Mario Mascalchi
University of Florence
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Featured researches published by Mario Mascalchi.
Lung Cancer | 2009
Andrea Lopes Pegna; Giulia Picozzi; Mario Mascalchi; Francesca Carozzi; Laura Carrozzi; Camilla E. Comin; Cheti Spinelli; Fabio Falaschi; Michela Grazzini; Florio Innocenti; Cristina Ronchi; Eugenio Paci
BACKGROUND Results of randomized clinical trials (RCTs) are needed to assess the efficacy of lung cancer screening with low-dose chest computed tomography (CT) in reducing lung cancer mortality. We report design and results of enrolment and baseline screening test in the ITALUNG trial, a RCT. METHODS Invitation letters were sent to subjects of 55-69 years of age clients of 269 general practitioners. Smokers or former smokers of at least 20 pack/years were eligible and after written consent were randomized in an active arm undergoing a low-dose CT annually for 4 years and in a control arm receiving no screening. Management of positive screening test was carried out using follow-up low-dose CT, fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography, fine needle aspiration cytology and fiber optic bronchoscopy. RESULTS A sample of 3206 eligible subjects was achieved by sending 71,232 letters (enrolment efficacy = 4.5%). Subjects in control (n = 1593) and active (n = 1613) arm were balanced for age, gender and smoking history. Two-hundred and seven (12.8%) subjects did not undergo CT after randomization. The baseline screening test was positive in 426 (30.3%) of 1406 subjects. Twenty-one lung cancers (prevalence = 1.5%) were found in 20 subjects: 18 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), 2 small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and a case of typical carcinoid. Ten NSCLC (47.6%) were in Stage I. Sixteen fine needle aspirations were performed in 15 lung cancers, with a positive result in 12 (75%) cases. One biopsy only (6.3%) was performed on a benign lesion. Seventeen lung cancers (81%) were treated with surgical resection in 16 subjects. One subject underwent surgery for a benign lesion (5.5% of all surgical resections). CONCLUSIONS Recruitment by mail of high risk subjects for a lung cancer screening RCT is feasible but not efficient. Results of the baseline screening test in the active arm of the ITALUNG trial are substantially in line with those of RCT and observational studies.
Neuroradiology | 1997
Mario Mascalchi; M. C. Bianchi; Salvatore Mangiafico; G. Ferrito; M. Puglioli; E. Marin; S. Mugnai; R. Canapicchi; N. Quilici; D. Inzitari
Abstract A review of 4,500 angiograms yielded 11 patients with dissection of the vertebral arteries who had MRI and (in 4 patients) MR angiography (MRA) in the acute phase of stroke. One patient with incidental discovery at arteriography of asymptomatic vertebral artery dissection and two patients with acute strokes with MRI and MRA findings consistent with vertebral artery dissection were included. Dissection occurred after neck trauma or chiropractic manipulation in 4 patients and was spontaneous in 10. Dissection involved the extracranial vertebral artery in 9 patients, the extra-intracranial junction in 1, and the intracranial artery in 4. MRI demonstrated infarcts in the brain stem, cerebellum, thalamus or temporo-occipital regions in 7 patients with extra- or extra-intracranial dissections and a solitary lateral medullary infarct in 4 patients (3 with intracranial and 1 with extra-intracranial dissection). In 2 patients no brain abnormality related to vertebral artery dissection was found and in one MRI did not show subarachnoid haemorrhage revealed by CT. Intramural dissecting haematoma appeared as crescentic or rounded high signal on T1-weighted images in 10 patients examined 3–20 days after the onset of symptoms. The abnormal vessel stood out in the low signal cerebrospinal fluid in intracranial dissections, whereas it was more difficult to detect in extracranial dissections because of the intermediate-to-high signal of the normal perivascular structures and slow flow proximal and distal to the dissection. In two patients examined within 36 h of the onset, mural thickening was of intermediate signal intensity on T1-weighted images and high signal on spin-density and T2-weighted images. MRA showed abrupt stenosis in 2 patients and disappearance of flow signal at and distal to the dissection in 5. Follow-up arteriography, MRI or MRA showed findings consistent with occlusion of the dissected vessel in 6 of 8 patients.
Stroke | 1990
Domenico Inzitari; G.P. Giordano; Anna Luisa Ancona; Giovanni Pracucci; Mario Mascalchi; Luigi Amaducci
To investigate whether the observed association of leukoaraiosis with intracerebral hemorrhage is direct or mediated by risk factors, we compared 116 patients with intracerebral hemorrhage confirmed by computed tomography and 155 controls without intracerebral hemorrhage, evaluating the prevalence of leukoaraiosis and vascular risk factors. Leukoaraiosis was observed in 21 (18%) of the 116 patients and in 12 (8%) of the 155 controls (p less than 0.01). Only two (6%) of the 31 patients with lobar hemorrhage had leukoaraiosis on computed tomograms, compared with 17 (24%) of the 71 patients with basal ganglionic hemorrhage (p less than 0.05). Leukoaraiosis was significantly correlated with intracerebral hemorrhage after controlling for age and sex by using multiple logistic regression analysis, while the correlation disappeared after controlling for hypertension. Our results indicate that leukoaraiosis is not an independent risk factor for intracerebral hemorrhage.
COPD: Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 2012
R. Graham Barr; Eugene Berkowitz; Francesca Bigazzi; Frederick Bode; Jessica Bon; Russell P. Bowler; Caroline Chiles; James D. Crapo; Gerard J. Criner; Jeffrey L. Curtis; Asger Dirksen; Mark T. Dransfield; Goutham Edula; Leif Erikkson; Adam L. Friedlander; Warren B. Gefter; David S. Gierada; P. Grenier; Jonathan G. Goldin; MeiLan K. Han; Nadia N. Hansel; Francine L. Jacobson; Hans-Ulrich Kauczor; Vuokko L. Kinnula; David A. Lipson; David A. Lynch; William MacNee; Barry J. Make; A. James Mamary; Howard Mann
Abstract The purposes of this study were: to describe chest CT findings in normal non-smoking controls and cigarette smokers with and without COPD; to compare the prevalence of CT abnormalities with severity of COPD; and to evaluate concordance between visual and quantitative chest CT (QCT) scoring. Methods: Volumetric inspiratory and expiratory CT scans of 294 subjects, including normal non-smokers, smokers without COPD, and smokers with GOLD Stage I-IV COPD, were scored at a multi-reader workshop using a standardized worksheet. There were 58 observers (33 pulmonologists, 25 radiologists); each scan was scored by 9–11 observers. Interobserver agreement was calculated using kappa statistic. Median score of visual observations was compared with QCT measurements. Results: Interobserver agreement was moderate for the presence or absence of emphysema and for the presence of panlobular emphysema; fair for the presence of centrilobular, paraseptal, and bullous emphysema subtypes and for the presence of bronchial wall thickening; and poor for gas trapping, centrilobular nodularity, mosaic attenuation, and bronchial dilation. Agreement was similar for radiologists and pulmonologists. The prevalence on CT readings of most abnormalities (e.g. emphysema, bronchial wall thickening, mosaic attenuation, expiratory gas trapping) increased significantly with greater COPD severity, while the prevalence of centrilobular nodularity decreased. Concordances between visual scoring and quantitative scoring of emphysema, gas trapping and airway wall thickening were 75%, 87% and 65%, respectively. Conclusions: Despite substantial inter-observer variation, visual assessment of chest CT scans in cigarette smokers provides information regarding lung disease severity; visual scoring may be complementary to quantitative evaluation.
American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2010
Federica Agosta; Adriano Chiò; Mirco Cosottini; N. De Stefano; Andrea Falini; Mario Mascalchi; Maria A. Rocca; Vincenzo Silani; Gioacchino Tedeschi; Massimo Filippi
SUMMARY: In patients with ALS, conventional MR imaging is frequently noninformative, and its use has been restricted to excluding other conditions that can mimic ALS. Conversely, the extensive application of modern MR imaging−based techniques to the study of ALS has undoubtedly improved our understanding of disease pathophysiology and is likely to have a role in the identification of potential biomarkers of disease progression. This review summarizes how new MR imaging technology is changing dramatically our understanding of the factors associated with ALS evolution and highlights the reasons why it should be used more extensively in studies of disease progression, including clinical trials.
NeuroImage | 2008
Riccardo Della Nave; Andrea Ginestroni; Carlo Tessa; Elena Salvatore; Ilaria Bartolomei; Fabrizio Salvi; Maria Teresa Dotti; Giuseppe De Michele; Silvia Piacentini; Mario Mascalchi
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Neuropathological examination in Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) reveals neuronal loss in the gray matter (GM) nuclei and degeneration of the white matter (WM) tracts in the spinal cord, brainstem and cerebellum, while the cerebral hemispheres are substantially spared. Tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) enables an unbiased whole-brain quantitative analysis of the fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) of the brain WM tracts in vivo. PATIENTS AND METHODS We assessed with TBSS 14 patients with genetically confirmed FRDA and 14 age- and sex-matched healthy controls who were also examined with voxel-based morphometry (VBM) to assess regional atrophy of the GM and WM. RESULTS TBSS revealed decreased FA in the inferior and superior cerebellar peduncles and the corticospinal tracts in the medullary pyramis, in WM tracts of the right cerebellar hemisphere and in the right occipito-frontal and inferior longitudinal fasciculi. Increased MD was observed in the superior cerebellar peduncles, deep cerebellar WM, posterior limbs of the internal capsule and retrolenticular area, bilaterally, and in the WM underlying the left central sulcus. Decreased FA in the left superior cerebellar peduncle correlated with clinical severity. VBM showed small symmetric areas of loss of bulk of the peridentate WM which also correlated with clinical severity. CONCLUSIONS TBSS enables in vivo demonstration of degeneration of the brainstem and cerebellar WM tracts which neuropathological examination indicates to be specifically affected in FRDA. TBSS complements VBM and might be a more sensitive tool to detect WM structural changes in degenerative diseases of the CNS.
NeuroImage | 2003
Maria A. Rocca; Cinzia Gavazzi; Domenico M. Mezzapesa; Andrea Falini; Bruno Colombo; Mario Mascalchi; G. Scotti; Giancarlo Comi; Massimo Filippi
Although several functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have shown adaptive cortical changes in patients with early multiple sclerosis (MS), the presence of brain plasticity and its role in limiting the functional consequences of brain tissue damage in patients with secondary progressive (SP) MS have not been fully investigated yet. In this study, we assessed the movement-associated brain pattern of cortical activations in patients with SPMS and investigated whether the extent of cortical brain activations is correlated with the extent of brain structural changes. From 13 right-handed SPMS patients and 15 sex- and age-matched healthy volunteers, we obtained: (a) brain dual-echo scans; (b) brain mean diffusivity and fractional anisotropy maps of the normal-appearing white (NAWM) and gray matter (NAGM); (c) fMRI during the performance of simple motor tasks [flexion-extension of the last four fingers of the right hand (task 1) and flexion-extension of the right foot (task 2)]. Compared to healthy volunteers, during task 1 performance, SPMS patients showed more significant activations of the ipsilateral inferior frontal gyrus, middle frontal gyrus, bilaterally, and contralateral intraparietal sulcus. During task 2 performance, SPMS patients had more significant activations of the contralateral primary sensorimotor cortex and thalamus and of the ipsilateral upper bank of sylvian fessure. For both tasks, strong correlations (r values ranging from -0.83 to 0.88) were found between relative activations of cortical areas of the motor network and the severity of structural changes of the NAWM and NAGM. This study demonstrates that cortical plasticity does occur in patients with SPMS and that it might have a role in limiting the clinical impact of MS-related damage. It also suggests that, in these patients, functional abilities are sustained by increased recruitment of highly specialized cortical areas.
NeuroImage | 2008
Riccardo Della Nave; Andrea Ginestroni; Carlo Tessa; Elena Salvatore; Domenico De Grandis; Rosaria Plasmati; Fabrizio Salvi; Giuseppe De Michele; Maria Teresa Dotti; Silvia Piacentini; Mario Mascalchi
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Neurodegeneration in spinocerebellar ataxia type 1(SCA1) and 2(SCA2) is associated with white matter(WM) damage. Voxel-Based Morphometry(VBM), histogram analysis of mean diffusivity(MD) and Tract-Based Spatial Statistics(TBSS) enable an in vivo quantitative analysis of WM volume and structure. We assessed with these 3 techniques the whole brain WM damage in SCA1 and SCA2. PATIENTS AND METHODS Ten patients with SCA1, 10 patients with SCA2 and 10 controls underwent MRI with acquisition of T1-weighted and diffusion tensor images. The results were correlated with severity of clinical deficit. RESULTS VBM showed atrophy of the brainstem and cerebellar WM without significant differences between SCA1 and SCA2. Focal atrophy of the cerebral subcortical WM was also present. Histogram analysis revealed increased MD in the brainstem and cerebellum in patients with SCA1 and SCA2 which in SCA2 was more pronounced and combined with mild increase of the MD in the cerebral hemispheres in SCA2. In SCA1 and SCA2 TBSS revealed decreased fractional anisotropy(FA) in the inferior, middle and superior cerebellar peduncles, pontine transverse fibres, medial and lateral lemnisci, spinothalamic tracts, corticospinal tracts and corpus callosum. The extent of tract changes was greater in SCA2 patients who also showed decreased FA in the short intracerebellar tracts. In both diseases VBM, histogram and TBSS results correlated with clinical severity. CONCLUSIONS Brain WM damage featuring a pontocerebeellar atrophy is similar in SCA1 and SCA2 but more pronounced in SCA2. In both diseases it correlates with severity of the clinical deficit.
Chest | 2007
Gianna Camiciottoli; Ilaria Orlandi; Maurizio Bartolucci; Eleonora Meoni; Francesca Nacci; Stefano Diciotti; Chiara Barcaroli; Maria Letizia Conforti; Massimo Pistolesi; Marco Matucci-Cerinic; Mario Mascalchi
BACKGROUND To ascertain if analysis of lung density histograms in thin-section CT was more reproducible than visual assessment of lung changes in systemic sclerosis (SSc), and if such density histogram parameters as mean lung attenuation (MLA), skewness, and kurtosis could more closely reflect pulmonary function as well as exercise and quality of life impairment. METHODS The intraoperator and interoperator reproducibility of visual and densitometric lung CT analysis in 48 SSc patients examined with CT were evaluated by means of weighted kappa statistics. Univariate and multivariate regression analyses were applied to evaluate the relationship of visual and densitometric CT measurements with functional parameters including functional residual capacity (FRC), FVC, FEV(1), diffusion capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide (Dlco), 6-min walking testing (6MWT), and health-related quality of life questionnaire (QLQ) parameters. RESULTS The intraoperator and interoperator reproducibility of MLA (intraobserver weighted kappa = 0.97; interobserver weighted kappa = 0.96), skewness (intraobserver weighted kappa = 0.89; interobserver weighted kappa = 0.88), and kurtosis (intraobserver weighted kappa = 0.89; interobserver weighted kappa = 0.88) were higher than those of visual assessment (intraobserver weighted kappa = 0.71; interobserver weighted kappa = 0.69). In univariate analysis, only densitometric measurements were correlated with some exercise and QLQ parameters. In multivariate analysis, MLA (square regression coefficient corrected [R(2)c] = 0.70), skewness (R(2)c = 0.78), and kurtosis (R(2)c = 0.77) were predicted by FRC, FVC, Dlco, 6MWT, and QLQ parameters, while visual assessment was associated only with FRC and FVC (R(2)c = 0.40). CONCLUSIONS In SSc, densitometric analysis is more reproducible than visual assessment of lung changes in thin-section CT and more closely correlated to pulmonary function testing, 6MWT, and QLQ. Density histogram parameters may be useful for cross-sectional and longitudinal studies of lung involvement in SSc.
American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2007
R. Della Nave; Silvia Foresti; A. Pratesi; Andrea Ginestroni; Marco Inzitari; Emilia Salvadori; Marco Giannelli; Stefano Diciotti; Domenico Inzitari; Mario Mascalchi
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Cerebral white matter changes, termed leukoaraiosis (LA), appearing as areas of increased signal intensity in T2-weighted MR images, are common in elderly subjects, but the possible correlation of LA with cognitive or motor deficit has not been established. We hypothesized that histogram and voxel-based analyses of whole-brain mean diffusivity (MD) and fractional anisotropy (FA) maps calculated from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) could be more sensitive tools than visual scales to investigate the clinical correlates of LA. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Thirty-six patients of the Leukoaraiosis and Disability Study were evaluated with fluid-attenuated inversion recovery for LA extension, T1-weighted images for volume, and DTI for MD and FA. The extent of LA was rated visually. The normalized total, gray, and white matter brain volumes were computed, as well as the 25th percentile, 50th percentile, kurtosis, and skewness of the MD and FA maps of the whole brain. Finally, voxel-based analysis on the maps of gray and white matter volume, MD, and FA was performed with SPM2 software. Correlation analyses between visual or computerized data and motor or neuropsychologic scale scores were performed using the Spearman rank test and the SPM2 software. RESULTS: The visual score correlated with some MD and FA histogram metrics (P < .01). However, only the 25th and 50th percentiles, kurtosis, and skewness of the MD and FA histograms correlated with motor or neuropsychologic deficits. Voxel-based analysis revealed a correlation (P < .05 corrected for multiple comparisons) between a large cluster of increased MD in the corpus callosum and pericallosal white matter and motor deficit. CONCLUSIONS: These results are consistent with the hypothesis that histogram and voxel-based analyses of the whole-brain MD and FA maps are more sensitive tools than the visual evaluation for clinical correlation in patients with LA.