Chiara Broglia
University of Pavia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chiara Broglia.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005
Paolo G. Gobbi; Alessandro Levis; Teodoro Chisesi; Chiara Broglia; Umberto Vitolo; Caterina Stelitano; Vincenzo Pavone; Luigi Cavanna; Gino Santini; Francesco Merli; Marina Liberati; Luca Baldini; Giorgio Lambertenghi Deliliers; Emanuele Angelucci; Roberto Bordonaro; Massimo Federico
PURPOSE In this multicenter, prospective, randomized clinical trial on advanced Hodgkins lymphoma (HL), the efficacy and toxicity of two chemotherapy regimens, doxorubicin, vinblastine, mechlorethamine, vincristine, bleomycin, etoposide, and prednisone (Stanford V) and mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone, epidoxirubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, lomustine, doxorubicin, and vindesine (MOPPEBVCAD), were compared with doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (ABVD) as standard therapy to select which regimen would best support a reduced radiotherapy program, which was limited to < or = two sites of either previous bulky or partially remitting disease (a modification of the original Stanford program). PATIENTS AND METHODS Three hundred fifty-five patients with stage IIB, III, or IV HL were randomly assigned. Three hundred thirty-four patients were assessable for the study and received six cycles of ABVD (n = 122), three cycles of Stanford V (n = 107), or six cycles of MOPPEBVCAD (n = 106); radiotherapy was administered to 76, 71, and 50 patients in these three arms, respectively. RESULTS The complete response rates for ABVD, Stanford V, and MOPPEBVCAD were 89%, 76% and 94%, respectively; 5-year failure-free survival (FFS) and progression-free survival rates were 78%, 54%, 81% and 85%, 73%, and 94%, respectively (P < .01 for comparison of Stanford V with the other two regimens). Corresponding 5-year overall survival rates were 90%, 82%, and 89% for ABVD, Stanford V, and MOPPEBVCAD, respectively. Stanford V was more myelotoxic than ABVD but less myelotoxic than MOPPEBVCAD, which had larger reductions in the prescribed drug doses. CONCLUSION When associated with conditioned and limited (not adjuvant) radiotherapy, ABVD and MOPPEBVCAD were superior to Stanford V chemotherapy in terms of response rate and FFS and progression-free survival. Patients were irradiated less often after MOPPEBVCAD, but this regimen was more toxic. ABVD is still the best choice when it is combined with optional, limited irradiation.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2007
Samantha Pozzi; Raffaella Marcheselli; Stefano Sacchi; Luca Baldini; Francesco Angrilli; Elsa Pennese; Giovanni Quarta; Caterina Stelitano; Giuseppe Caparotti; Stefano Luminari; Pellegrino Musto; Donato Natale; Chiara Broglia; Angela Cuoghi; Daniele Dini; Paolo Di Tonno; Giovanna Leonardi; Graziano Pianezze; Vincenzo Pitini; Giuseppe Polimeno; Luisa Ponchio; Luciano Masini; Maurizio Musso; Mauro Spriano; Giuseppe Pollastri
Over a period of 28 months, we observed five cases of osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ) in cancer patients treated with bisphosphonates (BP) at our institution. This prompted us to undertake a retrospective, multicenter study to analyse the characteristics of patients who exhibited ONJ and to define the frequency of ONJ in multiple myeloma (MM). We identified 35 cases in Gruppo Italiano Studio Linfomi centers during the period 2002 – 05. The median time from cancer diagnosis to the clinical onset of ONJ was 70 months. In these 35 cases of ONJ, 24 appeared 20 – 60 months after starting BP treatment. The time for the onset of ONJ was significantly shorter for patients treated with zoledronic acid alone than for those treated with pamidronate followed by zoledronic acid. The frequency of ONJ in the MM group during the study period was 1.9%, although the nature of the present study may have resulted in an underestimation of ONJ cases. Our analysis strongly suggested an association between the use of BP and the occurrence of ONJ, although we were unable to identify any definite risk factors with a retrospective study. The most frequently ONJ-associated clinical characteristics were chemotherapy treatment, steroid treatment, advanced age, female sex, anemia, parodonthopaties/dental procedures and thalidomide (in the case of MM patients).
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005
Luca Baldini; Maria Cecilia Goldaniga; Andrea Guffanti; Chiara Broglia; Sergio Cortelazzo; Andrea Rossi; Enrica Morra; Mariangela Colombi; Vincenzo Callea; Enrico Maria Pogliani; Fiorella Ilariucci; Stefano Luminari; Pierre Morel; Giampaolo Merlini; Paolo G. Gobbi
PURPOSE To evaluate the clinicohematologic variables at diagnosis that are prognostically related to neoplastic progression in patients with immunoglobulin M (IgM) monoclonal gammopathies of undetermined significance (MGUS), and indolent Waldenströms macroglobulinemia (IWM), and propose a scoring system to identify subsets of patients at different risk. PATIENTS AND METHODS We evaluated 217 patients with IgM MGUS and 201 with IWM (male-female ratio, 131:86 and 117:84; mean age, 63.7 and 63.6 years, respectively) diagnosed on the basis of serum monoclonal component (MC) levels and bone marrow lymphoplasmacytic infiltration degree. The variables selected by univariate analyses were multivariately investigated; on the basis of their individual relative hazards, a scoring system was devised to identify subsets of patients at different risk of evolution. RESULTS After a median follow-up of 56.1 and 60.2 months, 15 of 217 MGUS and 45 of 201 IWM patients, respectively, required chemotherapy for symptomatic WM (13 and 36), non-Hodgkins lymphoma (2 and 6) and amyloidosis (0 and 3). The median time to evolution (TTE) was not reached for MGUS and was 141.5 months for IWM. The variables adversely related to evolution were qualitatively the same in both groups: MC levels, Hb concentrations and sex. A scoring system based on these parameters identified three risk groups with highly significant differences in TTE in both groups (P < .0001). CONCLUSION MGUS and IWM identify disease entities with different propensities for symptomatic neoplastic evolution. As both have the same prognostic determinants of progression, we propose a practical scoring system that, identifying different risks of malignant evolution, may allow an individualized clinical approach.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2005
Paolo G. Gobbi; Luca Baldini; Chiara Broglia; Maria Cecilia Goldaniga; Mario Comelli; Pierre Morel; Enrica Morra; Sergio Cortelazzo; Roberto Bettini; Giampaolo Merlini
Purpose: To verify the reliability of the new criteria for the diagnosis of IgM gammopathies recently proposed by an international panel of experts (Athens, 2002). Experimental Design: A retrospective series of 698 patients with IgM gammopathy was reviewed paying attention to symptoms, serum IgM concentration, bone marrow infiltration, blood cell count and clinical course. Four clinical entities can be identified: IgM monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (IgM-MGUS), asymptomatic and symptomatic Wandenströms macroglobulinemia (A-WM and S-WM, respectively), and IgM-related disorders, although this last was excluded from the study because of the scarcity of patients due to probable selection biases. The observed mortality was studied related to that expected in the general population of comparable age and sex and over an equivalent period of follow-up (standardized mortality ratio, SMR). Results: IgM-MGUS, A-WM, and S-WM shared many clinical aspects but, with respect to the general population, patients with IgM-MGUS had a slight but definite survival advantage, those with A-WM had a mortality rate equivalent to that of the general population, whereas the SMR of patients with S-WM was 5.4. Within A-WM and S-WM the SMR values did not vary significantly in relation to marrow lymphocyte counts or serum IgM concentrations. Conclusions: Our findings represent a prognostic validation of the applied diagnostic criteria for three of the four identifiable clinical entities and highlight the importance of symptoms over serum IgM concentration and marrow infiltration.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2011
Giovanni D'Arena; Paolo G. Gobbi; Chiara Broglia; Stefano Sacchi; Giovanni Quarta; Luca Baldini; Emilio Iannitto; Antonietta Falcone; Roberto Guariglia; Giuseppe Pietrantuono; Oreste Villani; Maria Carmen Martorelli; Giovanna Mansueto; Grazia Sanpaolo; Nicola Cascavilla; Pellegrino Musto
A prospective, multicenter, randomized trial comparing pamidronate administration (60–90 mg once a month for 1 year) versus simple observation in 177 patients with asymptomatic myeloma was performed to explore whether the administration of this drug reduces the rate of and/or the time to progression to overt, symptomatic disease. No relevant side effects were recorded in pamidronate-treated patients. With a minimum follow-up of 5 years for live patients, there were 56/89 (62.9%) progressions in the pamidronate-treated group and 55/88 (62.5%) within the controls (p = NS). Median time to progression was 46 and 48 months, respectively (p = NS). Overall survival was also similar between the two groups. Skeletal-related events at the time of progression were observed in 40/55 (72.7%) controls, but only in 22/56 (39.2%) pamidronate-treated patients (p = 0.009). In conclusion, the administration of pamidronate in asymptomatic myeloma, while reducing bone involvement at progression, did not decrease the risk of transformation and the time to progression into overt myeloma.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001
Paolo G. Gobbi; Maria L. Ghirardelli; Marco Solcia; Giuseppe Di Giulio; Francesco Merli; Luisa Tavecchia; Raffaella Bertè; Ottavio Davini; Alessandro Levis; Chiara Broglia; Gabriella Carnevale Maffè; Fiorella Ilariucci; Roberto Dore; Edoardo Ascari
PURPOSE To explore a more direct method for evaluating tumor burden (TB) in Hodgkins disease (HD) and to verify its prognostic importance. PATIENTS AND METHODS The volume of TB at diagnosis was directly and retrospectively measured in 121 HD patients through images of the lesions recorded by computed tomographic (CT) scan of the thorax, abdomen, and pelvis for all deep sites of involvement and many superficial ones, and by ultrasonography (US) for the remaining superficial lesions. RESULTS The TB, which was obtained from the sum of the volumes of all the lesions measured on CT scans and US and normalized to body-surface area (relative TB [rTB]), showed a median value of 102.6 cm(3)/m(2) (range, 2.2 to 582.8). At multivariate analysis for prognostic value, rTB was the parameter that statistically correlated best with time to treatment failure (P = 2.2 x 10(-6)), followed by erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) (P =.0003), and serum fibrinogen (P =.0112). The prognostic discrimination allowed by rTB alone proved to be clearly superior to that obtained with the score of the International Prognostic Factor Project. The rTB was found to be correlated with many clinical staging parameters (bulky disease, number of involved lymph node regions, serum lactate dehydrogenase, ESR, hemoglobin, Karnofsky index), but its predictability from these variables was low (R(2) =.668). CONCLUSION Relative TB is emerging as a strong prognostic factor in HD, more powerful than and largely independent of those hitherto known and used. Further studies are needed to confirm these results and exploit their clinical value, particularly the relationship among rTB, drug doses, and response.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2006
Paolo G. Gobbi; Chiara Broglia; Alessandro Levis; Antonio La Sala; Francesco Valentino; Teodoro Chisesi; Stefano Sacchi; Franco Corbella; Luigi Cavanna; Emilio Iannitto; V. Pavone; Stefano Molica; Gino Roberto Corazza; Massimo Federico
Purpose: MOPPEBVCAD (mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone, epidoxirubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, lomustine, doxorubicin, and vindesine) chemotherapy with limited radiotherapy was devised in 1987 to reduce late toxicity and second tumor incidence while trying to improve effectiveness through increases of dose intensity and dose density. Late results, toxicity, and second tumor incidence were reviewed in all the patients treated. Experimental Design: The drugs of three previous alternating regimens [CAD (lomustine, melphalan, and vindesine), MOPP (mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone), and ABV (doxorubicin, bleomycin, and vinblastine)] were intensified and hybridized, the cumulative dose of mechlorethamine was lowered, and irradiation was delivered to no more than two sites either bulky or partially responding to chemotherapy. Results: A total of 307 previously untreated advanced-stage patients underwent MOPPEBVCAD chemotherapy. Radiotherapy was delivered to 118 of 307 patients (38%). Remission was complete in 290 patients (94%). With a median follow-up of 114 months, 10-year overall, disease-free, and failure-free survival rates were 79%, 84%, and 71%, respectively. Forty-two patients relapsed and 60 died. The causes of death were Hodgkins lymphoma in 36 patients, second neoplasms in 12, cardiorespiratory diseases in 4, pulmonary diseases in 2, and unknown in 6. Sixteen second tumors (of which nine were myelodysplasia and/or acute leukemia) were diagnosed in all. Outside this series of 307 patients, MOPPEBVCAD obtained complete responses in 12 of 15 relapsed and 9 of 9 refractory patients who had previously been treated with other regimens. Conclusions: Clinical response and long-term results are very satisfactory, whereas the second tumor incidence was lower than would have been expected with MOPP analogues. Given its response/late toxicity balance, MOPPEBVCAD does not undermine the leading role of ABVD as first-line regimen but can be indicated as a very effective second-line conventional therapy.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2002
Marco Lombardo; Fortunato Morabito; Francesco Merli; Stefano Molica; Luigi Cavanna; Stefano Sacchi; Chiara Broglia; Francesco Angrilli; Fiorella Ilariucci; Caterina Stelitano; Dimitri Luisi; Raffaella Bertè; Stefano Luminari; Massimo Federico; Maura Brugiatelli
At present we report the results of a prospective, non-randomized open trial, conducted on follicular lymphoma (FL) patients by the Gruppo Italiano per lo Studio dei Linfomi (GISL), after a median follow-up of 62.6 months. Seventy-three patients with FL were registered to the study and treated with combination chemotherapy consisting of cyclophosphamide, epidoxorubicin, vincristine, bleomycin and prednisone, weekly administered every 4 weeks. After chemotherapy, involved-field radiotherapy was delivered in case of either localized, bulky and extranodal disease at presentation or limited residual disease at the end of chemotherapy. Patient received four or eight chemotherapy courses in case of localized or advanced disease, respectively. The overall response rate at the end of the treatment program was 97.3%, with 78.1% CR and 19.2% PR. CR rate was 94.3 and 63.1% in stage I-II and III-IV, respectively (p =0.006). Beside the stage, response rate was significantly influenced by bone marrow involvement, and the number of extranodal sites. Relapse free survival was 60.8% at 5 years in the whole series; in localized disease it was 70.3 vs. 44.8% in advanced disease (p =0.044). Relapse free survival was significantly influenced by stage, bone marrow involvement, number of extranodal sites and International Prognostic Index (IPI) score. The overall 5-year survival rate was 90.2%; being 95.6% for patients with stage I-II and 85.1% for those III-IV (p =0,0133). In addition, both IPI and Italian Lymphoma Intergroup (ILI) score had a significant impact on survival. The toxicity profile of the treatment was acceptable. From the results of this prospective study it is possible to conclude that this regimen and the whole treatment program is effective as first line therapy for the general population of FL. In particular the BACOP schedule is a valid anthracycline-containing regimen, and in this respect suitable to be considered as a treatment option.
Seminars in Oncology | 2003
Giampaolo Merlini; Luca Baldini; Chiara Broglia; Mario Comelli; Maria Cecilia Goldaniga; Giovanni Palladini; Giorgio Lambertenghi Deliliers; Paolo G. Gobbi
Haematologica | 2000
Paolo G. Gobbi; Maria L. Ghirardelli; Carla Cavalli; Luca Baldini; Chiara Broglia; Vera Clò; Raffaella Bertè; Fiorella Ilariucci; Mario Carotenuto; Lino Piccinini; Caterina Stelitano; Giuseppe Attardo-Parrinello; Edoardo Ascari
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Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico
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