A
Alberto Malesci
Researcher at University of Milan
Publications - 213
Citations - 10585
Alberto Malesci is an academic researcher from University of Milan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Inflammatory bowel disease & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 199 publications receiving 8910 citations. Previous affiliations of Alberto Malesci include University of Genoa & Utrecht University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Tumor‐associated macrophages and risk of recurrence in stage III colorectal cancer
Tommaso Cavalleri,Luana Greco,Federica Rubbino,Tsuyoshi Hamada,Maria Giovanna Quaranta,Fabio Grizzi,Elisabetta Sauta,Vincenzo Craviotto,Paola Bossi,Stefania Vetrano,Lorenza Rimassa,Valter Torri,Riccardo Bellazzi,Alberto Mantovani,Shuji Ogino,Alberto Malesci,Luigi Laghi +16 more
TL;DR: Low TAM densities identify stage III CRC patients at higher risk of recurrence after adjuvant therapy, and macrophage polarization from M2‐ to M1‐phenotype can augment the chemo‐sensitivity of micro‐metastases.
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Endoclipping for gastric perforation secondary to second session of EMRC in locally residual early gastric cancer: a case report.
G. De Caro,Nico Pagano,Alberto Malesci,Cristina M. Hervoso,Silvio Danese,Fabio Romeo,Gabriele Delconte,A. Repici +7 more
TL;DR: A 72-year-old woman underwent gastric endoscopic mucosal resection with a cap-fitted endoscope for an adenocarcinoma in situ and a perforation in the site of endoscopic resection was immediately observed.
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Oral beclomethasone: a review of its use in inflammatory bowel disease.
TL;DR: Mechanisms of action, safety and efficacy of beclomethasone dipropionate, a steroid with enhanced topical intestinal activity and low systemic activity, in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease are reviewed.
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Colorectal cancer screening: dying en route?
TL;DR: In this issue of Digestive and Liver Disease, Lisi et al., along with the AMOD tudy group, compared attendance, feasibility, and detection rates or screening of an average-risk population with either FOBT or olonoscopy in an Italian multi-centre study.
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The role of magnetic resonance imaging in detecting intestinal fibrosis in Crohn's disease.
TL;DR: This review will first highlight the main diagnostic techniques for Crohn's disease, then briefly review the main mechanisms of fibrosis in this condition and the use of MRI focusing on findings predictive of fibrotic evolution.