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Dive into the research topics where Andrea Mayado is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea Mayado.


Histopathology | 2013

CD30 expression by bone marrow mast cells from different diagnostic variants of systemic mastocytosis

José Mário Morgado; Omar Perbellini; Ryan C. Johnson; Cristina Teodosio; Almudena Matito; Iván Álvarez-Twose; Patrizia Bonadonna; Alberto Zamò; María Jara-Acevedo; Andrea Mayado; Andrés C. García-Montero; Manuela Mollejo; Tracy I. George; Roberta Zanotti; Alberto Orfao; Luis Escribano; Laura Sánchez-Muñoz

CD30 expression by bone marrow (BM) mast cells (MC) has been reported recently in systemic mastocytosis (SM) patients. The aim of this study was to investigate the potential diagnostic and prognostic value of CD30 expression in SM as assessed by multiparameter flow cytometry.


Cancer Discovery | 2015

Infection Exposure Is a Causal Factor in B-cell Precursor Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia as a Result of Pax5-Inherited Susceptibility.

Alberto Martín-Lorenzo; Julia Hauer; Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Franziska Auer; Inés González-Herrero; Idoia García-Ramírez; Sebastian Ginzel; Ralf Thiele; Stefan N. Constantinescu; Christoph Bartenhagen; Martin Dugas; Michael Gombert; Daniel Schäfer; Oscar Blanco; Andrea Mayado; Alberto Orfao; Diego Alonso-López; Javier De Las Rivas; Cesar Cobaleda; María Begoña García-Cenador; Francisco Javier García-Criado; Isidro Sánchez-García; Arndt Borkhardt

UNLABELLED Earlier in the past century, infections were regarded as the most likely cause of childhood B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (pB-ALL). However, there is a lack of relevant biologic evidence supporting this hypothesis. We present in vivo genetic evidence mechanistically connecting inherited susceptibility to pB-ALL and postnatal infections by showing that pB-ALL was initiated in Pax5 heterozygous mice only when they were exposed to common pathogens. Strikingly, these murine pB-ALLs closely resemble the human disease. Tumor exome sequencing revealed activating somatic, nonsynonymous mutations of Jak3 as a second hit. Transplantation experiments and deep sequencing suggest that inactivating mutations in Pax5 promote leukemogenesis by creating an aberrant progenitor compartment that is susceptible to malignant transformation through accumulation of secondary Jak3 mutations. Thus, treatment of Pax5(+/-) leukemic cells with specific JAK1/3 inhibitors resulted in increased apoptosis. These results uncover the causal role of infection in pB-ALL development. SIGNIFICANCE These results demonstrate that delayed infection exposure is a causal factor in pB-ALL. Therefore, these findings have critical implications for the understanding of the pathogenesis of leukemia and for the development of novel therapies for this disease.


Modern Pathology | 2015

Detection of the KIT D816V mutation in peripheral blood of systemic mastocytosis: diagnostic implications

María Jara-Acevedo; Cristina Teodosio; Laura Sánchez-Muñoz; Iván Álvarez-Twose; Andrea Mayado; Carolina Caldas; Almudena Matito; José Mário Morgado; Javier Ignacio Muñoz-González; Luis Escribano; Andrés C. García-Montero; Alberto Orfao

Recent studies have found the KIT D816V mutation in peripheral blood of virtually all adult systemic mastocytosis patients once highly sensitive PCR techniques were used; thus, detection of the KIT D816V mutation in peripheral blood has been proposed to be included in the diagnostic work-up of systemic mastocytosis algorithms. However, the precise frequency of the mutation, the biological significance of peripheral blood-mutated cells and their potential association with involvement of bone marrow hematopoietic cells other than mast cells still remain to be investigated. Here, we determined the frequency of peripheral blood involvement by the KIT D816V mutation, as assessed by two highly sensitive PCR methods, and investigated its relationship with multilineage involvement of bone marrow hematopoiesis. Overall, our results confirmed the presence of the KIT D816V mutation in peripheral blood of most systemic mastocytosis cases (161/190; 85%)—with an increasing frequency from indolent systemic mastocytosis without skin lesions (29/44; 66%) to indolent systemic mastocytosis with skin involvement (124/135; 92%), and more aggressive disease subtypes (11/11; 100%)—as assessed by the allele-specific oligonucleotide-qPCR method, which was more sensitive (P<.0001) than the peptide nucleic acid-mediated PCR approach (84/190; 44%). Although the presence of the KIT mutation in peripheral blood, as assessed by the allele-specific oligonucleotide-qPCR technique, did not accurately predict for multilineage bone marrow involvement of hematopoiesis, the allele-specific oligonucleotide-qPCR allele burden and the peptide nucleic acid-mediated-PCR approach did. These results suggest that both methods provide clinically useful and complementary information through the identification and/or quantification of the KIT D816V mutation in peripheral blood of patients suspected of systemic mastocytosis.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2013

Gene expression profile of highly purified bone marrow mast cells in systemic mastocytosis

Cristina Teodosio; Andrés C. García-Montero; María Jara-Acevedo; Laura Sánchez-Muñoz; Carlos E. Pedreira; Iván Álvarez-Twose; Sergio Matarraz; José Mário Morgado; Paloma Bárcena; Almudena Matito; Andrea Mayado; Maria Luz Sanchez; María Díez-Campelo; Luis Escribano; Alberto Orfao

BACKGROUND Despite the fact that a great majority (>90%) of patients with systemic mastocytosis (SM) carry a common genetic lesion, the D816V KIT mutation, little is known regarding the molecular and biological pathways underlying the clinical heterogeneity of the disease. OBJECTIVE We sought to analyze the gene expression profile (GEP) of bone marrow mast cells (BMMCs) in patients with SM and its association with distinct clinical variants of the disease. METHODS GEP analyses were performed by using DNA-oligonucleotide microarrays in highly purified BMMCs from patients with SM carrying the D816V KIT mutation (n=26) classified according to the diagnostic subtype of SM versus normal/reactive BMMCs (n=7). Validation of GEP results was performed with flow cytometry in the same set of samples and in an independent cohort of 176 subjects. RESULTS Overall, 758 transcripts were significantly deregulated in patients with SM, with a common GEP (n=398 genes) for all subvariants of SM analyzed. These were characterized by upregulation of genes involved in the innate and inflammatory immune response, including interferon-induced genes and genes involved in cellular responses to viral antigens, together with complement inhibitory molecules and genes involved in lipid metabolism and protein processing. Interestingly, aggressive SM additionally showed deregulation of apoptosis and cell cycle-related genes, whereas patients with indolent SM displayed increased expression of adhesion-related molecules. CONCLUSION BMMCs from patients with different clinical subtypes of SM display distinct GEPs, which might reflect new targetable pathways involved in the pathogenesis of the disease.


Blood | 2016

KIT D816V-mutated bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells in indolent systemic mastocytosis are associated with disease progression.

Andrés C. García-Montero; María Jara-Acevedo; Iván Álvarez-Twose; Cristina Teodosio; Laura Sánchez-Muñoz; Carmen Muñiz; Javier Ignacio Muñoz-González; Andrea Mayado; Almudena Matito; Carolina Caldas; José Mário Morgado; Luis Escribano; Alberto Orfao

Multilineage involvement of bone marrow (BM) hematopoiesis by the somatic KIT D816V mutation is present in a subset of adult indolent systemic mastocytosis (ISM) patients in association with a poorer prognosis. Here, we investigated the potential involvement of BM mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from ISM patients by the KIT D816V mutation and its potential impact on disease progression and outcome. This mutation was investigated in highly purified BM MSCs and other BM cell populations from 83 ISM patients followed for a median of 116 months. KIT D816V-mutated MSCs were detected in 22 of 83 cases. All MSC-mutated patients had multilineage KIT mutation (100% vs 30%, P = .0001) and they more frequently showed involvement of lymphoid plus myeloid BM cells (59% vs 22%; P = .03) and a polyclonal pattern of inactivation of the X-chromosome of KIT-mutated BM mast cells (64% vs 0%; P = .01) vs other multilineage ISM cases. Moreover, presence of KIT-mutated MSCs was associated with more advanced disease features, a greater rate of disease progression (50% vs 17%; P = .04), and a shorter progression-free survival (P ≤ .003). Overall, these results support the notion that ISM patients with mutated MSCs may have acquired the KIT mutation in a common pluripotent progenitor cell, prior to differentiation into MSCs and hematopoietic precursor cells, before the X-chromosome inactivation process occurs. From a clinical point of view, acquisition of the KIT mutation in an earlier BM precursor cell confers a significantly greater risk for disease progression and a poorer outcome.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2015

The immunophenotype of mast cells and its utility in the diagnostic work-up of systemic mastocytosis

Cristina Teodosio; Andrea Mayado; Laura Sa´nchez-Mun~oz; José Mário Morgado; Mari´a Jara-Acevedo; Ivan A´lvarez-Twose; Andre´s C. Garci´a-Montero; Almudena Matito; Caldas Caldas; Luis Escribano; Alberto Orfao

SM comprises a heterogeneous group of disorders, characterized by an abnormal accumulation of clonal MCs in 1 or more tissues, frequently involving the skin and BM. Despite the fact that most adult patients (>90%) carry the same genetic lesion (D816V KIT mutation), the disease presents with multiple variants with very distinct clinical and biologic features, a diverse prognosis, and different therapeutic requirements. Recent advances in the standardization of the study of BM MC by MFC allowed reproducible identification and characterization of normal/reactive MCs and their precursors, as well as the establishment of the normal MC maturational profiles. Analysis of large groups of patients versus normal/reactive samples has highlighted the existence of aberrant MC phenotypes in SM, which are essential for the diagnosis of the disease. In turn, 3 clearly distinct and altered maturation‐associated immunophenotypic profiles have been reported recently in SM, which provide criteria for the distinction between ISM patients with MC‐restricted and multilineage KIT mutation; thus, immunphenotyping also contributes to prognostic stratification of ISM, particularly when analysis of the KIT mutation on highly purified BM cells is not routinely available in the diagnostic work‐up of the disease.


Leukemia | 2016

Increased IL6 plasma levels in indolent systemic mastocytosis patients are associated with high risk of disease progression

Andrea Mayado; Cristina Teodosio; Andrés C. García-Montero; Almudena Matito; Arancha Rodríguez-Caballero; José Mário Morgado; Carmen Muñiz; María Jara-Acevedo; Iván Álvarez-Twose; Laura Sánchez-Muñoz; Sergio Matarraz; Carolina Caldas; Javier Ignacio Muñoz-González; Luis Escribano; Alberto Orfao

Systemic mastocytosis (SM) is a heterogeneous disease with altered interleukin (IL)-6 and IL13 plasma levels. However, no study has simultaneously investigated the plasma levels of IL1β, IL6, IL13, CCL23 and clusterin in SM at diagnosis and correlated them with disease outcome. Here we investigated IL1β, IL6, IL13, CCL23 and clusterin plasma levels in 75 SM patients—66 indolent SM (ISM) and 9 aggressive SM—and analyzed their prognostic impact among ISM cases grouped according to the extent of hematopoietic involvement of the bone marrow cells by the KIT D816V mutation. Although increased IL1β, IL6 and CCL23 levels were detected in SM patients versus healthy controls, only IL6 and CCL23 levels gradually increased with disease severity. Moreover, increased IL6 plasma levels were associated with ISM progression to more aggressive disease, in particular among ISM patients with multilineal KIT mutation (ISM-ML), these patients also showing a higher frequency of organomegalies, versus other ISM-ML patients. Of note, all ISM patients who progressed had increased IL6 plasma levels already at diagnosis. Our results indicate that SM patients display an altered plasma cytokine profile already at diagnosis, increased IL6 plasma levels emerging as an early marker for disease progression among ISM cases, in particular among high-risk ISM patients who carry multilineage KIT mutation.


Oncotarget | 2017

Imatinib in systemic mastocytosis: a phase IV clinical trial in patients lacking exon 17 KIT mutations and review of the literature.

Iván Álvarez-Twose; Almudena Matito; José Mário Morgado; Laura Sánchez Muñoz; María Jara-Acevedo; Andrés C. García-Montero; Andrea Mayado; Carolina Caldas; Cristina Teodosio; Javier Ignacio Muñoz-González; Manuela Mollejo; Luis Escribano; Alberto Orfao

Resistance to imatinib has been recurrently reported in systemic mastocytosis (SM) carrying exon 17 KIT mutations. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of imatinib therapy in 10 adult SM patients lacking exon 17 KIT mutations, 9 of which fulfilled criteria for well-differentiated SM (WDSM). The World Health Organization 2008 disease categories among WDSM patients were mast cell (MC) leukemia (n = 3), indolent SM (n = 3) and cutaneous mastocytosis (n = 3); the remainder case had SM associated with a clonal haematological non-MC disease. Patients were given imatinib for 12 months −400 or 300 mg daily depending on the presence vs. absence of > 30% bone marrow (BM) MCs and/or signs of advanced disease–. Absence of exon 17 KIT mutations was confirmed in highly-purified BM MCs by peptide nucleic acid-mediated PCR, while mutations involving other exons were investigated by direct sequencing of purified BM MC DNA. Complete response (CR) was defined as resolution of BM MC infiltration, skin lesions, organomegalies and MC-mediator release-associated symptoms, plus normalization of serum tryptase. Criteria for partial response (PR) included ≥ 50% reduction in BM MC infiltration and improvement of skin lesions and/or organomegalies. Treatment was well-tolerated with an overall response rate of 50%, including early and sustained CR in four patients, three of whom had extracellular mutations of KIT, and PR in one case. This later patient and all non-responders (n = 5) showed wild-type KIT. These results together with previous data from the literature support the relevance of the KIT mutational status in selecting SM patients who are candidates for imatinib therapy.


British Journal of Haematology | 2016

Diagnosis and classification of mastocytosis in non-specialized versus reference centres: a Spanish Network on Mastocytosis (REMA) study on 122 patients

Laura Sánchez-Muñoz; José Mário Morgado; Iván Álvarez-Twose; Almudena Matito; Andrés C. García-Montero; Cristina Teodosio; María Jara-Acevedo; Andrea Mayado; Manuela Mollejo; Carolina Caldas; David González de Olano; Luis Escribano; Alberto Orfao

The diagnosis of ‘rare diseases’, such as mastocytosis, remains a challenge. Despite this, the precise benefits of referral of mastocytosis patients to highly specialized reference centres are poorly defined and whether patients should be managed at non‐specialized versus reference centres remains a matter of debate. To evaluate the quality and efficiency of diagnostic procedures performed at the reference centres for mastocytosis in Spain (REMA) versus other non‐reference centres, we retrospectively analysed a series of 122 patients, for the overall degree of agreement obtained for the World Health Organization (WHO) diagnostic and classification criteria betwen the referring and REMA centres. Our results showed that not all WHO diagnostic criteria were frequently investigated at the referring centres. Among the five WHO diagnostic criteria, the highest degree of agreement was obtained for serum tryptase levels [median 90% (95% confidence interval 84–96%)]; in turn, the overall agreement was significantly lower for the major histopathological criterion [80% (72–89%)], and the other three minor criteria: cytomorphology [68% (56–80%)] immunophenotyping of BM mast cells [75% (62–87%)] and detection of the KIT mutation [34% (8–60%)]. Referral of patients with diagnostic suspicion of mastocytosis to a multidisciplinary reference centre improves diagnostic efficiency and quality.


Immunology and Allergy Clinics of North America | 2014

Flow Cytometry in Mastocytosis: Utility as a Diagnostic and Prognostic Tool

Laura Sánchez-Muñoz; Cristina Teodosio; José Mário Morgado; Omar Perbellini; Andrea Mayado; Iván Álvarez-Twose; Almudena Matito; María Jara-Acevedo; Andrés C. García-Montero; Alberto Orfao; Luis Escribano

This article presents information for the identification and characterization of mast cells from bone marrow and other tissues using multiparametric flow cytometry. In addition, it provides guidelines for the application of this technique in the subclassification of systemic mastocytosis and assessment of the long-term prognosis of patients individually.

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Alberto Orfao

Spanish National Research Council

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