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Dive into the research topics where Chiara Paoli is active.

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Featured researches published by Chiara Paoli.


Blood | 2014

Impact of mutational status on outcomes in myelofibrosis patients treated with ruxolitinib in the COMFORT-II study.

Paola Guglielmelli; Flavia Biamonte; Giada Rotunno; Valentina Artusi; Lucia Artuso; Isabella Bernardis; Elena Tenedini; Lisa Pieri; Chiara Paoli; Carmela Mannarelli; Rajmonda Fjerza; Elisa Rumi; Viktoriya Stalbovskaya; Matthew Squires; Mario Cazzola; Rossella Manfredini; Claire N. Harrison; Enrico Tagliafico; Alessandro M. Vannucchi

The JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor ruxolitinib produced significant reductions in splenomegaly and symptomatic burden and improved survival in patients with myelofibrosis (MF), irrespective of their JAK2 mutation status, in 2 phase III studies against placebo (COMFORT-I) and best available therapy (COMFORT-II). We performed a comprehensive mutation analysis to evaluate the impact of 14 MF-associated mutations on clinical outcomes in 166 patients included in COMFORT-II. We found that responses in splenomegaly and symptoms, as well as the risk of developing ruxolitinib-associated anemia and thrombocytopenia, occurred at similar frequencies across different mutation profiles. Ruxolitinib improved survival independent of mutation profile and reduced the risk of death in patients harboring a set of prognostically detrimental mutations (ASXL1, EZH2, SRSF2, IDH1/2) with an hazard ratio of 0.57 (95% confidence interval: 0.30-1.08) vs best available therapy. These data indicate that clinical efficacy and survival improvement may occur across different molecular subsets of patients with MF treated with ruxolitinib.


Blood | 2015

JAK2V617F complete molecular remission in polycythemia vera/essential thrombocythemia patients treated with ruxolitinib

Lisa Pieri; Alessandro Pancrazzi; Annalisa Pacilli; Claudia Rabuzzi; Giada Rotunno; Tiziana Fanelli; Paola Guglielmelli; Rajmonda Fjerza; Chiara Paoli; Srdan Verstovsek; Alessandro M. Vannucchi

To the editor: Polycythemia vera (PV) and essential thrombocythemia (ET) are characterized by JAK2 V617F mutation in 95% and 60% of the patients, respectively.[1][1] Ruxolitinib is a JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor approved for myelofibrosis (MF) and more recently for hydroxyurea resistant/intolerant PV


Haematologica | 2016

Antiplatelet therapy versus observation in low-risk essential thrombocythemia with CALR mutation

Alberto Alvarez-Larrán; Arturo Pereira; Paola Guglielmelli; Juan Carlos Hernández-Boluda; Eduardo Arellano-Rodrigo; Francisca Ferrer-Marin; Alimam Samah; Martin Griesshammer; Ana Kerguelen; Bjorn Andreasson; Carmen Burgaleta; Jiri Schwarz; Valentín García-Gutiérrez; Rosa Ayala; Pere Barba; María Teresa Gómez-Casares; Chiara Paoli; Beatrice Drexler; Sonja Zweegman; Mary Frances McMullin; Jan Samuelsson; Claire N. Harrison; Francisco Cervantes; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Carlos Besses

The role of antiplatelet therapy as primary prophylaxis of thrombosis in low-risk essential thrombocythemia has not been studied in randomized clinical trials. We assessed the benefit/risk of low-dose aspirin in 433 patients with low-risk essential thrombocythemia (271 with a CALR mutation, 162 with a JAK2V617F mutation) who were on antiplatelet therapy or observation only. After a follow up of 2215 person-years free from cytoreduction, 25 thrombotic and 17 bleeding episodes were recorded. In CALR-mutated patients, antiplatelet therapy did not affect the risk of thrombosis but was associated with a higher incidence of bleeding (12.9 versus 1.8 episodes per 1000 patient-years, P=0.03). In JAK2V617F-mutated patients, low-dose aspirin was associated with a reduced incidence of venous thrombosis with no effect on the risk of bleeding. Coexistence of JAK2V617F-mutation and cardiovascular risk factors increased the risk of thrombosis, even after adjusting for treatment with low-dose aspirin (incidence rate ratio: 9.8; 95% confidence interval: 2.3–42.3; P=0.02). Time free from cytoreduction was significantly shorter in CALR-mutated patients with essential thrombocythemia than in JAK2V617F-mutated ones (median time 5 years and 9.8 years, respectively; P=0.0002) and cytoreduction was usually necessary to control extreme thrombocytosis. In conclusion, in patients with low-risk, CALR-mutated essential thrombocythemia, low-dose aspirin does not reduce the risk of thrombosis and may increase the risk of bleeding.


Haematologica | 2013

Infrequent occurrence of mutations in the PH domain of LNK in patients with JAK2 mutation-negative "idiopathic" erythrocytosis

Ambra Spolverini; Lisa Pieri; Paola Guglielmelli; Alessandro Pancrazzi; Tiziana Fanelli; Chiara Paoli; Alberto Bosi; Ilaria Nichele; Marco Ruggeri; Alessandro M. Vannucchi

LNK (SH2B3) belongs to a family of adaptor proteins that contain a proline-rich N-terminal dimerization domain, a pleckstrin homology domain (PH), an Src homology-2 domain (SH2), and a conserved C-terminal tyrosine residue. By binding to cytokine receptors and JAK2 through the SH2 domain, LNK


American Journal of Hematology | 2017

Safety and efficacy of ruxolitinib in splanchnic vein thrombosis associated with myeloproliferative neoplasms

Lisa Pieri; Chiara Paoli; Umberto Arena; Fabio Marra; Fabio Mori; Mery Zucchini; Stefano Colagrande; Alessandro Castellani; Arianna Masciulli; Vittorio Rosti; Valerio De Stefano; Silvia Betti; Guido Finazzi; Maria Ferrari; Elisa Rumi; Marco Ruggeri; Ilaria Nichele; Paola Guglielmelli; Rajmonda Fjerza; Carmela Mannarelli; Tiziana Fanelli; Lucia Merli; Giuditta Corbizi Fattori; Margherita Massa; Giuseppe Cimino; Alessandro Rambaldi; Giovanni Barosi; Mario Cazzola; Tiziano Barbui; Alessandro M. Vannucchi

Splanchnic vein thrombosis (SVT) is one of the vascular complications of myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN). We designed a phase 2 clinical trial to evaluate safety and efficacy of ruxolitinib in reducing splenomegaly and improving disease‐related symptoms in patients with MPN‐associated SVT. Patients diagnosed with myelofibrosis (12 cases), polycythemia vera (5 cases) and essential thrombocythemia (4 cases) received ruxolitinib for 24 weeks in the core study period. Spleen volume was assessed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and splanchnic vein circulation by echo‐Doppler analysis. Nineteen patients carried JAK2V617F, one had MPLW515L, and one CALRL367fs*46 mutation. Eighteen patients had spleno‐portal‐mesenteric thrombosis, two had Budd–Chiari syndrome, and one had both sites involved; 16 patients had esophageal varices. Ruxolitinib was well tolerated with hematological toxicities consistent with those of patients without SVT and no hemorrhagic adverse events were recorded. After 24 weeks of treatment, spleen volume reduction ≥35% by MRI was achieved by 6/21 (29%) patients, and a ≥50% spleen length reduction by palpation at any time up to week 24 was obtained by 13/21 (62%) patients. At week 72, 8 of the 13 (62%) patients maintained the spleen response by palpation. No significant effect of treatment on esophageal varices or in splanchnic circulation was observed. MPN‐related symptoms, evaluated by MPN‐symptom assessment form (SAF) TSS questionnaire, improved significantly during the first 4 weeks and remained stable up to week 24. In conclusion, this trial shows that ruxolitinib is safe in patients with MPN‐associated SVT, and effective in reducing spleen size and disease‐related symptoms.


Haematologica | 2017

Associations between gender, disease features and symptom burden in patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms: an analysis by the MPN QOL International Working Group.

Holly Geyer; Heidi E. Kosiorek; Amylou C. Dueck; Robyn Scherber; Stefanie Slot; Sonja Zweegman; Peter te Boekhorst; Zhenya Senyak; Harry C. Schouten; Federico Sackmann; Ana Kerguelen Fuentes; Dolores Hernandez-Maraver; Heike L. Pahl; Martin Griesshammer; Frank Stegelmann; Konstanze Döhner; Thomas Lehmann; Karin Bonatz; Andreas Reiter; Francoise Boyer; Gabriel Etienne; Jean Christophe Ianotto; Dana Ranta; Lydia Roy; Jean Yves Cahn; Claire N. Harrison; Deepti Radia; Pablo J. Muxi; Norman Maldonado; Carlos Besses

The myeloproliferative neoplasms, including polycythemia vera, essential thrombocythemia and myelofibrosis, are distinguished by their debilitating symptom profiles, life-threatening complications and profound impact on quality of life. The role gender plays in the symptomatology of myeloproliferative neoplasms remains under-investigated. In this study we evaluated how gender relates to patients’ characteristics, disease complications and overall symptom expression. A total of 2,006 patients (polycythemia vera=711, essential thrombocythemia=830, myelofibrosis=460, unknown=5) were prospectively evaluated, with patients completing the Myeloproliferative Neoplasm-Symptom Assessment Form and Brief Fatigue Inventory Patient Reported Outcome tools. Information on the individual patients’ characteristics, disease complications and laboratory data was collected. Consistent with known literature, most female patients were more likely to have essential thrombocythemia (48.6% versus 33.0%; P<0.001) and most male patients were more likely to have polycythemia vera (41.8% versus 30.3%; P<0.001). The rate of thrombocytopenia was higher among males than females (13.9% versus 8.2%; P<0.001) and males also had greater red-blood cell transfusion requirements (7.3% versus 4.9%; P=0.02) with shorter mean disease duration (6.4 versus 7.2 years, P=0.03). Despite there being no statistical differences in risk scores, receipt of most therapies or prior complications (hemorrhage, thrombosis), females had more severe and more frequent symptoms for most individual symptoms, along with overall total symptom score (22.8 versus 20.3; P<0.001). Females had particularly high scores for abdominal-related symptoms (abdominal pain/discomfort) and microvascular symptoms (headache, fatigue, insomnia, concentration difficulties, dizziness; all P<0.01). Despite complaining of more severe symptom burden, females had similar quality of life scores to those of males. The results of this study suggest that gender contributes to the heterogeneity of myeloproliferative neoplasms by influencing phenotypic profiles and symptom expression.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2015

Abnormal expression patterns of WT1-as, MEG3 and ANRIL long non-coding RNAs in CD34+ cells from patients with primary myelofibrosis and their clinical correlations

Valentina Pennucci; Roberta Zini; Ruggiero Norfo; Paola Guglielmelli; Elisa Bianchi; Simona Salati; Giorgia Sacchi; Zelia Prudente; Elena Tenedini; Samantha Ruberti; Chiara Paoli; Tiziana Fanelli; Carmela Mannarelli; Enrico Tagliafico; Sergio Ferrari; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Rossella Manfredini

Valentina Pennucci 1 , Roberta Zini 1 , Ruggiero Norfo 1 , Paola Guglielmelli 2 , Elisa Bianchi 1 , Simona Salati 1 , Giorgia Sacchi 1 , Zelia Prudente 1 , Elena Tenedini 3 , Samantha Ruberti 1 , Chiara Paoli 2 , Tiziana Fanelli 2 , Carmela Mannarelli 2 , Enrico Tagliafi co 3 , Sergio Ferrari 3 , Alessandro M. Vannucchi 2 , Rossella Manfredini 1 & on behalf of Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro Gruppo Italiano Malattie Mieloproliferative (AGIMM) Investigators


Cancer | 2016

The role of sexuality symptoms in myeloproliferative neoplasm symptom burden and quality of life: An analysis by the MPN QOL International Study Group.

Holly Geyer; Bjorn Andreasson; Heidi E. Kosiorek; Amylou C. Dueck; Robyn Scherber; Kari A. Martin; Kristina A. Butler; Claire N. Harrison; Deepti Radia; Francisco Cervantes; Jean-Jacques Kiladjian; Andreas Reiter; Gunnar Birgegård; Francesco Passamonti; Zhenya Senyak; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Chiara Paoli; Zhijian Xiao; Jan Samuelsson; Ruben A. Mesa

Patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) including polycythemia vera, essential thrombocythemia, and myelofibrosis, are faced with oppressive symptom profiles that compromise daily functioning and quality of life. Among these symptoms, sexuality‐related symptoms have emerged as particularly prominent and largely unaddressed. In the current study, the authors evaluated how sexuality symptoms from MPN relate to other patient characteristics, disease features, treatments, and symptoms.


American Journal of Hematology | 2014

Complex karyotype in a polycythemia vera patient with a novel SETD1B/GTF2H3 fusion gene

Clelia Tiziana Storlazzi; Lisa Pieri; Chiara Paoli; Giulia Daniele; Terra L. Lasho; Ayalew Tefferi; Alessandro M. Vannucchi

The patient had been diagnosed with polycythemia vera (PV) in 1999, at the age of 61, according to the criteria of the Polycythemia Vera Study Group (PVSG) on the basis of the increased red cell mass by isotope determination, normal oxygen saturation, low plasma erythropoietin level, presence of endogenous erythroid colonies (EEC), and splenomegaly. Histopathology of bone marrow biopsy was also consistent with polycythemia vera with no evidence of increased reticulin fibrosis. A karyotype analysis was not performed at that time. He had been treated initially with phlebotomies and then with hydroxyurea with the aim to obtain a better control of hematocrit; he was under low‐dose aspirin. In 2009, 10 years after the diagnosis, while the patient was still being treated with hydroxyurea and phlebotomies, he noticed worsening of general conditions and fatigue, and the appearance of night sweats; he also reported that his spleen volume had increased rapidly in the past few months. He complained of severe pruritus especially after (but not limited to) a shower. He was referred to our center for further evaluation. At presentation, his blood counts were as follows: hemoglobin 157 g/L, hematocrit 54.7%, leukocytes 13.1 × 109/L, platelets 238 × 109/L, LDH 856 U/L (normal upper limit, 250 U/L). Blood film examination showed neutrophilia (8.9 × 109/L) but immature myeloid cells and nucleated erythroblasts were absent. The spleen was 14 cm below the left costal margin, the liver was at 4 cm below the right costal margin. He was found to harbor the JAK2V617F mutation with an allele burden of 85% and the circulating CD34+ cell count was 14 × 106/L. A bone marrow biopsy showed the presence of hyperplasia of myeloid and erythroid lineages, increased number of scattered megakarocytes without overt morphologic abnormalities; reticulin fibrosis was grade 1 according to the European classification. On these basis, we considered the patient as presenting the features of PV according to the 2008 WHO classification of myeloid neoplasms associated with grade 1 reticulin fibrosis. Am. J. Hematol. 89:438–442, 2014.


Quality of Life Research | 2018

Life for patients with myelofibrosis: the physical, emotional and financial impact, collected using narrative medicine—Results from the Italian ‘Back to Life’ project

Francesca Palandri; Giulia Benevolo; Elisabetta Abruzzese; Angelo Michele Carella; Chiara Paoli; Giuseppe Palumbo; Massimiliano Bonifacio; Daniela Cilloni; Alessandro Andriani; Attilio Guarini; Diamante Turri; Elena Elli; Antonietta Falcone; Barbara Anaclerico; Pellegrino Musto; Nicola Di Renzo; Mario Tiribelli; Renato Zambello; Caterina Spinosa; Alessandra Ricco; Letizia Raucci; Bruno Martino; Mario Annunziata; Silvia Pascale; Anna Marina Liberati; Giorgio La Nasa; Margherita Maffioli; Massimo Breccia; Novella Pugliese; Silvia Betti

PurposeMyelofibrosis (MF) is a chronic myeloproliferative neoplasm characterised by an aggressive clinical course, with disabling symptoms and reduced survival. Patients experience a severely impaired quality of life and their families face the upheaval of daily routines and high disease-related financial costs. The aim of this study was to investigate the perceptions of Italian patients and their caregivers about living with MF and the burden of illness associated with MF.MethodsA quali-quantitative questionnaire and a prompted written narrative survey were administered to patients affected by primary or post-essential thrombocythemia/post-polycythaemia vera MF and their primary caregiver in 35 Italian haematological centres.ResultsIn total, 287 questionnaires were returned by patients and 98 by caregivers, with 215 and 62, respectively, including the narrative. At the time of diagnosis, the most commonly expressed emotional states of patients were fear, distress and anger, confirming the difficulty of this phase. A high level of emotional distress was also reported by caregivers. Along the pathway of care, the ability to cope with the disease differed according to the quality of care received. The mean cost to each patient attributable to MF was estimated as €12,466 per year, with an estimated average annual cost of loss of income of €7774 per patient and €4692 per caregiver.ConclusionsBetter understanding of the personal life of MF patients and their families could improve the relationships between health workers and patients, resulting in better focused healthcare pathways and more effective financial support to maintain patients in their social roles.

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Lisa Pieri

University of Florence

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Claire N. Harrison

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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