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Dive into the research topics where Nicola Solari is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicola Solari.


Cancer Nursing | 2012

Efficacy of Normal Saline Versus Heparinized Saline Solution for Locking Catheters of Totally Implantable Long-Term Central Vascular Access Devices in Adult Cancer Patients

Sergio Bertoglio; Nicola Solari; Paolo Meszaros; Francesca Vassallo; Maura Bonvento; S. Pastorino; Paolo Bruzzi

Background:Heparin solution is routinely used to maintain the patency of infusion devices. Literature supports the alternative use of normal saline solution for flushing and locking intravenous infusion devices especially for pediatric patients. There is uncertainty regarding safety and efficacy of this policy for intermittent locking of implanted ports. Objective:This study evaluates efficacy and safety of normal saline solution for intermittent locking procedures of implanted ports. Methods:This is a retrospective observational cohort study of 610 implanted ports receiving 2 different locking solutions conducted at the National Institute for Cancer Research, IST Genova, Italy, from January 2007 to August 2009. Group A (n = 297) received heparinized solution (10 mL/500 U heparin), whereas group B (n = 313), 10 mL normal saline. Primary endpoint was irreversible port occlusion. Minimum follow-up was 12 months. The role of age, type of tumor, disease stage, access site, access body side, catheter tip position, and concomitant use of parenteral nutrition and chemotherapy was evaluated in secondary aim. Results:Results fail to show statistically significant differences in implanted ports survival free from failure for occlusive events between the use of heparinized solution and that of normal saline for the maintenance of port patency, both in univariate (P = .9) and in multivariate analyses (P = .7). Conclusion:Normal saline solution seems to be as effective as heparinized solution for keeping patent implanted ports in adult cancer patients. Implications for Practice:Switching from heparinized solution to normal saline for catheter intermittent lock of ports seems a safe procedure.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2014

Electrochemotherapy for the management of cutaneous and subcutaneous metastasis: A series of 39 patients treated with palliative intent

Nicola Solari; Francesco Spagnolo; Erica Ponte; Alberto Quaglia; Roberto Lillini; Michela Battista; Paola Queirolo; Ferdinando Cafiero

Electrochemotherapy (ECT) is technique for local control of skin metastasis. This study is primarily aimed at assessing the clinical activity of ECT in a prospective cohort of patients, and evaluating the association between primary tumor histology, number of metastatic lesions and size of tumor deposits and objective response rate.


Tumori | 2000

Mapping the sentinel lymph node in malignant melanoma by blue dye, lymphoscintigraphy and intraoperative gamma probe.

Giuseppe Villa; Giuseppe Agnese; Pietro Bianchi; Ferdinando Buffoni; Rosario Costa; Franca Carli; Alberto Peressini; Nicola Solari; Ferdinando Cafiero; Giuliano Mariani

Eighty-eight consecutive patients (48 men and 40 women; mean age, 58.9 years; range, 16–84 years) with clinically localized cutaneous melanoma involving the trunk, extremities or head and neck underwent lymphatic mapping at our institution. The primary melanoma had a mean thickness of 2.74 mm (range, 0.95 to 9 mm). Patients were divided into two groups: group A (39 patients) underwent only vital blue dye (VBD) mapping, while group B (49 patients) underwent lymphatic mapping with VBD and radio-guided surgery (RGS) combined. In all patients 1-1.5 mL of VBD was injected subdermally around the biopsy scar 10–20 min before surgery. In group B 37 MBq in 150 μL of 99mTc-HSA nanocolloid was additionally injected intradermally 18 h before surgery (3–6 aliquots injected perilesionally). In all lymphatic basins where drainage was noted the sentinel lymph nodes (SNs) were identified and marked with a cutaneous marker. Final identification of the SN was then performed externally by a hand-held gamma probe. After the induction of anesthesia 0.5–1-0 mL of patent blue V dye was injected intradermally with a 25-gauge needle around the site of the primary melanoma. SNs were examined by routine hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining and immunohistochemistry. Patients with histologically positive SN(s) underwent standard lymph node dissection (SLND) in the involved lymph node basin. The SN was identified in 37/39 patients (94.9%) of group A and in 48/49 patients (98.0%) of group B. Blue dye mapping failed to identify the SN in 5 of the 88 patients (5.8%), while the radioisotope method failed in only 1 of 49 patients (2.0%). Similar results were obtained with the combined use of the two probes. The average number of SNs harvested was 1.9 per basin sampled, which does not differ significantly from the numbers reported by other authors114. The SN was histologically positive in 18 patients (20.5%). None of the 12 patients with a Breslow thickness less than 1.5 mm had positive SNs, whereas 18 of the 77 patients (23.4%) with a Breslow index exceeding 1.5 mm showed metastatic SNs with H&E or immunohistochemistry. The latter all underwent SLND of the affected basin. In 10 patients (55.6%) the SN was the only site of tumor invasion; eight patients (44.4%) with positive SNs had one or more metastatic lymph nodes in the draining basin.


International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2010

Empirical first-line treatment with tigecycline for febrile episodes following abdominal surgery in cancer patients

Giovanni Secondo; Francesca Vassallo; Nicola Solari; Luciano Moresco; Pierluigi Percivale; Lucia Zappi; Ferdinando Cafiero; Andrea De Maria

Cancer patients with complicated infections following abdominal surgery represent one of the worst clinical scenarios that is useful for testing the efficacy of empirical antimicrobial therapy. No study so far has evaluated the performance of tigecycline (TIG) when administered as empirical first-line treatment in a homogeneous population of surgical cancer patients with a febrile episode. An observational review of the data records of 24 sequential patients receiving TIG for a febrile episode following a major abdominal procedure in a single cancer institute was performed. Large bowel surgery represented 68% of all procedures, followed by gastric surgery (16%) and urinary-gynaecologic-biliary surgery (16%). Complications following surgery were observed in 68% of febrile episodes, with peritonitis and sepsis accounting for 59% and 24% of complications, respectively. Eight patients needed repeat surgery for source control. The mean duration of TIG treatment was 8 days. Causative pathogens were detected in 16 episodes (64%), and a total of 44 microorganisms were recovered (29% Escherichia coli, 9% Enterococcus faecalis and 9% coagulase-negative staphylococci). TIG was effective in 12 episodes (48%). The success rate was 67% when infectious episodes sustained by intrinsically resistant bacteria and fungi were excluded. Treatment failure was associated with the presence of complications and with microbiologically documented infection. TIG may be useful as a first-line treatment option in cancer patients requiring antibiotic treatment following surgery when complications are not present or suspected on clinical grounds and when local microbial epidemiology shows a low incidence of primary resistant bacteria.


Melanoma Research | 2009

Predictive role of preoperative lymphoscintigraphy on the status of the sentinel lymph node in clinically node-negative patients with cutaneous melanoma

Nicola Solari; Marco Gipponi; Mattia Stella; Paola Queirolo; Carmine di Somma; Giuseppe Villa; Arnoldo Piccardo; Marina Gualco; Francesco Cardinale; Ferdinando Cafiero

We reviewed our experience to assess the predictive role of preoperative lymphoscintigraphy with regard to the pathological status of sentinel lymph node (sN) in patients with cutaneous melanoma, to optimize the surgical treatment planning with regard to the use of intraoperative frozen section examination of sN. Eighty-eight patients with clinically node-negative cutaneous melanoma pT1b–T4 stage underwent preoperative lymphoscintigraphy for the lymphatic mapping of sN. A lymphoscintigraphic ‘score’ (from L1 to L5) was developed based on the ratio of radiotracer concentration within sN nodes as compared with the injection site. Our score allowed us to foresee that sN of patients with thick melanomas (T3 and T4) and a low preoperative score (L1–L2–L3) had a 90% expected likelihood (P<0.001) of harboring metastasis, whereas sN in patients with thin melanomas (T1b–T2) and high preoperative score (from L4 to L5) showed a 100% likelihood of being metastasis free. In conclusion, the sN is a reliable predictor of regional lymph node status in patients with cutaneous malignant melanoma. Moreover, we suggest that a low score (L1–L2–L3) associated with a thick melanoma is a good predictive factor of the positive sN involvement. This information could be useful in scheduling the intraoperative frozen-section examination with an expected benefit of a positive test in almost 90% of patients. Such patients might be selected for a ‘one-stage’ procedure with a more effective cost/benefit ratio and decreased hospitalization costs.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2016

Local treatment with electrochemotherapy of superficial angiosarcomas: Efficacy and safety results from a multi-institutional retrospective study

Michele Guida; Luca Giovanni Campana; Pietro Curatolo; Sabino Strippoli; Antonio Bonadies; Gretha Grilz; Carlo Cabula; Roberta Rotunno; Stefania Bucher; Nicola Solari; Antonio Santoriello; Sara Valpione; Carlo Riccardo Rossi

Angiosarcoma is an aggressive vascular neoplasm with a high propensity for local recurrence. Electrochemotherapy is an emerging skin‐directed therapy, exerting prominent cytotoxic activity, and antivascular effects. Its efficacy in angiosarcoma has not been investigated.


Dermatology | 2017

Multiple Lymph Node Basin Drainage in Trunk Melanoma Is Not Associated with Survival of Sentinel Lymph Node-Positive Patients

Simone Ribero; Simona Osella Abate; Sadro Pasquali; Carlo Riccardo Rossi; Lorenzo Borgognoni; Dario Piazzalunga; Nicola Solari; Mauro Schiavon; Paola Brandani; Luca Ansaloni; Erica Ponte; Francesco Silan; Antonio Sommariva; Francesco Bellucci; Giuseppe Macripò; Pietro Quaglino

Objectives: This study was aimed at investigating the prognostic role of multiple lymph node basin drainage (MLBD) in patients with positive sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy. Background: MLBD is frequently observed in patients with trunk melanoma undergoing SLN. The prognostic value of MLBD in SLN-positive patients is still debated. Methods: Retrospective data from 312 trunk melanoma patients with positive SLN biopsy (1991-2012) at 6 Italian referral centres were gathered in a multicentre database. MLBD was defined at preoperative lymphoscintigraphy. Clinical and pathological data were analysed for their association with disease-free interval (DFI) and disease-specific (DSS) survival. Results: MLBD was identified in 34.6% of patients (108/312) and was significantly associated with >1 positive SLN (37 vs. 15.2%; p < 0.001) and with >1 positive lymph node (LN) after complete lymph node dissection (CLND) (50.9 vs. 34.8%; p = 0.033). No differences were observed according to drainage pattern in patients who had negative and positive non-SLN at CLND. MLBD was not associated with either DFI or DSS. Multivariate analyses showed that tumour thickness, ulceration, and number of metastatic LNs were associated with worse DFI and DSS, while regression confirmed its protective role in survival. Conclusion: In positive SLN patients, MLBD has no association with survival, which is mainly related to American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) prognostic factors. Since the overall number of positive LNs drives the prognosis, the importance of a CLND in all the positive basins is confirmed.


Anticancer Research | 2001

Solitary fibrous tumor of the inguinal region: A clinicopathological, light-microscopic, immunohistochemical, electron microscopic and flow-cytometric DNA study

Ferdinando Cafiero; Marco Gipponi; Alberto Peressini; Barabino P; Paola Queirolo; Massimo Nicolò; Nicola Solari; Nicolò G


Anticancer Research | 2014

The role of sentinel lymph node biopsy in patients with local recurrence or in-transit metastasis of melanoma

Marco Gipponi; Nicola Solari; Davide Giovinazzo; Paola Queirolo; Sergio Bertoglio; Giuseppe Villa; Marina Gualco; Dario Bleidl; Ferdinando Cafiero


Anticancer Research | 2013

Predictive Factors of Non-sentinel Lymph Node Involvement in Patients with Invasive Breast Cancer and Sentinel Node Micrometastases

Daniele Friedman; Marco Gipponi; Federica Murelli; Paolo Meszaros; Nicola Solari; Michela Massa; Francesca Depaoli; Paola Baccini; Franca Carli; Maurizio Gallo; Ferdinando Cafiero

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Paola Queirolo

National Cancer Research Institute

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