Andrea Pioto - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Andrea Pioto
Nuclear Medicine Communications, 2004
Thyroid, 2006
The authors report in a large series the use of radio-probe-guided surgery (RGS) in non radioiodi... more The authors report in a large series the use of radio-probe-guided surgery (RGS) in non radioiodine-avid, well-differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC).
This study evaluated the accuracy of 99mTc-sestamibi scintigra- phy and neck ultrasonography in p... more This study evaluated the accuracy of 99mTc-sestamibi scintigra- phy and neck ultrasonography in patients with primary hyper- parathyroidism (PHPT) and the role of intraoperative hand-held -probes in minimally invasive radioguided surgery (MIRS) of patients with a high likelihood of a solitary parathyroid adenoma (PA). The study was undertaken under the aegis of the Italian Study Group on Radioguided Surgery and
World Journal of Surgery, 2004
The nonrecurrent laryngeal nerve, which is rarely observed during thyroidectomy, is at high risk ... more The nonrecurrent laryngeal nerve, which is rarely observed during thyroidectomy, is at high risk for damage. During a 20-year period 6000 thyroidectomies were performed at our institution, and during these operations inferior laryngeal nerves were routinely identified in all the patients with a standard procedure based on the usual anatomic landmarks. A nonrecurrent laryngeal nerve was observed on the right side in 31 cases (0.51%), with no anatomic anomalies found on the left side. The nerve anomaly was diagnosed preoperatively in five patients. A vocal cord deficit, caused by a nerve lesion, was observed in four cases (12.9%). Our results suggest that the best way to avoid morbidity is routine identification of the nerve. This can be done by carefully identifying all the thyroid structures and being suspicious of the presence of the abnormality when the inferior laryngeal nerve is not found in a classic position.
The American Journal of Surgery, 2008
BACKGROUND: The aim of this prospective study was to identify patients at high risk of developing... more BACKGROUND: The aim of this prospective study was to identify patients at high risk of developing hypocalcemia after thyroidectomy on the basis of the parathyroid hormone (PTH) level on the first postoperative day.
Nuclear Medicine Communications, 2004
The clinical and histopathological records of 149 consecutive patients with papillary thyroid mic... more The clinical and histopathological records of 149 consecutive patients with papillary thyroid microcarcinoma (PTMC), homogeneously studied and operated on by the same surgeon in the period 1990 to 2001, were reviewed. After a mean 6.5-year follow-up, three cases of loco-regional recurrence (2%) were observed. These three patients had all undergone partial thyroidectomy only and tumour relapse occurred in the residual thyroid tissue. No recurrence was observed in patients treated by total thyroidectomy and I. At variance with other reported series, no lymph node recurrence was observed in our series, in particular in the group of 23 patients with evidence of nodal metastases at initial diagnosis (three of whom were revealed by I scan after surgery). Therefore, a preventive effect of I treatment in our patient population can be hypothesized. However, prolonged follow-up will be necessary to clarify this. Due to the inability of current imaging modalities to select pre-operatively PTMC patients at risk for recurrence (presence of thyroid capsular invasion, multifocality and microscopic lymph node metastases), it appears reasonable to offer the patient total thyroidectomy when a pre-operative diagnosis of PTMC is reached. Moreover, the policy of our thyroid cancer centre is that, in these patients, post-surgical I scan should be obtained in order to detect unknown metastatic deposits, and I treatment should also be considered in patients with poor clinical and histopathological prognostic factors. In contrast, in patients operated on for benign thyroid disease and with delayed diagnosis of PTMC at definitive histopathological examination, re-operation might be avoided in the presence of unifocal disease without thyroid capsular invasion and with ultrasound-'normal' residual thyroid tissue. Close clinical and ultrasound follow-up is recommended, especially in patients who have undergone conservative surgery only.
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, 2000
The aims of this study were: (a) to define the accuracy of a preoperative parathyroid imaging pro... more The aims of this study were: (a) to define the accuracy of a preoperative parathyroid imaging protocol based on the combination of technetium-99m pertechnetate/technetium-99m methoxyisobutylisonitrile (99mTcO4/ 99mTc-MIBI) scan and neck ultrasound (US) in selecting patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) eligible for a limited neck exploration, and (b) to investigate the potential role of the intraoperative gamma probe (IGP) in radio-guided minimally invasive surgery. 99mTcO4/99mTc-MIBI subtraction scan was performed by means of potassium perchlorate administration with the aim of effecting rapid 99mTcO4 wash-out from the thyroid. Minimally invasive surgery using an IGP was commenced some minutes following the injection of a low, 70 MBq, 99mTc-MIBI dose. Intraoperative PTH (i-PTH) was measured. On the basis of preoperative imaging, 21 pHPT consecutive patients were selected for a limited neck dissection. In 18 of them, a single parathyroid adenoma was found at surgery and IGP allowed performance of parathyroidectomy through a small, 2-2.5 cm, skin incision with a relatively short surgical duration (mean 38 min). i-PTH rapidly normalised in all cases. In two patients, a parathyroid carcinoma was diagnosed at surgery; consequently, a wide neck exploration associated with a near-total thyroidectomy was performed. No loco-regional metastatic lesions were found and i-PTH rapidly normalised after carcinoma excision. In one patient, i-PTH remained elevated after removal of the enlarged parathyroid gland which was localised by 99mTcO4/99mTc-MIBI scan and US. A bilateral exploration was needed to remove a contralateral enlarged parathyroid gland. Combined, 99mTcO4/99mTc-MIBI scan and US imaging correctly localised a single parathyroid gland in 20/21 patients (95.2%); thus, this protocol appears to be accurate enough for the preoperative selection of pHPT patients eligible for limited neck surgery. Moreover, in these selected patients the IGP seems to be helpful in performing radio-guided minimally invasive surgery.
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, 2007
Purpose It is a matter of controversy whether prophylactic lymph node dissection improves prognos... more Purpose It is a matter of controversy whether prophylactic lymph node dissection improves prognosis and survival in papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) patients without suspicion of lymph node metastases either clinically or on ultrasonography. It is possible that in such patients the use of lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy, as are employed for other tumours, will be of assistance. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of preoperative 99m Tc-nanocolloid lymphoscin- Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging (2007) 34:934-938
Clinical Endocrinology, 1993
The diagnosis of phaeochromocytoma is sometimes difficult since its clinical presentation is quit... more The diagnosis of phaeochromocytoma is sometimes difficult since its clinical presentation is quite variable. We report a 52-year-old woman who presented with acute diabetes mellitus and severe hypertension, which spontaneously disappeared. MIBG-scintigraphy and urine and plasma catecholamines were normal. At surgery, a largely necrotic phaeochromocytoma was found. Pathological examination demonstrated extensive avascular necrosis, which had occurred spontaneously without any major symptoms.
Acta Cytologica, 2009
To analyze the utility of galectin-3 (Gal3) immunohistochemistry (IHC) on preoperatively obtained... more To analyze the utility of galectin-3 (Gal3) immunohistochemistry (IHC) on preoperatively obtained fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) in identifying the subgroup of follicular neoplasia (FN) patients who were candidates for thyroidectomy. This prospective, monoinstitutional study applied a standardized Gal3 immunostaining protocol (cell block specimens; Gal3 scores: G0 [no Gal3+ve IHC reaction], G1 [Gal3+ve thyrocytes < or = 10%], G2 [Gal3+ve thyrocytes > 10%) in 100 consecutive cytologically assessed FN. All patients underwent thyroidectomy, and the FNs were always histologically categorized (World Health Organization criteria). The overall malignancy rate was 15%. Gal3 expression in presurgical samples significantly correlated with the postoperative diagnosis (p < 0.0001). When all positive Gal3 cases were pooled together (G1+G2), the IHC test performed as follows: sensitivity = 80%; specificity = 86%; positive predictive value = 50%; negative predictive value = 96%. All the Gal3-G2 cases (presurgical cell block) showed postoperative evidence of malignancy. All 9 cases of papillary tumor expressed Gal3 in both cell block and postoperative histology. Among the 6 follicular cancers, the prevalence of Gal3 overexpression in the cell block was 50%. The cell block procedure applied to thyroid FNAB samples enables the Gal3 cytotest to be implemented usefully in the preoperative identification of those cases of FN postoperatively found to be malignant (also significantly reducing the number of inappropriate thyroidectomies). Strong Gal3 expression should prompt immediate surgical treatment.
Nuclear Medicine Communications, 2004
Thyroid, 2006
The authors report in a large series the use of radio-probe-guided surgery (RGS) in non radioiodi... more The authors report in a large series the use of radio-probe-guided surgery (RGS) in non radioiodine-avid, well-differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC).
This study evaluated the accuracy of 99mTc-sestamibi scintigra- phy and neck ultrasonography in p... more This study evaluated the accuracy of 99mTc-sestamibi scintigra- phy and neck ultrasonography in patients with primary hyper- parathyroidism (PHPT) and the role of intraoperative hand-held -probes in minimally invasive radioguided surgery (MIRS) of patients with a high likelihood of a solitary parathyroid adenoma (PA). The study was undertaken under the aegis of the Italian Study Group on Radioguided Surgery and
World Journal of Surgery, 2004
The nonrecurrent laryngeal nerve, which is rarely observed during thyroidectomy, is at high risk ... more The nonrecurrent laryngeal nerve, which is rarely observed during thyroidectomy, is at high risk for damage. During a 20-year period 6000 thyroidectomies were performed at our institution, and during these operations inferior laryngeal nerves were routinely identified in all the patients with a standard procedure based on the usual anatomic landmarks. A nonrecurrent laryngeal nerve was observed on the right side in 31 cases (0.51%), with no anatomic anomalies found on the left side. The nerve anomaly was diagnosed preoperatively in five patients. A vocal cord deficit, caused by a nerve lesion, was observed in four cases (12.9%). Our results suggest that the best way to avoid morbidity is routine identification of the nerve. This can be done by carefully identifying all the thyroid structures and being suspicious of the presence of the abnormality when the inferior laryngeal nerve is not found in a classic position.
The American Journal of Surgery, 2008
BACKGROUND: The aim of this prospective study was to identify patients at high risk of developing... more BACKGROUND: The aim of this prospective study was to identify patients at high risk of developing hypocalcemia after thyroidectomy on the basis of the parathyroid hormone (PTH) level on the first postoperative day.
Nuclear Medicine Communications, 2004
The clinical and histopathological records of 149 consecutive patients with papillary thyroid mic... more The clinical and histopathological records of 149 consecutive patients with papillary thyroid microcarcinoma (PTMC), homogeneously studied and operated on by the same surgeon in the period 1990 to 2001, were reviewed. After a mean 6.5-year follow-up, three cases of loco-regional recurrence (2%) were observed. These three patients had all undergone partial thyroidectomy only and tumour relapse occurred in the residual thyroid tissue. No recurrence was observed in patients treated by total thyroidectomy and I. At variance with other reported series, no lymph node recurrence was observed in our series, in particular in the group of 23 patients with evidence of nodal metastases at initial diagnosis (three of whom were revealed by I scan after surgery). Therefore, a preventive effect of I treatment in our patient population can be hypothesized. However, prolonged follow-up will be necessary to clarify this. Due to the inability of current imaging modalities to select pre-operatively PTMC patients at risk for recurrence (presence of thyroid capsular invasion, multifocality and microscopic lymph node metastases), it appears reasonable to offer the patient total thyroidectomy when a pre-operative diagnosis of PTMC is reached. Moreover, the policy of our thyroid cancer centre is that, in these patients, post-surgical I scan should be obtained in order to detect unknown metastatic deposits, and I treatment should also be considered in patients with poor clinical and histopathological prognostic factors. In contrast, in patients operated on for benign thyroid disease and with delayed diagnosis of PTMC at definitive histopathological examination, re-operation might be avoided in the presence of unifocal disease without thyroid capsular invasion and with ultrasound-'normal' residual thyroid tissue. Close clinical and ultrasound follow-up is recommended, especially in patients who have undergone conservative surgery only.
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, 2000
The aims of this study were: (a) to define the accuracy of a preoperative parathyroid imaging pro... more The aims of this study were: (a) to define the accuracy of a preoperative parathyroid imaging protocol based on the combination of technetium-99m pertechnetate/technetium-99m methoxyisobutylisonitrile (99mTcO4/ 99mTc-MIBI) scan and neck ultrasound (US) in selecting patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) eligible for a limited neck exploration, and (b) to investigate the potential role of the intraoperative gamma probe (IGP) in radio-guided minimally invasive surgery. 99mTcO4/99mTc-MIBI subtraction scan was performed by means of potassium perchlorate administration with the aim of effecting rapid 99mTcO4 wash-out from the thyroid. Minimally invasive surgery using an IGP was commenced some minutes following the injection of a low, 70 MBq, 99mTc-MIBI dose. Intraoperative PTH (i-PTH) was measured. On the basis of preoperative imaging, 21 pHPT consecutive patients were selected for a limited neck dissection. In 18 of them, a single parathyroid adenoma was found at surgery and IGP allowed performance of parathyroidectomy through a small, 2-2.5 cm, skin incision with a relatively short surgical duration (mean 38 min). i-PTH rapidly normalised in all cases. In two patients, a parathyroid carcinoma was diagnosed at surgery; consequently, a wide neck exploration associated with a near-total thyroidectomy was performed. No loco-regional metastatic lesions were found and i-PTH rapidly normalised after carcinoma excision. In one patient, i-PTH remained elevated after removal of the enlarged parathyroid gland which was localised by 99mTcO4/99mTc-MIBI scan and US. A bilateral exploration was needed to remove a contralateral enlarged parathyroid gland. Combined, 99mTcO4/99mTc-MIBI scan and US imaging correctly localised a single parathyroid gland in 20/21 patients (95.2%); thus, this protocol appears to be accurate enough for the preoperative selection of pHPT patients eligible for limited neck surgery. Moreover, in these selected patients the IGP seems to be helpful in performing radio-guided minimally invasive surgery.
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, 2007
Purpose It is a matter of controversy whether prophylactic lymph node dissection improves prognos... more Purpose It is a matter of controversy whether prophylactic lymph node dissection improves prognosis and survival in papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) patients without suspicion of lymph node metastases either clinically or on ultrasonography. It is possible that in such patients the use of lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy, as are employed for other tumours, will be of assistance. The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of preoperative 99m Tc-nanocolloid lymphoscin- Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging (2007) 34:934-938
Clinical Endocrinology, 1993
The diagnosis of phaeochromocytoma is sometimes difficult since its clinical presentation is quit... more The diagnosis of phaeochromocytoma is sometimes difficult since its clinical presentation is quite variable. We report a 52-year-old woman who presented with acute diabetes mellitus and severe hypertension, which spontaneously disappeared. MIBG-scintigraphy and urine and plasma catecholamines were normal. At surgery, a largely necrotic phaeochromocytoma was found. Pathological examination demonstrated extensive avascular necrosis, which had occurred spontaneously without any major symptoms.
Acta Cytologica, 2009
To analyze the utility of galectin-3 (Gal3) immunohistochemistry (IHC) on preoperatively obtained... more To analyze the utility of galectin-3 (Gal3) immunohistochemistry (IHC) on preoperatively obtained fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) in identifying the subgroup of follicular neoplasia (FN) patients who were candidates for thyroidectomy. This prospective, monoinstitutional study applied a standardized Gal3 immunostaining protocol (cell block specimens; Gal3 scores: G0 [no Gal3+ve IHC reaction], G1 [Gal3+ve thyrocytes < or = 10%], G2 [Gal3+ve thyrocytes > 10%) in 100 consecutive cytologically assessed FN. All patients underwent thyroidectomy, and the FNs were always histologically categorized (World Health Organization criteria). The overall malignancy rate was 15%. Gal3 expression in presurgical samples significantly correlated with the postoperative diagnosis (p < 0.0001). When all positive Gal3 cases were pooled together (G1+G2), the IHC test performed as follows: sensitivity = 80%; specificity = 86%; positive predictive value = 50%; negative predictive value = 96%. All the Gal3-G2 cases (presurgical cell block) showed postoperative evidence of malignancy. All 9 cases of papillary tumor expressed Gal3 in both cell block and postoperative histology. Among the 6 follicular cancers, the prevalence of Gal3 overexpression in the cell block was 50%. The cell block procedure applied to thyroid FNAB samples enables the Gal3 cytotest to be implemented usefully in the preoperative identification of those cases of FN postoperatively found to be malignant (also significantly reducing the number of inappropriate thyroidectomies). Strong Gal3 expression should prompt immediate surgical treatment.