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Featured researches published by G. Macchia.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2010

Long-term analysis of clinical outcome and complications in locally advanced cervical cancer patients administered concomitant chemoradiation followed by radical surgery

Gabriella Ferrandina; P.A. Margariti; Daniela Smaniotto; Marco Petrillo; Maria Giovanna Salerno; Anna Fagotti; G. Macchia; Alessio G. Morganti; N. Cellini; Giovanni Scambia

OBJECTIVE Preoperative chemoradiation (CT/RT) has been shown to achieve encouraging results in terms of clinical outcome in locally advanced cervical cancer (LACC). The study aims at analyzing the long-term results of this multimodal approach in a single institution series of 184 cases. METHODS Patients underwent whole pelvic irradiation combined with cisplatin and 5-fluorouracil. After evaluation of clinical response, patients were triaged to surgery. Surgical morbidity was classified according to Chassagne grading system. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to assess the prognostic and predictive role of clinicopathological parameters. RESULTS Clinical response was observed in 96.1% of cases. A total of 174 cases were submitted to radical surgery: 124 patients (71.3%) showed complete/microscopic pathological response. In multivariate analysis, clinical response, stage of disease, and histotype predicted response to CT/RT. With a median follow-up of 58 months, recurrence and death of disease were observed in 42 and 40 patients, respectively. The 5-year DFS was 75.5%, while the 5-year OS was 77.4%. Patients with no residual disease showed a significant longer DFS than patients with microscopic (p value = 0.0128), and macroscopic (p value = 0.0001) residual tumor after treatment. In multivariate analysis, residual tumor and stage of disease were the two most relevant prognostic factors for DFS and OS. As far as long-term toxicity is concerned, 8 out of 22 complications were grade 3/4. CONCLUSION Preoperative CT/RT is worth further investigation in LACC patients, providing encouraging survival outcomes and a favourable long-term toxicity profile.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2000

COMBINED MODALITY TREATMENT IN UNRESECTABLE EXTRAHEPATIC BILIARY CARCINOMA

A.G. Morganti; Lucio Trodella; Vincenzo Valentini; Paolo Montemaggi; Guido Costamagna; Daniela Smaniotto; Stefano Luzi; Pierpaolo Ziccarelli; G. Macchia; Vincenzo Perri; Massimiliano Mutignani; Numa Cellini

PURPOSE Cancers of the extrahepatic biliary tract are rare. Surgical resection is considered the standard treatment, but is rarely feasible. Several reports of combined modality therapy, including external beam radiation, often combined with chemotherapy and intraluminal brachytherapy, have been published. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of chemoradiation plus intraluminal brachytherapy on response, local control, survival, and symptom relief in patients with unresectable or residual extrahepatic biliary carcinoma. METHODS AND MATERIALS From February 1991 to December 1997, 20 patients (14 male, 6 female; mean age 61 +/- 12 years; median follow-up 71 months) with unresectable (16 patients) or residual (4 patients), nonmetastatic extrahepatic bile tumors (common bile duct, 8; gallbladder, 1; Klatskin, 11) received external beam radiation (39.6-50.4 Gy); in 19 patients, 5-fluorouracil (96-h continuous infusion, days 1-4 at 1,000 mg/m(2)/day) was also administered. Twelve patients received a boost by intraluminal brachytherapy using (192)Ir wires of 30-50 Gy, prescribed 1 cm from the source axis. RESULTS During external beam radiotherapy, 8 patients (40%) developed grade 1-2 gastrointestinal toxicity. Four patients treated with external-beam plus intraluminal brachytherapy had a clinical response (2 partial, 2 complete) after treatment. For the total patient group, the median survival and time to local progression was 21.2 and 33.1 months, respectively. Distant metastasis occurred in 10 (50%) patients. Two patients who received external beam radiation plus intraluminal brachytherapy developed late duodenal ulceration. Two patients with unresectable disease survived more than 5 years. CONCLUSION Our data suggest that chemoradiation plus intraluminal brachytherapy was relatively well-tolerated, and resulted in reasonable local control and median survival. Further follow-up and additional research is needed to determine the ultimate efficacy of this regimen. New chemoradiation combinations and/or new treatment strategies (neoadjuvant chemoradiation) may contribute, in the future, to improve these results.


Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2008

Complexity index (COMIX) and not type of treatment predicts undetected errors in radiotherapy planning and delivery

Alessio G. Morganti; F. Deodato; Simone Zizzari; Savino Cilla; C. Digesù; G. Macchia; Simona Panunzi; Andrea De Gaetano; Angelo Piermattei; Numa Cellini; Vincenzo Valentini

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Quality assurance procedures (QA) may reduce the risk of errors in radiotherapy. The aim of this study was to assess a QA program based on independent check (IC) procedures in patients undergoing 3D, intensity modulated (IMRT) and extracranial stereotactic (ESRT) radiotherapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS IC for set-up (IC1) and for radiotherapy treatments (IC2) was tested on 622 patients over a year. Fifteen events/parameters and 17 parameters were verified by IC1 and IC2, respectively. A third evaluation check (IC3) was performed before treatment. Potential errors were classified based on their magnitude. Incidents involving only incorrect or incomplete documentation were segregated. Treatments were classified based on a complexity index (COMIX). RESULTS With IC1, 75 documentation incidents and 31 potential errors were checked, and with IC2 111 documentation incidents and 6 potential errors were checked. During the study period 10 errors undetected by standard procedures (IC1, IC2) were detected by chance or by IC3. The incidence of errors and serious errors undetected by standard procedures was 1.6% and 0.6%, respectively. There was no higher incidence of errors undetected in patients undergoing IMRT or ESRT, while there was a higher incidence of errors undetected in more complex treatments (p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Systematic QA procedures can reduce the risk of errors. The risk of errors undetected by standard procedures is not correlated with the treatment technological level (3D versus IMRT/ESRT).


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2007

Application of a practical method for the isocenter point in vivo dosimetry by a transit signal

Angelo Piermattei; Andrea Fidanzio; L. Azario; Luca Grimaldi; Guido D'Onofrio; Savino Cilla; Gerardina Stimato; Diego Gaudino; Sara Ramella; Rolando Maria D'Angelillo; Francesco Cellini; Lucio Trodella; Aniello Russo; Luciano Iadanza; Sergio Zucca; Vincenzo Fusco; Nicola Di Napoli; Maria Antonietta Gambacorta; M. Balducci; Numa Cellini; F. Deodato; G. Macchia; Alessio G. Morganti

This work reports the results of the application of a practical method to determine the in vivo dose at the isocenter point, D(iso), of brain thorax and pelvic treatments using a transit signal S(t). The use of a stable detector for the measurement of the signal S(t) (obtained by the x-ray beam transmitted through the patient) reduces many of the disadvantages associated with the use of solid-state detectors positioned on the patient as their periodic recalibration, and their positioning is time consuming. The method makes use of a set of correlation functions, obtained by the ratio between S(t) and the mid-plane dose value, D(m), in standard water-equivalent phantoms, both determined along the beam central axis. The in vivo measurement of D(iso) required the determination of the water-equivalent thickness of the patient along the beam central axis by the treatment planning system that uses the electron densities supplied by calibrated Hounsfield numbers of the computed tomography scanner. This way it is, therefore, possible to compare D(iso) with the stated doses, D(iso,TPS), generally used by the treatment planning system for the determination of the monitor units. The method was applied in five Italian centers that used beams of 6 MV, 10 MV, 15 MV x-rays and (60)Co gamma-rays. In particular, in four centers small ion-chambers were positioned below the patient and used for the S(t) measurement. In only one center, the S(t) signals were obtained directly by the central pixels of an EPID (electronic portal imaging device) equipped with commercial software that enabled its use as a stable detector. In the four centers where an ion-chamber was positioned on the EPID, 60 pelvic treatments were followed for two fields, an anterior-posterior or a posterior-anterior irradiation and a lateral-lateral irradiation. Moreover, ten brain tumors were checked for a lateral-lateral irradiation, and five lung tumors carried out with three irradiations with different gantry angles were followed. One center used the EPID as a detector for the S(t) measurement and five pelvic treatments with six fields (many with oblique incidence) were followed. These last results are reported together with those obtained in the same center during a pilot study on ten pelvic treatments carried out by four orthogonal fields. The tolerance/action levels for every radiotherapy fraction were 4% and 5% for the brain (symmetric inhomogeneities) and thorax/pelvic (asymmetric inhomogeneities) irradiations, respectively. This way the variations between the total measured and prescribed doses at the isocenter point in five fractions were well within 2% for the brain treatment, and 4% for thorax/pelvic treatments. Only 4 out of 90 patients needed new replanning, 2 patients of which needed a new CT scan.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2010

A PHASE I DOSE-ESCALATION STUDY (ISIDE-BT-1) OF ACCELERATED IMRT WITH TEMOZOLOMIDE IN PATIENTS WITH GLIOBLASTOMA

A.G. Morganti; M. Balducci; Maurizio Salvati; Vincenzo Esposito; Pantaleo Romanelli; M. Ferro; Franco Calista; C. Digesù; G. Macchia; Massimo Ianiri; F. Deodato; Savino Cilla; Angelo Piermattei; Vincenzo Valentini; Numa Cellini; Gian Paolo Cantore

PURPOSE To determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of fractionated intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) with temozolomide (TMZ) in patients with glioblastoma. METHODS AND MATERIALS A Phase I clinical trial was performed. Eligible patients had surgically resected or biopsy-proven glioblastoma. Patients started TMZ (75 mg/day) during IMRT and continued for 1 year (150-200 mg/day, Days 1-5 every 28 days) or until disease progression. Clinical target volume 1 (CTV1) was the tumor bed +/- enhancing lesion with a 10-mm margin; CTV2 was the area of perifocal edema with a 20-mm margin. Planning target volume 1 (PTV1) and PTV2 were defined as the corresponding CTV plus a 5-mm margin. IMRT was delivered in 25 fractions over 5 weeks. Only the dose for PTV1 was escalated (planned dose escalation: 60 Gy, 62.5 Gy, 65 Gy) while maintaining the dose for PTV2 (45 Gy, 1.8 Gy/fraction). Dose limiting toxicities (DLT) were defined as any treatment-related nonhematological adverse effects rated as Grade >or=3 or any hematological toxicity rated as >or=4 by Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) criteria. RESULTS Nineteen consecutive glioblastoma were treated with step-and-shoot IMRT, planned with the inverse approach (dose to the PTV1: 7 patients, 60 Gy; 6 patients, 62.5 Gy; 6 patients, 65 Gy). Five coplanar beams were used to cover at least 95% of the target volume with the 95% isodose line. Median follow-up time was 23 months (range, 8-40 months). No patient experienced DLT. Grade 1-2 treatment-related neurologic and skin toxicity were common (11 and 19 patients, respectively). No Grade >2 late neurologic toxicities were noted. CONCLUSION Accelerated IMRT to a dose of 65 Gy in 25 fractions is well tolerated with TMZ at a daily dose of 75 mg.


American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Intensity-modulated radiotherapy with simultaneous integrated boost to dominant intraprostatic lesion: preliminary report on toxicity.

Edy Ippolito; Giovanna Mantini; Alessio Giuseppe Morganti; Ercole Mazzeo; Gilbert D.A. Padula; C. Digesù; Savino Cilla; V. Frascino; Stefano Luzi; Mariangela Massaccesi; G. Macchia; F. Deodato; Gian Carlo Mattiucci; Angelo Piermattei; Numa Cellini

ObjectivesTo evaluate the feasibility of intensity-modulated radiotherapy with simultaneous integrated boost to the dominant intraprostatic lesion for definitive treatment of prostate cancer. Materials and MethodsPatients were deemed eligible for the study if they had histologically proven stage cT2-T3 N0M0 prostate adenocarcinoma. In addition <20% risk of lymph nodal involvement according to Roach formula, was required for enrollment. Patients were treated with intensity-modulated radiotherapy with simultaneous integrated boost technique to the dominant intraprostatic lesion defined by magnetic resonance imaging. The prescribed dose to the prostate and seminal vesicles was 72 Gy (1.8 Gy per fraction). The dose delivered to the intraprostatic lesion received was 80 Gy (2 Gy per fraction). Acute gastrointestinal (GI) and genitourinary (GU) toxicity was evaluated weekly during treatment, and at 1 and 3 months thereafter. Late GI and GU toxicity was evaluated by Kaplan Meier method. ResultsForty patients were deemed evaluable. Acute and late GI and GU toxicity were evaluated in all patients. Two patients (5%) developed acute grade 3 GI toxicity and 1 patient (2.5%) developed acute grade 3 GU toxicity. No grade 4 acute GI or GU toxicity occurred. With a median follow-up of 19 months (interquartile range, 15 to 26 mo), the 2-year actuarial cumulative incidence of grade ≥2 rectal toxicity was 9.5%. The 2-year actuarial cumulative incidence of grade ≥2 urinary toxicity was 13.3%. ConclusionsTreatment related acute toxicity was low in our cohort. Prolonged observation with a larger series of patients is necessary to evaluate late toxicity and local control.


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2005

The Prognostic Effect of Clinical Staging in Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma

A.G. Morganti; M. Gabriella Brizi; G. Macchia; Giuseppina Sallustio; Guido Costamagna; Sergio Alfieri; Gian Carlo Mattiucci; Vincenzo Valentini; Luigi Natale; F. Deodato; Massimiliano Mutignani; G. Battista Doglietto; Numa Cellini

BackgroundThe importance of pancreatic cancer staging is uncertain. The aim of this report was to evaluate the accuracy of combined standard imaging techniques in predicting the pathologic stage and to evaluate the prognostic effect of clinical staging to identify patient groups in which laparoscopy and laparotomy could be beneficial.MethodsFifty-four patients were included in this analysis. The techniques used for clinical staging were endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, abdominal computed tomographic scan, and ultrasonography. All patients underwent both clinical and surgical/pathologic staging. A comparison was performed between presurgical stage and surgical/pathologic stage. The prognostic effect of different factors on survival was evaluated with both univariate (log-rank) and multivariate (Cox) analysis.ResultsSensitivity and specificity for vascular involvement were 73.9% and 96.3%, respectively. Sensitivity and specificity for nodal involvement were 63.6% and 95.4%, respectively. A total of 33.3% of patients showed a higher than expected pathologic stage, and 3.7% showed a lower than expected pathologic stage, by comparing clinical and pathologic evaluation. A highly significant correlation was observed between clinical T stage (P = .0067) and tumor diameter (P = .0037) and patient survival. Maximal prognostic differentiation was observed by dividing patients into two groups based on imaging results: group A (favorable prognosis) and group B (unfavorable prognosis). The median survival was 25.1 and 8.0 months for group A and B, respectively. Five-year survival was 20.1% and 0%, respectively (multivariate analysis: P = .0007).ConclusionsIntegrated standard imaging studies achieved reasonable diagnostic accuracy in our analysis. A single classification based on clinical stage and tumor diameter evaluated by imaging predicts prognosis in patients with pancreatic carcinoma.


Oncology | 2000

Bcl-2, Bax, Bcl-xL and Bcl-xS Expression in Neoplastic and Normal Endometrium

Maria Marone; Gabriella Ferrandina; G. Macchia; Simona Mozzetti; Anna de Pasqua; Pierluigi Benedetti-Panici; Salvatore Mancuso; Giovanni Scambia

The two anti-apoptotic proteins Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL, and the two pro-apoptotic proteins Bax and Bcl-xS were measured by Western blotting in 51 neoplastic and 8 normal endometrial samples. The corresponding mRNA levels were analyzed by semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction in a subgroup of 19 endometrial carcinomas. Neoplastic tissues had higher amounts of Bcl-2 protein than normal tissues (p < 0.051). Bcl-xL followed the same trend since its levels were higher in tumor than in normal samples (p < 0.048). Interestingly, Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL protein content showed a trend towards an inverse correlation (r = 0.27, p < 0.052). mRNA and protein levels directly correlated only with Bcl-2 (r = 0.63, p < 0.0032). Despite the fact that the amounts of Bcl-2, Bax and Bcl-xL proteins in the neoplastic population were not significantly differently distributed according to the clinicopathological features of the patients, the differences observed between normal and neoplastic samples suggest that these proteins may play a role in endometrial carcinoma: long-term follow-up studies will be required to confirm this hypothesis.


Oncology | 2004

Concomitant Radiochemotherapy plus Surgery in Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer: Update of Clinical Outcome and Cyclooxygenase-2 as Predictor of Treatment Susceptibility

Mariagrazia Distefano; Gabriella Ferrandina; Daniela Smaniotto; Alessandro Pasquale Margariti; Gianfranco Zannoni; G. Macchia; Riccardo Manfredi; Maria Grazia Mangiacotti; Numa Cellini; Giovanni Scambia

Objective: We have updated our findings on the efficacy of concomitant radiochemotherapy plus radical surgery in a larger series of patients (n = 54) with locally advanced cervical cancer (LACC). We also investigated the role of cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in this clinical setting. Methods: Radiotherapy was administered to the whole pelvic region (1.8 Gy/day, totaling 39.6 Gy) in combination with cisplatin (20 mg/m2) and 5-fluorouracil (1,000 mg/m2) (both on days 1–4 and 27–30). Radical surgery was performed 5–6 weeks after the end of treatment. Results: A clinical complete or partial response was observed in all 53 evaluable patients (75.5 and 24.5%, respectively). At pathological examination, 23 of 51 patients (45.1%) undergoing radical surgery showed complete response to treatment, 18 patients (35.3%) only had microscopic residual disease, 6 patients (11.7%) had a partial response and 4 (7.8%) had no change in their disease. When logistic regression was applied, the FIGO stage (χ2 = 5.28, p = 0.021) and tumor to stroma COX-2 ratio (χ2 = 4.72, p = 0.029) retained an independent role in the prediction of the pathologic response to treatment. The 3-year disease-free survival (DFS) was 75.2%, with local relapse-free survival of 86.2% and metastasis-free interval of 89.9% at 3 years. Cases with a high COX-2 ratio showed a shorter DFS than cases with a low COX-2 ratio (p = 0.016). A direct association was shown between COX-2 ratio values and risk of recurrence, as assessed by Cox analysis using COX-2 ratio values as a continuous covariate (χ2 = 3.94, p = 0.047). Conclusion: This study confirms the possibility of achieving a very high rate of pathological responses in LACC patients administered chemoradiation plus surgery (3-year DFS 75.2%). Moreover, COX-2 status may play a role in the prognostic characterization and prediction of tumor response.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2003

Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) expression in locally advanced cervical cancer patients undergoing chemoradiation plus surgery

Gabriella Ferrandina; Franco O. Ranelletti; Francesco Legge; Libero Lauriola; A Poerio; Gian Franco Zannoni; Daniela Smaniotto; Margariti Pa; G. Macchia; Giovanni Scambia

PURPOSE To investigate whether cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) could be a marker of clinical outcome in cervical cancer patients undergoing concomitant chemoradiation plus surgery. METHODS AND MATERIALS The study included 33 locally advanced cervical cancer patients; all underwent neoadjuvant chemoradiation, and responsive patients underwent radical surgery. Immunohistochemistry was performed with rabbit antiserum against COX-2. RESULTS COX-2 integrated density values (IDVs) in the tumor component ranged from 1.4 to 72.3 (median 15.0); in stromal inflammatory cells, COX-2 IDVs ranged from 1.4 to 96.0 (median 16.0). A statistically significant inverse relation was found between the COX-2 IDVs of the tumor vs. the stromal inflammatory component (r = -0.52, p = 0.0017). When the ratio between COX-2 IDV in the tumor vs. the stromal compartment was <or=1, it was considered to indicate cervical tumor with COX-2 expression in the tumor component lower or equivalent to COX-2 expression in the stroma. According to the chosen cutoff value, 17 (51.5%) of 33 were scored as having a high (>1) tumor/stroma COX-2 IDV ratio. Patients with a high tumor/stroma COX-2 IDV ratio had a shorter disease-free survival than did those with a low tumor/stroma COX-2 IDV ratio (p = 0.030). Similarly, those with a high tumor/stroma COX-2 IDV ratio had a shorter overall survival (p = 0.033). CONCLUSION The assessment of COX-2 status in both the tumor and the stromal compartment could provide additional information in the prognostic characterization of cervical cancer patients administered concomitant chemoradiation plus surgery.

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F. Deodato

The Catholic University of America

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Savino Cilla

The Catholic University of America

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Vincenzo Valentini

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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C. Digesù

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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V. Picardi

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Numa Cellini

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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