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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Mecucci is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Mecucci.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 1985

The 5q-anomaly

Herman Van den Berghe; Kristina Vermaelen; Cristina Mecucci; Dario Barbieri; G. Tricot

A deletion of the long arm of chromosome #5 (5q-) occurs nonrandomly in human malignancies. As a rule, the deletion is interstitial; the distal breakpoint by conventional techniques is usually in band q32, the proximal breakpoints in q12 or q14. Variant breakpoints occur in less than 10% of all cases. As the sole anomaly, 5q- is characteristically found in refractory anemia with or without excess of blasts. It can occur as the sole anomaly in de novo or secondary acute nonlymphocytic leukemia, but is usually accompanied in those disorders by other chromosome changes that are also nonrandomly distributed. In addition, it can be found in lymphoproliferative disorders, and occasionally, also in solid tumors. The 5q- myelodysplastic syndrome typically occurs in older age groups, particularly in females. Characteristic features are macrocytic anemia, normal or elevated platelets in the presence of megakaryocytic anomalies, and a mild clinical course. In cases with 5q- only, transformation into ANLL occurs rarely. Additional chromosome anomalies and male sex are prognostically unfavorable signs. Sex ratio is also at the disadvantage of females in de novo 5q- ANLL, and the latter disorder can occur without being preceded by a myelodysplastic phase. A myelodysplastic phase usually precedes 5q- secondary leukemia, in males as well as in females, and additional chromosome anomalies, especially of chromosome #7, are almost invariably present in those cases. We conclude that 5q- is the most frequently occurring single chromosome anomaly in secondary leukemia. Furthermore, the resemblance between de novo and secondary 5q- MDS and ANLL is striking; clinically, as well as cytogenetically, they are indistinguishable, suggesting that all de novo cases may be due to environmental (chemical) carcinogens. Response to treatment and prognosis are very poor with current therapeutic regimens in de novo as well as in secondary 5q- ANLL. Morphologically, these ANLLs fall into all FAB categories. There is considerable evidence to show that the 5q- anomaly occurs in a myeloid precursor stem cell. The occasional occurrence in lymphoid malignancies, of B cell as well as T cell type, suggests that, as in Ph-positive disorders, a common progenitor stem cell may be affected in 5q- also. The 5q- lymphoid malignancies, however, are much more rare; it is not clear at the present time whether or not a 5q- counterpart of Ph-positive ALL exists, and mixed lymphoid-myeloid 5q- disorders have not yet been documented.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Leukemia | 2005

Cell line OCI/AML3 bears exon-12 NPM gene mutation-A and cytoplasmic expression of nucleophosmin

Hilmar Quentmeier; M P Martelli; Wilhelm G. Dirks; Niccolo Bolli; Arcangelo Liso; Roderick A. F. MacLeod; Ildo Nicoletti; Roberta Mannucci; Alessandra Pucciarini; Barbara Bigerna; M F Martelli; Cristina Mecucci; Hans G. Drexler; Brunangelo Falini

We recently identified a new acute myeloid leukemia (AML) subtype characterized by mutations at exon-12 of the nucleophosmin (NPM) gene and aberrant cytoplasmic expression of NPM protein (NPMc+). NPMc+ AML accounts for about 35% of adult AML and it is associated with normal karyotype, wide morphological spectrum, CD34-negativity, high frequency of FLT3-ITD mutations and good response to induction therapy. In an attempt to identify a human cell line to serve as a model for the in vitro study of NPMc+ AML, we screened 79 myeloid cell lines for mutations at exon-12 of NPM. One of these cell lines, OCI/AML3, showed a TCTG duplication at exon-12 of NPM. This mutation corresponds to the type A, the NPM mutation most frequently observed in primary NPMc+ AML. OCI/AML3 cells also displayed typical phenotypic features of NPMc+ AML, that is, expression of macrophage markers and lack of CD34, and the immunocytochemical hallmark of this leukemia subtype, that is, the aberrant cytoplasmic expression of NPM. The OCI/AML3 cell line easily engrafts in NOD/SCID mice and maintains in the animals the typical features of NPMc+ AML, such as the NPM cytoplasmic expression. For all these reasons, the OCI/AML3 cell line represents a remarkable tool for biomolecular studies of NPMc+ AML.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 1987

A chromosomal profile of polycythemia vera

Giovanna Rege-Cambrin; Cristina Mecucci; G. Tricot; Jean-Louis Michaux; A. Louwagie; Werner Van Hove; Hugo Francart; Herman Van den Berghe

One hundred four patients with a diagnosis of polycythemia vera and a variable period of follow-up had one or more cytogenetic investigations. Chromosome abnormalities were found in 13% of untreated patients, in 56% of cases treated with radioactive phosphorus (32P) or cytotoxic drugs, and in 85% of patients in which transformation of the disease had occurred. Nonrandom chromosome abnormalities found before treatment included +8, +9, 13q-, 20q-; their prognostic value is little, as they are often associated with longstanding, stable disease. In contrast, 5q- anomaly and the appearance of subclones in patients with an abnormal karyotype were found to be poor prognostic signs, as they are usually coincidental with evolution of the disease to myelofibrosis or leukemia. Chromosomally two patterns of acute leukemia were observed in polycythemia vera patients. The first type resembles de novo acute leukemia, in that the clinical and cytologic characteristics of the disorder are easily defined by FAB criteria and the chromosome changes compatible with the types usually found in those conditions. In the second type, assignment to a FAB morphologic subgroup was more difficult, myelodysplastic changes were often present, and the karyotype showed complex abnormalities frequently involving chromosomes #5 and #7. All these features suggest the occurrence of secondary leukemia.


British Journal of Haematology | 1997

Further characterization of morphologically defined typical and atypical CLL: a clinical, immunophenotypic, cytogenetic and prognostic study on 390 cases

Arnold Criel; Gregor Verhoef; Robert Vlietinck; Cristina Mecucci; Johan Billiet; Lucienne Michaux; Peter Meeus; A. Louwagie; Angeline Van Orshoven; Achiel Van Hoof; Mark Boogaerts; Herman Van den Berghe; Chris De Wolf-Peeters

We analysed a group of 390 patients, diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL). Cases were subclassified as morphologically typical and atypical CLL according to the criteria of the FAB proposal. Typical CLL cases were mostly diagnosed at a low‐risk stage (Binet A/Rai 0), required no immediate treatment and expected a long survival; atypical CLL cases mostly presented at a more advanced risk stage (Binet B/Rai I–II), usually required immediate treatment and their survival was shorter. Moreover, clinical staging was of prognostic significance in typical but not in atypical cases.  In typical CLL, del(11q) was the most common chromosomal abnormality (21%) whereas in atypical CLL trisomy 12 was found in about 65% of the cases documented with an abnormal karyotype. Although chromosomal abnormalities were associated with a poor survival in typical CLL, they are of no prognostic significance in atypical CLL.  Based on these data, we conclude that subtyping CLL by morphology enables the identification of two groups of cases, each characterized by a specific clinical presentation, different cytogenetic abnormalities and prognostic parameters. We speculate that these two groups may represent two related, but different, diseases with different prognostic parameters and a different survival.


British Journal of Haematology | 1994

Trisomy 12 is uncommon in typical chronic lymphocytic leukaemias

A. Criel; Iwona Wlodarska; Peter Meeus; Michel Stul; A. Louwagie; A. Van Hoof; M. Hidajat; Cristina Mecucci; H. Van den Berghe

The incidence of trisomy 12 was studied by conventional chromosome analysis in 111 patients referred as B‐cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B‐CLL). Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) was also applied in 34 of those patients with either a normal karyotype or no analysable mitoses. By karyotyping, trisomy 12 was present in 11.7% (13/111), whereas additional FISH increased the incidence to 14.4% (16/111). When subdividing our cases in either typical CLL (n= 90), fulfilling the FAB classification criteria, or atypical CLL (n= 21), with one or more variations from those criteria, the incidence of +12 by metaphase analysis was 3% and 48%, respectively. Additional FISH increased the incidence to 4% and 57%. The most common aberration in atypical CLL was FMC7 positivity (n= 11), followed by CD5 negativity (n= 8), strong surface immunoglobulin staining (n= 7) and atypical morphology (n = 6). Trisomy 12 could only be demonstrated in a small proportion of neoplastic cells in all positive cases. By FISH and/or karyotyping, all available samples at diagnosis of the disease were positive.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 1989

Cytogenetic and Clinical Investigations in 76 Cases With Therapy-related Leukemia and Myelodysplastic Syndrome

Alessandra Iurlo; Cristina Mecucci; Angeline Van Orshoven; Jean-Louis Michaux; Marc Boogaerts; Lucien Noens; André Bosly; A. Louwagie; Herman Van den Berghe

Clinical, cytomorphologic, and cytogenetic investigations were carried out in a series of 76 secondary MDS and ANLL. Chromosome abnormalities were more frequent in patients with a history of multiple myeloma or macroglobulinemia (92%) and myeloproliferative disorders (82%) than in patients with previous breast cancer (40%). The secondary hematologic malignancies were mostly a trilineage bone marrow disorder. The most commonly found cytogenetic anomaly was monosomy 7, followed by total or partial loss of chromosome 5. In addition six other chromosomes, i.e., chromosome 3, 8, 9, 12, 17, and 21 seemed to be consistently involved in the pathogenetic mechanisms of secondary leukemia and MDS.


British Journal of Haematology | 1986

EVOLUTION OF THE MYELODYSPLASTIC SYNDROMES

Guido Tricot; Cristina Mecucci; H. Van den Berghe

The myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are imprecisely defined haematological dsorders that may precede acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), sometimes by many years. MDS mainly affect older individuals and are characterized by one or more cytopenias in the peripheral blood, while the bone marrow is usually normoor hypercellular. In contrast to AML, where the leukaemic cells show very limited or no differentiation, but are rapidly expanding, in MDS the haematopoietic cells always display some degree of differentiation and the disease expands more slowly. The diagnosis of the early stages of MDS may be difficult and no generally accepted diagnostic criteria for MDS are available at present, leading to the risk that MDS may be considered a common denominator for all unexplained cytopenias and bone marrows, which are difficult to interpret. While survival of untreated AML patients is very short with a median duration of 2 months (Tivey, 1955), the natural evolution in MDS is largely unpredictable. Some patients will experience prolonged survival, whereas a substantial number of patients will die within the first year after diagnosis (Vallespi et al , 1985; Tricot et al, 19 8 5a). The question why evolution in MDS may be so different has not yet been resolved and the opinion still largely prevails that MDS is a premalignant condition, clearly different from AML.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 1984

High-incidence of Chromosome-abnormalities in Igg3 Myeloma

Herman Van den Berghe; Kristina Vermaelen; A. Louwagie; A. Criel; Cristina Mecucci; Jean-Pierre Vaerman

Chromosomes were studied in 33 untreated myeloma patients, and results were correlated with the class of Ig secreted by the myeloma cells. A high incidence of clonal karyotypic anomalies seemed to be present in IgG3 myeloma patients, in whom the disease was advanced at diagnosis and rapidly progressing. Among the chromosome anomalies, the t(11;14)(q14;q32) was particularly prominent, and this chromosome anomaly, in analogy with the Ph1 chromosome, may characterize a family of lymphoproliferative disorders.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 1996

BCL3 rearrangement and t(14;19)(q32;q13) in lymphoproliferative disorders

Lucienne Michaux; Cristina Mecucci; Michel Stul; Iwona Wlodarska; Jesús Hernández; Peter Meeus; Jean-Louis Michaux; Jean-Marie Scheiff; Henri Noël; Andries Lodwagie; Arnold Criel; Marc Boogaerts; Angeline Van Orshoven; Jean-Jacques Cassiman; Herman Van den Berghe

Translocation t(14;19)(q32;q13) is a rare but recurrent abnormality in chronic lymphocytic leukemia and small cell lymphoma. It has been associated with rearrangements of the BCL3 gene, which is located at the breakpoint on chromosome 19 and is juxtaposed to the immunoglobulin heavy chain locus on chromosome 14 as a result of the translocation. This results in transcriptional up‐regulation of the BCL3 gene, which encodes a transcription coactivator, an 1‐κB protein, probably contributing to disease progression. We found, among 4,487 cytogenetic analyses of lymphoproliferative disorders, six cases with a t(14;19)(q32;q13), five of which showed the classical t(14;19)(q32;q13) and one of which showed a three‐way translocation t(7;19;14)(q21;q13;q32). The 14;19 translocation never occurred as a single abnormality; additional aberrations included trisomy 12 and several structural abnormalities. The cytogenetic examination was supplemented by molecular analysis using available probes for the BCL3 locus (pα1.4P and pα5B) in 1,150 of the 4,487 patients. Rearrangements of BCL3 involvement could only be confirmed using long‐range restriction mapping, indicating that, with the usually available BCL3 probes, rearrangements of this locus may be missed. Genes Chromosom Cancer 14:00–00 (1995).


British Journal of Haematology | 1992

Chromosome 11q rearrangements in B non Hodgkin's lymphoma

Elisabeth Vandenberghe; C. De Wolf Peeters; Iwona Wlodarska; Michel Stul; A. Louwagie; Gregor Verhoef; José Thomas; A. Criel; J.J. Cassiman; Cristina Mecucci; Herman Van den Berghe

Summary. The clinical features, morphology and immunophenotype of 20 cases of B non Hodgkins lymphoma (B‐NHL) with chromosome abnormalities involving 11q13–14 were studied, to determine if this abnormality was closely associated with a specific sub‐type of β‐NHL. A t(11:14)(q13;q32) was found in 11 cases of intermediately differentiated lymphocytic lymphoma (IDLL). A breakpoint in the major translocation cluster of the BCL‐.1 locus was found in six of these cases. These patients were male with lymphomatous involvement of the bone marrow, marked splenomegaly and frequently had mucosa associated lymphoid tissue involvement. One patient with IDLL had a t(8;11)(p21;q13) and a rearranged BCL‐1 locus, suggesting that this may be a variant of t(11;14)(q13;q32). Diagnoses of IDLL, chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma and monocytoid B cell lymphoma were made in all but one of the remaining cases. These cases had either a translocation involving 1 Iq13–14 and various partner chromosomes or an 11q13 deletion. This study demonstrates that 11q abnormalities occur mainly in a group of low‐grade B‐NHL of non follicle centre cell lineage.

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Dive into the Cristina Mecucci's collaboration.

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Herman Van den Berghe

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jean-Louis Michaux

Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc

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A. Louwagie

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Michel Stul

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jean-Jacques Cassiman

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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H. Van den Berghe

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Marc Boogaerts

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Angeline Van Orshoven

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Iwona Wlodarska

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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G. Tricot

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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