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Dive into the research topics where Daniela Campani is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniela Campani.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009

PTEN Expression and KRAS Mutations on Primary Tumors and Metastases in the Prediction of Benefit From Cetuximab Plus Irinotecan for Patients With Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

Fotios Loupakis; Luca Pollina; I. Stasi; Annamaria Ruzzo; Mario Scartozzi; Daniele Santini; Gianluca Masi; Francesco Graziano; Chiara Cremolini; Eliana Rulli; Emanuele Canestrari; Niccola Funel; Gaia Schiavon; Iacopo Petrini; Mauro Magnani; Giuseppe Tonini; Daniela Campani; Irene Floriani; Stefano Cascinu; Alfredo Falcone

PURPOSE PTEN, AKT, and KRAS are epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) downstream regulators. KRAS mutations confer resistance to cetuximab. This retrospective study investigated the role of PTEN loss, AKT phosphorylation, and KRAS mutations on the activity of cetuximab plus irinotecan in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). PATIENTS AND METHODS A cohort of patients with irinotecan-refractory mCRC who were treated with cetuximab plus irinotecan was tested for PTEN immunoreactivity (ie, immunohistochemistry; IHC), pAKT IHC, and KRAS mutations. Analyses were performed both on primary tumors and on related metastases, and the association among IHC, mutational results, and treatment outcomes was investigated. RESULTS One-hundred two patients were eligible. Ninety-six primary tumors, 59 metastases, and 53 paired samples were available. Forty-nine primary tumors (58% of assessable samples) had a preserved PTEN expression (PTEN-positive), whereas 35 (40% of assessable samples) were pAKT-positive. Levels of concordance between primary tumors and metastases were 60%, 68%, and 95% for PTEN, pAKT, and KRAS, respectively. PTEN status on primary tumors and pAKT status both on primary tumors and on metastases did not predict response or progression-free survival (PFS). On metastases, 12 (36%) of 33 patients with PTEN-positive tumors were responders compared with one (5%) of 22 who had PTEN-negative tumors (P = .007). The median PFS of patients with PTEN-positive metastases was 4.7 months compared with 3.3 months for those with PTEN-negative metastases (hazard ratio [HR], 0.49; P = .005). Patients with PTEN-positive metastases and KRAS wild type had longer PFS compared with other patients (5.5 months v 3.8 months; HR, 0.42; P = .001). CONCLUSION PTEN loss in metastases may be predictive of resistance to cetuximab plus irinotecan. The combination of PTEN IHC and KRAS mutational analyses could help to identify a subgroup of patients with mCRC who have higher chances of benefiting from EGFR inhibition.


Cancer Research | 2010

MicroRNA-21 in Pancreatic Cancer: Correlation with Clinical Outcome and Pharmacologic Aspects Underlying Its Role in the Modulation of Gemcitabine Activity

Elisa Giovannetti; Niccola Funel; Godefridus J. Peters; Marco Del Chiaro; Leyla A. Erozenci; Enrico Vasile; Leticia G. Leon; Luca Pollina; Annemieke Groen; Alfredo Falcone; Romano Danesi; Daniela Campani; Henk M.W. Verheul; Ugo Boggi

MicroRNA-21 (miR-21) was reported to be overexpressed and contributes to invasion and gemcitabine resistance in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). The aim of this study was to evaluate whether miR-21 expression was associated with the overall survival (OS) of PDAC patients treated with gemcitabine and to provide mechanistic insights for new therapeutic targets. miR-21 expression was evaluated in cells (including 7 PDAC cell lines, 7 primary cultures, fibroblasts, and a normal pancreatic ductal cell line) and tissues (neoplastic specimens from 81 PDAC patients and normal ductal samples) isolated by laser microdissection. The role of miR-21 on the pharmacologic effects of gemcitabine was studied with a specific miR-21 precursor (pre-miR-21). Patients with high miR-21 expression had a significantly shorter OS both in the metastatic and in the adjuvant setting. Multivariate analysis confirmed the prognostic significance of miR-21. miR-21 expression in primary cultures correlated with expression in their respective tissues and with gemcitabine resistance. Pre-miR-21 transfection significantly decreased antiproliferative effects and apoptosis induction by gemcitabine, whereas matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2/MMP-9 and vascular endothelial growth factor expression were upregulated. Addition of inhibitors of phosphoinositide 3-kinase and mammalian target of rapamycin resulted in decrease of phospho-Akt and prevented pre-miR-21-induced resistance to the proapoptotic effects of gemcitabine. miR-21 expression correlated with outcome in PDAC patients treated with gemcitabine. Modulation of apoptosis, Akt phosphorylation, and expression of genes involved in invasive behavior may contribute to the role of miR-21 in gemcitabine chemoresistance and to the rational development of new targeted combinations.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2004

Inflammatory cells contribute to the generation of an angiogenic phenotype in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma

Irene Esposito; Michele Menicagli; N Funel; Frank Bergmann; Ugo Boggi; Franco Mosca; Generoso Bevilacqua; Daniela Campani

Background: Inflammatory cells contribute to the growth and spread of human malignancies by producing molecules that enhance tumour invasiveness. Aims: To characterise the inflammatory infiltrate in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma and to analyse its contribution to angiogenesis and its prognostic relevance. Methods: Immunohistochemistry was used to identify inflammatory cells and evaluate the expression of proangiogenic and prolymphangiogenic molecules (vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A), VEGF-C, and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF)) by inflammatory and cancer cells in 137 pancreatic cancers. Intratumorous microvessel density (IMD) was assessed using CD34 as an endothelial cell marker. Results: There were significantly more mast cells and macrophages in pancreatic cancers than in normal pancreas and the number of mast cells directly correlated with the presence of lymph node metastases. However, there was no relation between numbers of infiltrating inflammatory cells and the presence of chronic pancreatitis (CP)-like changes in the parenchyma surrounding the tumour. Double immunostaining revealed that both pancreatic mast cells and macrophages express VEGF-A, VEGF-C, and bFGF. These factors were also expressed in the tumour cells in many cases. The numbers of VEGF-A expressing tumour cells and bFGF expressing tumour and inflammatory cells significantly correlated with IMD. Moreover, tumours with higher IMD had higher numbers of infiltrating mast cells and macrophages. Conclusions: Mononuclear inflammatory cells of the non-specific immune response are recruited to pancreatic cancer tissues independent of the presence of CP-like changes, may influence the metastatic capacity of the cancer cells, and may contribute to the development of tumours with high angiogenic activity.


Stem Cells | 2003

Isolation and Clonal Analysis of Human Epidermal Keratinocyte Stem Cells in Long‐Term Culture

Sandra Papini; D Cecchetti; Daniela Campani; Wendy Fitzgerald; Jean-Charles Grivel; Silvia Chen; Leonid Margolis; Roberto P. Revoltella

We developed a procedure for growing normal epidermal keratinocyte stem cells isolated from a single punch biopsy of adult human skin in long‐term culture. Primary skin epithelial cells were maintained in collagen‐coated plates with irradiated human neonatal foreskin fibroblasts (line HPI.1) as a feeder for more than 120 days, approximately 115 population doublings, without signs of replicative senescence. Clonal analysis revealed the presence of holoclones, meroclones, and paraclones. Only emerging colonies with high proliferative potentials and extensive capacities for division (holoclones and meroclones) were subcultured, favoring the expansion of stem cells and progenitors capable of prolonged self‐maintenance when subcloned, thus accounting for the prevailing long‐term proliferation of the original culture. We found that meroclones included bipotent progenitors capable of generating both keratinocytes and mucin‐producing cells. The numbers of these cells were greater after confluence, suggesting that commitment for their differentiation occurred late in the life of a single clone. On a three‐dimensional gelatin matrix and on a collagen layer containing the fibroblast feeder, cells isolated from the expansion of holoclones and meroclones formed stratified cohesive layers of keratinocytes that were able to further differentiate, as in normal skin. These results indicate that our procedure will serve as a valuable tool to study expansion of epidermal stem cells as well as the growth mechanisms and cell products associated with their growth and differentiation.


The Journal of Pathology | 2006

PIK3CA mutation and histological type in breast carcinoma: high frequency of mutations in lobular carcinoma.

Fiamma Buttitta; Lara Felicioni; Fabio Barassi; Carla Martella; Diego Paolizzi; Giuseppina Fresu; Simona Salvatore; Franco Cuccurullo; Andrea Mezzetti; Daniela Campani; Antonio Marchetti

Mutations in the PIK3CA gene have recently been reported in different human neoplasms, including breast cancer. This paper reports the results of a systematic analysis of PIK3CA mutations in different histological types of breast carcinoma. One hundred and eighty invasive breast carcinomas, comprising 74 ductal, 56 lobular, 22 mucinous, 20 medullary, and eight papillary, were selected on the basis of their histological type in a consecutive series of 780 breast cancers. Exons 1–20 of the PIK3CA gene were subjected to SSCP analysis followed by direct sequencing. PIK3CA mutations were observed in 46 (26%) of the 180 tumours examined: 23 (50%) mutations were located in exon 9, and 23 (50%) in exon 20. Mutations were frequent in lobular (46%), less frequent in ductal (22%), and uncommon in medullary (10%), mucinous (5%), and papillary tumours (12%) (p = 0.0002). Mutations in exon 9 were more frequent in lobular carcinomas (30% of cases) than in the other histological types (less than 5% of cases) (p = 0.00014). No significant differences were observed in the distribution of mutations in exon 20. There was no significant correlation between PIK3CA mutations and other clinicopathological and biological variables, including age, tumour size, lymph node metastases, oestrogen receptor (ER) status, progesterone receptor (PgR) status, p53 gene mutations, and p53 protein expression. The findings indicate that in invasive breast carcinomas, PIK3CA alterations are mainly present in lobular and ductal tumours, whereas the other histological types, known to be associated with a favourable prognosis, show a very low incidence of PIK3CA mutations. Copyright


European Radiology | 2007

Biliary and reticuloendothelial impairment in hepatocarcinogenesis: the diagnostic role of tissue-specific MR contrast media.

Carlo Bartolozzi; Laura Crocetti; Riccardo Lencioni; Dania Cioni; Clotilde Della Pina; Daniela Campani

The development and progression of a hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in a chronically diseased liver, i.e., the carcinogenesis, comprise a multistep and long-term process. Morphologically, this process is associated with the presence of distinct nodular lesions in the liver that are called ‘preneoplastic lesions.’ These preneoplastic lesions are associated with and can precede the growth and progression of well-differentiated HCCs . The characterization of nodular lesions and demonstration of the multistep development of HCC in the cirrhotic liver by imaging modalities represent a challenging issue. The arterial hypervascular supply, depicted by different dynamic studies, represents a fundamental radiological criterion for the diagnosis of HCC in cirrhosis. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging performed with tissue-specific contrast media can help to investigate the “grey area” of carcinogenesis, in which significant histological changes are already present without any imaging evidence of neoangiogenesis. The purpose of this review is to provide information on the properties of tissue-specific MR contrast agents and on their usefulness in the demonstration of the pathologic changes that take place at the level of the biliary and reticuloendothelial systems during the carcinogenetic process in liver cirrhosis.


British Journal of Cancer | 1996

Multiple regions of chromosome 6q affected by loss of heterozygosity in primary human breast carcinomas.

Z. M. Sheng; Antonio Marchetti; Fiamma Buttitta; M. H. Champeme; Daniela Campani; M. Bistocchi; R. Lidereau; Robert Callahan

A total of 80 primary human breast carcinoma DNAs were analysed for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on the long arm of chromosome 6, using microsatellite markers whose location has been defined physically and by linkage analysis. Loss of heterozygosity was observed in 38 of 80 (48%) tumours that were informative for at least one locus. The analysis revealed partial or interstitial deletions of chromosome 6q. Detailed mapping of chromosome 6q in these tumour DNAs identified two and perhaps three commonly deleted regions. One of these is located between markers D6S251 and D6S252 (6q14-q16.2), another between D6S268 and D6S261 (6q16.3-q23) and a third between D6S287 and D6S270 (6q22.3-q23.1).


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1996

IGF-II mRNA and protein are expressed in the stroma of invasive breast cancers: an in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry study

Claudio Giani; Kevin J. Cullen; Daniela Campani; Audrey Rasmussen

Insulin-like growth factor-II (IGF-II) is a potent mitogen for a variety of cell types and is considered an important regulator of breast cancer growth. In this study, we analyzed IGF-II mRNA and protein expression in a series of 80 cases of invasive breast cancer. Seventy-five cases produced informative results for IGF-II mRNA expression, and were scored on an arbitrary scale. Two cases (2.6%) had no significant IGF-II mRNA expression. 35 cases (46.7%) expressed low levels of IGF-II mRNA, 20 cases (26.7%) moderate IGF-II mRNA, while 18 (24%) expressed high levels of IGF-II message. Generally, IGF-II mRNA was expressed in the smooth muscle walls of blood vessels and ducts, as well as in the stroma tightly adjacent to and surrounding tumor epithelium. IGF-II mRNA content was also directly related to the amount of the stroma within the tumor (p<0.05). In 10 cases (13.3%) IGF-II mRNA was detected in the stroma of normal lobules. Fifty-six out of 75 were positive for IGF-II immunostaining. Again, protein staining was generally observed in the smooth muscle of both blood vessels and ducts, as well as in the stroma surrounding tumor epithelium. In normal lobules and ducts the IGF-II protein was detected in the myoepithelium. Unequivocal IGF-II protein staining was seen in tumor epithelium in only three cases. The results of our study demonstrate that, in breast cancer, IGF-II mRNA is expressed in the smooth muscle and stromal components in the majority of invasive breast cancers. IGF-II expression correlates positively with the amount of stromal tissue present within a tumor. This suggests that IGF-II may have an important growth regulatory effect on breast tumor epithelium through paracrine pathways.


Transplant International | 2009

Conversion to everolimus monotherapy in maintenance liver transplantation: feasibility, safety, and impact on renal function.

Paolo De Simone; P Carrai; A Precisi; S Petruccelli; L Baldoni; E Balzano; J Ducci; Francesco Caneschi; L Coletti; Daniela Campani; Franco Filipponi

We present the 12‐month results of a prospective trial of conversion from calcineurin inhibitors (CNI) to everolimus (EVL) in maintenance liver transplant (LT) recipients. Forty (M:F = 28:12; 54.9 ± 11 years) patients were enrolled at a mean interval of 45.5 ± 31.2 months from transplantation. Conversion was with EVL at a dosage of 0.75 mg b.i.d., withdrawal of antimetabolites, and a 50%‐per‐week reduction of CNI to a complete stop within 4 weeks. The treatment success was conversion to EVL monotherapy at 12 months while failure was presence of CNI, death, and graft loss. Indication to conversion was deteriorating renal function in 36 (90%). At 12 months, patient‐ and graft survival were 100% and the success rate was 75% (30/40). Ten patients (25%) were failures: four (10%) for acute rejection; three hepatitis C virus‐RNA positive patients (7.5%) for hypertransaminasemia; one (2.5%) for acute cholangitis; and two (5%) due to persistent pruritus and oral ulcers. In patients on EVL monotherapy, at 12 months the mean change of calculated creatinine clearance (cCrCl) was 4.03 ± 12.6 mL/min and the only variable correlated with the probability of improvement was baseline cCrCl (P < 0.0001). Conversion from CNI to EVL is feasible in 75% of the cases and associated with improvement in renal function for patients with higher baseline cCrCl.


Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2012

Immunohistochemical analysis of myenteric ganglia and interstitial cells of Cajal in ulcerative colitis.

Nunzia Bernardini; Cristina Segnani; Chiara Ippolito; Roberto De Giorgio; Rocchina Colucci; Maria Simonetta Faussone-Pellegrini; Massimo Chiarugi; Daniela Campani; Maura Castagna; Letizia Mattii; Corrado Blandizzi; Amelio Dolfi

Ulcerative colitis (UC) is an inflammatory bowel disease with alterations of colonic motility, which influence clinical symptoms. Although morpho‐functional abnormalities in the enteric nervous system have been suggested, in UC patients scarce attention has been paid to possible changes in the cells that control colonic motility, including myenteric neurons, glial cells and interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC). This study evaluated the neural‐glial components of myenteric ganglia and ICC in the colonic neuromuscular compartment of UC patients by quantitative immunohistochemical analysis. Full‐thickness archival samples of the left colon were collected from 10 patients with UC (5 males, 5 females; age range 45–62 years) who underwent elective bowel resection. The colonic neuromuscular compartment was evaluated immunohistochemically in paraffin cross‐sections. The distribution and number of neurons, glial cells and ICC were assessed by anti‐HuC/D, ‐S100β and ‐c‐Kit antibodies, respectively. Data were compared with findings on archival samples of normal left colon from 10 sex‐ and age‐matched control patients, who underwent surgery for uncomplicated colon cancer. Compared to controls, patients with UC showed: (i) reduced density of myenteric HuC/D+ neurons and S100β+ glial cells, with a loss over 61% and 38%, respectively, and increased glial cell/neuron ratio; (ii) ICC decrease in the whole neuromuscular compartment. The quantitative variations of myenteric neuro‐glial cells and ICC indicate considerable alterations of the colonic neuromuscular compartment in the setting of mucosal inflammation associated with UC, and provide a morphological basis for better understanding the motor abnormalities often observed in UC patients.

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