaplan Meier method. RESULTS Forty pts (male/female 22/18; median age 62 years, range, 36-76) were treated from 2000 to 2005. The majority had T4 tumour (n = 34, 85%), six pts (15%) had T3 tumour. Sixteen pts (40%) were node positive at diagnosis. Grade 3-4 acute toxicity was observed in 21 pts (52.5%). Thirty pts (75%) completed the treatment schedule. A clinical response was achieved in 12 pts (30%). With a median follow-up of 76 months (range, 32-98), 2-year LC was 39.6% (median, 12 months), 2-year TTP was 18.4% (median, 10 months), and 2-year MFS was 29.7% (median, 10 months). Two-year OS (25%; median, 15.5 months) compared with our previous study on 5-fluorouracil-based CT-RT (2.8%) was significantly improved (p <0.001). CONCLUSIONS Gemcitabine CT-RT seems correlated with improved outcomes. Healthier patients who are likely to complete the treatment schedule may benefit most from this therapy.
Tumori | 2002
Giulio Bigotti; Antonella Coli; Magistrelli P; De Ninno M; Antonacci; Antonio Crucitti; Federico F; Armando Antinori; Massi G
Aims We describe the fourth reported case of granulomatous gastritis associated with gastric adenocarcinoma, with a review of the literature and considerations about the prognostic implications of this association. Results A 48-year-old woman who had been suffering from gastritis for ten years was admitted to our institute for increasing left epigastric pain associated with vomiting. After an endoscopic biopsy had revealed an ulcerated signet ring cell carcinoma, the patient was submitted to subtotal gastrectomy with regional lymph node dissection. Pathological examination of the resected specimen revealed a superficial signet ring cell carcinoma (early cancer) associated with multiple granulomas. The granulomas, which were observed within the mucosa and the submucosa at the periphery of the carcinoma, were composed of CD68-positive, CD15-negative epithelioid and giant cells of the Langhans type, confirming their true histiocytic nature, and were also extensively found within the dissected lymph nodes. Since no ocular, skin, pulmonary or other gastrointestinal lesions were found and the granulomas were negative for acid-fast and fungal stain, a diagnosis of granulomatous gastritis was made. Conclusions To the best of our knowledge this is the fourth example of gastric adenocarcinoma and granulomatous gastritis. These cases suggest an association between granulomatous gastritis and early gastric cancer.
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Rocco Domenico Alfonso Bellantone
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
View shared research outputsPasquina Maria Carmen Tomaiuolo
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
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