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Dive into the research topics where Franco Pannelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Franco Pannelli.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2003

Incidence of AIDS-defining cancers after AIDS diagnosis among people with AIDS in Italy, 1986-1998

Silvia Franceschi; Luigino Dal Maso; Patrizio Pezzotti; Jerry Polesel; Claudia Braga; Pierluca Piselli; Diego Serraino; Giovanna Tagliabue; Massimo Federico; Stefano Ferretti; Vincenzo De Lisi; Francesco La Rosa; Ettore Conti; M. Budroni; Gianni Vicario; Silvano Piffer; Franco Pannelli; Adriano Giacomin; Francesco Bellù; Rosario Tumino; Mario Fusco; Giovanni Rezza

A record linkage was carried out between the Italian National Registry of AIDS and 19 cancer registries. The aim was to evaluate the 1986 through 1998 trends in incidence rate (IR) of AIDS-defining cancers (ADCs) among persons with AIDS (PWA) in Italy overall and according to various characteristics. A steady decrease in IRs was found for Kaposi sarcoma (KS) in men between 1986–1992 (2.5 per 100 person-years [py]) and 1997–1998 (1.0 per 100 py). Conversely, the first decrease in IRs of KS in women (from 0.9 to 0.6 per 100 py) and of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in both genders (from 1.7 to 0.7 per 100 py) was seen between 1993–1996 and 1997–1998, thus pointing to a favorable impact of highly active antiretroviral therapies. The decline was consistent across different age and HIV transmission groups, but it was more marked in PWA with a CD4 count >50 cells/&mgr;L than in PWA with more severe immune suppression. As a proportion of AIDS cases, invasive cervical cancer increased from 1.5% in 1993–1996 to 2.4% in 1997–1998, but IRs after AIDS could not be evaluated. On account of the marked decline of KS in men in 1997–1998, the overall burden of ADCs in Italy became similar in both genders.


Italian Journal of Pediatrics | 2014

SETIL: Italian multicentric epidemiological case–control study on risk factors for childhood leukaemia, non hodgkin lymphoma and neuroblastoma: study population and prevalence of risk factors in Italy

Corrado Magnani; Stefano Mattioli; Lucia Miligi; Alessandra Ranucci; Roberto Rondelli; Alberto Salvan; Luigi Bisanti; Giuseppe Masera; Carmelo Rizzari; Paola Zambon; Santina Cannizzaro; Lorenzo Gafà; Lia Luzzatto; Alessandra Benvenuti; Paola Michelozzi; Ursula Kirchmayer; Pierluigi Cocco; Pierfranco Biddau; Claudia Galassi; Egidio Celentano; Erni Guarino; Giorgio Assennato; Gigliola de Nichilo; Domenico Franco Merlo; Vittorio Bocchini; Franco Pannelli; Paola Mosciatti; Liliana Minelli; Manuela Chiavarini; Marina Cuttini

BackgroundAetiology of childhood leukaemia and childhood neoplasm is poorly understood. Information on the prevalence of risk factors in the childhood population is limited. SETIL is a population based case–control study on childhood leukaemia, conducted with two companion studies on non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL) and neuroblastoma. The study relies on questionnaire interviews and 50 Hz magnetic field (ELF-MF) indoor measurements. This paper discusses the SETIL study design and includes descriptive information.MethodsThe study was carried out in 14 Italian regions (78.3% of Italian population aged 0–10). It included leukaemia, NHL and neuroblastoma cases incident in 0–10 year olds in 1998–2001, registered by the Italian Association of Paediatric Haematology and Oncology (AIEOP) (accrual over 95% of estimated incidence). Two controls for each leukaemia case were randomly sampled from the Local Health Authorities rolls, matched by gender, birthdate and residence. The same controls were used in NHL and neuroblastoma studies. Parents were interviewed at home on: physical agents (ELF-MF and ionizing radiation), chemicals (smoking, solvents, traffic, insecticides), occupation, medical and personal history of children and parents, infectious diseases, immunizations and associated factors. Occupational exposure was collected using job specific modules. ELF-MF was measured in the main rooms (spot measurement) and close to child’s bed (48 hours measurement).ResultsThe study included: 683 leukaemia cases (87% ALL, 13% AnLL), 97 NHL, 155 neuroblastomas, and 1044 controls.ELF-MF long term measurements were obtained for 61.1% of controls and 81.6% of leukaemia cases; 8.8% of controls were exposed at over 0.1 microTesla (μT), 3.5% and 2.1% at respectively over 0.2 and 0.3 μT. 25% of controls’ fathers had smoked over 10 cigarettes/day during the year of conception, varying according to education and region. Maternal smoking was less common (71.4% did not smoke in pregnancy). Maternal passive smoking during pregnancy was reported by 31.2% of controls; the child’s passive smoking for 28.6%.Occupational exposure to solvents was estimated in 18.3% of controls’ fathers and 7.7% of mothers. Contact with public was more frequent among mothers (36.1%) than fathers (23.4%).ConclusionsSETIL represents a data source on exposure of Italian children to a broad array of potential carcinogenic factors.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 1989

Tobacco smoking, coffee, cocoa and tea consumption in relation to mortality from urinary bladder cancer in Italy

Franco Pannelli; F. La Rosa; G. Saltalamacchia; R Vitali; Anna Maria Petrinelli; V. Mastrandrea

This paper examines changes in mortality from urinary bladder cancer in Italy during the years 1950-81 in relation to changes in smoking habits and in coffee, cocoa and tea consumption. The authors found that, in both sexes and for all ages, mortality has been increasing throughout this period, although the rates and relative increase have consistently been much lower and more gradual for women than for men.From the analysis of age-cohort-period variation it seems that bladder cancer mortality can also be influenced by changes in smoking habit patterns and by variation in the quality of diagnoses. The increase in death risk for both sexes in Italy up to cohorts born around 1905-10 can be related to occupational exposures and to high-tar-content tobacco smoking, whereas the tendency for mortality rates to stabilize and decline in cohorts born after 1910 were influenced by changes from high-tar-content and no-filter cigarettes to low-tar-content and filter cigarettes and by prevention measures taken in at-risk working environments.The consumption of coffee, cocoa and tea does not seem to be related to the increase in bladder cancer risk in Italy.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 1990

Parallelism in the mortality clustering of the most frequent cancer sites in Italy and in the Marche region

G. Saltalamacchia; F. La Rosa; Franco Pannelli

Clusters of selected cancer sites mortality, regarding Italy and the Marche region, were compared. Very similar associations were found both in males and in females, in particular between the alcohol-tobacco-related sites. Many clusters agree with the international literature, while others could constitute a starting point for formulating new hypotheses.


Archives of Medical Research | 2016

Road Traffic Pollution and Childhood Leukemia: A Nationwide Case-control Study in Italy

Corrado Magnani; Alessandra Ranucci; Chiara Badaloni; Giulia Cesaroni; Daniela Ferrante; Lucia Miligi; Stefano Mattioli; Roberto Rondelli; Luigi Bisanti; Paola Zambon; Santina Cannizzaro; Paola Michelozzi; Pierluigi Cocco; Egidio Celentano; Giorgio Assennato; Domenico Franco Merlo; Paola Mosciatti; Liliana Minelli; Marina Cuttini; Maria Valeria Torregrossa; Susanna Lagorio; Riccardo Haupt; Francesco Forastiere; Andrea Farioli; Alberto Salvan; Giuseppe Masera; Carmelo Rizzari; Alessandra Greco Veneto; Lorenzo Gafà; Lia Luzzatto

BACKGROUND The association of childhood leukemia with traffic pollution was considered in a number of studies from 1989 onwards, with results not entirely consistent and little information regarding subtypes. AIM OF THE STUDY We used the data of the Italian SETIL case-control on childhood leukemia to explore the risk by leukemia subtypes associated to exposure to vehicular traffic. METHODS We included in the analyses 648 cases of childhood leukemia (565 Acute lymphoblastic-ALL and 80 Acute non lymphoblastic-AnLL) and 980 controls. Information on traffic exposure was collected from questionnaire interviews and from the geocoding of house addresses, for all periods of life of the children. RESULTS We observed an increase in risk for AnLL, and at a lower extent for ALL, with indicators of exposure to traffic pollutants. In particular, the risk was associated to the report of closeness of the house to traffic lights and to the passage of trucks (OR: 1.76; 95% CI 1.03-3.01 for ALL and 6.35; 95% CI 2.59-15.6 for AnLL). The association was shown also in the analyses limited to AML and in the stratified analyses and in respect to the house in different period of life. CONCLUSIONS Results from the SETIL study provide some support to the association of traffic related exposure and risk for AnLL, but at a lesser extent for ALL. Our conclusion highlights the need for leukemia type specific analyses in future studies. Results support the need of controlling exposure from traffic pollution, even if knowledge is not complete.


European Journal of Cancer | 2007

Analysis of latency time and its determinants in asbestos related malignant mesothelioma cases of the Italian register

Alessandro Marinaccio; Alessandra Binazzi; Gabriella Cauzillo; Domenica Cavone; Renata De Zotti; Pierpaolo Ferrante; Valerio Gennaro; Giuseppe Gorini; Massimo Menegozzo; Carolina Mensi; Enzo Merler; Dario Mirabelli; Fabio Montanaro; Marina Musti; Franco Pannelli; Antonio Romanelli; Alberto Scarselli; Rosario Tumino


European Journal of Cancer | 2006

Geographical patterns of childhood cancer incidence in Europe, 1988-1997. Report from the Automated Childhood Cancer Information System project

Charles Stiller; R. Marcos-Gragera; E. Ardanaz; Franco Pannelli; E. Almar Marqués; A. Cañada Martinez; Eva Steliarova-Foucher


Tumori | 2005

National estimates of cancer patients survival in Italy: A model-based method

Riccardo Inghelmann; Enrico Grande; Silvia Francisci; Roberta De Angelis; Andrea Micheli; Arduino Verdecchia; Stefano Ferretti; Marina Vercelli; Valerio Ramazzotti; Franco Pannelli; Massimo Federico; Vincenzo De Lisi; Rosario Tumino; Fabio Falcini; M. Budroni; Roberto Zanetti; Eugenio Paci; Paolo Crosignani; Paola Zambon; Riccardo Capocaccia


American Journal of Industrial Medicine | 2006

The Italian Surveillance System for Occupational Cancers: Characteristics, Initial Results, and Future Prospects

Paolo Crosignani; Stefania Massari; Roberto Audisio; Plinio Amendola; Silvio Cavuto; Alessandra Scaburri; Paola Zambon; Giovanni Nedoclan; Fabrizio Stracci; Franco Pannelli; Marina Vercelli; Lucia Miligi; Marcello Imbriani; Franco Berrino


Medicina Del Lavoro | 2005

Epidemiologic surveillance for primary prevention of malignant mesothelioma : the Italian experience

Nesti M; Alessandro Marinaccio; Gennaro; Gorini G; Dario Mirabelli; Carolina Mensi; Enzo Merler; Montanaro F; Marina Musti; Franco Pannelli; Antonio Romanelli; Tumino R

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Rosario Tumino

International Agency for Research on Cancer

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