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Featured researches published by Anita Mangia.


International Journal of Cancer | 2007

Cytoskeleton and paclitaxel sensitivity in breast cancer : the role of β-tubulins

Stefania Tommasi; Anita Mangia; Rosanna Lacalamita; Antonia Bellizzi; Vita Fedele; Annalisa Chiriatti; Christopher Thomssen; Nancy Kendzierski; A. Latorre; Vito Lorusso; Francesco Schittulli; Francesco Zito; Maria Kavallaris; Angelo Paradiso

The antineoplastic effect of paclitaxel is mainly related to its ability to bind the β subunit of tubulin, thus preventing tubulin chain depolarization and inducing apoptosis. The relevance of the Class I β‐tubulin characteristics have also been confirmed in the clinical setting where mutations of paclitaxel‐binding site of β‐tubulin Class I have been related to paclitaxel resistance in non small cell lung and ovarian cancers. In the present study, we verified the hypothesis of a relationship between molecular alterations of β‐tubulin Class I and paclitaxel sensitivity in a panel of breast cell lines with different drug IC50. The Class I β‐tubulin gene cDNA has been sequenced detecting heterozygous missense mutations (exon 1 and 4) only in MCF‐7 and SK‐BR‐3 lines. Furthermore, the expression (at both mRNA and protein level) of the different isotypes have been analyzed demonstrating an association between low cell sensitivity to paclitaxel and Class III β‐tubulin expression increasing. Antisense oligonucleotide (ODN) experiments confirmed that the inhibition of Class III β‐tubulin could at least partially increase paclitaxel‐chemosensitivity. The hypothesis of a relationship between β‐tubulin tumor expression and paclitaxel clinical response has been finally verified in a series of 92 advanced breast cancer patients treated with a first line paclitaxel‐based chemotherapy. Thirty‐five percent (95% CI: 45–31) of patients with high Class III β‐tubulin expression showed a disease progression vs. only 7% of patients with low expression (35% vs. 7%, p < 0.002). Our study suggests that Class III β‐tubulin tumor expression could be considered a predictive biomarker of paclitaxel‐clinical resistance for breast cancer patients.


Cancer | 1989

Cell kinetics and hormonal receptor status in inflammatory breast carcinoma. Comparison with locally advanced disease.

Angelo Paradiso; Stefania Tommasi; Mario Brandi; Francesco Marzullo; Gianni Simone; Vito Lorusso; Anita Mangia; Mario De Lena

The biological and prognostic role of hormone receptor status and proliferative activity have been studied in two series of patients affected by inflammatory breast carcinoma (IBC, 28 patients) and locally advanced breast cancer (LABC, 50 patients). Estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PgR) were measured by dextran‐coated charcoal (DCC) method whereas proliferative activity was measured by 3H‐thymidine autoradiographic labeling index (LI). The percentages of ER+ and PgR+ cases resulted lower in IBC than in LABC (ER+, 44% versus 64%; PgR+, 30% versus 51%, respectively), pertaining to both premenopausal and postmenopausal women. Inflammatory breast carcinoma showed a higher median LI value than LABC (3.5% versus 1.6%; P = 0.006). Regarding clinical aspects, time to progression (TTP) in IBC patients was not affected by hormone receptor status (19 evaluable patients) or by LI (17 evaluable patients); PgR+ status and low LI resulted important for individualizing women with a longer median overall survival (OS). Inflammatory breast carcinoma has been verified to be a heterogeneous biological entity for which hormone receptors and cell kinetics could be useful in identifying patients with different prognoses and therefore candidates for a personalized therapy.


Histopathology | 2011

Tissue remodelling in breast cancer: Human mast cell tryptase as an initiator of myofibroblast differentiation

Anita Mangia; Andrea Malfettone; Roberta Rossi; Angelo Paradiso; Girolamo Ranieri; Giovanni Simone; Leonardo Resta

Mangia A, Malfettone A, Rossi R, Paradiso A, Ranieri G, Simone G & Resta L
(2011) Histopathology58, 1096–1106
Tissue remodelling in breast cancer: human mast cell tryptase as an initiator of myofibroblast differentiation


International Journal of Cancer | 2004

Topoisomerase‐I, thymidylate synthase primary tumour expression and clinical efficacy of 5‐FU/CPT‐11 chemotherapy in advanced colorectal cancer patients

Angelo Paradiso; JanMing Xu; Anita Mangia; Annalisa Chiriatti; Gianni Simone; Alfredo Francesco Zito; Severino Montemurro; Francesco Giuliani; Evaristo Maiello; Giuseppe Colucci

While several studies have reported that thymidylate synthase (TS) tumour expression can be a reliable predictive marker of clinical response to 5‐Fluorouracil (5‐FU) for advanced colorectal cancer patients, only a few studies that searched for predictive factors of irinotecan (CPT‐11) clinical response are available. The aim of the present study has been to verify the predictive value of immunohistochemical topoisomerase‐I (Topo‐I) and TS primary tumour expression in a consecutive series of 62 advanced colorectal cancer patients that received a first line 5‐FU/CPT‐11 chemotherapy. TS and Topo‐I immunostaining was observed in 76% and 43% of tumours, respectively, resulting in a significant relationship within each tumour (r=0.365, p<0.004). Patients with different TS tumour expression showed a similar percentage of Objective Clinical Response, OR (40% vs. 28% of OR in low and high TS‐expressing tumours, respectively, p=ns); also, patients with different Topo‐I tumour expression did not show a different probability of OR (39% vs. 29% of OR in high and low Topo‐I expressing tumours, respectively; p=ns).The tumour expression of these 2 biomarkers also did not impact on time to progression and overall survival of patients. Furthermore, the combined analysis of TS and Topo‐I tumour status did not permit to individualize subgroups of patients with different probability of OR. With multivariate analysis, only patient Performance Status significantly impacted on OS (Hazard ratio 4.87; p=0.02) of these patients. We can conclude that high TS tumour expression seems not to preclude a clinical activity for 5‐FU/CPT‐11 polichemotherapy in advanced colorectal cancer patients; furthermore, clinical response and prognosis of colorectal cancer patients treated with 5‐FU/CPT‐11 regimen do not differ in tumours with different TS or Topo‐I expression.


Histopathology | 2009

Biological role of NHERF1 protein expression in breast cancer.

Anita Mangia; Annalisa Chiriatti; Antonia Bellizzi; Andrea Malfettone; Baldassarre Stea; Francesso Alfredo Zito; Stephen Joel Reshkin; Giovanni Simone; Angelo Paradiso

Aims:  To determine the role of Na+/H+ exchanger regulatory factor (NHERF1) in breast cancerogenesis and progression.


Modern Pathology | 2004

Prognostic relevance of histological grade and its components in node-negative breast cancer patients

Francesco Bacci; Angelo Paradiso; Luca Saragoni; Emanuela Scarpi; M. Ricci; Mirella Aldi; Simonetta Bianchi; Pietro Muretto; Fiorella Nuzzo; Gianni Simone; Anita Mangia; Francesco Schittulli; Dino Amadori

Available results highlight the lack of good level of evidence studies on the pure prognostic value of histological grade. In the present study, the prognostic relevance of histological grade and of its three components, tubule formation, nuclear pleomorphism and mitotic count, was analyzed in a series of 372 patients with node-negative breast cancer treated with locoregional therapy alone until early relapse. Histological grade was determined blindly by two observers and discordance between evaluations was resolved after joint review using a multihead microscope. No relation was observed between histological grade and any of its three components and disease-free survival. Conversely, a significant relation was observed between histological grade and distant metastasis-free survival (at 6 years, 94, 86 and 76% for grades 1, 2 and 3, respectively, P=0.013) as well as overall survival (98, 90 and 86%, P=0.001). A breakdown analysis as a function of the three components showed that neither tubule formation nor nuclear pleomorphism was associated with prognosis, and only mitotic count strongly influenced both distant metastasis-free survival (91, 82 and 74%, P=0.014) and overall survival (97, 87 and 85%, P=0.011). Histological grade suffers from a much higher subjectivity than any other microscopic evaluation of biomarkers as it is the sum of three different morphological features. Within the Italian Network for Quality Assessment of Tumor Biomarkers program we observed that histological grade is an independent prognostic variable, but also that this role is ascribable only to the number of mitotic figures. In conclusion, due to the ever smaller size of diagnosed breast cancers, resulting in less cancer tissue for biofunctional and molecular analysis, mitotic count evaluated under strict quality control conditions seems to be an accurate and feasible prognostic variable.


The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2008

Delineation of HER2 Gene Status in Breast Carcinoma by Silver in Situ Hybridization is Reproducible among Laboratories and Pathologists

Antonino Carbone; Gerardo Botti; Annunziata Gloghini; Gianni Simone; Mauro Truini; Maria Pia Curcio; Patrizia Gasparini; Anita Mangia; Tiziana Perin; Sandra Salvi; Adele Testi; Paolo Verderio

An automated enzyme metallographic silver in situ hybridization method (SISH) has been reported to successfully determine human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) gene amplification. We evaluated the staining and interpretative reproducibility of the HER2 SISH assay at five laboratories and compared SISH results with other in situ hybridization (ISH) methods. The HER2 gene status of 89 breast carcinomas was analyzed in parallel using manual dual-color fluorescence ISH, manual chromogenic ISH, and bright-field automated SISH. A total of 1098 SISH-stained slides were evaluated. For comparison, all specimens were stained by 4B5 immunohistochemistry for HER2 protein expression. Interpretation was performed by pathologists at five different laboratories using the algorithms provided by the manufacturers and the guidelines of American Society of Clinical Oncology/College of American Pathologists. Staining and interpretative reproducibility were measured through the computation of weighted kappa statistics. Following the optimization of SISH staining, 1077/1098 (98%) of slides were evaluable. Excellent reproducibility and efficacy of HER2 SISH staining, and interobserver interpretation (Kw = 0.91), were observed among five sites. For the 89 invasive breast cancer cases, the overall rate of concordance between consensus 4B5 and consensus SISH, fluorescence ISH, and chromogenic ISH was 96.6% (86/89), 97.8% (87/89), and 96.6% (86/89), respectively. Overall concordance between positive and negative SISH and fluorescence ISH results, as well as between individual and consensus positive and negative SISH results, was excellent (P < 0.001).


Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2013

High density of tryptase-positive mast cells in human colorectal cancer: a poor prognostic factor related to protease-activated receptor 2 expression

Andrea Malfettone; Nicola Silvestris; Concetta Saponaro; Girolamo Ranieri; Antonio Russo; Stefano Caruso; Ondina Popescu; Giovanni Simone; A. Paradiso; Anita Mangia

Tryptase(+) mast cells (MCs), abundant in the invasive front of tumours, contribute to tissue remodelling. Indeed, protease‐activated receptor‐2 (PAR‐2) activation by MC‐tryptase is considered an oncogenic event in colorectal cancer (CRC). Recently, we have suggested NHERF1 as a potential new marker in CRC. In this study, we aimed to determine the distribution of tryptase(+) MCs and PAR‐2 and to examine the relationship between PAR‐2 and NHERF1, investigating their reputed usefulness as tumour markers. We studied a cohort of 115 CRC specimens including primary cancer (C) and adjacent normal mucosa (NM) by immunohistochemical double staining, analyzing the protein expression of MC‐tryptase, PAR‐2 and cytoplasmic NHERF1. MC density was higher in NM than in C. Tumours with high TNM stage and poor grade showed the highest MC density. A higher PAR‐2 immunoreactivity characterized tumours most infiltrated by MCs compared with samples with low MC density. Furthermore, PAR‐2 overexpression was associated with advanced TNM stage, poor grade and lymphovascular invasion (LVI). A positive correlation existed between tryptase(+) MC density and PAR‐2 expression. Cytoplasmic NHERF1 was higher in C than in NM and overexpressing tumours resulted associated with nodal and distant metastases, poor grade and LVI. PAR‐2 correlated with cytoplasmic NHERF1 and the PAR‐2(+)/cytoplasmic NHERF1(+) expression immunophenotype identified tumours associated with unfavourable prognosis and aggressive clinical parameters. Our data indicate that the high density of tryptase(+) MCs at invasive margins of tumours was associated with advanced stages of CRC and was strongly correlated with PAR‐2 expression.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2014

Comparative Proteome Analysis Revealing an 11-Protein Signature for Aggressive Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

Ning Qing Liu; Christoph Stingl; Maxime P. Look; Marcel Smid; René B. H. Braakman; Tommaso De Marchi; Anieta M. Sieuwerts; Paul N. Span; Fred C.G.J. Sweep; Barbro Linderholm; Anita Mangia; Angelo Paradiso; Luc Dirix; Steven Van Laere; Theo M. Luider; John W.M. Martens; John A. Foekens; Arzu Umar

Background Clinical outcome of patients with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is highly variable. This study aims to identify and validate a prognostic protein signature for TNBC patients to reduce unnecessary adjuvant systemic therapy. Methods Frozen primary tumors were collected from 126 lymph node–negative and adjuvant therapy–naive TNBC patients. These samples were used for global proteome profiling in two series: an in-house training (n = 63) and a multicenter test (n = 63) set. Patients who remained free of distant metastasis for a minimum of 5 years after surgery were defined as having good prognosis. Cox regression analysis was performed to develop a prognostic signature, which was independently validated. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results An 11-protein signature was developed in the training set (median follow-up for good-prognosis patients = 117 months) and subsequently validated in the test set (median follow-up for good-prognosis patients = 108 months) showing 89.5% sensitivity (95% confidence interval [CI] = 69.2% to 98.1%), 70.5% specificity (95% CI = 61.7% to 74.2%), 56.7% positive predictive value (95% CI = 43.8% to 62.1%), and 93.9% negative predictive value (95% CI = 82.3% to 98.9%) for poor-prognosis patients. The predicted poor-prognosis patients had higher risk to develop distant metastasis than the predicted good-prognosis patients in univariate (hazard ratio [HR] = 13.15; 95% CI = 3.03 to 57.07; P = .001) and multivariable (HR = 12.45; 95% CI = 2.67 to 58.11; P = .001) analysis. Furthermore, the predicted poor-prognosis group had statistically significantly more breast cancer–specific mortality. Using our signature as guidance, more than 60% of patients would have been exempted from unnecessary adjuvant chemotherapy compared with conventional prognostic guidelines. Conclusions We report the first validated proteomic signature to assess the natural course of clinical TNBC.


PLOS ONE | 2013

VEGF, HIF-1α Expression and MVD as an Angiogenic Network in Familial Breast Cancer

Concetta Saponaro; Andrea Malfettone; Girolamo Ranieri; Katia Danza; Giovanni Simone; Angelo Paradiso; Anita Mangia

Angiogenesis, which plays an important role in tumor growth and progression of breast cancer, is regulated by a balance between pro- and anti-angiogenic factors. Expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is up-regulated during hypoxia by hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α). It is known that there is an interaction between HIF-1α and BRCA1 carrier cancers, but little has been reported about angiogenesis in BRCA1-2 carrier and BRCAX breast cancers. In this study, we investigated the expression of VEGF and HIF-1α and microvessel density (MVD) in 26 BRCA1-2 carriers and 58 BRCAX compared to 77 sporadic breast cancers, by immunohistochemistry. VEGF expression in BRCA1-2 carriers was higher than in BRCAX cancer tissues (p = 0.0001). Furthermore, VEGF expression was higher in both BRCA1-2 carriers and BRCAX than the sporadic group (p<0.0001). VEGF immunoreactivity was correlated with poor tumor grade (p = 0.0074), hormone receptors negativity (p = 0.0206, p = 0.0002 respectively), and MIB-1-labeling index (p = 0.0044) in familial cancers (BRCA1-2 and BRCAX). The percentage of nuclear HIF-1α expression was higher in the BRCA1-2 carriers than in BRCAX cancers (p<0.05), and in all familial than in sporadic tumor tissues (p = 0.0045). A higher MVD was observed in BRCA1-2 carrier than in BRCAX and sporadic cancer tissues (p = 0.002, p = 0.0001 respectively), and in all familial tumors than in sporadic tumors (p = 0.01). MVD was positively related to HIF-1α expression in BRCA1-2 carriers (r = 0.521, p = 0.006), and, in particular, we observed a highly significant correlation in the familial group (r = 0.421, p<0.0001). Our findings suggest that angiogenesis plays a crucial role in BRCA1-2 carrier breast cancers. Prospective studies in larger BRCA1-2 carrier series are needed to improve the best therapeutic strategies for this subgroup of breast cancer patients.

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Giovanni Simone

National Cancer Research Institute

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Stefania Tommasi

Buck Institute for Research on Aging

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Francesco Schittulli

National Institutes of Health

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Stella Petroni

National Cancer Research Institute

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