B. Manfredi
University of Pisa
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Featured researches published by B. Manfredi.
Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2014
A. Sainato; Valentina Cernusco Luna Nunzia; Vincenzo Valentini; Antonino De Paoli; Enrici Riccardo Maurizi; Marco Lupattelli; Cynthia Aristei; Cristiana Vidali; Monica Conti; A. Galardi; Pietro Ponticelli; Maria Luisa Friso; Tiziana Iannone; Falchetto Mattia Osti; B. Manfredi; Marianna Coppola; Cinzia Orlandini; Luca Cionini
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE To evaluate the effect of adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT) in locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) after neoadjuvant chemoradiation (NACT-RT). The study was funded by the Italian National Research Council (CNR). METHODS From September 1992 to January 2001, 655 patients with LARC (clinically T3-4, any N) treated with NACT-RT and surgery, were randomized in two arms: follow-up (Arm A) or 6 cycles of ACT with 5 fluorouracil (5FU)-Folinic Acid (Arm B). NACT-RT consisted of 45Gy/28/ff concurrent with 5FU (350mg/sqm) and Folinic Acid (20mg/sqm) on days 1-5 and 29-33; surgery was performed after 4-6weeks. Median follow up was 63·7months. Primary end point was overall survival (OS). RESULTS 634/655 patients were evaluable (Arm A 310, Arm B 324); 92·5% of Arm A and 91% of Arm B patients received the preoperative treatment as in the protocol; 294 patients of Arm A (94·8%) and 296 of Arm B (91·3%) underwent a radical resection; complete pathologic response and overall downstaging rates did not show any significant difference in the two arms. 83/297 (28%) patients in Arm B, never started ACT. Five year OS and DFS did not show any significant difference in the two treatment arms. Distant metastases occurred in 62 patients (21%) in Arm A and in 58 (19·6%) in Arm B. CONCLUSIONS In patients with LARC treated with NACT-RT, the addition of ACT did not improve 5year OS and DFS and had no impact on the distant metastasis rate.
Journal of Contemporary Brachytherapy | 2015
Durim Delishaj; Concetta Laliscia; B. Manfredi; Stefano Ursino; Francesco Pasqualetti; Ezio Lombardo; Franco Perrone; Riccardo Morganti; Fabiola Paiar; Maria Grazia Fabrini
Purpose The incidence of non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC) has been increasing over the past 30 years. Basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma are the two most common subtypes of NMSC. The aim of this study was to estimate tumour control, toxicity, and aesthetic events in elderly patients treated with high-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy (BT) using Valencia applicator. Material and methods From January 2012 to May 2015, 57 lesions in 39 elderly eligible patients were enrolled. All the lesions had a diameter ≤ 25 mm (median: 12.5 mm) and a depth ≤ 4 mm. The appropriate Valencia applicator, 2 or 3 cm in diameter was used. The prescribed dose was 40 Gy in 8 fractions (5 Gy/fraction) in 48 lesions (group A), and 50 Gy in 10 fractions (5 Gy/fraction) in 9 lesions (group B), delivered 2/3 times a week. The biological effective dose (BED) was 60 Gy and 75 Gy, respectively. Results After median follow-up of 12 months, 96.25% lesions showed a complete response and only two cases presented partial remission. Radiation Therapy Oncology Group – European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (RTOG/EORTC) G 1-2 acute toxicities were observed in 63.2% of the lesions: 56.3% in group A and 77.7% in group B. Late G1-G2 toxicities was observed in 19.3% of the lesions: 18.8% in group A and 22.2% in group B, respectively. No G3 or higher acute or late toxicities occurred. In 86% of the lesions, an excellent cosmetic result was observed (87.5% in group A and 77.8% in group B). Six lesions had a good cosmetic outcome and only 2.3% presented a fair cosmetic impact. Conclusions The treatment of NMSC with HDR-BT using Valencia surface applicator is effective with excellent and good cosmetics results in elderly patients. The hypofractionated course appears effective and no statistical differences were observed between the two groups analysed.
Journal of Contemporary Brachytherapy | 2016
Durim Delishaj; Agata Rembielak; B. Manfredi; Stefano Ursino; Francesco Pasqualetti; Concetta Laliscia; Francesca Orlandi; Riccardo Morganti; Maria Grazia Fabrini; Fabiola Paiar
Purpose The incidence of non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC) has been increasing over the past 30 years. There are different treatment options and surgical excision is the most frequent treatment due to its low rates of recurrence. Radiotherapy is an effective alternative of surgery, and brachytherapy (BT) might be a better therapeutic option due to high radiation dose concentration to the tumor with rapid dose fall-off resulting in normal tissues sparing. The aim of this review was to evaluate the local control, toxicity, and cosmetic outcomes in NMSC treated with high-dose-rate BT (HDR-BT). Material and methods In May 2016, a systematic search of bibliographic database of PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, and Cochrane Library with a combination of key words of “skin cancer”, “high dose rate brachytherapy”, “squamous cell carcinoma”, “basal cell carcinoma”, and “non melanoma skin cancer“ was performed. In this systematic review, we included randomized trials, non-randomized trials, prospective and retrospective studies in patients affected by NMSC treated with HDR-BT. Results Our searches generated a total of 85 results, and through a process of screening, 10 publications were selected for the review. Brachytherapy was well tolerated with acceptable toxicity and high local control rates (median: 97%). Cosmetic outcome was reported in seven study and consisted in an excellent and good cosmetic results in 94.8% of cases. Conclusions Based on the review data, we can conclude that the treatment of NMSC with HDR-BT is effective with excellent and good cosmetics results, even in elderly patients. The hypofractionated course appears effective with very good local disease control. More data with large-scale randomized controlled trials are needed to assess the efficacy and safety of brachytherapy.
European Journal of Radiology | 2015
Emanuele Neri; Elisa Guidi; Francesca Pancrazi; Maura Castagna; Elisa Castelluccio; Riccardo Balestri; Piero Buccianti; Luca Masi; Alfredo Falcone; B. Manfredi; Lorenzo Faggioni; Carlo Bartolozzi
OBJECTIVE To compare tumor volume reduction rate (TVRR) measured by MR volumetry after preoperative chemoradiotherapy (CRT) and pathological tumor regression grade (TRG) in locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC). MATERIAL AND METHODS In total, 20 patients with LARC (cT3-T4) treated with CRT followed by Total Mesorectal Excision (TME) between April 2011 and April 2013 were analyzed retrospectively. Pre- and post- CRT tumor volumes (MR volumetry) were measured on 3D MR sequences. TVRR was determined using the equation TVRR (%)=(pre-CRT tumor volume-post-CRT tumor volume)×100/pre-CRT tumor volume. The downstaging (defined as ypT0-T2) of tumor mass was evaluated and the correlation between TVRR and TRG was calculated with the method proposed by Dworak using the Spearman rank test. RESULTS The median TVRR was 77.3% (range, 26.4-99.3%); TVRR was >60% in 18 cases (90%) and in 8 of these patients (44.4 %) it was >80%. Downstaging of tumor lesions was obtained in 15 patients (75%). In 4 cases there was a complete tumor regression (TRG4) at histological examination and in the same patients there was also a TVRR>80% measured by MR volumetry. A statistically significant correlation between TVRR and TRG (r(s)=0.5466, p=0.0126) was observed. CONCLUSION TVRR after preoperative CRT correlates with TRG in LARC. The MR volumetry is a prognostic factor to estimate the tumor response after preoperative CRT. TVRR data may be an useful biomarker for tailoring surgery and postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016
Caterina Vivaldi; A. Sainato; Sara Lonardi; Piero Buccianti; Lorenzo Marcucci; Francesco Di Clemente; Gianna Musettini; S. Montrone; Francesca Bergamo; Matteo Franceschi; Laura Ginocchi; Angelo Martignetti; Concetta Laliscia; Francesca Battaglin; L Urbani; B. Manfredi; Laura Rumano; Francesco Sidoti; Alfredo Falcone; Gianluca Masi
673 Background: Induction chemotherapy (CT) is a promising option in LARC. FOLFOXIRI + BV is an effective treatment in metastatic colorectal cancer. Methods: Patients (pts) with LARC at < 12 cm from the anal verge, N+ or cT4 or high risk cT3 (MRI criteria) underwent 6 cycles of FOLFOXIRI + BV followed by CRT (50.4 Gy + 5FU 225 mg/m2/day or capecitabine 800 mg/m2/bid 5 days/week + BV 5 mg/kg on days 1, 15, 28). Surgery was planned 8 weeks after CRT. Primary endpoint is 2-year disease-free survival (DFS). Results: From April 2012 to April 2015 48 pts were enrolled. At now, 46 pts completed induction CT, 43 completed CRT and 39 underwent surgery (5 pts ongoing). Pts characteristics were: median age, 53 years (range 30-74); cT2/cT3/cT4, 4%/60%/36%; cN0/N+, 4%/96%. Main grade (G) 3/4 toxicities during induction were neutropenia (42%), febrile neutropenia (4.2%), diarrhea (12.5. Two pts did not complete induction: one died due to bowel perforation and sepsis and one discontinued CT after acute kidney injury. Re...
European Journal of Cancer | 2001
Luca Cionini; B. Manfredi; A. Sainato; M. Panichi; Maria Luisa Friso; Vincenzo Valentini; Marco Lupattelli; A. De Paoli
Anticancer Research | 2010
Angiolo Gadducci; Maria Grazia Fabrini; Franco Perrone; B. Manfredi; A Fanucchi; Concetta Laliscia; Cecilia Barsotti; Valerio Scotti; Andrea R. Genazzani; Carlo Greco
Anticancer Research | 2017
Francesco Pasqualetti; S. Montrone; Caterina Vivaldi; M. Zani; David Fedele; Lorenzo Fornaro; Giuseppe Pasqualetti; Lisa Salvatore; B. Manfredi; Concetta Laliscia; Gabriele Coraggio; Alessandra Gonnelli; Fotios Loupakis; Gianluca Masi; A. Sainato; Fabio Monzani; Alfredo Falcone; Fabiola Paiar
Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2018
S. Montrone; Francesco Pasqualetti; R. Morganti; B. Manfredi; C. Laliscia; A. Gonnelli; F. Orlandi; A. Cristaudo; D. Baldaccini; A. Molinari; A. Sainato; Fabiola Paiar
Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2018
S. Montrone; A. Sainato; R. Morganti; B. Manfredi; C. Laliscia; M. Cantarella; A. Gonnelli; S. Ursino; F. Orlandi; A. Cristaudo; D. Baldaccini; Francesco Pasqualetti; Fabiola Paiar