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Featured researches published by Gennaro Daniele.


Lancet Oncology | 2015

Pazopanib plus weekly paclitaxel versus weekly paclitaxel alone for platinum-resistant or platinum-refractory advanced ovarian cancer (MITO 11): a randomised, open-label, phase 2 trial

Sandro Pignata; Domenica Lorusso; Giovanni Scambia; Daniela Sambataro; Stefano Tamberi; Saverio Cinieri; Anna M Mosconi; Michele Orditura; Alba A. Brandes; Valentina Arcangeli; Pierluigi Beneditti Panici; Carmela Pisano; Sabrina Chiara Cecere; Marilena Di Napoli; Francesco Raspagliesi; Giuseppa Maltese; Vanda Salutari; Caterina Ricci; Gennaro Daniele; Maria Carmela Piccirillo; Massimo Di Maio; Ciro Gallo; Francesco Perrone

BACKGROUND Inhibition of angiogenesis is a valuable treatment strategy for ovarian cancer. Pazopanib is an anti-angiogenic drug active in ovarian cancer. We assessed the effect of adding pazopanib to paclitaxel for patients with platinum-resistant or platinum-refractory advanced ovarian cancer. METHODS We did this open-label, randomised phase 2 trial at 11 hospitals in Italy. We included patients with platinum-resistant or platinum-refractory ovarian cancer previously treated with a maximum of two lines of chemotherapy, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status 0-1, and no residual peripheral neurotoxicity. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive weekly paclitaxel 80 mg/m(2) with or without pazopanib 800 mg daily, and stratified by centre, number of previous lines of chemotherapy, and platinum-free interval status. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival, assessed in the modified intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01644825. This report is the final analysis; the trial is completed. FINDINGS Between Dec 15, 2010, and Feb 8, 2013, we enrolled 74 patients: 37 were randomly assigned to receive paclitaxel and pazopanib and 37 were randomly assigned to receive paclitaxel only. One patient, in the paclitaxel only group, withdrew from the study and was excluded from analyses. Median follow-up was 16·1 months (IQR 12·5-20·8). Progression-free survival was significantly longer in the pazopanib plus paclitaxel group than in the paclitaxel only group (median 6·35 months [95% CI 5·36-11·02] vs 3·49 months [2·01-5·66]; hazard ratio 0·42 [95% CI 0·25-0·69]; p=0·0002). We recorded no unexpected toxic effects or deaths from toxic effects. Adverse events were more common in the pazopanib and paclitaxel group than in the paclitaxel only group. The most common grade 3-4 adverse events were neutropenia (11 [30%] in the pazopanib group vs one [3%] in the paclitaxel group), fatigue (four [11%] vs two [6%]), leucopenia (four [11%] vs one [3%]), hypertension (three [8%] vs none [0%]), raised aspartate aminotransferase or alanine aminotransferase (three [8%] vs none), and anaemia (two [5%] vs five [14%]). One patient in the pazopanib group had ileal perforation. INTERPRETATION Our findings suggest that a phase 3 study of the combination of weekly paclitaxel plus pazopanib for patients with platinum-resistant or platinum-refractory advanced ovarian cancer is warranted. FUNDING National Cancer Institute of Napoli and GlaxoSmithKline.


BioMed Research International | 2011

Gefitinib in Non Small Cell Lung Cancer

Raffaele Costanzo; Maria Carmela Piccirillo; Claudia Sandomenico; Guido Carillio; Agnese Montanino; Gennaro Daniele; Pasqualina Giordano; Jane Bryce; Gianfranco De Feo; Massimo Di Maio; Gaetano Rocco; Nicola Normanno; Francesco Perrone; Alessandro Morabito

Gefitinib is an oral, reversible, tyrosine kinase inhibitor of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) that plays a key role in the biology of non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Phase I studies indicated that the recommended dose of gefitinib was 250 mg/day. Rash, diarrhea, and nausea were the most common adverse events. The positive results obtained in early phase 2 clinical trials with gefitinib were not confirmed in large phase 3 trials in unselected patients with advanced NSCLC. The subsequent discovery that the presence of somatic mutations in the kinase domain of EGFR strongly correlates with increased responsiveness to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors prompted phase 2 and 3 trials with gefitinib in the first line-treatment of EGFR-mutated NSCLC. The results of these trials have demonstrated the efficacy of gefitinib that can be now considered as the standard first-line treatment of patients with advanced NSCLC harbouring activating EGFR mutations.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Prognostic Relevance of Objective Response According to EASL Criteria and mRECIST Criteria in Hepatocellular Carcinoma Patients Treated with Loco-Regional Therapies: A Literature-Based Meta-Analysis.

Bruno Vincenzi; Massimo Di Maio; Marianna Silletta; Loretta D’Onofrio; Chiara Spoto; Maria Carmela Piccirillo; Gennaro Daniele; Francesca Comito; Eliana Maci; Giuseppe Bronte; Antonio Russo; Daniele Santini; Francesco Perrone; Giuseppe Tonini

Background The European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) criteria and the modified Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (mRECIST) are currently adopted to evaluate radiological response in patients affected by HCC and treated with loco-regional procedures. Several studies explored the validity of these measurements in predicting survival but definitive data are still lacking. Aim To conduct a systematic review of studies exploring mRECIST and EASL criteria usefulness in predictive radiological response in HCC undergoing loco-regional therapies and their validity in predicting survival. Methods A comprehensive search of the literature was performed in electronic databases EMBASE, MEDLINE, COCHRANE LIBRARY, ASCO conferences and EASL conferences up to June 10, 2014. Our overall search strategy included terms for HCC, mRECIST, and EASL. Loco-regional procedures included transarterial embolization (TAE), transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) and cryoablation. Inter-method agreement between EASL and mRECIST was assessed using the k coefficient. For each criteria, overall survival was described in responders vs. non-responders patients, considering all target lesions response. Results Among 18 initially found publications, 7 reports including 1357 patients were considered eligible. All studies were published as full-text articles. Proportion of responders according to mRECIST and EASL criteria was 62.4% and 61.3%, respectively. In the pooled population, 1286 agreements were observed between the two methods (kappa statistics 0.928, 95% confidence interval 0.912–0.944). HR for overall survival (responders versus non responders) according to mRECIST and EASL was 0.39 (95% confidence interval 0.26–0.61, p<0.0001) and 0.38 (95% confidence interval 0.24–0.61, p<0.0001), respectively. Conclusion In this literature-based meta-analysis, mRECIST and EASL criteria showed very good concordance in HCC patients undergoing loco-regional treatments. Objective response according to both criteria confirms a strong prognostic value in terms of overall survival. This prognostic value appears to be very similar between the two criteria.


British Journal of Cancer | 2013

Neoadjuvant FOLFIRI+bevacizumab in patients with resectable liver metastases from colorectal cancer: a phase 2 trial

Guglielmo Nasti; Mauro Piccirillo; Francesco Izzo; Alessandro Ottaiano; Vittorio Albino; Paolo Delrio; Carmela Romano; Pasqualina Giordano; Secondo Lastoria; Corradina Caracò; E de Lutio di Castelguidone; Raffaele Palaia; Gennaro Daniele; Luigi Aloj; Giovanni Maria Romano; Rosario Vincenzo Iaffaioli

Background:Preoperative treatment of resectable liver metastases from colorectal cancer (CRC) is a matter of debate. The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility and activity of bevacizumab plus FOLFIRI in this setting.Methods:Patients aged 18–75 years, PS 0–1, with resectable liver-confined metastases from CRC were eligible. They received bevacizumab 5 mg kg−1 followed by irinotecan 180 mg m−2, leucovorin 200 mg m−2, 5-fluorouracil 400 mg m−2 bolus and 5-fluorouracil 2400 mg m−2 46-h infusion, biweekly, for 7 cycles. Bevacizumab was stopped at cycle 6. A single-stage, single-arm phase 2 study design was applied with 1-year progression-free rate as the primary end point, and 39 patients required.Results:From October 2007 to December 2009, 39 patients were enrolled in a single institution. Objective response rate was 66.7% (95% exact CI: 49.8–80.9). Of these, 37 patients (94.9%) underwent surgery, with a R0 rate of 84.6%. Five patients had a pathological complete remission (14%). Out of 37 patients, 16 (43.2%) had at least one surgical complication (most frequently biloma). At 1 year of follow-up, 24 patients were alive and free from disease progression (61.6%, 95% CI: 44.6–76.6). Median PFS and OS were 14 (95% CI: 11–24) and 38 (95% CI: 28–NA) months, respectively.Conclusion:Preoperative treatment of patients with resectable liver metastases from CRC with bevacizumab plus FOLFIRI is feasible, but further studies are needed to define its clinical relevance.


Expert Review of Anticancer Therapy | 2012

Cetuximab in non-small-cell lung cancer.

Guido Carillio; Agnese Montanino; Raffaele Costanzo; Claudia Sandomenico; Maria Carmela Piccirillo; Massimo Di Maio; Gennaro Daniele; Pasqualina Giordano; Jane Bryce; Nicola Normanno; Gaetano Rocco; Francesco Perrone; Alessandro Morabito

Cetuximab is a chimeric human–mouse anti-EGF receptor monoclonal antibody. In Phase I studies, no dose-limiting toxicities were observed with cetuximab as a single agent or combined with chemotherapy; pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic analyses supported 250 mg/m2 weekly administration. Skin toxicity, diarrhea and fatigue were the most common toxicities. The positive results obtained in Phase II trials in patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer prompted two randomized Phase III trials evaluating cetuximab in addition to first-line chemotherapy. Both trials showed a small benefit in overall survival for the experimental treatment, which was considered insufficient by the EMA for marketing approval. However, a subgroup analysis of the FLEX Phase III trial recently demonstrated a larger survival benefit from the experimental treatment in patients with high immunohistochemical EGF receptor expression. This finding, if confirmed prospectively, could represent a new opportunity for positioning cetuximab into the standard treatment of advanced non-small-cell lung carcinoma.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Time spent for activation of non-profit studies in oncology in Italy.

Gianfranco De Feo; Simona Signoriello; Jane Bryce; Antonia Del Giudice; Giuliana Canzanella; Federika Crudele; Fiorella Romano; Giovanni De Matteis; Manuela Florio; Fabiano Falasconi; Alfonso Savio; Pasqualina Giordano; Gennaro Daniele; Mario Iaccarino; Maria Carmela Piccirillo; Massimo Di Maio; Alessandro Morabito; Ciro Gallo; Francesco Perrone

Aim The aim of this paper is to describe the time spent to activate oncological non-profit clinical trials promoted in Italy by the National Cancer Institute of Naples, following the implementation of recent European laws. Methodology Data about the process of activation of 5 non-profit multicentre clinical trials were prospectively collected through a web-based system. The impact of European guidelines was assessed by comparing the efficiency of the process between applications started before and after the decree introducing in Italy the Clinical Trial Application form (MD-CTA). Outcomes of the descriptive analyses were the time to EC opinion, the time to administrative agreement signature after a positive EC opinion, and the cumulative percentage of submissions that came to closure (either positive or negative) within four subsequent time cohorts. Principal Findings From March 2007 to October 2009, 202 applications were submitted to 107 centres. Forty-four (59%) applications of those submitted before were successful, compared to 71 (55%) of those submitted after MD-CTA. Most of the failures were due to missing EC response (27% and 22%) or administrative reasons (10% and 16%, before and after, respectively); very few (4% and 7%) were due to EC refusal. The impact of the MD-CTA on time to EC opinion looked positive (median 4.1 vs 2.4 months, before and after, respectively) but a subgroup analysis revealed that the impact was limited to a comparison biased by the selection of EC. After a positive EC opinion, there was no difference before and after MD-CTA in the time to administrative agreement signature (median 3.6 and 3.8 months, respectively). A trend to shortening time to closure of the whole submission process over the time was evident, with 58% of the applications coming to closure within 6 months from submission in the most recent cohort. Conclusions In our experience there is reassuring evidence of a trend toward shortening the time spent to activate non-profit clinical trials in Italy, but the whole process still remains inefficient. Efforts should be made to improve the process, also focusing on administrative procedures.


Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs | 2010

New drugs in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: searching for the correct clinical development

Massimo Di Maio; Alessandro Morabito; Maria Carmela Piccirillo; Gennaro Daniele; Pasqualina Giordano; Raffaele Costanzo; Marita Georgia Riccardi; Gaetano Rocco; Nicola Normanno; Francesco Perrone

Importance of the field: Non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is one of the most active fields of research in oncology, with many drugs under clinical development. Most of these drugs offer novel mechanisms of action compared with drugs currently used in clinical practice. Areas covered in this review: In this article, results recently obtained with most promising new drugs for advanced NSCLC are briefly described. What the reader will gain: Most of the new drugs are currently being tested without a biomarker-driven selection, due to inadequate knowledge of predictive factors. A few drugs are tested in biologically selected samples of NSCLC patients. The results obtained with crizotinib in patients with ALK gene rearrangement are a good example of the speed with which biological discoveries can be translated to clinical testing. Take home message: Emerging clinical and molecular data demonstrate that NSCLC is a family of related but distinct diseases. Some drugs tested in unselected population will probably obtain an incremental benefit compared to the current standard, but this will not substantially change the unfavorable prognosis of NSCLC patients. By contrast, unprecedented and much more cost-effective results can be obtained when targeted agents are administered following appropriate biomarker-driven patient selection.


Expert Opinion on Drug Metabolism & Toxicology | 2011

Pharmacokinetic evaluation of zoledronic acid

Antonella De Luca; Luana Lamura; Marianna Gallo; Gennaro Daniele; Amelia D'Alessio; Pasqualina Giordano; Monica R. Maiello; Maria Pergameno; Francesco Perrone; N. Normanno

Introduction: Increased bone resorption is associated with several diseases, including osteoporosis, bone metastases and Pagets disease of bone. Zoledronic acid (ZA) is the most potent of the clinically available bisphosphonates. In addition to its antiresorptive activity, there has been increasing evidence to suggest that it also has anticancer properties. Areas covered: This article is complied through PubMed and Medline databases searches on ZA. In this review, the authors summarize the current knowledge (up to December 2010) on the pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties of ZA. Expert opinion: ZA is a well-tolerated and effective drug in the management of metabolic as well as cancer-related bone disease. Clinical benefits in cancer patients include improvement in bone pain, reduction in skeletal events and delay of time to first skeletal event. However, novel indications for this drug are emerging from clinical studies in early breast cancer. Recent findings suggest that the addition of ZA to endocrine therapy can significantly prevent bone loss in premenopausal patients. Increasing evidence also indicates a potential anticancer activity of ZA, although this property needs to be further explored.


Annals of Oncology | 2012

Bone effect of adjuvant tamoxifen, letrozole or letrozole plus zoledronic acid in early-stage breast cancer: the randomized phase 3 HOBOE study

F. Nuzzo; Ciro Gallo; Secondo Lastoria; M. Di Maio; M.C. Piccirillo; A. Gravina; G. Landi; E. Rossi; Carmen Pacilio; V. Labonia; F. Di Rella; A. Bartiromo; G. Buonfanti; G. De Feo; Giuseppe Esposito; Roberta D'Aniello; Piera Maiolino; Simona Signoriello; E. De Maio; Vincenza Tinessa; G. Colantuoni; M. De Laurentiis; M. D'Aiuto; M. Di Bonito; G. Botti; Pasqualina Giordano; Gennaro Daniele; A. Morabito; N. Normanno; A. De Matteis

BACKGROUND To measure bone mineral density (BMD) reduction produced by letrozole as compared with tamoxifen and the benefit of the addition of zoledronic acid. PATIENTS AND METHODS A phase 3 trial comparing tamoxifen, letrozole or letrozole+zoledronic acid in patients with hormone receptor-positive early breast cancer was conducted; triptorelin was given to premenopausal patients. Two comparisons were planned: letrozole versus tamoxifen and letrozole+zoledronic acid versus letrozole. Primary end point was the difference in 1-year change of T-score at lumbar spine (LTS) measured by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry scan. RESULTS Out of 483 patients enrolled, 459 were available for primary analyses. Median age was 50 (range 28-80). The estimated mean difference (95% confidence interval [CI]) in 1-year change of LTS was equal to -0.30 (95% CI -0.44 to -0.17) in the letrozole versus tamoxifen comparison (P<0.0001) and to +0.60 (95% CI +0.46 to +0.77) in the letrozole+zoledronic acid versus letrozole comparison (P<0.0001). Bone damage by letrozole decreased with increasing baseline body mass index in premenopausal, but not postmenopausal, patients (interaction test P=0.004 and 0.47, respectively). CONCLUSIONS In the HOBOE (HOrmonal BOne Effects) trial, the positive effect of zoledronic acid on BMD largely counteracts damage produced by letrozole as compared with tamoxifen. Letrozole effect is lower among overweight/obese premenopausal patients.


Lung Cancer | 2012

Prognostic impact of education level of patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer enrolled in clinical trials

Massimo Di Maio; Simona Signoriello; Alessandro Morabito; Antonio Rossi; Paolo Maione; Francovito Piantedosi; Domenico Bilancia; Silvio Cigolari; Santi Barbera; Vittorio Gebbia; Bruno Daniele; Sergio Federico Robbiati; Alfonso Illiano; Anna Ceribelli; Francesco Carrozza; Adolfo Favaretto; Elena Piazza; Maria Carmela Piccirillo; Gennaro Daniele; Pasqualina Giordano; Raffaele Costanzo; Claudia Sandomenico; Gaetano Rocco; Ciro Gallo; Francesco Perrone; Cesare Gridelli

BACKGROUND Socioeconomic status can potentially affect prognosis of cancer patients. Our aim was to describe potential differences in demographic and clinical characteristics, treatment, and survival by education level in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) enrolled in clinical trials of first-line treatment. METHODS Individual data of Italian patients with advanced NSCLC (stage IV, or IIIB with supraclavicular nodes or malignant pleural effusion), ECOG performance status (PS) 0-2, enrolled in four phase III randomized trials conducted between 1996 and 2005 were pooled. Information about education was available for 1680 of 1709 patients (98.3%). Patients were divided in two groups according to education level: high (patients with at least high school diploma) or low (those with less than high school diploma). Survival analyses were stratified by treatment arm within trial. RESULTS There were 312 (19%) and 1368 (81%) patients with high and low education, respectively. Education level was significantly different among birth cohorts, with a time-trend toward higher education level. Patients with high education were significantly younger (median age 65 vs. 70), were less frequently unfit at diagnosis (ECOG PS2 5% vs. 16%), and their tumor type was more frequently adenocarcinoma (47% vs. 37%). Number of treatment cycles received was not significantly different between education groups. Median survival was 9.4 and 7.6 months in high and low education, respectively (p=0.012). At multivariable analysis, female sex, better PS and high education level (Hazard Ratio 0.85, 95%CI 0.73-0.99, p=0.03) were independently associated with longer survival. CONCLUSIONS In Italian patients enrolled in four randomized trials of first-line chemotherapy for advanced NSCLC, high education was significantly more frequent among younger patients, and was associated with lower proportion of PS2 patients. Education level did not significantly affect number of chemotherapy cycles received. Overall survival was longer in patients with high education, after adjustment for PS and other prognostic factors. The exact underlying mechanisms of the independent prognostic role of education level are substantially unknown, but lead-time bias (anticipation in diagnosis and time to inclusion in the trial), differences in adherence to care outside the trial procedures, differences in comorbidities and life-style factors may all contribute.

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Maria Carmela Piccirillo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Francesco Perrone

Northern Alberta Institute of Technology

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Ciro Gallo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Alessandro Morabito

National Institutes of Health

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Jane Bryce

National Institutes of Health

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Gaetano Rocco

Northern General Hospital

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Simona Signoriello

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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F. Perrone

National Institutes of Health

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