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Dive into the research topics where Ilaria Zanetti is active.

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Featured researches published by Ilaria Zanetti.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Pediatric Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor: The Italian and German Soft Tissue Sarcoma Cooperative Group

Modesto Carli; Andrea Ferrari; Adrian C. Mattke; Ilaria Zanetti; Michela Casanova; Gianni Bisogno; Giovanni Cecchetto; Rita Alaggio; Luigi De Sio; Eura Koscielniak; Guido Sotti; Joern Treuner

PURPOSE To assess the value of chemotherapy and radiotherapy in children with malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNSTs) and to identify risk factors associated with outcome. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 167 untreated eligible patients enrolled onto the Italian and German studies between 1975 and 1998 entered this analysis. Seventeen percent of patients had neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1). Chemotherapy was administered to 74% of patients; radiotherapy was administered to 38% of patients. RESULTS With a median follow-up of 7 years, 5-year overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) were 51% and 37%, respectively. The 5-year OS and PFS by Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study (IRS) groupings were as follows: group I, 82% and 61%; group II, 62% and 37%; group III, 32% and 27%; group IV, 26% and 21%, respectively. Univariate analysis identified IRS groups, size, invasiveness, primary site, age, and presence of NF1 as prognostic factors; multivariate analysis identified absence of NF1, tumor invasiveness T1, IRS groups I to II and extremity of primary site as independent favorable factors for OS. A trend was observed toward a benefit from radiotherapy after initial gross resection. The overall response rate to primary chemotherapy, including minor responses, in group III patients was 45%. CONCLUSION MPNST is an aggressive tumor for which complete surgical resection is the mainstay of successful treatment. Postoperative radiotherapy may have a role in improving local control in patients with minimal residual tumor. The reported responses to primary chemotherapy suggest that it may be effective in patients with tumor considered unresectable at diagnosis.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Paratesticular Rhabdomyosarcoma: Report From the Italian and German Cooperative Group

Andrea Ferrari; Gianni Bisogno; Michela Casanova; Cristina Meazza; Luigi Piva; Giovanni Cecchetto; Ilaria Zanetti; T. Pilz; A. Mattke; Joern Treuner; M. Carli

PURPOSE We report the experience of the German-Italian Cooperative Group with 216 pediatric patients with paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma treated over 20 years. PATIENTS AND METHODS At diagnosis, 198 patients had localized disease and 18 had distant metastases. Among the nonmetastatic patients, complete tumor resection was performed in 83% of cases. Evaluation of the retroperitoneal lymph nodes changed over the years from routine surgical staging to radiologic assessment. All patients received chemotherapy, which was reduced in intensity and duration for patients with low-risk features in subsequent protocols. Radiotherapy was administered to 10% of patients. RESULTS Among 72 patients with a negative retroperitoneal computed tomography (CT) scan, surgical assessment detected nodal involvement in only one case. Among 23 patients with enlarged nodes on CT scans, surgery confirmed nodal spread in 65% of patients. No differences in the rate of nodal involvement were observed over the years. With a median follow-up of 110 months, 5-year survival was 85.5% for the series as a whole, 94.6% for patients with localized disease, and 22.2% for metastatic cases. Retroperitoneal nodal recurrence was the major cause of treatment failure. Univariate analysis revealed the prognostic value of tumor invasiveness, size, and resectability, as well as of nodal involvement and age, in patients with localized tumor. CONCLUSION The outcome for patients with localized paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma is excellent, despite the reduction in chemotherapy over the years: an alkylating agent-free and anthracycline-free regimen is adequate treatment for low-risk patients. Surgical assessment of the retroperitoneum must be reserved for patients with enlarged nodes on CT scans. Children over 10 years old carry a higher risk of nodal involvement and relapse.


Cancer | 2007

Soft-tissue sarcomas in children and adolescents with neurofibromatosis type 1

Andrea Ferrari; Gianni Bisogno; Alessandra Macaluso; Michela Casanova; Paolo D'Angelo; Paolo Pierani; Ilaria Zanetti; Rita Alaggio; Giovanni Cecchetto; Modesto Carli

Patients affected by neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) are at higher risk of developing soft‐tissue sarcomas (STS) than the general population. The clinical findings and outcome in 43 children and adolescents with NF1 treated for STS in the Italian protocols between 1988 and 2004 are reported.


Cancer | 2003

Rhabdomyosarcoma in infants younger than one year old: a report from the Italian Cooperative Group

Andrea Ferrari; Michela Casanova; Gianni Bisogno; Ilaria Zanetti; Giovanni Cecchetto; Bruno De Bernardi; Riccardo Riccardi; Paolo Tamaro; Cristina Meazza; Rita Alaggio; Vito Ninfo; M. Carli

The management of rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) in patients age < 1 year is particularly problematic and requires a tailored therapeutic approach. We report on the Italian Cooperative Groups 20‐year study of 50 children with RMS who were age < 1 year at diagnosis.


Cancer | 2003

Role of Surgery for Nonmetastatic Abdominal Rhabdomyosarcomas A Report from the Italian and German Soft Tissue Cooperative Groups Studies

Giovanni Cecchetto; Gianni Bisogno; Jorn Treuner; Andrea Ferrari; Adrian Mattke; Michela Casanova; Patrizia Dall'Igna; Ilaria Zanetti; Sandra Volpato; Fortunato Siracusa; Gianni Scarzello; Camillo Boglino; M. Carli

In the current study, the authors aim to evaluate clinical features and treatment results observed in patients from the German and Italian studies who had nonmetastatic abdominal rhabdomyosarcomas (RMS).


Cancer | 2005

Localized Unresectable Non-Rhabdo Soft Tissue Sarcomas of the Extremities in Pediatric Age Results from the Italian Studies

Giovanni Cecchetto; Rita Alaggio; Patrizia Dall'Igna; Gianni Bisogno; Andrea Ferrari; Cosimo Gigante; Michela Casanova; Guido Sotti; Ilaria Zanetti; M. Carli

Treatment of initially unresectable nonrhabdo soft tissue sarcomas (NRSTS) in pediatric age is debated, due to their different chemosensitivity. The authors objective was to evaluate clinical features and treatment results observed in a series of Italian patients over a 24‐year period.


Cancer | 2003

Primary transcrotal excision for paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma: is hemiscrotectomy really mandatory?

Patrizia Dall'Igna; Gianni Bisogno; Andrea Ferrari; Jorn Treuner; M. Carli; Ilaria Zanetti; M. Guglielmi; Giovanni Cecchetto

To evaluate the role of primary reexcision (PRE) with scrotal resection in patients with paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma enrolled in the German‐Italian Cooperative Studies. The authors compared patients who underwent this procedure, according to the protocol guidelines, with those who did not.


Pediatric Surgery International | 2001

Primary re-excision: the Italian experience in patients with localized soft-tissue sarcomas

Giovanni Cecchetto; M. Guglielmi; Alessandro Inserra; Ilaria Zanetti; Patrizia Dall'Igna; C. Gigante; M. Carli

Abstract. Primary re-excision (PRE) is a wide, non-mutilating procedure carried out in patients with soft-tissue sarcomas (STS) when microscopic residuals are left after initial excision or when there are insufficient data on its completeness. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of PRE in patients enrolled in two consecutive Italian studies between January 1988 and September 1999. Of 126 patients with grade IIa tumors, 53 underwent PRE (23 rhabdomyosarcomas [RMS] and 30 non-RMS STS [NRSTS]). The primary sites were the extremities in 20, paratesticular 15, trunk 9, head-neck-non-parameningeal (HNnPM) 6, bladder 1, other sites in 2; the tumor (T) status was T1a in 30, T1b in 10, T2a in 9, and T2b in 4; the median interval between primary surgery and PRE was 36 days. Of the 53 patients, 45 had complete histologic excision of the tumor (residuals were found in 21/45 specimens) and subsequently received chemotherapy (CT) alone: 39/45 are in their first complete remission (CR) with a median follow-up of 53 months; 6/45 (3 RMS, 3 NRSTS) relapsed, 4 locally (2 extremities, 2 trunk), and 1 of these died of progressive disease, and 2 with metastatic spread died of their disease. In 8/53 cases (HNnPM 4, extremities 2, bladder 1, trunk 1) PRE did not achieve complete removal of the residuals (3 T1a, 2 Tlb, 2 T2a, 1 T2b); these patients were treated with CT and/or radiotherapy (RT); 1 also underwent further surgery. PRE was able to achieve or confirm complete excision in 45/53 patients, and 39 maintained the first CR without RT. The histologic types and the presence of residuals at PRE did not predict the failures; PRE was effective especially in extremity, trunk, and paratesticular sites, whereas its role was uncertain in large sarcomas over 5 cm in size.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2008

Full-dose ifosfamide can be safely administered to outpatients.

Cristina Meazza; Gianni Bisogno; Michela Casanova; Ilaria Zanetti; Modesto Carli; Andrea Ferrari

This report compares a traditional full‐dose ifosfamide administration modality (24‐hr hyperhydration and mesna infusion) with a simplified 9‐hr hyperhydration and mesna infusion for use in outpatients. Acute ifosfamide toxicity was the same, suggesting that ifosfamide could be safely administered to outpatients, reducing the currently‐recommended prolonged hyperhydration and mesna uroprotection, thus resulting in shorter hospital stays and consequently lower costs. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2008;50:375–378.


The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health | 2017

The EpSSG NRSTS 2005 treatment protocol for desmoid-type fibromatosis in children: an international prospective case series

Daniel Orbach; Bernadette Brennan; Gianni Bisogno; Max M. van Noesel; Véronique Minard-Colin; Julia Daragjati; Michela Casanova; Nadège Corradini; Ilaria Zanetti; Gian Luca De Salvo; Anne Sophie Defachelles; Anna Kelsey; Myriam Weyl Ben Arush; Nadine Francotte; Andrea Ferrari

BACKGROUND In 2005, the European Pediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG) proposed a conservative treatment algorithm-consisting of an initial wait-and-see strategy, non-mutilating surgery, and minimal-morbidity chemotherapy (in the case of tumour progression)-for paediatric patients with desmoid-type fibromatosis. We aimed to investigate the outcomes of this algorithm. METHODS In this case series, patients (<25 years) with desmoid-type fibromatosis from 57 centres in eight countries were prospectively registered through a web-based system. Diagnosis was based on histological analysis of the tumour specimen after biopsy or surgery, and we classified patients by tumour site, clinical stage (TNM system), and post-surgical stage (Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study system). Progression-free survival was defined as the time from diagnosis until disease progression (clinical or radiological progressive disease, relapse, or death from any cause). FINDINGS From Oct 1, 2005, to July 31, 2016, 173 patients (median age 11·4 years [IQR 4·0-14·1], 88 [51%] male patients) were registered. After excluding patients with missing data, 54 (35%) patients had no immediate therapy (wait-and-see strategy), 47 (31%) had immediate surgery, and 53 (34%) had immediate chemotherapy after diagnosis. 5-year progression-free survival was 36·5% (95% CI 27·8-45·2) overall, 26·7% (14·2-41·0) in the wait-and-see group, 41·2% (25·8-55·9) in the surgery group, and 42·8% (27·2-57·6) in the chemotherapy group (overall log-rank p=0·17; wait-and-see vs surgery p=0·12; wait-and-see vs chemotherapy p=0·13). In multivariable analysis, large tumour size (>5 cm) was associated with worse progression-free survival (hazard ratio 2·25, 95% CI 1·34-3·76; p=0·0021). Apart from one patient in the chemotherapy group who died from a secondary tumour (head and neck anaplastic embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma), all patients were alive at the time of analysis. 13 (8%) patients had biopsy only (no further treatment), 65 (42%) had chemotherapy only, 31 (20%) had surgery only, 36 (23%) had both chemotherapy and surgery, and nine (6%) had radiotherapy in addition to other therapies. INTERPRETATION In paediatric patients with desmoid-type fibromatosis, the EpSSG conservative strategy did not compromise outcomes and could be adopted to reduce treatment burden. FUNDING S Wisnia and la Città della Speranza Foundation.

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Andrea Ferrari

University Hospital of Basel

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Giovanni Cecchetto

American Board of Legal Medicine

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Anna Kelsey

Boston Children's Hospital

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