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daniele regge

daniele.regge@ircc.it

Journal articles

2009
 
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Regge, Neri, Turini, Chiara (2009)  Role of CT colonography in inflammatory bowel disease.   Eur J Radiol Jan  
Abstract: CT colonography (CTC), or virtual colonoscopy, is a non-invasive imaging method that uses CT data sets combined with specialized imaging software to examine the colon. CTC is not used routinely in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). However, investigating contemporarily the colon, other abdominal organs and the peritoneum with CTC is at times useful in patients with IBD, especially when other diagnostic tools fail. Furthermore, since symptoms of colorectal cancer sometimes superimpose to those of inflammatory disease, it may happen to image patients with IBD incidentally. If clinical signs are suggestive for inflammatory disease, exam technique should be modified accordingly and distinguishing radiological findings searched for.
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2008
 
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Stefano Cirillo, Massimo Petracchini, Cristina Maria Bona, Sabina Durando, Cinzia Ortega, Roberto Vormola, Michele Stasi, Giuseppe Malinverni, Massimo Aglietta, Daniele Regge, Pietro Gabriele (2008)  Comparison of endorectal magnetic resonance imaging, clinical prognostic factors and nomograms in the local staging of prostate cancer patients treated with radiotherapy.   Tumori 94: 1. 65-69 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: AIMS AND BACKGROUND: To determine retrospectively the role of endorectal magnetic resonance in the staging of prostate cancer. The aim of the study was to assess whether it is possible to identify a group of patients with prostate cancer, chosen for certain prognostic factors, eligible for radiotherapy that could take advantage of endorectal magnetic resonance in staging and therapy management. METHODS: Between January 2002 and December 2005, 143 patients with biopsy proven prostate cancer underwent endorectal magnetic resonance. All patients were initially evaluated considering the following prognostic factors: serum prostate-specific antigen at diagnosis, Gleason score, histological grade, involvement of the seminal vesicle and extracapsular extension using the Roach III and ECE equations. The findings were then compared to the results of endorectal magnetic resonance. RESULTS: The relationship between the variable post-endorectal magnetic resonance stage modification and Gleason score was statistically significant (P = 0.02847). In addition, our study showed a statistically significant correlation between the risk of seminal vesicle involvement according to the Roach III formula and post-endorectal magnetic resonance stage modification (P = 0.01305). Conversely, statistical analysis showed no significant correlation between post-endorectal magnetic resonance stage modification and prostate-specific antigen values (P = 0.83440) or between post-endorectal magnetic resonance stage modification and the risk of extracapsular extension according to the extracapsular extension formula (P = 0.42748). CONCLUSIONS: Our data suggest that endorectal magnetic resonance could be used for staging of the subgroup of patients at high risk of seminal vesicle involvement (> 15%). Although we found a statistical correlation between Gleason score and post-endorectal magnetic resonance stage modification, statistical analysis showed no correlation between any of the subgroups. Therefore, it is not possible at the moment to identify a subgroup of patients by Gleason score that may benefit from endorectal magnetic resonance. In our opinion, extracapsular extension values were not useful to select patients for endorectal magnetic resonance.
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Giovanni Carlo Anselmetti, Gregg Zoarski, Antonio Manca, Salvatore Masala, Haris Eminefendic, Filippo Russo, Daniele Regge (2008)  Percutaneous vertebroplasty and bone cement leakage: clinical experience with a new high-viscosity bone cement and delivery system for vertebral augmentation in benign and malignant compression fractures.   Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol 31: 5. 937-947 Sep/Oct  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility of and venous leakage reduction in percutaneous vertebroplasty (PV) using a new high-viscosity bone cement (PMMA). PV has been used effectively for pain relief in osteoporotic and malignant vertebral fractures. Cement extrusion is a common problem and can lead to complications. Sixty patients (52 female; mean age, 72.2 +/- 7.2) suffering from osteoporosis (46), malignancy (12), and angiomas (2), divided into two groups (A and B), underwent PV on 190 vertebrae (86 dorsal, 104 lumbar). In Group A, PV with high-viscosity PMMA (Confidence, Disc-O-Tech, Israel) was used. This PMMA was injected by a proprietary delivery system, a hydraulic saline-filled screw injector. In Group B, a standard low-viscosity PMMA was used. Postprocedural CT was carried out to detect PMMA leakages and complications. Fisher's exact test and Wilcoxon rank test were used to assess significant differences (p < 0.05) in leakages and to evaluate the clinical outcome. PV was feasible, achieving good clinical outcome (p < 0.0001) without major complications. In Group A, postprocedural CT showed an asymptomatic leak in the venous structures of 8 of 98 (8.2%) treated vertebrae; a discoidal leak occurred in 6 of 98 (6.1%). In Group B, a venous leak was seen in 38 of 92 (41.3%) and a discoidal leak in 12 of 92 (13.0%). Reduction of venous leak obtained by high-viscosity PMMA was highly significant (p < 0.0001), whereas this result was not significant (p = 0.14) related to the disc. The high-viscosity PMMA system is safe and effective for clinical use, allowing a significant reduction of extravasation rate and, thus, leakage-related complications.
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Riccardo Lencioni, Laura Crocetti, Roberto Cioni, Robert Suh, Derek Glenn, Daniele Regge, Thomas Helmberger, Alice R Gillams, Andrea Frilling, Marcello Ambrogi, Carlo Bartolozzi, Alfredo Mussi (2008)  Response to radiofrequency ablation of pulmonary tumours: a prospective, intention-to-treat, multicentre clinical trial (the RAPTURE study).   Lancet Oncol 9: 7. 621-628 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Radiofrequency ablation is an accepted treatment for non-surgical patients with liver cancer. The purpose of this study was to identify the feasibility, safety, and effectiveness of percutaneous radiofrequency ablation of malignant lung tumours. METHODS: Between July 1, 2001, and Dec 10, 2005, a series of 106 patients with 183 lung tumours that were 3.5 cm in diameter or smaller (mean 1.7 cm [SD 1.3]) were enrolled in a prospective, intention-to-treat, single-arm, multicentre clinical trial from seven centres in Europe, the USA, and Australia. Proof of malignancy was obtained by biopsy in all patients. Diagnoses included non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in 33 patients, metastasis from colorectal carcinoma in 53 patients, and metastasis from other primary malignancies in 20 patients. All patients were considered by the treating physician to be unsuitable for surgery and unfit for radiotherapy or chemotherapy. Patients underwent radiofrequency ablation in accordance with standard rules for CT-guided lung biopsy and were then followed for up to 2 years. Primary endpoints were technical success (defined as correct placement of the ablation device into all tumour targets with completion of the planned ablation protocol), safety (including identification of treatment-related complications and changes in pulmonary function), and confirmed complete response of tumours (according to modified Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors). Secondary endpoints were overall survival, cancer-specific survival, and quality of life. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00690703. FINDINGS: Correct placement of the ablation device into the target tumour with completion of the planned treatment protocol was feasible in 105 (99%) of 106 patients. The technical failure in one patient was caused by the inability to place the device inside a small tumour. No procedure-related deaths occurred in any of the 137 ablation procedures. Major complications consisted of pneumothorax (n=27) or pleural effusion (n=4), which needed drainage. No significant worsening of pulmonary function was noted. A confirmed complete response of target tumours lasting at least 1 year was shown in 75 (88%) of 85 assessable patients. No differences in response were noted between patients with NSCLC or lung metastases. Overall survival was 70% (95% CI 51-83%) at 1 year and 48% (30-65%) at 2 years in patients with NSCLC, 89% (76-95%) at 1 year and 66% (53-79%) at 2 years in patients with colorectal metastases, and 92% (65-99%) at 1 year and 64% (43-82%) at 2 years in patients with other metastases. Cancer-specific survival was 92% (78-98%) at 1 year and 73% (54-86%) at 2 years in patients with NSCLC, 91% (78-96%) at 1 year and 68% (54-80%) at 2 years in patients with colorectal metastases, and 93% (67-99%) at 1 year and 67% (48-84%) at 2 years in patients with other metastases. Patients with stage I NSCLC (n=13) had a 2-year overall survival of 75% (45-92%) and a 2-year cancer-specific survival of 92% (66-99%). INTERPRETATION: Percutaneous radiofrequency ablation yields high proportions of sustained complete responses in properly selected patients with pulmonary malignancies, and is associated with acceptable morbidity. Randomised controlled trials comparing radiofrequency ablation with standard non-surgical treatment options are warranted.
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Stefano Cirillo, Massimo Petracchini, Leonardo D'Urso, Patrizia Dellamonica, Rowland Illing, Daniele Regge, Giovanni Muto (2008)  Endorectal magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance spectroscopy to monitor the prostate for residual disease or local cancer recurrence after transrectal high-intensity focused ultrasound.   BJU Int 102: 4. 452-458 Aug  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To assess the role of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for evaluating changes in the prostate after transrectal high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) for treating prostate cancer, correlating the findings with histology to assess its possible role in predicting the outcome, evaluating residual cancer or local recurrence of disease. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Ten patients with prostate cancer were assessed with MR and MR spectroscopy (MRS) before and at 1, 4 and 12 months after HIFU, assessing the glandular volume and MRI and MRS data after HIFU. These data were correlated with the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels at each examination (suspicious for residual cancer if >0.5 ng/mL) and with histological findings of prostate biopsy sampling at 6-8 months (random or targeted at suspicious MR areas). RESULTS: Variations in volume during the follow-up were not associated with treatment outcome. MRI was suspicious for residual cancer in one patient at 1 month and in another two at 4 months; in all three patients (one with a PSA level of <0.5 ng/mL) targeted biopsies were positive for cancer. MRI was negative in seven patients; in six of these (one with a PSA level of >0.5 ng/mL) random biopsies were negative, and in one the random biopsies were positive for residual cancer. At 4 months there was a statistically significant difference (P = 0.015) between patients responsive to treatment and those with persistent disease, by combining negative MRI with a PSA level of <0.5 ng/mL; MRS data were suitable for analysis only in three patients with partial necrosis. CONCLUSION: Our preliminary data support the role of MRI in association with PSA levels as a useful and accurate tool in the follow-up of patients treated with HIFU for prostate cancer. However, considering the economic issue, it should not be used routinely and should be limited to detecting residual cancer (in patients with a PSA level of >0.5 ng/mL) with the main purpose of improving the detection rate of transrectal ultrasonography (TRUS)-guided prostate biopsy. MRS data had no additional value over MRI. Further evaluation is needed to compare the use of contrast media and other techniques (e.g. colour Doppler TRUS) in detecting residual or local recurrent cancer.
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S Cirillo, M Petracchini, P Della Monica, T Gallo, V Tartaglia, E Vestita, U Ferrando, D Regge (2008)  Value of endorectal MRI and MRS in patients with elevated prostate-specific antigen levels and previous negative biopsies to localize peripheral zone tumours.   Clin Radiol 63: 8. 871-879 Aug  
Abstract: AIM: To evaluate prospectively the role of endorectal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) in detecting peripheral zone tumour in patients with total prostate-specific antigen (PSA) values>or=4 ng/ml and one or more negative transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) biopsy rounds. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Fifty-four consecutive men (mean age 65.4+/-5.2 years, mean total PSA 10.8+/-7.5 ng/ml), underwent a combined MRI-MRS examination with endorectal coil. MRI included transverse, coronal, and sagittal T2-weighted and transverse T1-weighted fast spin-echo sequences. MRS data were acquired using a double spin-echo point resolved spectroscopy (PRESS) sequence. A 10-site scheme was adopted to evaluate the prostate peripheral zone. A peripheral prostatic site was classified as suspicious if low intensity signal was present on T2-weighted images and/or if the choline+creatine/citrate ratio was >0.86. Following MRI-MRS all patients were submitted to a standard 10-core biopsy scheme to which from one to three supplementary samples were added from suspicious MRI and/or MRS sites. In per-patient analysis findings were considered true-positive if biopsy positive patients were classified as suspicious, irrespectively of lesion site indication. RESULTS: Prostate cancer (PC) was detected in 17 of 54 patients (31.5%); median Gleason score was 6 (range 4-8). On a per-patient basis sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV), and accuracy were respectively 100, 64.9, 56.7, 100, and 75.9% for MRI; 82.2, 70.3, 57.7, 92.9, and 75.9% for MRS; and 100, 51.4, 48.6, 100, and 66.7% for combined MRI-MRS. In all the 17 PC patients, combined MRI-MRS correctly indicated the sites harbouring cancer, whereas both MRI and MRS gave erroneous indications in two patients. CONCLUSION: The results of the present study show that MRI alone might be able to select negative patients in whom further biopsies are unnecessary. The combination of MRI and MRS might be able to drive biopsies in suspicious sites and increase the cancer detection rate. Further studies are required to confirm these data.
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Neri, Laghi, Regge, Sacco, Gallo, Turini, Talini, Ferrari, Mellaro, Rengo, Marchi, Caramella, Bartolozzi (2008)  CT colonography: Project of High National Interest No. 2005062137 of the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR).   Radiol Med 113: 8. 1126-1134 Dec  
Abstract: PURPOSE: The aim of this paper is to describe the Web site of the Italian Project on CT Colonography (Research Project of High National Interest, PRIN No. 2005062137) and present the prototype of the online database. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The Web site was created with Microsoft Office Publisher 2003 software, which allows the realisation of multiple Web pages linked through a main menu located on the home page. The Web site contains a database of computed tomography (CT) colonography studies in the Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) standard, all acquired with multidetector-row CT according to the parameters defined by the European Society of Abdominal and Gastrointestinal Radiology (ESGAR). The cases present different bowel-cleansing and tagging methods, and each case has been anonymised and classified according to the Colonography Reporting and Data System (C-RADS). RESULTS: The Web site is available at http address www.ctcolonography.org and is composed of eight pages. Download times for a 294-Mbyte file were 33 min from a residential ADSL (6 Mbit/s) network, 200 s from a local university network (100 Mbit/s) and 2 h and 50 min from a remote academic site in the USA. The Web site received 256 accesses in the 22 days since it went online. CONCLUSIONS: The Web site is an immediate and up-to-date tool for publicising the activity of the research project and a valuable learning resource for CT colonography.
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Lorenzo Capussotti, Andrea Muratore, Filippo Baracchi, Bernard Lelong, Alessandro Ferrero, Daniele Regge, Jean Robert Delpero (2008)  Portal vein ligation as an efficient method of increasing the future liver remnant volume in the surgical treatment of colorectal metastases.   Arch Surg 143: 10. 978-82; discussion 982 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To compare the volumetric increase of segments 2 and 3, segment 4, and the caudate lobe after portal vein ligation (PVL) and portal vein embolization (PVE). The small size of the remnant liver and chemotherapy-induced liver injury increase the risk of postoperative hepatic insufficiency after major hepatic resection for colorectal liver metastases. Portal vein ligation has been suggested to be less effective than embolization in inducing hypertrophy of the remnant liver. Design, Setting, and PATIENTS: We retrospectively reviewed 48 patients with colorectal liver metastases who underwent PVL (n = 17) or PVE (n = 31) at the Istituto per la Ricerca e la Cura del Cancro or the Institut Paoli-Calmette from March 1, 2000, through August 31, 2006. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: To compare the volume increase of segments 2 and 3, segment 4, and of the caudate lobe in patients who have undergone PVL or PVE in preparation for a major hepatic resection. RESULTS: There were no deaths related to PVE or PVL. Portal vein ligation was associated with resection of synchronous colorectal cancer in 16 patients. Resection of a liver metastasis in the remnant liver was performed in 11 patients. The median estimated baseline volume of segments 2 and 3 was 17.7% in the PVL group and 17.5% in the PVE group (P = .72). After PVL or PVE, it increased to 26.9% and 24.7%, respectively (P = .95), for volumetric increases of 43.1% and 53.4%, respectively (P = .39). The volumetric increases of segment 4 and the caudate lobe were similar. CONCLUSION: Portal vein ligation is as effective as PVE in inducing hypertrophy of the remnant liver volume.
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Giovanni Carlo Anselmetti, Antonio Manca, Cinzia Ortega, Giovanni Grignani, Felicino Debernardi, Daniele Regge (2008)  Treatment of extraspinal painful bone metastases with percutaneous cementoplasty: a prospective study of 50 patients.   Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol 31: 6. 1165-1173 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of percutaneous cementoplasty (PC) with polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) in painful extravertebral lytic bone metastases not responding to conventional therapy. Fifty patients (25 females), mean age 64.7 +/- 11.2 years, underwent PC after giving informed consent. Procedures were performed under fluoroscopy (1/50) or combined fluoroscopy-CT (49/50) guidance in local anesthesia or under deep sedation in 7 patients with large metastases who underwent radiofrequency thermoablation (RFA) in the same session. Seventy lesions were treated (1-6 per patient; average, 1.4 +/- 0.9), arranging in size from 1 to 10 cm (average, 3.6 +/- 2.1 cm). Mean volume of PMMA per lesion was 5.9 +/- 3.2 ml (range, 1.5-15.0 ml). Pain was prospectively evaluated on an 11-point visual analog scale (VAS) before and after the procedure (follow-up, 15 to 36 months). Mean VAS score dropped from 9.1 +/- 1.2 (range: 6-10) to 2.1 +/- 2.5 (range: 0-9). Mean VAS difference was 7.0 +/- 2.3 (range, 1-10; p \ 0.0001, Wilcoxon signed rank test). Forty-seven of the 50 patients (94%) suspended narcotic drugs, in 22 (44%) pain was controlled with a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, in 25 (50%) analgesic therapy was suspended, and 13 of 50 (26%) had complete pain regression. In 3 of the 50 patients (6%) pain was not improved. No statistical difference between osteoplasty and osteoplasty plus RFA was found (p = 0.8338, Mann-Whitney test). No complications arose during the procedure. Two patients with metastases in the femoral diaphysis reported a fracture 1 month after treatment. PC is effective to obtain pain regression in painful bone metastases not responding to conventional analgesic therapy; bone consolidation cannot be obtained in the diaphysis of long weight-bearing bones.
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Cirillo, Petracchini, Scotti, Gallo, Macera, Bona, Ortega, Gabriele, Regge (2008)  Endorectal magnetic resonance imaging at 1.5 Tesla to assess local recurrence following radical prostatectomy using T2-weighted and contrast-enhanced imaging.   Eur Radiol Sep  
Abstract: To evaluate diagnostic performance of endorectal magnetic resonance (eMR) for diagnosing local recurrence of prostate cancer (PC) in patients with previous radical prostatectomy (RP) and to assess whether contrast-enhanced (CE)-eMR improved diagnostic accuracy in comparison to unenhanced study. Unenhanced eMR data of 72 male patients (mean of total PSA: 1.23 +/- 1.3 ng/ml) with previous RP were interpreted retrospectively and classified either as normal or suspicious for local recurrence. All eMR examinations were re-evaluated also on CE-eMR 4 months after the first reading. Images were acquired on a 1.5-T system. These data were compared to the standard of reference for local recurrence: prostatectomy bed biopsy results; choline positron emission tomography results; PSA reduction or increase after pelvic radiotherapy; PSA modification during active surveillance. Sensitivity, specificity, predictive positive value, negative predictive value and accuracy were 61.4%, 82.1%, 84.4%, 57.5% and 69.4% for unenhanced eMR and 84.1%, 89.3%, 92.5%, 78.1% and 86.1% for CE-eMR. A statistically significant difference was found between accuracy and sensitivity of the two evaluations (chi(2) = 5.33; p = 0.02 and chi(2) = 9.00; p = 0.0027). EMR had great accuracy for visualizing local recurrence of PC after RP. CE-eMR improved diagnostic performance in comparison with T2-weighted imaging alone.
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2007
 
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Filippo Montemurro, Laura Martincich, Ivana Sarotto, Ilaria Bertotto, Riccardo Ponzone, Lisa Cellini, Stefania Redana, Piero Sismondi, Massimo Aglietta, Daniele Regge (2007)  Relationship between DCE-MRI morphological and functional features and histopathological characteristics of breast cancer.   Eur Radiol 17: 6. 1490-1497 Jun  
Abstract: We studied whether dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) could identify histopathological characteristics of breast cancer. Seventy-five patients with breast cancer underwent DCE-MRI followed by core biopsy. DCE-MRI findings were evaluated following the scoring system published by Fischer in 1999. In this scoring system, five DCE-MRI features, three morphological (shape, margins, enhancement kinetic) and two functional (initial peak of signal intensity (SI) increase and behavior of signal intensity curve), are defined by 14 parameters. Each parameter is assigned points ranging from 0 to 1 or 0 to 2, with higher points for those that are more likely to be associated with malignancy. The sum of all the points defines the degree of suspicion of malignancy, with a score 0 representing the lowest and 8 the highest degree of suspicion. Associations between DCE-MRI features and tumor histopathological characteristics assessed on core biopsies (histological type, grading, estrogen and progesterone receptor status, Ki67 and HER2 status) were studied by contingency tables and logistic regression analysis. We found a significant inverse association between the Fischer's score and HER2-overexpression (odds ratio-OR 0.608, p = 0.02). Based on our results, we suggest that lesions with intermediate-low suspicious DCE-MRI parameters may represent a subset of tumor with poor histopathological characteristics.
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C Bracco, L Martincich, D Regge, M Becchio, D Persano, A Bert, G Rizzo (2007)  Visualization of quantitative breast DCE-MRI functional parametric maps by dedicated image processing.   Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc 2007: 55-58  
Abstract: DCE-MRI is a diagnostic method that can visualize neoangiogenic-induced vascular changes. Typically, the analysis of these data is time-consuming and the visualization of the quantitative information on tumor vasculature, derivable from DCE-MRI, is not easy and comfortable. In this study, we propose a method to accelerate computation and analysis of DCE-MRI data, while making easy to use the functional information obtained from model-based functional analysis.
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Giovanni Carlo Anselmetti, Giovanni Corrao, Patrizia Della Monica, Vincenzo Tartaglia, Antonio Manca, Haris Eminefendic, Filippo Russo, Irene Tosetti, Daniele Regge (2007)  Pain relief following percutaneous vertebroplasty: results of a series of 283 consecutive patients treated in a single institution.   Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol 30: 3. 441-447 May/Jun  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to assess if percutaneous vertebroplasty (PVP) could relieve back pain, reduce drug consumption, and improve the mobility of patients with metastases and vertebral compression fractures. From August 2002 to July 2004, 283 patients (216 females; mean age: 73.8 +/- 9.9 years) underwent PVP on 749 vertebrae. Pain was evaluated with the pain intensity numeric rating scale (PI-NRS) (0 = no pain; 10 = worst pain) before the procedure and at the end point in September 2004 (follow-up:1-24 months; median: 7 months). A reduction of at least two points of the PI-NRS score was considered clinically relevant. Two hundred four patients were available for evaluation at the end point. Overall results showed a reduction of the median pain score from 8 at baseline to 1 at the end point (p < 0.0001); a clinically relevant pain reduction was observed in 176/205 patients (86%); 89/147 patients (61%) gave up a brace support (p < 0.0001); and 117/190 patients (62%) gave up drug therapy. Results were similar in different subgroups stratified according to age, underlying pathology, number of fractured or treated vertebrae, and length of follow-up. This study adds evidence that PVP is effective in treating painful vertebral fractures. A significant reduction in drug assumption and significant mobility improvement can also be achieved.
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Alessandro Ferrero, Luca ViganĂ², Roberto Polastri, Andrea Muratore, Haris Eminefendic, Daniele Regge, Lorenzo Capussotti (2007)  Postoperative liver dysfunction and future remnant liver: where is the limit? Results of a prospective study.   World J Surg 31: 8. 1643-1651 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The future remnant liver (FRL) limit for safe major hepatectomy with low risk of postoperative liver failure has not yet been well defined. METHODS: Between April 2000 and September 2004, every patient scheduled for major hepatectomy in our institution underwent CT-volumetry of FRL. Patients with FRL <25% underwent portal vein embolization (PVE). Exclusion criteria were PVE, associated vascular resection and liver cirrhosis. The FRL was correlated with short-term results in patients with normal liver (group A) and those with impaired liver function secondary to neoadjuvant chemotherapy or cholestasis (bilirubin >2 mg/100 ml) (group B). Liver dysfunction was defined as both PT <50% and serum bilirubin level >5 mg/100 ml for three or more consecutive days. RESULTS: A total of 119 patients were analyzed, 72 in group A and 47 in group B. The FRL value was the only significant risk factor for postoperative liver dysfunction in the univariate and multivariate analysis (p = 0.009). The FRL did not correlate with postoperative mortality and morbidity. Bilirubin and prothrombin time (PT) on days 3 and 7 were significantly correlated to FRL in both groups. In group A, patients with postoperative liver dysfunction had a FRL<30% (3 versus 0; p = 0.005). According to receiving operator characteristic (ROC) curve analysis, a FRL value of 26.5% predicted postoperative liver dysfunction with 66.7% sensitivity, 97.1% specificity, 50% positive predictive value (PPV), and 98.5% negative predictive value (NPV). In group B, patients with postoperative liver dysfunction had a FRL <35% (4 versus 0; p = 0.027). According to ROC curve analysis, a FRL value of 31.05% predicted postoperative liver dysfunction with 75% sensitivity, 79.1% specificity, 25% PPV, and 97.1% NPV. CONCLUSIONS: Hepatectomy can be considered safe when FRL is >26.5% in patients with healthy liver and >31% in patients with impaired liver function.
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2006
 
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T M Gallo, G Galatola, C Laudi, D Regge (2006)  CT colonography: screening in individuals at high risk for colorectal cancer.   Abdom Imaging 31: 3. 297-301 May/Jun  
Abstract: The use of computed tomographic colonography (CTC) as a screening test for colorectal cancer is being advocated with growing enthusiasm by physicians and the public as stronger evidence of its validity and limited invasiveness emerges from the literature. Because the approach to surveillance of colorectal cancer depends on an individual's degree of risk category, which depends on familial and personal histories, it seems logical that the diagnostic performance and cost efficacy of screening CTC may differ according to the characteristics of the target population. Although CTC seems a valid option in low- to average-risk populations, pending a careful assessment of its cost and estimates of its cost efficacy, there are some important issues that should be addressed when it comes to considering its use in high-risk patients. The expected larger number of induced colonoscopies and higher false-positive rates are likely to have a great influence on CTC costs, but if its implementation causes a dramatic increase in the number of patients willing to undergo screening, thanks to its acceptability, then the cost efficacy ratio may ultimately become competitive with all other screening strategies for colorectal cancer. We strongly feel that large and well-conducted trials are needed to clarify the role of CTC in screening patients at increased risk of developing colorectal cancer.
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D Regge, D Campanella, G C Anselmetti, S Cirillo, T M Gallo, A Muratore, L Capussotti, G Galatola, I Floriani, M Aglietta (2006)  Diagnostic accuracy of portal-phase CT and MRI with mangafodipir trisodium in detecting liver metastases from colorectal carcinoma.   Clin Radiol 61: 4. 338-347 Apr  
Abstract: AIM: To compare the diagnostic accuracy of single section spiral computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with tissue-specific contrast agent mangafodipir trisodium (MnDPDP) in the detection of colorectal liver metastases. MATERIAL AND METHODS: One hundred and twenty-five consecutive patients undergoing surgery for primary and/or metastatic disease were evaluated using CT (5 mm collimation and reconstruction interval, pitch 2), two-dimensional fast spoiled gradient echo (2D FSPGR) T1 and single shot fast-spin echo (SSFSE) T2 weighted breath-hold MRI sequences, performed before and after intravenous administration of MnDPDP. The reference standards were intraoperative ultrasound and histology. RESULTS: The per-patient accuracy of CT was 72.8 versus 78.4% for unenhanced MRI (p = 0.071) and 82.4% for MnDPDP-enhanced MRI (p = 0.005). MnDPDP-enhanced MRI appeared to be more accurate than unenhanced MRI but this was not significant (p = 0.059). The sensitivity of CT was 48.4% versus 58.1% for unenhanced MRI (p = 0.083) and 66.1% for MnDPDP-enhanced MRI (p = 0.004). The difference in specificity between procedures was not significant. The per-lesion sensitivity was 71.7, 74.9 and 82.7% for CT, unenhanced MRI, and MnDPDP-enhanced MRI, respectively; the positive predictive value of the procedures was respectively 84.0, 96.0 and 95.8%. MnDPDP-enhanced MRI provided a high level diagnostic confidence in 92.5% of the cases versus 82.5% for both unenhanced MRI and CT. The kappa value for inter-observer variability was >0.75 for all procedures. CONCLUSIONS: The diagnostic accuracy and sensitivity of MnDPDP-enhanced MRI is significantly higher than single section spiral CT in the detection of colorectal cancer liver metastases; no significant difference in diagnostic accuracy was observed between unenhanced MRI and MnDPDP-enhanced MRI.
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David Burling, Steve Halligan, Douglas G Altman, Wendy Atkin, Clive Bartram, Helen Fenlon, Andrea Laghi, Jaap Stoker, Stuart Taylor, Roger Frost, Guido Dessey, Melinda De Villiers, Jasper Florie, Shane Foley, Lesley Honeyfield, Riccardo Iannaccone, Teresa Gallo, Clive Kay, Philippe Lefere, Andrew Lowe, Filipo Mangiapane, Jesse Marrannes, Emmanuele Neri, Giulia Nieddu, David Nicholson, Alan O'Hare, Sante Ori, Benedetta Politi, Martin Poulus, Daniele Regge, Lisa Renaut, Velauthan Rudralingham, Saverio Signoretta, Paola Vagli, Victor Van der Hulst, Jane Williams-Butt (2006)  CT colonography interpretation times: effect of reader experience, fatigue, and scan findings in a multi-centre setting.   Eur Radiol 16: 8. 1745-1749 Aug  
Abstract: Our purpose was to assess the effect of reader experience, fatigue, and scan findings on interpretation time for CT colonography. Nine radiologists (experienced in CT colonography); nine radiologists and ten technicians (both groups trained using 50 validated examinations) read 40 cases (50% abnormal) under controlled conditions. Individual interpretation times for each case were recorded, and differences between groups determined. Multi-level linear regression was used to investigate effect of scan category (normal or abnormal) and observer fatigue on interpretation times. Experienced radiologists (mean time 10.9 min, SD 5.2) reported significantly faster than less experienced radiologists and technicians; odds ratios of reporting times 1.4 (CI 1.1, 1.8) and 1.6 (1.3, 2.0), respectively (P<or=0.001). Experienced and less-experienced radiologists took longer to report abnormal cases; ratio 1.2 (CI 1.1,1.4, P<0.001) and 1.2 (1.0, 1.3, P=0.03), respectively. All groups took 70% as long to report the final five cases as they did with an initial five; ratio 0.7 (CI 0.6 to 0.8), P<0.001. For technicians only, accuracy increased with longer reporting times (P=0.04). Experienced radiologists report faster than do less-experienced observers and proportionally spend less time interpreting normal cases. Technicians who report more slowly are more accurate. All groups reported faster as the study period progressed.
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David Burling, Steve Halligan, Douglas G Altman, Wendy Atkin, Clive Bartram, Helen Fenlon, Andrea Laghi, Jaap Stoker, Stuart Taylor, Roger Frost, Guido Dessey, Melinda De Villiers, Jasper Florie, Shane Foley, Lesley Honeyfield, Riccardo Iannaccone, Teresa Gallo, Clive Kay, Philippe Lefere, Andrew Lowe, Filipo Mangiapane, Jesse Marrannes, Emmanuele Neri, Giulia Nieddu, David Nicholson, Alan O'Hare, Sante Ori, Benedetta Politi, Martin Poulus, Daniele Regge, Lisa Renaut, Velauthan Rudralingham, Saverio Signoretta, Paola Vagli, Victor Van der Hulst, Jane Williams-Butt (2006)  Polyp measurement and size categorisation by CT colonography: effect of observer experience in a multi-centre setting.   Eur Radiol 16: 8. 1737-1744 Aug  
Abstract: The extent measurement error on CT colonography influences polyp categorisation according to established management guidelines is studied using twenty-eight observers of varying experience to classify polyps seen at CT colonography as either 'medium' (maximal diameter 6-9 mm) or 'large' (maximal diameter 10 mm or larger). Comparison was then made with the reference diameter obtained in each patient via colonoscopy. The Bland-Altman method was used to assess agreement between observer measurements and colonoscopy, and differences in measurement and categorisation was assessed using Kruskal-Wallis and Chi-squared test statistics respectively. Observer measurements on average underestimated the diameter of polyps when compared to the reference value, by approximately 2-3 mm, irrespective of observer experience. Ninety-five percent limits of agreement were relatively wide for all observer groups, and had sufficient span to encompass different size categories for polyps. There were 167 polyp observations and 135 (81%) were correctly categorised. Of the 32 observations that were miscategorised, 5 (16%) were overestimations and 27 (84%) were underestimations (i.e. large polyps misclassified as medium). Caution should be exercised for polyps whose colonographic diameter is below but close to the 1-cm boundary threshold in order to avoid potential miscategorisation of advanced adenomas.
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2005
 
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Filippo Montemurro, Laura Martincich, Giovanni De Rosa, Stefano Cirillo, Vincenzo Marra, Nicoletta Biglia, Marco Gatti, Piero Sismondi, Massimo Aglietta, Daniele Regge (2005)  Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI and sonography in patients receiving primary chemotherapy for breast cancer.   Eur Radiol 15: 6. 1224-1233 Jun  
Abstract: We compared dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) and sonography (US) for monitoring tumour size in 21 patients with breast cancer undergoing primary chemotherapy (PCT) followed by surgery. The correlation between DCE-MRI and US measurements of tumour size, defined as the product of the two major diameters, was 0.555 (P=0.009), 0.782 (P<0.001), and 0.793 (P<0.001) at baseline, and after two and four cycles of PCT, respectively. The median tumour size was significantly larger when measured by DCE-MRI than by US at baseline (1472 vs 900 mm(2), P<0.001) and after two cycles of PCT (600 vs 400 mm(2), P=0.009). After PCT, the median tumour size measured by the two techniques was similar (256 vs 289 mm(2) for DCE-MRI and US, respectively, P=0.859). The correlation with the histopathological major tumour diameter was 0.824 (P<0.001) and 0.705 (P<0.001) for post-treatment DCE-MRI and US, respectively. Measurements of the final major tumour diameter by DCE-MRI tended to be more precise, including cases achieving a pathological complete response. Randomized trials are warranted to establish the clinical impact of the initial discrepancy in tumour size estimates between DCE-MRI and US, and the trend towards a better definition of the final tumour size provided by DCE-MRI in this clinical setting.
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Cirillo, Tosetti, Gaita, Bianchi, Gandini, Regge (2005)  Magnetic Resonance angiography of the pulmonary veins before and after radiofrequency ablation for atrial fibrillation.   Radiol Med 109: 5-6. 488-499 May/June  
Abstract: PURPOSE: To study the usefulness of magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) in imaging of the pulmonary veins (PV) before and after radiofrequency ablation procedures in patients with atrial fibrillation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between July 2002 and April 2003, 50 patients with atrial fibrillation underwent MRA prior to ablation; 18 patients also underwent post-procedure MRA. Images were acquired with 3D-spoiled gradient echo sequences after intravenous administration of the paramagnetic contrast medium gadopentetate dimeglumine; an automatic triggering device was used to start the angiographic sequence (Smartprep, General Electric Medical Systems). Postprocessing was performed with maximum intensity projection (MIP) and virtual endoscopy (VE) software (Navigator, GEMS). RESULTS: The venoatrial junction was visualised with MRA VE in 49 of 50 patients (98.0%). Twenty-seven patients out of 49 (55.1%) had two PV ostia on both sides, 13 (26.5%) had two right ostia and a single common left ostium, 5 (10.2%) had supernumerary PV and 4 (8.2%) had both a supernumerary right PV and a single common left ostium. Flythrough navigation showed the number and spatial arrangement of second-order PV branches in 48 out of 49 patients (98.0%). In postablation examinations, mild stenosis was detected with MIP and VE in 17 out of 83 PV examined (20.5%). CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms the clinical value of magnetic resonance imaging for visualising PV ostia in patients undergoing radiofrequency ablation for atrial fibrillation. Before the ablation procedure, MRA allows an accurate evaluation of PV number, shape and size; after the procedure, MRA is useful in screening for post-ablation stenosis and describing the location and severity of stenosis when present.
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D Regge, T M Gallo, G Nieddu, G Galatola, M Fracchia, E Neri, P Vagli, C Bartolozzi (2005)  Ileocecal valve imaging on computed tomographic colonography.   Abdom Imaging 30: 1. 20-25 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The aim of our study was to describe the visualization, normal anatomy, and variations of the ileocecal valve with computed tomographic (CT) colonography to provide information about its optimal imaging. METHODS: We analyzed data in two- and three-dimensional rendering mode in 71 consecutive patients who underwent routine CT colonoscopy followed by conventional colonoscopy for confirmation of the radiologic findings. RESULTS: Complete visualization of the ileocecal valve was better achieved in the supine than in the prone position (82% vs. 62%, respectively); the ileocecal valve appeared in 64% of cases in the supine position when it was invisible in prone position (p < 0.0001). Partial visualization of the ileocecal valve was possible in 94% of cases. The ileocecal valve was of labial type in 76%, papillary type in 21%, and lipomatous in 3% of cases. The orifice was identified in 53% of ileocecal valves; in two cases of cecal carcinoma, the normal ileocecal valve morphology was grossly disrupted. CONCLUSION: The ileocecal valve was at least partly visualized by CT colonoscopy in 94% of cases, more frequently in the supine position. Its most common normal morphology is the labial type. The absence of orifice visualization alone is not a specific sign for neoplasia, but its presence helps distinguish physiologic bulging from neoplasia.
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A Magnino, M Gatti, P Massucco, E Sperti, R Faggiuolo, D Regge, L Capussotti, P Gabriele, M Aglietta (2005)  Phase II trial of primary radiation therapy and concurrent chemotherapy for patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer.   Oncology 68: 4-6. 493-499 07  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Primary chemoradiotherapy for locally advanced pancreatic cancer (LAPC) may improve local control, curative resection rate and long-term survival. We performed a phase II study to evaluate toxicity and activity of primary radiation therapy and concurrent chemotherapy with gemcitabine (GEM) twice weekly in patients (pts) with LAPC. METHODS: From 6/1999 to 6/2003, 23 LAPC pts received GEM 100 mg/m2 twice weekly in the first 15 pts and 50 mg/m2 in the last 8 pts, concurrently with radiotherapy (1.8 Gy/day for a total dose of 45 Gy). RESULTS: The treatment was completed in 19/23 pts. Toxicities: G3-4 hematological toxicity occurred in 35 and 4% respectively; G3 nausea and vomiting and gastrointestinal toxicity in 30%. Clinical benefit was found in 10/18 pts (55%). Overall response: partial response rate 4/18 (22%); stable disease 13/18 (72%); progressive disease 1/18 (6%). Six pts underwent pancreaticoduodenectomy with extended lymphadenectomy (5/6 pts pT3, 1/6 pts microscopic cancer foci, 1/6 N+, 5/6 negative retroperitoneal margin). MEDIAN SURVIVAL: 14 months for the entire group, 12 months for unresected pts, 20 months for resected pts. CONCLUSIONS: The treatment with GEM twice weekly at 50 mg/m2 associated with radiotherapy (45 Gy) is feasible and permits to obtain clinical benefit in a good percentage of pts. Objective response, median survival, and local and systemic control are similar to other studies and need further improvement.
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Mauro Magnano, Guido Bongioannini, Stefano Cirillo, Daniele Regge, Laura Martinich, Giovanni Canale, Walter Lerda, Maurizio Bona Galvagno, Fausto Taranto (2005)  Virtual endoscopy of laryngeal carcinoma: is it useful?   Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 132: 5. 776-782 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To compare virtual endoscopy (VE) with flexible endoscopy in patients with cancer of the larynx. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTINGS: This prospective study includes 24 patients with proven cancer of the larynx. Patients underwent spiral CT according to our standard protocol for upper airway imaging. This same set of axial scans was transferred to a dedicated workstation to obtain VE images. Results of VE were compared with the findings of flexible endoscopy. RESULTS: Quality of the examination was good in 96% of the patients. VE identified all exophytic lesions. Two small flat lesions could be observed as slightly enhanced plaques only on the axial scans. Subglottic extension was correctly demonstrated in all cases by associating VE to the axial scans. CONCLUSION: VE shows high sensitivity in the identification of exophytic lesions of the larynx and can establish relationships between cancer and nearby structures. It can be performed in the presence of severe stenosis and does not require sedation and additional scanning. On the other hand, VE show limits in the identification of flat lesions and does not allow biopsies and functional imaging to be performed. SIGNIFICANCE: VE is a useful tool for staging and presurgery treatment of cancer of the larynx.
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Lorenzo Capussotti, Andrea Muratore, Alessandro Ferrero, Giovanni Carlo Anselmetti, Andrea Corgnier, Daniele Regge (2005)  Extension of right portal vein embolization to segment IV portal branches.   Arch Surg 140: 11. 1100-1103 Nov  
Abstract: HYPOTHESIS: Routine embolization of segment IV, combined with right portal vein embolization (PVE), has been suggested in patients who are candidates for right trisegmentectomy to induce higher and faster hypertrophy of segments II-III. Our objective was to compare hypertrophy of segments II-III induced by PVE with and without extension to segment IV in patients undergoing major hepatectomy. METHODS: Twenty-six consecutive patients were prospectively evaluated; the future remnant liver volume was calculated using the portal phase of spiral computed tomographic scans before and 3 to 4 weeks after right PVE (group R, n = 13), which was extended to segment IV branches in 13 patients (group L). RESULTS: Twenty patients (76.9%) underwent the scheduled hepatic resection. Of the 6 patients who did not undergo the planned operation, 5 showed disease progression; in 1 patient (group L), there was an insufficient increase of the future remnant liver volume due to the presence of embolizing material in the left lobe. The mean +/- SD time between PVE and volume measurements was 31.8 +/- 9.3 days. The overall mean +/- SD future remnant liver volume increase was 53.1% +/- 24.8%; the increase for segment IV was significantly higher in group R than group L. The mean +/- SD post-PVE volumes of segments II-III and the rate of volume increase were similar in the 2 groups: group R, 348.4 +/- 83.1 cm3 and 67.8% +/- 30.8%, respectively, vs group L, 391.2 +/- 78.05 cm3 and 56.1% +/- 35.1%, respectively (P = .20 and P = .40). CONCLUSION: Extension of embolization to segment IV portal branches should not be routinely used because a similar volume increase of segments II-III can be simply achieved by right PVE.
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Giovanni Carlo Anselmetti, Andrea Corgnier, Felicino Debernardi, Daniele Regge (2005)  Treatment of painful compression vertebral fractures with vertebroplasty: results and complications.   Radiol Med 110: 3. 262-272 Sep  
Abstract: AIM: The aim of this paper is to assess the effectiveness and safety of percutaneous vertebroplasty in patients with focal pain caused by compression vertebral body fractures. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Over an eleven-month period 49 patients underwent percutaneous vertebroplasty, of which seven were retreated, for a total of 56 operations on 108 vertebrae. The patients were affected by osteoporotic compression fractures (n=28) or by benign and malignant infiltrative processes (n=21). All of the patients were examined at discharge and later at one week, and one, three, six and nine months after surgery to ascertain the development of the pain and possible changes in the quality of life. The mean length of follow-up was 3.8 months. RESULTS: One week after treatment all patients reported complete disappearance or significant alleviation of the pain. In 8 out of 49 patients (16.3%) there was a reoccurrence of pain; 7 of these patients underwent further treatment at another level with immediate pain relief. After surgery only three patients (6.1%) continued to take non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), whereas prior to surgery all patients were taking pain medication. We also observed an important benefit in the quality of life, in that after treatment all patients reported an improvement in functional abilities, and only three (6.1%) still had to wear a back brace (against 15 in the preoperative period). We only had one serious complication (1.7%) which involved the formation of a subcutaneous paravertebral haematoma, which was resolved in about a week. Eight patients (16.3%) developed transient pain at the site of the puncture or radiculopathy in the days following the operation. In 63 out of 108 of the treated vertebrae (58) there were small asymptomatic leakages of cement outside the vertebral body and in two asymptomatic patients (3.5%) the chest radiograph revealed a small pulmonary embolism of cement. DISCUSSION: Our experience confirms the effectiveness of vertebroplasty in the treatment of pain caused by vertebral fractures. If the indications are respected the improvement of symptoms is often immediate, such as the return of mobility, and patient satisfaction with surgery is higher. The use of appropriate guiding systems limits the number of complications.
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Antonio M Fea, Federica Annetta, Stefano Cirillo, Delia Campanella, Massimo De Giuseppe, Daniele Regge, Federico M Grignolo (2005)  Magnetic resonance imaging and Orbscan assessment of the anterior chamber.   J Cataract Refract Surg 31: 9. 1713-1718 Sep  
Abstract: PURPOSE: To evaluate the correlation between white-to-white (WTW) distance as assessed by Orbscan II (Bausch & Lomb) and high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sulcus-sulcus (S-S) measures and to analyze the correlation between age and anterior chamber parameters. SETTING: Istituto per la Ricerca e la Cura del Cancro, Candiolo, Torino, Italy. METHODS: Eighty-eight patients had MRI with a 1.5 Tesla imager (GE Medical Systems) using a 3-inch circular coil. T1 weighted fast spin-echo scans were performed on the axial plane. Orbscan II was also used to measure WTW distance, K, anterior chamber depth (ACD), and lens curvature. One eye was randomly selected for analysis. Measures were compared using Spearman correlation, paired Student t test, and analysis of variance (ANOVA; post hoc: Scheffé). Intersession variability was performed in 10 patients. Ten MRI images were randomly selected and measured by 2 operators in a masked fashion (intrasession variability). RESULTS: Intersession and intrasession correlation was good for MRI (r = 0.89 and r = 0.92, respectively), and intersession was good for Orbscan (r = 0.91). When comparing Orbscan II and MRI results, the ACD was well correlated and not significantly different, whereas the S-S and the WTW measures were not correlated and significantly different. Lens thickness and lens diameter were directly correlated with age; S-S, WTW, lens curvature, and ACD were inversely correlated with age. CONCLUSIONS: Current methods of measuring the WTW were poorly correlated with anatomical measures. The S-S diameter and other anterior chamber structures significantly change with age, which could give rise to potential problems with posterior chamber phakic intraocular lens sizing position.
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2004
 
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Laura Martincich, Filippo Montemurro, Giovanni De Rosa, Vincenzo Marra, Riccardo Ponzone, Stefano Cirillo, Marco Gatti, Nicoletta Biglia, Ivana Sarotto, Piero Sismondi, Daniele Regge, Massimo Aglietta (2004)  Monitoring response to primary chemotherapy in breast cancer using dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging.   Breast Cancer Res Treat 83: 1. 67-76 Jan  
Abstract: PURPOSE. Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) allows analysis of both tumor volume and contrast enhancement pattern using a single tool. We sought to investigate whether DCE-MRI could be used to predict histological response in patients undergoing primary chemotherapy (PCT) for breast cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS. Thirty patients with breast cancer, clinical diameter > 3 cm or stage III A/B, received anthracycline and taxane based PCT. DCE-MRI was performed at the baseline, after two cycles and after four cycles of PCT, before surgery. Histological response was assessed using a five-point scheme. Grade 4 (small cluster of dispersed residual cancer cells) and grade 5 (no residual viable cancer cell) were defined as a major histopathological response (MHR). RESULTS. Univariate analysis showed that a > 65% reduction in the tumor volume and a reduction in the early enhancement ratio (ECU) after two cycles of PCT were associated with a MHR. Multivariate analysis revealed that tumor volume reduction after two cycles of PCT was independently associated with a MHR (odds ratio [OR] 39.968, 95% confidence interval [CI] 3.438-464.962, p < 0.01). ECU reduction was still associated with a MHR (OR 2.50, 95% CI 0.263-23.775), but it did not retain statistical significance (p = 0.42). Combining tumor volume and ECU reduction after two cycles of PCT yielded a 93% diagnostic accuracy in identifying tumors achieving a pathological complete response (pCR) (histopathological grade 5). CONCLUSIONS. DCE-MRI allows prediction of the effect of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer. Although in our study tumor volume reduction after two cycles had the strongest predictive value, DCE-MRI has the potential to provide functional parameters that could be integrated to optimize neoadjuvant chemotherapy strategies.
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Matthew P Goetz, Matthew R Callstrom, J William Charboneau, Michael A Farrell, Timothy P Maus, Timothy J Welch, Gilbert Y Wong, Jeff A Sloan, Paul J Novotny, Ivy A Petersen, Robert A Beres, Daniele Regge, Rodolfo Capanna, Mark B Saker, Dietrich H W Grönemeyer, Athour Gevargez, Kamran Ahrar, Michael A Choti, Thierry J de Baere, Joseph Rubin (2004)  Percutaneous image-guided radiofrequency ablation of painful metastases involving bone: a multicenter study.   J Clin Oncol 22: 2. 300-306 Jan  
Abstract: PURPOSE: Few options are available for pain relief in patients with bone metastases who fail standard treatments. We sought to determine the benefit of radiofrequency ablation (RFA) in providing pain relief for patients with refractory pain secondary to metastases involving bone. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Thirty-one US and 12 European patients with painful osteolytic metastases involving bone were treated with image-guided RFA using a multitip needle. Treated patients had > or = 4/10 pain and had either failed or were poor candidates for standard treatments such as radiation or opioid analgesics. Using the Brief Pain Inventory-Short Form, worst pain intensity was the primary end point, with a 2-unit drop considered clinically significant. RESULTS: Forty-three patients were treated (median follow-up, 16 weeks). Before RFA, the mean score for worst pain was 7.9 (range, 4/10 to 10/10). Four, 12, and 24 weeks following treatment, worst pain decreased to 4.5 (P <.0001), 3.0 (P <.0001), and 1.4 (P =.0005), respectively. Ninety-five percent (41 of 43 patients) experienced a decrease in pain that was considered clinically significant. Opioid usage significantly decreased at weeks 8 and 12. Adverse events were seen in 3 patients and included (1) a second-degree skin burn at the grounding pad site, (2) transient bowel and bladder incontinence following treatment of a metastasis involving the sacrum, and (3) a fracture of the acetabulum following RFA of an acetabular lesion. CONCLUSION: RFA of painful osteolytic metastases provides significant pain relief for cancer patients who have failed standard treatments.
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F Montemurro, F Russo, L Martincich, S Cirillo, M Gatti, M Aglietta, D Regge (2004)  Dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging in monitoring bone metastases in breast cancer patients receiving bisphosphonates and endocrine therapy.   Acta Radiol 45: 1. 71-74 Feb  
Abstract: PURPOSE: To study the role of dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) in monitoring the response of bone metastases to endocrine therapy combined with bisphosphonates in patients with breast cancer. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Ten breast cancer patients with bone metastases who were to receive endocrine therapy and bisphosphonates were investigated prospectively by DCE-MRI. We chose a reference lesion for each patient who was studied at baseline, within 3 weeks from the second administration of bisphosphonates, and after 4 and 8 months from the initiation of medical treatment. Time/intensity curves, representing temporal changes of signal intensity in areas of interest in the context of the target lesions (ROI), were obtained for each DCE-MRI. RESULTS: Changes in the shape of the T/I curves suggesting tumor regression were seen shortly after the initiation of medical treatment in the three patients who had the most durable responses. CONCLUSION: DCE-MRI has the potential to detect early changes related to medical treatment in bone metastases from breast cancer. If confirmed in larger series, these data identify DCE-MRI as a diagnostic tool for evaluating new bone targeting antineoplastic agents.
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Stefano Debernardi, Laura Martincich, Davide Lazzaro, Simone Comelli, Alberto Maria Raso, Daniele Regge (2004)  CT angiography in the assessment of carotid atherosclerotic disease: results of more than two years' experience.   Radiol Med 108: 1-2. 116-127 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: PURPOSE: To assess the role of CT Angiography (CTA) in patients with carotid atherosclerotic disease as compared to echo-colour Doppler (CDUS) ultrasound of the supra-aortic trunks (SAT) and surgery. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighty-two patients with suspected carotid atherosclerotic disease were submitted to CDUS and CTA of the supra-aortic trunks. Agreement between CDUS and CTA was first evaluated with regard to the following parameters: degree of stenosis according to NASCET criteria, plaque morphology, presence of ulcerations, tandem lesions and vessel abnormalities. Secondly, data provided by the two methodologies were compared with the surgical specimens (35 patients); in 12 cases, the stenosis was measured on the cast of the carotid plaque made of for biologic use silicone. RESULTS: The correlation between CDUS and CTA in evaluating the degree of stenosis was 75.6%; poor agreement was found for mild (61.1%) and severe (69.1%) stenoses; agreement in the evaluation of vessel abnormalities, plaque morphology and ulcerations was 81.7%, 89.0% and 96.3%, respectively. CTA demonstrated 11 tandem lesions not detected CDUS. Compared to surgery, CTA correctly classified the degree of stenosis according to NASCET criteria in 31/35 cases (88.6%) - as opposed to 29/35 by CDUS (82.9%) - and never overestimated the stenosis. CTA proved superior to CDUS in detecting plaque ulcerations (75% vs 25% sensitivity) and vessel abnormalities (100% vs 44.4% sensitivity). CONCLUSIONS: CTA is recommended as a second-level examination in patients with carotid atherosclerotic steno-obstructive disease who are surgical candidates.
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S Cirillo, R Bonamini, F Gaita, Irene Tosetti, M De Giuseppe, M Longo, F Bianchi, L Vivalda, D Regge (2004)  Magnetic resonance angiography virtual endoscopy in the assessment of pulmonary veins before radiofrequency ablation procedures for atrial fibrillation.   Eur Radiol 14: 11. 2053-2060 Nov  
Abstract: Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) is a safe and non-invasive imaging method that can readily depict the pulmonary veins (PV), whose imaging has acquired momentum with the advent of new techniques for radiofrequency ablation of atrial fibrillation (AF). We evaluated whether virtual endoscopy from 3D MRA images (MRA-VE) is feasible in studying the morphology of PV. Fifty patients with AF underwent pre-ablative MRA (1.5 T). Images were acquired with axial T-2 weighted and 3D-SPGR sequences after intravenous administration of Gd-DTPA and automatic triggering. Postprocessing was performed by an experienced radiologist with maximum intensity projection (MIP) and virtual endoscopy software (Navigator, GEMS). The venoatrial junction was visualized with MRA-VE in 49 of 50 patients (98.0%). Twenty-seven patients (55.1%) had two ostia on both sides, 13 patients (26.5%) had two ostia on the right and a single common ostium on the left, 5 patients (10.2%) had accessory PV and 4 patients (8.2%) had both an accessory right PV and a single common ostium on the left. Flythrough navigation showed the number and spatial disposition of second-order PV branches in 48 out of 49 patients (98.0%). MRA-VE is an excellent tool for at-a-glance visualization of ostia morphology, navigation of second-generation PV branches and easy endoluminal assessment of left atrial structures in pre-ablative imaging.
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Pietro Gabriele, Giuseppe Malinverni, Gian Luca Moroni, Marco Gatti, Daniele Regge, Annibale Versari, Desiderio Serafini, Alessandro Fraternali, Diana Salvo (2004)  The impact of 18F-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography on tumor staging, treatment strategy and treatment planning for radiotherapy in a department of radiation oncology.   Tumori 90: 6. 579-585 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: AIMS AND BACKGROUND: The study analyzed the potential contribution of positron emission tomography (PET) in patient selection for radiotherapy and in radiation therapy planning. METHODS: Eighty-seven patients with a histological cancer diagnosis were accrued for the study from December 2000 to December 2001. Demographic characteristics included a median age of 54 years and male/female ratio of 51/36. All patients staged by conventional workup who were candidates for radiotherapy had PET imaging and were allocated to a conventional "pre/post-PET stage". The treatment protocol and the shape and/or size of the portals was directly related to PET results. We examined 26 lung cancers, 15 gastrointestinal tumors, 22 genitourinary cancers and 24 hematologic malignancies. RESULTS: In the lung cancer group, the stage was modified in 10/26 patients (38.5%) by PET, with a change in management in 13 (50%) and a change in radiotherapy planning in 6 (23.1%). In the hematological group, stage was modified by PET in 8/24 cases (33.3%), with a change in treatment strategy in 9 (37.5%) and a change in radiotherapy planning in 3 (12.5%). In the gastrointestinal group, the stage was modified by PET in 2/15 cases (13.4%), with a change inn treatment strategy in 4 (26.7%) and a change in the decision for radiotherapy in 8 (no radiotherapy in 53.3%). In the mixed group (genitourinary, breast and other), the stage was modified by PET in 6/22 cases (27.3%), with a change in treatment strategy in 11 (50%) and a very low rate of change in radiotherapy planning. CONCLUSIONS: PET contributed to a modification of stage in 26/87 patients (30%), to a changing in treatment strategy in 37/87 (42.5%), and to a substantial change of the shape and/or size of radiotherapy portals in 13/43 (30%) who underwent radiotherapy.
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2003
 
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Laura Martincich, Filippo Montemurro, Stefano Cirillo, Vincenzo Marra, Giovanni De Rosa, Riccardo Ponzone, Massimo Aglietta, Daniele Regge (2003)  Role of Magnetic Resonance Imaging in the prediction of tumor response in patients with locally advanced breast cancer receiving neoadjuvant chemo-therapy.   Radiol Med 106: 1-2. 51-58 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: PURPOSE: To evaluate if dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance can predict the tumoural response in patients with breast cancer undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-six patients with biopsy-proven locally advanced breast cancer underwent taxane-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by radical surgery. MRI evaluations were carried out at baseline, after two of the four planned cycles of chemotherapy, and before surgical treatment. MR images, obtained with 1.5 T scanner and using dedicated surface multichannel coil (GEMS), were acquired by 3D SPGR sequences on the coronal plane before and after intravenous administration of gadolinium chelate by an automatic injector. The percent reduction of the early contrast uptake between the baseline and the second MRI was then calculated for every lesion and correlated with the outcome of interest (pCR). RESULTS: At baseline, we identified 26 lesions and two patterns of MRI enhancement: homogeneous (group 1, 14 patients) and peripheral ring-like (group 2, 12 patients). At surgery, pathological complete response was observed in 4 patients (2 patients group 1, 2 patients group 2). In group 1, the 2 cases of pCR showed a gs;70% reduction in the early contrast uptake between baseline examination and after two cycles of chemotherapy, whereas values <70% were seen in 12 cases of partial response (p=0.02). In group 2, the 2 cases of pCR showed a gs; 40% reduction in the early contrast uptake whereas all of the 10 cases of partial response had <40% reduction (p=0.02). CONCLUSIONS: In our series, the percent reduction in the early contrast uptake after two cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy was predictive of the achievement of a pathological complete response. However, we identified two distinct morphologic patterns associated with different cut-offs in the predictive value of the early contrast uptake reduction between baseline and intermediate examination.
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Teresa M Gallo, Giovanni Galatola, Mario Fracchia, Giuseppina Defazio, Francesca De Bei, Angelo Pera, Daniele Regge (2003)  Computed tomography colonography in routine clinical practice.   Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol 15: 12. 1323-1331 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To describe the experience of a radiology unit in using open access computed tomography (CT) colonography instead of double-contrast barium enema in patients who refused or had an incomplete first-attempt colonoscopy. METHODS: All consecutive patients who underwent CT colonography from December 1998 to August 2001 were recalled and evaluated. Patients in whom CT colonography showed intraluminal growths were sent for colonoscopy, performed using deep sedation if the first attempt failed. RESULTS: A total of 463 consecutive CT colonography examinations were performed: 304 patients were re-traceable and were evaluated. In 85 cases CT colonography reported the presence of intraluminal growth. Colonoscopy confirmed the presence of 74 of the 94 polyps, and of 43 of the 48 cancers found at CT colonography. Colonoscopy also diagnosed an additional two cancers in two patients with CT colonography findings of inflammatory changes, and an additional 26 polyps in 16 patients. On a per-lesion basis, the positive predictive value of CT colonography was 73%, 80% and 87% for polyps </= 5 mm, 6-9 mm and >/= 10 mm, respectively, and was 90% for cancer. On a per-patient basis, the positive predictive value was 60%, 72% and 89% for lesions </= 5 mm, 6-9 mm and >/= 10 mm, respectively, and was 93% for cancer. CONCLUSION: CT colonography on an open access basis can be confidently used as a routine test instead of double-contrast barium enema when total colonoscopy cannot be performed.
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2002
2000
 
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D Regge, G Galatola, L Martincich, T Gallo, M Pollone, A Rivolta, P Secreto, A Pera (2000)  Use of virtual endoscopy with computerized tomography in the identification of colorectal neoplasms. Prospective study with symptomatic patients   Radiol Med 99: 6. 449-455 Jun  
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Aim of this study was to evaluate the sensitivity of virtual colonoscopy (CT colonography) in the identification of colorectal cancer and to define the limitations and the advantages of this imaging modality, as well as indications to the examination. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We examined prospectively 62 symptomatic patients aged 36 to 82 years (28 women and 34 men). All patients underwent both conventional and virtual colonoscopy on the same day; the conventional examination allowed exploration of the entire colon. RESULTS: Conventional colonoscopy identified 89 lesions 3-50 mm in diameter, namely 84 benign and 5 malignant lesions. No lesions were identified in 12 patients. CT colonography identified 52 of the 89 lesions, with 57.1% diagnostic accuracy. There were 11 false positives (82.5% positive predictive value and 52.2% specificity) and 37 false negatives (24.5% negative predictive value and 58.4% sensitivity). Sensitivity was significantly higher (85.7%) for polyps > or = 1 cm. CONCLUSIONS: Virtual colonoscopy is an imaging modality with good diagnostic yield, well tolerated by patients and with great potentials for further development. We suggest that the examination be performed in symptomatic patients who cannot undergo total colonoscopy or refuse the other imaging modalities. Further studies are warranted in larger series of patients, possibly introducing it in screening programs.
Notes:
 
PMID 
A Veltri, G C Anselmetti, G Bartoli, M C Martina, D Regge, J Galli, M Bertini (2000)  Percutaneous treatment with amphotericin B of mycotic lung lesions from invasive aspergillosis: results in 10 immunocompromised patients.   Eur Radiol 10: 12. 1939-1944  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of percutaneous treatment of pulmonary lesions from invasive aspergillosis in immunocompromised patients. From 1992 to 1998, ten patients (seven men and three women; mean age 56 years) affected by hematological neoplasms (8 acute myeloid leukemias, 2 non-Hodgkin's lymphomas) and post-chemotherapy prolonged neutropenia developed pulmonary lesions from invasive aspergillosis. A total of 13 lesions (diameter 2-7 cm, median 5 cm) were treated percutaneously due to insufficiency of the high-dose i.v. therapy; under CT guidance, a median of 10 cm3 per session of a 1 mg/cm3 diluted solution of amphotericin B was injected through a fine needle (21-22 G); 45 sessions overall were performed (one to five per lesion, median four), according to the volume of the nodules, tolerance, and complications. The results were retrospectively evaluated either radiologically or clinically. Complications were cough, mild hemoptysis, and small pneumothorax and/or pleural effusion. No major complications occurred. One month after the beginning of treatment, 8 lesions completely resolved, 4 greatly improved, and 1 was not significantly reduced. In all ten patients symptoms improved (eight of ten could restart chemotherapy as scheduled). After antiblastic retreatment, 1 patient had mycotic recurrence. In our experience transthoracic topical treatment with amphotericin B of single or few lung lesions from invasive aspergillosis was effective, affording a rapid improvement of the lesions and symptoms, and allowing continuation of chemotherapy as scheduled, thereby reducing the risk of recurrences.
Notes:
1999
 
PMID 
D Regge, G Lo Bello, L Martincich, G Bianchi, G Cuomo, R Suriani, F Cavuoto (1999)  A case of bleeding gastric lipoma: US, CT and MR findings.   Eur Radiol 9: 2. 256-258  
Abstract: We report a case of gastric lipoma which manifested with an episode of acute gastrointestinal hemorrhage. Preoperative diagnosis was based on the US, CT, and MRI findings, as the results of gastrointestinal endoscopy were inconclusive. The role of current imaging methods, and particularly of MRI, is discussed.
Notes:
1998
 
PMID 
A Veltri, T Robba, G C Anselmetti, M C Martina, D Regge, M Grosso, C Fava (1998)  Computerized tomography with lipiodol in hepatocarcinoma. Assessment of its diagnostic accuracy with anatomo-pathological control   Radiol Med 96: 1-2. 81-86 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: PURPOSE: To assess the diagnostic accuracy and predictive value of Lipiodol CT for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) before liver transplantation (OLT). MATERIAL AND METHODS: Seventy-eight cirrhotic patients awaiting OLT underwent Lipiodol CT to demonstrate the presence and extent of possible HCC. Radiologically, focal uptake areas with dense, homogeneous or "mosaic" iodized oil uptake were considered to be neoplastic nodules. All patients underwent OLT within 4 months of Lipiodol CT. Pathologic examination of the explanted livers was performed using the standard technique and, if necessary, with additional slices. Pathologic findings were compared with radiologic results to calculate the diagnostic accuracy and predictive value of Lipiodol CT in relation to both patients and lesions. RESULTS: Lipiodol CT depicted 61 focal areas of iodized oil uptake in 48 patients; pathologic examinations detected 57 HCC lesions in 42 patients (diameter .8 cm, mean 2.2 cm); agreement with radiologic diagnosis was found in 35 patients only. Patient by patient, Lipiodol CT had 83.3% sensitivity, 63.8% specificity, 74.3% diagnostic accuracy, 72.9% positive predictive value (PPV), and 76.6% negative predictive value. Lesion by lesion, Lipiodol CT showed overall sensitivity and PPV of 75.4-70.5%, 74-69.8% for "small" HCCs (diameter < or = 3 cm), and 72.9-71.1% for nodules < or = 2 cm in size. Eighteen uptake areas in 13 patients were diagnosed as HCC by Lipiodol CT but the finding was not confirmed at histology: 4 were hemangiomas and 14 corresponded to cirrhotic tissue without neoplastic foci. CONCLUSIONS: Our study, as the few others comparing radiologic results and pathologic findings of whole explanted liver, demonstrates that Lipiodol CT has relatively low diagnostic accuracy; particularly, specificity and PPV were limited by possible false positives, with HCC overstaging and mistakes in the indications/contraindications for OLT.
Notes:
1997
 
PMID 
L Garretti, M C Cassinis, D Regge, M Drogo, C Trovato (1997)  Role of endorectal ultrasonography and CT in preoperative staging of rectal cancer. Personal experience   Minerva Chir 52: 6. 717-725 Jun  
Abstract: We report our personal experience on endorectal US and CT in the preoperative staging of rectal carcinoma. Our series includes 64 cases (38 male and 26 female) evaluated with intrarectal sonography; 38 of these patients underwent also CT-study of the lower abdomen. Using both imaging techniques infiltration of the rectal wall and adjacent structures and lymph node involvement were studied. The results of our study refer to 58 patients who underwent endorectal US, 31 of whom studied also with CT. Referring to the T-parameter with ultrasound 41 correct diagnosis were obtained, in 13 cases the lesion was over-staged and in 4 cases understaged. The sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic accuracy was respectively 89.5%, 60% and 79.3%. With CT 23 diagnosis were correct, in 1 case the lesion was overstaged and in 7 cases understaged; sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic accuracy concerning rectal wall infiltration were respectively 72%, 83.3% and 74.2%. The evaluation of the N-parameter demonstrated low value of sensitivity with both US (15.8%) and CT (42.9%). Considering the results of our series, we feel that it is necessary to use both imaging techniques because results obtained are complementary referring to the T-parameter, although N-parameter were a little significant.
Notes:
 
PMID 
D Regge, T Gallo, J Galli, A Bertinetti, C Gallino, E Scappaticci (1997)  Systemic arterial air embolism and tension pneumothorax: two complications of transthoracic percutaneous thin-needle biopsy in the same patient.   Eur Radiol 7: 2. 173-175  
Abstract: Systemic arterial air embolism and tension pneumothorax are two rare and severe complications of transthoracic fine-needle biopsy. We report on a patient who developed both complications during the same procedure and recovered successfully after resuscitation and hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Favourable outcome of systemic air arterial embolism has been reported infrequently in the literature. In our case tension pneumothorax may have influenced favourably the course of the illness due to collapse of distal airways and the reduction of the venous return to the heart from the affected side.
Notes:
 
PMID 
S Crasto, S Duca, O Davini, L Rizzo, I G Pavanello, T Avataneo, S Cirillo, D Regge, R Soffietti (1997)  MRI diagnosis of intramedullary metastases from extra-CNS tumors.   Eur Radiol 7: 5. 732-736  
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the topography, morphology and contrast enhancement of the intramedullary metastases (IM) from extra-CNS neoplasms. We report the results of a multicenter retrospective study on 18 patients with 26 IM examined with a 0.5T MR imaging system; intravenous injection of Gd-DTPA was performed in all cases. We found that the lesions are most frequently single, oval shaped, and small, with little or no deformation of the spinal cord (14 of 26 IM). They appear isointense on spin-echo T1-weighted images (24 of 26 IM), with a homogeneous and generally nodular high contrast enhancement after Gd-DTPA injection (21 of 26 IM), and present on T2- and proton-density-weighted sequences with a pronounced perilesional, pencil-shaped hyperintensity of the surrounding cord which is more evident in the cranial part of the cord referring to the IM.
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1996
 
PMID 
G C Actis, A Ottobrelli, B Lavezzo, V Modena, D Regge, A Veltri, C Tomasini, P Puiatti, D Novero, G Verme (1996)  Recurrent necroinflammatory disease of multiple organs and colon. Systemic presentation of inflammatory bowel disease or gut involvement during systemic disorder.   Dig Dis Sci 41: 10. 2100-2105 Oct  
Abstract: A 30-year-old man with a recurrent febrile illness resembling infection is described. Because he presented with an acute abdomen, he underwent a laparotomy, which showed the paraaortic and mesenteric lymph nodes to be changed into an abscess-like granulomatous tissue made up of necrotized granulocytes. During further flare-ups, the disease affected the spleen, skin, colon, peripheral nerve, and muscle. Histology on the biopsy materials of both the skin and colon, and on the surgically removed spleen showed the same invading pathologic tissue. Exhaustive investigation disclosed no pathogen, and the flare-ups responded repeatedly to high-dose steroids. This patient's picture has recently been defined as a syndrome of chronic granulomatosis based on several published cases. As a distinctive feature, in our patient the granulomas affected also the colon. For the present, and for another previously described similar case we analyzed the factors that might permit the differential diagnosis between the above-mentioned granulomatous syndrome and Crohn's colitis.
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1995
 
PMID 
T Cammarota, P Fauciglietti, A Sarno, S Bundino, A Bonvicino, D Regge (1995)  Echographic diagnosis of a large, asymptomatic, perirenal hematoma caused by a bleeding angiomyolipoma in tuberous sclerosis   Minerva Urol Nefrol 47: 1. 5-8 Mar  
Abstract: The authors describe a case of 21-year-old man suffering from tuberous sclerosis, more than once operated for subependymal astrocytomas, presenting multiple bilateral renal angiomyolipomas of 1.5 cm as greatest diameter. Last abdominal ultrasonographic exam, done a few years after the former, revealed an angiomyolipoma measuring 10 cm in diameter at the upper pole of the right kidney. This angiomyolipoma projected into a large haematoma of 15 cm in diameter, absolutely asymptomatic. After CT control bone lesions were removed. This case shows the progressive increase in number and size of renal angiomyolipomas, with subsequent haemorrhagic complications, suggesting as opportune periodic ultrasonographic controls.
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PMID 
D Regge, E Balma, P Lasciarrea, C Martina, M Serrallonga, G Gandini (1995)  Interventional radiology of the adrenal glands.   Minerva Endocrinol 20: 1. 15-26 Mar  
Abstract: Interventional radiology of the adrenal glands comprises angiographic and percutaneous procedures. Vascular maneuvers have never received widespread application. Venous retrograde adrenal gland ablation fell into disuse because it induced only temporary reduction of adrenal function, caused intense long lasting pain, and was considered unsafe. Chemoembolization of cortico-adrenal carcinoma has been shown to slow tumor growth and may be employed if the patient is inoperable. Percutaneous FNB, routinely performed in large hospital centers, has a high diagnostic yield and a low complication rate. The procedure is performed in the staging of oncological cases or in patients with incidentally found adrenal lesion with no evidence of adreno-cortical or adrenal medullary hypersecretion. Abscesses and adrenal cysts are rarely encountered in clinical practice. Percutaneous drainage of such lesions is readily accomplished under radiological guidance with little hazard for the patient. Furthermore treatment failure does not compromise surgical treatment. Percutaneous ethanol injection has been recently suggested for treatment of hormone producing adreno-cortical adenomas in patients at high surgical risk. Results are promising but further trials are required to ascertain the efficacy and the safety of the procedure.
Notes:
 
PMID 
M Toppino, D Campra, M Maramotti, D Regge, G R Fronda, S Recchia (1995)  Groove pancreatitis. A case report of chronic focal pancreatitis   Minerva Gastroenterol Dietol 41: 2. 181-185 Jun  
Abstract: The "groove pancreatitis" is a special form of segmental chronic pancreatitis affecting the "groove" between pancreatic head, duodenum and common bile duct. This type of chronic pancreatitis was first described in 1973 and only few cases have been reported in literature. Unlike other forms of chronic pancreatitis, this is often preceded by peptic ulcers, gastric resections or biliary tract diseases; it could be associated with cysts of the duodenal wall and pancreatic cysts. Abdominal pain, vomiting due to duodenal stenosis, obstructive jaundice and weight loss are the most common presenting symptoms. The radiological features show a pancreatic mass similar to a pancreatic head carcinoma and the discrimination of groove pancreatitis from pancreatic carcinoma is often difficult or even impossible in some patients. We describe a case of groove pancreatitis treated with pancreatoduodenectomy, reviewing the clinical and radiological features. We remark that the groove pancreatitis is a disease that must be known and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of pancreatic carcinoma.
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PMID 
A M Raso, P Rispoli, M Trogolo, A Bellan, D Regge, R Cassatella (1995)  True aneurysm of the inferior thyroid artery. Case report and review of the literature.   J Cardiovasc Surg (Torino) 36: 5. 493-495 Oct  
Abstract: In a patient already operated for abdominal aortic aneurysm fifteen months previously, because of the onset of aspecific vertigo, instrumental investigations of the supra aortic vessels showed us the presence of a non palpable mass, in the left side of the neck. Duplex Scanner, angio-CT and Angiography let us suspect the presence of an aneurysm located somewhere in the course of the thyrocervical trunk. At the operation the aneurysm, which we originally suspected to be a false and a possibly iatrogenic one, in the reality was a true aneurysm and was located at the termination of the thyrocervical trunk, just in the first segment of the inferior thyroid artery. The case is reported because of its rarity and the difficulties in the preoperative diagnosis.
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1994
1993
 
PMID 
L Todros, D Regge, G Ortoleva, C Gallino (1993)  Major clinical complications of hepatic cysts and angiomas. Report of 8 cases   Minerva Gastroenterol Dietol 39: 1. 41-45 Mar  
Abstract: The detection of hepatic cysts and hemangiomas has become relatively frequent after the diffusion of US imaging, but rarely they cause major clinical problems. We report our experience with 8 cases (4 cysts and 4 hemangiomas) which caused either signs and symptoms simulating a hepatic disease or compression on vascular structures with systemic consequences.
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1992
 
PMID 
M Durazzo, E Borghesio, D Regge, P A Milone, M Rizzetto (1992)  A case of hepatocarcinoma preceded by several years by "isolated" increase in alphafetoprotein   Minerva Gastroenterol Dietol 38: 3. 167-169 Jul/Sep  
Abstract: Hepatocarcinoma (HCC), the most frequent malignant hepatic neoplasia, is sometimes difficult to diagnose at an early stage since the symptoms may be attributed to concomitant hepatic cirrhosis. The assay of alpha-fetoprotein associated with an ultrasound examination of the hepatic parenchyma is an important screening tool for high-risk patients. Ultrasound examination is considered the most sensitive method and alpha-fetoprotein is a supplementary diagnostic tool. Elevated alpha-fetoprotein only occasionally precedes morphological anomalies and even in these cases the neoplastic aspect emerges within a short period of time. The case reported here illustrates the "astronomic" increase of alpha-fetoprotein in a high-risk patient for HCC (positive HBsAg cirrhosis) without the manifest appearance of any instrumental or histological data confirming the presence of the tumour for two years. When the tumour was identified in instrumental tests it had spread throughout the entire hepatic parenchyma in a form which could no longer be treated using any form of therapy. The case reported here emphasizes the diagnostic value of alphafetoprotein in high-risk patients for HCC, even in the prolonged absence of all other data regarding neoplastic transformation.
Notes:
 
PMID 
A Veltri, M Grosso, D Regge, S Capello, S Kienle, A Ottobrelli, M Salizzoni (1992)  Liver transplantation: diagnostic imaging in the preoperative assessment   Radiol Med 84: 4. 393-399 Oct  
Abstract: The correct selection of patients for liver transplantation, which is essential for surgical success, requires thorough radiological evaluation. The authors present their experience on 94 pretransplant adult patients that underwent a total of 251 diagnostic exams (Doppler US, CT, angiography and cholangiography) and interventional radiology maneuvers (biopsy, chemoembolization, biliary drainage). Three sclerosing cholangitis, 3 Budd-Chiari syndromes and 20 hepatocellular carcinomas in cirrhotic patients were identified; venous collaterals were present in 62.7% of the cases, 12.8%, of which had important spontaneous porto-systemic shunts; 6 patients had portal thrombosis; 20 arterial variations were found. Interventional maneuvers were useful and free of complications. US, CT and angiographic findings of each patient were compared. Integrating informations from different exams allowed a significant increase in the accuracy of diagnostic conclusions. Thanks to interventional maneuvers 5 patients could be selected for transplantation (hepatic arterial lipiodolization stopped the growth of 4 hepatic neoplasms; 2 infected fluid collections were sterilized by percutaneous US-guided drainage and topic therapy.
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PMID 
A Veltri, M Grosso, D Regge, S Capello, E Zanon, E Andorno, M Salizzoni (1992)  Liver transplantation: role of the radiologic methods in the postoperative period   Radiol Med 84: 4. 400-409 Oct  
Abstract: Some complications of liver transplantation appear as aspecific clinical and blood test abnormalities; others--e.g., hepatic artery thrombosis in the immediate postoperative period and stenosis of the biliary anastomosis before T-tube removal--require early diagnosis. These considerations justify the need of frequent radiologic examination in both the complicated course and the follow-up. The authors report their experience in 59 adult patients submitted to liver transplantation for irreversible liver disease in advanced stage (49 with cirrhosis, 10 with HCC; 5 with cholestatic hepatopathy; 3 with fulminant hepatitis; 1 with Budd-Chiari syndrome; 1 with metastatic APUDoma). Two hundred and sixty-three radiological examinations were performed (Doppler US, CT, angiography and cholangiography) which showed numerous early and delayed complications: 13 of them were treated with interventional radiology maneuvers (US-or CT-guided percutaneous drainage of fluid collections, biliary drainage, bilioplasty, arterial transcatheter embolization). Our results demonstrate that diagnostic and operative radiology are essential for the success of liver transplantation; integrated imaging is particularly important in the diagnosis of complications, while interventional radiology techniques can be usefully employed in their treatment.
Notes:
1991
 
PMID 
E Zanon, D Righi, U Maisano, D Regge, A Ferrari, S Recchia, G Gandini (1991)  Percutaneous transhepatic sphincterotomy--a report on 3 cases.   Endoscopy 23: 1. 25-28 Jan  
Abstract: The technique of percutaneous transhepatic sphincterotomy is described. This procedure was employed in 3 patients with common bile duct (CBD) stones in whom a previous attempted endoscopic procedure had failed for anatomical reasons (a Billroth II gastric resection or a partial gastric resection with Braun anastomosis). Complete immediate success was obtained in all 3 patients. Furthermore, no major complications occurred during transhepatic treatment. The authors suggest that PTS be employed electively in patients with diseases of the biliary tree in whom the endoscopic approach fails.
Notes:
 
PMID 
D Cravero, D Reggio, D Regge, E Patelli, M Saracco (1991)  Acute biliary pancreatitis. Therapeutic approach   Minerva Chir 46: 23-24. 1235-1243 Dec  
Abstract: Those forms of acute pancreatitis with a biliary etiology necessitate the choice of surgical techniques whose main objective is to obviate the cause of lithiasis and remove the necrotic and hemorrhagic areas of the gland. While probably overestimated from an epidemiological point of view, acute biliary pancreatitis still causes an overall mortality rate of 10% and has hardly been affected by the development of intensive care units and the routine use of somatostatin. By comparing the various approaches reported in the literature the Authors attempt to match the surgical concept of "timing" and the type of operation to be performed with the anatomopathological stage of disease. The paper reports the preliminary results of a treatment protocol in use since 1988 in group of 35 patients in whom the preoperative diagnosis of acute biliary pancreatitis was confirmed by computerised tomography.
Notes:
 
PMID 
D Regge, G Gandini, T Avataneo, M C Cassinis, L Garretti, P E Marchesa, M Garavoglia (1991)  Critical evaluation of preoperative instrumental staging of rectal tumors. Research on the adequate use of US, CT and MR   Minerva Gastroenterol Dietol 37: 2. 101-112 Apr/Jun  
Abstract: Both traditional exams (rectal exploration, rectoscopy, barium enema, CEA) and advanced imaging (31 US, 40 CT and 11 MR) were performed for preoperative evaluation of rectal carcinoma in order to assess the accuracy of radiological imaging in the T and N staging. The results obtained have not been considered satisfactory and it is felt that US, CT and MR should not be employed routinely for rectal staging. Indeed accuracy of US, CT and MR is respectively 64%, 75% and 81% in the T evaluation and 64%, 70% and 64% in the N staging. In order to evaluate the effective usefulness of these three latter imaging techniques a double therapeutical choice was proposed. The first treatment option was suggested on the basis of traditional staging while a second choice was given considering US, TC and MR data also. Operatory findings subsequently allowed a definitive judgement on the influence of the different techniques on treatment selection. US has furnished useful data that could have allowed us to modify treatment in one case while in 5 other cases diagnostic error would have influenced treatment negatively. CT was useful in 5 cases while in 7 cases it would have influenced treatment choice negatively. MR would have been useful in one case and harmful in another. It is concluded that only patients with large neoplasms (stages T3 and T4) benefit from CT and MR staging with the exception of those cases that have tumors above the peritoneal fold or in strict relation with the sphincter structures. US was useful only in evaluating relations of neoplasms of the anterior rectal wall with nearby pelvic structures.
Notes:
1990
 
PMID 
G Gandini, D Righi, D Regge, S Recchia, A Ferraris, G R Fronda (1990)  Percutaneous removal of biliary stones.   Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol 13: 4. 245-251 Aug/Sep  
Abstract: Since 1983 we have performed percutaneous treatment of biliary lithiasis in 97 patients. Previous retrograde endoscopic procedures were incomplete or infeasible in all patients. Immediate results were excellent resulting in complete resolution of lithiasis in 89 of 97 patients (92%). In 4 patients (4%) partial success was obtained (symptoms subsided although there were nonobstructing residual stones). Percutaneous treatment failed in 1 patient (1%). Three patients died. Complications occurred in 14 of 97 patients (14%) and mortality at 30 days was 3%. Long-term results were evaluated in 71 patients who had a least a 6-month follow-up (mean 31 months and range 6-78 months). Eight of 71 patients (11%) had recurrence of stones and 7 of these were successfully retreated transhepatically. Percutaneous removal of biliary stones is efficacious because it has a high cure rate, a low complication rate, and a mortality rate that compares favorably to that of surgery even though the patients are usually older and in poorer general condition.
Notes:
 
PMID 
D Regge, E Carnieri, D Righi, M Salizzoni, E Andorno, G Gandini (1990)  CT of the operated liver   Minerva Dietol Gastroenterol 36: 4. 197-208 Oct/Dec  
Abstract: The Authors examine retrospectively 93 CT exams performed on 60 patients submitted to hepatic surgery both for malignant and benign lesions. It is concluded that CT, if performed correctly, is helpful in recognizing both complications and recurrences.
Notes:
1989
 
PMID 
M Grosso, G Gandini, M C Cassinis, D Regge, D Righi, P Rossi (1989)  Percutaneous treatment (including pseudocystogastrostomy) of 74 pancreatic pseudocysts.   Radiology 173: 2. 493-497 Nov  
Abstract: Percutaneous treatment of 74 pancreatic pseudocysts was performed in 70 patients. Initially, single-step fine-needle aspiration was used and had a 71% (15 of 21 patients) recurrence rate. Better results were obtained with prolonged extragastric or transgastric external drainage, performed in 43 patients (46 pseudocysts). Two patients in this series (4.7%) required urgent surgery: one for gastric wall hematoma and the other for intracystic hemorrhage. Three patients (7.0%) were lost to follow-up. The recurrence rate in the remaining 38 patients (41 pseudocysts) was 23.7% (nine of 38 patients). Since 1986, seven patients have been treated with percutaneous pseudocystogastrostomy (one also underwent external drainage and is thus included in the previous series, too) after placement of a transgastric drainage catheter, with no recurrence (follow-up, 2-26 months). It is concluded that transgastric drainage should be performed whenever the anatomic situation is favorable and that a pseudocystogastric stent should be placed in these patients whenever secretions are still abundant after 7-10 days.
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1988
 
PMID 
G Gandini, F Cesarani, E Juliani, D Regge, L Bonardi, S Recchia, G Verme (1988)  Percutaneous transhepatic cholangioscopy with a 2.8 mm fiberscope.   Endoscopy 20: 3. 114-117 May  
Abstract: The authors describe their initial experience with a 2.8 mm (8.5F) fiberscope. The instrument, used to refine interventional radiology maneuvers of the intra- and extra-hepatic bile ducts, caused no additional discomfort to the 18 patients treated. The fiberscope permitted differentiation between different causes of biliary stenosis in the few cases where doubt persisted after percutaneous cholangiography. Brushing was also performed wherever necessary. The color, and thus the composition, of bile duct stones could also be determined. This has helped us to plan the therapy with methyl-tert-butyl-ether (MTBE) in patients with cholesterol stones. Compared with traditional fiberscopes (diameter of 5mm or more) the new instrument is easier to use, and allows more peripheral ducts to be reached, but is expensive and has a smaller field of view and fewer possibilities for therapeutic applications.
Notes:
 
PMID 
G Gandini, D Regge, T Avataneo, G Cavalot, C Giordano, A Cavalot, M Sacchi (1988)  Computerized tomographic evaluation of latero-cervical lymphatic metastasis of carcinoma of the larynx. Personal experience in 170 cases   Minerva Med 79: 6. 435-440 Jun  
Abstract: CT can be considered the most reliable technique in detecting nodal metastases of the cervical district. The Authors have studied 170 patients with laryngeal cancer (104 N0, 21 N1, 21 N2 and 24 N3 clinically) with CT of the cervical region during infusion of contrast material. All patients underwent radical neck dissection with pathological examination of the nodes. CT diagnosis and pathological findings were correlated. Our findings show that CT has an overall accuracy of 91.8% (100% in groups N2 and N3) and fed false positives and false negatives.
Notes:
 
PMID 
L Garretti, P Fauciglietti, D Regge, F Bonino, M Brunetto, G Gandini (1988)  Evaluation of the usefulness of ultrasonics in the diagnosis of cancerous cirrhosis. Comparison with CT   Radiol Med 76: 3. 187-192 Sep  
Abstract: Cirrhotic liver hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) was evaluated with both US and CT. In a group of 600 cirrhotic patients 64 had HCC, which was confirmed at histology in 24 cases, and by disease evolution in the other 40; single focal degeneration was proven in 40 patients, multiple (2, 3 focal lesions), or diffuse degeneration (more than 3 focal lesions) in the remaining 24. Sixteen patients had associated portal thrombosis. US recognized 38/40 single HCC, 22/24 multiple or diffuse lesions, and 11/16 portal vein thromboses. Degeneration was most frequently hypo/isoechoic in small tumors, hyperechoic and mixed in large lesions. When small lesions are hyperechoic their differentiation from both hemangiomas and regeneration noduli is extremely difficult. In such cases CT is mandatory. US diagnostic accuracy is by far superior to that of CT: 95% vs 85% in single lesions and 91.6% vs 87.5% in diffuse forms. Overall accuracy is 93.7% for US and 85.9% for CT. The authors believe that US should be performed every 6 months on cirrhotic patients, so as to allow HCC to be detected in time for radical surgery, while CT should be performed only when doubts persist.
Notes:
 
PMID 
C Tetti, C Fava, L Garretti, M Grosso, F Potenzoni, D Regge, G Gandini (1988)  Percutaneous biopsy (PB) of solid thoraco-abdominal formations with instrumental guidance. The authors' experience   Radiol Med 76: 5. 443-447 Nov  
Abstract: The results are reported of 283 percutaneous biopsies performed on solid thoracic and abdominal masses. Indications to biopsy are examined at first, which are relatively limited in number if compared to other authors' opinion on the subject--i.e., when the tumor cannot be characterized with any other methodology, or in case of neoplasms whose histological type is to be known in order to plan therapy. The techniques employed are then evaluated, with a special emphasis on the needle caliber and the guidance method (US, radioscopy and CT). Correct samplings have been obtained in more than 90% of cases. Minor complications were observed in less than 10% of cases, while major complications were totally absent. In conclusion, percutaneous biopsy proves useful in those cases where exam indication is respected and an accurate selection is previously performed.
Notes:
 
PMID 
E Juliani, D Righi, F Cesarani, D Regge, G Gandini (1988)  Use of an electrohydraulic lithotripter in the percutaneous treatment of biliary tract calculi. The preliminary clinical experience in 4 cases   Radiol Med 76: 5. 448-452 Nov  
Abstract: The results are reported of percutaneous transhepatic treatment with an electrohydraulic lithotripter in 4 cases of bile duct lithiasis. An electric discharge, generated by a bipolar electrode, gives origin to high-amplitude and low-frequency shock waves in the fluid medium which cause the stone to fragment. Complete resolution of lithiasis was obtained in 2 patients with intrahepatic calculosis. In the other 2 cases of massive lithiasis of intra and extrahepatic bile ducts the treatment, however incomplete, proved to be useful, as the biliary flux was rehabilitated and clinical symptoms disappeared. No relevant immediate side-effects were observed, except for well-tolerated pain during the discharges, and transitory hemobilia which solved spontaneously. No complications were observed in this series of patients. Electrohydraulic lithotripsy proves thus to be useful for supporting standard interventional radiology techniques in very complex cases of intra- and extrahepatic bile duct stones.
Notes:
1985
 
PMID 
A Borrè, L Gremo, D Regge, D Ricci, F Russo (1985)  Possibility of using the spot camera in the documentation of the arterial phase in urography   Radiol Med 71: 7-8. 525-528 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: 32 patients have been examined with sequential angiourography (AUS) and image subtraction, utilizing a spot-camera instead of a rapid seriograph, for the visualization of the vascular phase of the renal artery. Satisfactory results have been obtained since in 96.9% of the cases (31/32) it has been possible to obtain representation of those structures sufficient for a clinical evaluation. This technique for its low cost and simplicity of execution can therefore be proposed as a routine examination in the suspect of vascular renal pathology. This method and the more diffuse AUS with rapid seriograph offer, with respect to digital subtraction angiography (DSA), the advantage of a better nephrographic and urographic phase due to the higher quantity of contrast medium injected.
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