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Dive into the research topics where Eleonora De Martin is active.

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Featured researches published by Eleonora De Martin.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2010

Practice guidelines for the treatment of hepatitis C: Recommendations from an AISF/SIMIT/SIMAST expert opinion meeting

Daniele Prati; Antonio Gasbarrini; Francesco Mazzotta; Evangelista Sagnelli; Giampiero Carosi; Nicola Abrescia; Alfredo Alberti; Silvia Ambu; P. Andreone; Angelo Andriulli; Mario Angelico; Giorgio Antonucci; Antonio Ascione; Luca Saverio Belli; Raffaele Bruno; Savino Bruno; Patrizia Burra; Calogero Cammà; N. Caporaso; Giuseppe Cariti; Umberto Cillo; Nicola Coppola; A. Craxì; Andrea De Luca; Eleonora De Martin; Vito Di Marco; S. Fagiuoli; Carlo Ferrari; Giovanni Battista Gaeta; Massimo Galli

It is increasingly clear that a tailored therapeutic approach to patients with hepatitis C virus infection is needed. Success rates in difficult to treat and low-responsive hepatitis C virus patients are not completely satisfactory, and there is the need to optimise treatment duration and intensity in patients with the highest likelihood of response. In addition, the management of special patient categories originally excluded from phase III registration trials needs to be critically re-evaluated. This article reports the recommendations for the treatment of hepatitis C virus infection on an individual basis, drafted by experts of three scientific societies.


Transplantation | 2010

Sexual Dysfunction in Chronic Liver Disease: Is Liver Transplantation an Effective Cure?

Patrizia Burra; G. Germani; A Masier; Eleonora De Martin; M. Gambato; Andrea Salonia; Patrizio Bo; A. Vitale; Umberto Cillo; Francesco Paolo Russo; Marco Senzolo

The goal of liver transplantation is not only to ensure patient long-term survival but also to offer the opportunity to achieve psychologic and physical integrity. Quality of life after liver transplantation may be affected by unsatisfactory sexual function. Before liver transplantation, sexual dysfunction and sex hormone disturbances are reported in men and women mainly due to abnormality of physiology of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis and, in some cases, origin of liver disease. Successful liver transplantation should theoretically restore hormonal balance and improve sexual function both in men and women, thus improving the reproductive performance. However, after transplantation, up to 25% of patients report persistent sexual dysfunction, and approximately one third of patients describe the appearance of de novo sexual dysfunction. Despite the described high prevalence of this condition, epidemiologic data are relatively scant. Further studies on pathophysiology and risk factors in the field of sexual function after liver transplantation along with new strategies to support and inform patients on the waiting list and after surgery are needed.


Liver Transplantation | 2013

Influence of Age and Gender Before and After Liver Transplantation

Patrizia Burra; Eleonora De Martin; Stefano Gitto; Erica Villa

Women constitute a particular group among patients with chronic liver disease and in the post–liver transplantation (LT) setting: they are set apart not only by traditional differences with respect to men (ie, body mass index, different etiologies of liver disease, and accessibility to transplantation) but also by factors related to hormonal changes that characterize first the fertile age and subsequently the postmenopausal period (eg, disease course variability and responses to therapy). The aim of this review is, therefore, to evaluate the role of the interplay of factors such as age, gender, and hormones in influencing the natural history of chronic liver disease before and after LT and their importance in determining outcomes after LT. As the population requiring LT ages and the mean age at transplantation increases, older females are being considered for transplantation. Older patients are at greater risk for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, osteoporosis, and a worse response to antiviral therapy. Female gender per se is associated with a greater risk for osteoporosis because of metabolic changes after menopause, the bodily structure of females, and, in the population of patients with chronic liver disease, the prevalence of cholestatic and autoimmune liver diseases. With menopause, the fall of protective estrogen levels can lead to increased fibrosis progression, and this represents a negative turning point for women with chronic liver disease and especially for patients with hepatitis C. Therefore, the notion of gender as a binary female/male factor is now giving way to the awareness of more complex disease processes within the female gender that follow hormonal, social, and age patterns and need to be addressed directly and specifically. Liver Transpl 19:122–134, 2013.


World journal of transplantation | 2014

Female gender in the setting of liver transplantation.

K.I. Rodriguez-Castro; Eleonora De Martin; M. Gambato; Silvia Lazzaro; Erica Villa; Patrizia Burra

The evolution of liver diseases to end-stage liver disease or to acute hepatic failure, the evaluation process for liver transplantation, the organ allocation decision-making, as well as the post-transplant outcomes are different between female and male genders. Womens access to liver transplantation is hampered by the use of model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) score, in which creatinine values exert a systematic bias against women due to their lower values even in the presence of variable degrees of renal dysfunction. Furthermore, even when correcting MELD score for gender-appropriate creatinine determination, a quantifiable uneven access to transplant prevails, demonstrating that other factors are also involved. While some of the differences can be explained from the epidemiological point of view, hormonal status plays an important role. Moreover, the pre-menopausal and post-menopausal stages imply profound differences in a womans physiology, including not only the passage from the fertile age to the non-fertile stage, but also the loss of estrogens and their potentially protective role in delaying liver fibrosis progression, amongst others. With menopause, the tendency to gain weight may contribute to the development of or worsening of pre-existing metabolic syndrome. As an increasing number of patients are transplanted for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, and as the average age at transplant increases, clinicians must be prepared for the management of this particular condition, especially in post-menopausal women, who are at particular risk of developing metabolic complications after menopause.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2012

Antiviral therapy and fibrosis progression in patients with mild-moderate hepatitis C recurrence after liver transplantation. A randomized controlled study.

L. Belli; Riccardo Volpes; Ivo Graziadei; S. Fagiuoli; Peter Starkel; Patrizia Burra; A. Alberti; Bruno Gridelli; Wolfgang Vogel; L. Pasulo; Eleonora De Martin; Maria Guido; Luciano De Carlis; Jan Lerut; Umberto Cillo; Andrew K. Burroughs; G. Pinzello

BACKGROUNDS/AIMS We evaluated the effect of antiviral therapy on fibrosis progression in patients with histological features of mild/moderate HCV disease recurrence defined by a Grading score≥4 and Staging score up to 3 (Ishak) at 1 year after liver transplantation. METHODS Seventy-three consecutive patients with mild/moderate recurrence were randomized either to no treatment or to receive Pegilated-Interferon-alfa-2b and ribavirin for 52 weeks. Liver biopsies obtained at baseline (1 year after transplantation) and 2 years afterwards were evaluated for assessment of disease progression, defined as worsening of at least 2 staging points or progression to stage 4 or higher. RESULTS As for these two major histological end points there were no statistically significant differences between the 2 groups (36.1% vs. 50%, p=0.34 and 36.1% vs. 38.9%, p=1). Fifteen treated patients (41%) achieved a sustained virological response which was associated with a reduced risk of fibrosis worsening for both endpoints when compared to viremic patients (p=0.04). CONCLUSIONS Although antiviral-therapy was beneficial in preventing fibrosis progression in patients achieving a sustained virological response, the majority of the overall population of our patients with mild-moderate disease recurrence could not benefit from antiviral therapy either because they either could not be treated or did not respond to treatment (EudraCT number: 2005-005760).


Transplant International | 2012

Treatment of hepatitis C recurrence is less successful in female than in male liver transplant recipients

V. Giannelli; M. Giusto; Alessio Farcomeni; Francesca Romana Ponziani; Maurizio Pompili; R. Viganò; R.M. Iemmolo; Maria Francesca Donato; M. Rendina; Pierluigi Toniutto; L. Pasulo; Maria Cristina Morelli; Eleonora De Martin; L. Miglioresi; Daniele Di Paolo; S. Fagiuoli; M. Merli

It has been recently suggested that the risk of graft loss after liver transplantation (LT) may increase in female HCV patients. The aim of the study was to examine gender differences in HCV therapy tolerance and outcome in LT patients treated for HCV recurrence. A retrospective study was conducted on liver recipients with HCV recurrence, who were given antiviral therapy from 2001 to 2009 in 12 transplant centers in Italy. Sustained virological response (SVR), adherence‐to‐therapy, and side effects were evaluated. A multivariate logistic regression model was used after adjusting for possible confounders. The data regarding 342 treated patients were analyzed. SVR was reported in 38.8% of patients. At baseline, male and female did not differ in HCV viral load, histology, or rate of diabetes. SVR was lower in females than in males (29.5% vs. 42.1%; P = 0.03). Adherence‐to‐therapy was also lower in females than in males 43.4% vs. 23.8%; P = 0.001); anemia was the main reason for lower adherence. In a multivariate analysis in patients Genotype 1, female gender (P < 0.04), early virological response (P < 0.0001), and adherence to therapy (P < 0.0001) were independent predictors for SVR. In conclusion, female gender represents an independent negative prognostic factor for the outcome of HCV antiviral therapy after LT.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2015

Recipient female gender is a risk factor for graft loss after liver transplantation for chronic hepatitis C: Evidence from the prospective Liver Match cohort.

L. Belli; Renato Romagnoli; A. Nardi; T. Marianelli; F. Donato; Stefano Ginanni Corradini; R.M. Iemmolo; Cristina Morelli; Luisa Pasulo; M. Rendina; Eleonora De Martin; Francesca Romana Ponziani; Riccardo Volpes; Mario Strazzabosco; Mario Angelico

BACKGROUND Female gender has been reported to be a risk factor for graft loss after liver transplantation for hepatitis C virus (HCV)-related cirrhosis but evidence is limited to retrospective studies. AIMS To investigate the impact of recipient gender and donor/recipient gender mismatch on graft outcome. METHODS We performed a survival analysis of a cohort of 1530 first adult transplants enrolled consecutively in Italy between 2007 and 2009 and followed prospectively. After excluding possible confounding factors (fulminant hepatitis, human immunodeficiency virus co-infection, non-viremic anti-HCV positive subjects), a total of 1394 transplant recipients (604 HCV-positive and 790 HCV-negative) were included. RESULTS Five-year graft survival was significantly reduced in HCV-positive patients (64% vs 76%, p=0.0002); Cox analysis identified recipient female gender (HR=1.44, 95% CI 1.03-2.00, p=0.0319), Mayo clinic End stage Liver Disease score (every 10 units, HR=1.25, 95% CI 1.03-1.50; p=0.022), portal thrombosis (HR=2.40, 95% CI 1.20-4.79, p=0.0134) and donor age (every 10 years, HR=1.14, 95% CI 1.05-1.24, p=0.0024) as independent determinants of graft loss. All additional mortality observed among female recipients was attributable to severe HCV recurrence. CONCLUSIONS This study unequivocally shows that recipient female gender unfavourably affects the outcome of HCV-infected liver grafts.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2013

Interaction between calcineurin inhibitors and IL-28B rs12979860 C>T polymorphism and response to treatment for post-transplant recurrent hepatitis C

Davide Bitetto; Tullia Maria De Feo; M. Mantovani; Edmondo Falleti; Carlo Fabris; L. Belli; S. Fagiuoli; Patrizia Burra; Giuseppe Piccolo; M.F. Donato; Pierluigi Toniutto; S. Cmet; A. Cussigh; R. Viganò; Aldo Airoldi; Luisa Pasulo; Maria Colpanij; Eleonora De Martin; M. Gambato; C. Rigamonti

BACKGROUND The impact of calcineurin inhibitors on achievement of sustained virological response to antiviral therapy for post-transplant recurrent hepatitis C is controversial. This study aimed at investigating the interactions between calcineurin inhibitors and interleukin-28B (IL-28B) gene polymorphisms and sustained virological response. METHODS Retrospective study of 147 liver transplant recipients with recurrent hepatitis C, who received 48 weeks of peg-interferon-α (N=113) or standard interferon (N=34), in association with ribavirin. Cyclosporine and tacrolimus were administered in 68 and 79 patients, respectively. IL-28B rs12979860 allele frequency was assessed in both donors and recipients. RESULTS Overall, 57 patients (38.8%) obtained sustained virological response; no difference was found between cyclosporine and tacrolimus-treated patients (42.6% vs. 35.4%, p=0.371). Recipient and donor IL-28B genotypic frequencies were C/C=30.6%, C/T=51.7%, T/T=17.7% and C/C=44.9%, C/T=50.3%, T/T=4.8%, respectively. Combining donor and recipient alleles, response rates decreased from cyclosporine-treated patients carrying ≤ 1 T allele (56.1%) to tacrolimus-treated patients carrying ≤ 1 T allele (44.7%) to patients carrying ≥ 2 T alleles (25.0%, p=0.0009). CONCLUSIONS Donor and recipient rs12979860 alleles synergistically influence sustained virological response rate to antiviral treatment for recurrent hepatitis C. In patients carrying <2 T alleles cyclosporine favours a better response than tacrolimus, while no difference was found in the presence of ≥ 2 T alleles.


Transplant International | 2016

Hepatitis C virus and liver transplantation: where do we stand?

Patrizia Burra; Eleonora De Martin; A. Zanetto; Marco Senzolo; Francesco Paolo Russo; Giacomo Zanus; S. Fagiuoli

The hepatitis C virus (HCV) infects more than 180 million people globally, with increasing incidence, especially in developing countries. HCV infection frequently progresses to liver cirrhosis leading to liver transplantation or death, and HCV recurrence still constitutes a major challenge for the transplant team. Antiviral therapy is the only available instrument to slow down this process, although its actual impact on liver histology, in responders and nonresponders, is still controversial. We are now facing a “new era” of direct antiviral agents that is already changing the approach to HCV burden both in the pre‐ and in the post‐liver transplantation settings. Available data on sofosbuvir/ledipasvir and sofosbuvir/simeprevir in patients with decompensated cirrhosis sustain a SVR12 of 89% , but one‐third of patients do not clinically improved. The sofosbuvir/ribavirin treatment in stable cirrhotic patients with HCC before liver transplantation is associated with 2% recurrence rate if liver transplantation is performed at least one month after undetectable HCV‐RNA is achieved. The treatment of recurrence with the new antiviral drugs is associated with a SVR that ranges between 60 and 90%. In this review, we have focused on the evolution of antiviral therapy for HCV recurrence from the “old” interferon‐based therapy to the “new” interferon‐free regimens, highlighting useful information to aid the transplant hepatologist in the clinical practice.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2016

AISF position paper on liver transplantation and pregnancy: Women in Hepatology Group, Italian Association for the Study of the Liver (AISF)

Anna Alisi; Clara Balsano; Veronica Bernabucci; Annalisa Berzigotti; Maurizia Rossana Brunetto; Elisabetta Bugianesi; Patrizia Burra; V. Calvaruso; Elisabetta Cariani; B. Coco; Isabelle Colle; Rosina Critelli; Eleonora De Martin; Mariagrazia Del Buono; Isabel Fabregat; Francesca Faillaci; Giovanna Fattovich; Annarosa Floreani; Guadalupe Garcia-Tsao; Chantal Housset; Aimilia Karampatou; Barbara Lei; Alessandra Mangia; María Luz Martínez-Chantar; Fabiola Milosa; F. Morisco; Paola Nasta; Tomris Ozben; Teresa Pollicino; Maria Laura Ponti

After the first successful pregnancy in a liver transplant recipient in 1978, much evidence has accumulated on the course, outcomes and management strategies of pregnancy following liver transplantation. Generally, liver transplantation restores sexual function and fertility as early as a few months after transplant. Considering that one third of all liver transplant recipients are women, that approximately one-third of them are of reproductive age (18-49 years), and that 15% of female liver transplant recipients are paediatric patients who have a >70% probability of reaching reproductive age, the issue of pregnancy after liver transplantation is rather relevant, and obstetricians, paediatricians, and transplant hepatologists ever more frequently encounter such patients. Pregnancy outcomes for both the mother and infant in liver transplant recipients are generally good, but there is an increased incidence of preterm delivery, hypertension/preeclampsia, foetal growth restriction, and gestational diabetes, which, by definition, render pregnancy in liver transplant recipients a high-risk one. In contrast, the risk of congenital anomalies and the live birth rate are comparable to those of the general population. Currently there are still no robust guidelines on the management of pregnancies after liver transplantation. The aim of this position paper is to review the available evidence on pregnancy in liver transplant recipients and to provide national Italian recommendations for clinicians caring for these patients.

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Antonio Gasbarrini

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Maurizio Pompili

Sapienza University of Rome

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