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Dive into the research topics where Luigi Brancaccio is active.

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Featured researches published by Luigi Brancaccio.


British Journal of Cancer | 2004

A randomised clinical trial of two docetaxel regimens (weekly vs 3 week) in the second-line treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer. The DISTAL 01 study

C. Gridelli; Ciro Gallo; M. Di Maio; Emiddio Barletta; Alfonso Illiano; Paolo Maione; S Salvagni; Francovito Piantedosi; G. Palazzolo; Orazio Caffo; Anna Ceribelli; A Falcone; P Mazzanti; Luigi Brancaccio; M A Capuano; Luciano Isa; Santi Barbera; F. Perrone

Docetaxel (75 mg m−2 3-weekly) is standard second-line treatment in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with significant toxicity. To verify whether a weekly schedule (33.3 mg m−2 for 6 weeks) improved quality of life (QoL), a phase III study was performed with 220 advanced NSCLC patients, ⩽75 years, ECOG PS ⩽2. QoL was assessed by EORTC questionnaires and the Daily Diary Card (DDC). No difference was found in global QoL scores at 3 weeks. Pain, cough and hair loss significantly favoured the weekly schedule, while diarrhoea was worse. DDC analysis showed that loss of appetite and overall condition were significantly worse in the 3-week arm in the first week, while nausea and loss of appetite were more severe in the weekly arm in the third week. Response rate and survival were similar, hazard ratio of death in the weekly arm being 1.04 (95% CI 0.77–1.39). A 3-weekly docetaxel was more toxic for leukopenia, neutropenia, febrile neutropenia and hair loss; any grade 3–4 haematologic toxicity was significantly more frequent in the standard arm (25 vs 6%). The weekly schedule could be preferred for patients candidate to receive docetaxel as second-line treatment for advanced NSCLC, because of some QoL advantages, lower toxicity and no evidence of strikingly different effect on survival.


British Journal of Cancer | 2004

Prevalence and management of pain in Italian patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer

M Di Maio; Cesare Gridelli; Ciro Gallo; Luigi Manzione; Luigi Brancaccio; Santi Barbera; Sergio Federico Robbiati; Giovanni Pietro Ianniello; Francesco Ferraù; Elena Piazza; Luciano Frontini; Francesco Rosetti; Francesco Carrozza; Alessandra Bearz; Mario Spatafora; V. Adamo; Luciano Isa; R. V. Iaffaioli; E Di Salvo; F. Perrone

Pain is a highly distressing symptom for patients with advanced cancer. WHO analgesic ladder is widely accepted as a guideline for its treatment. Our aim was to describe pain prevalence among patients diagnosed with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), impact of pain on quality of life (QoL) and adequacy of pain management. Data of 1021 Italian patients enrolled in three randomised trials of chemotherapy for NSCLC were pooled. QoL was assessed by EORTC QLQ-C30 and LC-13. Analgesic consumption during the 3 weeks following QoL assessment was recorded. Adequacy of pain management was evaluated by the Pain Management Index (PMI). Some pain was reported by 74% of patients (42% mild, 24% moderate and 7% severe); 50% stated pain was affecting daily activities (30% a little, 16% quite a bit, 3% very much). Bone metastases strongly affected presence of pain. Mean global QoL linearly decreased from 64.9 to 36.4 from patients without pain to those with severe pain (P<0.001). According to PMI, 616 out of 752 patients reporting pain (82%) received inadequate analgesic treatment. Bone metastases were associated with improved adequacy and worst pain with reduced adequacy at multivariate analysis. In conclusion, pain is common in patients with advanced NSCLC, significantly affects QoL, and is frequently undertreated. We recommend that: (i) pain self-assessment should be part of oncological clinical practice; (ii) pain control should be a primary goal in clinical practice and in clinical trials; (iii) physicians should receive more training in pain management; (iv) analgesic treatment deserves greater attention in protocols of anticancer treatment.


Lung Cancer | 2002

Carboplatin plus vinorelbine plus G-CSF in elderly patients with extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer: a poorly tolerated regimen. Results of a multicentre phase II study

Cesare Gridelli; Antonio Rossi; Emiddio Barletta; Nicola Panza; Luigi Brancaccio; R. Cioffi; Tonino Pedicini; Giovanni Pietro Ianniello; Elena Piazza; Nestore Rossi; Rosario Vincenzo Iaffaioli; Paolo Maione; Massimo Di Maio; Ciro Gallo; Francesco Perrone

PURPOSE AND METHODS A multicentre phase II trial (single-stage design) was undertaken to test the activity and toxicity of carboplatin (AUC 5 according to Calvert, day 1) plus vinorelbine (25 mg/m(2) days 1 and 8) with lenograstim support, every 3 weeks in the first line treatment of elderly patients, aged 65 or more, affected by extensive small-cell lung cancer (SCLC). The primary end-point of the trial was the objective response rate. Twenty-three responses among 37 patients were considered necessary to proceed to a phase III trial. RESULTS Twenty-eight patients were enrolled (median age 70 years). Treatment was remarkably toxic. Three patients died while on treatment. Eleven patients (39.3%, 95% exact confidence interval (CI): 21.5-59.4) had an objective response, that was complete in 2 cases. Median time to progression was 5.1 months (95% CI: 3.3-6.7). Median survival was 7.9 months (95% CI: 4.8-14.4). CONCLUSION Carboplatin plus vinorelbine is poorly tolerated and not sufficiently active to warrant phase III comparison with standard chemotherapy regimens in elderly patients with extensive SCLC.


Lung Cancer | 2000

Amifostine plus cisplatin plus vinorelbine in the treatment of advanced non small cell lung cancer: a multicenter phase II study

Cesare Gridelli; Silvio Cigolari; A. Maiorino; G.P. Ianniello; Luigi Brancaccio; Antonio Rossi; G. De Cataldis; T Pedicini; L. Maiorino; E Barletta; M Di Lanno; Domenico Bilancia; Carlo Crispino; M.L Barzelloni; P. Masullo; R D’Aniello; L. Manzione

PURPOSE to evaluate the activity and toxicity of the combination cisplatin plus vinorelbine plus amifostine in advanced non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). PATIENTS AND METHODS a two-stage Simon design was applied. To proceed after the first stage, responses from seven of 19 patients were needed. Overall, 17 responses from 40 treated patients were required to comply with the design parameter. Inclusion criteria were cyto-histologically proven stage IIIB-IV NSCLC; age of 70 years or less; Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 2 or less; normal cardiac, hepatic, renal and bone marrow functions; and no previous chemotherapy. Patients were staged by physical examination, biochemistry, chest radiograph, brain, thoracic and abdominal computed tomographic (CT) scans, and bone scan. All patients received cisplatin 100 mg/m(2) intravenously (iv) day 1, vinorelbine 25 mg/m(2) iv days 1-8-15-22, amifostine 740 mg/m(2) iv day 1 every 4 weeks up to six cycles. Eleven of 40 enrolled patients were stage IIIB and 29 stage IV, with a median age of 57 years (range, 38-70 years). RESULTS all patients were evaluable for response and toxicity (intention to treat analysis). We observed 20 (50%) objective responses, with four (10%) complete responses. Median time to progression was 20 weeks, and median survival was 45 weeks. The toxicity was manageable. The reported main toxicities were neutropenia grade 4 in 10% of patients, grade 1 and grade 3 nephrotoxicity both in 5% of patients and grade 1 amifostine-related hypotension in 15% of patients. CONCLUSION these data show that cisplatin plus vinorelbine plus amifostine is an active and feaseable regimen in stage IIIB-IV NSCLC. A phase III trial comparing cisplatin plus vinorelbine versus cisplatin plus vinorelbine plus amifostine in advanced NSCLC is warranted.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 1999

Effects of vinorelbine on quality of life and survival of elderly patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer

Cesare Gridelli; Francesco Perrone; Ciro Gallo; Antonio Rossi; Francesco Scognamiglio; Cesare Guida; Silvio Monfardini; Giovanni Pietro Ianniello; Vincenza Tinessa; Maria Grazia Caprio; Antonio Santoro; L. Maiorino; Massimiliano Santoro; Francovito Piantedosi; Luigi Brancaccio; Carlo Crispino; Silvio Cigolari; Maria Di Lanno; Valentina Angelini; Luigi Manzione; Domenico Bilancia; Angelo Dinota; Giuseppe Failla; Rosa Anna Aiello; Paolo Tralongo; Franco Figoli; Ludmilla Zuccarino; Tonino Pedicini; Antonio Febbraro; Cesira Zollo


Lung Cancer | 1998

Vinorelbine (VNR) plus best supportive care (BSC) vs. BSC in the treatment of advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) elderly patients (PTS). Results of a phase III randomized trial

C. Gridelli; Giovanni Pietro Ianniello; L. Maiorino; Luigi Brancaccio; Silvio Cigolari; Domenico Bilancia; R Aiello; L Zuccarino; T Pedicini; S Zonato; Gl Pappagallo; Silvio Monfardini; Antonio Rossi; Ciro Gallo; F. Perrone


Lung Cancer | 2008

The MILES-2G phase 2 study of single-agent gemcitabine with prolonged constant infusion in advanced non-small cell lung cancer elderly patients

Cesare Gridelli; Ermelinda De Maio; Santi Barbera; Mirella Sannicolò; Elena Piazza; Francovito Piantedosi; Luigi Brancaccio; Alessandro Morabito; Paolo Maione; Francesco Renda; Giuseppe Signoriello; Francesco Perrone


Lung Cancer | 1994

Carboplatin plus epirubicin plus VP-16, concurrent ‘split course’ radiotherapy and adjuvant surgery for limited small cell lung cancer

C. Gridelli; Modesto D'Aprile; Carlo Curcio; Luigi Brancaccio; Sergio Palmeri; Giuseppe Comella; Enzo Veltri; Giovanni Ferrante; Maria Gentile; Antonio Rossi; Giorgio Arcangeli; Maurizio Montella; A. Raffaele Bianco


American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1994

Carboplatin, epirubicin, and VP-16 chemotherapy in the treatment of small cell lung cancer

C. Gridelli; Ianniello Gp; Maiorino A; Carlo Curcio; Modesto D'Aprile; Luigi Brancaccio; Palmeri S; Maria Gentile; Giuseppe Comella; Pedicini T


Lung Cancer | 1997

212 Carboplatin plus vinorelbine: A new active regimen in extensive small cell lung cancer. Results of a multicenter phase II study

C. Gridelli; Giovanni Pietro Ianniello; Luigi Brancaccio; Francesco Perrone; Rosario Vincenzo Iaffaioli; Carlo Curcio; Modesto D'Aprile; R. Cioffi; Silvio Cigolari; Antonio Rossi; L. Rinaldi; Enzo Veltri; G. Palazzolo; L. Leo; A. R. Bianco; M. Pergola; Silvio Monfardini

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Antonio Rossi

University of Naples Federico II

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C. Gridelli

University of Naples Federico II

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Ciro Gallo

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Giovanni Pietro Ianniello

University of Naples Federico II

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Carlo Curcio

University of Naples Federico II

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Modesto D'Aprile

University of Naples Federico II

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Silvio Cigolari

University of Naples Federico II

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Francesco Perrone

Northern Alberta Institute of Technology

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