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Dive into the research topics where Aurora Castellano is active.

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Featured researches published by Aurora Castellano.


Acta Paediatrica | 2004

Ifosfamide/carboplatin/etoposide (ICE) as front-line, topotecan/ cyclophosphamide as second-line and oral temozolomide as third-line treatment for advanced neuroblastoma over one year of age

Alberto Donfrancesco; Alessandro Jenkner; Aurora Castellano; Ilaria Ilari; Giuseppe Maria Milano; L. De Sio; Raffaele Cozza; Paola Fidani; Giovanni Deb; C De Laurentis; Alessandro Inserra; Carlo Dominici

Children affected by advanced neuroblastoma have a discouraging prognosis, but intensive induction chemotherapy may increase the complete response rate. The combination of ifosfamide, carboplatin and etoposide (ICE) was used for the first time as front‐line regimen in patients with stage 4 neuroblastoma over the age of 1 y. Similarly, second‐line treatment for children with relapsed neuroblastoma, particularly after high‐dose chemotherapy, has been unsatisfactory. The combination of topotecan and cyclophosphamide was studied in resistant or relapsed solid tumors. Furthermore, there is a need for effective palliative treatment in patients failing therapy. Temozolomide, a new dacarbazine analog with optimal oral bioavailability, is being used in an ongoing phase II study as an alternative to oral etoposide. Seventeen patients with stage 4 neuroblastoma have entered the ICE study; 15/16 (94%) major responses after induction were observed and 6/16 (37%) evaluable patients are disease free after a median of 51 mo. Twenty‐one patients with relapsed/refractory disease (of whom 13 neuroblastomas) entered the topotecan/cyclophosphamide study: 7/21 (33%) patients responded. Forty‐one patients entered the temozolomide study (of whom 16 had neuroblastomas): stable disease and symptom relief were obtained in 15/30 (50%) evaluable patients. Intensive induction with ICE resulted in a faster response with high response rate; a larger study with longer follow‐up is needed to confirm a survival advantage. Second‐line treatment was effective in obtaining remissions, some of them long lasting. Third‐line treatment did not elicit measurable responses in neuroblastoma, but achieved prolonged freedom from disease progression and excellent palliation in several patients.


Journal of Immunology | 2013

Neuroblastoma-Derived TGF-β1 Modulates the Chemokine Receptor Repertoire of Human Resting NK Cells

Roberta Castriconi; Alessandra Dondero; Francesca Bellora; Lorenzo Moretta; Aurora Castellano; Franco Locatelli; Maria Valeria Corrias; Alessandro Moretta; Cristina Bottino

In this study, we show that neuroblastoma (NB) cell conditioning affects the chemokine receptor repertoire of human resting NK cells. In particular, NB cells upregulated the expression of CXCR4 and CXCR3 in all NK cells and downregulated CX3CR1 in the CD56dim subset. On the contrary, the expression of CXCR1 and CCR7 remained unaltered. The phenomenon was dependent on the release by NB cells of TGF-β1, and rTGF-β1 induced a chemokine receptor repertoire identical to that of NB-conditioned NK cells. The immune modulatory role of TGF-β1 appears to be dose dependent because low amounts of the cytokine were sufficient to modulate CXCR4 and CX3CR1 expression, intermediate amounts modified that of CXCR3, and high amounts were necessary to downregulate the expression of the NKp30 activating receptor. Notably, a similar receptor modulation was observed in rTGF-β2–conditioned NK cells. Finally, the analysis of NK cells from patients with stage 4 NB suggests that NB conditioning could exert in vivo an immune modulatory effect resembling that emerged from in vitro experiments. Altogether our data propose a novel tumor escape-mechanism based on the modulation of chemokine receptors that play pivotal roles in NK cells bone marrow homing, egress, or recruitment into peripheral tissues.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2006

Temozolomide in resistant or relapsed pediatric solid tumors

L. De Sio; Giuseppe Maria Milano; Aurora Castellano; Alessandro Jenkner; Paola Fidani; Carlo Dominici; Alberto Donfrancesco

We report the off‐label study aimed at investigating the use of temozolomide (TMZ) as single agent in relapsed or resistant pediatric solid tumors. The drug was administered at the dose of 215 mg/m2/day × 5 days or 180 mg/m2/day × 5 days in patients with prior craniospinal irradiation (CSI) or autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT).


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2004

Antibiotic lock with vancomycin and urokinase can successfully treat colonized central venous catheters in pediatric cancer patients.

Luigi De Sio; Alessandro Jenkner; Giuseppe Maria Milano; Ilaria Ilari; Paola Fidani; Aurora Castellano; Roberta Gareri; Alberto Donfrancesco

We used an antibiotic lock technique with vancomycin in combination with urokinase in 10 consecutive eligible children with Gram-positive catheter-related bacteremia persisting after appropriate intravenous antibiotics. Treatment was successful in sterilizing all colonized central venous catheters, avoiding device removal and delay of further chemotherapy. The antibiotic lock technique may represent a safe and effective therapeutic option in patients with selected, uncomplicated catheter-related bacteremias resistant to systemic antimicrobial therapy, particularly when maintaining a venous access is mandatory.


European Journal of Cancer | 2009

Neuroblastoma in the newborn. A study of the Italian Neuroblastoma Registry

Anna Rita Gigliotti; Andrea Di Cataldo; Stefania Sorrentino; Stefano Parodi; Antonino Rizzo; Piero Buffa; Claudio Granata; Angela Rita Sementa; Anna Maria Fagnani; Massimo Provenzi; Arcangelo Prete; Carmelita D’Ippolito; Anna Clerico; Aurora Castellano; Gian Paolo Tonini; Massimo Conte; Alberto Garaventa; Bruno De Bernardi

AIM Presenting features, treatment and outcome of 134 newborns with neuroblastoma diagnosed over a 27-year period are described. METHODS Analyses were performed on the entire cohort and on patients distributed over three periods of diagnosis. RESULTS Twenty-seven tumours (20.1%) were detected prenatally. Localised disease prevailed (65.7%) with an increase of stage 1 patients over time from 18.8% to 46.5%. Disseminated disease accounted for 34.3% of tumours with only one stage 4 and 45 stage 4S. Five-year overall survival (OS) of the entire cohort was 88.3%. Five/88 patients with localised disease died, including three who died of complications (OS, 95.3%). The only stage 4 patient survived. Eleven/45 stage 4S patients died, including 7/18 symptomatic and 4/27 asymptomatic (OS, 74.1%). CONCLUSION The outcome of neuroblastoma in newborns is excellent. In localised tumours, surgery-related deaths outnumbered deaths due to disease. Symptomatic stage 4S patients were at greater risk of dying.


OncoImmunology | 2015

Tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes improve clinical outcome of therapy-resistant neuroblastoma

Marco Mina; Renata Boldrini; Arianna Citti; Paolo Romania; Valerio D'Alicandro; Maretta De Ioris; Aurora Castellano; Cesare Furlanello; Franco Locatelli; Doriana Fruci

Neuroblastoma grows within an intricate network of different cell types including epithelial, stromal and immune cells. The presence of tumor-infiltrating T cells is considered an important prognostic indicator in many cancers, but the role of these cells in neuroblastoma remains to be elucidated. Herein, we examined the relationship between the type, density and organization of infiltrating T cells and clinical outcome within a large collection of neuroblastoma samples by quantitative analysis of immunohistochemical staining. We found that infiltrating T cells have a prognostic value greater than, and independent of, the criteria currently used to stage neuroblastoma. A variable in situ structural organization and different concurrent infiltration of T-cell subsets were detected in tumors with various outcomes. Low-risk neuroblastomas were characterized by a higher number of proliferating T cells and a more structured T-cell organization, which was gradually lost in tumors with poor prognosis. We defined an immunoscore based on the presence of CD3+, CD4+ and CD8+ infiltrating T cells that associates with favorable clinical outcome in MYCN-amplified tumors, improving patient survival when combined with the v-myc avian myelocytomatosis viral oncogene neuroblastoma derived homolog (MYCN) status. These findings support the hypothesis that infiltrating T cells influence the behavior of neuroblastoma and might be of clinical importance for the treatment of patients.


Pediatric Obesity | 2014

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma in a 7-year-old obese boy: coincidence or comorbidity?

Valerio Nobili; Anna Alisi; Chiara Grimaldi; D. Liccardo; Paola Francalanci; Lidia Monti; Aurora Castellano; J. de Ville de Goyet

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) may develop from non‐alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) either in the presence or in the absence of established cirrhosis. Non‐cirrhotic patients with NAFLD‐related HCC are usually adult, male and obese. However, this association has not been reported yet in younger age groups. Objectives In the present study, the clinical case of a 7‐yaer‐old obese boy with steatosis and HCC is presented.


PLOS ONE | 2012

IRF1 and NF-kB Restore MHC Class I-Restricted Tumor Antigen Processing and Presentation to Cytotoxic T Cells in Aggressive Neuroblastoma

Silvia Lorenzi; Matteo Forloni; Loredana Cifaldi; Chiara Antonucci; Arianna Citti; Renata Boldrini; Marco Pezzullo; Aurora Castellano; V. Russo; Pierre van der Bruggen; Patrizio Giacomini; Franco Locatelli; Doriana Fruci

Neuroblastoma (NB), the most common solid extracranial cancer of childhood, displays a remarkable low expression of Major Histocompatibility Complex class I (MHC-I) and Antigen Processing Machinery (APM) molecules, including Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) Aminopeptidases, and poorly presents tumor antigens to Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes (CTL). We have previously shown that this is due to low expression of the transcription factor NF-kB p65. Herein, we show that not only NF-kB p65, but also the Interferon Regulatory Factor 1 (IRF1) and certain APM components are low in a subset of NB cell lines with aggressive features. Whereas single transfection with either IRF1, or NF-kB p65 is ineffective, co-transfection results in strong synergy and substantial reversion of the MHC-I/APM-low phenotype in all NB cell lines tested. Accordingly, linked immunohistochemistry expression patterns between nuclear IRF1 and p65 on the one hand, and MHC-I on the other hand, were observed in vivo. Absence and presence of the three molecules neatly segregated between high-grade and low-grade NB, respectively. Finally, APM reconstitution by double IRF1/p65 transfection rendered a NB cell line susceptible to killing by anti MAGE-A3 CTLs, lytic efficiency comparable to those seen upon IFN-γ treatment. This is the first demonstration that a complex immune escape phenotype can be rescued by reconstitution of a limited number of master regulatory genes. These findings provide molecular insight into defective MHC-I expression in NB cells and provide the rational for T cell-based immunotherapy in NB variants refractory to conventional therapy.


Pediatrics | 2010

Tyrosinemia Type 1: Metastatic Hepatoblastoma With a Favorable Outcome

Valerio Nobili; Alessandro Jenkner; Paola Francalanci; Aurora Castellano; Elisabeth Holme; Francesco Callea; Carlo Dionisi-Vici

The clinical course of tyrosinemia type 1 is characterized by acute liver failure in infancy or chronic liver dysfunction and renal Fanconi syndrome in late-presenting cases. Dietary treatment may improve liver function but does not prevent the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in late childhood. A new treatment strategy that uses 2-(2-nitro-4-trifluoromethylbenzoyl)-1,3-cyclohexanedione (NTBC), which prevents the production of toxic/carcinogenic metabolites, has dramatically changed the outcome of the disease by reducing the occurrence of liver cancer, especially in patients who start this treatment before the age of 2 years. We report here the case of a patient with a diagnosis of tyrosinemia type 1 at 5 months of age who was treated with NTBC and dietary restriction and in whom a liver neoplasm with lung metastases, histologically determined to be HCC, was found at the age of 15 months. A conservative approach that consisted of chemotherapy and partial hepatectomy resulted in a 12-year disease-free period. The excellent postchemotherapy course, in sharp contrast to the expected course of HCC, led to histologic reevaluation with reclassification of the neoplasm as hepatoblastoma. A diagnosis of hepatoblastoma would no longer be a mandate for a liver transplant for patients with tyrosinemia type 1 undergoing NTBC treatment. We encourage clinicians to perform more accurate evaluation of liver histology, because a neoplastic mass in a child with tyrosinemia type 1 is not the same as HCC.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2010

Gefitinib in combination with oral topotecan and cyclophosphamide in relapsed neuroblastoma: Pharmacological rationale and clinical response†

Alberto Donfrancesco; Maria Antonietta De Ioris; Heather P. McDowell; Maria Debora De Pasquale; Ilaria Ilari; Alessandro Jenkner; Aurora Castellano; Samantha Cialfi; Clementina De Laurentis; Carlo Dominici

Activity and toxiciy of gefitinib in combination with topotecan and cyclophosphamide (CPA) were evaluated in a case‐series of relapsed neuroblastoma (NB) patients. The in vitro activity of the combination was also assessed.

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Carlo Dominici

Sapienza University of Rome

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Ilaria Ilari

Boston Children's Hospital

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Renata Boldrini

Boston Children's Hospital

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Massimo Conte

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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