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Cesare Cozzarini

Researcher at Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

Publications -  198
Citations -  6394

Cesare Cozzarini is an academic researcher from Vita-Salute San Raffaele University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prostate cancer & Radiation therapy. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 181 publications receiving 5863 citations.

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Two Positive Nodes Represent a Significant Cut-off Value for Cancer Specific Survival in Patients with Node Positive Prostate Cancer. A New Proposal Based on a Two-Institution Experience on 703 Consecutive N+ Patients Treated with Radical Prostatectomy, Extended Pelvic Lymph Node Dissection and Adjuvant Therapy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed to stratify node positive patients according to the number of positive nodes to improve cancer specific survival (CSS) prediction, and showed that patients with up to 2 positive nodes experienced a significantly higher overall survival compared to patients with more than 2 nodes.
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Predictive factors of [(11)C]choline PET/CT in patients with biochemical failure after radical prostatectomy

TL;DR: In addition to PSA levels, pathological stage, previous biochemical failure and age, physicians should be considered by physicians when referring prostate cancer patients with biochemical failure after radical prostatectomy to [11C]choline PET/CT.
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Functional outcomes and complications following radiation therapy for prostate cancer: a critical analysis of the literature.

TL;DR: In the absence of prospective randomised trials comparing different types of surgical and RT-based treatments in PCa, the introduction of validated tools for reporting functional and clinical outcomes is crucial for evaluating and identifying each individual's best treatment choice.
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Impact of Adjuvant Radiotherapy on Survival of Patients With Node-Positive Prostate Cancer

TL;DR: The beneficial impact of aRT on survival in patients with pN1 prostate cancer is highly influenced by tumor characteristics, and only two groups of men benefited from aRT.
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Fitting late rectal bleeding data using different NTCP models: results from an Italian multi-centric study (AIROPROS0101).

TL;DR: Different NTCP models fit quite accurately the considered clinical data and are consistent with a rectum 'less serial' than previously reported investigations when considering grade 2 bleeding while a more serial behaviour was found for severe bleeding.