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Featured researches published by Carlo Campana.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2001

Independent and additive prognostic value of Right ventricular systolic function and pulmonary artery pressure in patients with chronic heart failure

Stefano Ghio; Antonello Gavazzi; Carlo Campana; Corinna Inserra; Catherine Klersy; Roberta Sebastiani; Eloisa Arbustini; Franco Recusani; Luigi Tavazzi

OBJECTIVES We sought a better understanding of the coupling between right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF) and pulmonary artery pressure (PAP), as it might improve the accuracy of the prognostic stratification of patients with heart failure. BACKGROUND Despite the long-standing view that systolic function of the right ventricle (RV) is almost exclusively dependent on the afterload that this cardiac chamber must confront, recent studies claim that RV function is an independent prognostic factor in patients with chronic heart failure. METHODS Right heart catheterization was performed in 377 consecutive patients with heart failure. RESULTS During a median follow-up period of 17 +/- 9 months, 105 patients died and 35 underwent urgent heart transplantation. Pulmonary artery pressure and thermodilution-derived RVEF were inversely related (r = 0.66, p < 0.001). However, on Cox multivariate survival analysis, no interaction between such variables was found, and both turned out to be independent prognostic predictors (p < 0.001). It was found that RVEF was preserved in some patients with pulmonary hypertension, and that the prognosis of these patients was similar to that of the patients with normal PAP. In contrast, when PAP was normal, reduced RV function did not carry an additional risk. CONCLUSIONS These observations emphasize the necessity of combining the right heart hemodynamic variables with a functional evaluation of the RV when trying to define the individual risk of patients with heart failure.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2000

Prognostic usefulness of the tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion in patients with congestive heart failure secondary to idiopathic or ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy.

Stefano Ghio; Franco Recusani; Catherine Klersy; Roberta Sebastiani; Maria Luisa Laudisa; Carlo Campana; Antonello Gavazzi; Luigi Tavazzi

The prognostic value of ultrasound evaluation of right ventricular (RV) performance in patients with congestive heart failure (CHF) is still a matter of investigation. We studied 140 consecutive patients with chronic CHF and a left ventricular ejection fraction <35%. All patients underwent a complete echocardiographic evaluation that systematically included the measurement of the tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE). During a follow-up period of 24 +/- 14 months, 45 patients died and 7 underwent emergency heart transplantation. At the multivariate survival analysis (Cox regression model) backward stepwise selection identified a prognostic model with 2 parameters: New York Heart Association (NYHA) class III or IV and TAPSE < or =14 mm (p <000). In a subgroup of 97 patients in sinus rhythm in whom mitral inflow Doppler variables could be measured, survival was further analyzed according to a model in which the significant parameters were included in the same order as usually used in routine clinical practice: clinical variables first, left ventricular function data second, mitral Doppler variables third, and indexes of right ventricular (RV) function last. TAPSE < or =14 mm added significant (p <0.03) prognostic information to NYHA class III or IV, left ventricular ejection fraction of <20%, and mitral deceleration time of < 125 ms. In conclusion, in patients with CHF, TAPSE adds significant prognostic information to the NYHA clinical classification, to the echocardiographic evaluation of left ventricular function, and to mitral Doppler variables. Furthermore, the measurement of TAPSE is easy to obtain in all patients, irrespective of heart rate and rhythm.


Circulation | 2003

Serum N-Terminal Pro–Brain Natriuretic Peptide Is a Sensitive Marker of Myocardial Dysfunction in AL Amyloidosis

Giovanni Palladini; Carlo Campana; Catherine Klersy; Alessandra Balduini; Giovanbattista Vadacca; Vittorio Perfetti; Stefano Perlini; Laura Obici; Edoardo Ascari; Gianvico Melzi d’Eril; Remigio Moratti; Giampaolo Merlini

Background—Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) is a marker of ventricular dysfunction and can be used to assess prognosis in heart failure and after myocardial infarction. Heart involvement is the most important prognostic factor and causes death in almost all patients with light-chain amyloidosis (AL). We investigated the prognostic value of NT-proBNP and its utility in monitoring amyloid heart dysfunction. Methods and Results—NT-proBNP was quantified at diagnosis in 152 consecutive patients seen at the coordinating center of the Italian Amyloidosis Study Group (Pavia) from 1999 throughout 2001. Heart involvement was estimated on the basis of clinical signs, electrocardiography, and echocardiography. NT-proBNP concentrations differed in patients with (n=90, 59%) and without (n=62, 41%) heart involvement (median: 507.8 pmol/L versus 22.1 pmol/L, P =10−7). The best cutoff for heart involvement was at 152 pmol/L (sensitivity: 93.33%, specificity: 90.16%, accuracy: 92.05%) and distinguished two groups with different survival (P <0.001). The Cox multivariate model including NT-proBNP was better than models including echocardiographic and clinical signs of heart involvement. NT-proBNP appeared to be more sensitive than conventional echocardiographic parameters in detecting clinical improvement or worsening of amyloid cardiomyopathy during follow-up. Conclusions—NT-proBNP appeared to be the most sensitive index of myocardial dysfunction and the most powerful prognostic determinant in AL amyloidosis. It adds prognostic information for newly diagnosed patients and can be useful in designing therapeutic strategies and monitoring response. NT-proBNP is a sensitive marker of heart toxicity caused by amyloidogenic light chains.


European Journal of Heart Failure | 2008

Long term vagal stimulation in patients with advanced heart failure: first experience in man.

Peter J. Schwartz; Gaetano M. De Ferrari; Antonio Sanzo; Maurizio Landolina; Roberto Rordorf; Claudia Raineri; Carlo Campana; Miriam Revera; Nina Ajmone-Marsan; Luigi Tavazzi; Attilio Odero

Experimentally, vagal stimulation (VS) is protective in chronic heart failure (HF). In man, VS is used in refractory epilepsy but has never been used in cardiovascular diseases. Increased sympathetic and reduced vagal activity predict increased mortality in HF.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2002

Autosomal dominant dilated cardiomyopathy with atrioventricular block: a lamin A/C defect-related disease

Eloisa Arbustini; Andrea Pilotto; Alessandra Repetto; Maurizia Grasso; Andrea Negri; Marta Diegoli; Carlo Campana; Laura Scelsi; Elisa Baldini; Antonello Gavazzi; Luigi Tavazzi

OBJECTIVES We investigated the prevalence of lamin A/C (LMNA) gene defects in familial and sporadic dilated cardiomyopathies (DCM) associated with atrioventricular block (AVB) or increased serum creatine-phosphokinase (sCPK), and the corresponding changes in myocardial and protein expression. BACKGROUND It has been reported that familial DCM, associated with conduction disturbances or variable myopathies, is causally linked to LMNA gene defects. METHODS The LMNA gene and myocardial ultrastructural and immunochemical changes were analyzed in 73 cases of DCM (49 pure, 15 with AVB [seven familial, eight sporadic], 9 with increased sCPK), four cases of familial AVB and 19 non-DCM heart diseases. The normal controls included eight heart donor biopsies for tissue studies and 107 subjects for LMNA gene studies. RESULTS Five novel LMNA mutations (K97E, E111X, R190W, E317K, four base pair insertion at 1,713 cDNA) were identified in five cases of familial autosomal dominant DCM with AVB (5/15: 33%). The LMNA expression of the myocyte nuclei was reduced or absent. Western blot protein analyses of three hearts with different mutations showed an additional 30-kDa band, suggesting a degrading effect of mutated on wild-type protein. Focal disruptions, bleb formation and nuclear pore clustering were documented by electron microscopy of the myocyte nuclear membranes. None of these changes and no mutations were found in the nine patients with DCM and increased sCPK or in the disease and normal controls. CONCLUSIONS The LMNA gene mutations account for 33% of the DCMs with AVB, all familial autosomal dominant. Increased sCPK in patients with DCM without AVB is not a useful predictor of LMNA mutation.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2008

Long-Term Outcome and Risk Stratification in Dilated Cardiolaminopathies

Michele Pasotti; Catherine Klersy; Andrea Pilotto; Nicola Marziliano; Claudio Rapezzi; Alessandra Serio; Savina Mannarino; Fabiana Isabella Gambarin; Valentina Favalli; Maurizia Grasso; Manuela Agozzino; Carlo Campana; Antonello Gavazzi; Oreste Febo; Massimiliano Marini; Maurizio Landolina; Andrea Mortara; Giovanni Piccolo; Mario Viganò; Luigi Tavazzi; Eloisa Arbustini

OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to analyze the long-term follow-up of dilated cardiolaminopathies. BACKGROUND Lamin A/C (LMNA) gene mutations cause a variety of phenotypes. In the cardiology setting, patients diagnosed with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) plus atrioventricular block (AVB) constitute the majority of reported cases. METHODS Longitudinal retrospective observational studies were conducted with 27 consecutive families in which LMNA gene defects were identified in the probands, all sharing the DCM phenotype. RESULTS Of the 164 family members, 94 had LMNA gene mutations. Sixty of 94 (64%) were phenotypically affected whereas 34 were only genotypically affected, including 5 with pre-clinical signs. Of the 60 patients, 40 had DCM with AVB, 12 had DCM with ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation, 6 had DCM with AVB and Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy type 2 (EDMD2), and 2 had AVB plus EDMD2. During a median of 57 months (interquartile range 36 to 107 months), we observed 49 events in 43 DCM patients (6 had a later event, excluded from the analysis). The events were related to heart failure (15 heart transplants, 1 death from end-stage heart failure) and ventricular arrhythmias (15 sudden cardiac deaths and 12 appropriate implantable cardioverter-defibrillator interventions). By multivariable analysis, New York Heart Association functional class III to IV and highly dynamic competitive sports for >or=10 years were independent predictors of total events. By a bivariable Cox model, splice site mutations and competitive sport predicted sudden cardiac death. CONCLUSIONS Dilated cardiomyopathies caused by LMNA gene defects are highly penetrant, adult onset, malignant diseases characterized by a high rate of heart failure and life-threatening arrhythmias, predicted by New York Heart Association functional class, competitive sport activity, and type of mutation.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2010

Prognostic relevance of the echocardiographic assessment of right ventricular function in patients with idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension

Stefano Ghio; Catherine Klersy; Giulia Magrini; Andrea Maria D'Armini; Laura Scelsi; Claudia Raineri; Michele Pasotti; Alessandra Serio; Carlo Campana; Mario Viganò

BACKGROUND In patients with idiopathic pulmonary hypertension (IPAH) progression of the disease and survival are related to the capability of the right ventricle to adapt to the chronically elevated pulmonary artery pressure. Although several echocardiographic variables have been associated with outcome in previous studies, a comparative evaluation of all right ventricular (RV) function indices obtainable at echocardiography has never been performed. METHODS 59 patients consecutively admitted in a tertiary referral centre because of IPAH (22 males, mean age 46.3+/-16.1 years, 68% in WHO class III/IV at referral) underwent right heart catheterization and echocardiography. During a median follow-up period of 52 months, 21 patients died and 2 underwent lung transplantation in emergency conditions. RESULTS The following parameters were associated with survival: tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE), RV fractional area change, degree of tricuspid regurgitation, inferior vena cava collapsibility, superior vena cava flow velocity pattern, left ventricular diastolic eccentricity index. Patients with TAPSE<or=15 mm and left ventricular eccentricity index >or=1.7 had the highest event rate (51.7 per 100 person year); patients with TAPSE>15 mm and mild or no tricuspid regurgitation had the lowest event rate (2.6 per 100 person year). CONCLUSIONS A comprehensive echocardiographic assessment of RV systolic and diastolic function based on TAPSE, left ventricular diastolic eccentricity index and degree of tricuspid regurgitation allows an accurate prognostic stratification of patients with IPAH.


American Journal of Pathology | 1998

Mitochondrial DNA Mutations and Mitochondrial Abnormalities in Dilated Cardiomyopathy

Eloisa Arbustini; Marta Diegoli; Roberta Fasani; Maurizia Grasso; Patrizia Morbini; Nadia Banchieri; Ornella Bellini; Barbara Dal Bello; Andrea Pilotto; Giulia Magrini; Carlo Campana; Paolo Fortina; Antonello Gavazzi; Jagat Narula; Mario Viganò

Mitochondrial (mt)DNA defects, both deletions and tRNA point mutations, have been associated with cardiomyopathies. The aim of the study was to determine the prevalence of pathological mtDNA mutations and to assess associated defects of mitochondrial enzyme activity in dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) patients with ultrastructural abnormalities of cardiac mitochondria. In a large cohort of 601 DCM patients we performed conventional light and electron microscopy on endomyocardial biopsy samples. Cases with giant organelles, angulated, tubular, and concentric cristae, and crystalloid or osmiophilic inclusion bodies were selected for mtDNA analysis. Mutation screening techniques, automated DNA sequencing, restriction enzyme digestion, and densitometric assays were performed to identify mtDNA mutations, assess heteroplasmy, and quantify the amount of mutant in myocardial and blood DNA. Of 601 patients (16 to 63 years; mean, 43.5 +/- 12.7 years), 85 had ultrastructural evidence of giant organelles, with abnormal cristae and inclusion bodies; 19 of 85 (22.35%) had heteroplasmic mtDNA mutations (9 tRNA, 5 rRNA, and 4 missense, one in two patients) that were not found in 111 normal controls and in 32 DCM patients without the above ultrastructural mitochondrial abnormalities. In all cases, the amount of mutant was higher in heart than in blood. In hearts of patients that later underwent transplantation, cytochrome c oxidase (Cox) activity was significantly lower in cases with mutations than in those without or controls (P = 0.0008). NADH dehydrogenase activity was only slightly reduced in cases with mutations (P = 0.0388), whereas succinic dehydrogenase activity did not significantly differ between DCM patients with mtDNA mutations and those without or controls. The present study represents the first attempt to detect a morphological, easily identifiable marker to guide mtDNA mutation screening. Pathological mtDNA mutations are associated with ultrastructurally abnormal mitochondria, and reduced Cox activity in a small subgroup of non-otherwise-defined, idiopathic DCMs, in which mtDNA defects may constitute the basis for, or contribute to, the development of congestive heart failure.


Clinical Pharmacokinectics | 1996

Clinically Significant Drug Interactions with Cyclosporin An Update

Carlo Campana; Mario Regazzi; Isabella Buggia; Mariadelfina Molinaro

SummarySince its approval in 1983 for immunosuppressive therapy in patients undergoing organ and bone marrow transplants, cyclosporin has had a major impact on organ transplantation. It has significantly improved 1-year and 2-year graft survival rates, and decreased morbidity in kidney, liver, heart, heart-lung and pancreas transplantation. Several studies have supported the efficacy of cyclosporin in preventing graft-versus-host disease in bone marrow transplantation. Cyclosporin is also possibly effective in treating diseases of autoimmune origin and as an antineoplastic agent.The introduction of therapeutic drug monitoring of cyclosporin was extremely useful because of the wide inter- and intraindividual variability in the pharmacokinetics of cyclosporin after oral or intravenous administration. Optimal long term use of cyclosporin requires careful monitoring of the blood (or plasma) concentrations.Sustained and clinically significant drug-drug interactions can occur during long term therapy with cyclosporin. The coadministration of multiple drugs with cyclosporin could result in graft rejection, renal dysfunction or other undesirable effects. Any interaction that leads to modified cyclosporin concentrations is of potential clinical importance.Cyclosporin itself may have significant effects on the pharmacokinetics and/or pharmacodynamics of coadministered drugs, such as digoxin, HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors and antineoplastic drugs affected by multidrug resistance.Many drugs have been shown to affect the pharmacokinetics and/or pharmacodynamics of cyclosporin. Interactions between cyclosporin and danazol, diltiazem, erythromycin, fluconazole, itraconazole, ketoconazole, metoclopramide, nicardipine, verapamil, carbamazepine, phenobarbital (phenobarbitone), phenytoin, rifampicin (rifampin) and cotrimoxazole (trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole) are well documented in a large number of patients. Other interactions (such as those with aciclovir, estradiol and imipenem) are documented only in isolated case studies.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1987

Clinical significance of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease.

Colomba Falcone; Stefano De Servi; Ercole Poma; Carlo Campana; Aldo Scire; Carlo Montemartini; Giuseppe Specchia

Exercise-induced silent myocardial ischemia is a frequent feature in patients with coronary artery disease. The purpose of this study was to compare the clinical and angiographic characteristics of 269 patients who complained of chest pain during an exercise test (group I) with those of 204 who developed exercise-induced silent myocardial ischemia (group II). Group I patients more frequently had anginal symptoms of class III and IV of the Canadian Cardiovascular Society than did group II patients, who had milder symptoms (p less than 0.001). The only angiographic difference observed between the two groups was a slightly but significantly higher left ventricular end-diastolic pressure in group II patients (p less than 0.05), who also showed a longer exercise duration (p less than 0.01) with a higher heart rate-systolic pressure product (p less than 0.01) and more pronounced ST segment depression at peak exercise (p less than 0.001). Moreover, ventricular ectopic beats during exercise were more frequently observed in group II patients (p less than 0.05). Coronary bypass surgery was performed in 45% of patients of group I and in 24% of patients of group II (p less than 0.05). Survival curves of medically treated patients did not show any statistically significant difference between the two groups. Thus, although patients with a defective anginal warning system may have more pronounced signs of myocardial ischemia and a greater incidence of ventricular arrhythmias during exercise, their long-term prognosis is not different from that of patients who are stopped by angina from the activity that is inducing myocardial ischemia.

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