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Featured researches published by Eleni Plata.


Blood | 2010

The effect of prolonged administration of hydroxyurea on morbidity and mortality in adult patients with sickle cell syndromes: results of a 17-year, single-center trial (LaSHS)

Ersi Voskaridou; Dimitrios Christoulas; Antonios Bilalis; Eleni Plata; Konstantinos Varvagiannis; George Stamatopoulos; Klio Sinopoulou; Aggeliki Balassopoulou; Dimitris Loukopoulos; Evangelos Terpos

The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of hydroxyurea (HU) in patients with sickle cell disease (SCD). Thirty-four patients with sickle cell anemia (hemoglobin S [HbS]/HbS), 131 with HbS/beta(0)-thal, and 165 with HbS/beta(+)-thal participated in this trial. HU was administered to 131 patients, whereas 199 patients were conventionally treated. The median follow-up period was 8 years for HU patients and 5 years for non-HU patients. HU produced a dramatic reduction in the frequency of severe painful crises, transfusion requirements, hospital admissions, and incidence of acute chest syndrome. The probability of 10-year survival was 86% and 65% for HU and non-HU patients, respectively (P = .001), although HU patients had more severe forms of SCD. The 10-year probability of survival for HbS/HbS, HbS/beta (0)-thal, and HbS/IVSI-110 patients was 100%, 87%, and 82%, respectively, for HU patients and 10%, 54%, and 66%, for non-HU patients. The multivariate analysis showed that fetal hemoglobin values at baseline and percentage change of lactate dehydrogenase between baseline and 6 months were independently predicted for survival in the HU group. These results highlight the beneficial effect of HU, which seems to modify the natural history of SCD and raise the issue of expanding its use in all SCD patients.


Oncologist | 2013

Treatment of Splenic Marginal Zone Lymphoma With Rituximab Monotherapy: Progress Report and Comparison With Splenectomy

Christina Kalpadakis; Gerassimos A. Pangalis; Maria K. Angelopoulou; Sotirios Sachanas; Flora N. Kontopidou; Xanthi Yiakoumis; Stella I. Kokoris; Evagelia M. Dimitriadou; Maria N. Dimopoulou; Maria Moschogiannis; Penelope Korkolopoulou; Marie-Christine Kyrtsonis; Marina P. Siakantaris; Theodora Papadaki; Panayiotis Tsaftaridis; Eleni Plata; Helen E. Papadaki; Theodoros P. Vassilakopoulos

BACKGROUND Treatment of splenic marginal zone lymphoma (SMZL) patients is not standardized. Recent data suggest that rituximab is highly effective and could be considered as initial therapy. AIM To assess the efficacy of rituximab monotherapy in a large series of patients with SMZL and compare these results with splenectomy results. METHODS The studied population included 85 patients. Fifty-eight received rituximab at a dose of 375 mg/m2 per week for 6 weeks as induction followed by maintenance at the same dose every 2 months for 1-2 years, whereas 27 patients were treated using splenectomy only. RESULTS The overall response rate to rituximab 2 months after the end of induction was 95% (complete response [CR], 45%; unconfirmed CR, 26%; partial response, 24%). The median times to hematologic and clinical response were 2 weeks and 3 weeks, respectively. Forty-three of 55 patients already completed the maintenance phase: 28 sustained their initial response, 14 improved their response, and one progressed. Eighty-five percent of splenectomized patients responded, and two were treated with rituximab as consolidation after splenectomy and achieved a CR. The 5-year overall and progression-free survival (PFS) rates for rituximab-treated and splenectomized patients were 92% and 77% (p = .09) and 73% and 58% (p = .06), respectively. Furthermore, maintenance therapy with rituximab resulted in a longer duration of response (at 5 years, PFS was 84% for patients receiving maintenance and 36% for patients without maintenance, p <.0001). CONCLUSIONS Rituximab is a very effective and well-tolerated therapy and may be substituted for splenectomy as the first-line treatment of choice for patients with SMZL.


British Journal of Haematology | 2010

Treatment with deferasirox (Exjade®) effectively decreases iron burden in patients with thalassaemia intermedia: results of a pilot study

Ersi Voskaridou; Eleni Plata; Maroussa Douskou; Manousos Papadakis; Eleni-Evangelia Delaki; Dimitrios Christoulas; Evangelos Terpos

Iron loading in thalassaemia intermedia (TI) occurs primarily due to increased intestinal iron absorption secondary to chronic anaemia and is further exacerbated by intermittent blood transfusion therapy. In contrast to thalassaemia major (TM) the evaluation of body iron based on serum ferritin alone may underestimate the severity of iron overload in TI (Pakbaz et al, 2007). Therefore, direct assessment of liver iron concentration (LIC) by either biopsy or non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is recommended (Jensen, 2004). Relatively few studies have evaluated the efficacy, safety and dosing regimen of iron chelation therapy specifically in TI (Cossu et al, 1981; Olivieri et al, 1992). Deferasirox (Exjade ) is a once-daily orally administered iron chelator approved for the treatment of transfusional iron overload in various anaemias (Cappellini et al, 2006). The aim of this preliminary, open-label, prospective, single-centre trial was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of deferasirox in sporadically transfused, iron-overloaded patients with TI. Adult male or female patients who had received sporadic red blood cell (RBC) transfusions (£20 RBC units in their lifetime) and had confirmed liver or cardiac iron overload (serum ferritin levels of ‡1000 lg/l, liver MRI T2* of <25 ms or cardiac T2* of <28 ms) were included in this study. Patients were excluded if they were pregnant, showed signs of hepatic failure (transaminase levels of >500 U/l) or renal failure (creatinine clearance <60 ml/min) or had a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of <50%. The starting deferasirox dose was 10 or 20 mg/kg per day depending on baseline iron burden. Dose adjustments were permitted after 3 months (in increments of 5 mg/kg per day every 3 months as required) based on serum ferritin trends (rises of ‡1000 lg/l on 2 visits or >2500 lg/l without decreasing trend) and reduced for elevated levels of creatinine, urinary protein/creatinine ratio and transaminases, and in response to adverse events. Patients provided written, informed consent before entering the study. The study was conducted in accordance with Good Clinical Practice guidelines and the Declaration of Helsinki. The primary efficacy endpoint was the improvement in MRI T2* values in the liver and the heart from baseline after 12 months of deferasirox therapy. The secondary efficacy endpoints included evaluation of changes in serum ferritin,


Hemoglobin | 2008

Carrier Screening and Prenatal Diagnosis of Hemoglobinopathies. A Study of Indigenous and Immigrant Couples in Northern Greece, Over the Last 5 Years

S. Theodoridou; Michael Alemayehou; Nikolaos Prappas; Olga Karakasidou; Vasiliki Aletra; Eleni Plata; Panagiotis Tsaftaridis; Photini Karababa; Marina Boussiou; Klio Sinopoulou; Anna Hatzi; Ersi Voskaridou; Afroditi Loutradi; Anna Manitsa

Hemoglobinopathies constitute the most frequent monogenic disorders worldwide and thalassemias are the most frequent genetic disorders in Greece. Over a 5-year period (2002–2006), 1,375 couples were screened for hemoglobinopathies and counseled at our Thalassaemia Prevention Unit, Hippokration Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece. In 148 cases (10.7%), both partners carried an abnormal hemoglobin (Hb) gene and genetic counseling was offered. One hundred out of 116 pregnancies were at-risk of giving birth to an offspring carrying either the homozygous or double heterozygous forms of the mutations under discussion. The remaining 16 pregnancies involved couples who were heterozygous for mutations that did not cause severe clinical disease, and were exempted from prenatal diagnosis. Twenty-six fetuses were found to be homozygotes or double heterozygotes for clinically significant mutations. These couples were informed of the danger of having an affected child but the termination or continuation of the pregnancy was left to the couples to decide. Nevertheless, all the couples preferred to terminate the pregnancies. The National Thalassaemia Prevention Programme has effectively decreased the incidence of thalassemia major and sickle cell syndromes in Greece.


European Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology | 1991

Alpha interferon treatment of essential thrombocythaemia and other myeloproliferative disorders with excessive thrombocytosis

Xenophon Yataganas; John Meletis; Eleni Plata; Nora Viniou; Filippos Deligiannis; Christina Tsekoura; Ersi Voscaridou; Viki A. Boussiotis; John Rombos; Georges Vayopoulos; Christos Kittas; Phaedon Fessas

The effect of recombinant interferon alfa-2b on platelet count, thrombocytosis-associated symptoms and marrow fibrosis was studied in 18 patients with myeloproliferative diseases and associated thrombocytosis (nine with essential thrombocythaemia, three with polycythaemia vera, three with myelofibrosis and three with chronic myelogenous leukaemia). A reduction of the platelet count below 600 x 10(9)/L was achieved in 94%, and below 400 x 10(9)/L in 77% of the patients within 8 to 330 days of treatment. The selective thrombocytosis-reducing effect of alpha interferon was maintained for long periods of time in most patients without serious side effects. Thrombocytosis-associated symptoms were relieved once the number of platelets was reduced to near normal levels. Marrow reticulin content was found to be reduced after treatment in two of the seven patients studied. Side effects of alpha interferon were flu-like symptoms, which usually subsided within 7 days of treatment.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 1999

Cytogenetic analysis and RAS mutations in primary myelodysplastic syndromes.

Eleni Plata; Nora Viniou; Danai Abazis; Kostas Konstantopoulos; Constantinos Troungos; George Vaiopoulos; John Meletis; Christos Kittas; Constantinos Pangalos; Xenophon Yataganas

Cytogenetic analysis was performed in 60 patients with primary myelodysplastic syndromes--diagnosed, treated, and followed in our department. In 41 cases, the presence of the NRAS mutation was also evaluated. The aim of this study was to evaluate the prognostic value of chromosomal abnormalities and NRAS mutation. The median age of the patients was 67 years (18-88 years), and the French-American-British classification was as follows: refractory anemia 26, refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts 4, refractory anemia with excess of blast cells 15, refractory anemia with excess of blast cells in transformation 3, and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia 12. Survival analysis was performed for the patients with a normal (n = 35), an abnormal (n = 25) karyotype and with a single (n = 15) or multiple (n = 10) cytogenetic abnormalities. Abnormal karyotypes were detected in 25 of the 60 patients (41.6%). Fifteen of these patients had a single and 10 had two or more lesions. The median survival of the patients with a normal (33.1 months) and with an abnormal (36.5 months) karyotype was not significantly different. Patients with multiple lesions had a reduced median survival compared with patients with single anomalies (19.2 versus 39.7 months, p = 0.5). Patients with an abnormal karyotype progressed to acute leukemia more frequently compared with patients without lesions (36 versus 28.6%, p = 0.5). NRAS mutation was detected in 2 of 10 CMMoL patients studied and in none of the 31 patients with other types of myelodysplastic syndrome. Marrow blasts more than 10% significantly affected survival.


Oncologist | 2016

Prognostic Implication of the Absolute Lymphocyte to Absolute Monocyte Count Ratio in Patients With Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma Treated With Doxorubicin, Bleomycin, Vinblastine, and Dacarbazine or Equivalent Regimens

Theodoros P. Vassilakopoulos; Maria N. Dimopoulou; Maria K. Angelopoulou; Kyriaki Petevi; Gerassimos A. Pangalis; Maria Moschogiannis; Maria Dimou; George Boutsikas; Alexandros Kanellopoulos; Gabriella Gainaru; Eleni Plata; Pagona Flevari; Katerina Koutsi; Loula Papageorgiou; Vassilios Telonis; Panayiotis Tsaftaridis; Sotirios Sachanas; Xanthoula Yiakoumis; Pantelis Tsirkinidis; Nora-Athina Viniou; Marina P. Siakantaris; Eleni Variami; Marie-Christine Kyrtsonis; John Meletis; Panayiotis Panayiotidis; Konstas Konstantopoulos

Low absolute lymphocyte count (ALC) to absolute monocyte count (AMC) ratio (ALC/AMC) is an independent prognostic factor in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), but different cutoffs (1.1, 1.5, and 2.9) have been applied. We aimed to validate the prognostic significance of ALC/AMC in 537 homogenously treated (doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine or equivalents ± radiotherapy) classical HL patients at various cutoffs. The median ALC/AMC was 2.24 (0.44-20.50). The median AMC was 0.653 × 10(9)/L (0.050-2.070). Lower ALC/AMC was associated with established markers of adverse prognosis. In total, 477 (89%), 418 (78%), and 189 (35%) patients had an ALC/AMC ratio of ≥1.1, ≥1.5, and ≥2.9; respectively; 20% had monocytosis (≥0.9 × 10(9)/L). Ten-year time to progression (TTP) was 77% versus 55% for patients with ALC/AMC ≥1.1 and <1.1 (p = .0002), 76% versus 68% for ALC/AMC ≥1.5 and <1.5 (p = .049), 77% versus 73% for ALC/AMC ≥2.9 and <2.9 (p = .35), and 79% versus 70% for ALC/AMC ≥2.24 and <2.24 (p = .08), respectively. In stages ΙΑ/ΙΙΑ and in patients ≥60 years old, ALC/AMC had no significant effect on TTP. In advanced stages, ALC/AMC was significant only at the cutoff of 1.1 (10-year TTP 67% vs. 48%; p = .016). In younger, advanced-stage patients, the differences were more pronounced. In multivariate analysis of TTP, ALC/AMC < 1.1 (p = .007) and stage IV (p < .001) were independent prognostic factors; ALC/AMC was independent of International Prognostic Score in another model. ALC/AMC was more predictive of overall survival than TTP. At the cutoff of 1.1, ALC/AMC had independent prognostic value in multivariate analysis. However, the prognostically inferior group comprised only 11% of patients. Further research is needed prior to the widespread use of this promising marker.


Annals of Hematology | 2000

Flow-cytometric detection of minimal residual disease with atypical antigen combinations in patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia.

Eleni Plata; H. Choremi-Papadopoulou; V. Viglis; Xenophon Yataganas

Abstract The immunophenotypic features in adult de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients at diagnosis using flow cytometry double marker analysis and the detection of minimal residual disease with atypical leukemia-associated antigen combinations during remission were investigated. Fifty adult patients with de novo AML at diagnosis were studied. Bone marrow samples from 21 patients with AML were analyzed upon achievement of complete remission and during continuous complete remission. Ten bone marrow samples of normal donors were also studied. CD34/CD13, CD34/CD33, CD33/CD7, CD33/CD10, CD33/CD19 and CD33/TdT are the leukemia-associated antigen combinations used for the detection of minimal residual disease. The outcome of 19 patients has been evaluated. Of these 19 patients, 10 were found to be in immunophenotypic remission (median follow-up after the study: 837 days, range 620–1343 days). Only one patient in this group has relapsed so far. In the other nine patients residual disease was detected. Seven of these patients developed systemic relapse following a median follow-up time of 86 days after the study (range 34–273 days), one received allogeneic bone marrow transplantation 70 days after the study, and another has been in complete remission and off chemotherapy for 36 months. The presence of cells with atypical antigen combinations identified at diagnosis in certain patients is valuable for monitoring the disease in remission. The persistence of such a population in remission has indicated the impending relapse in this study.


Annals of Hematology | 1996

Development of plasma cell tumors during treatment of multiple myeloma

George Vaiopoulos; Nora-Athina Viniou; Eleni Plata; Konstantinos Konstantopoulos; Anastasios Andreopoulos; Yannis Rombos; John Meletis; Dimitrios Loukopoulos; Xenophon Yataganas

Plasma cell tumors (plasmacytomas-PCT) of the bone, or extramedullary PCT, may be diagnosed in patients with or without the diagnostic criteria for systemic multiple myeloma (MM). The reason for the local development of these tumors is not clear. Recent reports emphasize the contribution of CT and MRI in the detection of bone lesions and their expansion into the soft tissues. We report the development of PCT in nine patients with MM under maintenance treatment with α-IFN, of whom six had no evidence of systemic relapse and three had indications of early relapse. The PCT were located in the pelvis (4), thoracic (3), cervical (1), and lumbar (2) spine and in 8/9 cases were not demonstrable on plain X-rays. These observations suggest that frequent screening with advanced imaging techniques may detect local disease expansion in asymptomatic patients. Early application of radiochemotherapy may improve prognosis.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 1996

Trisomy 11 with loss of the Y chromosome and trisomy 13 in a case of de novo acute myeloid leukemia.

John Meletis; Michalis Samarkos; Danae Abazis; Evi Michali; Stathis Vavourakis; Eleni Plata; John Rombos; Kostas Konstantopoulos; Konstantinos Pangalos; Xenophon Yataganas; Dimitris Loukopoulos

We report a man with de novo acute myeloid leukemia (M4 of the FAB classification) bearing two abnormal clones in the bone marrow cells. The clones showed trisomy 11 with loss of the Y chromosome and trisomy 13, respectively.

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Maria K. Angelopoulou

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Maria N. Dimopoulou

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Theodoros P. Vassilakopoulos

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Ersi Voskaridou

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Evangelos Terpos

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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John Meletis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Dimitrios Christoulas

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Marie-Christine Kyrtsonis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Marina P. Siakantaris

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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