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149


How to choose reconstruction for bone defects of knee sarcoma surgery

Mercuri, M; Ruggieri, P; De Paolis, M; Fabbri, Nicola; Errani, C; Bosco, G
ORIGINAL:0016206
ISSN: 0949-2658
CID: 5354862

Hemangioendothelioma of the spine

Aflatoon, Kamran; Staals, Eric; Bertoni, Franco; Bacchini, Patrizia; Donati, Davide; Fabbri, Nicola; Boriani, Stephan; Frassica, Frank J
A review of the patient files from our institution's oncology department showed that between 1950 and 2000, 11 patients were diagnosed with hemangioendothelioma of the spine, a rare, low-grade malignant vascular tumor. After reevaluation of the diagnoses by orthopaedic oncologists and pathologists, three patients were excluded; therefore eight patients formed the study group. The eight lesions were located in the thoracic (three) or lumbar spine (five, one in each vertebral level). Computed tomography scans revealed expansile lytic process. All lesions involved the vertebral body, but only one was diffuse with spinous process involvement. Treatment included: external beam irradiation alone (one patient), curettage and external beam irradiation (one patient), laminectomy and external beam irradiation (two patients), anterior resection only (two patients), and anterior resection with postoperative external beam irradiation (two patients). Patients without spinal stabilization had chronic low back pain; no patient with spinal stabilization had such pain. One patient who had surgical resection and radiation therapy had a radiation-induced sarcoma develop after 4 years. One patient who was treated with radiation therapy alone had a metastatic lung lesion develop. No other patient had tumor recurrence or progression. Therefore, patients with hemangioendothelioma of the spine may be treated with radiation therapy alone, surgery alone, or a combination thereof. However, because the number of patients in the current series was small, no definitive recommendations regarding treatment may be made. Resection of large lesions and stabilization of vertebral collapse may decrease back pain.
PMID: 15043114
ISSN: 0009-921x
CID: 5293382

Bone metastases in pediatric osteosarcoma [Meeting Abstract]

Manfrini, Marco; Ferrari, S; Fabbri, Nicola; Stagni, C; Picci, P; Bertoni, F; Bacci, G
ORIGINAL:0016205
ISSN: 1357-714x
CID: 5354852

Trattamento dell'osteosarcoma : esperienza dell'Istituo Ortopedico Rizzoli

De Paolis, M; Errani, C; Ruggieri, P; Ferraro, A; Fabbri, Nicola; Mercuri, M
ORIGINAL:0016212
ISSN: 0300-8916
CID: 5354982

Radiation-induced osteosarcoma arising 20 years after the treatment of Ewing's sarcoma [Case Report]

Longhi, Alessandra; Barbieri, Enza; Fabbri, Nicola; Macchiagodena, Michele; Favale, Leonardo; Lippo, Cataldo; Salducca, Nicola; Bacci, Gaetano
We report the case of a 17 years old female with a Ewing's sarcoma of the left femur treated with limb sparing surgery followed by local radiotherapy of 45 Gy and adjuvant chemotherapy with vincristine, doxorubicine, cyclophosphamide, actinomycin D. The patient received neoadjuvant chemotherapy for osteosarcoma and a left femur resection with endoprosthesis replacement. The patient is alive and free of disease 4 years after the treatment of this second malignant neoplasm (SMN). This case shows that radioinduced SMN can occurr with relatively low doses of RT (<50 Gy) and that it may occur very late.
PMID: 14870790
ISSN: 0300-8916
CID: 5293372

Seven BMPs and all their receptors are simultaneously expressed in osteosarcoma cells

Gobbi, Giuliana; Sangiorgi, Luca; Lenzi, Luca; Casadei, Raffaella; Canaider, Silvia; Strippoli, Pierluigi; Lucarelli, Enrico; Ghedini, Ilaria; Donati, Davide; Fabbri, Nicola; Warzecha, Jorg; Yeoung, Choh; Helman, Lee J; Picci, Piero; Carinci, Paolo
Members of the bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) family and their receptors (BMPRs and activin receptors-ActRs) promote the development of bones with a fine regulation of their expression. Mutations in BMPs or BMPRs cause several diseases, as shown in knockout mice, such as skeletal defects, familial primary pulmonary hypertension and neoplasias. Osteosarcoma is the most frequent primary malignant tumor of bone. Due to their importance in bone development, BMPs, BMPRs and ActRs could also play a role in osteosarcoma growth and development. Previous data have shown that the overexpression of the BMPR-II was related to poor prognosis in malignant and metastatic bone tumors. We evaluate by reverse transcription-linked polymerase chain reaction analysis (RT-PCR) the expression pattern of BMPs, BMPRs and ActRs in five different human osteosarcoma cell lines (MG63, G292, HOS, SaOS and U2). Moreover, we performed the mutational screening of the complete BMPR-II mRNA by automated sequencing of the correspondent cDNA to evaluate the presence of point mutations in osteosarcoma cell lines. All the osteosarcoma cell lines studied simultaneously expressed the BMPs, BMPRs and ActRs investigated. No mutations were detected in the BMPR-II cDNA. Our results suggest the presence of a mechanism involving the simultaneous activation of the BMPs and their receptors in osteosarcoma cell lines.
PMID: 11743655
ISSN: 1019-6439
CID: 5293362

Staged revision for infected reconstruction after limb salvage surgery for bone tumors [Meeting Abstract]

Fabbri, Nicola; Donati, D; Giacomini, S; Manfrini, M; Mercuri, M
ORIGINAL:0016203
ISSN: 1357-714x
CID: 5354832

Benign cartilage tumours

Fabbri, Nicola; De Paolis, M; Bertoni, F
ORIGINAL:0016204
ISSN: 0268-0890
CID: 5354842

[Cancer of the right colon: biological features and extent of the surgical resection]

Rubbini, M; Fabbri, N; Adani, G; Rosa, D; Morri, A
Right-sided colon cancer therapy is based upon right hemicolectomy, which is a well established surgical technique. Considering the possibility of biological diversity in cancer arising from the caecum, ascending colon and transverse colon, this retrospective study analysed age, sex, grading, T, N, M and mortality to evaluate the biological characteristics of the cancers and their level of local and general diffusion with a view to establishing any correlation between these characteristics and the advisability of employing different surgical procedures for the different sites. Cancer arising from the sites considered does not seem to present different biological aspects and therefore a different surgical procedure is not authorized. Our data show that a significant majority of cancers are diagnosed at an advanced stage as compared to earlier stages (P < 0.05) and that early detection of these cancers is the best way of improving the prognosis.
PMID: 11586564
ISSN: 0009-4773
CID: 5354882

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for patients with synchronous multifocal osteosarcoma: results in eleven cases

Longhi, A; Fabbri, N; Donati, D; Capanna, R; Briccoli, A; Biagini, R; Bernini, G; Ferrari, S; Versari, M; Bacci, G
Between January 1995 and December 1999, 11 patients with synchronous multifocal osteosarcoma (SMO) received neoadjuvant treatment with high-dose methotrexate, cisplatinum, Adriamycin, and ifosfamide. After primary chemotherapy in 4 patients who had only two bone localizations, it was possible to treat all tumor foci locally. The remaining patients, with more than three bones involved, were treated surgically only in 3 cases at the primary site, while secondary lesions did not receive any treatment. The final results of our study were disappointing. All patients died of the tumor 6 to 24 months after the beginning of treatment (mean 11.9 months). Nevertheless, the survival time of the 4 patients with locally treated lesions was significantly longer than the one of 7 patients in whom the secondary lesions were not locally treated (18.2 vs 9.1 months; P<0.008). It should be noted that those patients simultaneously operated on two sites, the response to chemotherapy of "primary" and "secondary" lesions was always similar. This homogeneity supports the thesis that in synchronous multifocal osteosarcoma the tumors are not multicentric in origin but represent bone-to-bone metastases from a monocentric tumor.
PMID: 11450892
ISSN: 1120-009x
CID: 5354022