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Dive into the research topics where Elisa Nardecchia is active.

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Featured researches published by Elisa Nardecchia.


International Journal of Surgery | 2008

Peri-operative complications of video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS)

Andrea Imperatori; Nicola Rotolo; Matteo Gatti; Elisa Nardecchia; Lavinia De Monte; Valentina Conti; Lorenzo Dominioni

Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) has multiple indications for diagnosis and treatment of many different thoracic diseases; the commonest are lung wedge resection, pleural and mediastinal biopsy, treatment of pneumothorax, and pleurectomy. Moreover, in recent years a few surgeons have performed routinely major lung anatomic resections by VATS approach, including segmentectomy, lobectomy and pneumonectomy. In our experience VATS constitutes about one-third of all thoracic surgical procedures. In the reviewed literature as in the most frequent complications after VATS procedures are: prolonged air leak, bleeding, infection, postoperative pain, port site recurrence and the need to convert the access in thoracotomy. The complication and mortality rates are generally very low and VATS procedures are considered safe and effective. It is recommended that all thoracic surgery departments audit their VATS procedures for peri-operative morbidity and mortality to compare results and outcomes.


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2014

Risk factors for postoperative recurrence of spontaneous pneumothorax treated by video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery

Andrea Imperatori; Nicola Rotolo; Marco Spagnoletti; Luigi Festi; Fabio Berizzi; Davide Di Natale; Elisa Nardecchia; Lorenzo Dominioni

OBJECTIVES Over the past two decades, video-assisted thoracoscopic blebectomy and pleurodesis have been used as a safe and reliable option for treatment of spontaneous pneumothorax. The aim of this study is to evaluate the long-term outcome of video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) treatment of spontaneous pneumothorax in young patients, and to identify risk factors for postoperative recurrence. METHODS We retrospectively analysed the outcome of VATS treatment of spontaneous pneumothorax in our institution in 150 consecutive young patients (age ≤ 40 years) in the years 1997-2010. Treatment consisted of stapling blebectomy and partial parietal pleurectomy. After excluding 16 patients lost to follow-up, in 134 cases [110 men, 24 women; mean age, 25 ± 7 standard deviation years; median follow-up, 79 months (range: 36-187 months)], we evaluated postoperative complications, focusing on pneumothorax recurrence, thoracic dysaesthesia and chronic chest pain. Risk factors for postoperative pneumothorax recurrence were analysed by logistic regression. RESULTS Of 134 treated patients, 3 (2.2%) required early reoperation (2 for bleeding; 1 for persistent air leaks). Postoperative (90-day) mortality was nil. Ipsilateral pneumothorax recurred in 8 cases (6.0%) [median time of recurrence, 43 months (range: 1-71 months)]. At univariate analysis, the recurrence rate was significantly higher in women (4/24) than in men (4/110; P = 0.026) and in patients with >7-day postoperative air leaks (P = 0.021). Multivariate analysis confirmed that pneumothorax recurrence correlated independently with prolonged air leaks (P = 0.037) and with female gender (P = 0.045). Chronic chest wall dysaesthesia was reported by 13 patients (9.7%). In 3 patients, (2.2%) chronic thoracic pain (analogical score >4) was recorded, but only 1 patient required analgesics more than once a month. CONCLUSIONS VATS blebectomy and parietal pleurectomy is a safe procedure for treatment of spontaneous pneumothorax in young patients, with a 6% long-term recurrence rate in our experience. Postoperative recurrence significantly correlates with female gender and with prolonged air leakage after surgery.


Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery | 2011

Bronchogenic cyst associated with pericardial defect: Case report and review of the literature

Andrea Imperatori; Nicola Rotolo; Elisa Nardecchia; Giovanni Mariscalco; Marco Spagnoletti; Lorenzo Dominioni

Partial defect of the pericardium combined with bronchogenic cyst is a very rare congenital anomaly. We describe the case of a 32-year-old man with a partial defect of the left pericardium and a bronchogenic cyst arising from the border of the pericardial defect. The cyst was successfully resected with the harmonic scalpel by three-port videothoracoscopic approach.


Journal of Chemotherapy | 2010

Five-year survival of stage IIIA-IIIB (non-N3) non-small cell lung cancer patients after platinum/gemcitabine induction chemotherapy and surgery.

Andrea Imperatori; D La Salvia; Nicola Rotolo; Elisa Nardecchia; M Bandera; Olga Toungoussova; Antonio Spanevello; Lorenzo Dominioni

Abstract The 5-year survival rate of marginally resectable nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients treated by platinum/gemcitabine induction chemotherapy and surgery is not well documented. We studied 47 consecutive patients with NSCLC stage IIIA-IIIB (non-N3) treated with platinum/gemcitabine induction chemotherapy (median: 3 cycles) and evaluated the objective response, resectability, surgical morbidity/mortality and long-term survival rate. The induction chemotherapy was completed by 45/47 patients. Objective response was: 36% partial, 32% stable disease, 28% progression, 0% complete; two patients (4%) died during induction chemotherapy. tumor respectability was 74%, postoperative morbidity 34%, mortality nil. 26% of patients were unresectable. In the whole cohort the 5-year survival was 25% (95%CI, 17%-32%) and the median survival was 22 months (28 months in resected patients; 7 months in unresectable). In conclusion, in the intention-to-treat population undergoing platinum/gemcitabine induction chemotherapy, resectability was high (74%) and the 5-year survival rate was 25%. median survival in resected cases was three-fold greater than in the unresected.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2013

The challenge of prognostic markers in pleural mesothelioma

Andrea Imperatori; Massimo Castiglioni; Lorenzo Mortara; Elisa Nardecchia; Nicola Rotolo

Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a very aggressive tumor, highly resistant to chemo- and radio-therapy. Treatment of MPM patients is often disappointing, regardless of the modality used. Inter-individual variability of response to multimodal treatment remains a challenge and generally the MPM prognosis continues to be poor. Knowledge of predicting factors of outcome is currently insufficient; therefore, it would be highly desirable to find specific prognostic markers for MPM. Translational research projects are to be implemented.


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2016

Chest pain control with kinesiology taping after lobectomy for lung cancer: initial results of a randomized placebo-controlled study †

Andrea Imperatori; Annamaria Grande; Massimo Castiglioni; Laura Gasperini; Agnese Faini; Sebastiano Spampatti; Elisa Nardecchia; Lorena Terzaghi; Lorenzo Dominioni; Nicola Rotolo

OBJECTIVES Kinesiology taping (KT) is a rehabilitative technique performed by the cutaneous application of a special elastic tape. We tested the safety and efficacy of KT in reducing postoperative chest pain after lung lobectomy. METHODS One-hundred and seventeen consecutive patients, both genders, age 18-85, undergoing lobectomy for lung cancer between January 2013 and July 2015 were initially considered. Lobectomies were performed by the same surgical team, with thoracotomy or video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) access. Exclusion criteria (n = 25 patients) were: previous KT exposure, recent trauma, pre-existing chest pain, lack of informed consent, >24-h postoperative intensive care unit treatment. After surgery, the 92 eligible patients were randomized to KT experimental group (n = 46) or placebo control group (n = 46). Standard postoperative analgesia was administered in both groups (paracetamol/non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, epidural analgesia including opioids), with supplemental analgesia boluses at patient request. On postoperative day 1 in addition, in experimental group patients a specialized physiotherapist applied KT, with standardized tape length, tension and shape, over three defined skin areas: at the chest access site pain trigger point; over the ipsilateral deltoid/trapezius; lower anterior chest. In control group, usual dressing tape mimicking KT was applied over the same areas, as placebo. Thoracic pain severity score [visual analogue scale (VAS) ranging 0-10] was self-assessed by all patients on postoperative days 1, 2, 5, 8, 9 and 30. RESULTS The KT group and the control group had similar demographics, lung cancer clinico-pathological features and thoracotomy/VATS ratio. Postoperatively, the two groups also resulted similar in supplemental analgesia, complication rate, mean duration of chest drainage and length of stay. There were no adverse events with KT application. After tape application, KT patients reported overall less thoracic pain than the control group, the difference being significant on postoperative day 5 [median VAS, 2 (interquartile range, 1-3) vs 3 (2-5), P < 0.01] and day 8 [median VAS, 1 (0-2) vs 2 (1-3), P < 0.05]. Moreover, on postoperative day 30 persistence of chest pain (VAS ≥3) was reported less frequently by the KT group than by the control group (7 vs 24%; P = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS KT after lung lobectomy is a safe and effective auxiliary technique for chest pain control. ISRCTN REGISTRY ISRCTN37253470.


Lung Cancer | 2017

LINE-1 hypomethylation is associated to specific clinico-pathological features in Stage I non-small cell lung cancer

Andrea Imperatori; Nora Sahnane; Nicola Rotolo; Francesca Franzi; Elisa Nardecchia; Laura Libera; Chiara Romualdi; Maria Cattoni; Fausto Sessa; Lorenzo Dominioni; Daniela Furlan

OBJECTIVES We hypothesize that selected genetic and/or epigenetic changes associated with advanced tumours may help identifying early non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLCs) that recur after resection. Among epigenetic changes, long interspersed nuclear element-1 (LINE-1) hypomethylation is seen early during carcinogenesis and may act in concert with genetic alterations to cancer progression. LINE-1 hypomethylation and gene mutations frequently involved in lung cancer, were analysed to evaluate their prognostic role in resected stage I NSCLC. METHODS Gene mutations and LINE-1 methylation were analysed in 167 Caucasian patients with stage I NSCLC, namely 100 adenocarcinomas (ADC) and 67 squamous-cell carcinomas (SqCC), using mass-spectrometry and pyrosequencing. We evaluated the correlation between molecular results and clinico-pathological data: age, gender, smoking status, period of surgery, histology, grading, pathological stage, p53 expression, LINE-1 hypomethylation. These variables have been assessed as possible predictors of cancer related survival by regression analysis. RESULTS Frequency and spectrum of gene mutations were significantly different in ADCs compared with SqCCs. p53 positivity was more common in SqCC, while EGFR or KRAS mutations were mainly detected in ADC. LINE1 hypomethylation was associated with SqCC histology, p53 immunoreactivity and smoking habit. Stage IB, LINE-1 hypomethylation and PIK3CA mutation independently predicted a worse cancer-related survival. When combined into a scoring system, their prognostic power was strengthened. CONCLUSIONS In many stage I NSCLC a mutation pattern of advanced disease was observed. Stage IB, LINE-1 hypomethylation and PIK3CA mutation were associated to poor prognosis. Genetic and epigenetic events occurring in early carcinogenesis may help identifying stage I NSCLC patients who deserve adjuvant therapy.


Journal of Thoracic Disease | 2017

Comparison of multiple techniques for endobronchial ultrasound-transbronchial needle aspiration specimen preparation in a single institution experience

Nicola Rotolo; Maria Cattoni; Giorgio Crosta; Elisa Nardecchia; Albino Poli; Francesca Moretti; Valentina Conti; Stefano La Rosa; Lorenzo Dominioni; Andrea Imperatori

BACKGROUND The optimal method for specimen preparation of endobronchial ultrasound-transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) is still controversial. This study aims to compare several techniques available for EBUS-TBNA specimen acquisition and processing, in order to identify the best performing technique. METHODS We retrospectively reviewed the data of 199 consecutive patients [male, 73%; median age, 64 years (IQR: 52-74 years)] undergoing EBUS-TBNA at our institution from 2012 through 2014 for diagnosis of hilar-mediastinal lymph node enlargement suspect of neoplastic (n=139) or granulomatous (n=60) disease. All procedures were performed by two experienced bronchoscopists, under conscious sedation and local anaesthesia, using 21/22-Gauge (G) needle, without rapid on-site evaluation (ROSE). Five specimen-processing techniques were used: cytology slides in 42 cases (21%); cell-block in 25 (13%); core-tissue in 60 (30%); combination of cytology slides and core-tissue in 51 (26%); combination of cytology slides and cell-block in 21 (10%). To assess the diagnostic accuracy of each tissue-processing technique we compared the EBUS-TBNA results to those obtained with surgical lymphadenectomy, or 1-year follow-up in non-operated patients. RESULTS Diagnostic yield, accuracy and area under the curve (AUC) were as follows. Cytology slides: 81%, 80%, 0.90; cell-block: 48%, 33%, 0.67; core-tissue: 87%, 99%, 0.96; cytology slides + core-tissue: 80%, 100%, 1.00; cytology slides + cell-block: 86%, 100%, 1.00. Cytology slides and core-tissue method showed non-significantly different diagnostic yield (P=0.435) and AUC (P=0.152). CONCLUSIONS In our single-institution experience, cytology slides and core-tissue preparations demonstrated high and similar diagnostic performance. Cytology slides combination with core-tissue or cell-block showed the highest performance, however these combination methods were more resource-consuming.


Thorax | 2016

Resection rate of lung cancer in Teesside (UK) and Varese (Italy): a comparison after implementation of the National Cancer Plan

Andrea Imperatori; Richard Harrison; Lorenzo Dominioni; Neil Leitch; Elisa Nardecchia; Vandana Jeebun; Jacqueline Brown; Elena Altieri; Massimo Castiglioni; Maria Cattoni; Nicola Rotolo

Background In a lung cancer survey in 2000 we showed significantly less favourable stage distribution and lower resection rate in Teesside (UK) than in the comparable industrialised area of Varese (Italy). Lung cancer services in Teesside were subsequently reorganised according to National Cancer Plan recommendations. Methods For all new lung cancer cases diagnosed in Teesside (n=324) and Varese (n=260) during the 12 months October 2010 to September 2011 (hereafter ‘the 2010 cohort’), demographic, clinico-pathological and disease management data were prospectively recorded using the same database and protocol as the 2000 survey. Findings were analysed focusing on resection rate. Results In the 2010 cohort compared with 2000, both in Teesside and Varese emergency referral decreased (p<0.001), performance status improved (p<0.001), but cancer stage shift was not seen; resection rate improved in Teesside, from 7% to 11% (p=0.054), and was unchanged in Varese (24%). Moreover, in Teesside compared with Varese the stage distribution remained less favourable, stage I–II non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) proportion being respectively 12% and 19% (p=0.040), and resection rate in all lung cancers remained lower (11% and 24%; p<0.001). On multivariate analysis, resection predictors in Teesside were as follows: stage I–II NSCLC (OR 86.14; 95% CI 31.80 to 233.37), performance status 0–1 (OR 5.02; 95% CI 1.48 to 17.07), belonging to 2010 cohort (OR 2.85; 95% CI 1.06 to 7.64). Conclusions In Teesside the main independent predictor of resection was disease stage; in 2010–2011 compared with 2000, lung cancer service improved but stage shift did not occur, and resection rate increased but remained significantly lower than in Varese.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2015

Assessment of the aggregate risk score to predict mortality after surgical biopsy for interstitial lung disease

Nicola Rotolo; Andrea Imperatori; Albino Poli; Elisa Nardecchia; Massimo Castiglioni; Maria Cattoni; Lorenzo Dominioni

OBJECTIVES An aggregate risk score (range 0-6 points) for predicting mortality after surgical biopsy for interstitial lung disease (ILD) was recently developed from four independent variables: intensive care unit treatment (2 points), age >67 years (1.5 points), immunosuppression (1.5 points), open biopsy (1 point). In the development cohort, patients were grouped in four classes of aggregate score (A, B, C, D) showing incremental risk of death within 90 days from biopsy. We tested this mortality risk model in an independent cohort. METHODS The aggregate risk score and the corresponding class of 90-day mortality risk was retrospectively determined in 151 consecutive patients undergoing biopsy for uncertain ILD at the Center for Thoracic Surgery, University of Insubria (Varese, Italy) in 1997-2012. We evaluated, by Spearmans ρ test, the correlation between aggregate risk score and mortality rate in the development cohort and in our cohort. Fishers exact test was used for comparison of overall mortality rate between the two cohorts. RESULTS The mortality rate correlation with risk score differed in our cohort (ρ = 0.127; P = 0.06) compared with the development cohort (ρ = 0.352; P < 0.0001). In our dataset mortality polarized: it was minimal in Classes A and B (2% and 0%, respectively), 33% in Classes C and D. This skewed mortality distribution was possibly contributed by significantly lower overall mortality rate in our cohort than in the development cohort (2.6% vs 10.6%; P = 0.0017). Despite the difference in mortality distribution, in our dataset, we confirmed that ILD patients with aggregate score >2 (Classes C and D) were at exceedingly high risk of postoperative mortality. CONCLUSIONS The aggregate score is a simple and useful risk score for ILD. Our dataset confirms that lung biopsy is reasonably safe in Class A and B patients while, in Class C and D patients, it is indicated only if histology would substantially change management and prognosis.

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