M. Bergonzi
University of Pavia
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Featured researches published by M. Bergonzi.
Nutrients | 2013
Michele Di Stefano; C. Mengoli; M. Bergonzi; Gino Roberto Corazza
Osteoporosis affects many patients with celiac disease (CD), representing the consequence of calcium malabsorption and persistent activation of mucosal inflammation. A slight increase of fracture risk is evident in this condition, particularly in those with overt malabsorption and in postmenopausal state. The adoption of a correct gluten-free diet (GFD) improves bone derangement, but is not able to normalize bone mass in all the patients. Biomarkers effective in the prediction of bone response to gluten-free diet are not yet available and the indications of guidelines are still imperfect and debated. In this review, the pathophysiology of bone loss is correlated to clinical aspects, defining an alternative proposal of management for this condition.
The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2014
Michele Di Stefano; E. Miceli; P. Tana; C. Mengoli; M. Bergonzi; E. Pagani; Gino Roberto Corazza
OBJECTIVES:Little information is available on the mechanisms responsible for dyspeptic symptoms in postprandial distress syndrome (PDS), characterized by the presence of prevalently meal-related early satiation and fullness, and the epigastric pain syndrome (EPS), characterized by the prominent symptom of epigastric pain, generally not meal related. In a group of PDS patients, the presence of hypersensitivity to gastric distension in both fasting and postprandial phases was described as the main pathophysiological mechanism; on the contrary, we have no information on the pathophysiology of EPS.METHODS:Sixty Helicobacter pylori (HP)-negative, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)-negative, and gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)-negative patients with functional dyspepsia according to Rome III criteria underwent symptom, anxiety, depression, and somatization evaluation, gastric barostat test, and gastric emptying time evaluation for solids. Fifteen age- and sex-matched healthy volunteers (HVs) were also enrolled as a control group.RESULTS:In PDS patients, the prevalence of both fasting and postprandial hypersensitivity was higher than in EPS patients, and the extent of postprandial reduction of discomfort threshold was significantly correlated with symptom severity. In EPS patients, gastric volume at fasting discomfort threshold and fasting compliance were significantly lower than in PDS patients. Gastric emptying time and gastric accommodation were similar between the two dyspeptic groups. Dyspeptic patients showed a higher prevalence of psychiatric disorders than HVs, but the prevalence was similar between PDS and EPS patients.CONCLUSIONS:Fasting and postprandial hypersensitivity characterize PDS patients and a reduction of gastric compliance is present in EPS patients. However, the pathophysiology of EPS appears more complex than PDS and further studies are needed to analyze central processing and integration of afferent pathways in order to clarify the role of the central nervous system in this condition.
Cancer Epidemiology | 2013
Paolo G. Gobbi; M. Bergonzi; Mario Comelli; Lara Villano; Donatella Pozzoli; Alessandro Vanoli; Paolo Dionigi
BACKGROUND The aim of this study was to investigate the prognostic role of diagnostic delay and clinical presentation (regarding pain, jaundice, and weight loss) in pancreatic carcinoma. METHODS One hundred and seventy patients with pancreatic cancer were diagnosed and treated in the decade 2001-2010 (100 males and 70 females, with a mean age of 65.8 years [range, 36-91]). Patients were staged with spiral computed tomography and 75% were found to have advanced disease (28 stage III, 99 stage IV disease). Ductal adenocarcinoma was diagnosed in 147 cases, other subtypes of carcinoma in the remaining 23. Fifty patients were operated with radical intent, 19 had palliative surgery, 101 were considered inoperable because of advanced disease or heavy anesthesiologic risk; 31 of these inoperable patients underwent biliary decompression by insertion of an endoluminal or percutaneous stent. Gemcitabine-containing regimens were administered to 143 patients and radiotherapy was combined in 19. Overall and relative survival were the parameters studied. Multivariate analysis was performed by multiple regressions applied to proportional-hazards model. RESULTS From all the clinical, pathological and therapeutical factors evaluated the statistically significant ones were time to diagnosis and surgery. Among symptoms pain was related to the shortest mean time to diagnosis, weight loss to the longest, with corresponding differences in survival. These differences of observed survival were substantially confirmed in terms of relative survival. CONCLUSIONS The poor prognosis of pancreatic carcinoma seems to depend, in part, on diagnostic delay and this, in turn, is influenced by the type of presenting symptoms.
The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2015
Michele Di Stefano; C. Mengoli; M. Bergonzi; Catherine Klersy; E. Pagani; E. Miceli; Gino Roberto Corazza
OBJECTIVES:The role of colonic methane production in functional bowel disorders is still uncertain. In small samples of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients, it was shown that methane breath excretion correlates with clinical presentation and delayed gastrointestinal transit time. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between intestinal production and breath excretion of CH4 and to correlate CH4 production with the presence and the severity of symptoms, in a large cohort of IBS patients and in a group of healthy volunteers.METHODS:A group of 103 IBS patients and a group of 28 healthy volunteers were enrolled. The presence and severity of symptoms and gastrointestinal transit were evaluated in all subjects, who underwent breath H2/CH4 measurement for 7 h after lactulose to identify breath excretors of these gases; H2 and CH4 were also measured in rectal samples to identify colonic producers. Cumulative H2 and CH4 excretion and production were evaluated by the area under the time–concentration curve calculation (AUC).RESULTS:In IBS patients, CH4 was detected in rectal samples in 48 patients (47%), but only 27 of them (26% of the 103 enrolled patients) excreted this gas with breath. In CH4 producers, the prevalence and severity of symptoms and gastrointestinal transit time were not significantly different with respect to non-producers. IBS subtypes were homogeneously represented in CH4 producers and in non-producers. Healthy volunteers, compared with IBS patients, showed a significantly lower prevalence of CH4 excretion, whereas no difference was found in the prevalence of colonic CH4 production; moreover, in healthy volunteers compared with IBS, CH4 breath excretion and CH4 production were not different in quantitative terms.CONCLUSION:Our data show that colonic CH4 production is not associated with clinical presentation in IBS patients and does not correlate with symptom severity or with gastrointestinal transit time. Clinical inferences based on breath CH4 excretion should undergo an in-depth revision, as this method is not a good marker of CH4 colonic production.
Hematological Oncology | 2012
Paolo G. Gobbi; Emilio Bassi; M. Bergonzi; Francesco Merli; Chiara Coriani; Emilio Iannitto; Stefano Luminari; Giuseppe Polimeno; Massimo Federico
The purpose of the work was to investigate the factors predicting early resistance to treatment in Hodgkin lymphoma. Many staging parameters, including relative tumour burden (rTB), were analysed in 246 patients with Hodgkin lymphoma in relation to early failure, that is, less than complete remission (i.e. partial response, null response or progression) or occurrence of early relapse, as clinical expressions of resistance to treatment. Patients with early unfavourable disease were 129 and were treated with four to six cycles of ABVD + involved field radiotherapy; 117 patients with advanced stage disease received six cycles of ABVD + optional irradiation to no more than two sites. The rTB was volumetrically measured through the evaluation of staging computed tomography for all the lesions except bone marrow involvement, which was quantified by calculation. The relationship with early resistance was analysed with logistic regressions. The rTB demonstrated to be the best predictor of early failure in both patient subsets, being superior to the multiparameter International Prognostic Score. The rTB showed a significant exponential relationship with the relative risk of early failure, and with inclusion of the extranodal involvement into the model, a single equation became adequate to predict resistance in both early unfavourable and advanced stage patients. The conclusions are that the rTB is the best pretreatment factor related to the risk of resistance to combined ABVD + radiotherapy and that this relationship can be mathematically expressed in an easy way. A simplified assessment of rTB is highly desirable. Copyright
Hematological Oncology | 2013
Paolo G. Gobbi; M. Bergonzi; Emilio Bassi; Francesco Merli; Chiara Coriani; Massimo Federico
We verified whether early resistance to treatment can be predicted in a subset of patients with very favourable, early stage Hodgkin lymphoma, treated with VBM (vinblastine, bleomycin and methotrexate) chemotherapy and involved‐field radiotherapy, an effective combination with very low early and late toxicity. The relative tumour burden (rTB) was volumetrically measured from the staging computed tomography and analysed together with the parameters of pre‐therapy evaluation in 61 patients enrolled into the protocol MH‐1b of the Gruppo Italiano Studio Linfomi between 1996 and 2003. Early failure, codified by either less than complete remission (i.e. partial/null response or progression) or early relapse (within 12 months from the end of therapy), was considered as clinical expression of resistance to treatment. Logistic regression and failure‐free survival were the statistical tools for the analysis. The rTB demonstrated to be the best predictor of early failure, outperforming every other pre‐treatment parameter, International Prognostic Score included. With a mean rTB value of 44.964 ± 34.788 cm3/m2 in the 53 patients successfully treated and of 130.185 ± 63.993 cm3/m2 in the eight with early treatment failure, the risk of resistance showed fivefold and 10‐fold increases at rTB of 52.002 and 74.497 cm3/m2, respectively. Only two patients relapsed more than 12 months after the end of therapy; both had a high initial rTB. The rTB is the best predictor of resistance also in the subset of patients with very favourable, early stage disease. Safe rTB limits are proposed for successful administration of VBM chemotherapy plus involved‐field radiotherapy. Copyright
Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2017
M. Di Stefano; M. Bergonzi; E. Miceli; Catherine Klersy; E. Pagani; Gino Roberto Corazza
The pathophysiology of abdominal distention in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is still a matter of debate, but the relationship between modifications of intestinal tone and abdominal volume has never been analyzed.
Digestive and Liver Disease | 2015
Michele Di Stefano; Gabriella Carnevale Maffè; M. Bergonzi; C. Mengoli; Antonio Di Sabatino; Gino Roberto Corazza
BACKGROUND The relationship between gluten ingestion and gastrointestinal tract function is a matter of debate. AIM We analysed the effect of gluten on gastric and gallbladder emptying and intestinal fermentation in healthy volunteers. METHODS Ultrasound measurement of gastric and gallbladder emptying after both gluten-containing and gluten-free meals was performed in 18 volunteers (8 women, age 25.0±2.5 years; BMI 22±1.9). Breath hydrogen excretion after a gluten-containing meal, a gluten-free meal and a gluten-free meal with added gluten powder was measured in 16 volunteers (10 women, age 25.2±2.7 years; BMI 22±1.8). The severity of symptoms was monitored. RESULTS Gluten presence in the meals was not recognised. Gastric emptying time was 81.6±13.8min after gluten-containing and 73.9±21.6min after gluten-free meals (p=0.11). Percentage ejection fraction after gluten-containing meals was 60±9% and 60.6±6% after gluten-free meals (p=0.68). Peak and cumulative hydrogen excretion were significantly higher after gluten-containing than after gluten-free meals (peak: 12.5±7.3 vs 6.5±5.1 parts-per-million, p<0.01; and cumulative: 2319±1720 vs 989±680 parts-per-million/minute, respectively; p<0.01). Adding gluten powder to the gluten-free meal did not modify fermentation. Symptoms were mild and not different after the meals. CONCLUSIONS In healthy volunteers, gluten may induce gastrointestinal alterations. Further studies are needed to clarify which patients could benefit from dietary modification.
Oncology Reports | 2012
Paolo G. Gobbi; M. Bergonzi; Emilio Bassi; Francesco Merli; Chiara Coriani; Caterina Stelitano; Emilio Iannitto; Massimo Federico
The relative tumor burden (rTB), the tumor burden normalized to body surface area, is of prime clinical and prognostic value in Hodgkins lymphoma. However, its measurement is rather complicated and a bedside computation cannot be proposed. We investigated the possibility of estimating, instead of measuring, rTB from elementary parameters of the initial staging. The rTB of 507 patients, treated with therapeutic protocols of the Gruppo Italiano Studio Linfomi according to their staging characteristics, was measured through their pre-therapy computed tomographies. The relationships between rTB and staging characteristics were analyzed with simple and multiple regressions both in a training sample (254 patients) for a selection of predictive parameters, and in a test sample (253 patients) for validation of the results. The number of involved sites, bulky mass and the IPI score were the variables best related to rTB. The resulting final equation {estimated rTB=-4.3+8.3xIPI2+22.7x[no. of involved sites (+3 if a bulky mass is present)]} provided the maximal approximation to the measured rTB (R2=0.671). The validity of the equation was confirmed on the test sample and the predictive superiority of the estimated rTB over IPI was still evident in terms of failure-free survival in both groups of patients. The estimated rTB is accurate enough to retain most of the prognostic advantage of the measured rTB over the IPI score. It can be easily calculated, allows a valid approximation of the measured rTB, and can be proposed as a useful tool for clinical research and practice.
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2011
Paolo G. Gobbi; Lara Villano; Donatella Pozzoli; M. Bergonzi; Alessandro Vanoli; Francesca Tava; Paolo Dionigi; Gino Roberto Corazza
PurposeThe current TNM classification is still unsatisfactory for collecting all the prognostic information from the clinical presentation of early gastric cancer: “T” is limited to two levels, the classes of “N” are still wide and “M” is generally absent.Patients and MethodsThis study involved 99 patients who underwent radical gastric resection for early gastric cancer. Clinical and histological parameters were prognostically analyzed for both observed and relative survival. Univariate and multivariate analyses were applied to the proportional hazards model.ResultsNumber of metastatic lymph nodes and measure of the largest diameter of the tumor were the only independent prognosticators of observed and relative survival. Their similar relative hazards allowed an additive use of them in the N class. Two cut-off values of this composite clinical parameter are proposed for a good discrimination of the relative survival.DiscussionThe number of metastatic lymph nodes is the cornerstone of the current TNM system and was confirmed as adequate. The possibility of adding tumor size to the number of the involved lymph nodes improves and amplifies the prognostic ability, which is presently limited by the rarity of lymph node involvement and the small number of the lymph nodes usually involved.