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Dive into the research topics where Rodolfo Capanna is active.

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Featured researches published by Rodolfo Capanna.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2004

Percutaneous Image-Guided Radiofrequency Ablation of Painful Metastases Involving Bone: A Multicenter Study

Matthew P. Goetz; Matthew R. Callstrom; J. William Charboneau; Michael A. Farrell; Timothy P. Mans; Timothy J. Welch; Gilbert Y. Wong; Jeff A. Sloan; Paul J. Novotny; Ivy A. Petersen; Robert A. Beres; Daniele Regge; Rodolfo Capanna; Mark B. Saker; Dietrich H. W. Grönemeyer; Athour Gevargez; Kamran Ahrar; Michael A. Choti; Thierry J. Debaere; Joseph Rubin

PURPOSE Few options are available for pain relief in patients with bone metastases who fail standard treatments. We sought to determine the benefit of radiofrequency ablation (RFA) in providing pain relief for patients with refractory pain secondary to metastases involving bone. PATIENTS AND METHODS Thirty-one US and 12 European patients with painful osteolytic metastases involving bone were treated with image-guided RFA using a multitip needle. Treated patients had > or = 4/10 pain and had either failed or were poor candidates for standard treatments such as radiation or opioid analgesics. Using the Brief Pain Inventory-Short Form, worst pain intensity was the primary end point, with a 2-unit drop considered clinically significant. RESULTS Forty-three patients were treated (median follow-up, 16 weeks). Before RFA, the mean score for worst pain was 7.9 (range, 4/10 to 10/10). Four, 12, and 24 weeks following treatment, worst pain decreased to 4.5 (P <.0001), 3.0 (P <.0001), and 1.4 (P =.0005), respectively. Ninety-five percent (41 of 43 patients) experienced a decrease in pain that was considered clinically significant. Opioid usage significantly decreased at weeks 8 and 12. Adverse events were seen in 3 patients and included (1) a second-degree skin burn at the grounding pad site, (2) transient bowel and bladder incontinence following treatment of a metastasis involving the sacrum, and (3) a fracture of the acetabulum following RFA of an acetabular lesion. CONCLUSION RFA of painful osteolytic metastases provides significant pain relief for cancer patients who have failed standard treatments.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy with high-dose ifosfamide, high-dose methotrexate, cisplatin, and doxorubicin for patients with localized osteosarcoma of the extremity : A joint study by the italian and scandinavian sarcoma groups

Stefano Ferrari; Sigbjørn Smeland; Mario Mercuri; Franco Bertoni; Alessandra Longhi; Pietro Ruggieri; Thor Alvegård; Piero Picci; Rodolfo Capanna; Gabriella Bernini; Cristoph Müller; Amelia Tienghi; Thomas Wiebe; Alessandro Comandone; Tom Böhling; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Otte Brosjö; Gaetano Bacci; Gunnar Sæter

PURPOSE To explore the effect of high-dose ifosfamide in first-line treatment for patients < or = 40 years of age with nonmetastatic osteosarcoma of the extremity. PATIENTS AND METHODS From March 1997 to September 2000, 182 patients were evaluated. Primary treatment consisted of two blocks of high-dose ifosfamide (15 g/m2), methotrexate (12 g/m2), cisplatin (120 mg/m2), and doxorubicin (75 mg/m2). Postoperatively, patients received two cycles of doxorubicin (90 mg/m2), and three cycles each of high-dose ifosfamide, methotrexate, and cisplatin (120 to 150 mg/m2). Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor support was mandatory after the high-dose ifosfamide/cisplatin/doxorubicin combination. RESULTS No disease progression was recorded during primary chemotherapy, 164 patients (92%) underwent limb-salvage surgery, four patients (2%) underwent rotation plasty, and 11 patients (6%) had limbs amputated. Three (1.6%) patients died as a result of treatment-related toxicity, and one died as a result of pulmonary embolism after pathologic fracture. Grade 4 neutropenia and thrombocytopenia followed 52% and 31% of all courses, respectively, and mild to severe nephrotoxicity was recorded in 19 patients (10%). The median received dose-intensity compared with protocol was 0.82. With a median follow-up of 55 months, the 5-year probability of event-free survival was 64% (95% CI, 57% to 71%) and overall survival was 77% (95% CI, 67% to 81%), whereas seven patients (4%) experienced local recurrence. CONCLUSION The addition of high-dose ifosfamide to methotrexate, cisplatin, and doxorubicin in the preoperative phase is feasible, but with major renal and hematologic toxicities, and survival rates similar to those obtained with four-drug regimens using standard-dose ifosfamide. Italian Sarcoma Group/Scandinavian Sarcoma Group study I showed that in a multicenter setting, more than 90% of patients with osteosarcoma of the extremity can undergo conservative surgery.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1986

Unicameral and aneurysmal bone cysts

Mario Campanacci; Rodolfo Capanna; Piero Picci

Unicameral and aneurysmal bone cysts are considered tumorlike conditions of unclear origin. The diagnosis of unicameral bone cysts is almost always based on the radiographic appearance, whereas aneurysmal bone cyst imaging may sometimes mimic a sarcomatous lesion. Several pathogenetic hypotheses [correction of hypothesis] reported in literature have been described. Classifications have been proposed to detect the activity of the cysts and to predict the prognostic behavior. The results observed with different options of treatment have been discussed.


Cancer | 1985

Histologic evaluation of necrosis in osteosarcoma induced by chemotherapy regional mapping of viable and nonviable tumor

Piero Picci; Gaetano Bacci; Mario Campanacci; Marco Gasparini; Silvana Pilotti; Serenella Cerasoli; Franco Bertoni; Aristide Guerra; Rodolfo Capanna; Ugo Albisinni; Stefano Galletti; F. Gherlinzoni; Pierina Calderoni; Sudanese A; Nicola Baldini; Marzia Bernini; Norman Jaffe

The predominant sites of viable and nonviable tumor were determined in the primary lesions of 50 patients with osteosarcoma after initial treatment with preoperative chemotherapy. The degree of tumor destruction was classified as good, fair, and poor and a map of the sites revealing viable and nonviable tumor was constructed. The study revealed several preferential sites where viable tumor was likely to persist: soft tissues, cortex, subcortex, ligaments, and areas in contact with cartilage (growth plate and/or articular cartilage). Localized areas of hemorrhage and necrosis, designated “lacunae,” were noted within the tumor. They were frequently surrounded by bundles of viable tumor and appeared to correlate with open surgical biopsies. Factors responsible for this phenomenon and the persistence of viable tumor are discussed. The findings have important implications in the design of surgical treatment and in the use of needle biopsies to determine the effects of preoperative treatment. Cancer 56: 1515‐1521, 1985.


Cancer | 1990

Primary chemotherapy and delayed surgery (neoadjuvant chemotherapy) for osteosarcoma of the extremities the istituto rizzoli experience in 127 patients treated preoperatively with intravenous methotrexate (high versus moderate doses) and intraarterial cisplatin

G. Bacci; Piero Picci; Pietro Ruggieri; Mario Mercuri; Maddalena Avella; Rodolfo Capanna; A. Brach del Prever; Antonia Mancini; F. Gherlinzoni; G. Padovani; C. Leonessa; R. Biagini; A. Ferraro; A. Ferruzzi; A. Cazzola; Marco Manfrini; Mario Campanacci

Between March 1983 and June 1986 127 patients with localized osteosarcoma of the extremity were treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Preoperative chemotherapy consisted of two cycles of methotrexate (MTX) (high or moderate doses) followed by 6 days by cisplatin (CDP). Surgery was an amputation or a rotation plasty, or a limb salvage. Necrosis was good in 52% of cases, fair in 36%, and poor in 12%. Postoperative chemotherapy consisted of Adriamycin (doxorubicin [ADM]) and bleomycin (BCD) for poor responders; and ADM, MTX, and CDP for fair responders. Good responders were treated as fair responders or with only MTX and CDP. At a 47‐month follow‐up, 66 patients remained continuously disease free and 61 patients developed metastases. Six of these patients had also a local recurrence. According to the grade of necrosis, the cumulative disease‐free probability at 5 years was 67% for good responders, 42% for fair responders, and for poor responders 10% at 45 months. According to the doses of MTX, survival at 5 years was 58% for patients who received high doses and 42% for patients treated with moderate doses. No differences in the rate of survivors were observed between amputated patients and patients treated with limb salvage. The authors conclude that (1) a limb salvage procedure is possible in about 70% of cases and as safe as demolitive surgery, if adequate surgical margins are achieved; (2) good responders have a better prognosis than fair and poor responders if postoperative chemotherapy is sufficiently prolonged and also includes ADM; (3) a different postoperative chemotherapy for poor responders did not improve their prognosis; and (4) a multidrug regimen using high doses of MTX is probably more effective than moderate doses.


Cancer | 1983

Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma of bone and soft tissues

Franco Bertoni; Piero Picci; Patrizia Bacchini; Rodolfo Capanna; Vincenzo Innao; Gaetano Bacci; Mario Campanacci

Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma of bone and soft tissues treated at the Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli are reviewed. The skeletal locations were prominent in five cases. Only two cases were in the soft tissues. Radiographic picture in the bone shows an aggressive osteolysis, with soft tissues invasion. Histologic picture is the same in bone and soft tissues, and is highly distinctive: islands of well‐differentiated chondrosarcoma embedded in undifferentiated mesenchymal cells with high malignancy characteristics. The cases showed a poor prognosis, and no patient survived more than four years.


Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 2008

Tissue engineering for bone defect healing: an update on a multi-component approach.

Inga Drosse; Elias Volkmer; Rodolfo Capanna; Pietro De Biase; W. Mutschler; Matthias Schieker

SUMMARY The need for an interdisciplinary approach in order to establish new therapeutic strategies for the therapy of bone defects has been acknowledged by the scientific community for many years. This awareness makes itself felt when looking at the multitude of approaches--ranging from cell-based to scaffold-based strategies and also including the use of osteogenic growth factors and genetic engineering--that are currently being combined to assess their potential to develop effective concepts for the treatment of extensive loss of osseous tissue. With a strong focus on the preclinical research in this field, the goal of this review is to give an update on the multi-component approaches that are currently being investigated in tissue engineering of bone.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1985

Aneurysmal bone cyst of the spine.

Rodolfo Capanna; U Albisinni; Piero Picci; Pierina Calderoni; Mario Campanacci; Dempsey S. Springfield

The cases of twenty-two patients with an aneurysmal bone cyst of the spine above the sacrum were analyzed with regard to sex, age, site, symptoms, and radiographic findings. Four patients had extension of the lesion to the adjacent vertebra or rib, and twelve patients had neurological deficits. The primary treatment was either radiotherapy or surgery alone, or surgery and radiotherapy combined. No recurrences were found in patients who were treated with surgery alone or with surgery and radiotherapy, while three of the six patients who were treated with radiotherapy had a local recurrence, two of which were fatal. The patients with neurological deficits recovered after healing of the cyst.


European Journal of Cancer | 2001

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for osteosarcoma of the extremity: long-term results of the Rizzoli's 4th protocol

G. Bacci; Antonio Briccoli; Stefano Ferrari; Alessandra Longhi; Mario Mercuri; Rodolfo Capanna; Davide Donati; S Lari; Cristiana Forni; M DePaolis

From January 1993 to March 1995, 162 patients with osteosarcoma of extremities were treated according to the IOR/OS-4 protocol. 133 patients had localised disease, while 29 had metastases at diagnosis. These last patients were simultaneously operated upon for their primary and metastatic lesions. Chemotherapy consisted preoperatively of two cycles of high dose methotrexate (HDMTX) and one cycle each of cisplatin (CDP)-doxorubicin (ADM), CDP/ifosfamide (IFO) and IFO/ADM. After surgery, patients were treated with the aforementioned drugs used as single agents. The mean follow-up of all patients was 6.5 years (5.5-8 years). Surgery was a limb salvage in 94% of cases, and the 5-year event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) rates were 56 and 71% for patients with localised disease, and 17 and 24% for patients with metastases at diagnosis. These results did not differ from those achieved in our previous study (IOR/OS-3) in which IFO was used only postoperatively in poor responders.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 2000

Massive bone allograft reconstruction in high-grade osteosarcoma.

Davide Donati; Michele Di Liddo; Marcello Zavatta; Marco Manfrini; Gaetano Bacci; Piero Picci; Rodolfo Capanna; Mario Mercuri

From 1986 to 1994, 112 bone allograft reconstructions were performed in patients with high-grade osteosarcoma in whom neoadjuvant chemotherapy was administered. The allograft reconstruction was used in arthrodesis in 44 cases (41 knees, three ankles), as an intercalary graft in 39 (28 femurs, 11 tibias), as an osteoarticular graft in 22 (three proximal and/or distal humeri, six distal femurs, 13 proximal tibias), and as an allograft and prosthesis composite in seven (two proximal humeri, one proximal femurs, four proximal tibias). In 20 patients an autologous vascularized fibula was used to augment the allograft. Functional results were excellent or good in 74% of the patients after the primary surgery, and in 83% of the patients after secondary surgery. Complications include delayed union (49%) and fracture (27%), although there were no cases of deep infection. The incidence of delayed union, but not infection or fracture, was increased by the use of chemotherapy.

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