Maurizio Cardi
Sapienza University of Rome
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Gastroenterology Research and Practice | 2012
Paolo Sammartino; Simone Sibio; Daniele Biacchi; Maurizio Cardi; Fabio Accarpio; Pietro Mingazzini; Maria Sofia Rosati; Tommaso Cornali; Angelo Di Giorgio
The study compared the outcome in patients with advanced colonic cancer at high risk of peritoneal metastases (mucinous or signet-ring cell) without peritoneal or systemic spread, treated with standard colectomy or a more aggressive combined surgical approach. The study included patients with colonic cancer with clinical T3/T4, any N, M0, and mucinous or signet ring cell histology. The 25 patients in the experimental group underwent hemicolectomy, omentectomy, bilateral adnexectomy, hepatic round ligament resection, and appendectomy, followed by HIPEC. The control group comprised 50 patients treated with standard surgical resection during the same period in the same hospital by different surgical teams. Outcome data, morbidity, peritoneal recurrence rate, and overall, and disease-free survival, were compared. Peritoneal recurrence developed in 4% of patients in the experimental group and 22% of controls without increasing morbidity (P < 0.05). Actuarial overall survival curves disclosed no significant differences, whereas actuarial disease-free survival curves showed a significant difference between groups (36.8 versus 21.9 months, P < 0.01). A more aggressive preventive surgical approach combined with HIPEC reduces the incidence of peritoneal recurrence in patients with advanced mucinous colonic cancer and also significantly increases disease-free survival compared with a homogeneous control group treated with a standard surgical approach without increasing morbidity.
Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2000
Antonio Bolognese; Maurizio Cardi; Irnerio A. Muttillo; Apostolos Barbarosos; Tommaso Bocchetti
The aim of our study was to retrospectively evaluate the results of 2 groups of patients admitted and treated for rectal cancer.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1992
P. Barillari; Antonio Bolognese; Piero Chirletti; Maurizio Cardi; Paolo Sammartino; V. Stipa
Sixty-six consecutive patients who underwent curative resection for rectal cancer were studied prospectively to evaluate the roles of sequential carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), tissue plasminogen activator (TPA), and carcinomatous antigen 19-9 (Ca 19-9) determinations in the early diagnosis of resectable recurrences. Thirty-three recurrences were detected between 6 and 42 months. CEA, TPA, and Ca 19-9 showed a sensitivity of 72.7 percent, 78.8 percent, and 60.1 percent, respectively, and a specificity of 60.6 percent, 60.6 percent, and 87.9 percent, respectively. In 23 cases the rise in the value of CEA and/or TPA and/or Ca 19-9 was the first sign of recurrences, and the diagnosis was established later by clinical methods. In this group, the lead time was two months for liver metastases and four months for disseminated metastases. As far as the relationship between localization of recurrence and marker level increase is concerned, of 16 hepatic metastases CEA, TPA, and Ca 19-9 showed a sensitivity of 94 percent (P<0.05), 69 percent, and 62 percent, respectively. Of six patients with local recurrences, CEA, TPA, and Ca 19-9 showed a sensitivity of 50 percent, 100 percent (P<0.05), and 83.3 percent, respectively. Of three patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis, CEA, TPA (P<0.05), and Ca 19-9 showed a sensitivity of 0 percent, 100 percent, and 0 percent, respectively. No significant differences were reported among the three markers according to multiple metastases and metachronous polyps. Fourteen patients (42.4 percent) underwent surgical treatment for recurrent disease, and eight of them (57 percent) showed a resectable disease, for a total resectability rate of 24.2 percent. The findings of our study indicate that a followup program based on CEA, TPA, and Ca 19-9 assays is related to an early diagnosis and a good resectability rate for both local and metastatic recurrences from rectal cancer.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2011
Simone Sibio; Paolo Sammartino; Fabio Accarpio; Daniele Biacchi; Tommaso Cornali; Maurizio Cardi; Franco Iafrate; Angelo Di Giorgio
We report the case of a 72-year-old woman with metastatic malignant mesothelioma presenting as right colonic polyp. She was diagnosed with malignant pleural mesothelioma 2 years previously and underwent surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy. After 2 years with a negative follow-up, she was admitted to the infectious disease department for malaria and severe anaemia. A computed tomographic scan and a colonoscopy showed a huge bleeding polypoid lesion in the right colon diagnosed as adenocarcinoma. She underwent a right hemicolectomy; a pathologic examination found neoplastic cell population positive to anti-cytokeratin7, anti-calretinin, anti-vimentin, and negative for anti-cytokeratin 20, MOC-31, and thyroid transcription factor 1, providing a diagnosis of metastatic mesothelioma.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 1991
Piero Chirletti; P. Barillari; M. Martelli; Roberto Caronna; M. Indinnimeo; I. A. Muttillo; M. Ricci; Maurizio Cardi; Paolo Sammartino; A. Bolognese; V. Stipa
This study analyzes the value of surgery in the treatment, staging and long-term survival of 17 patients affected with primary gastric lymphoma. In 7 patients the neoplasm was localized to the lower third of the stomach, in three to the middle third, in two to the upper third, while in 5 patients there was involvement of the entire stomach. Patients were classified according to the Ann-Arbor classification. Nine patients were stage Ie, five stage Ile, and three stage IVe. A partial gastrectomy was carried out in ten patients and total gastrectomy in 7. In all cases surgical excision of the gastric lymphoma was performed together with intraoperative staging including bilateral hepatic biopsies, and exploration of all abdominal lymph nodes. Two postoperative deaths occurred among the 7 patients who underwent total gastrectomy but no major complications were observed in the remaining 5 patients. No deaths occurred among the 10 patients who underwent partial gastrectomy, but in one case an acute complication developed. Staging laparotomy permitted the correction of clinical staging, and showed that three cases were understaged and one overstaged. All patients received adjuvant chemio-radiotherapy. All but one patient are currently alive, well and free of disease. Survival was correlated significantly with the stage of the disease and extent of gastric involvement, but there was no correlation between survival, histological grade, and the type of gastrectomy performed.
Indian Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2016
Paolo Sammartino; Daniele Biacchi; Tommaso Cornali; Maurizio Cardi; Fabio Accarpio; Alessio Impagnatiello; Bianca Maria Sollazzo; Angelo Di Giorgio
An integrated treatment strategy using peritonectomy procedures plus hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) is now a clinical standard of care in selected patients with peritoneal metastases and primary peritoneal tumors. This comprehensive approach can offer many patients, who hitherto had no hope of cure, a good quality of life and survival despite limited morbidity. The increasingly successful results and chance of interfering in the natural history of disease has prompted research to develop for some clinical conditions a therapeutic strategy designed to prevent malignant peritoneal dissemination before it becomes clinically evident and treat it microscopically (tertiary prevention). The main factor governing successful cytoreductive surgery and predicting outcome is the extent of peritoneal spread assessed with the peritoneal cancer index (PCI). In peritoneal metastases from colorectal and gastric cancer the PCI score acquires a specific role acting as the cut-off between patients who can undergo curative surgery or palliation. Long-term results show that the only group enjoying favorable results are patients with limited disease (a statistical minority). By applying to appropriately selected patients with primary malignancies a proactive management strategy including HIPEC we can treat patients with microscopic peritoneal dissemination and therefore at PCI 0. Among treated conditions pseudomyxoma peritonei enjoys the best results. But a major future advance comes from identifying among lesions at major risk of pseudomyxoma.
World Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2013
Angelo Di Giorgio; Maurizio Cardi; Daniele Biacchi; Simone Sibio; Fabio Accarpio; Antonio Ciardi; Tommaso Cornali; Marialuisa Framarino; Paolo Sammartino
BackgroundMore information is needed on the anatomopathological outcome variables indicating the appropriate surgical strategy for the colorectal resections often needed during cytoreduction for ovarian cancer.MethodsFrom a phase-II study cohort including 70 patients with primary advanced or recurrent ovarian cancer with diffuse peritoneal metastases treated from November 2000 to April 2009, we selected for this study the 52 consecutive patients who needed colorectal resection. Data collected included type of colorectal resection, peritoneal cancer index (PCI), histopathology (depth of bowel-wall invasion and lymph-node spread), cytoreduction rate and outcome. Correlations were tested between possible prognostic factors and Kaplan-Meier five-year overall and disease-free survival. A Cox multivariate regression model was used to identify independent variables associated with outcome.ResultsIn the 52 patients, the optimal cytoreduction rate was 86.5% (CC0/1). In all patients, implants infiltrated deeply into the bowel wall, in 75% of the cases up to the muscular and mucosal layer. Lymph-node metastases were detected in 50% of the cases; mesenteric nodes were involved in 42.3%. Most patients (52%) had an uneventful postoperative course. Operative mortality was 3.8%. The five-year survival rate was 49.9% and five-year disease-free survival was 36.7%. Cox regression analysis identified as the main prognostic factors completeness of cytoreduction and depth of bowel wall invasion.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that the major independent prognostic factors in patients with advanced ovarian cancer needing colorectal resections are completeness of cytoreduction and depth of bowel wall invasion. Surgical management and pathological assessment should be aware of and deal with dual locoregional and mesenteric lymphatic spread.
Asian pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine | 2014
Giuseppe La Torre; Vincenzo Nicosia; Maurizio Cardi
ABSTRACT The aim of this paper is to highlight the current development in the research field for helping people just exposed to Ebola virus survive (treatment) and to prevent the disease when given at various times after exposure (vaccine). Concerning the treatment, recombinant anti-Ebola monoclonal antibodies and small interfering RNAs that block the expression of essential viral proteins, are the most promising way in stopping the disease when it has already reached the humans. As far as concerns the prevention field, two candidate vaccines have clinical-grade vials available for phase 1 pre-licensure clinical trials, and demonstrated to have a 100% efficacy in studies on non human primates. Well-informed communities can reduce the main ways of spread the infection, by avoiding unprotected home-based care of people who are infected and also by completely modifying traditional burial practices that are way of diffusion of the contagion.
World Journal of Emergency Surgery | 2008
Roberto Caronna; Mario Bezzi; Monica Schiratti; Maurizio Cardi; Giampaolo Prezioso; Michele Benedetti; Federica Papini; Simona Mangioni; Gabriele Martino; Piero Chirletti
A non cirrhotic patient with esophageal varices and portal vein thrombosis had recurrent variceal bleeding unsuccessfully controlled by endoscopy and esophageal transection. Emergency transhepatic portography confirmed the thrombosed right branch of the portal vein, while the left branch appeared angulated, shifted and stenotic. A stent was successfully implanted into the left branch and the collateral vessels along the epatoduodenal ligament disappeared. In patients with esophageal variceal hemorrhage and portal thrombosis if endoscopy fails, emergency esophageal transection or nonselective portocaval shunting are indicated. The rare patients with only partial portal thrombosis can be treated directly with stenting through an angioradiologic approach.
Archive | 1988
Antonio Bolognese; Piero Chirletti; Paolo Sammartino; Maurizio Cardi; V. Stipa
Disappointing results, difficulty in treatment and lack of agreement on the surgical therapy are hallmarks of reports concerning malignant tumors of the cardia [1–4]. Controversy exists as to which kind of treatment offers the best chance of cure or, more often, palliation [3, 5, 6]. Due to the rarity of the disease, most of the reports concern small series of patients. The present study is a retrospective review of short- and long-term results in 215 patients with cancer of the cardia surgically treated in our referral institution.