Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Carmen Fucile is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carmen Fucile.


BMC Cancer | 2015

In vitro and in vivo antiproliferative activity of metformin on stem-like cells isolated from spontaneous canine mammary carcinomas: translational implications for human tumors

Federica Barbieri; Stefano Thellung; Alessandra Ratto; Elisa Carra; Valeria Marini; Carmen Fucile; Adriana Bajetto; Alessandra Pattarozzi; Roberto Würth; Monica Gatti; Chiara Campanella; Guendalina Vito; Francesca Mattioli; Aldo Pagano; Antonio Daga; Angelo Ferrari; Tullio Florio

BackgroundCancer stem cells (CSCs) are considered the cell subpopulation responsible for breast cancer (BC) initiation, growth, and relapse. CSCs are identified as self-renewing and tumor-initiating cells, conferring resistance to chemo- and radio-therapy to several neoplasias. Nowadays, th (about 10mM)e pharmacological targeting of CSCs is considered an ineludible therapeutic goal. The antidiabetic drug metformin was reported to suppress in vitro and in vivo CSC survival in different tumors and, in particular, in BC preclinical models. However, few studies are available on primary CSC cultures derived from human postsurgical BC samples, likely because of the limited amount of tissue available after surgery. In this context, comparative oncology is acquiring a relevant role in cancer research, allowing the analysis of larger samples from spontaneous pet tumors that represent optimal models for human cancer.MethodsIsolation of primary canine mammary carcinoma (CMC) cells and enrichment in stem-like cell was carried out from fresh tumor specimens by culturing cells in stem-permissive conditions. Phenotypic and functional characterization of CMC-derived stem cells was performed in vitro, by assessment of self-renewal, long-lasting proliferation, marker expression, and drug sensitivity, and in vivo, by tumorigenicity experiments. Corresponding cultures of differentiated CMC cells were used as internal reference. Metformin efficacy on CMC stem cell viability was analyzed both in vitro and in vivo.ResultsWe identified a subpopulation of CMC cells showing human breast CSC features, including expression of specific markers (i.e. CD44, CXCR4), growth as mammospheres, and tumor-initiation in mice. These cells show resistance to doxorubicin but were highly sensitive to metformin in vitro. Finally, in vivo metformin administration significantly impaired CMC growth in NOD-SCID mice, associated with a significant depletion of CSCs.ConclusionsSimilarly to the human counterpart, CMCs contain stem-like subpopulations representing, in a comparative oncology context, a valuable translational model for human BC, and, in particular, to predict the efficacy of antitumor drugs. Moreover, metformin represents a potential CSC-selective drug for BC, as effective (neo-)adjuvant therapy to eradicate CSC in mammary carcinomas of humans and animals.


Virulence | 2017

Meropenem for treating KPC-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae bloodstream infections: Should we get to the PK/PD root of the paradox?

Valerio Del Bono; Daniele Roberto Giacobbe; Anna Marchese; Andrea Parisini; Carmen Fucile; Erika Coppo; Valeria Marini; Antonio Arena; Alexandre Molin; Antonietta Martelli; Angelo Gratarola; Claudio Viscoli; Paolo Pelosi; Francesca Mattioli

ABSTRACT The objective of this study was to assess the achievement of pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) targets of meropenem (MEM) in critically-ill patients with bloodstream infections (BSI) due to Klebsiella pneumoniae-carbapenemase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae (KPC-Kp) with MEM minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) ≥16 mg/L. Nineteen critically-ill patients with KPC-Kp BSI were given combination therapy including MEM, tigecycline, plus colistin or gentamicin (according to susceptibility testing). MEM was administered as an extended 3-hour infusion of 2 g every 8 hours, or adjusted according to renal function. MEM plasma concentrations were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. PK/PD targets for MEM were defined as T > 40% 1×MIC and T > 40% 4×MIC. Possible synergisms between MEM and coadministered agents were assessed by time-kill assays based on plasma levels for MEM and on fixed plasma concentrations for the other agents. In none of 19 patients MEM reached any PK/PD target. The actual MEM MICs were 256, 512, and 1024 mg/L in 1, 3, and 15 isolates, respectively. However, theoretically, the PK/PD target of T > 40% 1×MIC could have been achieved in 95%, 68%, 32% and 0% of the isolates for MIC equal to 8, 16, 32, and 64 mg/L, respectively. No synergisms were observed between MEM and coadministered agents. In conclusion, high-dose MEM failed to reach PK/PD targets in 19 patients with BSI due to KPC-Kp with very high MEM MICs. On a theoretical basis, our results suggest a possible usefulness of MEM against resistant blood isolates with MICs up to 32 mg/L.


Mutation Research-genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis | 2011

Exposure to asbestos: correlation between blood levels of mesothelin and frequency of micronuclei in peripheral blood lymphocytes.

Valeria Marini; Luigi Michelazzi; Alex Cioè; Carmen Fucile; Fabio Spigno; Luigi Robbiano

Inhalation of asbestos, a mineral extensively used in a variety of applications, is strongly associated with malignant mesothelioma (MM), a fatal cancer of the pleura. Soluble mesothelin-related peptides (SMRP) are a promising biomarker suggested for the screening of MM in healthy asbestos-exposed subjects. In the present study a comparison of micronucleus (Mn) frequencies in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) between 44 asbestos-exposed and 22 control individuals has been performed, and the correlation with serum SMRP has been examined. SMRP levels were found to be significantly higher in subjects exposed to asbestos and in their various subgroups than in controls. Concerning micronucleated lymphocytes, a statistically significant difference from controls was seen in the percentages of both micronucleated mononucleated lymphocytes (MnMNL) and micronucleated binucleated lymphocytes (MnBNL), but the difference was markedly higher for the percentage of micronucleated polynucleated lymphocytes (MnPNL). With respect to the correlation between the frequency of the three types of micronucleated lymphocytes and serum-SMRP values of asbestos-exposed subjects, it was statistically significant for MnMNL, but not for MnBNL and MnPNL.


Addictive Behaviors | 2013

Involvement of the mu-opioid receptor gene polymorphism A118G in the efficacy of detoxification of alcohol dependent patients

Valeria Marini; Carmen Fucile; Maria Laura Zuccoli; Giovanni Testino; Alessandro Sumberaz; Luigi Robbiano; Antonietta Martelli; Francesca Mattioli

INTRODUCTION The A118G (rs 1799971) polymorphism in the mu-opioid receptor gene (OPRM1) has been reported to be associated with alcohol addiction. METHODS In this study 109 patients diagnosed with alcohol dependence in accordance with DMS-IV criteria and 95 healthy subjects were enrolled and everyone has been genotyped. RESULTS The percentage of alcoholic patients with higher than normal gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) levels significantly decreased after six months of standard detoxification treatment, both in patients with A/A genotype and in the other ones with A/G genotype. However, the percentage of alcohol dependent patients with the A/A genotype recorded a slight decrease of the GGT and the mean corpuscolar volume of erythrocytes (MCV) combination marker after six months of therapy (30% vs 12%), while subjects with the A/G genotype showed no variation. CONCLUSION This finding suggests that alcohol dependent patients with the A/A genotype could have a faster restoration of their liver function than those ones with the A/G genotype: it might be possible that the presence of G allele confers on these patients a reduced ability in abstaining from drinking alcohol.


European Journal of Haematology | 2015

Determination of deferasirox plasma concentrations: do gender, physical and genetic differences affect chelation efficacy?

Francesca Mattioli; Matteo Puntoni; Valeria Marini; Carmen Fucile; Giulia Milano; Luigi Robbiano; Silverio Perrotta; Valeria Pinto; Antonietta Martelli; Gian Luca Forni

Bioavailability of deferasirox (DFX) is significantly affected by the timing of administration relative to times and to composition of meals. Its elimination half‐life is also highly variable – in some patients as a result of gene polymorphisms. Understanding whether deferasirox plasma levels are related to specific characteristics of patients could help physicians to devise a drug regimen tailored the individual patient.


International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine | 2013

A Case Report on Escitalopram-Induced Hyperglycaemia in a Diabetic Patient

Maria Laura Zuccoli; P. C. Brasesco; Giulia Milano; Antonietta Martelli; Silvia Leone; Francesca Mattioli; Carmen Fucile

The incidence of depression in diabetic patients is quite high; moreover, it has been suggested that the presence of depression itself may increase the risk of diabetes mellitus. Hence, it follows that the simultaneous use of antidiabetic and antidepressant drugs is common. Some clinical evidence indicates that selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) could be very useful in treating overweight patients, both with and without diabetes. However, recent deregulation of glucidic metabolism was tested in diabetic subjects treated with antidepressants. Several cases of hyperglycaemia and hypoglycaemia associated with other SSRIs have been published, whereas only one case of escitalopram inducing hyperglycaemia has been noted. The exact mechanism of glucose control impairment in patients taking SSRIs—escitalopram in particular—still remains unclear. We describe a diabetic 83-year-old woman with good glycaemic control (as evinced by glycaemic and glycosylated haemoglobin assay—HbA1c—values) before escitalopram initiation in response to therapy with glibenclamide. Escitalopram resulted in a significantly increased glycaemia values 5 days following administration. Glycaemia values returned to normality only after suspension of escitalopram, despite antidiabetic dosage increase. We report this case to draw attention to escitalopram as a possible cause of glycaemic control loss.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Development of an Injectable Slow-Release Metformin Formulation and Evaluation of Its Potential Antitumor Effects

Sara Baldassari; Agnese Solari; Guendalina Zuccari; Giuliana Drava; Sara Pastorino; Carmen Fucile; Valeria Marini; Antonio Daga; Alessandra Pattarozzi; Alessandra Ratto; Angelo Ferrari; Francesca Mattioli; Federica Barbieri; Gabriele Caviglioli; Tullio Florio

Metformin is an antidiabetic drug which possesses antiproliferative activity in cancer cells when administered at high doses, due to its unfavorable pharmacokinetics. The aim of this work was to develop a pharmacological tool for the release of metformin in proximity of the tumor, allowing high local concentrations, and to demonstrate the in vivo antitumor efficacy after a prolonged metformin exposition. A 1.2% w/w metformin thermoresponsive parenteral formulation based on poloxamers P407 and P124, injectable at room temperature and undergoing a sol-gel transition at body temperature, has been developed and optimized for rheological, thermal and release control properties; the formulation is easily scalable, and proved to be stable during a 1-month storage at 5 °C. Using NOD/SCID mice pseudo-orthotopically grafted with MDA-MB-231/luc+ human breast cancer cells, we report that multiple administrations of 100 mg of the optimized metformin formulation close to the tumor site cause tissue accumulation of the drug at levels significantly higher than those observed in plasma, and enough to exert antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic activities. Our results demonstrate that this formulation is endowed with good stability, tolerability, thermal and rheological properties, representing a novel tool to be pursued in further investigations for adjuvant cancer treatment.


International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine | 2014

Paliperidone for the Treatment of Ketamine-Induced Psychosis: A Case Report:

Maria Laura Zuccoli; A. Muscella; Carmen Fucile; R. Carrozzino; Francesca Mattioli; Antonietta Martelli; S. Orengo

Ketamine is an anaesthetic and analgesic drug synthesized in the 1960s from phencyclidine. The recreational use of ketamine increased among the dance culture of techno and house music, in particular in clubs, discotheques, and rave parties. The psychotropic effects of ketamine are now well known and they range from dissociation to positive, negative, and cognitive schizophrenia-like symptoms. We report a case of a chronic oral consumption of ketamine which induced agitation, behavioral abnormalities, and loss of contact with reality in a poly-drug abuser; these symptoms persisted more than two weeks after the drug consumption had stopped. Antipsychotic treatment with paliperidone led to a successful management of the psychosis, getting a complete resolution of the clinical picture. Paliperidone has proven to be very effective in the treatment of ketamine-induced disorders. Moreover, the pharmacological action and metabolism of paliperidone are poorly dependent from the activity of liver enzymes, so that it seems to be one of the best second generation antipsychotics for the treatment of smokers and alcohol abusers.


Journal of Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics | 2012

Heparin-induced acute adverse reaction - case report of a patient with acute trauma and a genetic predisposition to thrombotic events: a concurrence of events

Silvia Leone; Maria Laura Zuccoli; Carmen Fucile; S. Storace; Antonietta Martelli; Francesca Mattioli

What is known and Objective:  The most common complication of heparin therapy is bleeding. Allergic reactions to heparin are rare, and the mechanisms are poorly understood. We report on a case of acute systemic reaction after subcutaneous injections of a low‐molecular‐weight heparin (LMWH) in a patient with a genetic predisposition to thrombotic events and review the literature on heparin‐induced acute adverse reaction.


Oncotarget | 2017

Safety and tolerability of deferasirox in pediatric hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients: one facility’s five years’ experience of chelation treatment

Natalia Maximova; Massimo Gregori; Roberto Simeone; Aurelio Sonzogni; Giulia Boz; Carmen Fucile; Valeria Marini; Antonietta Martelli; Francesca Mattioli

42 pediatric patients with iron overload, who underwent liver biopsy and DFX treatment after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation were included in the study group. The patients were divided into two groups diversified according to deferasirox trough plasma concentrations (DFX Ctrough) with cut-off equal to10 mcg/mL. The average dose of DFX was 25.9 mg/kg in the DFX Ctrough < 10 mcg/mL group versus 19.2 mg/kg in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group (p=0,0003). The mean duration of DFX treatment was 135.7 days in the DFX Ctrough < 10 mcg/mL group versus 41.8 days in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group (p<0.0001). The mean tissue iron concentration in the DFX Ctrough < 10 mcg/mL group was 261.9 μmol/g versus 133.4 μmol/g in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group (p < 0.0001). 21 patients (100%) in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group had ductopenia which was complete in 47.6% of them and severe in 52.4%. All patients with particularly high Ctrough (> 25 mcg/mL) were found to have total ductopenia. 90.5% of all deferasirox-related adverse events and 100% of major adverse events occurred in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group. In the DFX Ctrough < 10 mcg/mL group only one patient interrupted chelation therapy versus 16 (84.2%) patients in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group. We would recommend a close monitoring in pediatric hematopoietic transplant recipients subjected to deferasirox-based therapy because we have observed a high incidence of adverse events and discontinuation of chelation treatment.42 pediatric patients with iron overload, who underwent liver biopsy and DFX treatment after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation were included in the study group. The patients were divided into two groups diversified according to deferasirox trough plasma concentrations (DFX Ctrough) with cut-off equal to10 mcg/mL. The average dose of DFX was 25.9 mg/kg in the DFX Ctrough < 10 mcg/mL group versus 19.2 mg/kg in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group (p=0,0003). The mean duration of DFX treatment was 135.7 days in the DFX Ctrough < 10 mcg/mL group versus 41.8 days in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group (p<0.0001). The mean tissue iron concentration in the DFX Ctrough < 10 mcg/mL group was 261.9 μmol/g versus 133.4 μmol/g in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group (p < 0.0001). 21 patients (100%) in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group had ductopenia which was complete in 47.6% of them and severe in 52.4%. All patients with particularly high Ctrough (> 25 mcg/mL) were found to have total ductopenia. 90.5% of all deferasirox-related adverse events and 100% of major adverse events occurred in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group. In the DFX Ctrough < 10 mcg/mL group only one patient interrupted chelation therapy versus 16 (84.2%) patients in the DFX Ctrough > 10 mcg/mL group. We would recommend a close monitoring in pediatric hematopoietic transplant recipients subjected to deferasirox-based therapy because we have observed a high incidence of adverse events and discontinuation of chelation treatment.

Collaboration


Dive into the Carmen Fucile's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge