B. Mazzi
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by B. Mazzi.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2009
Luca Vago; Serena Kimi Perna; Monica Zanussi; B. Mazzi; Cristina Barlassina; Maria Teresa Lupo Stanghellini; Nicola Flavio Perrelli; Cristian Cosentino; Federica Torri; Andrea Angius; Barbara Forno; Monica Casucci; Massimo Bernardi; Jacopo Peccatori; Consuelo Corti; Attilio Bondanza; Maurizio Ferrari; Silvano Rossini; Maria Grazia Roncarolo; Claudio Bordignon; Chiara Bonini; Fabio Ciceri; Katharina Fleischhauer
BACKGROUND Transplantation of hematopoietic stem cells from partially matched family donors is a promising therapy for patients who have a hematologic cancer and are at high risk for relapse. The donor T-cell infusions associated with such transplantation can promote post-transplantation immune reconstitution and control residual disease. METHODS We identified 43 patients who underwent haploidentical transplantation and infusion of donor T cells for acute myeloid leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome and conducted post-transplantation studies that included morphologic examination of bone marrow, assessment of hematopoietic chimerism with the use of short-tandem-repeat amplification, and HLA typing. The genomic rearrangements in mutant variants of leukemia were studied with the use of genomic HLA typing, microsatellite mapping, and single-nucleotide-polymorphism arrays. The post-transplantation immune responses against the original cells and the mutated leukemic cells were analyzed with the use of mixed lymphocyte cultures. RESULTS In 5 of 17 patients with leukemia relapse after haploidentical transplantation and infusion of donor T cells, we identified mutant variants of the original leukemic cells. In the mutant leukemic cells, the HLA haplotype that differed from the donors haplotype had been lost because of acquired uniparental disomy of chromosome 6p. T cells from the donor and the patient after transplantation did not recognize the mutant leukemic cells, whereas the original leukemic cells taken at the time of diagnosis were efficiently recognized and killed. CONCLUSIONS After transplantation of haploidentical hematopoietic stem cells and infusion of donor T cells, leukemic cells can escape from the donors antileukemic T cells through the loss of the mismatched HLA haplotype. This event leads to relapse.
Blood | 2008
Luca Vago; Barbara Forno; Maria Pia Sormani; Roberto Crocchiolo; Elisabetta Zino; Simona Di Terlizzi; Maria Teresa Lupo Stanghellini; B. Mazzi; Serena Kimi Perna; Attilio Bondanza; Derek Middleton; Alessio Palini; Massimo Bernardi; Rosa Bacchetta; Jacopo Peccatori; Silvano Rossini; Maria Grazia Roncarolo; Claudio Bordignon; Chiara Bonini; Fabio Ciceri; Katharina Fleischhauer
In this study, we have characterized reconstitution of the natural killer (NK) cell repertoire after haploidentical CD34(+) selected hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) for high-risk hematologic malignancies. Analysis focused on alloreactive single-KIR(+) NK cells, which reportedly are potent antileukemic effectors. One month after HSCT, CD56(bright)/CD56(dim) NK-cell subsets showed inverted ratio and phenotypic features. CD25 and CD117 down-regulation on CD56(bright), and NKG2A and CD62L up-regulation on CD56(dim), suggest sequential CD56(bright)-to-CD56(dim) NK-cell maturation in vivo. Consistently, the functional potential of these maturation intermediates against leukemic blasts was impaired. Mature receptor repertoire reconstitution took at least 3 months. Importantly, at this time point, supposedly alloreactive, single-KIR(+) NK cells were not yet fully functional. Frequency of these cells was highly variable, independently from predicted NK alloreactivity, and below 1% of NK cells in 3 of 6 alloreactive patients studied. In line with these observations, no clinical benefit of predicted NK alloreactivity was observed in the total cohort of 56 patients. Our findings unravel the kinetics, and limits, of NK-cell differentiation from purified haploidentical hematopoietic stem cells in vivo, and suggest that NK-cell antileukemic potential could be best exploited by infusion of mature single-KIR(+) NK cells selected from an alloreactive donor.
Leukemia | 2015
L Crucitti; Roberto Crocchiolo; Cristina Toffalori; B. Mazzi; Raffaella Greco; A Signori; F Sizzano; Lorenza Chiesa; Elisabetta Zino; M T Lupo Stanghellini; Andrea Assanelli; M G Carrabba; Sarah Marktel; Magda Marcatti; Claudio Bordignon; Consuelo Corti; Massimo Bernardi; Jacopo Peccatori; Chiara Bonini; K Fleischhauer; Fabio Ciceri; Luca Vago
Genomic loss of the mismatched human leukocyte antigen (HLA) is a recently described mechanism of leukemia immune escape and relapse after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Here we first evaluated its incidence, risk factors and outcome in 233 consecutive transplants from partially HLA-mismatched related and unrelated donors (MMRD and MMUD, respectively). We documented 84 relapses, 23 of which with HLA loss. All the HLA loss relapses occurred after MMRD HSCT, and 20/23 in patients with acute myeloid leukemia. Upon MMRD HSCT, HLA loss variants accounted for 33% of the relapses (23/69), occurring later than their ‘classical’ counterparts (median: 307 vs 88 days, P<0.0001). Active disease at HSCT increased the risk of HLA loss (hazard ratio (HR): 10.16; confidence interval (CI): 2.65–38.92; P=0.001), whereas older patient ages had a protective role (HR: 0.16; CI: 0.05–0.46; P=0.001). A weaker association with HLA loss was observed for graft T-cell dose and occurrence of chronic graft-versus-host disease. Outcome after ‘classical’ and HLA loss relapses was similarly poor, and second transplantation from a different donor appeared to provide a slight advantage for survival. In conclusion, HLA loss is a frequent mechanism of evasion from T-cell alloreactivity and relapse in patients with myeloid malignancies transplanted from MMRDs, warranting routine screening in this transplantation setting.
Leukemia | 2008
B. Mazzi; T D Clerici; Monica Zanussi; M T Lupo Stanghellini; Luca Vago; E Sironi; Jacopo Peccatori; Massimo Bernardi; P Carrera; A Palini; Silvano Rossini; Claudio Bordignon; Chiara Bonini; Maurizio Ferrari; Fabio Ciceri; Katharina Fleischhauer
Genomic typing for patient-specific human leukocyte antigen-alleles is an efficient tool for relapse detection of high-risk hematopoietic malignancies after stem cell transplantation from alternative donors
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2016
Elisabetta Xue; Cristina Tresoldi; E Sala; Alessandra Crippa; B. Mazzi; Raffaella Greco; Carlo Messina; M Carrabba; M T Lupo Stanghellini; Sarah Marktel; Consuelo Corti; Jacopo Peccatori; Massimo Bernardi; Fabio Ciceri; Luca Vago
Longitudinal qPCR monitoring of nucleophosmin 1 mutations after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation to predict AML relapse
Blood | 2003
Elisabetta Zino; Guido Frumento; Sarah Marktel; Maria Pia Sormani; Francesca Ficara; Simona Di Terlizzi; Anna Maria Parodi; Ruhena Sergeant; Miryam Martinetti; Andrea Bontadini; Francesca Bonifazi; Daniela Lisini; B. Mazzi; Silvano Rossini; Paolo Servida; Fabio Ciceri; Chiara Bonini; Edoardo Lanino; Giuseppe Bandini; Franco Locatelli; Jane F. Apperley; Andrea Bacigalupo; Giovanni Battista Ferrara; Claudio Bordignon; Katharina Fleischhauer
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2007
Elisabetta Zino; Luca Vago; Simona Di Terlizzi; B. Mazzi; Laura Zito; Elisabetta Sironi; Silvano Rossini; Chiara Bonini; Fabio Ciceri; Maria Grazia Roncarolo; Claudio Bordignon; Katharina Fleischhauer
Tissue Antigens | 1996
Katharina Fleischhauer; B. Mazzi; G. M. Severini; E. Benazzi; C. Bordignon
Tissue Antigens | 2012
F. Sizzano; Manuela Testi; Laura Zito; Roberto Crocchiolo; M. Troiano; B. Mazzi; G. Turchiano; M. Torchio; C. Pultrone; Silvia Gregori; Robert Chiesa; J Gaziev; P Sodani; Sarah Marktel; A. Amoroso; Maria Grazia Roncarolo; G Lucarelli; Fabio Ciceri; Marco Andreani; Katharina Fleischhauer
Tissue Antigens | 2004
Elisabetta Zino; S. Di Terlizzi; C. Carugo; L. Baggi; A. Galli; Chiara Bonini; Silvano Rossini; B. Mazzi; Katharina Fleischhauer