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Dive into the research topics where Pasquale Benedetto is active.

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Featured researches published by Pasquale Benedetto.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1991

A phase II study of weekly 24-hour infusion with high-dose fluorouracil with leucovorin in colorectal carcinoma.

Bach Ardalan; L Chua; E M Tian; Rajender Reddy; Kasi S. Sridhar; Pasquale Benedetto; Stephen P. Richman; A Legaspi; Stuart Waldman; Louise Morrell

Twenty-two patients with advanced colorectal carcinoma were enrolled in this study. Ten patients had received prior chemotherapy that included the combination of fluorouracil (5-FU) and leucovorin (LV). All patients required subcutaneous port insertion and portable external infusion pumps to allow outpatient treatment. 5-FU (2,600 mg/m2) was administered concurrently with LV (500 mg/m2) over 24 hours of continuous infusion. The mean steady-state plasma concentration of 5-FU was 10 mumol/L (range, 7 to 14 mumol/L). The 5-FU dose was based on our previous phase I study, in which maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) of 5-FU was determined to be 2,600 mg/m2 in combination with a fixed dose of LV at 500 mg/m2. The treatment was repeated weekly. Twenty-two patients received a total of 560 courses of treatment. Eleven instances of grade 2-3 toxicity were observed: diarrhea (five), stomatitis (three), hand/foot syndrome (three). The overall objective response was 45% (10 of 22) and among previously untreated patients was 58%. Three of the responders achieved complete response (CR), with lung and liver as the metastatic sites. The median duration of survival for the previously untreated patients was not reached at 22 months, and was 10 months for the previously treated patients. These results suggest that short-term infusional therapy of 5-FU and LV in patients with advanced metastatic colorectal cancer generates acceptable toxicity, with equivalent or superior survivability in previously treated and untreated patients versus alternative methods of administration of the two agents.


Urology | 1995

Small cell carcinoma of the bladder and prostate

Farhat Abbas; Francisco Civantos; Pasquale Benedetto; Mark S. Soloway

S mall cell carcinoma (SCC), also referred to in the lungs as oat cell carcinoma or a neuroendocrine tumor, is a distinct histologic and biologic disease entity characterized by an aggressive clinical course and a high disease-related mortality. In 1926, Barnard’ described the first case of SCC, originating in the lungs. This histology now accounts for approximately 90,000 of the 150,000 cases of lung cancer that are diagnosed yearly in the United States.2 Nonpulmonary SCC was first described by Duguid and Kennedy in 1930.3 Since that time, extrapulmonary SCCs have been described in numerous organs including pharynx,4 larynx,5 trachea,(j esophagus7 stomach,8 small intestine,9 colon,1° nasal sinuses,ll salivary glands,12 thymus, l3 skin,14 breast,l* cervix,16 as well as prostate, l7 urinary bladder,18 kidney,19 and ureter.20 These neoplasms appear to have the same aggressive biologic behavior and share similar microscopic, immunohistochemical, and often ultrastructural characteristics as SCC of the lung. SCC originating in the urinary tract is rare; it is most often reported arising in the urinary bladder or prostate. In view of its rarity, there is a relative scarcity of information on the clinicopathologic behavior and optimum treatment strategies for this tumor. In recent years, however, genitourinary SCCs have been diagnosed with increasing frequency This appears to be due to an increased use of immunohistochemical studies in the evaluation of anaplastic tumors. The present review was undertaken to discuss the current concepts of histogenesis and to analyze the existing data on the pathologic characteristics, clinical behavior, and treatment response of SCC of the bladder and prostate.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Phase II Study of Ganitumab, a Fully Human Anti–Type-1 Insulin-Like Growth Factor Receptor Antibody, in Patients With Metastatic Ewing Family Tumors or Desmoplastic Small Round Cell Tumors

William D. Tap; George D. Demetri; Phillip Barnette; Jayesh Desai; Petr Kavan; Richard Tozer; Pasquale Benedetto; Gregory Friberg; Hongjie Deng; Ian McCaffery; Ian M. Leitch; Sunita Badola; Sung Chang; Min Zhu; Anthony W. Tolcher

PURPOSE Ganitumab is a fully human monoclonal antibody against type-1 insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF1R). An open-label phase II study was conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of ganitumab monotherapy in patients with metastatic Ewing family tumors (EFT) or desmoplastic small round cell tumors (DSRCT). PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients ≥16 years of age with relapsed or refractory EFT or DSRCT received 12 mg/kg of ganitumab every 2 weeks. Objective response rate (ORR) was the primary end point. Secondary end points included clinical benefit rate (CBR = complete + partial responses + stable disease [SD] ≥ 24 weeks) and safety and pharmacokinetic profiles of ganitumab. The relationship between tumor response and EWS gene translocation status and IGF-1 levels was evaluated. RESULTS Thirty-eight patients (22 with EFT; 16 with DSRCT) received one or more doses of ganitumab. Twenty-four patients (63%) experienced ganitumab-related adverse events. Grade 3 related events included hyperglycemia (n = 2), thrombocytopenia (n = 5), neutropenia (n = 2), leukopenia (n = 1), and transient ischemic attack (n = 1). There were no grade 4 or 5 treatment-related events. Of 35 patients assessed for response, two had partial responses (ORR, 6%) and 17 (49%) had SD. Four patients had SD ≥ 24 weeks, contributing to a CBR of 17%. The pharmacokinetic profile of ganitumab was similar to that observed in the first-in-human trial. Elevation of IGF-1 levels was observed postdose. EWS-Fli1 translocations were analyzed by RNA sequencing and fluorescent in situ hybridization, and novel translocations were observed in EFT and DSCRT. No apparent relationship between tumor response and IGF-1 levels or EWS gene translocations was observed. CONCLUSION Ganitumab was well tolerated and demonstrated antitumor activity in patients with advanced recurrent EFT or DSRCT.


Cancer | 1990

Chemotherapy with cisplatin and 5-fluorouracil for penile and urethral squamous cell carcinomas

Atif M. Hussein; Pasquale Benedetto; Kasi S. Sridhar

Six men with either recurrent (n = 4) or unresectable (n = 2) squamous cell carcinoma of the penis (n = 5) and urethra (n = 1) received chemotherapy with cisplatin intravenously at a dose of 100 mg/m2. This was followed 24 hours later by a continuous intravenous infusion of 5‐fluorouracil (5‐FU) at a dose of 960 mg/m2/d for five days every 3 to 4 weeks. There was universal alopecia. The other toxicities were mild and consisted of mucositis, nausea, vomiting, reversible creatininemia, and transient azotemia. After chemotherapy, five patients had a clinical partial response and one had a complete response. Of the five patients with no metastases, three had residual unresectable tumors. These three patients received radiation and survived for 6,8, and 20 months after the start of chemotherapy. The other two patients were rendered disease‐free by surgery. The first patient, who was a partial responder to chemotherapy, survived for 26 months. The second patient, who was a clinical complete responder, had excision of microscopic disease and is disease‐free at 32+ months after the start of chemotherapy. This is the first article to report that the combination of cisplatin and 5‐FU is active in penile and urethral carcinomas. After chemotherapy, surgery may be useful in selected patients to accurately assess response and excise localized residual tumors. Patients rendered tumor‐free may achieve long‐term survival.


Ophthalmic Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery | 1999

Ocular-adnexal Lymphoid Tumors: A Clinicopathologic and Molecular Genetic Study of 77 Patients

Thomas E. Johnson; David T. Tse; Gerald E. Byrne; Alvaro Restrepo; Clarence C. Whitcomb; Walter Voigt; Pasquale Benedetto; Victor T. Curtin

PURPOSE To determine whether molecular genetic analysis of ocular-adnexal lymphoid tumors, combined with histopathology and tumor location, is helpful in predicting which patients will develop systemic lymphoma. METHODS A combined retrospective and prospective study of 77 patients with ocular-adnexal lymphoid tumors was performed. The tumors were subdivided into conjunctival, orbital, and eyelid lesions, and all were studied using both routine histopathology and molecular genetic analysis. RESULTS Most lesions (70%) were small cell lymphomas of the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue type, and the majority of tumors (90%) contained monoclonal or oligoclonal populations of lymphocytes discovered on molecular genetic analysis. Additionally, 72% of tumors exhibiting clonality had more than one gene rearrangement. Fifty-three percent of patients developed extraocular lymphoma sometime during the course of their disease. Patients with gene rearrangements on Southern blot hybridization had a 52% incidence of nonocular disease, compared with 63% of those without rearrangements. Patients with conjunctival tumors had a 37.5% incidence of nonocular disease, those with orbital tumors had a 54% incidence, and those with eyelid tumors had a 100% incidence of nonocular lymphoma. Only two patients died as result of systemic lymphoma. CONCLUSIONS Most ocular-adnexal lymphoid tumors are lymphomas of the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue type. The majority of tumors exhibit gene rearrangements on molecular genetic analysis, and this technique was not helpful in predicting which patients would develop nonocular lymphoma. Tumor location did have predictive value: Conjunctival lesions had the lowest incidence of nonocular lymphoma, and lid lesions had the highest incidence. Even with disseminated disease, most patients have a favorable prognosis with treatment.


World Journal of Surgery | 2000

Radical resection of periampullary tumors in the elderly: evaluation of long-term results.

Oliver F. Bathe; David Levi; Humberto Caldera; Dido Franceschi; Luis E. Raez; Ajay Patel; William A. Raub; Pasquale Benedetto; Rajender Reddy; Duane G. Hutson; Danny Sleeman; Alan S. Livingstone; Joe U. Levi

Increasingly, patients of advanced age are coming for evaluation of periampullary tumors. Although several studies have demonstrated the safety of resecting periampullary tumors in older patients, few long-term survival data have been reported. Between 1983 and 1992 various periampullary masses were resected in 70 patients over age 65 (range 65–87 years). Total pancreatectomy was performed in 11 patients, and 59 patients underwent pancreaticoduodenectomy. The mean duration of hospitalization was 17 ± 15 days. Major complications occurred in 27 patients (39%), and operative mortality rate was 8.5%. Overall median survival was 24 months; and 5-year survival was 25%. Perioperative outcome was compared in patients aged 65 to 74 years and in patients ≥75 years old. The older age group required longer periods in the surgical intensive care unit postoperatively, but the long-term survival was similar in the two age groups. Radical resection with the intent to cure periampullary tumors is safe in selected patients of advanced age, and long-term survival is in the range of expected survival for younger patients with the same tumors.


Cancer | 1989

Response of eccrine adenocarcinoma to tamoxifen

Kasi S. Sridhar; Pasquale Benedetto; Christian L. Otrakji; Komandurikn Charyulu

One of two patients with systemic metastases from a poorly differentiated eccrine adenocarcinoma of the scalp was found to have a tumor positive for estradiol receptors. In the receptor positive patient, after tamoxifen therapy, the lymph node metastasis regressed completely and was associated with full relief of pain from osseous metastases for nearly 3 years. Subsequently, progressive painful osseous metastases in the spine, skull, pelvis, and femur were palliated for shorter periods with sequential systemic therapy with megestrol acetate and fluoxymesterone. Osseous metastases were also palliated with external radiation therapy. In contrast, despite external radiation therapy, brain metastases proved fatal. Tamoxifen was ineffective in the estradiol receptor negative patient. Based on this report, it may be valuable to determine the presence of estradiol receptor protein in eccrine carcinoma as a predictor of response to hormonal therapy.


Ophthalmology | 2013

Long-term outcomes of neoadjuvant intra-arterial cytoreductive chemotherapy for lacrimal gland adenoid cystic carcinoma.

David T. Tse; Andrea L. Kossler; William J. Feuer; Pasquale Benedetto

PURPOSE To compare the long-term outcomes after intra-arterial cytoreductive chemotherapy (IACC) with conventional treatment for lacrimal gland adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC). DESIGN Retrospective case series. PARTICIPANTS Nineteen consecutive patients treated with IACC, followed by orbital exenteration, chemoradiotherapy, and intravenous chemotherapy. INTERVENTIONS Analyses of the histologic characteristics of biopsy specimens, extent of disease at the time of diagnosis, diagnostic surgical procedures, incidence of locoregional recurrences or distant metastases, disease-free survival time, response to IACC, tumor margins at definitive surgery, and toxicity and complications. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Disease relapse, disease-free survival, and chemotherapeutic complications. RESULTS Eight patients with an intact lacrimal artery had significantly better outcomes for survival (100% vs. 28.6% at 10 years), cause-specific mortality, and recurrences (all P = 0.002, log-rank test) than conventionally treated patients from the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. These 8 patients (group 1) had cumulative 10-year disease-free survival of 100% compared with 50% for 11 patients (group 2) who had an absence of the lacrimal artery or deviated from the treatment protocol (P = 0.035) and 14.3% for conventionally treated patients (P<0.001). Likewise, group 2 was associated with lower cause-specific mortality than the institutional comparator group (P = 0.038). Prior tumor resection with lateral wall osteotomy, delay in IACC implementation or exenteration, and failure to adhere to protocol are risk factors for suboptimal outcomes. CONCLUSIONS Neoadjuvant IACC seems to improve overall survival and decrease disease recurrence. An intact lacrimal artery, no disruption of bone barrier or tumor manipulation other than incisional biopsy, and protocol compliance are factors responsible for favorable outcomes. The chemotoxicity complication rate is limited and manageable.


American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1994

A Phase I study of chemoembolization with cisplatin and lipiodol for primary and metastatic liver cancer

Lynn G. Feun; K. R. Reddy; Jose M. Yrizarry; Niramol Savaraj; R. K. Purser; Stuart Waldman; Joe U. Levi; F. Moffatt; Louise Morrell; Alan S. Livingstone; Bach Ardalan; Pasquale Benedetto

Twenty patients with either unresectable primary hepatocellular carcinoma or hepatic metastases were entered into a Chemoembolization program with cisplatin and lipiodol; 19 patients were evaluable for response. Doses of cisplatin ranged from 40 to 100 mg/m2. Toxicity was tolerable and reversible and included abdominal pain, transient elevation in serum creatinine, serum bilirubin, and serum transaminases. Less common side effects include fever, ascites or pleural effusion, and hiccups. Two of four patients with ocular melanoma had partial responses. Duration of response was 10 and 11 months. Among 8 patients with unresectable hepatoma, 2 patients had partial response for 10+ and 13 months, 2 had minor response for 2 months and 4+ months, 1 patient had stable disease for 5+ months, and 3 patients failed to respond. Of the six colon cancer patients treated, one had a partial response in the liver, but developed progressive nodal disease, and another patient had a partial response for 3 months. Chemoembolization of the liver with cisplatin and lipiodol is feasible and doses of cisplatin at least 100 mg/m2 are tolerable. Antitumor activity in metastatic ocular melanoma is encouraging but requires further study.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1992

Phase I study of high dose 5-fluorouracil and high dose leucovorin with low dose phosphonacetyl-l-aspartic acid in patients with advanced malignancies

Bach Ardalan; Kasi Stridhar; Rajender Reddy; Pasquale Benedetto; Stephen P. Richman; Stuart Waldman; Louise Morrell; Lynn G. Feun; Niramol Savaraj; Alan S. Livingstone

Twenty-eight patients with refractory advanced malignancies were treated with a 24 hr infusion of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), Leucovorin (LV), and N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartic acid (PALA) weekly. Twenty-seven patients were evaluable for the assessment of toxicity and anti-tumor activity. PALA was administered as intravenous bolus over 15 min at a fixed dose, 250 mg/m2 24 hr before the start of 5-FU and LV infusions. 5-FU was initially administered at 750 mg/m2 and was incrementally increased to 2600 mg/m2. LV was administered in a fixed dose of 500 mg/m2 concurrently with 5-FU over a 24-hr period. The course was repeated weekly. Diarrhea, stomatitis, nausea, and vomiting were among dose-limiting toxic effects. Other toxicities observed were hand-foot syndrome, hair loss of scalp/eyelashes, overall weakness, rhinitis, and chemical conjunctivitis. Maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of 5-FU in this combination and schedule was 2600 mg/m2. Seven of 14 patients treated at 2600 mg/m2 were able to tolerate the chemotherapy on a weekly basis without interruption. The other seven patients required dose de-escalation, a majority of whom contained 5-FU at a dose of 2100 mg/m2. Twenty-three of 27 patients had been previously treated. Eight patients achieved a partial response, all of whom were previously treated, except three patients. A complete response was observed in a patient with pancreatic carcinoma, previously untreated. Overall response rate for the patients who were treated at the 5-FU dose of 2100 mg/m2 or 2600 mg/m2 is 9 of 18 patients (50%).

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