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Dive into the research topics where Umberto Crocetti is active.

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Featured researches published by Umberto Crocetti.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Identification and optimal postsurgical follow-up of patients with very low-risk papillary thyroid microcarcinomas

Cosimo Durante; Marco Attard; Massimo Torlontano; Giuseppe Ronga; Fabio Monzani; Giuseppe Costante; M Ferdeghini; Salvatore Tumino; Domenico Meringolo; Rocco Bruno; Giorgio De Toma; Umberto Crocetti; Teresa Montesano; Angela Dardano; Livia Lamartina; Adele Maniglia; Laura Giacomelli; Sebastiano Filetti

CONTEXT Most papillary thyroid microcarcinomas (PTMCs; ≤ 1 cm diameter) are indolent low-risk tumors, but some cases behave more aggressively. Controversies have thus arisen over the optimum postoperative surveillance of PTMC patients. OBJECTIVES We tested the hypothesis that clinical criteria could be used to identify PTMC patients with very low mortality/recurrence risks and attempted to define the best strategy for their management and long-term surveillance. DESIGN We retrospectively analyzed data from 312 consecutively diagnosed PTMC patients with T1N0M0 stage disease, no family history of thyroid cancer, no history of head-neck irradiation, unifocal PTMC, no extracapsular involvement, and classic papillary histotypes. Additional inclusion criteria were complete follow-up data from surgery to at least 5 yr after diagnosis. All 312 had undergone (near) total thyroidectomy [with radioactive iodine (RAI) remnant ablation in 137 (44%) - RAI group] and were followed up yearly with cervical ultrasonography and serum thyroglobulin, TSH, and thyroglobulin antibody assays. RESULTS During follow-up (5-23 yr, median 6.7 yr), there were no deaths due to thyroid cancer or reoperations. The first (6-12 months after surgery) and last postoperative cervical sonograms were negative in all cases. Final serum thyroglobulin levels were undetectable (<1 ng/ml) in all RAI patients and almost all (93%) of non-RAI patients. CONCLUSION Accurate risk stratification can allow safe follow-up of most PTMC patients with a less intensive, more cost-effective protocol. Cervical ultrasonography is the mainstay of this protocol, and negative findings at the first postoperative examination are highly predictive of positive outcomes.


Thyroid | 2008

Predictive value of recombinant human TSH stimulation and neck ultrasonography in differentiated thyroid cancer patients.

Umberto Crocetti; Cosimo Durante; Marco Attard; Adele Maniglia; Salvatore Tumino; Rocco Bruno; Nazario Bonfitto; Franca Dicembrino; Antonio Varraso; Domenico Meringolo; Sebastiano Filetti; Vincenzo Trischitta; Massimo Torlontano

BACKGROUND Serum thyroglobulin (Tg) stimulation by recombinant human TSH (rhTSH), in combination with neck ultrasonography (US), is an important tool in the first follow-up of differentiated epithelial cell thyroid carcinoma (DTC) patients. The objective of this study was to investigate if a second rhTSH stimulation, performed 2-3 years later, is of clinical utility in the follow-up of these patients. METHODS One hundred and one consecutive ambulatory DTC patients were studied. The great majority of them (89/101) were low-risk patients, being stage I or II at tumor node metastasis (TNM) staging classification. All study patients had been treated by surgery and radioiodine ablation, and exhibited, at first rhTSH follow-up, either undetectable Tg (<or=1 ng/mL) (rhTSH1-Tg-, n = 89 patients considered as free of disease) or low Tg (>1-5 ng/mL) (rhTSH1-Tg+, n = 12 patients considered with uncertain prognosis), with no US evidence of residual disease. In all patients, serum Tg measurement after a second rhTSH stimulation and neck US were performed. RESULTS At the second follow-up, all 89 rhTSH1-Tg-patients showed a negative US, and Tg became low positive only in one case, whereas it remained undetectable in the other patients. The overall negative predictive value of rhTSH1-Tg- was, then, 98.9%. Out of the remaining 12 patients (i.e., rhTSH1-Tg+ patients), 2 showed disease persistence/recurrence (with a positive predictive value of rhTSH1-Tg+ of 16.7%) and 6 became Tg-. CONCLUSIONS A second rhTSH stimulation is useless in DTC patients who were rhTSH-Tg and imaging negative at first follow-up, while it is suggested in patients with detectable, although low, rhTSH-Tg levels at first follow-up: in the absence of clinical or US evidence of disease persistence, these patients should not be retreated by radioiodine, but simply scheduled for a later rhTSH stimulation.


Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 2002

Iodine deficiency in Calabria: characterization of endemic goiter and analysis of different indicators of iodine status region-wide.

Giuseppe Costante; Lucia Grasso; E. Schifino; M. F. Marasco; Umberto Crocetti; Carmelo Capula; Rosarita Chiarella; O. Ludovico; Maria Nocera; G. Parlato; Sebastiano Filetti

The distribution of goiter prevalence in schoolchildren (no.=13,984, age 6–14 yr), the neonatal TSH results obtained from the congenital hypothyroidism screening program and the urinary iodine excretion values (no.=284) were employed for the assessment of iodine deficiency in Calabria, a Southern Italy region. Data were collected during the years 1990–1996. In the inland territory, goiter prevalence ranged from 19 to 64%. At sea level, there was a great variability of goiter prevalence, with values varying from 5.3 to 25.7%. The analysis of the neonatal hypothyroidism screening program data (no.=21,078) showed a 14.8% frequency of TSH levels >5 μU/ml whole blood in newborns from the inland territory and a 14.1% frequency at sea level. Urinary iodine excretion resulted (mean±SD) 53.8±43.4 μg/l (range: <20 to 189 μg/l) in the inland territory and 89.6±59.8 μg/l (range: 26 to 333 μg/l) at sea level. Median urinary iodine excretion values in 13 villages or small towns of the inland territory ranged from 31 to 57 μg/l. In 2 major towns located at sea level, the median iodine excretion values were 72 μg/l in Crotone main city and 94 μg/l in Reggio Calabria main city. The data indicated that moderate, with pockets of severe iodine deficiency is present in the inland region while iodine supply varies from sufficient to marginally low in the coastal areas. Mild iodine deficiency was found in a major town located at sea level.


Thyroid | 2017

Are Evidence-Based Guidelines Reflected in Clinical Practice? An Analysis of Prospectively Collected Data of the Italian Thyroid Cancer Observatory

Livia Lamartina; Cosimo Durante; Giuseppe Lucisano; Giorgio Grani; Rocco Domenico Alfonso Bellantone; Celestino Pio Lombardi; Alfredo Pontecorvi; Emanuela Arvat; Francesco Felicetti; Maria Chiara Zatelli; Roberta Elisa Rossi; Efisio Puxeddu; Silvia Morelli; Massimo Torlontano; Umberto Crocetti; Teresa Montesano; Raffaele Giubbini; Fabio Orlandi; Gianluca Aimaretti; Fabio Monzani; Marco Attard; C. Francese; Alessandro Antonelli; Paolo Limone; R. Rossetto; Laura Fugazzola; Domenico Meringolo; Rocco Bruno; Salvatore Tumino; Graziano Ceresini

OBJECTIVES The goal of evidence-based practice guidelines is to optimize the management of emerging diseases, such as differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC). The aim of this study was to assess therapeutic approaches for DTC in Italy and to see how closely these practices conformed to those recommended in the 2009 American Thyroid Association (ATA) guidelines. METHODS The Italian Thyroid Cancer Observatory was established to collect data prospectively on thyroid cancers consecutively diagnosed in participating centers (uniformly distributed across the nation). Data on the initial treatment of all pathologically confirmed DTC cases present in the database from January 1, 2013 (database creation) to January 31, 2016, were analyzed. RESULTS A total of 1748 patients (77.2% females; median age 48.1 years [range 10-85 years]) were enrolled in the study. Most (n = 1640; 93.8%) were papillary carcinomas (including 84 poorly differentiated/aggressive variants); 6.2% (n = 108) were follicular and Hürthle cell carcinomas. The median tumor diameter was 11 mm (range 1-93 mm). Tumors were multifocal in 613 (35%) and presented extrathyroidal extension in 492 (28%) cases. Initial treatments included total thyroidectomy (involving one or two procedures; n = 726; 98.8%) and lobectomy (n = 22; 1.2%). A quarter of the patients who underwent total thyroidectomy had unifocal, intrathyroidal tumors ≤1 cm (n = 408; 23.6%). Neck dissection was performed in 40.4% of the patients (29.5% had central compartment dissection). Radioiodine remnant ablation (RRA) was performed in 1057 (61.2%) of the 1726 patients who underwent total thyroidectomy: 460 (41.2%) of the 983 classified by 2009 ATA guideline criteria as low-risk, 570 (87.1%) of the 655 as intermediate-risk, and 82 (93.1%) of the 88 as high-risk patients (p < 0.001). RRA was performed in 44% of the cases involving multifocal DTCs measuring ≤1 cm. CONCLUSIONS The treatment approaches for DTCs used in Italy display areas of inconsistency with those recommended by the 2009 ATA guidelines. Italian practices were characterized by underuse of thyroid lobectomy in intrathyroidal, unifocal DTCs ≤1 cm. The use of RRA was generally consistent with risk-stratified recommendations. However, its frequent use in small DTCs (≤1 cm) that are multifocal persists, despite the lack of evidence of benefit. These data provide a baseline for future assessments of the impact of international guidelines on DTC management in Italy. These findings also illustrate that the dissemination and implementation of guideline recommendations, and the change in practice patterns, require ongoing education and time.


Acta Cytologica | 2009

Cold benign thyroid nodule volume reduction predictability after percutaneous ethanol injection.

Vincenzo Nirchio; Francesco Nirchio; Umberto Crocetti; Paola Tizzani; Vincenzo Trischitta; Matteo Zingrillo

OBJECTIVE To determine the effect of percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI), a suppressive therapy for cold benign thyroid nodules (CBNs), on cytology. STUDY DESIGN The study group consisted of 31 CBNs, treated with PEI for 1 year, aspirated before and while the patients were on suppressive therapy. A control group consisting of 22 patients, whose nodule characteristic, PEI treatment and follow-up were similar to those of the study patients group, was monitored to confirm the results. By analogy with a similar study, the following factors were considered: an initial volume of the CBNs > 25 mL, abundant colloid, degree of cellular hyperplasia and presence ofdegenerative changes. To verify these hypotheses, we tested the differences using the t test for the initial volume and the Mann-Whitney U test for the remaining features. RESULTS The study has proved the unpredictability of the volume reduction in a single nodule on the basis of cytologic evaluation. CONCLUSION The lack of cytologic features that can be considered statistically predictive of large nodule reduction as a result of PEI treatment confirms that fine needle aspiration cytology may help establish the correct diagnosis.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2007

Predictive value of serum calcitonin levels for preoperative diagnosis of medullary thyroid carcinoma in a cohort of 5817 consecutive patients with thyroid nodules

Giuseppe Costante; Domenico Meringolo; Cosimo Durante; Davide Bianchi; Maria Nocera; Salvatore Tumino; Umberto Crocetti; Marco Attard; Marianna Maranghi; Massimo Torlontano; Sebastiano Filetti


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2004

Follow-Up of Low Risk Patients with Papillary Thyroid Cancer: Role of Neck Ultrasonography in Detecting Lymph Node Metastases

Massimo Torlontano; Marco Attard; Umberto Crocetti; Salvatore Tumino; Rocco Bruno; Giuseppe Costante; Girolamo D'Azzò; Domenico Meringolo; Elisabetta Ferretti; Rosario Sacco; Franco Arturi; Sebastiano Filetti


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2003

Serum thyroglobulin and 131I whole body scan after recombinant human TSH stimulation in the follow-up of low-risk patients with differentiated thyroid cancer

Massimo Torlontano; Umberto Crocetti; Leonardo D'Aloiso; Nazario Bonfitto; Anna Di Giorgio; Sergio Modoni; Guido Valle; Vincenzo Frusciante; Michele Bisceglia; Sebastiano Filetti; Martin Schlumberger; Vincenzo Trischitta


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2006

Comparative Evaluation of Recombinant Human Thyrotropin-Stimulated Thyroglobulin Levels, 131I Whole-Body Scintigraphy, and Neck Ultrasonography in the Follow-Up of Patients with Papillary Thyroid Microcarcinoma Who Have Not Undergone Radioiodine Therapy

Massimo Torlontano; Umberto Crocetti; Giovanni Augello; Leonardo D'Aloiso; Nazario Bonfitto; Antonio Varraso; Franca Dicembrino; Sergio Modoni; Vincenzo Frusciante; Anna Di Giorgio; Rocco Bruno; Sebastiano Filetti; Vincenzo Trischitta


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

Type 2 Deiodinase Polymorphism (Threonine 92 Alanine) Predicts l-Thyroxine Dose to Achieve Target Thyrotropin Levels in Thyroidectomized Patients

Massimo Torlontano; Cosimo Durante; Isabella Torrente; Umberto Crocetti; Giovanni Augello; Giuseppe Ronga; Teresa Montesano; Laura Travascio; Antonella Verrienti; Rocco Bruno; Stefano Angelo Santini; Palmina D'Arcangelo; Bruno Dallapiccola; Sebastiano Filetti; Vincenzo Trischitta

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Massimo Torlontano

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Sebastiano Filetti

Sapienza University of Rome

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Cosimo Durante

Sapienza University of Rome

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Vincenzo Trischitta

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Teresa Montesano

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giuseppe Ronga

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giuseppe Costante

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Laura Travascio

Sapienza University of Rome

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Nazario Bonfitto

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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