Mariani, Gabriella
Overview
Works: | 10 works in 10 publications in 3 languages and 14 library holdings |
---|---|
Genres: | Film adaptations Television adaptations History Drama Historical television programs |
Roles: | Other, Actor, Author |
Classifications: | PN1995.91.R8, 616.994 |
Publication Timeline
.
Most widely held works by
Gabriella Mariani
Grafini︠a︡ de Monsoro(
Visual
)
1 edition published in 2007 in Russian and held by 3 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
During the reign of King Henry III, tragically caught between the millstones of history, are the gallant Count de Bussy and the woman he adores, la Dame de Monsoreau
1 edition published in 2007 in Russian and held by 3 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
During the reign of King Henry III, tragically caught between the millstones of history, are the gallant Count de Bussy and the woman he adores, la Dame de Monsoreau
The neutrophil-to-lymphocyte and platelet-to-lymphocyte ratios predict efficacy of platinum-based chemotherapy in patients
with metastatic triple negative breast cancer by Claudio Vernieri(
)
1 edition published in 2018 in English and held by 2 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
1 edition published in 2018 in English and held by 2 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
Pharmacokinetics and pharmacogenetics of the MEK1/2 inhibitor, selumetinib, in Asian and Western healthy subjects: a pooled
analysis by Angela W Dymond(
)
1 edition published in 2017 in English and held by 2 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
1 edition published in 2017 in English and held by 2 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
Antitumor activity and safety profile of weekly carboplatin plus paclitaxel in metastatic breast cancer: a ten-year, monocentric,
retrospective study by Claudio Vernieri(
)
1 edition published in 2017 in English and held by 2 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
1 edition published in 2017 in English and held by 2 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
Effects of cytochrome P450 (CYP3A4 and CYP2C19) inhibition and induction on the exposure of selumetinib, a MEK1/2 inhibitor,
in healthy subjects: results from two clinical trials by Angela W Dymond(
)
1 edition published in 2016 in English and held by 2 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
1 edition published in 2016 in English and held by 2 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
Everolimus Plus Exemestane in Advanced Breast Cancer: Safety Results of the BALLET Study on Patients Previously Treated Without
and with Chemotherapy in the Metastatic Setting(
)
1 edition published in 2017 in English and held by 1 WorldCat member library worldwide
Abstract: Background: The BALLET study was an open-label, multicenter, expanded access study designed to allow treatment with everolimus plus exemestane in postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer progressed following prior endocrine therapy. A post hoc analysis to evaluate if previous chemotherapy in the metastatic setting affects the safety profile of the combination regimen of everolimus and exemestane was conducted on the Italian subset, as it represented the major part of the patients enrolled (54%). Patients and Methods: One thousand one hundred and fifty-one Italian patients were included in the present post hoc analysis, which focused on two sets of patients: patients who never received chemotherapy in the metastatic setting (36.1%) and patients who received at least one chemotherapy treatment in the metastatic setting (63.9%). Results: One thousand one hundred and sixteen patients (97.0%) prematurely discontinued the study drug, and the main reasons reported were disease progression (39.1%), local reimbursement of everolimus (31.1%), and adverse events (AEs) (16.1%). The median duration of study treatment exposure was 139.5 days for exemestane and 135.0 days for everolimus. At least one AE was experienced by 92.5% of patients. The incidence of everolimus-related AEs was higher (83.9%) when compared with those that occurred with exemestane (29.1%), and the most commonly reported everolimus-related AE was stomatitis (51.3%). However, no significant difference in terms of safety related to the combination occurred between patients without and with chemotherapy in the metastatic setting. Conclusion: Real-life data of the Italian patients BALLET-related cohort were an adequate setting to state that previous chemotherapy did not affect the safety profile of the combination regimen of everolimus and exemestane. Implications for Practice: With the advent of new targeted agents for advanced or metastatic breast cancer, multiple lines of therapy may be possible, and components of the combined regimens can overlap from one line to another. Thus, it is important to assess even the potential of cumulative and additive toxic effects among the drugs. Previous chemotherapy did not affect the safety profile of the combination regimen of everolimus and exemestane. The continuous monitoring of the safety signals of this drug combination from general clinical practice is important, in particular for stomatitis. Abstract : This study presents results of the BALLET study, which focused on the use of everolimus/exemestane combination in postmenopausal women with ER+ locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer after recurrence or progression after nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor treatment. Real-life data of the cohort are reported
1 edition published in 2017 in English and held by 1 WorldCat member library worldwide
Abstract: Background: The BALLET study was an open-label, multicenter, expanded access study designed to allow treatment with everolimus plus exemestane in postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer progressed following prior endocrine therapy. A post hoc analysis to evaluate if previous chemotherapy in the metastatic setting affects the safety profile of the combination regimen of everolimus and exemestane was conducted on the Italian subset, as it represented the major part of the patients enrolled (54%). Patients and Methods: One thousand one hundred and fifty-one Italian patients were included in the present post hoc analysis, which focused on two sets of patients: patients who never received chemotherapy in the metastatic setting (36.1%) and patients who received at least one chemotherapy treatment in the metastatic setting (63.9%). Results: One thousand one hundred and sixteen patients (97.0%) prematurely discontinued the study drug, and the main reasons reported were disease progression (39.1%), local reimbursement of everolimus (31.1%), and adverse events (AEs) (16.1%). The median duration of study treatment exposure was 139.5 days for exemestane and 135.0 days for everolimus. At least one AE was experienced by 92.5% of patients. The incidence of everolimus-related AEs was higher (83.9%) when compared with those that occurred with exemestane (29.1%), and the most commonly reported everolimus-related AE was stomatitis (51.3%). However, no significant difference in terms of safety related to the combination occurred between patients without and with chemotherapy in the metastatic setting. Conclusion: Real-life data of the Italian patients BALLET-related cohort were an adequate setting to state that previous chemotherapy did not affect the safety profile of the combination regimen of everolimus and exemestane. Implications for Practice: With the advent of new targeted agents for advanced or metastatic breast cancer, multiple lines of therapy may be possible, and components of the combined regimens can overlap from one line to another. Thus, it is important to assess even the potential of cumulative and additive toxic effects among the drugs. Previous chemotherapy did not affect the safety profile of the combination regimen of everolimus and exemestane. The continuous monitoring of the safety signals of this drug combination from general clinical practice is important, in particular for stomatitis. Abstract : This study presents results of the BALLET study, which focused on the use of everolimus/exemestane combination in postmenopausal women with ER+ locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer after recurrence or progression after nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor treatment. Real-life data of the cohort are reported
Taglio e cucito facile by Gabriella Mariani(
Book
)
1 edition published in 1975 in Italian and held by 1 WorldCat member library worldwide
1 edition published in 1975 in Italian and held by 1 WorldCat member library worldwide
I leccesi a Civita Castellana : storia di emigrazione e di tabacco by Irene Mancini(
Book
)
1 edition published in 2008 in Italian and held by 1 WorldCat member library worldwide
1 edition published in 2008 in Italian and held by 1 WorldCat member library worldwide
Radiotherapy with the anti-programmed cell death ligand-1 immune checkpoint blocker avelumab: acute toxicities in triple-negative
breast cancer by Eliana La Rocca(
)
1 edition published in 2018 in English and held by 0 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
1 edition published in 2018 in English and held by 0 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
Tagliocucito cosi : fare un orlo, attaccare una cerniera, ma anche cucire le tende e creare un abito: punti, lavori, porticolari
tecnici e tanti modelli che chiunque può realizzare by Gabriella Mariani(
Book
)
1 edition published in 1975 in Italian and held by 0 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
1 edition published in 1975 in Italian and held by 0 WorldCat member libraries worldwide
Audience Level
0 |
![]() |
1 | ||
Kids | General | Special |

- SpringerLink (Online service) Other
- Martin, Paul Other
- Huang, Yifan Other
- Capri, Giuseppe Other
- Milano, Monica Other
- So, Karen Other
- Rinaldi, Lucia Other
- Dymond, Angela W. Author
- Dvorzhet︠s︡kiĭ, Evgeniĭ Vat︠s︡lavovich 1960- Actor
- Dumas, Alexandre 1802-1870
Associated Subjects