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Featured researches published by Vittorio Pasta.


Tumori | 2006

CYSTIC HYGROMA OF THE BREAST: A RARE LESION

Angelo Torcasio; Stefano Veneroso; Maria Ida Amabile; Biffoni M; Giovanni Martino; Massimo Monti; Orlando Tintisona; Vittorio Pasta

Lymphangiomas are congenital malformations of lymphatic vessels. More than 50% of these lesions are present at birth; 90% are diagnosed by the age of 2. These lesions do not expand very rapidly but they tend to infiltrate surrounding tissues; their degeneration into malignant tumors is an extremely rare occurrence. They are mostly located in the neck region and the axilla; breast lymphangioma is very rare. Surgery is usually performed for aesthetic reasons and in order to make a differential diagnosis with other, more common lesions. The surgical procedure involves the excision of the mass; other methods, such as radiotherapy and sclerotherapy, have proved to be completely ineffective.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2015

Peliosis hepatis: Personal experience and literature review

Daniele Crocetti; Andrea Palmieri; Giuseppe Pedullà; Vittorio Pasta; Valerio D’Orazi; Gian Luca Grazi

Peliosis hepatis (PH) is a disease characterized by multiple and small, blood-filled cysts within the parenchymatous organs. PH is a very rare disease, more common in adults, and when it affects the liver, it comes to the surgeons attention only in an extremely urgent situation after the lesions rupture with the resulting hemoperitoneum. This report describes the case of a 29-year-old woman affected by recurring abdominal pain. Computed tomography scans showed a hepatic lesion formed by multiple hypodense areas, which showed an early acquisition of the contrast during the arterial phase. Furthermore, it remained isodense with the remaining parenchyma during the late venous phase. We decided on performing a liver resection of segment VII while avoiding a biopsy for safety reasons. The histopathologic examination confirmed the diagnosis of focal PH. PH should always be considered in the differential diagnosis of hepatic lesions. Clinicians should discuss the possible causes and issues related to the differential diagnosis in addition to the appropriate therapeutic approach. The fortuitous finding of a lesion, potentially compatible with PH, requires elective surgery with diagnostic and therapeutic intents. The main aim is to prevent the risk of a sudden bleeding that, in absence of properly equipped structures, may have a fatal outcome.


Oncology Letters | 2015

Rare chondrosarcoma of the breast treated with quadrantectomy instead of mastectomy: A case report

Vittorio Pasta; Daniela Sottile; Paolo Urciuoli; Luca Del Vecchio; Filippo Custureri; Valerio D'orazi

Breast chondrosarcoma is a rare sarcoma that mainly occurs in females >50 years old. To the best of our knowledge, only 16 cases were reported in the literature prior to 2013 and all patients were surgically treated by mastectomy, with or without lymphadenectomy, which was occasionally preceded by neoadjuvant chemotherapy. However, the literature does not report the benefit of mastectomy compared with a more conservative surgery. The present study reports a novel case of extraskeletal chondrosarcoma of the breast. A 63-year-old female patient presented with a neoplasm localized in the upper-outer quadrant of the right breast. The palpable lesion with sharp margins was a firm parenchymatous mass, which was confirmed by ultrasonography and mammography. The patient underwent conservative quadrantectomy instead of mastectomy, followed by post-surgical chemotherapy. A positron emission tomography scan performed five months subsequent to the surgery revealed no remnants of the disease. The patient underwent a strict clinical and instrumental follow-up, and two and half years after surgery, there are no signs of recurrent disease. In conclusion, the present case is currently one of the two cases in which a more conservative quadrantectomy was performed, instead of mastectomy. This surgical approach did not lead to metastasis and resulted in a good follow-up for the patient.


Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research | 2015

A modified sentinel node and occult lesion localization (SNOLL) technique in non-palpable breast cancer: a pilot study.

Giulia Anna Follacchio; Francesco Monteleone; Paolo Anibaldi; Giuseppe De Vincentis; Silvia Iacobelli; Raffaele Merola; Valerio D’Orazi; Massimo Monti; Vittorio Pasta

BackgroundThe spread of mammographic screening programs has allowed an increasing amount of early breast cancer diagnosis. A modern approach to non-palpable breast lesions requires an accurate intraoperative localization, in order to achieve a complete surgical resection. In addiction, the assessment of lymph node status is mandatory as it represents a major prognostic factor in these patients. The aim of this study is to evaluate the reliability of a modified technical approach using a single nanocolloidal radiotracer to localize both sentinel node and breast occult lesion.MethodsTwenty-five patients with a single non-palpable breast lesions and clinically negative axilla were enrolled. In the same day of surgery, patients underwent intratumoral and peritumoral administration of 99mTc-labeled nanocolloid tracer under sonographic guidance. A lymphoscintigraphy was performed to localize the sentinel lymph node and its cutaneous projection was marked on the skin in order to guide the surgeon to an optimal incision. During surgery an hand-held gamma-detection probe was used to select the best surgical access route and to guide localization of both occult breast lesion and sentinel lymph node. After specimen excision, the surgical field was checked with the gamma-probe to verify the absence of residual sources of significant radioactivity, thereby ensuring a radical treatment in a single surgical session and minimizing normal tissue excision.ResultsBoth targeted breast lesion and sentinel lymph node were localized and removed at the first attempt in every patients and histopathological diagnosis of malignancy was confirmed in 25/26 samples. Non-palpable lesions were included within the surgical margins in all patients and in all samples surgical margins were free from neoplastic infiltration thus avoiding any further reintervention. Only two patients showed metastatic involvement of sentinel lymph node.ConclusionsThe modified sentinel node and occult lesion localization (SNOLL) technique performed with a single injection of nanocolloidal radiotracer has shown an excellent intraoperative identification rate of both non-palpable lesion and sentinel lymph node. This procedure offers, as opposed to standard techniques, an accurate, simple and reliable approach to the management of non-palpable breast cancer.


Annali Italiani Di Chirurgia | 2006

Inflammatory breast cancer.

Vittorio Pasta; Francesca Mitri; Maria Ida Amabile; Nicola Picardi

Primary non-Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL) of the breast, and its extranodal spread to the breast resulting from systemic lymphoma, are recognised albeit uncommon conditions. However, lymphoma involving the axilla, presenting with the clinical appearance of inflammatory breast carcinoma (IBC) without infiltration of breast dermal lymphatics has not been reported previously. As highlighted by the two cases presented here, this entity should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients presenting with clinical IBC. The cases highlight the importance of careful histological analysis to distinguish IBC from NHL, since management strategies and prognosis are quite different.


Phlebology | 2015

Breast mondor’s disease: Diagnosis and management of six new cases of this underestimated pathology

Vittorio Pasta; Valerio D’Orazi; Daniela Sottile; Luca Del Vecchio; Andrea Panunzi; Paolo Urciuoli

Mondor’s disease is an unusual and little-known pathology of the breast, characterized by superficial thrombophlebitis. The causes are still unresolved. Most of the patients do not fall under case studies of the scientific literature, given the reported incidence rate between 0.5% and 0.8%. The Mondor’s disease patients are not always properly identified, and they are frequently treated as outpatients, even considering the benign course of the disease which often spontaneously resolves without any medical therapy. We report here six new cases of Mondor’s disease, two of them were likely due to a trauma and were easily resolved with the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; the third one was apparently due to the stretching of the mammary veins in a patient with gigantomastia; the fourth one was subsequent to hormonal stimulation for in vivo fertilization and following gestation; and the last two cases (one was a man) were diagnosed after undergoing surgery for breast carcinoma.


Molecular and Clinical Oncology | 2015

Microsurgical approach for unusual and unexpected malignant fibrous histiocytoma of the forearm: A case report

Valerio D'orazi; Andrea Panunzi; Marco Paoloni; Alice Ortensi; Silvia Anichini; Michela Cialini; Stefano Nardoni; Paolo Urciuoli; Vittorio Pasta; A. Ortensi

Soft tissue sarcomas are rare tumors with a dismal prognosis. Among the most common histological types of sarcomas of the extremities, malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH) is the one with the highest incidence. Surgery is considered to be the first choice of treatment for MFH. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case report in the literature of a patient with MFH within the abductor pollicis longus (APL) muscle. This unusual location was also unexpected by the treating surgeons, as the preoperative magnetic resonance imaging localized the tumor inside a different muscle. A 79-year-old Caucasian man presented with a swelling in the middle third of the dorsal aspect of the left forearm. MFH was diagnosed following biopsy and instrumental diagnostic examinations. Surgical excision and simultaneous reconstruction was performed by the same microsurgical team, achieving an excellent functional outcome. The present case highlights the significance of microsurgical approach for improving strategic planning in oncologic surgery. Accurate surgical dissection, performed by a team of microsurgeons, allowed for the identification of the unusual and unexpected tumor localization within the APL muscle. For this reason, a change of surgical strategy allowed for preservation of the extensor digitorum communis muscle, which would otherwise have to be resected, with tendon transfer and successful restoration of the thumb abduction function.


Gland surgery | 2016

Oncoplastic central quadrantectomies

Vittorio Pasta; Valerio D’Orazi; Raffaele Merola; Federico Frusone; Maria Ida Amabile; Alessandro De Luca; Rosanna Buè; Marco Monti

Tumors localized in the central quadrant (centrally located breast tumors) have always represented a challenge for the surgeon because of the critical aesthetical matters related to the nipple-areola complex (NAC). Many years of experience with breast cancer patients treated by using various oncoplastic techniques, has allowed us to develop the modified hemibatwing for the treatment of central breast tumors, where the NAC is involved. Modified hemibatwing-along with the removal of the NAC-is a useful oncoplastic technique and it represents an ideal option for the treatment of central tumors because it assures oncological safety, a reduced surgical timetable and greater aesthetical results.


Tumori | 2004

Unusual breast tumors: Primary lymphoma. A case report

Vittorio Pasta; Cecilia Midulla; Massimo Monti; Maurizio Martelli; Angelo Torcasio; Salvatore Stella

An 82-year-old woman presented with a right breast lump with erythematous reaction of the overlying skin and corresponding lymph nodes. Cytological examination of the breast lesion and lymph nodes suggested a lymphoid proliferation. Frozen section revealed carcinoma with lymphoid stroma. Simple mastectomy was performed because of the extent of the lesion. Histological diagnosis was non-Hodgkin type B large-cell lymphoma. Primary breast lymphomas behave similarly to lymphomas of similar histologic types occurring in other sites. The authors illustrate the diagnostic difficulties and the usefulness of complementary techniques in the diagnosis of an unusual breast mass.


Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research | 2015

Primitive sarcoma of the breast: New insight on the proper surgical management

Vittorio Pasta; Massimo Monti; Michela Cialini; Massimo Vergine; Paolo Urciuoli; Annunziata Iacovelli; Silvio Rea; Valerio D’Orazi

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Massimo Monti

Sapienza University of Rome

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Massimo Vergine

Sapienza University of Rome

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Maria Ida Amabile

Sapienza University of Rome

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Valerio D'orazi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Paolo Urciuoli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giovanni Martino

Sapienza University of Rome

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Valerio D’Orazi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Angelo Torcasio

Sapienza University of Rome

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Chiarini S

Sapienza University of Rome

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Daniela Sottile

Sapienza University of Rome

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