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Dive into the research topics where Bianca Serio is active.

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Featured researches published by Bianca Serio.


Blood | 2009

Complement fraction 3 binding on erythrocytes as additional mechanism of disease in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria patients treated by eculizumab

Antonio M. Risitano; Rosario Notaro; Ludovica Marando; Bianca Serio; Danilo Ranaldi; Elisa Seneca; Patrizia Ricci; Fiorella Alfinito; Andrea Camera; Giacomo Gianfaldoni; Angela Amendola; Carla Boschetti; Eros Di Bona; Giorgio Fratellanza; Filippo Barbano; Francesco Rodeghiero; Alberto Zanella; Anna Paola Iori; Lucio Luzzatto; Bruno Rotoli

In paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) hemolytic anemia is due mainly to deficiency of the complement regulator CD59 on the surface of red blood cells (RBCs). Eculizumab, an antibody that targets complement fraction 5 (C5), has proven highly effective in abolishing complement-mediated intravascular hemolysis in PNH; however, the hematologic benefit varies considerably among patients. In the aim to understand the basis for this variable response, we have investigated by flow cytometry the binding of complement fraction 3 (C3) on RBCs from PNH patients before and during eculizumab treatment. There was no evidence of C3 on RBCs of untreated PNH patients; by contrast, in all patients on eculizumab (n = 41) a substantial fraction of RBCs had C3 bound on their surface, and this was entirely restricted to RBCs with the PNH phenotype (CD59(-)). The proportion of C3(+) RBCs correlated significantly with the reticulocyte count and with the hematologic response to eculizumab. In 3 patients in whom (51)Cr labeling of RBCs was carried out while on eculizumab, we have demonstrated reduced RBC half-life in vivo, with excess (51)Cr uptake in spleen and in liver. Binding of C3 by PNH RBCs may constitute an additional disease mechanism in PNH, strongly enhanced by eculizumab treatment and producing a variable degree of extravascular hemolysis.


The Scientific World Journal | 2014

Endocrinopathies after Allogeneic and Autologous Transplantation of Hematopoietic Stem Cells

Francesco Orio; Giovanna Muscogiuri; Stefano Palomba; Bianca Serio; M Sessa; Valentina Giudice; I Ferrara; Libuse Tauchmanovà; Annamaria Colao

Early and late endocrine disorders are among the most common complications in survivors after hematopoietic allogeneic- (allo-) and autologous- (auto-) stem cell transplant (HSCT). This review summarizes main endocrine disorders reported in literature and observed in our center as consequence of auto- and allo-HSCT and outlines current options for their management. Gonadal impairment has been found early in approximately two-thirds of auto- and allo-HSCT patients: 90–99% of women and 60–90% of men. Dysfunctions of the hypothalamus-pituitary-growth hormone/insulin growth factor-I axis, hypothalamus-pituitary-thyroid axis, and hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis were documented as later complicances, occurring in about 10, 30, and 40–50% of transplanted patients, respectively. Moreover, overt or subclinical thyroid complications (including persistent low-T3 syndrome, chronic thyroiditis, subclinical hypo- or hyperthyroidism, and thyroid carcinoma), gonadal failure, and adrenal insufficiency may persist many years after HSCT. Our analysis further provides evidence that main recognized risk factors for endocrine complications after HSCT are the underlying disease, previous pretransplant therapies, the age at HSCT, gender, total body irradiation, posttransplant derangement of immune system, and in the allogeneic setting, the presence of graft-versus-host disease requiring prolonged steroid treatment. Early identification of endocrine complications can greatly improve the quality of life of long-term survivors after HSCT.


Mini-reviews in Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Impact of Immunogenetic Polymorphisms in Bone Marrow Failure Syndromes

Bianca Serio; Jp Maciejewski

AIM To explore whether predisposition to bone marrow failure syndromes (BMF), such aplastic anemia (AA), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) and myelosysplastic syndromes (MDS), is found in killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR) and human leukocyte antigen (HLA) ligand (KIR-L) gene variations or cytokine polymorphisms. PATIENTS We studied a cohort of 77 patients with AA, 129 with MDS and 285 healthy controls for the frequencies of KIR-L and KIR genotypes and 22 selected single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located within 10 cytokine (IL-1α, IL-1β, IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL12, IFN- γ, TNF- α, TGF- β) and 3 cytokine receptor (IL-1R, IL-1RA, IL-4Rα) genes. RESULTS In AA we found a decreased frequency of inhibitory KIR-2DL3 genes. In MDS, no difference in the frequency of KIR genotype was identified; however, a decreased frequency of 2DL3 was found in hypocellular MDS. Analysis of the KIR genotype in correlation with the corresponding KIR-L profile, revealed a decreased frequency of stimulatory 2DS1/C2 mismatch both in AA and MDS. In AA and MDS cohorts, compared to controls, we found a higher frequency of TT codon 10 variant and of GG codon 25 variant of TGF- β gene, consistent with a high secretory phenotype. This relationship was even more pronounced in PNH and hypocellular MDS. We confirm that the hypersecretory genotype T/T at position -874 of INF-γ gene was overrepresented only in AA and correlates with presence of a PNH clone. Instead in MDS patients, the frequency of G/A polymorphism at position -308 on the TNF- α gene promoter, which correlates with higher TNF- α production, was found significantly higher. Moreover, hypocellular MDS was characterized by a higher prevalence of IL-10 GCC/GCC haplotype, which is functionally associated with a low secretor phenotype. CONCLUSION Our findings suggest that alterations in KIR/KIR-L matching, such as increased 3DL2 and decreased 2DS1 mismatch, and in the polymorphisms of TGFβ1, IFN-γ, TNF- α and IL-10 may account for the propensity to immunemediated killing of hematopoietic stem cells and/or ineffective hematopoiesis characteristic of AA and MDS. Further studies are needed to elucidate whether these immunogenetic traits may be involved in increased risk of developing immune-mediated BMF.


Open Medicine | 2016

Role of Laparoscopic Splenectomy in Elderly Immune Thrombocytopenia

Valentina Giudice; Rosa Rosamilio; Bianca Serio; Rosa Maria Di Crescenzo; Francesca Rossi; Amato de Paulis; Vincenzo Pilone

Abstract The management of older patients with chronic primary immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is still very challenging because of the fragility of older patients who frequently have severe comorbidities and/or disabilities. Corticosteroid-based first-line therapies fail in most of the cases and patients require a second-line treatment, choosing between rituximab, thrombopoietin-receptor agonists and splenectomy. The choice of the best treatment in elderly patients is a compromise between effectiveness and safety and laparoscopic splenectomy may be a good option with a complete remission rate of 67% at 60 months. But relapse and complication rates remain higher than in younger splenectomized ITP patients because elderly patients undergo splenectomy with unfavorable conditions (age >60 year-old, presence of comorbidities, or multiple previous treatments) which negatively influence the outcome, regardless the hematological response. For these reasons, a good management of concomitant diseases and the option to not use the splenectomy as the last possible treatment could improve the outcome of old splenectomized patients.


Open Medicine | 2016

Efficacy and safety of splenectomy in adult autoimmune hemolytic anemia

Valentina Giudice; Rosa Rosamilio; I Ferrara; Elisa Seneca; Bianca Serio

Abstract Autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) is a rare hematologic disease, primarily affecting adults or children with immunodeficiency disease. First-line therapy consists of long course of steroids administration, with an early complete response rate (CRr) of 75-80%, but up to 20-30% of patients requires a second-line therapy. Rituximab is the first choice in refractory old AIHA patients, because of its safety and efficacy (early CRr at 80-90% and at 68% at 2-3 years). For this reason, splenectomy is even less chosen as second-line therapy in elderly, even though laparoscopic technique decreased complication and mortality rates. However, splenectomy can be still considered a good therapeutic option with a CRr of 81% at 35.6 months in patients older than 60 year-old, when rituximab administration cannot be performed.


Oncotarget | 2016

Involvement of urokinase receptor in the cross-talk between human hematopoietic stem cells and bone marrow microenvironment

Nunzia Montuori; Annamaria Salvati; Bianca Serio; Ada Pesapane; Patrizia Ricci; Anna Gorrasi; Anna Li Santi; Gunilla Høyer-Hansen; Pia Ragno

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) reside in bone marrow (BM) and can be induced to mobilize into the circulation for transplantation. Homing and lodgement into BM of transplanted HSCs are the first critical steps in their engraftment and involve multiple interactions between HSCs and the BM microenvironment. uPAR is a three domain receptor (DIDIIDIII) which binds urokinase, vitronectin, integrins. uPAR can be cleaved and shed from the cell surface generating full-length and cleaved soluble forms (suPAR and DIIDIII-suPAR). DIIDIII-suPAR can bind fMLF receptors through the SRSRY sequence (residues 88-92). We previously reported the involvement of soluble uPAR in HSC mobilization. We now investigate its possible role in HSC homing and engraftment. We show similar levels of circulating full-length suPAR in healthy donors and in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients before and after the pre-transplant conditioning regimen. By contrast, levels of circulating DIIDIII-suPAR in AML patients are higher as compared to controls and significantly decrease after the conditioning. We found that suPAR and uPAR84-95, a uPAR-derived peptide which mimics active DIIDIII-suPAR, induce a significant increase in Long Term Culture (LTC)-Initiating Cells (ICs) and in the release of clonogenic progenitors from LTCs of CD34+ HSCs. Further, suPAR increases adhesion and survival of CD34+ KG1 AML cells, whereas uPAR84-95 increases their proliferation. Thus, circulating DIIDIII-suPAR, strongly increased in HSC mobilization, is indeed down-regulated by pre-transplant conditioning, probably to favour HSC homing. BM full-length suPAR and DIIDIII-suPAR may be involved in HSC lodgement within the BM by contributing to a suitable microenvironment.


Blood | 2005

Involvement of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor in hematopoietic stem cell mobilization

Nunzia Montuori; Patrizia Ricci; Valeria Visconte; Maria Vincenza Carriero; Nicolai Sidenius; Bianca Serio; Francesco Blasi; Bruno Rotoli; Guido Rossi; Pia Ragno


American Journal of Hematology | 2007

Hemochromatosis‐associated gene mutations in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes with refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts

Zachary P. Nearman; Hadrian Szpurka; Bianca Serio; Ilka Warshawksy; Karl S. Theil; Alan E. Lichtin; Mikkael A. Sekeres; Jaroslaw P. Maciejewski


Blood | 2003

Involvement of nitric oxide in farnesyltransferase inhibitor–mediated apoptosis in chronic myeloid leukemia cells

Jaroslaw P. Maciejewski; Nunzia Montuori; Patrizia Ricci; Valeria Visconte; Bianca Serio; Luigiana Luciano; Bruno Rotoli


UniSa. Sistema Bibliotecario di Ateneo | 2014

Immunological derangement in Hypocellular Myelodysplastic Syndromes

Bianca Serio; Antonio M. Risitano; Valentina Giudice; Nunzia Montuori

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Valentina Giudice

National Institutes of Health

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Bruno Rotoli

University of Naples Federico II

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Patrizia Ricci

University of Naples Federico II

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Nunzia Montuori

National Institutes of Health

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Jp Maciejewski

National Institutes of Health

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