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146


Ewing's sarcoma family tumours. Differences in clinicopathological characteristics at presentation between localised and metastatic tumours

Bacci, G; Balladelli, A; Forni, C; Longhi, A; Serra, M; Fabbri, N; Alberghini, M; Ferrari, S; Benassi, M S; Picci, P
Despite local treatment with systemic chemotherapy in Ewing's sarcoma family tumours (ESFT), patients with detectable metastases at presentation have a markedly worse prognosis than those with apparently localised disease. We investigated the clinical, pathological and laboratory differences in 888 patients with ESFT, 702 with localised disease and 186 with overt metastases at presentation, seen at our institution between 1983 and 2006. Multivariate analyses showed that location in the pelvis, a high level of serum lactic dehydrogenase, the presence of fever and a short interval between the onset of symptoms and diagnosis were indicative of metastatic disease. The rate of overt metastases at presentation was 10% without these four risk factors, 22.7% with one, 31.4% with two, and 50% for those with three or four factors. We concluded that in ESFT the site, the serum level of lactic dehydrogenase, fever, and the interval between the onset of symptoms and diagnosis are indicators of tumours having a particularly aggressive metastatic behaviour.
PMID: 17905963
ISSN: 0301-620x
CID: 5354102

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for osteosarcoma of the extremities in patients aged 41-60 years: outcome in 34 cases treated with adriamycin, cisplatinum and ifosfamide between 1984 and 1999

Bacci, Gaetano; Ferrari, Stefano; Mercuri, Mario; Longhi, Alessandra; Fabbri, Nicola; Galletti, Stefano; Forni, Cristiana; Balladelli, Alba; Serra, Massimo; Picci, Piero
BACKGROUND:It is unclear whether adult patients with high-grade non-metastatic osteosarcoma of the extremities, treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy according to protocols designed for adults, have a different outcome than younger patients treated with conventional protocols. PATIENTS AND METHODS/METHODS:From 1994 through 1999, we treated 34 patients with non-metastatic osteosarcoma of the extremities. These patients were aged mean 50 years (41-60), and received 4 cycles of multidrug chemotherapy (1 preoperatively and 3 postoperatively). Each cycle consisted of a combination of Cisplatin/Adriamycin, Ifosfamide/Cisplatinum and Ifosfamide/Adriamycin. 30 patients had limb salvage and 3 underwent amputation. During preoperative treatment, 1 died of toxicity. 16 patients had a good histological response to chemotherapy (> or = 90% tumor necrosis) and 17 had a poor response. RESULTS AND INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:With a median follow-up of 8 (5-11) years, 19/33 patients remained continuously disease-free and 14 relapsed (10 with metastases, 3 with local recurrence and metastases, and 1 with local recurrence alone). After further treatments, 2/14 relapsed patients are alive and disease-free, 11 died of tumor, and 1 is alive with uncontrolled disease. 5-year event-free survival and overall survival were 56% and 70%, respectively. These results, which are similar to those of 296 patients under 40 years of age who were treated with conventional chemotherapy (5-year EFS 59% and 5-year OS 70%), indicate that neoadjuvant chemotherapy improves prognosis and also reduces amputations in patients aged over 40 with osteosarcoma of the extremities.
PMID: 17611853
ISSN: 1745-3674
CID: 5293422

Adjuvant and neoadjuvant chemotherapy for Ewing sarcoma family tumors in patients aged between 40 and 60: report of 35 cases and comparison of results with 586 younger patients treated with the same protocols in the same years

Bacci, Gaetano; Balladelli, Alba; Forni, Cristiana; Ferrari, Stefano; Longhi, Alessandra; Bacchini, Patrizia; Alberghini, Marco; Fabbri, Nicola; Benassi, Mariaserena; Briccoli, Antonio; Picci, Piero
BACKGROUND:The clinical and pathologic features of 46 patients 40 to 60 years old with Ewing sarcoma family tumor (ESFT) diagnosed at the authors' institute between 1972 and 2000 were reviewed. METHODS:Ten patients with metastatic tumors at presentation went elsewhere for treatment; 35 of 36 remaining cases with localized disease were treated at the authors' institution according to different chemotherapy protocols activated in successive years. In patients with nonmetastatic tumors local treatment was surgery in 9 patients, radiotherapy in 16, and surgery followed by radiotherapy in 10. RESULTS:At follow-up times ranging from 6 and 34 years (mean, 17.8 years), 15 patients (42.9%) remained continuously disease-free, 19 experienced recurrence, and 1 died of chemotherapy-related toxicity. The 5- and 10-year event-free survivals were 42.9% and 35.2%, respectively, and the 5- and 10-year overall survivals were 46.1% and 42.8%, respectively. Comparing this group of patients with 586 cases of younger patients seen in the same period at Rizzoli, the only difference between the 2 groups was a significantly higher rate of tumors located in the soft tissues with a larger volume in the older group. The results achieved were comparable in the 2 groups, although the older group had a lower chemotherapy dose-intensity and a higher rate of WHO grade 4 hematologic toxicity. CONCLUSIONS:For patients with localized disease treated with adjuvant and neoadjuvant chemotherapy the results were essentially comparable in the 2 groups. It is concluded that patients 40 years or older with ESFT should be treated in the same way as younger patients and included in treatment trials for these tumors.
PMID: 17219445
ISSN: 0008-543x
CID: 5293412

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for radioinduced osteosarcoma of the extremity: The Rizzoli experience in 20 cases

Bacci, Gaetano; Longhi, Alessandra; Forni, Cristiana; Fabbri, Nicola; Briccoli, Antonio; Barbieri, Enza; Mercuri, Mario; Balladelli, Alba; Ferrari, Stefano; Picci, Piero
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Evaluate treatment and outcome of 20 patients with radioinduced osteosarcoma (RIO). Because of previous primary tumor treatment, RIO protocols were different from others we used for non-RIO. PATIENTS AND METHODS/METHODS:Between 1983 and 1998, we treated 20 RIO patients, ages 4-36 years (mean 16 years), with chemotherapy (two cycles before surgery, three postoperatively). The first preoperative cycle consisted of high-dose Methotrexate (HDMTX)/Cisplatinum (CDP)/Adriamycin (ADM) and the second of HDMTX/CDP/Ifosfamide (IFO). The three postoperative treatments were performed with cycles of MTX/CDP; IFO was used as single agent per cycle repeated three times. RESULTS:Two patients received palliative treatment because their osteosarcoma remained unresectable after preoperative chemotherapy. The remaining 18 patients had surgery (7 amputations, 11 resections); histologic response to preoperative chemotherapy was good in 8 patients, poor in 10. At a mean follow-up of 11 years (range, 7-22 years), 9 patients remained continuously disease-free, 10 died from osteosarcoma and 1 died from a third neoplasm (myeloid acute leukemia). These results are not significantly different from those achieved in 754 patients with conventional osteosarcoma treated in the same period with protocols used for conventional treatment. However, this later group had an 18% 3-year event-free survival after treatment of relapse vs. 0% in the RIO group. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy RIO seem to have an outcome that is not significantly different from that of comparable patients with conventional primary high grade osteosarcoma (5-year event-free survival: 40% vs. 60%, p = NS; 5-year overall survival 40% vs. 67%, p < 0.01).
PMID: 17118571
ISSN: 0360-3016
CID: 5293402

Le artroprotesi modulari di ginocchio nella chirugia oncologica

Mercuri, M; Errani, C; De Paolis, M; Fabbri, Nicola; Ruggieri, P; Toscano, A
ORIGINAL:0016211
ISSN: 0390-0134
CID: 5354962

Treatment and prognosis for synchronous multifocal osteosarcoma in 42 patients

Bacci, G; Fabbri, N; Balladelli, A; Forni, C; Palmerini, E; Picci, P
Between 1986 and 2002, 42 patients with synchronous multifocal osteosarcoma were treated with two different protocols of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. When feasible, the primary and secondary tumours were excised as a combined procedure. After initial chemotherapy 26 patients were excluded from simultaneous excision of all their secondary bone lesions as their disease was too advanced. In 12 patients only isolated excision of the primary lesion was possible. For 16 patients simultaneous operations were conducted to excise the primary and secondary lesions. This involved two supplementary sites in 15 patients and four additional sites in one patient. Of these, 15 attained remission but 12 relapsed and died (11 within two years). Three patients remained disease-free at five, six and 17 years. The histological response to pre-operative chemotherapy of the primary and secondary lesions was concordant in 13 of the 16 patients who underwent simultaneous operations at more than one site. The prognosis for synchronous multifocal osteosarcoma remains poor despite combined chemotherapy and surgery. The homogeneous histological responses in a large proportion of the primary and secondary lesions implies that synchronous multifocal osteosarcoma tumours are not multicentric in origin, but probably represent bone-to-bone metastases from a single tumour.
PMID: 16877608
ISSN: 0301-620x
CID: 5354092

Imaging findings in desmoplastic fibroma of bone: distinctive T2 characteristics

Frick, Matthew A; Sundaram, Murali; Unni, Krishnan K; Inwards, Carrie Y; Fabbri, Nicola; Trentani, Federico; Baccini, Patrizia; Bertoni, Franco
OBJECTIVE:The purpose of this study was to evaluate the imaging features of desmoplastic fibroma of the bone, with an emphasis on MRI signal characteristics. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Significant T2 shortening of a nonsclerotic fibroosseous lesion should place desmoplastic fibroma high among the diagnostic considerations.
PMID: 15908527
ISSN: 0361-803x
CID: 5293392

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

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

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