Publications by authors named "Fabiola Paiar"

Article Synopsis
  • Glioblastoma (GBM) is a highly aggressive brain cancer with few treatment options, and the study focuses on exploring extracellular vesicles (EVs) from GBM cells as potential diagnostic biomarkers.
  • * The research utilized tumor explants from GBM patients to preserve tumor characteristics and successfully isolated EVs, analyzing their surface markers through advanced techniques.
  • * Results showed unique surface biomarker expression patterns in GBM-derived EVs that could differentiate them from healthy controls, indicating their potential role in noninvasive diagnosis and understanding of GBM progression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: To investigate changes of objective instrumental measures and correlate with patient reported outcomes (PROs) of radiation-induced dysphagia (RID) after swallowing organs at risk (SWOARs)-sparing IMRT.

Methods: Patients (pts) underwent Fiberoptic Endoscopic Evaluation of Swallowing (FEES), Videofluoroscopy (VFS) and M.D.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Head and neck squamous cell carcinomas are characterized by a high incidence of recurrence, especially in patients with locally advanced disease. Standard treatment strategies can be associated with severe side effects to healthy tissues that can negatively impact the patient's quality of life. Hyperthermia (HT) is a noninvasive treatment modality that has improved the effectiveness of chemotherapy (CT) and/or radiotherapy (RT) for the management of some solid neoplasms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background/aim: The objective of this study was to assess the role of iodine (I) plaque brachytherapy in the management of uveal melanoma.

Patients And Methods: This is a retrospective study of 50 patients (median age 67 years; range=33-86 years) with uveal melanoma, treated with I plaque brachytherapy at the University Hospital of Pisa. Uveal melanoma was diagnosed with A-scan and B-scan standardized echography, fluorescein angiography, indocyanine green-angiography, optical coherence tomography, and/or magnetic resonance imaging.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cisplatin chemoradiotherapy (CRT) is the established standard of care for managing locally advanced human papillomavirus-positive head/neck carcinoma. The typically young patients may suffer serious and long-time side effects caused by the treatment, such as dysphagia, and hearing loss. Thus, ensuring a satisfactory post-treatment quality of life is paramount.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

FLASH-radiotherapy delivers a radiation beam a thousand times faster compared to conventional radiotherapy, reducing radiation damage in healthy tissues with an equivalent tumor response. Although not completely understood, this radiobiological phenomenon has been proved in several animal models with a spectrum of all kinds of particles currently used in contemporary radiotherapy, especially electrons. However, all the research teams have performed FLASH preclinical studies using industrial linear accelerator or LINAC commonly employed in conventional radiotherapy and modified for the delivery of ultra-high-dose-rate (UHDRs).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Clinical evidence suggests an association between comorbidities and outcome in patients with glioblastoma (GBM). We hypothesised that the internal carotid artery (ICA) calcium score could represent a promising prognostic biomarker in a competing risk analysis in patients diagnosed with GBM. We validated the use of the ICA calcium score as a surrogate marker of the coronary calcium score in 32 patients with lung cancer.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Locally advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (LA-HNSCC) is characterized by high rate of recurrence, resulting in a poor survival. Standard treatments are associated with significant toxicities that impact the patient's quality of life, highlighting the urgent need for novel therapies to improve patient outcomes. On this regard, noble metal nanoparticles (NPs) are emerging as promising agents as both drug carriers and radiosensitizers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Treatment de-intensification for p16 + oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) is an area of active research to reduce the side effects and improve patients' quality of life (QoL). In this paper we evaluated the Overall Survival (OS), the Disease-Free Survival (DFS) and the QoL of patients affected by p16 + OPSCC according to their prognostic stage group (PSG) and different treatments.

Methods: Patients were selected retrospectively through our Electronic Tumor Board Database according to prespecified inclusion criteria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA, liquid biopsy) is a powerful tool to detect molecular alterations. However, depending on tumor characteristics, biology and anatomic localization, cfDNA detection and analysis may be challenging. Gliomas are enclosed into an anatomic sanctuary, which obstacles the release of cfDNA into the peripheral blood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Radiotherapy (RT) is performed in approximately 75% of patients with cancer, and its efficacy is often hampered by the low tolerance of the surrounding normal tissues. Recent advancements have demonstrated the potential to widen the therapeutic window using "very short" radiation treatment delivery (from a conventional dose rate between 0.5 Gy/min and 2 Gy/min to more than 40 Gy/s) causing a significant increase of normal tissue tolerance without varying the tumor effect.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite countless papers in the field of radioresistance, researchers are still far from clearly understanding the mechanisms triggered in glioblastoma. Cancer stem cells (CSC) are important to the growth and spread of cancer, according to many studies. In addition, more recently, it has been suggested that CSCs have an impact on glioblastoma patients' prognosis, tumor aggressiveness, and treatment outcomes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: To evaluate and report the outcome of a patient with locally recurrent uveal melanoma (UM) previously treated with brachytherapy (BT), using a second personalized globe-sparing radiotherapy approach.

Material And Methods: In June 2020, a 78-year-old man arrived at our institution with diplopia and suspected uveal melanoma. At the ophthalmological evaluation (B-scan and A-scan ultrasonography) a lesion in the right eye at 6-7 hours of about 5 mm thickness, with internal lacunar areas, approximately 7 mm away from the limbus, was observed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite advances in the therapy of Central Nervous System (CNS) malignancies, treatment of glioblastoma (GB) poses significant challenges due to GB resistance and high recurrence rates following post-operative radio-chemotherapy. The majority of prognostic and predictive GB biomarkers are currently developed using tumour samples obtained through surgical interventions. However, the selection criteria adopted by different neurosurgeons to determine which cases are suitable for surgery make operated patients not representative of all GB cases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aim: Stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) showed increasing survival in oligometastatic patients. Few studies actually depicted oligometastatic disease (OMD) evolution and which patient will remain disease-free and which will rapidly develop a polymetastatic disease (PMD) after SABR. Therefore, apart from the number of active metastases, there are no clues on which proven factor should be considered for prescribing local treatment in OMD.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: The present study examined the longitudinal trajectories, through hierarchical modeling, of quality of life among patients with head and neck cancer, specifically symptoms burden, during radiotherapy, and in the follow-up period (1, 3, 6, and 12 months after completion of radiotherapy), through the M.D. Anderson Symptom Inventory Head and Neck questionnaire, formed by three factors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pancreatic cancer has a poor prognosis due to its aggressive nature and ability to metastasize at an early stage. Currently, its management is still a challenge because this neoplasm is resistant to conventional treatment approaches, among which is chemo-radiotherapy (CRT), due to the abundant stromal compartment involved in the mechanism of hypoxia. Hyperthermia, among other effects, counteracts hypoxia by promoting blood perfusion and thereby can enhance the therapeutic effect of radiotherapy (RT).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background/aim: The present study aimed to investigate radiomics features derived from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT).

Patients And Methods: We retrospectively evaluated data of 53 patients (32 males, 21 females) with T3/T4 or N+ rectal cancer who underwent MRI before and after CRT. Twenty-seven texture radiomics features were extracted from regions of interest, delimiting the tumor on T2-weighted images.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background/aim: The majority of patients with endometrial cancer (EC) are diagnosed at an early stage and undergo primary surgery, followed by observation or adjuvant therapy according to risk factors on surgical samples. The objective of this study was to assess the correlation between a risk profile represented by the presence of substantial lymph-vascular space involvement (LVSI) and/or p53 overexpression and the clinical outcome of patients with early-stage endometrial cancer (EC) who received adjuvant vaginal brachytherapy (BT).

Patients And Methods: This investigation assessed 79 patients who underwent hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, and pelvic and/o aortic lymphadenectomy or sentinel lymph node biopsy followed by hypofractionated (HDR)-vaginal BT, using 192Ir source, for stage I-II endometrioid (n=70) or non-endometrioid (n=9) EC.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The free electron fraction is the fraction of electrons, produced inside the cavity of an ionization chamber after irradiation, which does not bind to gas molecules and thereby reaches the electrode as free electrons. It is a fundamental quantity to describe the recombination processes of an ionization chamber, as it generates a gap of positive charges compared to negative ones, which certainly will not undergo recombination. The free electron fraction depends on the specific chamber geometry, the polarizing applied voltage and the gas thermodynamic properties.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

NAVIGATOR is an Italian regional project boosting precision medicine in oncology with the aim of making it more predictive, preventive, and personalised by advancing translational research based on quantitative imaging and integrative omics analyses. The project's goal is to develop an open imaging biobank for the collection and preservation of a large amount of standardised imaging multimodal datasets, including computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography data, together with the corresponding patient-related and omics-related relevant information extracted from regional healthcare services using an adapted privacy-preserving model. The project is based on an open-source imaging biobank and an open-science oriented virtual research environment (VRE).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Glioblastoma (GB) is a deadly brain cancer with limited treatment options and a median survival of only 12-15 months, prompting the need for improved therapeutic screening methods.
  • This study introduced a functional precision medicine approach utilizing organoids from resected GB tumors, combined with metabolic imaging to assess quick responses to anticancer treatments, validating the method with temozolomide (TMZ).
  • Results indicated successful differentiation between TMZ responders and non-responders within a week post-surgery, uncovering new target genes related to treatment responses and a 17-gene signature linked to patient survival, highlighting the potential to refine current biomarkers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose Of Review: Gliomas are the most common primary tumors of the central nervous system. They are characterized by a disappointing prognosis and ineffective therapy that has shown no substantial improvements in the past 20 years. The lack of progress in treating gliomas is linked with the inadequacy of suitable tumor samples to plan translational studies and support laboratory developments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ultra-High dose-per-pulse regimens (UHDP), necessary to trigger the "FLASH" effect, still pose serious challenges to dosimetry. Dosimetry plays a crucial role, both to significantly improve the accuracy of the radiobiological experiments necessary to fully understand the mechanisms underlying the effect and its dependencies on the beam parameters, and to be able to translate such effect into clinical practice. The standard ionization chamber in UHDP region is significantly affected by the effects of the electric field generated by the enormous density of charges produced by the dose pulse.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: There is an unmet need for new biomarkers able to predict both the outcomes of up-front therapy and the compliance of elderly patients diagnosed with glioblastoma. For this purpose, temporal muscle thickness is a promising tool to be investigated.

Methods: Data from 52 glioblastoma patients older than 65 years, treated with post-operative radio or radio-chemotherapy and referred to Pisa University Hospital, were retrieved.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF