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Featured researches published by Aldo Filosa.


Haematologica | 2011

Deferasirox, deferiprone and desferrioxamine treatment in thalassemia major patients: cardiac iron and function comparison determined by quantitative magnetic resonance imaging

Alessia Pepe; Antonella Meloni; Marcello Capra; Paolo Cianciulli; Luciano Prossomariti; Cristina Malaventura; Maria Caterina Putti; Alma Lippi; Maria Antonietta Romeo; Maria Grazia Bisconte; Aldo Filosa; Vincenzo Caruso; Antonella Quarta; Lorella Pitrolo; Massimiliano Missere; Massimo Midiri; Giuseppe Rossi; Vincenzo Positano; Massimo Lombardi; Aurelio Maggio

Background Oral deferiprone was suggested to be more effective than subcutaneous desferrioxamine for removing heart iron. Oral once-daily chelator deferasirox has recently been made commercially available but its long-term efficacy on cardiac iron and function has not yet been established. Our study aimed to compare the effectiveness of deferasirox, deferiprone and desferrioxamine on myocardial and liver iron concentrations and bi-ventricular function in thalassemia major patients by means of quantitative magnetic resonance imaging. Design and Methods From the first 550 thalassemia subjects enrolled in the Myocardial Iron Overload in Thalassemia network, we retrospectively selected thalassemia major patients who had been receiving one chelator alone for longer than one year. We identified three groups of patients: 24 treated with deferasirox, 42 treated with deferiprone and 89 treated with desferrioxamine. Myocardial iron concentrations were measured by T2* multislice multiecho technique. Biventricular function parameters were quantitatively evaluated by cine images. Liver iron concentrations were measured by T2* multiecho technique. Results The global heart T2* value was significantly higher in the deferiprone (34±11ms) than in the deferasirox (21±12 ms) and the desferrioxamine groups (27±11 ms) (P=0.0001). We found higher left ventricular ejection fractions in the deferiprone and the desferrioxamine versus the deferasirox group (P=0.010). Liver iron concentration, measured as T2* signal, was significantly lower in the desferrioxamine versus the deferiprone and the deferasirox group (P=0.004). Conclusions The cohort of patients treated with oral deferiprone showed less myocardial iron burden and better global systolic ventricular function compared to the patients treated with oral deferasirox or subcutaneous desferrioxamine.


Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2009

Improving survival with deferiprone treatment in patients with thalassemia major: a prospective multicenter randomised clinical trial under the auspices of the Italian Society for Thalassemia and Hemoglobinopathies.

Aurelio Maggio; Angela Vitrano; Marcello Capra; Liana Cuccia; Francesco Gagliardotto; Aldo Filosa; Carmelo Magnano; Michele Rizzo; Vincenzo Caruso; Calogera Gerardi; Crocetta Argento; Saveria Campisi; Francesco Cantella; Francesca Commendatore; Domenico Giuseppe D'Ascola; Carmelo Fidone; Angela Ciancio; Maria Concetta Galati; Gaetano Giuffrida; Rocca Cingari; Giovanni Giugno; Turi Lombardo; Luciano Prossomariti; Roberto Malizia; Anna Meo; Gaetano Roccamo; Maria Antonietta Romeo; Pietro Violi; Paolo Cianciulli; Paolo Rigano

The prognosis for thalassemia major has dramatically improved in the last two decades. However, many transfusion-dependent patients continue to develop progressive accumulation of iron. This can lead to tissue damage and eventually death, particularly from cardiac disease. Previous studies that investigated iron chelation treatments, including retrospective and prospective non-randomised clinical trials, suggested that mortality, due mainly to cardiac damage, was reduced or completely absent in patients treated with deferiprone (DFP) alone or a combined deferiprone-deferoxamine (DFP-DFO) chelation treatment. However, no survival analysis has been reported for a long-term randomised control trial. Here, we performed a multicenter, long-term, randomised control trial that compared deferoxamine (DFO) versus DFP alone, sequential DFP-DFO, or combined DFP-DFO iron chelation treatments. The trial included 265 patients with thalassemia major, with 128 (48.3%) females and 137 (51.7%) males. No deaths occurred with the DFP-alone or the combined DFP-DFO treatments. One death occurred due to graft versus host disease (GVHD) in a patient that had undergone bone marrow transplantation; this patient was censored at the time of transplant. Only one death occurred with the DFP-DFO sequential treatment in a patient that had experienced an episode of heart failure one year earlier. Ten deaths occurred with the deferoxamine treatment. The main factors that correlated with an increase in the hazard ratio for death were: cirrhosis, arrhythmia, previous episode of heart failure, diabetes, hypogonadism, and hypothyroidism. In a Cox regression model, the interaction effect of sex and age was statistically significant (p-value<0.013). For each increasing year of age, the hazard ratio for males was 1.03 higher than that for females (p-value<0.013). In conclusion, the results of this study show that the risk factors for predicting mortality in patients with thalassemia major are deferoxamine-treatment, complications, and the interaction effect of sex and age.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2013

Cardiac and hepatic iron and ejection fraction in thalassemia major: Multicentre prospective comparison of combined Deferiprone and Deferoxamine therapy against Deferiprone or Deferoxamine Monotherapy

Alessia Pepe; Antonella Meloni; Giuseppe Rossi; Liana Cuccia; Giuseppe Domenico D’Ascola; Michele Santodirocco; Paolo Cianciulli; Vincenzo Caruso; Maria Antonietta Romeo; Aldo Filosa; Lorella Pitrolo; Maria Caterina Putti; Angelo Peluso; Saveria Campisi; Massimiliano Missere; Massimo Midiri; L. Gulino; Vincenzo Positano; Massimo Lombardi; Paolo Ricchi

BackgroundDue to the limited data available in literature, the aim of this multi-centre study was to prospectively compare in thalassemia major (TM) patients the efficacy of combined deferiprone (DFP) and deferoxamine (DFO) regimen versus either DFP and DFO in monotherapy by cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) over a follow up of 18 months.MethodsAmong the first 1135 TM patients in the MIOT (Myocardial Iron Overload in Thalassemia) network, we evaluated those who had received either combined regimen (DFO + DFP, N=51) or DFP (N=39) and DFO (N=74) monotherapies between the two CMR scans. Iron overload was measured by T2* multiecho technique. Biventricular function parameters were quantitatively evaluated by cine images.ResultsThe percentage of patients that maintained a normal global heart T2* value was comparable between DFP+DFO versus both monotherapy groups. Among the patients with myocardial iron overload at baseline, the changes in the global heart T2* and in biventricular function were not significantly different in DFP+DFO compared with the DFP group. The improvement in the global heart T2* was significantly higher in the DFP+DFO than the DFO group, without a difference in biventricular function. Among the patients with hepatic iron at baseline, the decrease in liver iron concentration values was significantly higher with combination therapy than with either monotherapy group.ConclusionsIn TM patients at the dosages used in the real world, the combined DFP+DFO regimen was more effective in removing cardiac iron than DFO, and was superior in clearing hepatic iron than either DFO or DFP monotherapy. Combined therapy did not show an additional effect on heart function over DFP.


Blood | 2010

Management of chronic viral hepatitis in patients with thalassemia: recommendations from an international panel.

V. Di Marco; Massimo Capra; E. Angelucci; Caterina Borgna-Pignatti; Paul Telfer; Paul Harmatz; Antonis Kattamis; L. Prossamariti; Aldo Filosa; Deborah Rund; M. R. Gamberini; Paolo Cianciulli; M. de Montalembert; Francesco Gagliardotto; Graham R. Foster; J. D. Grangè; F. Cassarà; A. Iacono; Maria Domenica Cappellini; G. M. Brittenham; Daniele Prati; Antonello Pietrangelo; A. Craxì; Aurelio Maggio

Chelation therapy with new drugs prevents cardiac damage and improves the survival of thalassemia patients. Liver diseases have emerged as a critical clinical issue. Chronic liver diseases play an important role in the prognosis of thalassemia patients because of the high frequency of viral infections and important role of the liver in regulating iron metabolism. Accurate assessment of liver iron overload is required to tailor iron chelation therapy. The diagnosis of hepatitis B virus- or hepatitis C virus-related chronic hepatitis is required to detect patients who have a high risk of developing liver complications and who may benefit by antiviral therapy. Moreover, clinical management of chronic liver disease in thalassemia patients is a team management issue requiring a multidisciplinary approach. The purposes of this paper are to summarize the knowledge on the epidemiology and the risks of transmission of viral infections, to analyze invasive and noninvasive methods for the diagnosis of chronic liver disease, to report the knowledge on clinical course of chronic viral hepatitis, and to suggest the management of antiviral therapy in thalassemia patients with chronic hepatitis B or C virus or cirrhosis.


British Journal of Haematology | 2009

Long-term sequential deferiprone–deferoxamine versus deferiprone alone for thalassaemia major patients: a randomized clinical trial

Aurelio Maggio; Angela Vitrano; Marcello Capra; Liana Cuccia; Francesco Gagliardotto; Aldo Filosa; Maria Antonietta Romeo; Carmelo Magnano; Vincenzo Caruso; Crocetta Argento; Calogera Gerardi; Saveria Campisi; Pietro Violi; Roberto Malizia; Paolo Cianciulli; Michele Rizzo; Domenico Giuseppe D’Ascola; Alessandra Quota; Luciano Prossomariti; Carmelo Fidone; Paolo Rigano; Alessia Pepe; Gennaro D’Amico; Alberto Morabito; Christian Gluud

A multicentre randomized open‐label trial was designed to assess the effectiveness of long‐term sequential deferiprone–deferoxamine (DFO–DFP) versus DFP alone to treat thalassaemia major (TM). DFP at 75 mg/kg, divided into three oral daily doses, for 4 d/week and DFO by subcutaneous infusion (8–12 h) at 50 mg/kg per day for the remaining 3 d/week was compared with DFP alone at 75 mg/kg, administered 7 d/week during a 5‐year follow‐up. The main outcome measures were differences between multiple observations of serum ferritin concentrations. Secondary outcomes were survival analysis, adverse events, and costs. Consecutive thalassaemia patients (275) were assessed for eligibility; 213 of these were randomized and underwent intention‐to‐treat analysis. The decrease of serum ferritin levels during the treatment period was statistically significant higher in sequential DFP–DFO patients compared with DFP‐alone patients (P = 0·005). Kaplan–Meier survival analysis for the two chelation treatments did not show any statistically significant differences (long‐rank test, P = 0·3145). Adverse events and costs were comparable between the groups. The trial results show that sequential DFP–DFO treatment compared with DFP alone significantly decreased serum ferritin concentration during treatment for 5 years without significant differences regarding survival, adverse events, or costs. This trial was registered at http://www.clinicaltrials.gov as # NCT00733811.


Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2011

Iron chelation therapy in thalassemia major: a systematic review with meta-analyses of 1520 patients included on randomized clinical trials.

Aurelio Maggio; Aldo Filosa; Vitrano A; Aloj G; Antonis Kattamis; Ceci A; Suthat Fucharoen; Cianciulli P; Robert W. Grady; Prossomariti L; John B. Porter; Iacono A; Cappellini; Bonifazi F; Cassarà F; Paul Harmatz; John C. Wood; Gluud C

The effectiveness of deferoxamine (DFO), deferiprone (DFP), or deferasirox (DFX) in thalassemia major was assessed. Outcomes were reported as means±SD, mean differences with 95% CI, or standardized mean differences. Statistical heterogeneity was tested using χ2 (Q) and I2. Sources of bias and Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation system (GRADE) were considered. Overall, 1520 patients were included. Only 7.4% of trials were free of bias. Overall measurements suggest low trial quality (GRADE). The meta-analysis suggests lower final liver iron concentrations during associated versus monotherapy treatment (p<0.0001), increases in serum ferritin levels during DFX 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg versus DFO-treated groups (p<0.00001, p<0.00001, and p=0.002, respectively), but no statistically significant difference during DFX 30 mg/kg versus DFO (p=0.70), no statistically significant variations in heart T2* signal during associated or sequential versus mono-therapy treatment (p=0.46 and p=0.14, respectively), increases in urinary iron excretion during associated or sequential versus monotherapy treatment (p=0.008 and p=0.02, respectively), and improved ejection fraction during associated or sequential versus monotherapy treatment (p=0.01 and p<0.00001, respectively). These findings do not support any specific chelation treatment. The literature shows risks of bias, and additional larger and longer trials are needed.


Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2017

Pattern of complications and burden of disease in patients affected by beta thalassemia major

Fedele Bonifazi; Rosa Conte; Paola Baiardi; Donato Bonifazi; Mariagrazia Felisi; Paola Giordano; Viviana Giannuzzi; Angela Iacono; Rosa Padula; Alessia Pepe; Maria Caterina Putti; Lucia Ruggieri; Giovanni Carlo Del Vecchio; Aldo Filosa; Aurelio Maggio; Adriana Ceci

Abstract Objectives: Despite the correct application of blood transfusions and chelation treatments, beta thalassemia patients have many complications. Systematic population analyses on types and frequency of these complications are very few. The aim of this study is to characterize the complications, their risk factors and their clinical and economic impact. Methods: Complications at baseline and events occurring during one observational year were analyzed in 272 patients aged >12 years. Risk factors were analyzed through chi-squared and unpaired t tests. Logistic regression was applied to perform the risk factors multivariate analysis. Results: A total of 554 complications (1–6 per patient) affected 82.3% of patients. Cardiac complications were less represented than expected. Musculoskeletal diseases were the most represented complications followed by hepatic, sexual and endocrine diseases. Splenectomized patients, born before 1970 and aged >40 years, starting iron chelation therapy when aged >4 years or after receiving more than 20 blood transfusions, presented a significantly higher number of complications. A total of 885 adverse events requiring 34125 additional medical services occurred in 1 year. Of these, 34.9% were related to treatments and 65.1% to other causes. Event numbers, additional medical interventions and cost increased progressively in patients affected by one or more complication compared to patients with no complications. Conclusions: The pattern of complications changes according to birth cohort and differentiates older from younger patients. The burden of the disease and its costs increase after the onset of the first complication, therefore prevention of complications is fundamental in these patients.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2010

Preferential patterns of myocardial iron overload by multislice multiecho T*2 CMR in thalassemia major patients

Antonella Meloni; Vincenzo Positano; Alessia Pepe; Giuseppe Rossi; MariaChiara Dell'Amico; Cristina Salvatori; Petra Keilberg; Aldo Filosa; Giuseppina Sallustio; Massimo Midiri; Domenico Giuseppe D'Ascola; Maria Filomena Santarelli; Massimo Lombardi

T*2 multislice multiecho cardiac MR allows quantification of the segmental distribution of myocardial iron overload. This study aimed to determine if there were preferential patterns of myocardial iron overload in thalassemia major. Five hundred twenty‐three thalassemia major patients underwent cardiac MR. Three short‐axis views of the left ventricle were acquired and analyzed using a 16‐segment standardized model. The T*2 value on each segment was calculated, as well as the global value. Four main circumferential regions (anterior, septal, inferior, and lateral) were defined. Significant segmental variability was found in the 229 patients with significant myocardial iron overload (global T*2 <26 ms), subsequently divided into two groups: severe (global T*2 <10 ms) and mild to moderate (global T*2 between 10 and 26 ms) myocardial iron overload. A preferential pattern of iron store in anterior and inferior regions was detected in both groups. This pattern was preserved among the slices. The pattern could not be explained by additive susceptibility artifacts, negligible in heavily iron‐loaded patients. A significantly higher T*2 value in the basal slice was found in patients with severe iron overload. In conclusion, a segmental T*2 cardiac MR approach could identify early iron deposit, useful for tailoring chelation therapy and preventing myocardial dysfunction in the clinical setting. Magn Reson Med, 2010.


American Journal of Hematology | 2014

Endocrine function and bone disease during long-term chelation therapy with deferasirox in patients with β-thalassemia major

Maddalena Casale; Serena Citarella; Aldo Filosa; Elisa De Michele; Francesco Palmieri; Alfonso Ragozzino; Giovanni Amendola; Umberto Pugliese; Immacolata Tartaglione; Filomena Della Rocca; Patrizia Cinque; Bruno Nobili; Silverio Perrotta

Iron overload in β‐thalassemia major (TM) typically results in iron‐induced cardiomyopathy, liver disease, and endocrine complications. We examined the incidence and progression of endocrine disorders (hypothyroidism, diabetes, hypoparathyroidism, hypogonadism), growth and pubertal delay, and bone metabolism disease during long‐term deferasirox chelation therapy in a real clinical practice setting. We report a multicenter retrospective cohort study of 86 transfusion‐dependent patients with TM treated with once daily deferasirox for a median duration of 6.5 years, up to 10 years. No deaths or new cases of hypothyroidism or diabetes occurred. The incidence of new endocrine complications was 7% (P = 0.338, for change of prevalence from baseline to end of study) and included hypogonadism (n = 5) and hypoparathyroidism (n = 1). Among patients with hypothyroidism or diabetes at baseline, no significant change in thyroid parameters or insulin requirements were observed, respectively. Mean lumbar spine bone mineral density increased significantly (P < 0.001) and the number of patients with lumbar spine osteoporosis significantly decreased (P = 0.022) irrespective of bisphosphonate therapy, hormonal replacement therapy, and calcium or vitamin D supplementation. There were no significant differences in the number of pediatric patients below the 5th centile for height between baseline and study completion. Six pregnancies occurred successfully, and four of them were spontaneous without ovarian stimulation. This is the first study evaluating endocrine function during the newest oral chelation therapy with deferasirox. A low rate of new endocrine disorders and a stabilization of those pre‐exisisting was observed in a real clinical practice setting. Am. J. Hematol. 89:1102–1106, 2014.


British Journal of Haematology | 2012

Neridronate improves bone mineral density and reduces back pain in β‐thalassaemia patients with osteoporosis: results from a phase 2, randomized, parallel‐arm, open‐label study

Gian Luca Forni; Silverio Perrotta; Andrea Giusti; Giovanni Quarta; Lorella Pitrolo; Maria Domenica Cappellini; Domenico Giuseppe D'Ascola; Caterina Borgna Pignatti; Paolo Rigano; Aldo Filosa; Giovanni Iolascon; Bruno Nobili; Marina Baldini; Alessandra Rosa; Valeria Pinto; Ernesto Palummeri

Neridronate is a third generation bisphosphonate with established efficacy in metabolic bone disease. In this randomized, open‐label study, 118 adults with β‐thalassaemia and bone mineral density (BMD) Z scores ≤−2·0 were randomized 1:1–500 mg calcium with 400 international unis (iu) vitamin D daily or 500 mg calcium with 400 iu vitamin D daily plus neridronate 100 mg intravenously every 90 d. Significant increases in BMD at the lumbar spine and total hip were noted in the neridronate group at 6 and 12 months from baseline (P < 0·001), and values were significantly higher than the control group at both time intervals. Neridronate also significantly decreased serum bone alkaline phosphatase and C‐telopeptide of collagen type 1 levels from as early as 3 months (P = 0·04 and P < 0·001, respectively), reaching significantly lower values at 12 months compared with the control group (P < 0·05). Reductions in back pain and analgesic use were also evident, starting 3 months from commencing treatment. Treatment was well tolerated by all patients. In this largest randomized trial in thalassaemia‐induced osteoporosis to date, neridronate was safe and effective in reducing bone resorption and increasing BMD. The associated reduction in back pain and improved quality of life will encourage adherence to therapy. (Clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT01140321.)

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Antonella Meloni

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Paolo Cianciulli

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Liana Cuccia

Boston Children's Hospital

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