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Dive into the research topics where Alessandro Antonelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandro Antonelli.


European Urology | 2010

Validation of the 2009 TNM Version in a Large Multi-Institutional Cohort of Patients Treated for Renal Cell Carcinoma: Are Further Improvements Needed?

Giacomo Novara; Vincenzo Ficarra; Alessandro Antonelli; Walter Artibani; Roberto Bertini; Marco Carini; Sergio Cosciani Cunico; Ciro Imbimbo; Nicola Longo; Guido Martignoni; Giuseppe Martorana; Andrea Minervini; Vincenzo Mirone; Francesco Montorsi; Roberto Schiavina; Claudio Simeone; Sergio Serni; Alchiede Simonato; Salvatore Siracusano; Alessandro Volpe; Giorgio Carmignani

BACKGROUND A new edition of the TNM was recently released that includes modifications for the staging system of kidney cancers. Specifically, T2 cancers were subclassified into T2a and T2b (< or =10 cm vs >10 cm), tumors with renal vein involvement or perinephric fat involvement were classified as T3a cancers, and those with adrenal involvement were classified as T4 cancers. OBJECTIVE Our aim was to validate the recently released edition of the TNM staging system for primary tumor classification in kidney cancer. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Our multicenter retrospective study consisted of 5339 patients treated in 16 academic Italian centers. INTERVENTION Patients underwent either radical or partial nephrectomy. MEASUREMENTS Univariable and multivariable Cox regression models addressed cancer-specific survival (CSS) after surgery. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS In the study, 1897 patients (35.5%) were classified as pT1a, 1453 (27%) as pT1b, 437 (8%) as pT2a, 153 (3%) as pT2b, 1059 (20%) as pT3a, 117 (2%) as pT3b, 26 (0.5%) as pT3c, and 197 (4%) as pT4. At a median follow-up of 42 mo, 786 (15%) had died of disease. In univariable analysis, patients with pT2b and pT3a tumors had similar CSS, as did patients with pT3c and pT4 tumors. Moreover, both pT3a and pT3b stages included patients with heterogeneous outcomes. In multivariable analysis, the novel classification of the primary tumor was a powerful independent predictor of CSS (p for trend <0.0001). However, the substratification of pT1 tumors did not retain an independent predictive role. The major limitations of the study are retrospective design, lack of central pathologic review, and the small number of patients included in some substages. CONCLUSIONS The recently released seventh edition of the primary tumor staging system for kidney tumors is a powerful predictor of CSS. However, some of the substages identified by the classification have overlapping prognoses, and other substages include patients with heterogeneous outcomes. The few modifications included in this edition may have not resolved the most critical issues in the previous version.


The Journal of Urology | 2011

Simple Enucleation is Equivalent to Traditional Partial Nephrectomy for Renal Cell Carcinoma: Results of a Nonrandomized, Retrospective, Comparative Study

Andrea Minervini; Vincenzo Ficarra; Francesco Rocco; Alessandro Antonelli; Roberto Bertini; Giorgio Carmignani; Sergio Cosciani Cunico; Dario Fontana; Nicola Longo; Giuseppe Martorana; Vincenzo Mirone; Giuseppe Morgia; Giacomo Novara; Marco Roscigno; Riccardo Schiavina; Sergio Serni; Claudio Simeone; Alchiede Simonato; Salvatore Siracusano; Alessandro Volpe; Filiberto Zattoni; Alessandro Zucchi; Marco Carini

PURPOSE The excision of the renal tumor with a substantial margin of healthy parenchyma is considered the gold standard technique for partial nephrectomy. However, simple enucleation showed excellent results in some retrospective series. We compared the oncologic outcomes after standard partial nephrectomy and simple enucleation. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively analyzed 982 patients who underwent standard partial nephrectomy and 537 who had simple enucleation for localized renal cell carcinoma at 16 academic centers between 1997 and 2007. Local recurrence, cancer specific survival and progression-free survival were the main outcomes of this study. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to calculate survival functions and differences were assessed with the log rank statistic. Univariable and multivariable Cox regression models addressed progression-free survival and cancer specific survival. RESULTS Median followup of the patients undergoing traditional partial nephrectomy and simple enucleation was 51 ± 37.8 and 54.4 ± 36 months, respectively (p = 0.08). The 5 and 10-year progression-free survival estimates were 88.9 and 82% after standard partial nephrectomy, and 91.4% and 90.8% after simple enucleation (p = 0.09). The 5 and 10-year cancer specific survival estimates were 93.9% and 91.6% after standard partial nephrectomy, and 94.3% and 93.2% after simple enucleation (p = 0.94). On multivariable analysis the adopted nephron sparing surgery technique was not an independent predictor of progression-free survival (HR 0.8, p = 0.55) and cancer specific survival (HR 0.7, p = 0.53) when adjusted for the effect of the other covariates. CONCLUSIONS To our knowledge this is the first multicenter, comparative study showing oncologic equivalence of standard partial nephrectomy and simple enucleation.


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1999

Insulin: new roles for an ancient hormone

Eleuterio Ferrannini; Alfredo Quiñones Galvan; Amalia Gastaldelli; Stefania Camastra; Annamaria Sironi; Elena Toschi; Simona Baldi; Silvia Frascerra; Monzani F; Alessandro Antonelli; Monica Nannipieri; Mari A; Seghieri G; Andrea Natali

Recent research has greatly expanded the domain of insulin action. The classical action of insulin is the control of glucose metabolism through the dual feedback loop linking plasma insulin with plasma glucose concentrations. This canon has been revised to incorporate the impact of insulin resistance or insulin deficiency, both of which alter glucose homeostasis through maladaptive responses (namely, chronic hyperinsulinaemia and glucose toxicity). A large body of knowledge is available on the physiology, cellular biology and molecular genetics of insulin action on glucose production and uptake.  More recently, a number of newer actions of insulin have been delineated from in vitro and in vivo studies. In sensitive individuals, insulin inhibits lipolysis and platelet aggregation. In the presence of insulin resistance, dyslipidaemia, hyper‐aggregation and anti‐fibrinolysis may create a pro‐thrombotic milieu. Preliminary evidence indicates that hyperinsulinaemia per se may be pro‐oxidant both in vitro and in vivo. Insulin plays a role in mediating diet‐induced thermogenesis, and insulin resistance may therefore be implicated in the defective thermogenesis of diabetes. In the kidney, insulin spares sodium and uric acid from excretion; in chronic hyperinsulinaemic states, these effects may contribute to high blood pressure and hyperuricaemia. Insulin hyperpolarises the plasma membranes of both excitable and non‐excitable tissues, with consequences ranging from baroreceptor desensitisation to cardiac refractoriness (prolongation of QT interval). Under some circumstances insulin is vasodilatory—the mechanism involving both the sodium‐potassium pump and intracellular calcium transients. Finally, by crossing the blood–brain barrier insulin exerts a host a central effects (sympatho‐excitation, vagal withdrawal, stimulation of corticotropin releasing factor), collectively resembling a stress reaction.  Description and understanding of these new roles, their interactions, the interplay between insulin resistance and hyperinsulinaemia, and their implications for cardiovascular disease have only begun.


The FASEB Journal | 2005

3,5-Diiodo-L-thyronine powerfully reduces adiposity in rats by increasing the burning of fats

Antonia Lanni; Maria Moreno; Assunta Lombardi; Pieter de Lange; Elena Silvestri; Maurizio Ragni; Paola Farina; Gabriella Chieffi Baccari; Pupah Fallahi; Alessandro Antonelli; Fernando Goglia

The effect of thyroid hormones on metabolism has long supported their potential as drugs to stimulate fat reduction, but the concomitant induction of a thyrotoxic state has greatly limited their use. Recent evidence suggests that 3,5‐diiodo‐L‐thyronine (T2), a naturally occurring iodothyronine, stimulates metabolic rate via mechanisms involving the mitochondrial apparatus. We examined whether this effect would result in reduced energy storage. Here, we show that T2 administration to rats receiving a high‐fat diet (HFD) reduces both adiposity and body weight gain without inducing thyrotoxicity. Rats receiving HFD + T2 showed (when compared with rats receiving HFD alone) a 13% lower body weight, a 42% higher liver fatty acid oxidation rate, ∼50% less fat mass, a complete disappearance of fat from the liver, and significant reductions in the serum triglyceride and cholesterol levels (−52% and −18%, respectively). Thyroid hormones and thyroid‐stimulating hormone (TSH) serum levels were not influenced by T2 administration. The biochemical mechanism underlying the effects of T2 on liver metabolism involves the carnitine palmitoyl‐transferase system and mitochondrial uncoupling. If the results hold true for humans, pharmacological administration of T2 might serve to counteract the problems associated with overweight, such as accumulation of lipids in liver and serum, without inducing thyrotoxicity. However, the results reported here do not exclude deleterious effects of T2 on a longer time scale as well as do not show that T2 acts in the same way in humans.


Nature Clinical Practice Endocrinology & Metabolism | 2009

Endocrine manifestations of hepatitis C virus infection

Alessandro Antonelli; Clodoveo Ferri; Silvia Martina Ferrari; Michele Colaci; Domenico Sansonno; Poupak Fallahi

Chronic infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) can result in both hepatic and extrahepatic disease and endocrine dysfunction represents an important class of HCV-related extrahepatic disease. The most frequently occurring—and clinically important—of these endocrine disorders are thyroid disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus. In this Review, we evaluate the evidence in support of a link between HCV infection and endocrine-system dysfunction, and discuss potential pathophysiological mechanisms. A meta-analysis of the literature has revealed significant associations between chronic HCV infection, thyroid autoimmunity and hypothyroidism. Furthermore, a high prevalence of thyroid cancer has been reported in HCV-positive patients. Several clinicoepidemiological studies have demonstrated that chronic HCV infection could lead to the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus, possibly as a result of HCV-induced metabolic disturbances. Some researchers have postulated that a type 1 T-helper -cell mediated immune response underpins the association of chronic HCV infection with endocrine disease. Indeed, the available data suggest that a common immunological, type 1 T-helper cell pattern of cytokine expression and activation (via interferon-γ) could provide the pathophysiological basis for this association. Nonetheless, additional studies will be necessary to elucidate fully all the mechanisms involved in HCV-related endocrine dysfunction.


Gastroenterology | 2011

Early Menopause Is Associated With Lack of Response to Antiviral Therapy in Women With Chronic Hepatitis C

Erica Villa; Aimilia Karampatou; Calogero Cammà; Alfredo Di Leo; Monica Luongo; Anna Ferrari; Salvatore Petta; Luisa Losi; Gloria Taliani; Paolo Trande; Barbara Lei; Amalia Graziosi; Veronica Bernabucci; Rosina Critelli; Paola Pazienza; M. Rendina; Alessandro Antonelli; Antonio Francavilla

BACKGROUND & AIMS Chronic hepatitis C (CHC) and liver fibrosis progress more rapidly in men and menopausal women than in women of reproductive age. We investigated the associations among menopause, sustained virologic response (SVR), and liver damage in patients with CHC. METHODS We performed a prospective study of 1000 consecutive, treatment-naïve patients 18 years of age and older with compensated liver disease from CHC. Liver biopsy samples were analyzed (for fibrosis, inflammation, and steatosis) before patients received standard antiviral therapy. From women (n = 442), we collected data on the presence, type, and timing of menopause; associated hormone and metabolic features; serum levels of interleukin-6; and hepatic tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α. RESULTS Postmenopausal women achieved SVRs less frequently than women of reproductive age (46.0% vs 67.5%; P < .0001) but as frequently as men (51.1%; P = .283). By multivariate regression analysis, independent significant predictors for women to not achieve an SVR were early menopause (odds ratio [OR], 8.055; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.834-25.350), levels of γ-glutamyl transpeptidase (OR, 2.165; 95% CI, 1.364-3.436), infection with hepatitis C virus genotype 1 or 4 (OR, 3.861; 95% CI, 2.433-6.134), and cholesterol levels (OR, 0.985; 95% CI, 0.971-0.998). Early menopause was the only independent factor that predicted lack of an SVR among women with genotype 1 hepatitis C virus infection (OR, 3.933; 95% CI, 1.274-12.142). Baseline levels of liver inflammation, fibrosis, steatosis, serum interleukin-6 (P = .04), and hepatic TNF-α (P = .007) were significantly higher among postmenopausal women than women of reproductive age. CONCLUSIONS Among women with CHC, early menopause was associated with a low likelihood of SVR, probably because of inflammatory factors that change at menopause.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2007

HCV-related autoimmune and neoplastic disorders: the HCV syndrome

Clodoveo Ferri; Alessandro Antonelli; Mt Mascia; Marco Sebastiani; Poupak Fallahi; Daniela Ferrari; S Pileri; Anna Linda Zignego

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) chronic infection may be associated with a great number of both hepatic and extrahepatic manifestations. HCV lymphotropism is responsible for poly-oligoclonal B-lymphocyte expansion, which is the common underlying alteration in a significant percentage of HCV-infected individuals. The consequent production of different autoantibodies and immune-complexes, including cryoglobulins, may lead to organ- and non-organ-specific immunological alterations. Mixed cryoglobulinemia, a small-vessel systemic vasculitis, is characterized by the coexistence of autoimmune and lymphoproliferative alterations; therefore, it represents the prototype of HCV-associated disorders. Moreover, HCV shows an oncogenic potential; several studies support its pathogenetic link with some malignancies, mainly hepatocellular carcinoma and B-cell lymphomas. On the whole, HCV-related disorders present a heterogeneous geographical distribution, suggesting a role of other important genetic and/or environmental cofactors. While the majority of HCV-infected individuals is asymptomatic or may develop only liver manifestations, a significant percentage of them may develop a variable combination of autoimmune lymphoproliferative disorders. The resulting multiform clinico-pathological condition can be termed HCV syndrome. The natural history of HCV syndrome is the expression of multifactorial and multistep pathogenetic process, which usually proceeds from mild, often isolated manifestations to systemic immune-mediated disorders, and less frequently to overt malignancies.


Thyroid | 2003

Role of Neck Ultrasonography in the Follow-Up of Children Operated on for Thyroid Papillary Cancer

Alessandro Antonelli; Paolo Miccoli; Poupak Fallahi; M Grosso; Claudia Nesti; Claudio Spinelli; Ele Ferrannini

The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of neck ultrasonography compared to (131)I whole-body scan (WBS) and circulating thyroglobulin (Tg) measurement after thyroid hormone withdrawal in the follow-up of children with thyroid papillary cancer, who had previously undergone total thyroidectomy for the diagnosis of neck lymph node metastases (LNM). Forty-five children were examined. Neck ultrasonography and diagnostic WBS were conclusive about the presence or absence of LNM in 35 patients. Diagnostic WBS revealed the presence of LNM in 6 cases not detected by neck ultrasonography; neck ultrasonography was positive in 3 cases that were negative at diagnostic WBS but confirmed by post-(131)I therapy WBS. One patient with suspicious neck lymphnodes at neck ultrasonography not confirmed by WBS was considered as a false-positive result of neck ultrasonography. Neck ultrasonography and thyroglobulin (Tg) were conclusive about the presence or absence of LNM in 29 patients. Tg was elevated in 10 subjects with negative neck ultrasonography (7 had also lung and/or mediastinic LNM). Tg was undetectable in 5 patients in whom the presence of LNM was confirmed by neck ultrasonography and WBS. In conclusion, our study in children demonstrates that neck ultrasonography can detect LNM that are not suspected by palpation, diagnostic WBS, or serum Tg determination. Furthermore, neck ultrasonography can pinpoint the anatomic site of the LNM.


Journal of Hepatology | 2009

3,5-diiodo-l-thyronine, by modulating mitochondrial functions, reverses hepatic fat accumulation in rats fed a high-fat diet.

Maria Pina Mollica; Lillà Lionetti; Maria Moreno; Assunta Lombardi; Pieter de Lange; Alessandro Antonelli; Antonia Lanni; Gina Cavaliere; A. Barletta; Fernando Goglia

BACKGROUND/AIMS Mitochondrial dysfunction is central to the physiopathology of steatosis and/or non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. In this study on rats we investigated whether 3,5-diiodo-l-thyronine (T2), a biologically active iodothyronine, acting at mitochondrial level is able to reverse hepatic steatosis after its induction through a high-fat diet. METHODS Hepatic steatosis was induced by long-term high-fat feeding of rats for six weeks which were then fed the same high-fat diet for the next 4 weeks and were simultaneously treated or not treated with T2. Histological analyses were performed on liver sections (by staining with Sudan black B). In liver mitochondria fatty acid oxidation rate, mitochondrial efficiency (by measuring proton conductance) and mitochondrial oxidative stress (by measuring H(2)O(2) release, aconitase and SOD activity) were detected. RESULTS Stained sections showed that T2 treatment reduced hepatic fatty accumulation induced by a high-fat diet. At the mitochondrial level, the fatty acid oxidation rate and carnitine palmitoyl transferase activity were enhanced by T2 treatment. Moreover, by stimulating mitochondrial uncoupling, T2 caused less efficient utilization of fatty acid substrates and ameliorated mitochondrial oxidative stress. CONCLUSION These data demonstrate that T2, by activating mitochondrial processes, markedly reverses hepatic steatosis in vivo.


Autoimmunity Reviews | 2008

Immunopathogenesis of HCV-related endocrine manifestations in chronic hepatitis and mixed cryoglobulinemia

Alessandro Antonelli; Clodoveo Ferri; Silvia Martina Ferrari; Michele Colaci; Poupak Fallahi

Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) is known to be responsible for both hepatic and extrahepatic diseases (HCV-related extrahepatic diseases = HCV-EHDs). The most important systemic HCV-EHDs are mixed cryoglobulinemia and lymphoproliferative disorders, while the most frequent and clinically important endocrine HCV-EHDs are thyroid disorders and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D). From a meta-analysis of the literature a significant association between HCV infection and thyroid autoimmunity and hypothyroidism has been reported. A high prevalence of thyroid cancer has been reported, too. Furthermore, several clinical epidemiologic studies have reported that HCV infection is associated to T2D. Many studies have linked Th1 immune response with HCV infection, thyroid autoimmunity, or diabetes. These findings suggest that a possible common immunological Th1 pattern could be the pathophysiological base of the association of HCV-EHDs, with thyroid autoimmunity and T2D. In fact, HCV infection of thyrocytes or beta-cells may act by upregulating CXCL10 secretion in these cells that is responsible for Th1 lymphocyte recruitment. Th1 response leads to increased IFNgamma and TNFalpha production that in turn stimulates CXCL10 secretion by the target cells, thus perpetuating the immune cascade. This process may lead to the appearance of thyroid autoimmune disorders or T2D in genetically predisposed subjects.

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Clodoveo Ferri

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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M. Furlan

University of Brescia

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S. Ferrari

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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