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Dive into the research topics where Paola Fidani is active.

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Featured researches published by Paola Fidani.


Journal of Pediatric Hematology Oncology | 1990

High-dose carboplatin in combination with etoposide (JET regimen) for childhood brain tumors.

Manuel A. Castello; Anna Clerico; Giovanni Deb; Carlo Dominici; Paola Fidani; Alberto Donfrancesco

Fourteen patients aged 1 to 15 years with medulloblastoma (six patients), low-grade astrocytoma (four patients), and high-grade astrocytoma (four patients) were treated with carboplatin and etoposide (JET regimen). Six patients had been treated previously, two of them with cisplatin at conventional doses. Carboplatin was administered at 500 mg/m2/day over 5 h on days 1 and 2, in association with pulsed etoposide at 100 mg/m2/day on days 1, 2, and 3. Courses were repeated at 3-week intervals. The disease-specific response rates were as follows: five of six with three complete responses and two partial responses for medulloblastoma; zero of four for low-grade astrocytoma; and two of four with two partial responses for high-grade astrocytoma. Myelosuppression was the main side effect: anemia (hemoglobin less than 8.0 g/dl), thrombocytopenia (less than 25,000/microliter) and leukopenia (less than 1,000 white blood cells/microliters) were noted in 19 of 54, 10 of 54, and 7 of 54 courses, respectively. Gastrointestinal toxicity was very mild, and nephro- and neurotoxicity were not observed. No audiometric abnormalities were demonstrated in seven of seven patients who had not previously received cisplatin, and preexisting audiometric abnormalities were not worsened by the administration of carboplatin in one cisplatin-pretreated patient. The combination of carboplatin and etoposide administered in this study appears to be effective and well tolerated in children with brain tumors. Further studies on a larger number of patients are needed to ascertain its real activity in childhood brain tumors.


American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1992

Deferoxamine, cyclophosphamide, etoposide, carboplatin, and thiotepa (D-CECaT): a new cytoreductive chelation-chemotherapy regimen in patients with advanced neuroblastoma.

Alberto Donfrancesco; Giovanni Deb; Carlo Dominici; A. Angioni; M. Caniglia; L. De Sio; Paola Fidani; A. Amici; L. Helson

Thirteen patients with Stage III (3 patients) or Stage IV (10 patients) neuroblastoma were treated with a new iron chelation-cytotoxic therapy regimen. Deferoxamine given for five consecutive days followed by 3 days of cyclophosphamide, etoposide, carboplatin, and thiotepa (D-CECaT) caused moderate to severe myelotoxicity. In 39 courses there were four episodes of sepsis; platelet and packed red blood cell transfusions were required in 72% and 82% of courses, respectively. Mild nausea and vomiting occurred in 52% of courses. Objective responses after two courses were observed in 12 of 13 patients. Three of four partial responses were achieved in previously treated relapsed patients, and seven of eight complete responses (four of which were surgically documented) were achieved in previously untreated patients. This cytoreduction regimen appears to be an improvement over other initial induction regimens and may be worth testing in larger populations.


Acta Paediatrica | 2004

Ifosfamide/carboplatin/etoposide (ICE) as front-line, topotecan/ cyclophosphamide as second-line and oral temozolomide as third-line treatment for advanced neuroblastoma over one year of age

Alberto Donfrancesco; Alessandro Jenkner; Aurora Castellano; Ilaria Ilari; Giuseppe Maria Milano; L. De Sio; Raffaele Cozza; Paola Fidani; Giovanni Deb; C De Laurentis; Alessandro Inserra; Carlo Dominici

Children affected by advanced neuroblastoma have a discouraging prognosis, but intensive induction chemotherapy may increase the complete response rate. The combination of ifosfamide, carboplatin and etoposide (ICE) was used for the first time as front‐line regimen in patients with stage 4 neuroblastoma over the age of 1 y. Similarly, second‐line treatment for children with relapsed neuroblastoma, particularly after high‐dose chemotherapy, has been unsatisfactory. The combination of topotecan and cyclophosphamide was studied in resistant or relapsed solid tumors. Furthermore, there is a need for effective palliative treatment in patients failing therapy. Temozolomide, a new dacarbazine analog with optimal oral bioavailability, is being used in an ongoing phase II study as an alternative to oral etoposide. Seventeen patients with stage 4 neuroblastoma have entered the ICE study; 15/16 (94%) major responses after induction were observed and 6/16 (37%) evaluable patients are disease free after a median of 51 mo. Twenty‐one patients with relapsed/refractory disease (of whom 13 neuroblastomas) entered the topotecan/cyclophosphamide study: 7/21 (33%) patients responded. Forty‐one patients entered the temozolomide study (of whom 16 had neuroblastomas): stable disease and symptom relief were obtained in 15/30 (50%) evaluable patients. Intensive induction with ICE resulted in a faster response with high response rate; a larger study with longer follow‐up is needed to confirm a survival advantage. Second‐line treatment was effective in obtaining remissions, some of them long lasting. Third‐line treatment did not elicit measurable responses in neuroblastoma, but achieved prolonged freedom from disease progression and excellent palliation in several patients.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2006

Temozolomide in resistant or relapsed pediatric solid tumors

L. De Sio; Giuseppe Maria Milano; Aurora Castellano; Alessandro Jenkner; Paola Fidani; Carlo Dominici; Alberto Donfrancesco

We report the off‐label study aimed at investigating the use of temozolomide (TMZ) as single agent in relapsed or resistant pediatric solid tumors. The drug was administered at the dose of 215 mg/m2/day × 5 days or 180 mg/m2/day × 5 days in patients with prior craniospinal irradiation (CSI) or autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT).


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2004

Antibiotic lock with vancomycin and urokinase can successfully treat colonized central venous catheters in pediatric cancer patients.

Luigi De Sio; Alessandro Jenkner; Giuseppe Maria Milano; Ilaria Ilari; Paola Fidani; Aurora Castellano; Roberta Gareri; Alberto Donfrancesco

We used an antibiotic lock technique with vancomycin in combination with urokinase in 10 consecutive eligible children with Gram-positive catheter-related bacteremia persisting after appropriate intravenous antibiotics. Treatment was successful in sterilizing all colonized central venous catheters, avoiding device removal and delay of further chemotherapy. The antibiotic lock technique may represent a safe and effective therapeutic option in patients with selected, uncomplicated catheter-related bacteremias resistant to systemic antimicrobial therapy, particularly when maintaining a venous access is mandatory.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2011

Infant Ependymoma in a 10-Year AIEOP (Associazione Italiana Ematologia Oncologia Pediatrica) Experience With Omitted or Deferred Radiotherapy

Maura Massimino; Lorenza Gandola; Salvina Barra; Felice Giangaspero; Cecilia Casali; Paolo Potepan; Concezio Di Rocco; Paolo Nozza; Paola Collini; Elisabetta Viscardi; Daniele Bertin; Veronica Biassoni; Armando Cama; Claudia Milanaccio; Piergiorgio Modena; Rita Balter; Giampiero Tamburrini; Paola Peretta; Maurizio Mascarin; Giovanni Scarzello; Paola Fidani; Giuseppe Maria Milano; Iacopo Sardi; Lorenzo Genitori; Maria Luisa Garrè

PURPOSE The protocols of the 1990s omitted or delayed irradiation, using upfront chemotherapy to spare the youngest children with ependymoma the sequelae of radiotherapy (RT). We treated 41 children under the age of 3 years with intracranial ependymoma between 1994 and 2003. PATIENTS AND METHODS After surgery, chemotherapy was given as follows: regimen I with four blocks of vincristine, high-dose methotrexate 5 g/m(2), and cyclophosphamide 1.5 g/m(2) alternating with cisplatin 90 mg/m(2) plus VP16 450 mg/m(2) for 14 months; subsequently, regimen II was used: VEC (VCR, VP16 300 mg/m(2), and cyclophosphamide 3 g/m(2)) for 6 months. Radiotherapy was planned for residual tumor after the completion of chemotherapy or for progression. RESULTS We treated 23 boys and 18 girls who were a median 22 months old; 14 were given regimen I, 27 were given regimen II; 22 underwent complete resection, 19 had residual tumor. Ependymoma was Grade 2 in 25 patients and Grade 3 in 16; tumors were infratentorial in 37 patients and supratentorial in 4. One child had intracranial metastases; 29 had progressed locally after a median 9 months. Event-free survival was 26% at 3 and 5 years and 23% at 8 years. One child died of sepsis, and another developed a glioblastoma 72 months after RT. Progression-free survival was 27% at 3, 5, and 8 years, and overall survival was 48%, 37%, and 28% at 3, 5, and 8 years, respectively. Of the 13 survivors, 6 never received RT; their intellectual outcome did not differ significantly in those children than in those without RT. CONCLUSIONS Our results confirm poor rates of event-free survival and overall survival for up-front chemotherapy in infant ependymoma. No better neurocognitive outcome was demonstrated in the few survivors who never received RT.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 2009

Metastatic retinoblastoma: Single institution experience over two decades

Raffaele Cozza; M A De Ioris; Ilaria Ilari; Rita Devito; Paola Fidani; L De Sio; F. Demelas; Antonino Romanzo; Alberto Donfrancesco

Background: Metastatic spread in retinoblastoma is a rare occurrence in developed countries but still associated with a poor prognosis. Patients and methods: Medical records of all metastatic retinoblastoma diagnosed during a 20-year period were retrospectively reviewed. Results: Six patients out of 104 presented a metastatic disease with an incidence at diagnosis of 2%. Three had a metastatic disease at diagnosis, one patient a trilateral retinoblastoma and two a metastatic spread after enucleation. All but one were sporadic retinoblastoma. Central nervous system (CNS) involvement was reported in five patients, while one patient had an intraorbital lesion, and bone and bone marrow spread. Different treatment strategies were administered based on local treatment plus chemotherapy and radiotherapy with or without high-dose chemotherapy. An ifosfamide/carboplatin/etoposide regimen was administered in three patients resulting in a partial response. Out of six patients, four died, and two patients are alive at 60 and 63 months from diagnosis. Both children with a long follow-up were treated with high-dose chemotherapy. All but one of the patients with CNS involvement died; the survivor was a patient with pineal involvement. Conclusion: This retrospective review confirms a curable strategy based on local treatment and conventional plus high-dose chemotherapy. Patients with CNS involvement remain incurable.


Childs Nervous System | 1996

CNS-85 trial: a cooperative pediatric CNS tumor study--results of treatment of medulloblastoma patients.

S. Pezzotta; L. Cordero di Montezemolo; Knerich R; M. Arrigoni; Affif Barbara; L. Besenzon; A. Brach del Prever; Paola Fidani; Davide Locatelli; Giuseppe Loiacono; L. Magrassi; Giorgio Perilongo; Luca Rigobello; A. Urgesi; Madon E

Between 1985 and 1989, 38 children with newly diagnosed medulloblastoma entered our therapeutic protocol. After surgery and postoperative staging assessments, patients were assigned to risk groups. Eleven with “standard-risk” (SR) tumors were treated with radiation therapy alone, while 27 with “high-risk” (HR) tumors received radiation therapy plus adjuvant chemotherapy with vincristine, methotrexate, VM-26, and 1-(2-chloroethyl)-3-cyclohexyl-1-nitrosourea (CCNU). After a minimum follow-up of 5 years (range 5–9 years) 21/38 children had developed a recurrence or progression of their disease and 19/38 patients had died. Five-year event-free survival rates and 5-year total survival rates for all 38 patients were 47.4% and 50% respectively. The event-free survival rates at 5 years for SR and HR patients separately were 27.3% and 55.6%, respectively. The corresponding 5-year total survival rates were 27.3% and 59.3%. The differences were not statistically significant. Univariate analysis showed age at diagnosis to be the most important prognostic factor. Infants aged 5 years or less had a significantly shorter event-free survival time than older patients (P=0.00897). Similar effects were found when total survival time was considered. There were significant differences in outcome in patients receiving different doses of radiation, suggesting a dose-response relationship. A Cox stepwise multivariate analysis showed age at diagnosis as the only independent prognostic factor. Variables relating to treatment entered the model, suggesting that chemotherapy could play an important role in determining outcome.


Neuropsychologia | 2007

Acquired amnesia in childhood: A single case study

Stefano Vicari; Deny Menghini; Margherita Di Paola; Laura Serra; Alberto Donfrancesco; Paola Fidani; Giuseppe Maria Milano; Giovanni Augusto Carlesimo

We report the case of C.L., an 8-year-old child who, following the surgical removal of an ependymoma from the left cerebral ventricle at the age of 4 years, developed significant difficulties in retaining day-to-day events and information. A thorough neuropsychological analysis documented in C.L. a severe anterograde amnesic syndrome, characterised by normal short-term memory, but poor performance on episodic long-term memory tests. In particular, C.L. demonstrated virtually no ability to recollect new verbal information several minutes after the presentation. As for semantic memory, C.L. demonstrated general semantic competencies, which, depending on the test, ranged from the level of a 6-year-old girl to a level corresponding to her actual chronological age. Finding a patient who, despite being severely impaired in the ability to recollect new episodic memories, still demonstrates at least partially preserved abilities to acquire new semantic knowledge suggests that neural circuits implicated in the memorisation of autobiographical events and factual information do not overlap completely. This case is examined in the light of growing literature concerned with the dissociation between episodic and semantic memory in childhood amnesia.


Disability and Rehabilitation | 2011

Adaptive functioning in children in the first six months after surgery for brain tumours

Chiara Vago; Sara Bulgheroni; Arianna Usilla; Veronica Biassoni; Annalisa Serra; Simonetta Gentile; Daniela Ajovalasit; Matilde Leonardi; Maura Massimino; Paola Fidani; Daria Riva

Purpose. To examine the adaptive functioning of children who underwent surgery for brain tumours with a view to analyse the related acute impairments and to describe their short-term outcome. Method. We investigated adaptive functioning in 25 children (ranging from 2 to 18 years of age) for 40 days and again 3 and 6 months after they underwent surgery for various brain tumours. The Vineland Adaptive Behaviour Scales (VABS) were used to assess their adaptive functioning, considering the four main domains and all the subdomains. Results. The results remained stable over the follow-up period considered. The domain in which the scores were most severely affected was Daily Living, followed by the Socialisation and Communication domains. Within the Communication domain, the abilities investigated in the Receptive subdomain revealed the worst impairments. Within the Daily Living domain, impairments were most evident in the childrens capacity to take care of themselves and handle domestic activities. In the Socialisation domain, Play and Leisure Time, and Interpersonal Relationships were the subdomains most severely impaired. Conclusions. These findings are relevant because identifying childrens adaptive functioning difficulties sooner could help their rehabilitation to be tailored and thus have a positive fallout on their long-term outcome.

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Ilaria Ilari

Boston Children's Hospital

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Raffaele Cozza

Boston Children's Hospital

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Carlo Dominici

Sapienza University of Rome

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L. De Sio

Boston Children's Hospital

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Annalisa Serra

Boston Children's Hospital

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Aurora Castellano

Boston Children's Hospital

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Giovanni Deb

Boston Children's Hospital

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