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Dive into the research topics where Giuseppe Macrì is active.

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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Macrì.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2003

Long-term endoscopic surveillance of patients with Barrett's esophagus. Incidence of dysplasia and adenocarcinoma: a prospective study.

Massimo Conio; Sabrina Blanchi; Gabriella Lapertosa; Roberto Ferraris; Renato Sablich; Santino Marchi; V. D'Onofrio; Teresa Lacchin; Gaetano Iaquinto; Guido Missale; P. Ravelli; Renzo Cestari; Giorgio Benedetti; Giuseppe Macrì; Roberto Fiocca; Francesco Munizzi; Rosangela Filiberti

OBJECTIVE:Barretts esophagus (BE) is a premalignant condition for which regular endoscopic follow-up is usually advised. We evaluated the incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma (AC) in patients with BE and the impact of endoscopic surveillance on mortality from AC.METHODS:A cohort of newly diagnosed BE patients was studied prospectively. Endoscopic and histological surveillance was recommended every 2 yr. Follow-up status was determined from hospital and registry office records and telephone calls to the patients.RESULTS:From 1987 to 1997, BE was diagnosed in 177 patients. We excluded three with high-grade dysplasia (HGD) at the time of enrollment. Follow-up was complete in 166 patients (135 male, 31 female). The mean length of endoscopic follow-up was 5.5 yr (range 0.5–13.3). Low-grade dysplasia (LGD) was present initially in 16 patients (9.6%) and found during follow-up in another 24 patients. However, in 75% of cases, LGD was not confirmed on later biopsies. HGD was found during surveillance in three patients (1.8%), one with simultaneous AC; two with HGD developed AC later. AC was detected in five male patients during surveillance. The incidence of AC was 1/220 (5/1100) patient-years of total follow-up, or 1/183.6 (5/918) patient-years in subjects undergoing endoscopy. Four AC patients died, and one was alive with advanced-stage tumor. The mean number of endoscopies performed for surveillance, rather than for symptoms, was 2.4 (range 1–10) per patient. During the follow-up years the cohort had a total of 528 examinations and more than 4000 biopsies.CONCLUSION:The incidence of AC in BE is low, confirming recent data from the literature reporting an overestimation of cancer risk in these patients. In our patient cohort, surveillance involved a large expenditure of effort but did not prevent any cancer deaths. The benefit of surveillance remains uncertain.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 1998

Eradication of helicobacter pylori reduces the rate of duodenal ulcer rebleeding: a long-term follow-up study

Giuseppe Macrì; Stefano Milani; E. Surrenti; Maria Teresa Passaleva; Giuseppe Salvadori; C. Surrenti

Objectives:The long-term efficacy of Helicobacter pylori eradication to reduce the rate of recurrence of peptic ulcer bleeding is still uncertain. We evaluated the rate of duodenal ulcer rebleeding for 48 months after H. pylori eradication.Methods:Thirty-two male patients with H. pylori infection and duodenal ulcer bleeding were treated with omeprazole (40 mg/day for 4 wk), colloidal bismuth (480 mg/day for 2 wk), amoxicillin (2 g/day for 1 wk), and metronidazole (750 mg/day for 1 wk), and followed up for 48 months. Endoscopy and tests for H. pylori infection were repeated every year.Results:Ulcer healed in all patients, but H. pylori infection persisted or recurred in 11 patients. Within 48 months, rebleeding occurred in nine (81.8%) of these patients, whereas the 21 patients who were persistently negative for H. pylori infection remained asymptomatic without rebleeding (0/21 = 0%, p < 0.002) during the whole follow-up.Conclusions:Eradication of H. pylori can reduce the rate of duodenal ulcer rebleeding for at least 4 yr, thus potentially modifying the natural history of the disease.


Journal of Laparoendoscopic & Advanced Surgical Techniques | 2013

Totally Laparoscopic Versus Open Gastrectomy for Gastric Cancer: A Matched Cohort Study

Fabio Cianchi; Etleva Qirici; Giacomo Trallori; Giuseppe Macrì; Giampiero Indennitate; Manuela Ortolani; Beatrice Paoli; Maria Rosa Biagini; Andrea Galli; Luca Messerini; Beatrice Mallardi; Benedetta Badii; Fabio Staderini; Giuliano Perigli

BACKGROUND The role of laparoscopic surgery for the treatment of gastric cancer is still controversial, particularly in terms of oncologic efficacy. The aim of this study was to compare short-term outcomes of laparoscopic and open resection for gastric cancer at a single Western institution. SUBJECTS AND METHODS This study was designed as a matched cohort study from a prospective gastric cancer database. Forty-one patients undergoing laparoscopic gastrectomy for gastric cancer between June 2008 and January 2012 were matched with 41 patients undergoing open gastrectomy in the same time period. Patient pairing was done according to age, gender, type of gastrectomy (subtotal or total), and tumor stage via a randomized statistical method. The short-term outcomes and oncologic adequacy of the laparoscopic and open procedures were compared. A D2 lymph node dissection was performed in the majority of patients in both groups. RESULTS The two study groups were similar with respect to patient and tumor characteristics. Laparoscopic procedures were associated with a decreased blood loss (118.7 versus 312.4 mL, P<.005), incidence of surgery-unrelated complications (3 versus 9 patients, P<.05), and duration of hospital stay (8.1 versus 11.5 days, P<.05) but increased operative time for both subtotal (223.5 versus 158.2 minutes, P<.001) and total (298.1 versus 185.5 minutes, P<.001) gastrectomies. The mean number of retrieved lymph nodes after D2 dissection was similar: 30.0 for laparoscopic and 29.7 for open patients. CONCLUSIONS Within the limitations of a nonrandomized analysis, this study shows that the laparoscopic approach is a safe and oncologically adequate option for the treatment of gastric cancer, which compares favorably with open gastrectomy in short-term outcomes.


Helicobacter | 1998

Serologic Detection of CagA Positive Helicobacter pylori Infection in a Northern Italian Population: Its Association with Peptic Ulcer Disease

B. Orsini; G. Ciancio; E. Surrenti; Giuseppe Macrì; Maria Rosa Biagini; Stefano Milani; C. Surrenti

About 60–70% of Helicobacter pylori strains possess cagA (cytotoxin associated gene A) gene and express its product CagA, a highly immunogenic 128–140kD protein. Patients infected with CagA positive strains develop serum IgG anti‐CagA. A serologic response to CagA has been detected in Helicobacter pylori infected patients with peptic ulcer more frequently than in those with gastritis alone. It is unclear whether this finding is consistent in different geographical populations. We investigated the relationship between anti‐CagA seropositivity and peptic ulcer disease in a Northern Italian population.


World Journal of Gastrointestinal Oncology | 2016

Robotic rectal surgery: State of the art

Fabio Staderini; Caterina Foppa; Alessio Minuzzo; Benedetta Badii; Etleva Qirici; Giacomo Trallori; Beatrice Mallardi; Gabriele Lami; Giuseppe Macrì; Andrea G. Bonanomi; Siro Bagnoli; Giuliano Perigli; Fabio Cianchi

Laparoscopic rectal surgery has demonstrated its superiority over the open approach, however it still has some technical limitations that lead to the development of robotic platforms. Nevertheless the literature on this topic is rapidly expanding there is still no consensus about benefits of robotic rectal cancer surgery over the laparoscopic one. For this reason a review of all the literature examining robotic surgery for rectal cancer was performed. Two reviewers independently conducted a search of electronic databases (PubMed and EMBASE) using the key words “rectum”, “rectal”, “cancer”, “laparoscopy”, “robot”. After the initial screen of 266 articles, 43 papers were selected for review. A total of 3013 patients were included in the review. The most commonly performed intervention was low anterior resection (1450 patients, 48.1%), followed by anterior resections (997 patients, 33%), ultra-low anterior resections (393 patients, 13%) and abdominoperineal resections (173 patients, 5.7%). Robotic rectal surgery seems to offer potential advantages especially in low anterior resections with lower conversions rates and better preservation of the autonomic function. Quality of mesorectum and status of and circumferential resection margins are similar to those obtained with conventional laparoscopy even if robotic rectal surgery is undoubtedly associated with longer operative times. This review demonstrated that robotic rectal surgery is both safe and feasible but there is no evidence of its superiority over laparoscopy in terms of postoperative, clinical outcomes and incidence of complications. In conclusion robotic rectal surgery seems to overcome some of technical limitations of conventional laparoscopic surgery especially for tumors requiring low and ultra-low anterior resections but this technical improvement seems not to provide, until now, any significant clinical advantages to the patients.


BMC Surgery | 2016

Robotic vs laparoscopic distal gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy for gastric cancer: a retrospective comparative mono-institutional study

Fabio Cianchi; Giampiero Indennitate; Giacomo Trallori; Manuela Ortolani; Beatrice Paoli; Giuseppe Macrì; Gabriele Lami; Beatrice Mallardi; Benedetta Badii; Fabio Staderini; Etleva Qirici; Antonio Taddei; Maria Novella Ringressi; Luca Messerini; Luca Novelli; Siro Bagnoli; Andrea G. Bonanomi; Caterina Foppa; Ileana Skalamera; Giulia Fiorenza; Giuliano Perigli

BackgroundRobotic surgery has been developed with the aim of improving surgical quality and overcoming the limitations of conventional laparoscopy in the performance of complex mini-invasive procedures. The present study was designed to compare robotic and laparoscopic distal gastrectomy in the treatment of gastric cancer.MethodsBetween June 2008 and September 2015, 41 laparoscopic and 30 robotic distal gastrectomies were performed by a single surgeon at the same institution. Clinicopathological characteristics of the patients, surgical performance, postoperative morbidity/mortality and pathologic data were prospectively collected and compared between the laparoscopic and robotic groups by the Chi-square test and the Mann-Whitney test, as indicated.ResultsThere were no significant differences in patient characteristics between the two groups. Mean tumor size was larger in the laparoscopic than in the robotic patients (5.3 ± 0.5 cm and 3.0 ± 0.4 cm, respectively; P = 0.02). However, tumor stage distribution was similar between the two groups. The mean number of dissected lymph nodes was higher in the robotic than in the laparoscopic patients (39.1 ± 3.7 and 30.5 ± 2.0, respectively; P = 0.02). The mean operative time was 262.6 ± 8.6 min in the laparoscopic group and 312.6 ± 15.7 min in the robotic group (P < 0.001). The incidences of surgery-related and surgery-unrelated complications were similar in the laparoscopic and in the robotic patients. There were no significant differences in short-term clinical outcomes between the two groups.ConclusionsWithin the limitation of a small-sized, non-randomized analysis, our study confirms that robotic distal gastrectomy is a feasible and safe surgical procedure. When compared with conventional laparoscopy, robotic surgery shows evident benefits in the performance of lymphadenectomy with a higher number of retrieved and examined lymph nodes.


BMC Surgery | 2015

Survival after laparoscopic and open surgery for colon cancer: a comparative, single-institution study

Fabio Cianchi; Giacomo Trallori; Beatrice Mallardi; Giuseppe Macrì; Maria Rosa Biagini; Gabriele Lami; Giampiero Indennitate; Siro Bagnoli; Andrea G. Bonanomi; Luca Messerini; Benedetta Badii; Fabio Staderini; Ileana Skalamera; Giulia Fiorenza; Giuliano Perigli

BackgroundSome recent studies have suggested that laparoscopic surgery for colorectal cancer may provide a potential survival advantage when compared with open surgery. This study aimed to compare cancer-related survivals of patients who underwent laparoscopic or open resection of colon cancer in the same, high volume tertiary center.MethodsPatients who had undergone elective open or laparoscopic surgery for colon cancer between January 2002 and December 2010 were analyzed. A clinical database was prospectively compiled. Survival analysis was calculated by using the Kaplan-Meier method.ResultsA total of 460 resections were performed. There were no significant differences between the laparoscopic (n = 227) and the open group (n = 233) apart from tumor stage: stage I tumors were more frequent in the laparoscopic group whereas stage II tumors were more frequent in the open group. The mean number of harvested lymph nodes was significantly higher in the laparoscopic than in the open group (20.0 ± 0.7 vs 14.2 ± 0.5, P < 0.01). The 5-year cancer-related survival for patients undergoing laparoscopic resection was significantly higher than that following open resections (83.1% vs 68.5%, P = 0.01). By performing a stage-to-stage comparison, we found that the improvement in survival in the laparoscopic group occurred mainly in patients with stage II tumors.ConclusionsOur study shows a survival advantage for patients who had undergone laparoscopic surgery for stage II colon cancer. This may be correlated with a higher number of harvested lymph nodes and thus a better stage stratification of these patients.


Surgical Laparoscopy Endoscopy & Percutaneous Techniques | 2012

Adequacy of lymphadenectomy in laparoscopic colorectal cancer surgery: a single-centre, retrospective study.

Fabio Cianchi; Camillo Cortesini; Giacomo Trallori; Luca Messerini; Luca Novelli; Camilla E. Comin; Etleva Qirici; Andrea G. Bonanomi; Giuseppe Macrì; Benedetta Badii; Aurora Kokomani; Giuliano Perigli

Purpose: This study aimed at evaluating the lymph node (LN) harvest after both open and laparoscopic colorectal cancer surgery. Methods: In the period between 1996 and 2009, 404 patients with colorectal cancer underwent open resection, whereas 147 patients underwent laparoscopic surgery. Results: The overall number of harvested LNs was significantly higher in the laparoscopic group than in the open one (16.5 vs. 14.3, P<0.001). A higher number of LNs was found in moderately differentiated tumors of the laparoscopic group when compared with the open surgery group (16.7 vs. 14.2, P<0.01). The numbers of harvested LNs in the proximal tumors and in stage II and III tumors were higher in the laparoscopic group than in the open group (18.9 vs. 15.4, P<0.001; 17.9 vs. 14.2, P=0.002; 17.3 vs. 15.3, P=0.02, respectively). Conclusions: Laparoscopic surgery for colorectal cancer can achieve LN retrieval similar to that achieved by the open approach.


World journal of clinical oncology | 2017

Gastric and duodenal polyps in familial adenomatous polyposis patients: Conventional endoscopy vs virtual chromoendoscopy (fujinon intelligent color enhancement) in dysplasia evaluation

Gabriele Lami; Andrea Galli; Giuseppe Macrì; Emanuele Dabizzi; Maria Rosa Biagini; M. Tarocchi; Luca Messerini; Rosa Valanzano; Stefano Milani; S. Polvani

AIM To test the fujinon intelligent color enhancement (FICE) in identifying dysplastic or adenomatous polyps in familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) patients. METHODS Seventy-six consecutive FAP patients, already treated by colectomy and members of sixty-five families, were enrolled. A FICE system for the upper gastro-intestinal tract with an electronic endoscope system and a standard duodenoscope (for side-viewing examination) were used by two expert examiners. Endoscopic resection was performed with diathermic loop for polyps ≥ 6 mm and with forceps for polyps < 6 mm. Formalin-fixed biopsy specimens were analyzed by two expert gastrointestinal pathologists blinded to size, location and number of FAP-associated fundic gland polyps. RESULTS Sixty-nine (90.8%) patients had gastric polyps (34 only in the corpus-fundus, 7 only in the antrum and 28 in the whole stomach) and 52 (68.4%) in duodenum (7 in the bulb, 35 in second/third duodenal portion, 10 both in the bulb and the second portion of duodenum). In the stomach fundus after FICE evaluation, 10 more polyps were removed from 10 patients for suspicious features of dysplasia or adenomas, but they were classified as cystic fundic gland after histology. In the antrum FICE identified more polyps than traditional endoscopy, showing a better tendency to identify adenomas and displastic areas. In the duodenum FICE added a significant advantage in identifying adenomas in the bulb and identified more polyps in the II/III portion. CONCLUSION FICE significantly increases adenoma detection rate in FAP patients but does not change any Spigelman stage and thus does not modify patient’s prognosis and treatment strategies.


SpringerPlus | 2014

Laparoscopic total gastrectomy using the transorally inserted anvil (OrVil™): a preliminary, single institution experience

Fabio Cianchi; Giuseppe Macrì; Giampiero Indennitate; Beatrice Mallardi; Giacomo Trallori; Maria Rosa Biagini; Benedetta Badii; Fabio Staderini; Giuliano Perigli

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