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Dive into the research topics where Angela Alama is active.

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Featured researches published by Angela Alama.


Drug Discovery Today | 2009

Organometallic compounds in oncology: implications of novel organotins as antitumor agents.

Angela Alama; Bruno Tasso; Federica Novelli; Fabio Sparatore

Since the introduction of cisplatin in cancer therapy, metal complexes and organometallic compounds have been gaining growing importance in oncology. The impressive clinical effectiveness of cisplatin is limited by significant side effects and the emergence of drug resistance. Thus, novel classic and unconventional Pt(II) and Pt(IV) complexes have been introduced in therapy or are presently in advanced clinical trials. Moreover, innovative non-platinum metal-based antitumor agents, whose activity does not rely on direct DNA damage and may involve proteins and enzymes, have been developed. Gold and tin derivatives are enjoying an increasing interest and appear very promising as potential drug candidates.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1987

Conventional versus cytokinetic polychemotherapy with estrogenic recruitment in metastatic breast cancer: results of a randomized cooperative trial.

Pierfranco Conte; Paolo Pronzato; A Rubagotti; Angela Alama; D Amadori; R Demicheli; G Gardin; P Gentilini; A Jacomuzzi; R Lionetto

Diethylstilbestrol (DES) can induce a recruitment into the proliferative pool of previously resting breast cancer cells in vivo. In order to verify if estrogenic recruitment could result in a larger tumor cell killing by chemotherapy, 117 patients with metastatic breast cancer were randomized to receive CEF (cyclophosphamide, 600 mg/m2; epidoxorubicin, 60 mg/m2; and 5-fluorouracil, 600 mg/m2 on day 1); DES-CEF (cyclophosphamide, 600 mg/m2 on day 1; DES, 1 mg orally on days 5, 6, and 7; and epidoxorubicin, 60 mg/m2, and 5-fluorouracil, 600 mg/m2, on day 8) every 21 days. No significant difference in objective response rates, survival, or progression-free survival was seen between the two regimens. Patients in the DES-CEF arm experienced a higher complete response (CR) rate (24.1% v 16.1%), which reached statistical significance in the case of soft-tissue metastasis (48% v 27.3%; P less than .05) and estrogen receptor-negative tumors (35.7% v 11.1%; P less than .025). Survival and progression-free survival of patients refractory to treatment were not worsened by estrogenic recruitment. In the subset of patients failing after adjuvant polychemotherapy, DES-CEF unexpectedly induced a significantly longer survival (greater than 802 days v 375 days; P = .029) and progression-free survival (239 days v 192 days; P = .041) than CEF. The DES-CEF regimen was more myelotoxic, and 43.3% of the DES-CEF cycles had to be delayed because of leukopenia in comparison with 11.8% of the CEF cycles (P less than .0001). In conclusion, chemotherapy with estrogenic recruitment was able to induce more CRs in certain subsets of patients and a significant prolongation in survival and progression-free survival of patients failing after adjuvant polychemotherapy. These results have been achieved despite a significantly lower dose intensity of chemotherapy.


Oncology | 2004

Overexpression of Cyclin D1 Is Associated with Poor Survival in Epithelial Ovarian Cancer

Federica Barbieri; Paola Lorenzi; Nicola Ragni; Gennaro Schettini; Cristina Bruzzo; Francesco Pedullà; Angela Alama

Objective: In order to assess the prognostic role of the cell-cycle regulator cyclin D1 in epithelial ovarian cancer, 70 patients have been studied during an observation period of 8 years. Methods: The cyclin D1 protein content was analyzed by Western blotting, and classed as negative, positive and highly positive by densitometric scanning. The relationship between cyclin D1 expression and clinicopathological variables was determined. Univariate and multivariate survival analyses were also carried out. Results: Patients with highly positive cyclin D1 tumors had shorter overall survival than patients with positive cyclin D1 (median survival 31 vs. 49 months; p = 0.058). Furthermore, in patients with stage III/IV tumors and residual disease greater than 2 cm, cyclin D1 expression significantly influenced clinical outcome (p = 0.047 and 0.040, respectively). In the Cox’s regression model, cyclin D1 expression and residual disease were identified as the most important predictors of survival (p = 0.016 and 0.002, respectively). In patients with high cyclin D1 expression and residual disease after debulking surgery greater than 2 cm, the relative risks of death were to 2.48 and 3.7, respectively, compared to their correspondent counterparts. Conclusion: The overexpression of cyclin D1 is significantly related to a more aggressive tumor phenotype and poor prognosis in ovarian carcinoma.


Anti-Cancer Drugs | 1998

Synthesis and biological activity of gold and tin compounds in ovarian cancer cells

Monica Cagnoli; Angela Alama; Federica Barbieri; Federica Novelli; Cristina Bruzzo; Fabio Sparatore

We have investigated the patterns of in vitro cytotoxicity, induced by six newly synthesized gold and tin compounds, in three human ovarian cancer cell lines (SW 626, IGROV 1 and OVCAR-3). Four gold compounds, i.e. gold(I)lupinylsulfide hydrochloride [1] (containing a naked gold atom), triethylphosphinogold(I)lupinylsulfide hydrochloride [2], triphenyl-phosphinogold(I)lupinylsulfide hydrochloride [3] and 1 ,2-bis(diphenylphosphino)ethane bis[gold(I)lupinylsulfide] dihydrochloride [4] (all containing a gold atom coordinated with different phosphines), were prepared. Moreover, the triethylphosphinogold(I)(2-diethylamino)ethylsulfide hydrochloride [5] in which the simple diethylaminoethylthiol replaced the bulky lupinylthiol was synthesized. The tin compound, triethyltin(IV)lupinylsulfide hydrochlorlde [6], was also studied. Comparative tests with cisplatin, the most widely used antitumor agent in ovarian cancer, were carried out in biological Investigations. In vitro cytotoxicity, by MTT assay, showed that compound [4] and compound [6] exhibited interesting antiproliferative activity in all the three cell lines (mean IC50=1.3 and 0.7 microM, respectively) compared to cisplatin (mean IC50=4.8 microM). In addition, the PA-1 cell line, more sensitive to cisplatin (IC50=0.6 microM), was included as a comparison in the study. Cell count assays confirmed the cytotoxic properties of compounds [4] and [6] against the four cell lines, reporting higher growth Inhibition potency than cisplatin, with IC50 values in the sub-micromolar range.


Frontiers in Oncology | 2014

Clinical Applications of Circulating Tumor Cells in Lung Cancer Patients by CellSearch System

Anna Truini; Angela Alama; Maria Giovanna Dal Bello; Simona Coco; Irene Vanni; Erika Rijavec; Carlo Genova; Giulia Barletta; Federica Biello; Francesco Grossi

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are cells spread from the primary tumor into the bloodstream that might represent an important biomarker in lung cancer. The prognosis of patients diagnosed with lung cancer is generally poor mainly due to late diagnosis. Recent evidences have reported that tumor aggressiveness is associated with the presence of CTCs in the blood stream; therefore, several studies have focused their attention on CTC isolation, characterization, and clinical significance. So far, the CellSearch® system is the only approach approved by FDA for metastatic breast, prostate, and colorectal cancer intended to detect CTCs of epithelial origin in whole blood and to assess prognosis. To date, no specific biomarkers have been validated in lung cancer and the identification of novel tumor markers such as CTCs might highly contribute to lung cancer prognosis and management. In the present review, the significance of CTC detection in lung cancer is examined through the analysis of the published studies in both non-small cell and small cell lung cancers; additionally the prognostic and the clinical role of CTC enumeration in treatment monitoring will be reported and discussed.


Anti-Cancer Drugs | 2002

Antitumor activity of a new orally active organotin compound: a preliminary study in murine tumor models.

Federica Barbieri; Maurizio Viale; Fabio Sparatore; Gennaro Schettini; Anna Favre; Cristina Bruzzo; Federica Novelli; Angela Alama

The toxicity and antitumor activity of the novel organotin compound triethyltin(IV)lupinylsulfide hydrochloride (IST-FS 29), administered by the oral route, have been evaluated against three transplantable murine tumor models: P388 lymphocytic leukemia, B16F10 melanoma and 3LL Lewis lung carcinoma. Mild and reversible signs of acute toxicity such as behavioral symptoms, weight loss and histological alterations were mainly reported at the highest single dose of 28 mg/kg. Conversely, lower concentrations of compound ranging from 7 to 21 mg/kg did not result in major toxic effects, even after repeated dosing. The antitumor activity studies showed that fractionation dosing, rather than single bolus administration, over 1 week, might prove more active and better tolerated by allowing the achievement of the highest therapeutic total dose of IST-FS 29 (42 mg/kg). Indeed, repeated administrations of IST-FS 29 resulted in marked significant improvement of antitumor activity against B16F10 (50% of tumor volume inhibition, p  = 0.0003) and, to a greater extent, 3LL (90% of tumor volume inhibition, p  = 0.0001) tumors. These results indicate that IST-FS 29 might be a suitable candidate as an orally administrable anticancer drug and support its further development in human tumor xenografts.


Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2001

Antiproliferative activity and interactions with cell-cycle related proteins of the organotin compound triethyltin(IV)lupinylsulfide hydrochloride.

Federica Barbieri; Fabio Sparatore; Monica Cagnoli; Cristina Bruzzo; Federica Novelli; Angela Alama

Organotin compounds, particularly tri-organotin, have demonstrated cytotoxic properties against a number of tumor cell lines. On this basis, triethyltin(IV)lupinylsulfide hydrochloride (IST-FS 29), a quinolizidine derivative, was synthesized and developed as a potential antitumor agent. This tin-derived compound exhibited potent antiproliferative effects on three different human cancer cell lines: teratocarcinoma of the ovary (PA-1), colon carcinoma (HCT-8) and glioblastoma (A-172). Cytotoxic activity was assessed by MTT and cell count assays during time course experiments with cell recovery after compound withdrawal. Significant cell growth inhibition (up to 95% in HCT-8 after 72 h of exposure), which also persisted after drug-free medium change, was reported in all the cell lines by both assays. In addition, the cytocidal effects exerted by IST-FS 29 appeared more consistent with necrosis or delayed cell death, rather than apoptosis, as shown by morphologic observations under light microscope, DNA fragmentation analysis and flow cytometry. In the attempt to elucidate whether this compound might affect genes playing a role in G1/S phase transition, the expressions of p53, p21(WAF1), cyclin D1 and Rb, mainly involved in response to DNA-damaging stress, were analyzed by Western blot. Heterogeneous patterns of expression during exposure to IST-FS 29 were evidenced in the different cell lines suggesting that these cell-cycle-related genes are not likely the primary targets of this compound. Thus, the present data seem more indicative of a direct effect of IST-FS-29 on macromolecular synthesis and cellular homeostasis, as previously hypothesized for other organotin complexes.


European Journal of Cancer | 2008

Targeting α7-nicotinic receptor for the treatment of pleural mesothelioma

Alessia Catassi; Laura Paleari; Denis Servent; Fausto Sessa; Lorenzo Dominioni; Emanuela Ognio; Michele Cilli; Paola Vacca; Mariacristina Mingari; Giovanni Gaudino; Pietro Bertino; Massimo Paolucci; Andrea Calcaterra; Alfredo Cesario; Pierluigi Granone; Roberta Costa; Monica Ciarlo; Angela Alama; Patrizia Russo

Human malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a dreadful disease and there is still no standard therapy available for a consistent therapeutic approach. This research is aimed at the evaluation of the potential therapeutic effect of a specific nicotinic receptor (nAChR) antagonist, namely alpha-Cobratoxin (alpha-CbT). Its effectiveness was tested in mesothelioma cell lines and in primary mesothelioma cells in vitro, as well as in vivo, in orthotopically xenotransplanted NOD/SCID mice. Cells showed alpha7-nAChR expression and their growth was significantly inhibited by alpha-CbT. Severe induction of apoptosis was observed after exposure to alpha-CbT [IC(80-90)]. Apoptosis was characterised by: change in mitochondrial potential, caspase-3 cleavage, down-regulation of mRNA and protein for survivin, XIAP, IAP1, IAP2 and Bcl-XL, inhibition by caspase-3 inhibitor. In vivo, the alpha-CbT acute LD(50) was 0.15 mg/kg. The LD(100) [0.24 mg/kg] induced fatal respiratory failure and massive kidney necrosis. Phase II experiments with 0.12 ng/kg alpha-CbT (1/1000 of LD(10)) were done in 53 xenotransplanted mice, inhibiting tumour development as confirmed by chest X-ray examinations, autopsy and microscopical findings. The growth of human proliferating T lymphocytes and of mesothelial cells in primary culture was not affected by alpha-CbT. Non-immunogenic derivatives of the alpha-CbT molecule need to be developed for possible human use.


Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy | 2013

Pemetrexed for the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer

Carlo Genova; Erika Rijavec; Anna Truini; Simona Coco; Claudio Sini; Giulia Barletta; Maria Giovanna Dal Bello; Angela Alama; Grazia Savarino; Paolo Pronzato; Francesco Boccardo; Francesco Grossi

Introduction: Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is a major cause of cancer-related death worldwide. Although advanced NSCLC is still incurable, various anti-neoplastic agents have become available for the treatment of this disease. Pemetrexed, a multi-target folate antagonist, has improved the survival of non-squamous NSCLC patients. Currently, pemetrexed is approved for first-line treatment in combination with a platinum derivate, for second-line treatment as a single agent and, more recently, as maintenance treatment after first-line chemotherapy. Areas covered: The authors analyzed the state of the art of pemetrexed through a review of the literature. Clinical trials and meta-analyses involving pemetrexed in NSCLC were evaluated. Pemetrexed improved survival of non-squamous NSCLC in first-line, maintenance, and second-line treatments; this benefit is limited to non-squamous histology. Because pemetrexed has become part of the standard of care, current clinical trials are designed to compare it to other investigational combinations. Limited data on resectable disease are available, and additional clinical trials are being conducted. Expert opinion: Pemetrexed has shown effectiveness and a favorable toxicity profile. Histology-driven indications and the relationship of pemetrexed with thymidylate synthase expression suggest that a more precise definition of predictive biomarkers could be further investigated.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Inhibition of the Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors by Cobra Venom α-Neurotoxins: Is There a Perspective in Lung Cancer Treatment?

Angela Alama; Cristina Bruzzo; Zita Cavalieri; Alessandra Forlani; Yuri N. Utkin; Ida Casciano; Massimo Romani

Nicotine exerts its oncogenic effects through the binding to nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) and the activation of downstream pathways that block apoptosis and promote neo-angiogenesis. The nAChRs of the α7 subtype are present on a wide variety of cancer cells and their inhibition by cobra venom neurotoxins has been proposed in several articles and reviews as a potential innovative lung cancer therapy. However, since part of the published results was recently retracted, we believe that the antitumoral activity of cobra venom neurotoxins needs to be independently re-evaluated. We determined the activity of α-neurotoxins from Naja atra (short-chain neurotoxin, α-cobrotoxin) and Naja kaouthia (long-chain neurotoxin, α-cobratoxin) in vitro by cytotoxicity measurements in 5 lung cancer cell lines, by colony formation assay with α7nAChRs expressing and non-expressing cell lines and in vivo by assessing tumor growth in an orthotopic Non-Obese Diabetic/Severe Combined Immunodeficient (NOD/SCID) mouse model system utilizing different treatment schedules and dosages. No statistically significant reduction in tumor growth was observed in the treatment arms in comparison to the control for both toxins. Paradoxically α-cobrotoxin from Naja atra showed the tendency to enhance tumor growth although, even in this case, the statistical significance was not reached. In conclusion our results show that, in contrast with other reports, the nAChR inhibitors α-cobratoxin from N. kaouthia and α-cobrotoxin from N. atra neither suppressed tumor growth nor prolonged the survival of the treated animals.

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Francesco Grossi

National Cancer Research Institute

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Simona Coco

National Cancer Research Institute

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Irene Vanni

National Cancer Research Institute

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Carlo Genova

Anschutz Medical Campus

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Anna Truini

University of Michigan

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