Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Massimo D'Armiento is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Massimo D'Armiento.


European Urology | 2008

Modified Supine versus Prone Position in Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy for Renal Stones Treatable with a Single Percutaneous Access: A Prospective Randomized Trial

Marco De Sio; Riccardo Autorino; Giuseppe Quarto; Francesco Calabrò; Rocco Damiano; Francesco Giugliano; Salvatore Mordente; Massimo D'Armiento

OBJECTIVES To compare operative time, safety, and effectiveness of percutaneous nephrolithotomy in the supine versus prone position in a prospective randomized trial. MATERIAL AND METHODS From October 2005 to June 2007, 75 patients (33 men, 42 women; mean age, 39.3 yr) were prospectively enrolled and randomly divided into group A (39 patients, supine position) and group B (36 patients, prone position). Inclusion criteria were diagnosis of single or multiple renal stones (pelvic-caliceal) treatable with a single percutaneous access, stone diameter >2.5cm, body mass index (BMI) <30kg/m(2), and no contraindications to perform the operation in the prone position. Exclusion criteria were stones in more than one calyx, complete staghorn stones, and coexisting renal anomalies. RESULTS The two groups were comparable in age, BMI, male-to-female ratio, and stone size. No significant difference was ascertained between the two groups in terms of stone-free rate (group A, 88.7% vs. group B, 91.6%, p=0.12), mean blood loss (group A, Delta hemoglobin -2.3g/dl vs. group B, -2.2g/dl, p=0.23), and mean hospital stay (group A, 4.3 d vs. group B, 4.1 d, p=0.18). The only significant difference reported was mean operative time (group A, 43min vs. group B, 68min, p<0.001). No blood transfusions were needed and no organ injuries were reported. CONCLUSIONS In this carefully selected patient population with uncomplicated renal stones, the supine position was similar to the prone position for percutaneous stone removal.


Urologia Journal | 2004

Long-Term Results of Nephron Sparing Surgery for Localized Renal Cell Carcinoma

R. Autorino; M. De Sio; Rocco Damiano; M. Schiavo; Luca Cosentino; U. Pane; F. Di Giacomo; D.R. Giordano; G. Quarto; Salvatore Mordente; Renato De Domenico; Massimo D'Armiento

Several unrandomized studies from the current literature confirm that in selected patients with localized renal cell carcinoma (RCC), nephron sparing surgery (NSS) shows to be as effective as radical surgery. In this regard, we evaluated the data from patients treated by using such a conservative approach with a long-term follow-up. Materials and Methods. We considered 28 patients (19 M, 9 F; median age 54 years) with unilateral, localized, small (< 4 cm) RCC, submitted to NSS from 1988 to 1994. Only 3 of them (10%) were symptomatic at presentation. Oncological follow-up had been conducted with visits every 4 months for the first two years, every six for another three years and then annually. Results. All the patients were clinical stage T1aN0M0 (UICC TNM 2002). Grading was: 10 G1, 10 G2, 8 G3. Mean tumor diameter was 3.2 cm. After a long-term follow-up (mean 10 years, range 8–14), none present local relapse, disease specific survival is 93% and overall survival is 86%. Based on biochemistry, 82% of the remaining patients still have a normal renal function. Conclusions. Given the excellent long-term results and the recognized benefits of elective NSS, this approach should be preferentially adopted in a selected population of patients with small (<4 cm), unilateral, RCC.


Journal of Endourology | 2008

Effect of tamsulosin in preventing ureteral stent-related morbidity: a prospective study.

Rocco Damiano; Riccardo Autorino; Marco De Sio; Alessandro Giacobbe; Italo M. Palumbo; Massimo D'Armiento

PURPOSE We conducted a randomized study to evaluate the effect of tamsulosin in improving symptoms and quality of life (QoL) in patients with indwelling double-pigtail ureteral stents, using both generic and specific questionnaires. MATERIALS AND METHODS We prospectively enrolled 75 patients (29 men, 46 women; mean age, 42.3 years), who underwent ureteral stent positioning and were assigned to one of two study groups. In group A (n = 38), patients were discharged with a prescription for tamsulosin, 0.4 mg once daily. In group B (n = 37), patients received no alpha(1)-blocker (control group). RESULTS One week after stent placement (visit week 1 [W1]), analysis of the ureteral stent symptoms questionnaire showed a significant worsening of urinary symptoms (13.1 v 26.4, P = 0.008) and pain (4.1 v 21.6, P = 0.002) in patients not receiving tamsulosin. There was also a significant difference in the mean visual analog score (VAS) of health scale between the two groups (P < 0.001) compared with the result obtained at the W4 evaluation (visit). The proportion of patients reporting level 2 or 3 for the pain/discomfort domain in the QoL questionnaire from W4 to W1 varied between the two groups in a highly statistically significant manner (P = 0.006). CONCLUSIONS Our findings indicate that administration of tamsulosin has a positive effect on stent-related urinary symptoms and QoL. Further clinical research in this area is warranted to better define the role of alpha(1)-blockers in current clinical practice.


Lancet Oncology | 2005

Efficacy of tamoxifen and radiotherapy for prevention and treatment of gynaecomastia and breast pain caused by bicalutamide in prostate cancer: a randomised controlled trial

Sisto Perdonà; Riccardo Autorino; Sabino De Placido; Massimo D'Armiento; Antonio Gallo; Rocco Damiano; Domenico Pingitore; Luigi Gallo; Marco De Sio; Angelo Raffaele Bianco; Giuseppe Di Lorenzo

BACKGROUND Gynaecomastia and breast pain are frequent adverse events with bicalutamide monotherapy, and might cause some patients to withdraw from treatment. We aimed to compare tamoxifen with radiotherapy for prevention and treatment of gynaecomastia, breast pain, or both during bicalutamide monotherapy for prostate cancer. METHODS 51 patients were randomly assigned to 150 mg bicalutamide per day, 50 patients to 150 mg bicalutamide per day and to 10 mg tamoxifen per day for 24 weeks, and 50 patients to 150 mg bicalutamide per day and radiotherapy (one 12-Gy fraction on the day of starting bicalutamide). 35 of the 51 patients allocated bicalutamide alone developed gynaecomastia or breast pain and were subsequently randomly allocated to tamoxifen (n=17) or radiotherapy (n=18) soon after symptoms started (median 180 days, range 160-195). Gynaecomastia and breast pain were assessed once a month. Severity of gynaecomastia was scored on the basis of the largest diameter. Breast pain was scored as none, mild, moderate, or severe. The primary outcome was frequency of gynaecomastia or breast pain; secondary outcomes were safety and tolerability, relapse-free survival, as assessed by concentration of prostate specific antigen, and quality of life. Analyses were by intention to treat. RESULTS 35 of 51 patients assigned bicalutamide alone developed gynaecomastia, compared with four of 50 assigned bicalutamide and tamoxifen (odds ratio [OR] 0.1 [95% CI 0.08-0.12], p=0.0009), and with 17 of 50 assigned bicalutamide and radiotherapy (0.51 [0.47-0.54], p=0.008). Breast pain was seen in 29 of 51 patients allocated bicalutamide alone, compared with three allocated bicalutamide and tamoxifen (0.1 [0.07-0.11], p=0.009), and with 15 allocated bicalutamide and radiotherapy (0.43 [0.40-0.45], p=0.02) In 35 patients assigned bicalutamide alone who subsequently developed gynaecomastia, breast pain, or both, tamoxifen significantly reduced the frequency of gynaecomastia (0.2 [0.18-0.22], p=0.02). INTERPRETATION Antioestrogen treatment with tamoxifen could help patients with prostate cancer to tolerate the hypergonadotropic effects of bicalutamide monotherapy.


Annals of Oncology | 2009

Neo-adjuvant treatment of rectal cancer with capecitabine and oxaliplatin in combination with radiotherapy: a phase II study

Chiara Carlomagno; A. Farella; L. Bucci; Francesco Paolo D'Armiento; G. Pesce; Stefano Pepe; L. Cannella; Roberto Pacelli; A. De Stefano; R. Solla; Massimo D'Armiento; S. De Placido

BACKGROUND Preoperative chemoradiation is now standard treatment for stages II-III rectal cancer. Capecitabine (CAP) and oxaliplatin (OX) are synergistic with radiotherapy (RT) and active in colorectal neoplasms. PATIENTS AND METHODS Two cycles of CAP 825 mg/m(2) b.i.d. (days 1-14) and OX 50 mg/m(2) (days 1 and 8) every 3 weeks were given concomitantly with pelvic conformal RT (45 Gy). Patients with a > or =T3 and/or node-positive rectal tumour were eligible. The pathologic tumour response was defined according to the tumour regression grade (TRG) scale. RESULTS Forty-six patients were enrolled. Gastrointestinal adverse events were mostly G1-G2; only two patients experienced G3 vomiting and diarrhoea and six patients had G1 peripheral neuropathy. Haematological toxicity was rare. G2 proctitis and anal pain occurred in two patients. Pathological complete response (TRG1) was observed in nine patients (20.9%; 95% CI 8.7%-33.1%); TRG2 in 19 patients (44.2%); TRG3 in 12 patients (27.9%); and TRG4 in three patients (7%). Overall, nine patients recurred: five with distant metastases, one with local recurrence, and three with both local recurrence and distant metastases. CONCLUSIONS CAP-OX-RT as preoperative treatment for rectal cancer induces a remarkable rate of complete or near-complete pathologically documented response and is well tolerated.


Tumori | 2004

HER-2/neu receptor in prostate cancer development and progression to androgen independence.

Giuseppe Di Lorenzo; Riccardo Autorino; Michele De Laurentiis; Luca Cindolo; Massimo D'Armiento; Angelo Raffaele Bianco; Sabino De Placido

Development of prostate cancer and progression to androgen-independent disease is correlated with increased expression of growth factors and receptors capable of establishing autocrine and/or paracrine growth-stimulatory loops. A thorough review was made of the current literature and recent abstract presentations at scientific meetings focusing on the role of the HER-2/neu (c-erbB2) receptor in prostate cancer and the potential clinical usefulness of its specific inhibitors. In the past 10 years, conflicting results on HER-2/neu expression in prostate cancer have been reported. More recently, four studies have shown experimental evidence of HER-2/neu in the development of prostate cancer and, more specifically, in the progression to a hormone-refractory clinical behavior. Furthermore, it has been proposed that HER-2 family and androgen receptors function synergistically in the absence of androgen, which suggests a crosstalk between the HER-2/neu and androgen receptor pathways. Finally, clinical trials are in progress in prostate cancer patients to test novel agents that selectively interfere with HER-2/neu activity.


International Journal of Impotence Research | 2006

Dietary factors in erectile dysfunction

Katherine Esposito; Francesco Giugliano; M De Sio; D Carleo; C Di Palo; Massimo D'Armiento; Dario Giugliano

The role of dietary factors in erectile dysfunction (ED) has never been addressed. In the present case–control study, we investigated the relation of the Mediterranean diet with ED. A total of 100 men with ED were compared with 100 age-matched men without ED. A scale indicating the degree of adherence to the Mediterranean diet was constructed: the total Mediterranean diet score ranged from 0 (minimal adherence to the Mediterranean diet) to 9 (maximal adherence). The percentage of physical inactivity was greater in the ED group (35 vs 19%, P=0.04), whereas the diet score was lower (4.7±0.5 vs 5.4±0.5, P<0.01), indicating a reduced adherence to the Mediterranean diet. In analyses adjusted for the prevalence of associated risk factors (hypertension, hypercholesterolemia), body mass index, waist, physical inactivity and total energy intake, the intake of fruits and nuts, and the ratio of monounsaturated lipids to saturated lipids remained the only individual measures associated with ED. In conclusion, the results of the present study show that dietary factors may be important in the development of ED: adoption of healthy diets would hopefully help preventing ED.


Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases | 2003

Are extended biopsies really necessary to improve prostate cancer detection

Rocco Damiano; R. Autorino; Sisto Perdonà; M. De Sio; Andrea Oliva; C Esposito; Francesco Cantiello; G. Di Lorenzo; R Sacco; Massimo D'Armiento

The aim of this study is to understand the value of specific sites in extended peripheral and transition zone biopsy schemes in order to define the optimal systematic biopsy regimen correlated with the percentage of positivity of each single bioptic site. A total of 165 consecutive patients underwent transrectal ultrasonography examination to detect prostate cancer followed by a lesion-directed and systematic 14-step biopsy scheme. The detection rate was examined for the lesion-directed and for each zone region biopsy. The frequency of positive biopsies in the various prostate regions was determined to evaluate the diagnostic yield of each biopsy site. Analysis was stratified for prostate-specific antigen (PSA), free-to-total PSA ratio, age, prostate size and digital rectal examination. The biopsy protocol detected 40% of patients (66/165) as positive and 55.1% (91/165) as negative for cancer. Standard sextant biopsy was expected to detect only 51 cancer on 66, lateral peripheral (PZ), transition (TZ) and central zone (CZ) biopsies only 56 cancer on 66, while the combination of sextant, PZ, TZ and CZ biopsies, for a total of 14 zone biopsies, detected 64 on 66 patients with cancer (97%) at recruitment. Sampling only the eight prostate regions with higher frequency of positive cancer biopsy was expected to detect 61 cancer patients against the 64 found with the 14-step scheme. This eight-biopsy regimen outperforms the conventional sextant regimen in cancer detection rate (93 vs 77%) and has an overall detection rate lower by only 3.1% (36.9 vs 40%) compared to the 14-biopsy regimen. This difference in detection rate is even smaller in patients with PSA values <10 ng/ml, age <70 y and prostate size <50 ml. This eight-biopsy scheme, including sampling in PZ and TZ toward the base, should be considered in an initial biopsy scheme to maintain a similar detection rate of an extensive biopsy scheme reducing the number of biopsies.


Tumori | 2004

Gemcitabine and cisplatin following surgical treatment of urinary bladder carcinosarcoma.

Rocco Damiano; Massimo D'Armiento; Francesco Cantiello; Andrea Amorosi; Pierosandro Tagliaferri; Rosario Sacco; Salvatore Venuta

The clinical case of a 73-year-old man with a history of transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder, an ulcerated mass on the left hemitrigone and left hydronephrosis who underwent radical cystoprostatectomy and urinary diversion followed by cisplatin-gemcitabine chemotherapy is presented. Pathological examination revealed a biphasic mixed tumor characterized by an epithelial and a mesenchymal component. At 24 months of follow-up the patient is alive and free from recurrent disease, with good quality of life and preserved renal function. Carcinosarcoma is highly aggressive and often has a dismal outcome regardless of treatment. Among all the studied prognostic factors, pathological stage is the main predictor of survival. The outcome of our patient suggests that the relatively well tolerated gemcitabine-cisplatin regimen after surgical treatment of invasive carcinosarcoma of the bladder might improve the currently dismal prognosis of selected elderly patients.


Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases | 2006

Gynecomastia in patients with prostate cancer: update on treatment options

R. Autorino; Sisto Perdonà; Massimo D'Armiento; M. De Sio; Rocco Damiano; Luca Cosentino; G. Di Lorenzo

Non-steroidal antiandrogen monotherapy offers potential quality of life benefits over other treatment modalities in patients with prostate cancer. Nevertheless, gynecomastia and breast pain still represent the most bothersome side effects during this treatment. In this update article, recent advances in the management options for gynecomastia/breast pain caused by hormonal manipulation are reviewed and critically analyzed.

Collaboration


Dive into the Massimo D'Armiento's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Riccardo Autorino

Virginia Commonwealth University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. De Sio

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giuseppe Di Lorenzo

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sisto Perdonà

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Francesco Giugliano

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marco De Sio

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

G. Di Lorenzo

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Luca Cosentino

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Salvatore Mordente

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Katherine Esposito

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge