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Dive into the research topics where Marisa Di Seri is active.

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Featured researches published by Marisa Di Seri.


Cancer | 2008

Cytoreductive surgery (peritonectomy procedures) combined with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) in the treatment of diffuse peritoneal carcinomatosis from ovarian cancer

Angelo Di Giorgio; Enzo Naticchioni; Daniele Biacchi; Simone Sibio; Fabio Accarpio; Monica Rocco; Sergio Tarquini; Marisa Di Seri; Antonio Ciardi; Daniele Montruccoli; Paolo Sammartino

Because of scarce data from larger series and nonhomogeneous selection criteria, further information is needed on peritonectomy with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) in managing patients with ovarian peritoneal carcinomatosis.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2004

Lung cancer and skeletal muscle metastases

Angelo Di Giorgio; Paolo Sammartino; Carlo Luigi Cardini; Monir Al Mansour; Fabio Accarpio; Simone Sibio; Marisa Di Seri

Skeletal muscle metastases from lung cancer are rare, and the optimal treatment strategy is unknown. Three cases of skeletal muscle metastases from lung cancer are described. In 2 patients surgical biopsy of muscle swelling disclosed the presence of the lung tumor; the first patient underwent lung resection to remove the primary lesion, the second was not operable because of the metastatic extension of the disease. In the third patient muscle metastasis was observed and excised after lung resection. Adenocarcinoma, squamous cell, and small cell carcinoma were the histologic types diagnosed. Various regimens of radiotherapy and chemotherapy were adopted. Survival times were 3, 6, and 30 months.


Oncology | 2005

Continuous infusion of oxaliplatin plus chronomodulated capecitabine in 5-fluorouracil- and irinotecan-resistant advanced colorectal cancer patients.

Daniele Santini; Bruno Vincenzi; Annalisa La Cesa; Marco Caricato; Gaia Schiavon; Bruno Spalletta; Marisa Di Seri; Roberto Coppola; Laura Rocci; Giuseppe Tonini

Objectives: The aim of the study was to define the feasibility and efficacy of Xelox (capecitabine and oxaliplatin) administered through a new and original schedule in advanced pretreated colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. Methods: 36 metastatic CRC patients resistant at least to a previous 5-fluorouracil- and irinotecan-based chemotherapy line were included in the study. Treatment: Oxaliplatin 70 mg/m2 as continuous infusion for 12 h (8.00 a.m. to 8.00 p.m.) on days 1, 8 plus chronomodulated capecitabine 1,750 mg/m2/day per os (8.00 a.m. 25% of total dose; 6.00 p.m. 25% of total dose; 11.00 p.m. 50% of total dose), on days 1–14 every 21 days. 16 (44.4%) patients had previously received only 1 chemotherapy line for metastatic disease and 20 patients (55.6%) 2 chemotherapy lines. Moreover, 12 patients (33.3%) progressed after a first or second line of oxaliplatin-based regimen as well. Results: Most frequent related G3–4 adverse reactions were diarrhea (11.6%), nausea/vomiting (8.3%), neuropathy (8.3%), mucositis (8.3%), asthenia (16.7%) and hand-foot syndrome (5.5%). G3–4 anemia, leucopenia and liver toxicities were not observed. The overall response rate was 30.6% (11/36 patients). Disease stabilization was observed in 13 patients (36.1%) and progression in 12 patients (34.3%). Between the 12 oxaliplatin-resistant patients, the overall response rate was 25% (3 patients); 6 patients (54.5%) obtained a stable disease, and only 3 patients (25%) progressed. The median overall survival was 11.3 months (95% confidence interval 7.0–15.7 months), the median response duration 2.8 months (95% confidence interval 1.2–5.6 months) and the median time to progression 6.7 months (95% confidence interval 5.7–6.3 months). The 1-year survival rate was 53.8%. Conclusions: The high overall tumor growth control, the remarkable median time to progression and overall survival and the good safety profile are of particular interest for patients with heavy pretreated metastatic CRC.


BMC Cancer | 2006

A phase II trial of a biweekly combination of paclitaxel and gemcitabine in metastatic breast cancer

Silverio Tomao; Adriana Romiti; Federica Tomao; Marisa Di Seri; Giuliana Caprio; Gian Paolo Spinelli; Edmondo Terzoli; Luigi Frati

BackgroundMany emerging new drugs have recently been trialled for treatment of early and advanced breast cancer. Among these new agents paclitaxel and gemcitabine play a crucial role, mostly in patients with relapsed and metastatic disease after failure of chemotherapy with antracyclines.MethodsA phase II study was started in order to evaluate the activity and toxicity of a combination of paclitaxel and gemcitabine in a biweekly schedule on metastatic breast cancer patients previously treated with antracyclines.ResultsTwenty-five patients received paclitaxel (150 mg/mq) by 3-hours infusion, followed by gemcitabine (2000 mg/mq) given as a 60 min i.v. infusion (day 1–14) for a maximum of eight cycles. In all patients treatment was evaluated for toxicity and efficacy; four patients (16%) achieved a complete response, 12 (48%) a partial response giving an overall objective response rate of 64%. Stable disease was documented in 5 patients (20%) and progressive disease occurred in 4 patients (16%).ConclusionThe schedule of treatment was safe and tolerable from a haematological and non-haematological point of view. These data confirm that the combination of gemcitabine and paclitaxel on a biweekly basis is an effective and well-tolerated regimen in breast cancer patients with prior therapeutic exposure to antracyclines.


Future Oncology | 2012

Bevacizumab plus chemotherapy in metastatic colorectal cancer patients treated in clinical practice

Luigi Rossi; Enzo Veltri; Angelo Zullo; Federica Zoratto; Maria Colonna; Marisa Di Seri; Flavia Longo; Marcella Mottolese; Diana Giannarelli; Luigi Ruco; Adriana Romiti; Viola Barucca; Daniela Adua; Silverio Tomao

AIM The effect of KRAS status on response to bevacizumab plus chemotherapy in metastatic colorectal cancer is still unclear. We aimed to evaluate the overall clinical response to such a therapy in clinical practice and assess the role of KRAS status on therapy response. PATIENTS & METHODS This was a retrospective study enrolling 108 metastatic colorectal cancer patients. KRAS mutation analysis was performed by PCR. RESULTS Overall, 41.7% of patients had stable disease, 39.8% a partial response, 3.7% a complete response and 14.8% disease progression. Both clinical benefit and objective response rate tended to be higher in patients with only hepatic metastases than those with extrahepatic or multiple metastases. Response to therapy would appear to be independent of KRAS status, but larger studies are needed. CONCLUSION Bevacizumab plus chemotherapy provides clinical benefit and objective response rate in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer independently of KRAS expression, especially in those patients with only liver metastases.


Tumori | 2012

Capecitabine in elderly patients with metastatic breast cancer

Rita De Sanctis; Silvia Quadrini; Flavia Longo; Vittoria Lapadula; Rossella Restuccia; Ester Del Signore; Lucilla De Filippis; L. Stumbo; Bruno Gori; Vincenzo Bianco; Iolanda Speranza; Maria Luisa Basile; Marisa Di Seri

AIMS AND BACKGROUND Capecitabine is the reference treatment for anthracycline- and/or taxane-pretreated metastatic breast cancer (MBC). This study examined its efficacy, tolerability and impact on the quality of life of elderly patients with MBC. MATERIALS AND METHODS Between January 2002 and December 2009, 75 consecutive elderly patients with MBC received first-line chemotherapy with capecitabine 1000 mg/m2 twice daily for 14 days every 3 weeks. Endpoints were efficacy, tolerability and clinical-benefit response measured every 3 cycles. RESULTS Median age was 76 years (range 65-88); median ECOG performance status was 1 (range 0-2); 51 patients (68%) had received adjuvant chemotherapy and all patients had received hormonal therapy. Median exposure was 6 cycles. After 3 cycles, 11 patients (14.7%) had a partial response, one patient experienced a complete response, and 49 patients (65.3%) had stable disease, amounting to a disease control rate of 81.3%. Stable disease was maintained in 45 patients (60%) after 6 cycles, in 21 patients (28%) after 9 cycles, and in 13 patients (17.3%) after 12 cycles. A clinical-benefit response was experienced by 42 patients (56%), indicating a positive impact on quality of life. Treatment was well tolerated, the most common grade 3 events being diarrhea (12%) hand-foot syndrome (8%), and mucositis (8%). Adverse events were managed with dose adjustments and supportive therapy when required. CONCLUSIONS Our results indicate that capecitabine is active and well tolerated in elderly patients with MBC. This dosing regimen warrants further study in the first-line setting for patients with less aggressive MBC who are not candidates for combination therapy.


110° Congresso S.I.C. 2008 | 2009

Surgery in Multimodal Treatment of Cancer: Peritoneal Carcinomatosis

Angelo Di Giorgio; Fabio Accarpio; Simone Sibio; Daniele Biacchi; Sergio Gazzanelli; Anna Maria Baccheschi; Tommaso Cornali; Marisa Di Seri; Linda Cerbone; Paolo Sammartino

Until recent years a diagnosis of peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) from intra-abdominal solid tumors carried a uniformly fatal prognosis, often within weeks or months. Since the 1980s, following the intuition of an American surgeon, Paul Sugarbaker, combined treatment modalities of PC have developed considerably. Since the first pioneering approaches on the treatment of “pseudomyxoma peritonei”


Tumori | 2003

A case of renal cell carcinoma with bone and lymph node metastases.

Marisa Di Seri; Attilio Veri; Marialuisa Colloca; Bruno Spalletta; Rosalinda Rossi; Pia Pierpaola Petrella; Deborah Coletta; Fausto Petricola; Serena Ricciardi; Luigi Frati

We present a rare case of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) with a metastatic, mainly osteoblastic lesion of the skull and spread to the lymph nodes. Renal tumors are often associated with bone metastases; these are most often of the osteolytic type, while osteoblastic metastases are extremely rare. In the case presented here, the primary metastasis was a large osteoblastic lesion of the skull that spread to the lymph nodes. The patient has undergone treatment for 20 months with interleukin-2: 3 million IU/day (subcutaneous) for six consecutive days once every four weeks, ie a total weekly dose of 18 million IU.


Supportive Care in Cancer | 2011

Palonosetron plus 3-day aprepitant and dexamethasone to prevent nausea and vomiting in patients receiving highly emetogenic chemotherapy

Flavia Longo; Giovanni Mansueto; Vittoria Lapadula; Rita De Sanctis; Silvia Quadrini; Roberta Grande; Bruno Gori; Amelia Altavilla; I. D’Antoni; Ester Del Signore; L. Stumbo; Cristina De Luca; Barbara Cimadon; Enrico Cortesi; Teresa Gamucci; Marisa Di Seri


Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | 2007

Chronomodulated administration of oxaliplatin plus capecitabine (XELOX) as first line chemotherapy in advanced colorectal cancer patients: phase II study

Daniele Santini; Bruno Vincenzi; Gaia Schiavon; Marisa Di Seri; Vladimir Virzì; Bruno Spalletta; Marco Caricato; Roberto Coppola; Giuseppe Tonini

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Luigi Frati

Sapienza University of Rome

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Adriana Romiti

Sapienza University of Rome

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Angelo Di Giorgio

Sapienza University of Rome

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Bruno Spalletta

Sapienza University of Rome

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Bruno Vincenzi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Daniele Santini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Fabio Accarpio

Sapienza University of Rome

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Flavia Longo

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giuseppe Tonini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Paolo Sammartino

Sapienza University of Rome

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