Claudia Giavoli
Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico
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Publication
Featured researches published by Claudia Giavoli.
Clinical Endocrinology | 2011
Annamaria De Bellis; Elena Pane; Giuseppe Bellastella; Antonio Agostino Sinisi; Caterina Colella; Roberta Giordano; Claudia Giavoli; Andrea Lania; Maria Rosaria Ambrosio; Carolina Di Somma; Maria Chiara Zatelli; Emanuela Arvat; Annamaria Colao; Antonio Bizzarro; Antonio Bellastella
Objective Antipituitary (APA) but not antihypothalamus antibodies (AHA) have been investigated in patients with idiopathic hypopituitarism. This study searched for APA and AHA in some of these patients to investigate whether pituitary or hypothalamic autoimmunity could play a role in their pituitary dysfunction.
Clinical Endocrinology | 2004
Claudia Giavoli; Vincenzo Cappiello; Sabrina Corbetta; Cristina Ronchi; P. S. Morpurgo; Emanuele Ferrante; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Anna Spada
objective To evaluate circulating levels of ghrelin and adiponectin (ApN) in GH‐deficient (GHD) adults before and after short‐ and long‐term recombinant human GH (rhGH) administration.
Clinical Endocrinology | 2003
Claudia Giavoli; Silvia Porretti; Emanuele Ferrante; Vincenzo Cappiello; Cristina Ronchi; P. Travaglini; Paolo Epaminonda; Maura Arosio; Paolo Beck-Peccoz
objective Recombinant hGH treatment may alter thyroid hormone metabolism and we have recently reported that 50% of patients with GH deficiency (GHD) due to organic lesions, previously not treated with thyroxine, developed hypothyroidism during treatment with recombinant human GH (rhGH). These results prompted us to evaluate the impact of rhGH treatment on thyroid function in children with GHD.
Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 2003
Cristina Ronchi; Emanuela Orsi; Claudia Giavoli; Vincenzo Cappiello; Paolo Epaminonda; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Maura Arosio
Many studies have recently shown that simple computer-solved indices, based on fasting glucose and insulin levels, closely mirror the euglycemic clamp technique in studying insulin resistance or pancreatic insulin secretion. Few data are at present available on the evaluation of these novel indices in acromegalic patients, known to be GH-dependent insulin-resistant subjects, in particular during medical treatment with somatostatin analogues. Indeed, these drugs are able to inhibit not only GH and IGF-I levels, but also insulin and glucagon pancreatic secretion, with contrasting effects on glucose metabolism. In this study, insulin resistance was evaluated by the homeostasis model assessment (HOMA-IR) and insulin sensitivity by quantitative insulin check index (QUICKI) in 27 normoglycemic acromegalic patients, before and after 6-month therapy with somatostatin analogues (lanreotide-SR 30–60 mg every 7–28 days in 15 and octreotide-LAR 20–30 mg every 28 days in 12). Thirty-five age- and sexmatched healthy subjects and 17 surgically treated acromegalic patients (5 cured and 12 not cured) were studied as control groups. Before medical treatment, HOMA-IR was higher in acromegalic patients than in healthy controls (4±3 vs 1.7±0.7, p<0.05), while QUICKI was lower (0.33±0.04 vs 0.36±0.03, p<0.05). During medical therapy, HOMA-IR decreased to 2.4±1.6 (p<0.05) and became similar to that recorded in both healthy subjects and surgically treated patients. However, fasting glucose was increased and fasting insulin was decreased. QUICKI did not significantly change from basal values. No differences were observed between patients who normalized or not hormonal levels. The effects of the 2 drugs, though higher glucose levels were seen in patients treated with octreotide-LAR. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that medical treatment is able to improve insulin resistance, even if only successful surgery is able to completely normalize both HOMA-IR and QUICKI.
European Journal of Endocrinology | 2009
Cristina Ronchi; Claudia Giavoli; Emanuele Ferrante; Elisa Verrua; Silvia Bergamaschi; Daniela Ferrari; Sabrina Corbetta; Laura Montefusco; Maura Arosio; Bruno Ambrosi; Anna Spada; Paolo Beck-Peccoz
OBJECTIVE Radiotherapy (RT) for pituitary adenomas, including GH-secreting ones, frequently leads to GH deficiency (GHD). Data on the effects of surgery alone (S) on dynamic GH secretion are limited. The aim of the study was to investigate the occurrence of GHD in acromegalic patients treated with different therapeutic options. DESIGN AND METHODS Fifty-six patients in remission from acromegaly, (33 F & 23 M, age: 54+/-13 years, body mass index (BMI): 28.4+/-4.1 kg/m(2), 21 with adequately substituted pituitary deficiencies) treated by S alone (n=33, group 1) or followed by RT (n=23, group 2), were investigated for GHD by GHRH plus arginine testing, using BMI-adjusted cut-offs. Several metabolic and cardiovascular parameters (waist circumference, body fat percentage, blood pressure, fasting and post-oral glucose tolerance test glucose, HbA1c, insulin resistance and lipid profile) were evaluated in all the patients and 28 control subjects with known diagnosis of GHD. RESULTS Serum GH peak after challenge was 8.0+/-9.7 microg/l, without any correlation with post-glucose GH nadir and IGF-1 levels. The GH response indicated severe GHD in 34 patients (61%) and partial GHD in 15 patients (27%). IGF-1 were below the normal range in 14 patients (25%). The frequency of GHD was similar in the two treatment groups (54% in group 1 and 70% in group 2). No significant differences in metabolic parameters were observed between acromegalic patients and controls with GHD. CONCLUSIONS Severe GHD may occur in about 60% of patients treated for acromegaly, even when cured after S alone. Thus, a stimulation test (i.e. GHRH plus arginine) is recommended in all cured acromegalic patients, independently from previous treatment.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2012
A. De Bellis; A. A. Sinisi; Elena Pane; A. Dello Iacovo; G. Bellastella; G. Di Scala; Alberto Falorni; Claudia Giavoli; V. Gasco; Roberta Giordano; Maria Rosaria Ambrosio; A. Colao; Antonio Bizzarro; A. Bellastella
CONTEXT Antipituitary antibodies (APA) but not antihypothalamus antibodies (AHA) are usually searched for in autoimmune hypopituitarism. OBJECTIVE Our objective was to search for AHA and characterize their hypothalamic target in patients with autoimmune hypopituitarism to clarify, on the basis of the cells stained by these antibodies, the occurrence of autoimmune subclinical/clinical central diabetes insipidus (CDI) and/or possible joint hypothalamic contribution to their hypopituitarism. DESIGN We conducted a cross-sectional cohort study. PATIENTS Ninety-five APA-positive patients with autoimmune hypopituitarism, 60 without (group 1) and 35 with (group 2) lymphocytic hypophysitis, were studied in comparison with 20 patients with postsurgical hypopituitarism and 50 normal subjects. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES AHA by immunofluorescence and posterior pituitary function were evaluated; then AHA-positive sera were retested by double immunofluorescence to identify the hypothalamic cells targeted by AHA. RESULTS AHA were detected at high titer in 12 patients in group 1 and in eight patients in group 2. They immunostained arginine vasopressin (AVP)-secreting cells in nine of 12 in group 1 and in four of eight in group 2. All AVP cell antibody-positive patients presented with subclinical/clinical CDI; in contrast, four patients with GH/ACTH deficiency but with APA staining only GH-secreting cells showed AHA targeting CRH- secreting cells. CONCLUSION The occurrence of CDI in patients with lymphocytic hypophysitis seems due to an autoimmune hypothalamic involvement rather than an expansion of the pituitary inflammatory process. To search for AVP antibody in these patients may help to identify those of them prone to develop an autoimmune CDI. The detection of AHA targeting CRH-secreting cells in some patients with GH/ACTH deficiency but with APA targeting only GH-secreting cells indicates that an autoimmune aggression to hypothalamus is jointly responsible for their hypopituitarism.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010
Giovanna Mantovani; Emanuele Ferrante; Claudia Giavoli; Agnès Linglart; Marco Cappa; Mariangela Cisternino; Mohamad Maghnie; Lucia Ghizzoni; Luisa de Sanctis; Andrea Lania; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Anna Spada
CONTEXT Since the identification of GH deficiency due to resistance to GHRH in patients with pseudohypoparathyroidism type Ia (PHP-Ia), no study investigated the effects of recombinant human GH (rhGH) therapy on height velocity (HV) in these patients. OBJECTIVES, PATIENTS AND METHODS To address this question, eight prepubertal PHP-Ia children with GH deficiency (seven girls and one boy, aged 5.8-12 yr) underwent a 3- to 8-yr treatment with rhGH. Height and HV were measured before and at 6-month intervals during therapy. Nine sex- and age-matched children with idiopathic GH deficiency were monitored during rhGH therapy for comparison. RESULTS In PHP-Ia children, height sd scores increased from -2.4 ± 0.58 to -1.8 ± 0.47 (P = 0.04) after 12 months, this increase being maintained after the second (-1.6 ± 0.6) and third (-1.15 ± 0.6) year of therapy, similarly to what recorded in children with idiopathic GH deficiency. The HV and HV sd scores after 3 yr maintained a significant increase from 3.5 ± 0.6 to 7.0 ± 0.9 cm/yr (P < 0.0001) and from -2.8 ± 0.8 to +2.2 ± 1.0 (P < 0.0001), respectively. Six patients treated for 4-8 yr had a reduced pubertal spurt and did not improve their near-adult height, with the only exception of one patient in whom estrogen production was blocked by GnRH analogs. CONCLUSIONS We report the first study on the efficacy of rhGH replacement therapy in prepubertal children with PHP-Ia and provide indication that treatment of GH deficiency should be started soon due to the rather limited time window for a potentially effective therapy.
European Journal of Endocrinology | 2010
Claudia Giavoli; Emanuele Ferrante; Eriselda Profka; Luca Olgiati; Silvia Bergamaschi; Cristina Ronchi; Elisa Verrua; Marcello Filopanti; Elena Passeri; Laura Montefusco; Andrea Lania; Sabrina Corbetta; Maura Arosio; Bruno Ambrosi; Anna Spada; Paolo Beck-Peccoz
OBJECTIVE A common polymorphic variant of GH receptor (exon 3 deletion, d3GHR) has been linked with increased response to recombinant human GH (rhGH) in some patients with or without GH deficiency (GHD). The aim of the study was to investigate the impact of the GHR genotype on the phenotype of GHD adults and on the metabolic effect of rhGH therapy. DESIGN Prospective study of GHD patients evaluated before and during short- (1 year, n=100) and long-term (5 years, n=50) rhGH therapy. METHODS Effects of rhGH on IGF1 levels, body composition (body fat percentage, BF%), body mass index, lipid profile, and glucose homeostasis (fasting insulin and glucose, insulin sensitivity indexes) were evaluated according to the presence or the absence of the d3GHR variant. RESULTS The different genotype did not influence basal phenotype of GHD. Short-term rhGH determined normalization of IGF1 levels, decrease in BF%, and worsening of insulin sensitivity, independently from the presence of the d3GHR allele. A significant increase in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol occurred in the d3GHR group. Normalization of IGF1 levels and decrease in BF% were maintained after 5 years. Insulin sensitivity restored to basal values, though in d3GHR patients fasting glucose remained significantly higher than at baseline. After both 1 and 5 years, percentage of subjects with impaired glucose tolerance, similar in the two groups at baseline, decreased in fl/fl while doubled in d3GHR patients. In this last group, a long-term significant reduction in total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol was also observed. CONCLUSION The functional difference of d3GHR may influence some metabolic effects of rhGH on GHD adults.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2012
Claudia Giavoli; Eriselda Profka; Elisa Verrua; Cristina L. Ronchi; Emanuele Ferrante; Silvia Bergamaschi; Elisa Sala; Elena Malchiodi; Andrea Lania; Maura Arosio; Bruno Ambrosi; Anna Spada; Paolo Beck-Peccoz
OBJECTIVE Effects of GH replacement in patients with GH deficiency (GHD) after a cure for acromegaly so far have been poorly studied, although its prevalence among acromegalic patients may reach the 60%. The aim of the study was to evaluate whether metabolic parameters and quality of life are improved by GH replacement in patients with prior acromegaly and severe GHD. DESIGN AND METHODS This was a prospective study on 42 GHD subjects [22 men, mean age (sd): 48 ± 10]: 10 acromegalics treated with recombinant human GH (group A), 12 acromegalics who refused treatment (group B), and 20 subjects operated for nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma on recombinant human GH (group C). Serum IGF-I levels, lipid profile, glucose levels (fasting and after an oral glucose tolerance test), glycosylated hemoglobin, insulin resistance (homeostasis model assessment insulin resistance index), anthropometric parameters (body mass index, waist circumference, body composition), and quality of life (Questions on Life Satisfaction-Hypopituitarism Z-scores) were evaluated at baseline and after 12 and 36 months. RESULTS At baseline, group B showed higher IGF sd score than group A and C, as well as better quality of life and higher post-oral glucose tolerance test glucose levels than group A. After 12-months, similarly in group A and C, the IGF-I sd score significantly increased, and body composition and lipid profile improved, without deterioration of glucose tolerance. Quality of life significantly improved too, and the baseline difference between group A and B disappeared. Results were confirmed after 36 months. CONCLUSIONS In GHD acromegalic patients, GH therapy improved body composition, lipid profile, and quality of life as in patients with GHD due to nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma, without negative effects on glucose metabolism. GH replacement therapy should be considered in these patients, as in patients with GHD from other causes.
International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition | 2015
Roberto Ercole Rusconi; Valentina De Cosmi; Ghilardi Gianluca; Claudia Giavoli; Carlo Agostoni
Abstract Vitamin D (25OHD) deficiency is reported in obese children. Low 25OHD levels are associated with dyslipidemia and increased risk of cardiovascular complication in adulthood. Within an observational study, 120 obese subjects in pediatric age were enrolled: 59 had 25OHD <20 ng/ml (group A) while 61 had 25OHD >20 ng/ml (group B). Group A versus Group B showed elevated total cholesterol (TC), p = 0.017, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), p = 0.045, and parathormone (PTH), p = 0.008. Apolipoprotein B (ApoB) showed a similar trend, p = 0.074. Negative correlations were found between 25OHD and the following parameters: TC (ρ = −0.22, p = 0.01), LDL (ρ = −0.22; p = 0.03), ApoB (ρ = −0.20; p = 0.03), and PTH (ρ = −0.33, p = 0.003). No differences in High Lipoprotein Cholesterol (HDL-C) were found. In multivariate regression the most powerful predictor for explaining 25OHD variation were TC (p = 0.048) and PTH (p = 0.055). Within a pediatric obese population an association between 25OHD low levels and unfavourable lipid patterns has been found.
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