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Dive into the research topics where Riccardo Masetti is active.

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Featured researches published by Riccardo Masetti.


Lancet Oncology | 2005

Oncoplastic approaches to partial mastectomy: an overview of volume-displacement techniques

Benjamin O. Anderson; Riccardo Masetti; Melvin J Silverstein

Oncoplastic surgery refers to several surgical techniques by which segments of malignant breast tissue are removed to achieve wide surgical margins while the remaining glandular tissue is transposed to achieve the best possible cosmetic outcome. We summarise the general approach to oncoplastic lumpectomy for surgeons who recognise the limitations of standard lumpectomy for large breast cancers, and review different cancer distributions in the breast and their associated imaging characteristics. Full-thickness fibroglandular excision of the mass and surrounding breast tissue allows resection with wide surgical margins. Subsequent breast-flap advancement (mastopexy) results in closure of the resulting surgical defect with good or excellent cosmetic closure. These approaches can improve both the aesthetic outcome of breast cancer resections and the likelihood of surgeons obtaining wide surgical margins in preparation for breast-conserving radiotherapy. Advanced volume-displacement techniques, which are based on the key principles of breast reductive surgery, can greatly increase the options for breast conservation in complex cancer cases.


Breast Journal | 2006

Oncoplastic techniques in the conservative surgical treatment of breast cancer: an overview.

Riccardo Masetti; Alba Di Leone; Gianluca Franceschini; Stefano Magno; Daniela Terribile; Maria Cristina Fabbri; Federica Chiesa

Abstract:  Conservative surgery has become a well‐established alternative to mastectomy in the treatment of breast cancer. However, in case of larger lesions or small‐size breasts, the removal of adequate volumes of breast tissue to achieve tumor‐free margins and reduce the risk of local relapse may compromise the cosmetic outcome, causing unpleasant results. In order to address this issue, new surgical techniques, so‐called oncoplastic techniques, have been introduced in recent years to optimize the efficacy of conservative surgery both in terms of local control and cosmetic results. This article discusses the indications, advantages, and limitations of these techniques and their results in terms of local recurrence and overall survival. 


Cancer | 2008

Guideline implementation for breast healthcare in low- and middle-Income countries: Treatment resource allocation†

Alexandru Eniu; Robert W. Carlson; Nagi S. El Saghir; José Bines; Nuran Senel Bese; Daniel A. Vorobiof; Riccardo Masetti; Benjamin O. Anderson

A key determinant of breast cancer outcome is the degree to which newly diagnosed cancers are treated correctly in a timely fashion. Available resources must be applied in a rational manner to optimize population‐based outcomes. A multidisciplinary international panel of experts addressed the implementation of treatment guidelines and developed process checklists for breast surgery, radiation treatment, and systemic therapy. The needed resources for stage I, stage II, locally advanced, and metastatic breast cancer were outlined, and process metrics were developed. The ability to perform modified radical mastectomy is the mainstay of locoregional treatment at the basic level of breast healthcare. Radiation therapy allows for consideration of breast‐conserving therapy, postmastectomy chest wall irradiation, and palliation of painful or symptomatic metastases. Systemic therapy with cytotoxic chemotherapy is effective in the treatment of all biologic subtypes of breast cancer, but its provision is resource intensive. Although endocrine therapy requires few specialized resources, it requires knowledge of hormone receptor status. Targeted therapy against human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (anti‐HER‐2) is very effective in tumors that overexpress HER‐2/neu receptors, but cost largely prevents its use in resource‐limited environments. Incremental allocation of resources can help address economic disparities and ensure equity in access to care. Checklists and allocation tables can support the objective of offering optimal care for all patients. The use of process metrics can facilitate the development of multidisciplinary, integrated, fiscally responsible, continuously improving, and flexible approaches to the global enhancement of breast cancer treatment. Cancer 2008;113(8 suppl):2269–81.


Breast Journal | 2003

Treatment of Breast Cancer in Countries with Limited Resources

Robert W. Carlson; Benjamin O. Anderson; Rakesh Chopra; Alexandru Eniu; Raimund Jakesz; Riccardo Masetti; Gilberto Schwartsmann

Abstract: Early and accurate diagnosis of breast cancer is important for optimizing treatment. Local treatment of early stage breast cancer involves either mastectomy or breast‐conserving surgery followed by whole‐breast irradiation. The pathologic and biologic properties of a womans breast cancer may be used to estimate her probability for recurrence of and death from breast cancer, as well as the magnitude of benefit she is likely to receive from adjuvant endocrine therapy or cytotoxic chemotherapy. Ovarian ablation or suppression with or without tamoxifen is an effective endocrine therapy in the adjuvant treatment of breast cancer in premenopausal women with estrogen receptor (ER)‐positive or ER‐unknown breast cancer. In postmenopausal women with ER‐ and/or progesterone receptor (PR)‐positive or PR‐unknown breast cancer, the use of tamoxifen or anastrozole is effective adjuvant endocrine therapy. The benefit of tamoxifen is additive to that of chemotherapy. Cytotoxic chemotherapy also improves recurrence rates and survival, with the magnitude of benefit decreasing with increasing age. Substantial support systems are required to optimally and safely use breast‐conserving approaches to local therapy or cytotoxic chemotherapy as systemic therapy. Locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) accounts for at least half of all breast cancers in countries with limited resources and has a poor prognosis. Initial treatment of LABC with anthracycline‐based chemotherapy is standard and effective. Addition of a sequential, neoadjuvant taxane thereafter increases the rate of pathologic complete responses. Neoadjuvant endocrine therapy may benefit postmenopausal women with hormone receptor‐positive LABC. After an initial response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the use of local‐regional surgery is appropriate. Most women will require a radical or modified radical mastectomy. In those women in whom mastectomy is not possible after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the use of whole‐breast and regional lymph node irradiation alone is appropriate. In those women who cannot receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy because of resource constraints, mastectomy with node dissection, when feasible, may still be considered in an attempt to achieve local‐regional control. After local‐regional therapy, most women should receive additional systemic chemotherapy. Women with LABC that has a positive or unknown hormone receptor status benefit from endocrine therapy with tamoxifen. The treatment of LABC requires multiple disciplines and is resource intensive. Efforts to reduce the number of breast cancers diagnosed at an advanced stage thus have the potential to improve rates of survival while decreasing the use of limited resources. 


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2000

Prognostic factors after surgical resection for pancreatic carcinoma.

Paolo Magistrelli; Armando Antinori; Antonio Crucitti; Antonio La Greca; Riccardo Masetti; Roberto Coppola; Gennaro Nuzzo; Aurelio Picciocchi

Surgical resection offers the only potential cure for pancreatic carcinoma. Several recent series have reported an encouraging increase in 5‐year survival rate exceeding 20% and have emphasized the importance of patient selection based on reproducible prognostic factors. The impact on survival of demographic, intraoperative, and histopatologic factors are investigated in this study.


Surgery Today | 1996

Choledochocele : Changing Trends in Diagnosis and Management

Riccardo Masetti; Armando Antinori; Roberto Coppola; Claudio Coco; Claudio Mattana; Antonio Crucitti; Antonio La Greca; Guido Fadda; Paolo Magistrelli; Aurelio Picciochi

Eighty-four patients with choledochocele collected from the world literature and one personal observation are reviewed. The main issues regarding clinical presentation, diagnostic work-up, and the treatment of this uncommon lesion are discussed. Abdominal pain was the most common clinical feature (91% of cases), followed by pancreatitis (38%), nausea or vomiting (35%), and jaundice (26%). In addition, associated lithiasis was found in 43% of the cases. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography was the most useful diagnostic procedure and resulted in a correct diagnosis in all but one of the patients investigated by this method. Surgical excision of the duodenal luminal portion of the choledochocele was the treatment most commonly used (65% of cases). In recent years, operative endoscopy has also been increasingly used, with good results.


Abdominal Imaging | 1989

Value of ERCP in the diagnosis and management of pre-and postoperative biliary complications in hydatid disease of the liver

Paolo Magistrelli; Riccardo Masetti; Roberto Coppola; Guido Costamagna; Vittorio Durastante; Gennaro Nuzzo; Aurelio Picciocchi

Twenty-nine patients with symptomatic hydatid disease of the liver were evaluated preoperatively by endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) in the years 1982–1987. In the same period, 6 patients who previously underwent surgery for the parasitic disease also underwent ERCP because of postoperative symptoms of biliary obstruction.Findings at ERCP excluded biliary tract involvement in 11 cases. Positive findings were shown in 24 patients, including compression of the bile ducts in 4, small cysto-biliary communications in 5, intrabiliary rupture in 9, residual hydatid material in the common bile duct, and sclerosing cholangitis in 3.Endoscopic removal of migrated hydatid debris was achieved in 8 patients, avoiding reoperation in 4.


European Journal of Radiology | 2010

DWI in breast MRI: role of ADC value to determine diagnosis between recurrent tumor and surgical scar in operated patients.

Pierluigi Rinaldi; Michela Giuliani; Paolo Belli; Melania Costantini; Maurizio Romani; Daniela Distefano; Enida Bufi; Antonino Mulè; Stefano Magno; Riccardo Masetti; Lorenzo Bonomo

INTRODUCTION Purpose of our study is to evaluate the role of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) in the diagnosis of recurrent tumor on the scar in patients operated for breast cancer. Assess, therefore, the weight of diagnostic diffusion echo-planar sequence, in association with the morphological and dynamic sequences in the diagnosis of tumor recurrence versus surgical scar. MATERIALS AND METHODS From September 2007 to March 2009, 72 patients operated for breast cancer with suspected recurrence on the scar were consecutively subjected to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including use of a diffusion sequence. All patients with pathological enhancement in the scar were then subjected to histological typing. MRI was considered negative in the absence of areas of suspicious enhancement. In all cases it was measured the ADC value in the scar area or in the area with pathological enhancement. The ADC values were compared with MRI findings and histological results obtained. RESULTS 26 cases were positive/doubtful at MRI and then subjected to histological typing: of these recurrences were 20 and benign were 6. 46 cases were judged negative at MRI and therefore not sent to cyto-histology. The average ADC value of recurrences was statistically lower of scarring (p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS ADC value can be a specific parameter in differential diagnosis between recurrence and scar. The diffusion sequence, in association with the morphological and dynamic sequences, can be considered a promising tool for the surgical indication in suspected recurrence of breast cancer.


The Breast | 2011

Update on one-stage immediate breast reconstruction with definitive prosthesis after sparing mastectomies

Marzia Salgarello; Liliana Barone-Adesi; Daniela Andreina Terribile; Riccardo Masetti

Immediate breast reconstruction after skin and nipple-sparing mastectomies is commonly performed as a two-stage procedure; to overcome the paradox of traditional two-stage tissue expander/implant reconstruction used to create a tight muscular pocket that needs expansion to produce lower pole fullness, while losing the laxity of the mastectomy skin flaps, the authors conceived a subpectoral-subfascial pocket by elevating the major pectoral muscle in continuity with the superficial pectoralis fascia up to the inframammary fold. This alteration allowed for the immediate insertion of the definitive implant. The authors present their experience in 220 cases of immediate one-stage breast reconstructions with definitive prostheses in sparing mastectomies. Immediate and long-term local complications were evaluated. Immediate breast reconstruction with definitive anatomical silicone-filled implants can produce excellent cosmetic results (78.6%) with a low rate of complications (17.7%); these results allow for agreement between oncologic, aesthetic and economic purposes.


Human Pathology | 2013

Genetic clonal mapping of in situ and invasive ductal carcinoma indicates the field cancerization phenomenon in the breast

Maria P. Foschini; Luca Morandi; Elisa Leonardi; Federica Flamminio; Yuko Ishikawa; Riccardo Masetti; Vincenzo Eusebi

Nearly 80% of well-differentiated in situ duct carcinomas (g1 DCIS) have been shown to be multicentric (multilobar) lesions, while most in situ poorly differentiated duct carcinomas (g3 DCIS) were unifocal (unilobar) lesions. Here we present a clonality study of 15 cases of DCIS, all showing multiple foci. Twelve of these cases were associated with an invasive duct carcinoma. Fifteen cases of female breast cancer patients all showing multiple DCIS foci (5 g1 DCIS, 5 g2 DCIS, 5 g3 DCIS) were randomly selected and histologically studied using large histological sections. Care was taken to laser-microdissect DCIS foci that were most distantly located from one another in the same large section, and pertinent cells were genetically studied. Invasive duct carcinoma and ipsilateral lymph node metastases and/or contralateral lesions, whenever present, were additionally microdissected. DNA of neoplastic cells was purified, and the mtDNA D-loop region was sequenced. Genetic distance of different foci from the same case was visualized by phylogenetic analyses using the neighbor-joining method. Patients ranged in age from 36 to 87 years (mean 65.1). All 9 cases of widely spread DCIS were not clonal. Four of 6 cases that showed multiple adjacent foci were clonally related on mtDNA analysis. In the present series, 11/15 DCIS appeared as multiple synchronous primary breast tumors, genetically not related to one another. The present data enhance the view that breast can also show the field cancerization phenomenon, paralleling what has already been proposed in other organs.

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Gianluca Franceschini

The Catholic University of America

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Alba Di Leone

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Stefano Magno

The Catholic University of America

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Aurelio Picciocchi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Daniela Andreina Terribile

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Federica Chiesa

The Catholic University of America

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Alejandro Martin Sanchez

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Marzia Salgarello

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Paolo Magistrelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Daniela Terribile

The Catholic University of America

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