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Dive into the research topics where Cristiana Barbera is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristiana Barbera.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2014

Introduction of Gluten, HLA Status, and the Risk of Celiac Disease in Children

Abstr Act; Elena Lionetti; Stefania Castellaneta; Ruggiero Francavilla; Alfredo Pulvirenti; Elio Tonutti; Sergio Amarri; Maria Barbato; Cristiana Barbera; Graziano Barera; Antonella Bellantoni; Emanuela Castellano; Graziella Guariso; Maria Giovanna Limongelli; Salvatore Pellegrino; Carlo Polloni; Claudio Ughi; Giovanna Zuin; Alessio Fasano; Carlo Catassi

BACKGROUND The relationship between the risk of celiac disease and both the age at which gluten is introduced to a childs diet and a childs early dietary pattern is unclear. METHODS We randomly assigned 832 newborns who had a first-degree relative with celiac disease to the introduction of dietary gluten at 6 months (group A) or 12 months (group B). The HLA genotype was determined at 15 months of age, and serologic screening for celiac disease was evaluated at 15, 24, and 36 months and at 5, 8, and 10 years. Patients with positive serologic findings underwent intestinal biopsies. The primary outcome was the prevalence of celiac disease autoimmunity and of overt celiac disease among the children at 5 years of age. RESULTS Of the 707 participants who remained in the trial at 36 months, 553 had a standard-risk or high-risk HLA genotype and completed the study. At 2 years of age, significantly higher proportions of children in group A than in group B had celiac disease autoimmunity (16% vs. 7%, P=0.002) and overt celiac disease (12% vs. 5%, P=0.01). At 5 years of age, the between-group differences were no longer significant for autoimmunity (21% in group A and 20% in group B, P=0.59) or overt disease (16% and 16%, P=0.78 by the log-rank test). At 10 years, the risk of celiac disease autoimmunity was far higher among children with high-risk HLA than among those with standard-risk HLA (38% vs. 19%, P=0.001), as was the risk of overt celiac disease (26% vs. 16%, P=0.05). Other variables, including breast-feeding, were not associated with the development of celiac disease. CONCLUSIONS Neither the delayed introduction of gluten nor breast-feeding modified the risk of celiac disease among at-risk infants, although the later introduction of gluten was associated with a delayed onset of disease. A high-risk HLA genotype was an important predictor of disease. (Funded by the Fondazione Celiachia of the Italian Society for Celiac Disease; CELIPREV ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00639444.).


Gastroenterology | 2008

Long-Term Course of Chronic Hepatitis C in Children: From Viral Clearance to End-Stage Liver Disease

Flavia Bortolotti; Gabriella Verucchi; Calogero Cammà; Giuseppe Cabibbo; Lucia Zancan; Giuseppe Indolfi; Raffaella Giacchino; Matilde Marcellini; Maria Grazia Marazzi; Cristiana Barbera; Giuseppe Maggiore; Pietro Vajro; S. Bartolacci; Fiorella Balli; Anna Maccabruni; Maria Guido

BACKGROUND & AIMS The natural course of chronic hepatitis C (CHC) in children is not well understood. The aim of this study was to assess the long-term course of CHC in a large sample of otherwise healthy children. METHODS From 1990 to 2005, 504 consecutive antihepatitis C virus (HCV)-positive children were enrolled at 12 centers of a national observatory and were followed up retrospectively/prospectively. RESULTS Putative exposure was perinatal in 283 (56.2%) cases, parenteral in 158 (31.3%), and unknown in 63 (12.5%). At baseline, 477 (94.6%) cases were HCV RNA seropositive, 118 (24.7%) of which were treated with standard interferon alpha. Ten years after putative exposure, the outcome in 359 HCV RNA-positive, untreated patients was (1) undetectable viremia in 27 (7.5%) (by Cox regression analysis, spontaneous viral clearance was independently predicted by genotype 3 [hazard ratio 6.44; 95% confidence interval: 2.7-15.5]) and (2) persistent viremia in 332 (92%) cases. Six of these 332 cases (1.8%) progressed to decompensated cirrhosis (mean age, 9.6 years). This latter group included 5 Italian children perinatally infected with genotype 1a (4 of the mothers were drug users). Thirty-three (27.9%) treated patients achieved a sustained virologic response. CONCLUSIONS Over the course of a decade, few children with chronic HCV infection cleared viremia spontaneously, and those who did were more likely to have genotype 3. Persistent viral replication led to end-stage liver disease in a small subgroup characterized by perinatal exposure, maternal drug use, and infection with HCV genotype 1a. Children with such features should be considered for early treatment.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2003

Chronic hepatitis C virus infection in childhood: clinical patterns and evolution in 224 white children.

Paloma Jara; Massimo Resti; Loreto Hierro; Raffaella Giacchino; Cristiana Barbera; Lucia Zancan; Carlo Crivellaro; Etienne Sokal; Chiara Azzari; Maria Guido; Flavia Bortolotti

The characteristics and evolution of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection were retrospectively investigated in a study of 224 HCV RNA-seropositive white children who were consecutively recruited at 7 European centers in 1980-1998. At presentation, all patients were positive for antibodies to hepatitis C virus, 87% were asymptomatic, and 48% had alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels that were < or =2 times the upper limit of the range considered to be normal. Of 200 children followed for 1-17.5 years (mean follow-up +/- standard deviation [SD], 6.2+/-4.7 years), only 12 (6%) achieved sustained viremia clearance and normalization of the ALT level. In 92 revised liver biopsy specimen analyses, the mean fibrosis score (+/-SD) was 1.5+/-1.3 for children <15 years of age and 2.3+/-1.2 for children > or =15 years of age (range, 0-6 years; P<.01). Pediatric HCV infection is usually mild, but few patients, especially those who are perinatally infected, clear viremia in the medium-term follow-up. Conversely, the higher rates of fibrosis observed in older patients suggest the possibility of an insidious progression of HCV-associated liver disease.


Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition | 1994

Posttransfusion and community-acquired hepatitis C in childhood

Flavia Bortolotti; Paloma Jara; Carmen Diaz; Pietro Vajro; Loreto Hierro; Raffaella Giacchino; Angela de la Vega; Carlo Crivellaro; C. Camarena; Cristiana Barbera; Gabriella Nebbia; Lucia Zancan; Lorena De Moliner

Following a longitudinal study of chronic non-A, non-B hepatitis in Italy and Spain, we evaluated the epidemiologic and clinical features of chronic hepatitis C in 77 consecutively observed children (35 male; mean age, 4 years) without underlying systemic diseases. All subjects were positive for antibody to hepatitis C virus in serum by second-generation tests. Forty-six patients had received blood transfusions in the perinatal period; 12 had a mother with antibodies to HCV in serum (five of these mothers were drug users or partners of a drug user); seven had a history of putative percutaneous exposure; and 12 had not been exposed to any risk factors for viral hepatitis. At presentation, only 22% were symptomatic, mean alanine-aminotransferase levels were three times the upper normal value, and liver histology showed active disease in only nine of 28 cases (32%). During a mean observation period of 6 years, only 11 of 57 patients (19%) complained of symptoms and 11 of 40 cases (27%) had histologic features of active hepatitis. Two patients had severe hepatitis with associated cirrhosis. However, only six of 57 cases (10%) achieved sustained biochemical remission. The clinical features and the outcome were similar in both the posttransfusion and the community-acquired cases. These results indicate that transfusions in the perinatal period are the single most important cause of hepatitis C in otherwise healthy children. Community-acquired cases represent an heterogeneous epidemiologic group in which maternal transmission, whether perinatal or postnatal, could be relevant. Histologically severe hepatitis and cirrhosis seem to be an infrequent feature of chronic hepatitis C virus infection in childhood and adolescence, in spite of persistent liver damage.


Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition | 2008

Duodenal bulb biopsies in celiac disease: a multicenter study

Margherita Bonamico; Enina Thanasi; P. Mariani; Raffaella Nenna; R.P.L. Luparia; Cristiana Barbera; Isabella Morra; Pietro Lerro; Graziella Guariso; Costantino De Giacomo; Serenella Scotta; Stefano Pontone; Francesco Carpino; Fabio Massimo Magliocca

Objectives: Celiac disease (CD)–related lesions have been reported in duodenal bulb biopsies, sometimes the bulb mucosa being the only one affected. The aim was to verify in a significant series whether histological lesions are always present in the bulb of celiac patients, what is the prevalence of lesions when isolated to the bulb, and if similar lesions are present in nonceliac subjects. Methods: We studied 665 children with CD (241 males, range 9 months–15 years, 8 months), at diagnosis on a gluten-containing diet, and 348 age- and sex-matched gastroenterological controls submitted to upper endoscopy for gastroenterological complaints. During endoscopy, multiple biopsies (1 bulb and 4 distal duodenum samples) were taken. Anti-endomysium antibodies were evaluated by immunofluorescence method, anti–human tissue–transglutaminase antibodies by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay or radioimmunoassay. Human leukocyte antigen-DRB1, -DQA1, and -DQB1 genes were typed by polymerase chain reaction sequence–specific primers repeat method. Results: In all of the patients with CD, histological lesions were present in the bulb sample; in 16 of them, the lesions were present only in the bulb. Patchy villous atrophy was found in 20 children. All of the patients with CD were anti-endomysium and/or anti-transglutaminase positive. The controls showed neither autoantibody positivity nor mucosal changes compatible with CD. Conclusions: This study demonstrated that CD-related histological lesions are always present in the bulb; sometimes this specific site is the only one affected. Therefore, we suggest taking 2 biopsies from the bulb and 2 from the distal duodenum for CD diagnosis.


Pediatrics | 2009

Prevalence and Natural History of Gastroesophageal Reflux: Pediatric Prospective Survey

Angelo Campanozzi; Gabriella Boccia; Licia Pensabene; Fabio Panetta; Antonio Marseglia; Pietro Strisciuglio; Cristiana Barbera; Giuseppe Magazzù; Massimo Pettoello-Mantovani; Annamaria Staiano

OBJECTIVE. The prevalence and natural history of gastroesophageal reflux in infants have been poorly documented. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prevalence and natural history of infant regurgitation in Italian children during the first 2 years of life. METHODS. A detailed questionnaire, according to the Rome II criteria, was completed by 59 primary care pediatricians to assess infant regurgitation in consecutive patients seen in their office over a 3-month period. A total of 2642 patients aged 0 to 12 months were prospectively enrolled during this 3-month period. Follow-up was performed at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months of age. RESULTS. A total of 313 children (12%; 147 girls) received the diagnosis of infant regurgitation. Vomiting was present in 34 of 313 patients. Their score for the Infant Gastroesophageal Reflux Questionnaire was 8.51 ± 4.75 (mean ± SD). Follow-up visits were conducted to the end in 210 of 313 subjects. Regurgitation had disappeared in 56 of 210 infants by the first 6 months of age, in 128 by the first 12 months, in 23 at 18 months, and in 3 patients by the first 24 months. At follow-up, 1 of 210 patients had developed a gastroesophageal reflux disease with esophagitis, proven endoscopically and histologically; another patient received a diagnosis of cow milk protein intolerance. The Infant Gastroesophageal Reflux Questionnaire score reached 0 after 8.2 ± 3.9 months in breastfed infants (89 of 210) and after 9.6 ± 4.1 months in artificially fed infants. CONCLUSIONS. We found that 12% of Italian infants satisfied the Rome II criteria for infant regurgitation. Eighty-eight percent of 210 infants who had completed a 24-month follow-up period had improved at the age of 12 months. Only 1 patient later turned out to have gastroesophageal reflux disease. Use of breast milk was associated with a shorter time necessary to reach an Infant Gastroesophageal Reflux Questionnaire score of 0.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2003

Fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C acquired in infancy: is it only a matter of time?

Maria Guido; Flavia Bortolotti; Gioacchino Leandro; Paloma Jara; Loreto Hierro; Javier Larrauri; Cristiana Barbera; Raffaella Giacchino; Lucia Zancan; Fiorella Balli; Carlo Crivellaro; Emilio Cristina; Angela Pucci; Massimo Rugge

Abstract Objective The natural history of chronic hepatitis C acquired in infancy is not well understood. The progression of fibrosis was analyzed in untreated children with chronic hepatitis C virus infection and no other hepatotoxic cofactors. Methods A total of 112 pediatric patients (13 with paired liver biopsies) were considered. Fibrosis was assessed by METAVIR score (i.e., stage F1 to F4). The ratio between the stage of fibrosis (METAVIR units) and the presumed duration of infection represented the “estimated” rate of fibrosis progression per year. In patients with paired biopsies, the “observed” rate of fibrosis progression was defined as the difference between the stage of fibrosis in the two biopsies divided by the time interval between them. Results Both age of patients at biopsy and duration of infection correlated with stage of fibrosis (p Conclusions Chronic hepatitis C acquired in childhood is a progressive, slow-moving, fibrotic disease. Fibrosis progression inferred on the basis of linear mathematical models should be critically evaluated in the clinical practice.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2008

Inflammatory bowel disease in children and adolescents in Italy: data from the pediatric national IBD register (1996-2003).

M. Castro; B. Papadatou; M. Baldassare; Fiorella Balli; Arrigo Barabino; Cristiana Barbera; S. Barca; Graziano Barera; F. Bascietto; R. Berni Canani; M. Calacoci; Angelo Campanozzi; G. Castellucci; Carlo Catassi; M. Colombo; M.R. Covoni; S. Cucchiara; M.R. D'Altilia; G De Angelis; S. De Virgilis; V. Di Ciommo; Massimo Fontana; Graziella Guariso; D. Knafelz; Lambertini A; S. Licciardi; Paolo Lionetti; L. Liotta; G. Lombardi; L. Maestri

Background: The purpose was to assess in Italy the clinical features at diagnosis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in children. Methods: In 1996 an IBD register of disease onset was established on a national scale. Results: Up to the end of 2003, 1576 cases of pediatric IBD were recorded: 810 (52%) ulcerative colitis (UC), 635 (40%) Crohns disease (CD), and 131 (8%) indeterminate colitis (IC). In the period 1996–2003 an increase of IBD incidence from 0.89 to 1.39/105 inhabitants aged <18 years was observed. IBD was more frequent among children aged between 6 and 12 years (57%) but 20% of patients had onset of the disease under 6 years of age; 28 patients were <1 year of age. Overall, 11% had 1 or more family members with IBD. The mean interval between onset of symptoms and diagnosis was higher in CD (10.1 months) and IC (9 months) versus UC (5.8 months). Extended colitis was the most frequent form in UC and ileocolic involvement the most frequent in CD. Upper intestinal tract involvement was present in 11% of CD patients. IC locations were similar to those of UC. Bloody diarrhea and abdominal pain were the most frequent symptoms in UC and IC, and abdominal pain and diarrhea in CD. Extraintestinal symptoms were more frequent in CD than in UC. Conclusions The IBD incidence in children and adolescents in Italy shows an increasing trend for all 3 pathologies. UC diagnoses exceeded CD.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1997

Hepatitis C virus infection and related liver disease in children of mothers with antibodies to the virus

Flavia Bortolotti; Massimo Resti; Raffaella Giacchino; Chiara Azzari; Nadia Gussetti; Carlo Crivellaro; Cristiana Barbera; Francesco Mannelli; Lucia Zancan; Adalberto Bertolini

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the clinical, biochemical, and virologic features associated with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection acquired early in life from mothers with antibodies to HCV (anti-HCV). STUDY DESIGN Multicenter prospective-retrospective study in Italian children. PATIENTS Two groups of children were investigated. Group 1 included 14 infants, born to mothers with anti-HCV but without human immunodeficiency virus infection, who became seropositive for HCV RNA during the first year of life and were thus considered infected. Group 2 included 16 children with chronic hepatitis C, aged 1 1/2 to 14 years, whose mothers were the unique potential source of infection. Both groups were followed for 12 to 48 months. METHODS Alanine transaminase (ALT), anti-HCV, and HCV RNA were investigated by the polymerase chain reaction on entry to the study and during follow-up. RESULTS All children in group 1 had anti-HCV throughout follow-up, and all had ALT abnormalities, ranging from 1.5 to 10.5 times the normal value during the first 12 months. During further follow-up, 5 of 10 children had HCV RNA with abnormal ALT values, 3 had a return to normal of the ALT values but continued to have viremia, and 2 eventually had normal ALT values and clearance of HCV RNA. Of the 16 children in group 2, all were free of symptoms and 62% had only slight ALT elevations; 7 who underwent liver biopsy had histologic features of minimal or moderate hepatitis. CONCLUSIONS HCV infection acquired early in life from mothers with anti-HCV is usually associated with biochemical features of liver damage during the first 12 months of life. Progression to chronicity seems to occur in the majority of cases, although HCV-associated liver disease is likely to be mild throughout infancy and childhood.


Gut | 1983

HLA-DR3 and DR7 in coeliac disease: immunogenetic and clinical aspects.

M Demarchi; A Carbonara; N Ansaldi; B Santini; Cristiana Barbera; I Borelli; P Rossino; S Rendine

The association of HLA-A,B,C, DR polymorphisms and of Bf and GLO with coeliac disease was analysed in 100 Italian children. Primary involvement of HLA-DR3 and DR7 is apparent, while specificities of nearby loci are probably associated secondarily, because of linkage disequilibrium. Direct assessment of D/DR genotype through family studies and mixed lymphocyte cultures led to the recognition of two high risk genotypes DR3/3 and DR3/7, and of two lower risk genotypes DR3/X and DR7/X. The different weight of the HLA-dependent genetic factors is to some extent correlated with the clinical and immunological parameters, suggesting that the low-risk genotypes induce a milder expression of coeliac disease. Furthermore, other genetic factors, such as sex, appear to contribute to the penetrance of the disease, especially in the case of DR3/X and DR7/X.

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Fiorella Balli

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Gabriella Nebbia

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Maria Grazia Marazzi

University of Naples Federico II

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