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Featured researches published by Antonella Insalaco.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Mutations of CD40 gene cause an autosomal recessive form of immunodeficiency with hyper IgM

Simona Ferrari; Silvia Giliani; Antonella Insalaco; Abdulaziz Al-Ghonaium; Anna Rosa Soresina; Michael Loubser; Maria Antonietta Avanzini; Massimo Marconi; Raffaele Badolato; Alberto G. Ugazio; Yves Levy; Nadia Catalan; Anne Durandy; Abdelghani Tbakhi; Luigi D. Notarangelo; Alessandro Plebani

CD40 is a member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily, expressed on a wide range of cell types including B cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells. CD40 is the receptor for CD40 ligand (CD40L), a molecule predominantly expressed by activated CD4+ T cells. CD40/CD40L interaction induces the formation of memory B lymphocytes and promotes Ig isotype switching, as demonstrated in mice knocked-out for either CD40L or CD40 gene, and in patients with X-linked hyper IgM syndrome, a disease caused by CD40L/TNFSF5 gene mutations. In the present study, we have identified three patients with an autosomal recessive form of hyper IgM who fail to express CD40 on the cell surface. Sequence analysis of CD40 genomic DNA showed that one patient carried a homozygous silent mutation at the fifth base pair position of exon 5, involving an exonic splicing enhancer and leading to exon skipping and premature termination; the other two patients showed a homozygous point mutation in exon 3, resulting in a cysteine to arginine substitution. These findings show that mutations of the CD40 gene cause an autosomal recessive form of hyper IgM, which is immunologically and clinically undistinguishable from the X-linked form.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2013

Treatment of autoinflammatory diseases: results from the Eurofever Registry and a literature review

Nienke Ter Haar; Helen J. Lachmann; Seza Ozen; P Woo; Yosef Uziel; Consuelo Modesto; Isabelle Koné-Paut; Luca Cantarini; Antonella Insalaco; Bénédicte Neven; Michael Hofer; Donato Rigante; Sulaiman M. Al-Mayouf; Isabelle Touitou; Romina Gallizzi; Efi mia Papadopoulou-Alataki; Silvana Martino; J Kuemmerle-Deschner; Laura Obici; Nicolae Iagaru; Anna Simon; Susan Nielsen; Alberto Martini; Nicolino Ruperto; Marco Gattorno; Joost Frenkel

Objective To evaluate the response to treatment of autoinflammatory diseases from an international registry and an up-to-date literature review. Methods The response to treatment was studied in a web-based registry in which clinical information on anonymised patients with autoinflammatory diseases was collected retrospectively as part of the Eurofever initiative. Participating hospitals included paediatric rheumatology centres of the Paediatric Rheumatology International Trial Organisation network and adult centres with a specific interest in autoinflammatory diseases. The following diseases were included: familial Mediterranean fever (FMF), cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS), tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-receptor associated periodic syndrome (TRAPS), mevalonate kinase deficiency (MKD), pyogenic arthritis pustulosis acne (PAPA) syndrome, deficiency of interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (DIRA), NLRP12-related periodic fever and periodic fever aphthosis pharyngitis adenitis (PFAPA) syndrome. Cases were independently validated by experts for each disease. A literature search regarding treatment of the abovementioned diseases was also performed using Medline and Embase. Results 22 months from the beginning of the enrolment, complete information on 496 validated patients was available. Data from the registry in combination with evidence from the literature confirmed that colchicine is the treatment of choice for FMF and IL-1 blockade for DIRA and CAPS. Corticosteroids on demand probably represent a valid therapeutic strategy for PFAPA, but also for MKD and TRAPS. Patients with poorly controlled MKD, TRAPS, PAPA or FMF may benefit from IL-1 blockade; anti-TNF treatment may represent a possible valuable alternative. Conclusions In the absence of high-grade evidence, these results could serve as a basis for therapeutic guidelines and to identify candidate drugs for future therapeutic trials.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2014

Clinical Features, Treatment, and Outcome of Macrophage Activation Syndrome Complicating Systemic Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis: A Multinational, Multicenter Study of 362 Patients

Francesca Minoia; Sergio Davì; AnnaCarin Horne; Erkan Demirkaya; Francesca Bovis; Caifeng Li; Kai Lehmberg; Sheila Weitzman; Antonella Insalaco; Carine Wouters; Susan Shenoi; Graciela Espada; Seza Ozen; Jordi Anton; Raju Khubchandani; Ricardo Russo; Priyankar Pal; Ozgur Kasapcopur; Paivi Miettunen; Despoina Maritsi; Rosa Merino; Bita Shakoory; Maria Alessio; Vyacheslav Chasnyk; Helga Sanner; Yi Jin Gao; Zeng Hua-song; Toshiyuki Kitoh; Tadej Avcin; Michel Fischbach

To describe the clinical, laboratory, and histopathologic features, current treatment, and outcome of patients with macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) complicating systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA).


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2015

Evidence-based provisional clinical classification criteria for autoinflammatory periodic fevers

Silvia Federici; Maria Pia Sormani; Seza Ozen; Helen J. Lachmann; Gayane Amaryan; Patricia Woo; Isabelle Koné-Paut; Natacha Dewarrat; Luca Cantarini; Antonella Insalaco; Yosef Uziel; Donato Rigante; Pierre Quartier; Erkan Demirkaya; Troels Herlin; Antonella Meini; Giovanna Fabio; Tilmann Kallinich; Silvana Martino; Aviel Yonatan Butbul; Alma Nunzia Olivieri; J Kuemmerle-Deschner; Bénédicte Neven; Anna Simon; Huri Ozdogan; Isabelle Touitou; Joost Frenkel; Michael Hofer; Alberto Martini; Nicolino Ruperto

The objective of this work was to develop and validate a set of clinical criteria for the classification of patients affected by periodic fevers. Patients with inherited periodic fevers (familial Mediterranean fever (FMF); mevalonate kinase deficiency (MKD); tumour necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic fever syndrome (TRAPS); cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS)) enrolled in the Eurofever Registry up until March 2013 were evaluated. Patients with periodic fever, aphthosis, pharyngitis and adenitis (PFAPA) syndrome were used as negative controls. For each genetic disease, patients were considered to be ‘gold standard’ on the basis of the presence of a confirmatory genetic analysis. Clinical criteria were formulated on the basis of univariate and multivariate analysis in an initial group of patients (training set) and validated in an independent set of patients (validation set). A total of 1215 consecutive patients with periodic fevers were identified, and 518 gold standard patients (291 FMF, 74 MKD, 86 TRAPS, 67 CAPS) and 199 patients with PFAPA as disease controls were evaluated. The univariate and multivariate analyses identified a number of clinical variables that correlated independently with each disease, and four provisional classification scores were created. Cut-off values of the classification scores were chosen using receiver operating characteristic curve analysis as those giving the highest sensitivity and specificity. The classification scores were then tested in an independent set of patients (validation set) with an area under the curve of 0.98 for FMF, 0.95 for TRAPS, 0.96 for MKD, and 0.99 for CAPS. In conclusion, evidence-based provisional clinical criteria with high sensitivity and specificity for the clinical classification of patients with inherited periodic fevers have been developed.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2014

The phenotype of TNF receptor-associated autoinflammatory syndrome (TRAPS) at presentation: a series of 158 cases from the Eurofever/EUROTRAPS international registry

Helen J. Lachmann; Riccardo Papa; K. Gerhold; Laura Obici; Isabelle Touitou; Luca Cantarini; Joost Frenkel; Jordi Anton; Isabelle Koné-Paut; Marco Cattalini; Brigitte Bader-Meunier; Antonella Insalaco; Véronique Hentgen; Rosa Merino; Consuelo Modesto; N Toplak; Rainer Berendes; Seza Ozen; Rolando Cimaz; Annette Jansson; Paul A. Brogan; Philip N. Hawkins; N Ruperto; Alberto Martini; P Woo; Marco Gattorno

Objective To evaluate the genetic findings, demographic features and clinical presentation of tumour necrosis factor receptor-associated autoinflammatory syndrome (TRAPS) in patients from the Eurofever/EUROTRAPS international registry. Methods A web-based registry collected retrospective data on patients with TNFRSF1A sequence variants and inflammatory symptoms. Participating hospitals included paediatric rheumatology centres and adult centres with a specific interest in autoinflammatory diseases. Cases were independently validated by experts in the disease. Results Complete information on 158 validated patients was available. The most common TNFRSF1A variant was R92Q (34% of cases), followed by T50M (10%). Cysteine residues were disrupted in 27% of cases, accounting for 39% of sequence variants. A family history was present in 19% of patients with R92Q and 64% of those with other variants. The median age at which symptoms began was 4.3 years but 9.1% of patients presented after 30 years of age. Attacks were recurrent in 88% and the commonest features associated with the pathogenic variants were fever (88%), limb pain (85%), abdominal pain (74%), rash (63%) and eye manifestations (45%). Disease associated with R92Q presented slightly later at a median of 5.7 years with significantly less rash or eye signs and more headaches. Children were more likely than adults to present with lymphadenopathy, periorbital oedema and abdominal pains. AA amyloidosis has developed in 16 (10%) patients at a median age of 43 years. Conclusions In this, the largest reported case series to date, the genetic heterogeneity of TRAPS is accompanied by a variable phenotype at presentation. Patients had a median 70 symptomatic days a year, with fever, limb and abdominal pain and rash the commonest symptoms. Overall, there is little evidence of a significant effect of age or genotype on disease features at presentation.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2015

Phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome: a series of 136 patients from the Eurofever Registry

R. Levy; L. Gérard; J Kuemmerle-Deschner; Helen J. Lachmann; Isabelle Koné-Paut; Luca Cantarini; P Woo; A. Naselli; Brigitte Bader-Meunier; Antonella Insalaco; Sulaiman M. Al-Mayouf; Seza Ozen; Michael Hofer; Joost Frenkel; Consuelo Modesto; Irina Nikishina; T. Schwarz; Silvana Martino; Antonella Meini; Pierre Quartier; Alberto Martini; N Ruperto; Bénédicte Neven; Marco Gattorno

Objective To evaluate genetic, demographic and clinical features in patients with cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome (CAPS) from the Eurofever Registry, with a focus on genotype-phenotype correlations and predictive disease severity markers. Methods A web-based registry retrospectively collected data on patients with CAPS. Experts in the disease independently validated all cases. Patients carrying NLRP3 variants and germline-mutation-negative patients were included. Results 136 patients were analysed. The median age at disease onset was 9 months, and the median duration of follow-up was 15 years. Skin rash, musculoskeletal involvement and fever were the most prevalent features. Neurological involvement (including severe complications) was noted in 40% and 12% of the patients, respectively, with ophthalmological involvement in 71%, and neurosensory hearing loss in 42%. 133 patients carried a heterozygous, germline mutation, and 3 patients were mutation-negative (despite complete NLRP3 gene screening). Thirty-one different NLRP3 mutations were recorded; 7 accounted for 78% of the patients, whereas 24 rare variants were found in 27 cases. The latter were significantly associated with early disease onset, neurological complications (including severe complications) and severe musculoskeletal involvement. The T348M variant was associated with early disease onset, chronic course and hearing loss. Neurological involvement was less strongly associated with V198M, E311 K and A439 V alleles. Early onset was predictive of severe neurological complications and hearing loss. Conclusions Patients carrying rare NLRP3 variants are at risk of severe CAPS; onset before the age of 6 months is associated with more severe neurological involvement and hearing loss. These findings may have an impact on treatment decisions.


Acta Paediatrica | 2006

Macrophage activation syndrome in juvenile idiopathic arthritis.

Elisabetta Cortis; Antonella Insalaco

UNLABELLED Macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) is a rare and potentially lethal complication of chronic rheumatic diseases of childhood, in particular of systemic-onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis (s-JIA), resulting from uncontrolled activation and proliferation of T lymphocytes and macrophages. The onset, acute and dramatic, may mimic a flare of the underlying disease or a severe sepsis. Diagnosis is difficult and, until now, no specific criteria have been developed. Laboratory data show pancytopenia, coagulopathy, low ESR and low concentrations of serum albumin, and high levels of ferritin, liver enzymes and triglycerides. Activated macrophages are found in various organs, particularly in bone marrow. Most hypotheses on the mechanism underlying MAS are based on the data obtained in primary haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), a genetic disease very similar to MAS. Prompt diagnosis is essential because prognosis is highly related to early treatment. The first approach was to use intravenous methylprednisolone pulse therapy; cyclosporin A was proposed in patients resistant to steroids. We describe nine patients affected by haemophagocytosis: seven patients developed MAS and two patients developed HLH. A child with s-JIA developed three episodes of MAS. After the third episode, as there was no improvement with pulses of methylprednisolone and cyclosporine, he was successfully given etanercept. CONCLUSION Our data, together with a similar, published observation, suggest that the TNF inhibitor etanercept is potentially useful for obtaining remission in children not responding to steroids and cyclosporin A.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2014

Results from a multicentre international registry of familial Mediterranean fever: impact of environment on the expression of a monogenic disease in children

Seza Ozen; Erkan Demirkaya; Gayane Amaryan; Isabelle Koné-Paut; Adem Polat; P Woo; Yosef Uziel; Consuelo Modesto; Martina Finetti; Pierre Quartier; Efimia Papadopoulou-Alataki; Sulaiman M. Al-Mayouf; Giovanna Fabio; Romina Gallizzi; Luca Cantarini; Joost Frenkel; Susan Nielsen; Michael Hofer; Antonella Insalaco; Cengizhan Acikel; Huri Ozdogan; Alberto Martini; Nicolino Ruperto; Marco Gattorno

Background and aim Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autoinflammatory disease caused by mutations of the MEFV gene. We analyse the impact of ethnic, environmental and genetic factors on the severity of disease presentation in a large international registry. Methods Demographic, genetic and clinical data from validated paediatric FMF patients enrolled in the Eurofever registry were analysed. Three subgroups were considered: (i) patients living in the eastern Mediterranean countries; (ii) patients with an eastern Mediterranean ancestry living in western Europe; (iii) Caucasian patients living in western European countries. A score for disease severity at presentation was elaborated. Results Since November 2009, 346 FMF paediatric patients were enrolled in the Eurofever registry. The genetic and demographic features (ethnicity, age of onset, age at diagnosis) were similar among eastern Mediterranean patients whether they lived in their countries or western European countries. European patients had a lower frequency of the high penetrance M694V mutation and a significant delay of diagnosis (p<0.002). Patients living in eastern Mediterranean countries had a higher frequency of fever episodes/year and more frequent arthritis, pericarditis, chest pain, abdominal pain and vomiting compared to the other two groups. Multivariate analysis showed that the variables independently associated with severity of disease presentation were country of residence, presence of M694V mutation and positive family history. Conclusions Eastern Mediterranean FMF patients have a milder disease phenotype once they migrate to Europe, reflecting the effect of environment on the expression of a monogenic disease.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2012

Clinical impact of MEFV mutations in children with periodic fever in a prevalent western European Caucasian population

Silvia Federici; G Calcagno; Martina Finetti; Romina Gallizzi; Antonella Meini; Agata Vitale; Francesco Caroli; Marco Cattalini; Roberta Caorsi; Alberto Tommasini; Antonella Insalaco; Maria Pia Sormani; Maurizia Baldi; Isabella Ceccherini; Alberto Martini; Marco Gattorno

Objective To evaluate the actual impact of MEFV mutations on clinical manifestations associated with fever attacks in Caucasian children with periodic fever. Methods 113 children carrying MEFV mutations (44 with mutations in two alleles, 69 heterozygous) and 205 children negative for mutations in genes associated with periodic fevers were analysed. The following groups of patients were considered: patients carrying two high penetrance mutations (M694V, M694I, M680I); one high, one low penetrance mutation; two low penetrance mutations; one high penetrance mutation; one low penetrance mutation; genetically negative patients. Results Patients with two MEFV mutations displayed a shorter duration of fever attacks and higher prevalence of a positive family history than patients carrying one MEFV mutation and genetically negative patients. Severe abdominal pain, chest pain and pleurisy were also more frequent in patients with two MEFV mutations compared with children with one MEFV mutation and genetically negative patients. Conversely, a higher frequency of exudative and erythematous pharyngitis, enlargement of cervical lymph nodes, aphthous stomatitis and non-specific skin rash was observed in genetically negative patients and, to a lesser extent, in patients with one MEFV mutation. The frequency of ‘familial Mediterranean fever (FMF)-like symptoms’ decreases from patients carrying two high penetrance mutations towards patients with a single low penetrance mutation with an opposite trend for ‘periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, adenitis-like symptoms’. Conclusions This clinical observation supports recent findings contrasting the notion of FMF being a pure autosomal recessive disorder associated with recurrence of mutations leading to loss of protein function. A dosage effect could be invoked, giving rise to symptom onset even in the presence of one wild-type allele.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Familial Mediterranean fever mutations lift the obligatory requirement for microtubules in Pyrin inflammasome activation

Hanne Van Gorp; Pedro Henrique Viana Saavedra; Nathalia Moraes de Vasconcelos; Nina Van Opdenbosch; Lieselotte Vande Walle; Magdalena Matusiak; Giusi Prencipe; Antonella Insalaco; Filip Van Hauwermeiren; Dieter Demon; Delfien Bogaert; Melissa Dullaers; Elfride De Baere; Tino Hochepied; Jo Dehoorne; Karim Vermaelen; Filomeen Haerynck; Fabrizio De Benedetti; Mohamed Lamkanfi

Significance Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autoinflammatory disease caused by more than 310 mutations in the gene MEFV, which encodes Pyrin. Pyrin recently was shown to trigger inflammasome activation in response to Rho GTPase-modifying bacterial toxins. Here we report that Clostridium difficile infection and intoxication with its enterotoxin TcdA engage the Pyrin inflammasome. Moreover, activation of the Pyrin inflammasome, but not other inflammasomes, was hampered by microtubule-depolymerizing drugs in mouse and humans. Unexpectedly, we found that FMF mutations render Pyrin activation independent of microtubules. Thus, our findings provide a conceptual framework for understanding Pyrin signaling and enable functional diagnosis of FMF. Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is the most common monogenic autoinflammatory disease worldwide. It is caused by mutations in the inflammasome adaptor Pyrin, but how FMF mutations alter signaling in FMF patients is unknown. Herein, we establish Clostridium difficile and its enterotoxin A (TcdA) as Pyrin-activating agents and show that wild-type and FMF Pyrin are differentially controlled by microtubules. Diverse microtubule assembly inhibitors prevented Pyrin-mediated caspase-1 activation and secretion of IL-1β and IL-18 from mouse macrophages and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). Remarkably, Pyrin inflammasome activation persisted upon microtubule disassembly in PBMCs of FMF patients but not in cells of patients afflicted with other autoinflammatory diseases. We further demonstrate that microtubules control Pyrin activation downstream of Pyrin dephosphorylation and that FMF mutations enable microtubule-independent assembly of apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a caspase recruitment domain (ASC) micrometer-sized perinuclear structures (specks). The discovery that Pyrin mutations remove the obligatory requirement for microtubules in inflammasome activation provides a conceptual framework for understanding FMF and enables immunological screening of FMF mutations.

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Alberto Martini

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Manuela Pardeo

Boston Children's Hospital

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Marco Gattorno

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Claudia Bracaglia

Boston Children's Hospital

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F De Benedetti

Boston Children's Hospital

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Elisabetta Cortis

Boston Children's Hospital

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R Nicolai

Boston Children's Hospital

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