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Dive into the research topics where Antonietta D’Antuono is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonietta D’Antuono.


BMC Research Notes | 2014

Prevalence and predictors of Lymphogranuloma venereum in a high risk population attending a STD outpatients clinic in Italy

Claudio Foschi; Antonella Marangoni; Antonietta D’Antuono; Paola Nardini; Monica Compri; Sara Bellavista; Andrea Filippini; Maria Letizia Bacchi Reggiani; Roberto Cevenini

BackgroundWe evaluated LGV prevalence and predictors in a high risk population attending a STI Outpatients Clinic in the North of Italy.MethodsA total of 108 patients (99 MSM and 9 women), with a history of unsafe anal sexual intercourses, were enrolled. Anorectal swabs and urine samples were tested for Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) DNA detection by Versant CT/GC DNA 1.0 Assay (Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics Terrytown, USA). RFLP analysis was used for CT molecular typing.ResultsL2 CT genotype was identified in 13/108 (12%) rectal swabs. All LGV cases were from MSM, declaring high-risk sexual behaviour and complaining anorectal symptoms. Patients first attending the STI Outpatient Clinic received a significant earlier LGV diagnosis than those first seeking care from general practitioners or gastroenterologists (P = 0.0046).LGV prevalence and characteristics found in our population are in agreement with international reports. Statistical analysis showed that LGV positive patients were older (P = 0.0008) and presented more STIs (P = 0.0023) than LGV negative ones, in particular due to syphilis (P < 0.001), HIV (P < 0.001) and HBV (P = 0.001).Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that HIV and syphilis infections are strong risk factors for LGV presence (respectively, P = 0.001 and P = 0.010).ConclusionsEven if our results do not provide sufficient evidence to recommend routine screening of anorectal swabs in high-risk population, they strongly suggest to perform CT NAAT tests and genotyping on rectal specimens in presence of ulcerative proctitis in HIV and/or syphilis-positive MSM. In this context, CT DNA detection by Versant CT/GC DNA 1.0 Assay, followed by RFLP analysis for molecular typing demonstrated to be an excellent diagnostic algorithm for LGV identification.


Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2008

Antenatal syphilis serology in pregnant women and follow-up of their infants in northern Italy

Antonella Marangoni; Alessandra Moroni; Elisabetta Tridapalli; Maria Grazia Capretti; G. Farneti; Giacomo Faldella; Antonietta D’Antuono; Roberto Cevenini

Positive syphilis serology was noted in 119 (0.49%) of the 24 053 pregnant women delivering at St Orsola Hospital in Bologna, Italy, from November 2000 through July 2007. Six presumptive cases of congenital syphilis with IgM western blot positive results were found. Two infants had a positive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) Venereal Disease Research Laboratory test result (one also had a positive CSF PCR result), another presented long-bone lesions, and the remaining three were preterm. These observations confirmed that antenatal syphilis screening facilitates treatment during pregnancy and offsets vertical transmission; moreover, the use of IgM western blot and careful CSF examination allowed the identification and treatment of high-risk newborns.


Mycoses | 2012

Use of Dermasilk briefs in recurrent vulvovaginal candidosis: safety and effectiveness

Antonietta D’Antuono; Elena Baldi; Sara Bellavista; Nicoletta Banzola; Stefania Zauli; Annalisa Patrizi

Despite the generally excellent results achieved with fluconazole 150 mg weekly in recurrent vulvovaginal candidosis (RVVC), some patients with a long history of disease do not achieve complete resolution of symptoms following antimycotic treatment. It is thought that use of tight synthetic fabric underwear could be a significant factor in causing recurrence. We decided to compare underwear made of Dermasilk®, a pure fibroin fabric impregnated with a permanent antimicrobial protection, with a cotton placebo to see whether it could be a useful adjunctive tool in the management of RVVC. We recruited 96 women who had a long‐term history of RVVC and had not responded to oral antimycotics with complete satisfaction. The patients were randomly divided into two groups and instructed to use either white cotton placebo briefs or Dermasilk® briefs. Both groups were treated with fluconazole 150 mg once weekly for 6 months. After 6 months, the Dermasilk group showed a statistically significant greater decrease of itching, burning, erythema and a smaller number of recurrences than the cotton group. Our work suggests that Dermasilk® briefs could be a useful adjunctive tool in addition to antimycotic treatment to help relieve the discomfort of recurrent vulvovaginitis.


Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2015

Acute Fitz-Hugh-Curtis Syndrome in a Man due to Gonococcal Infection

Paola Nardini; Monica Compri; Antonella Marangoni; Antonietta D’Antuono; Sara Bellavista; Claudio Calvanese; Andrea Belluzzi; Franco Bazzoli; Marco Montagnani

BACKGROUND Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome is a rare extra-pelvic complication of genital infection involving the perihepatic capsule. Most cases have been described in women in association with pelvic inflammatory disease; in rare cases it has been reported in men. Because the main symptom is acute abdominal pain, and laboratory and imaging findings are frequently nonspecific, the differential diagnosis, considering other gastrointestinal or renal diseases, can be difficult in the early stage of the syndrome, leading to frequent misdiagnosis and mismanagement. CASE REPORT We report a case of Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome in a 26-year-old man who first presented to the emergency department with acute abdominal pain, vomiting, and fever. Diagnosis was possible on the basis of clinical signs of orchiepididymitis, abnormal ultrasound findings, and specialist consultation with the Sexually Transmitted Infection Clinic. An acute gonoccocal infection was revealed, which was complicated by a collection of free perihepatic fluid and a subcapsular hypoechoic focal lesion. Prompt antibiotic therapy was established, with complete resolution of the symptoms within a few days. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: Awareness of the clinical presentation, imaging, and laboratory findings during the acute phase of Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome could help emergency physicians to make an early diagnosis and to correctly manage such patients. Improved diagnostic skills could prevent chronic complications that are especially a risk in the case of delayed or minor genitourinary symptoms.


Dermatologic Therapy | 2013

Pruritic papular eruption in HIV: a case successfully treated with NB-UVB.

Sara Bellavista; Antonietta D’Antuono; Salvatore Domenico Infusino; Roberto Trimarco; Annalisa Patrizi

Pruritic papular eruption (PPE) is a skin disease characterized by the eruption of itching papules on the extremities, face, and trunk; it is quite frequent in HIV‐positive patients especially during the advanced immunosuppressive stage. PPE usually improves or heals when antiretroviral therapy restores the immune system function, but in some cases, it can take several months, and a symptomatic treatment for PPE is required. Systemic antihistamines, topical steroids, topical tacrolimus, itraconazole, pentoxyphilline, and ultraviolet B phototherapy have been proposed in cases of persisting PPE, but an elective treatment has not yet been found. We describe the case of a black patient affected by PPE, nonimproving with antiretroviral treatment, and resistant to topical steroids and oral antihistamines; a satisfactory and speedy result was achieved with narrow‐band ultraviolet B phototherapy.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Urine metabolome in women with Chlamydia trachomatis infection

Claudio Foschi; Luca Laghi; Antonietta D’Antuono; Valeria Gaspari; Chenglin Zhu; Nicolò Dellarosa; Melissa Salvo; Antonella Marangoni

The aim of this study was to characterize the urine metabolome of women with Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) uro-genital infection (n = 21), comparing it with a group of CT-negative subjects (n = 98). By means of a proton-based nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR) spectroscopy, we detected and quantified the urine metabolites of a cohort of 119 pre-menopausal Caucasian women, attending a STI Outpatients Clinic in Italy. In case of a CT positive result, CT molecular genotyping was performed by omp1 gene semi-nested PCR followed by RFLP analysis. We were able to identify several metabolites whose concentrations were significantly higher in the urine samples of CT-positive subjects, including sucrose, mannitol, pyruvate and lactate. In contrast, higher urinary levels of acetone represented the main feature of CT-negative women. These results were not influenced by the age of patients nor by the CT serovars (D, E, F, G, K) responsible of the urethral infections. Since the presence of sugars can increase the stability of chlamydial proteins, higher levels of sucrose and mannitol in the urethral lumen, related to a higher sugar consumption, could have favoured CT infection acquisition or could have been of aid for the bacterial viability. Peculiar dietary habits of the subjects enrolled, in term of type and amount of food consumed, could probably explain these findings. Lactate and pyruvate could result from CT-induced immunopathology, as a product of the inflammatory microenvironment. Further studies are needed to understand the potential role of these metabolites in the pathogenesis of CT infection, as well as their diagnostic/prognostic use.


International Journal of Dermatology | 2013

AIDS-related Kaposi’s sarcoma involving the genital and inguinal regions

Antonietta D’Antuono; Stefania Zauli; Sara Bellavista; Nicoletta Banzola; Giulia Rech; Riccardo Balestri; Annalisa Patrizi

with leukocytoclasis throughout the dermis (Fig. 2). Interestingly, the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay for HSV type 2 DNA was positive in the same specimen using Seeplex HSV2 ACE Detection (Seegene, Seoul, Korea). Cutaneous vasculitis is a common diagnosis in routine dermatology practice. Underlying autoimmune diseases, malignancy, drugs, and systemic vasculitis are often found to be etiological factors. Infections also play a major role, including streptococcus, staphylococcus, mycobacterium, and hepatitis B or C. But, with better techniques such as PCR and various immunodiagnostic techniques, looking at the characteristic antibodies for certain infections now offers us the ability to sort out and determine the true incidence of vasculitis related to the myriad infectious agents. As far as we know, leukocytoclastic vasculitis associated with HSV has not been previously reported. Although our patient did not have any history of herpetic infection, an unapparent HSV infection was implicated as the cause associated with vasculitis. This relationship of HSV and vasculitis is supported by an animal study involving ICR strain mice. The mice were inoculated with an HSV-1 solution, and 29.8% of 258 mice showed Behcet’s diseaselike symptoms that revealed vasculitis. Moreover, the unique plantar location of cutaneous vasculitis supports this etiological association, because the plantar area is known as a predilection site of erythema multiforme, in which hematogenous spread of HSV DNA from the infected lesion to the plantar area has already been proven, and the benign course but frequent recurrences in the presented case seem to be consistent with the natural course of mucosal HSV infections. Here we report a case of plantar leukocytoclastic vasculitis associated with HSV-2 infection proven by PCR assay. Although the specificity of a PCR assay is not high enough, HSV seems to be one of various agents that can cause leukocytoclastic vasculitis. We think the causality link has been overlooked by both patients and physicians due to the asymptomatic nature of HSV infection. More sophisticated laboratory techniques and subsequent reports are required to confirm the etiology of plantar leukocytoclastic vasculitis.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2018

Insights Into Vaginal Bacterial Communities and Metabolic Profiles of Chlamydia trachomatis Infection: Positioning Between Eubiosis and Dysbiosis

Carola Parolin; Claudio Foschi; Luca Laghi; Chenglin Zhu; Nicoletta Banzola; Valeria Gaspari; Antonietta D’Antuono; Barbara Giordani; Marco Severgnini; Clarissa Consolandi; Melissa Salvo; Roberto Cevenini; Beatrice Vitali; Antonella Marangoni

The vaginal microbiota plays a crucial role in maintaining the health and functioning of the female genital tract, preventing the colonization of urogenital pathogens and sexually transmitted infections. In this study, we characterized the vaginal bacterial communities and the metabolome associated to Chlamydia trachomatis infection (CT: 20 women), compared to healthy condition (H: 22 women) and bacterial vaginosis (BV: 19 women). A microarray-based tool (VaginArray), implemented with a real-time PCR for Gardnerella vaginalis, was used to determine the vaginal bacterial composition, whereas the metabolic profiles were assessed by a proton-based nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR) spectroscopy. CT infection was characterized by bacterial and metabolic signatures similar to healthy condition, even though higher amounts of Lactobacillus iners, as well as depletion of some amino acids, biogenic amines, and succinate marked CT infection. Moreover, the frequency of Lactobacillus crispatus was higher in asymptomatic CT-positive patients than in women with CT-correlated symptoms. We also confirmed the marked differences in the microbiome and metabolome between healthy and BV-affected women. In conclusion, we highlighted microbial and metabolic peculiarities of the vaginal ecosystem in the case of CT infection, even though further studies are needed to understand if the observed alterations precede the infection onset or if the pathogen itself perturbs the vaginal environment.


Sexually Transmitted Infections | 2017

P1.14 Evaluation of the aptima assays for the detection of bacterial sexually transmitted infections in a selected population of women

Claudio Foschi; Nicoletta Banzola; Valeria Gaspari; Antonietta D’Antuono; Roberto Cevenini; Antonella Marangoni

Introduction: Chlamydia trachomatis (CT), Neisseria gonorrhoeae (NG) and Mycoplasma genitalium (MG) represent the most common agents of bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs), worldwide. In women, uro-genital infections caused by these microorganisms are often asymptomatic and, left untreated, can lead to several sequelae. Nucleic acid amplification techniques (NAATs) have become the reference methods for the diagnosis, thanks to the suitability for different specimens and the outstanding sensitivity and specificity. The aim of this study was to assess the performance of Aptima Assays for CT, NG and MG detection in a group of selected women, by a head-to-head comparison with other NAATs. Moreover, an evaluation about the suitability for the Aptima assays with one of the most used swab collection device (E-Swab; Copan) was carried out. Methods Routinely, all the women attending the STI Outpatients Clinic of Sant’Orsola-Malpighi Hospital of Bologna (Italy) complaining of genital STI-related symptoms or reporting unsafe intercourse, are managed as follows. After a clinical visit, a sample of first-void urines and a vaginal swab collected in E-swab, are obtained for CT, NG and MG detection. A duplex real-time PCR (Versant CT/GC DNA 1.0 assay; Siemens) is used for CT and NG detection, while, MG presence is investigated by a home-made PCR, starting from the remaining eluate of Versant PCR plate. From January 2016, a total of 100 patients were selected and their samples were also tested with Aptima assays. Previously frozen samples were thawed and transferred to the suitable collection devices for Aptima assays: in particular, 2 ml of urines and 100 µl of vaginal E-swab were used. All the specimens were processed by Aptima Combo2® for CT and NG detection and by the Aptima® Mycoplasma genitalium assay for MG infection diagnosis. These assays were run on Panther system (Hologic). A comparison between the different molecular methods, stratified by type of sample and microorganism, was conducted. Results In the group of 100 women selected, 25 patients were positive for CT, 4 for NG and 6 for MG. One case of CT-NG and two cases of CT-MG co-infections were found. Interestingly, more than 50% of CT-positive women were completely asymptomatic. By the routine tests, all positive cases were simultaneously found both on the urine sample and on the vaginal swab, except for 3 CT, 1 NG and 1 MG infections, detected only on the vaginal swab. A complete concordance with Aptima assays, both for the type of sample and microorganism was found, with only one discordant result (a CT case detected by Versant on urines and vaginal swab, found by Aptima only on urines). Any interference due to the different liquid components of E-Swab was excluded. Conclusion Given the outstanding performance, Aptima assays can represent an excellent choice for CT, NG and MG molecular detection. Moreover, it is noteworthy that Aptima assays allow testing of specimens collected by E-Swab, enabling the possibility to use the same sample for both NG molecular detection and culture.


Sexually Transmitted Infections | 2017

P1.13 Vaginal microbiome signatures in chlamydia trachomatis infected women

Claudio Foschi; Carola Parolin; Antonietta D’Antuono; Luca Laghi; Roberto Cevenini; Nicoletta Banzola; Valeria Gaspari; Beatrice Vitali; Antonella Marangoni

Introduction In healthy women, lactobacilli play a crucial role in maintaining the microbial homeostasis of the vaginal niche. In case of bacterial vaginosis (BV), a condition characterised by a depletion of lactobacilli and an increasing number of anaerobes, a higher risk of urogenital and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) is reported. The vaginal environment of healthy and BV-positive women have been extensively studied, leading to the identification of the microbial species dominating these opposite conditions and to the description of specific metabolic profiles. Besides that, less is known about the vaginal microbiome in case of STIs, as Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) infections. The aim of this study was to analyse the composition of the endogenous microbiota and the metabolic signatures of the vaginal niche in 3 different conditions: healthy, BV and CT infections. Methods From July 2016, all the pre-menopausal women attending the STI Outpatients Clinic of Sant’Orsola-Malpighi Hospital in Bologna (Italy) and meeting one of the following criteria were enrolled: presence of vaginal symptoms or presence of risk factors for CT infection. Patients with vaginal candidiasis were excluded. For all the patients, a vaginal swab was collected for molecular CT detection (Versant CT/GC DNA 1.0 Assay; Siemens), whereas Amsel criteria were used for BV assessment. Moreover, for each woman, an additional vaginal swab stored in saline was collected and centrifuged. Cell pellets were examined with a DNA-microarray platform including 17 probe sets specific for the most representative vaginal bacterial groups and with a quantitative real-time PCR targeting 16s rRNA gene of Gardnerella vaginalis (GV). Cell-free supernatants were used for metabolomic analysis by means of 1H-NMR spectroscopy. NMR spectra were recorded with an AVANCE spectrometer (Bruker). Similarities among microbial and metabolic profiles of samples were investigated by means of a principal component analysis (PCA). Differences in GV DNA loads and metabolites concentrations were analysed by ANOVA test. The study was approved by the Hospital Ethical Committee. Results Among all the women enrolled, 25 were considered healthy, 18 received a diagnosis of BV and 22 were positive for CT. PCA revealed that the vaginal microbiome of healthy and BV-subjects were clearly distinct and that CT-positive women were more similar to healthy women rather than to BV-positives, both for microbial composition and for metabolic profile. The mean GV DNA load was significantly different between the groups (p=0.03): healthy and CT positive women showed similar and lower mean loads compared to BV group. At a metabolic level, significantly higher concentrations of formate, ethanolamine and methylamine were found in BV-patients, while tryptophan and lactate were more present in healthy and CT-positive women. Conclusion Specific microbial and metabolic signatures characterise different clinical conditions of the vaginal tract. In this context, CT-positive women are definitely more similar to healthy than BV-subjects.

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