Stefano Crippa
University of Milan
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Featured researches published by Stefano Crippa.
Melanoma Research | 2004
Stefano Crippa; Giorgio Bovo; F. Romano; Chiara Mussi; Franco Uggeri
From post-mortem case records, the small bowel is the most frequent site of metastatic melanoma in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, with gallbladder involvement occurring in 15% of cases. However, few cases have been documented in living patients and, when found, are associated with a poor prognosis. We report a case of a Caucasian man with metastatic gallbladder and small bowel melanoma from an unknown primary. He presented with diffuse abdominal pain, vomiting and progressive asthenia; subsequently, intestinal obstruction occurred. He had no past history of malignant melanoma and the primary lesion was not found. The multiple lesions, together with the absence of mucosal involvement in both the gallbladder and small bowel, led us to believe that the lesions were metastatic deposits from a probably regressed primary melanoma. It should be emphasized that surgical resection for melanoma metastatic to the GI tract is recommended for palliative reasons and can be performed safely. The clinical presentation, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of previously reported cases of melanoma metastatic to the gallbladder and small bowel are reviewed. The differences between primary and secondary GI tract melanomas are also discussed.
Pediatric Surgery International | 2005
Carlo Angelini; Stefano Crippa; Fabio Uggeri; Claudia Bonardi; Paola Sartori; Franco Uggeri
Colorectal cancer is extremely rare in children and presents with a poor prognosis because of the delay in diagnosis and lack of histological differentiation. We report a case of a sigmoid colon carcinoma with areas of neuroendocrine cells in a 12-year-old patient without familial occurrence of colorectal cancer. Symptoms at presentation were anaemia, anorexia, abdominal pain and weight loss. The patient was treated with radical resection and adjuvant chemotherapy. One year later, a local recurrence and hepatic metastases were diagnosed and she underwent chemotherapy and surgical resection. Twenty-six months from initial diagnosis she is alive with evidence of disease. The clinical presentation, diagnosis and treatment of the previously reported cases of colorectal cancer in children are also reviewed.
Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | 2005
Paola Sartori; Chiara Mussi; Carlo Angelini; Stefano Crippa; Roberto Caprotti; Franco Uggeri
Background/aimsOptimal management of gastrointestinal carcinoid neoplasms that metastasize to the liver is controversial. Although operative resection seems to be the most effective approach to metastatic disease, hepatic metastases are usually multicentric and often non-resectable. We investigated the effectiveness of several forms of palliative tumor cytoreduction followed by administration of somatostatin analogues in advanced carcinoid neoplasms.MethodsWe reviewed our experience with 34 patients with gastrointestinal carcinoid neoplasms. Eighteen patients had metastases and 14 had hormonal symptoms. Twenty-two patients underwent radical surgery, ten with multiple liver metastases were treated with a combination of debulking (resection, radiofrequency ablation, chemoembolization), followed by medical treatment with long-acting octreotide and eventually by radiolabelled somatostatin analogues, and two patients with intractable disease received only biotherapies.ResultsThe six patients with metastatic disease who underwent radical curative liver resection had a median survival of 52 months, compared with a median survival of 48 months in the ten patients who underwent palliative debulking. Symptomatic improvement was observed in all the patients after debulking procedures. The two patients who underwent only medical treatment died after 9 and 18 months.ConclusionsAggressive tumor debulking should be performed in patients with liver metastases already at diagnosis even when complete resection is not feasible because the combination of cytoreductive procedures followed by biotherapies may provide good long-term survival and achieves symptom control in most patients with advanced disease.
World Journal of Surgery | 2006
Stefano Crippa; Carlo Angelini; Chiara Mussi; Claudia Bonardi; F. Romano; Paola Sartori; Franco Uggeri; Giorgio Bovo
Hepato-gastroenterology | 2006
Paolo Baccari; Pietro Bisagni; Stefano Crippa; Roberto Sampietro; C. Staudacher
Hepato-gastroenterology | 2006
F. Romano; Giovanni Cesana; Roberto Caprotti; Giorgio Bovo; Franco Uggeri; Maria Gaia Piacentini; Stefano Crippa
Journal of the Pancreas | 2004
Stefano Crippa; Claudia Bonardi; Giorgio Bovo; Chiara Mussi; Carlo Angelini; Franco Uggeri
Minerva ginecologica | 2006
Roberto Caprotti; Claudia Bonardi; Stefano Crippa; Mussi C; Carlo Angelini; Franco Uggeri
Hepato-gastroenterology | 2006
Carlo Angelini; Giorgio Bovo; Pietro Muselli; Chiara Mussi; Stefano Crippa; Roberto Caprotti; Franco Uggeri
International Surgery | 2005
Chiara Mussi; Roberto Caprotti; Alberto Scaini; Carlo Angelini; Stefano Crippa; Franco Uggeri; Paola Sartori