Gianluca Di Monta
National Institutes of Health
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Gianluca Di Monta.
World Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2011
Ugo Marone; Corrado Caracò; Anna Maria Anniciello; Gianluca Di Monta; Maria Grazia Chiofalo; Maria Luisa Di Cecilia; Nicola Mozzillo
Eccrine porocarcinoma (EPC) is a rare type of skin cancer arising from the intraepidermal portion of eccrine sweat glands or acrosyringium, representing 0.005-0.01% of all cutaneous tumors. About 20% of EPC will recur and about 20% will metastasize to regional lymph nodes. There is a mortality rate of 67% in patients with lymph node metastases. Although rare, the occurrence of distant metastases has been reported.We report a case of patient with EPC of the left arm, with axillary nodal involvement and subsequent local relapse, treated by complete lymph node dissection and electrochemotherapy (ECT).EPC is an unusual tumor to diagnose. Neither chemotherapy nor radiation therapy has been proven to be of clinical benefit in treating metastatic disease. Although in the current case the short follow-up period is a limitation, we consider in the management of EPC a therapeutic approach involving surgery and ECT, because of its aggressive potential for loregional metastatic spread.
OncoImmunology | 2015
Nicola Mozzillo; Ester Simeone; Lucia Benedetto; Marcello Curvietto; Diana Giannarelli; Giusy Gentilcore; Rosa Camerlingo; Mariaelena Capone; Gabriele Madonna; Lucia Festino; Corrado Caracò; Gianluca Di Monta; Ugo Marone; Massimiliano Di Marzo; Antonio Maria Grimaldi; Stefano Mori; Gennaro Ciliberto; Paolo Antonio Ascierto
Melanoma is responsible for most skin cancer-related deaths and is one of the most common cancers diagnosed in young adults. In melanoma, tumors can become established by activation of the negative regulator of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), CTL antigen-4 (CTLA-4). Ipilimumab blocks the interaction of CTLA-4 with CD80/CD86 and augments T-cell activation and proliferation. In electrochemotherapy (ECT), local application of short high-voltage pulses renders cell membranes transiently permeable to chemotherapeutic drugs. The combination of ipilimumab and ECT may be beneficial for the treatment of metastatic melanoma; however, no prospective data are available to date. Here, we report the retrospective analysis of patients treated with ipilimumab in an expanded access program (EAP) who also received ECT. Fifteen patients with previously treated metastatic melanoma who received ipilimumab 3 mg/kg every three weeks for four cycles and underwent ECT for local disease control and/or palliation of cutaneous lesions with bleomycin 15 mg/m2 after the first ipilimumab infusion were included in the analysis. Over the study period, a local objective response was observed in 67% of patients (27% complete response [CR] and 40% partial response [PR]). According to immune-related response criteria, a systemic response was observed in nine patients (five PR and four stable disease [SD]), resulting in a disease control rate of 60%. Evaluation of circulating T-regulatory (T-reg) cells demonstrated significant differences between responders and non-responders. Overall, treatment was well-tolerated and without notable toxicity. In conclusion, the combination of ipilimumab and ECT appears to be beneficial to patients with advanced melanoma, warranting further investigation in prospective trials.
World Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2012
Gianluca Di Monta; Corrado Caracò; Anna Crispo; Ugo Marone; Nicola Mozzillo
BackgroundSeroma formation is a frequent complication following radical lymph node dissection (RLND) in patients with metastatic melanoma. Several strategies have been used to prevent fluid accumulation and thereby reduce the duration of postoperative drainage, including fibrin sealants.MethodsThis was a prospective, single-center study in which consecutive patients undergoing surgical treatment of stage III metastatic melanoma by axillary or ilio-inguinal RLND were randomized to receive standard treatment plus fibrinogen/thrombin-coated collagen sealant patch (CSP) or standard treatment alone. The primary endpoint of the study was postoperative duration of drainage.ResultsA total of 70 patients underwent axillary (n = 47) or ilio-inguinal (n = 23) RLND and received CSP plus standard treatment (n = 37) or standard treatment alone (n = 33). Mean duration of drainage was significantly reduced in the CSP group compared with standard treatment (ITT analysis: 20.1 ± 5.1 versus 23.3 ± 5.1 days; p = 0.010). The percentage of patients drainage-free on day 21 was significantly higher in the CSP group compared with the standard treatment group (86% versus 67%; p = 0.049).ConclusionsUse of the tissue sealant resulted in a significant reduction in duration of drainage. Further studies are warranted to confirm these results in different and selected types of lymphadenectomy.
Journal of Translational Medicine | 2012
Nicola Mozzillo; Corrado Caracò; Stefano Mori; Gianluca Di Monta; Gerardo Botti; Paolo Antonio Ascierto; Corradina Caracò; Luigi Aloj
BackgroundApproximately 200,000 new cases of melanoma are diagnosed worldwide each year. Skin metastases are a frequent event, occurring in 18.2% of cases. This can be distressing for the patient, as the number and size of cutaneous lesions increases, often worsened by ulceration, bleeding and pain. Electrochemotherapy (ECT) is a local modality for the treatment of cutaneous or subcutaneous tumors that allows delivery of low- and non-permeant drugs into cells. ECT has been used in palliative management of metastatic melanoma to improve patients’ quality of life. This is, to our knowledge, the first application of ECT as neoadjuvant treatment of metastatic subcutaneous melanoma.Methods and resultsA 44-year-old Caucasian woman underwent extensive surgical resection of a melanoma, with a Breslow thickness of 1.5 mm, located on the right side of her scalp. No further treatment was given and the woman remained well until she came to our attention with a large nodule in her right cheek. Whole-body fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG PET/CT) was performed for staging and treatment monitoring. Baseline FDG PET/CT showed the lesion in the cheek to have a maximal standardized uptake value (SUVmax) of 19.5 with no evidence of further disease spread. Fine needle aspiration cytology confirmed the presence of metastatic melanoma. The patient underwent two sessions of ECT with intravenous injections of bleomycin using a CliniporatorTM as neoadjuvant treatment permitting conservative surgery three months later.Follow-up PET/CT three months after the first ECT treatment showed a marked decrease in SUVmax to 5. Further monitoring was performed through monthly PET/CT studies. Multiple cytology examinations showed necrotic tissue. Conservative surgery was carried out three months after the second ECT. Reconstruction was easily achieved through a rotation flap. Pathological examination of the specimen showed necrotic tissue without residual melanoma. One year after the last ECT treatment, the patient was disease-free as determined by contrast-enhanced CT and PET/-CT scans with a good functional and aesthetic result.ConclusionsECT represents a safe and effective therapeutic approach that is associated with clear benefits in terms of quality of life (minimal discomfort, mild post-treatment pain and short duration of hospital stay) and may, in the neoadjuvant setting as reported here, offer the option of more conservative surgery and an improved cosmetic effect with complete local tumor control.
World Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2013
Nicola Mozzillo; Corrado Caracò; Ugo Marone; Gianluca Di Monta; Anna Crispo; Gerardo Botti; Maurizio Montella; Paolo Antonio Ascierto
BackgroundThe aims of this retrospective analysis were to evaluate the effect of combined superficial and deep groin dissection on disease-free and melanoma-specific survival, and to identify the most important factors for predicting the involvement of deep nodes according to clinically or microscopically detected nodal metastases.MethodsBetween January 1996 and December 2005, 133 consecutive patients with groin lymph node metastases underwent superficial and deep dissection at the National Cancer Institute, Naples. Lymph node involvement was clinically evident in 84 patients and detected by sentinel node biopsy in 49 cases.ResultsThe 5-year disease-free survival was significantly better for patients with superficial lymph node metastases than for patients with involvement of both superficial and deep lymph nodes (34.9% vs. 19.0%; P = 0.001). The 5-year melanoma-specific survival was also significantly better for patients with superficial node metastases only (55.6% vs. 33.3%; P = 0.001).ConclusionsMetastasis in the deep nodes is the strongest predictor of both disease-free and melanoma-specific survival. Deep groin dissection should be considered for all patients with groin clinical nodal involvement, but might be spared in patients with a positive sentinel node. Prospective studies will clarify the issue further.
Journal of Translational Medicine | 2014
Ester Simeone; Lucia Benedetto; Giusy Gentilcore; Marilena Capone; Corrado Caracò; Gianluca Di Monta; Ugo Marone; Marialuisa Di Cecilia; Antonio Maria Grimaldi; Stefano Mori; Nicola Mozzillo; Paolo Antonio Ascierto
Background Ipilimumab is the first agent approved for the treatment of advanced melanoma that showed a survival benefit in randomized phase 3 trials. Despite the survival benefit, due to its mechanism of action it is associated with a slow onset and low rate of responses and, in many cases, responses occur after other therapies, like chemotherapy, targeted therapy and radiotherapy. Electrochemotherapy (ECT) has been shown to be effective and well tolerated for local control of metastatic melanoma with superficial lesions. The current challenge is to improve ipilimumab efficacy by combination/sequence with other therapies. We performed a pilot study of combination with ipilimumab and ECT in order to verify the possible increase of response rate. Furthermore, due to the lack of predictive markers, we evaluated the possible predictive role of circulating T-regulatory cells (T-Reg) variations in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of treated patients. Methods
Radiology Research and Practice | 2011
Ugo Marone; Luigi Aloj; Gianluca Di Monta; Corrado Caracò
Sentinel lymph node biopsy is commonly applied as staging procedure of regional lymph nodes in patients with cutaneous melanoma. Dynamic lymphoscintigraphy defines the lymphatic pathways from a primary melanoma site and allows to identify the node receiving lymphatic drainage from the primary tumor, which is the sentinel lymph node. In rare cases, lymphoscintigraphy shows sites of lymphatic drainage in nonclassical basins never described in the past when lymphatic drainage was considered only according to the anatomical proximity of the tumor primary site. These peculiar sentinel nodes, so-called “uncommon/interval” nodes, must be surgically removed because they may contain micrometastatic disease and may be the only site of nodal involvement.
Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer | 2014
Ester Simeone; Maria Fiammetta Romano; Antonio Maria Grimaldi; Assunta Esposito; Marcello Curvietto; Giovanni Rinaldi; Gianluca Di Monta; Massimiliano Di marzo; Federica Hauber; Lucia Festino; Anna D'Angelillo; Simona Romano; Stefania Staibano; Gennaro Ilardi; Rita Bisogni; Nicola Mozzillo; Paolo Antonio Ascierto
Meeting abstracts Identifying molecular biomarkers in melanoma may provide useful diagnostic and therapeutic tools. Melanoma delivers immune suppressive stimuli through the pathway PDL-1/PD-1. Recent data suggest tumour-cell expression of PD-L1 in melanoma may be driven by constitutive oncogenic
Archive | 2016
Stefano Mori; Cinzia Sassaroli; Gianluca Di Monta; Giovanni Romano
Healing tissues by first intention after abdominoperineal resection (APR) for rectal cancer (RC) is difficult to achieve due to the large tissue deficit and the anatomical and functional complexity of the pelvic region. APR in RC removes a much tissue that connects the abdominal cavity with the exterior of the body, with the risk of severe complications. APR must therefore be well planned out in a synchronous approach by an expert multidisciplinary team.
Journal of Translational Medicine | 2014
Nicola Mozzillo; Corrado Caracò; Ugo Marone; Ester Simeone; Stefano Mori; Lucia Benedetto; Gianluca Di Monta; Maria Luisa Di Cecilia; Massimiliano Di Marzo; Gerardo Botti; Paolo Antonio Ascierto
Background Treatment of early and multiple cutaneous unresectable recurrences is a major therapeutic problem with around 80% of patients relapsing within 5 years [1]. For lesions refractory to elective treatments, electrochemotherapy (ECT) involving electroporation combined with antineoplastic drug treatment appears to be a new potential option [2]. This study was undertaken to analyze the shortand long-term responses of lesions treated with ECT with intravenous injection of bleomycin in melanoma patients with in-transit disease or distant cutaneous metastases.