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Dive into the research topics where Juliano J. Cerci is active.

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Featured researches published by Juliano J. Cerci.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2010

18F-FDG PET After 2 Cycles of ABVD Predicts Event-Free Survival in Early and Advanced Hodgkin Lymphoma

Juliano J. Cerci; Luis Fernando Pracchia; Camila da Cruz Gouveia Linardi; Felipe A. Pitella; Dominique Delbeke; Marisa Izaki; Evelinda Trindade; José Soares Junior; Valeria Buccheri; José Cláudio Meneghetti

Our objective was to assess the prognostic value of 18F-FDG PET after 2 cycles of chemotherapy using doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (ABVD) in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patients overall and in subgroups of patients with early and advanced stages and with low and high risks according to the International Prognostic Score (IPS). Methods: One hundred fifteen patients with newly diagnosed HL were prospectively included in the study. All underwent standard ABVD therapy followed by consolidation radiotherapy in cases of bulky disease. After 2 cycles of ABVD, the patients were evaluated with PET (PET2). Prognostic analysis compared the 3-y event-free survival (EFS) rate to the PET2 results, clinical data, and IPS. Results: Of the 104 evaluated patients, 93 achieved complete remission after first-line therapy. During a median follow-up of 36 mo, relapse or disease progression was seen in 22 patients. Treatment failure was seen in 16 of the 30 PET2-positive patients and in only 6 of the 74 PET2-negative patients. PET2 was the only significant prognostic factor. The 3-y EFS was 53.4% for PET2-positive patients and 90.5% for PET2-negative ones (P < 0.001). When patients were categorized according to low or high IPS risk and according to early or advanced stage of disease, PET2 was also significantly associated with treatment outcome. Conclusion: PET2 is an accurate and independent predictor of EFS in HL. A negative interim 18F-FDG PET result is highly predictive of treatment success in overall HL patients, as well as in subgroups with early or advanced-stage disease and with low or high IPS risk.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Cost Effectiveness of Positron Emission Tomography in Patients With Hodgkin's Lymphoma in Unconfirmed Complete Remission or Partial Remission After First-Line Therapy

Juliano J. Cerci; Evelinda Trindade; Luis Fernando Pracchia; Felipe A. Pitella; Camila da Cruz Gouveia Linardi; José Soares; Dominique Delbeke; Leigh-Ann Topfer; Valeria Buccheri; José Cláudio Meneghetti

PURPOSE To assess the cost effectiveness of fluorine-18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) in patients with Hodgkins lymphoma (HL) with unconfirmed complete remission (CRu) or partial remission (PR) after first-line treatment. PATIENTS AND METHODS One hundred thirty patients with HL were prospectively studied. After treatment, all patients with CRu/PR were evaluated with FDG-PET. In addition, PET-negative patients were evaluated with standard follow-up, and PET-positive patients were evaluated with biopsies of the positive lesions. Local unit costs of procedures and tests were evaluated. Cost effectiveness was determined by evaluating projected annual economic impact of strategies without and with FDG-PET on HL management. RESULTS After treatment, CRu/PR was observed in 50 (40.0%) of the 127 patients; the sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of FDG-PET were 100%, 92.0%, 92.3%, and 100%, respectively (accuracy of 95.9%). Local restaging costs without PET were


Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2011

Myocardial Perfusion Imaging Is a Strong Predictor of Death in Women

Mario Sergio Julio Cerci; Juliano J. Cerci; Rodrigo J. Cerci; Carlos Cunha Pereira Neto; Evelinda Trindade; Dominique Delbeke; Claudio Da Cunha; João V. Vitola

350,050 compared with


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2014

Combined PET and Biopsy Evidence of Marrow Involvement Improves Prognostic Prediction in Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma

Juliano J. Cerci; Tamás Györke; Stefano Fanti; Diana Paez; José Cláudio Meneghetti; Francisca Redondo; Monica Celli; Chirayu Auewarakul; Venkatesh Rangarajan; Sumeet Gujral; Charity Gorospe; Maejoy V. Campo; June-Key Chung; Tim P. Morris; Maurizio Dondi; Robert Carr

283,262 with PET, a 19% decrease. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio is -


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2014

Prospective International Cohort Study Demonstrates Inability of Interim PET to Predict Treatment Failure in Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma

Robert Carr; Stefano Fanti; Diana Paez; Juliano J. Cerci; Tamás Györke; Francisca Redondo; Tim P. Morris; Cláudio Meneghetti; Chirayu Auewarakul; Reena Nair; Charity Gorospe; June-Key Chung; Isinsu Kuzu; Monica Celli; Sumeet Gujral; Rose Ann Padua; Maurizio Dondi

3,268 to detect one true case. PET costs represented 1% of total costs of HL treatment. Simulated costs in the 974 patients registered in the 2008 Brazilian public health care database showed that the strategy including restaging PET would have a total program cost of


Clinical Lymphoma, Myeloma & Leukemia | 2011

Consistency of FDG-PET Accuracy and Cost-Effectiveness in Initial Staging of Patients With Hodgkin Lymphoma Across Jurisdictions

Juliano J. Cerci; Evelinda Trindade; Valeria Buccheri; Stefano Fanti; Artur Martins Novaes Coutinho; Lucia Zanoni; Camila da Cruz Gouveia Linardi; Monica Celli; Dominique Delbeke; Luis Fernando Pracchia; Felipe A. Pitela; José Soares; Pier Luigi Zinzani; José Cláudio Meneghetti

56,498,314, which is


Clinics | 2009

Positron emission tomography with 2-[18F]-Fluoro-2-Deoxy-D-Glucose for initial staging of hodgkin lymphoma: a single center experience in Brazil

Juliano J. Cerci; Luis Fernando Pracchia; José Soares Júnior; Camila da Cruz Gouveia Linardi; José Cláudio Meneghetti; Valeria Buccheri

516,942 less than without restaging PET, resulting in a 1% cost saving. CONCLUSION FDG-PET demonstrated 95.9% accuracy in restaging for patients with HL with CRu/PR after first-line therapy. Given the observed probabilities, FDG-PET is highly cost effective and would reduce costs for the public health care program in Brazil.


Radiologia Brasileira | 2010

Lista de recomendações do Exame PET/CT com 18F-FDG em Oncologia. Consenso entre a Sociedade Brasileira de Cancerologia e a Sociedade Brasileira de Biologia, Medicina Nuclear e Imagem Molecular

José Soares Júnior; Roberto Porto Fonseca; Juliano J. Cerci; Carlos Alberto Buchpiguel; Marcelo Livorsi da Cunha; Marcelo Mamed; Sérgio Altino de Almeida

OBJECTIVES We sought to assess the prognostic value and risk classification improvement using contemporary single-photon emission computed tomography myocardial perfusion imaging (SPECT-MPI) to predict all-cause mortality. BACKGROUND Myocardial perfusion is a strong estimator of prognosis. Evidence published to date has not established the added prognostic value of SPECT-MPI nor defined an approach to detect improve classification of risk in women from a developing nation. METHODS A total of 2,225 women referred for SPECT-MPI were followed by a mean period of 3.7 ± 1.4 years. SPECT-MPI results were classified as abnormal on the presence of any perfusion defect. Abnormal scans were further classified as with mild/moderate reversible, severe reversible, partial reversible, or fixed perfusion defects. Risk estimates for incident mortality were categorized as <1%/year, 1% to 2%/year, and >2%/year using Cox proportional hazard models. Risk-adjusted models incorporated clinical risk factors, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), and perfusion variables. RESULTS All-cause death occurred in 139 patients. SPECT-MPI significantly risk stratified the population; patients with abnormal scans had significantly higher death rates compared with patients with normal scans, 13.1% versus 4.0%, respectively (p < 0.001). Cox analysis demonstrated that after adjusting for clinical risk factors and LVEF, SPECT-MPI improved the model discrimination (integrated discrimination index = 0.009; p = 0.02), added significant incremental prognostic information (global chi-square increased from 87.7 to 127.1; p < 0.0001), and improved risk prediction (net reclassification improvement = 0.12; p = 0.005). CONCLUSIONS SPECT-MPI added significant incremental prognostic information to clinical and left ventricular functional variables while enhancing the ability to classify this Brazilian female population into low- and high-risk categories of all-cause mortality.


Clinics | 2007

Metabolic test with fluorine-18-fluorodeoxyglucose in staging and detection of residual tumor or recurrence in Hodgkin lymphoma

Luis Fernando Pracchia; Anna Alice Rolim Chaves; Juliano J. Cerci; José Soares Júnior; José Cláudio Meneghetti; Valeria Buccheri

Bone marrow is an important extranodal site in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), and marrow histology has been incorporated into the new National Comprehensive Cancer Network international prognostic index. Marrow involvement demonstrated histologically confers poor prognosis but is identified by staging PET in more cases. How information from staging PET and biopsy should be combined to optimize outcome prediction remains unclear. Methods: The International Atomic Energy Agency sponsored a prospective international cohort study to better define the use of PET in DLBCL. As a planned subsidiary analysis, we examined the interplay of marrow involvement identified by PET and biopsy on clinical outcomes. Results: Eight countries contributed 327 cases with a median follow-up of 35 mo. The 2-y outcomes of cases with no evidence of marrow involvement (n = 231) were 81% (95% confidence interval [CI], 76%–86%) for event-free survival (EFS) and 88% (83%–91%) for overall survival (OS); cases identified only on PET (n = 61), 81% (69%–89%) for EFS and 88% (77%–94%) for OS; cases indentified only on biopsy (n = 10), 80% (41%–95%) for EFS and 100% for OS; or cases identified by both PET and biopsy (n = 25), 45% (25%–64%) for EFS and 55% (32%–73%) for OS. The hazard ratios for PET-negative/biopsy-negative cases versus PET-positive/biopsy-positive cases were 2.67 (95% CI, 1.48–4.79) for EFS and 3.94 (1.93–8.06) for OS. Conclusion: This large study demonstrates that positive iliac crest biopsy histology only confers poor prognosis for patients who also have abnormal marrow 18F-FDG uptake identified on the staging PET scan. Abnormal 18F-FDG uptake in marrow, when iliac crest biopsy histology is normal, has no adverse effect on outcomes.


Radiologia Brasileira | 2012

A tomografia por emissão de pósitrons com 2-[18F]-fluoro-2-desoxi-D-glicose é custo-efetiva em pacientes com câncer de pulmão não pequenas células no Brasil

Juliano J. Cerci; Teresa Yae Takagaki; Evelinda Trindade; Roberta Morgado; Fausto Morabito; Rafael Silva Musolino; José Soares Júnior; José Cláudio Meneghetti

The International Atomic Energy Agency sponsored a large, multinational, prospective study to further define PET for risk stratification of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and to test the hypothesis that international biological diversity or diversity of healthcare systems may influence the kinetics of treatment response as assessed by interim PET (I-PET). Methods: Cancer centers in Brazil, Chile, Hungary, India, Italy, the Philippines, South Korea, and Thailand followed a common protocol based on treatment with R-CHOP (cyclophosphamide, hydroxyadriamycin, vincristine, prednisolone with rituximab), with I-PET after 2–3 cycles of chemotherapy and at the end of chemotherapy scored visually. Results: Two-year survivals for all 327 patients (median follow-up, 35 mo) were 79% (95% confidence interval [CI], 74%–83%) for event-free survival (EFS) and 86% (95% CI, 81%–89%) for overall survival (OS). Two hundred ten patients (64%) were I-PET–negative, and 117 (36%) were I-PET–positive. Two-year EFS was 90% (95% CI, 85%–93%) for I-PET–negative and 58% (95% CI, 48%–66%) for I-PET–positive, with a hazard ratio of 5.31 (95% CI, 3.29–8.56). Two-year OS was 93% (95% CI, 88%–96%) for I-PET–negative and 72% (95% CI, 63%–80%) for I-PET–positive, with a hazard ratio of 3.86 (95% CI, 2.12–7.03). On sequential monitoring, 192 of 312 (62%) patients had complete response at both I-PET and end-of-chemotherapy PET, with an EFS of 97% (95% CI, 92%–98%); 110 of these with favorable clinical indicators had an EFS of 98% (95% CI, 92%–100%). In contrast, the 107 I-PET–positive cases segregated into 2 groups: 58 (54%) achieved PET-negative complete remission at the end of chemotherapy (EFS, 86%; 95% CI, 73%–93%); 46% remained PET-positive (EFS, 35%; 95% CI, 22%–48%). Heterogeneity analysis found no significant difference between countries for outcomes stratified by I-PET. Conclusion: This large international cohort delivers 3 novel findings: treatment response assessed by I-PET is comparable across disparate healthcare systems, secondly a negative I-PET findings together with good clinical status identifies a group with an EFS of 98%, and thirdly a single I-PET scan does not differentiate chemoresistant lymphoma from complete response and cannot be used to guide risk-adapted therapy.

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Dominique Delbeke

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Mateos Bogoni

Federal University of Paraná

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