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Dive into the research topics where Elisa Bacillo is active.

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Featured researches published by Elisa Bacillo.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Thymidylate Synthase But Not Excision Repair Cross-Complementation Group 1 Tumor Expression Predicts Outcome in Patients With Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma Treated With Pemetrexed-Based Chemotherapy

Luisella Righi; Mauro Papotti; Paolo Ceppi; Andrea Billè; Elisa Bacillo; Luca Molinaro; Enrico Ruffini; Giorgio V. Scagliotti; Giovanni Selvaggi

PURPOSE The relationship between thymidylate synthase (TS) expression and outcome in patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) treated with pemetrexed (P) was retrospectively evaluated. PATIENTS AND METHODS Sixty histologically confirmed patients with MPM previously treated with P and platinum (45 of 60) or as single agent (15 of 60) were retrospectively considered. Eighty-one control patients with MPM not P-treated were also evaluated. TS and excision repair cross-complementation group 1 (ERCC1) gene expression levels were evaluated by real-time polymerase chain reaction and by immunohistochemistry using the H-score. RESULTS Median TS H-score value was 90 (range, 5 to 240). A significant correlation between low TS protein expression and longer time to progression (TTP; 17.9 v 7.9 months; hazard ratio [HR], 2.05, 95% CI, 1.19 to 3.77; P = .02) or overall survival (OS; 30 v 16.7 months; HR, 2.38; 95% CI, 1.15 to 4.91; P = .019) was found when patients were divided according to median H-score. Conversely, TS mRNA levels were not significantly correlated with outcome. In platinum-treated patients (n = 45), no correlation was found with survival according to ERCC1 median H-score, but patients in the lower tertile had a significantly shorter survival (HR, 3.06; 95% CI, 1.08 to 8.69; P = .035). In control MPMs, TS had no prognostic role. At multivariate analysis, TS protein levels were the only independent prognostic factor for both TTP (HR, 2.71; 95% CI, 1.13 to 6.49; P = .02) and OS (HR, 6.91; 95% CI, 1.90 to 25.07; P = .003). CONCLUSION In patients with MPM treated with P-based chemotherapy, low TS protein levels are predictive of improved TTP and OS. The role of TS assessment is worth of prospective validation in future studies on MPM.


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2009

Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Gene in Primary Tumor and Metastatic Sites from Non-small Cell Lung Cancer

Lorenzo Daniele; Paola Cassoni; Elisa Bacillo; Susanna Cappia; Luisella Righi; Marco Volante; Fabrizio Tondat; Giorgio Inghirami; Anna Sapino; Giorgio V. Scagliotti; Mauro Papotti; Silvia Novello

Introduction: The majority of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) develop distant metastases. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitors are capable of reducing brain and adrenal metastases. However, the EGFR status may be discordant between primary NSCLC and the corresponding metastases. Methods: Using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis, the EGFR gene status was evaluated in a series of 38 cerebral or adrenal metastases collected from two institutions and in the corresponding primary tumors. Also, EGFR mutational analysis was performed using direct sequencing on the cerebral metastases. Results: EGFR FISH was positive in 28% of the primary tumors and in 45% of the metastases (p < 0.05). Among the seven cases FISH-positive at the metastatic site but negative in the primary tumor, six were brain metastases, and one was an adrenal metastasis; all were polysomic for chromosome 7, none were amplified. No EGFR mutations have been found in the cerebral metastases. Conclusion: Because the molecular asset of EGFR may change during the metastatic progression of NSCLC to brain (but not to adrenal), the selection of patients with brain metastasis for specific targeted therapies by EGFR FISH analysis should be performed on metastatic lesions rather than on their corresponding primary tumors.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2006

Bone Sialoprotein Is Predictive of Bone Metastases in Resectable Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer: A Retrospective Case-Control Study

Mauro Papotti; Thea Kalebic; Marco Volante; Luigi Chiusa; Elisa Bacillo; Susanna Cappia; Paolo Olivo Lausi; Silvia Novello; Piero Borasio; Giorgio V. Scagliotti

PURPOSE Bone metastases (BM) in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) may be detected at diagnosis or during the course of the disease, and are associated with a worse prognosis. Currently, there are no predictive or diagnostic markers to identify high-risk patients for metastatic bone dissemination. PATIENTS AND METHODS Thirty patients with resected NSCLC who subsequently developed BM were matched for clinicopathologic parameters to 30 control patients with resected NSCLC without any metastases and 26 patients with resected NSCLC and non-BM lesions. Primary tumors were investigated by immunohistochemistry for 10 markers involved in bone resorption or development of metastases. Differences among groups were estimated by chi2 test, whereas the prognostic impact of clinicopathologic parameters and marker expression was evaluated by univariate (Wilcoxon and Mantel-Cox tests) and multivariate (Cox proportional hazards regression model) analyses. RESULTS The presence of bone sialoprotein (BSP) was strongly associated with bone dissemination (P < .001) and, independently, with worse outcome (P = .02, Mantel-Cox test), as defined by overall survival. To evaluate BSP protein expression in nonselected NSCLC, a series of 120 consecutive resected lung carcinomas was added to the study, and BSP prevalence reached 40%. No other markers showed a statistically significant difference among the three groups or demonstrated a prognostic impact, in terms of both overall survival and time interval to metastases. CONCLUSION BSP protein expression in the primary resected NSCLC is strongly associated with BM progression and could be useful in identifying high-risk patients who could benefit from novel modalities of surveillance and preventive treatment.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2008

Prognostic role of osteopontin expression in malignant pleural mesothelioma.

Susanna Cappia; Luisella Righi; Dario Mirabelli; Paolo Ceppi; Elisa Bacillo; Francesco Ardissone; Luca Molinaro; Giorgio V. Scagliotti; Mauro Papotti

Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) represents highly aggressive neoplasms with a mean survival of approximately 10 months. Osteopontin, a glycoprotein involved in cell-matrix interactions correlated with invasion and metastatic spread in several tumors, has recently been proposed as a serum marker of MPM in asbestos-exposed subjects. The aim of this study was to define the prognostic role of osteopontin in MPM. For the study, 32 long-term survivors (>24 months) and a random sample of 69 short-term survivors (<or=24 months) were matched according to the main clinicopathologic features. Immunohistochemical osteopontin expression in tissue specimens was quantified through the HScore (histologic scoring) method and correlated with clinicopathologic parameters and survival. Osteopontin expression was significantly lower in long-term compared with short-term survivors (P< .0001), and overall survival analysis showed that low osteopontin expression was associated with longer survival; multivariate analysis confirmed the value of osteopontin expression as an independent prognostic factor (P< .0001).


Modern Pathology | 2008

Human ASH1 expression in prostate cancer with neuroendocrine differentiation

Ida Rapa; Paolo Ceppi; Enrico Bollito; Rosj Rosas; Susanna Cappia; Elisa Bacillo; Francesco Porpiglia; Alfredo Berruti; Mauro Papotti; Marco Volante

Neuroendocrine differentiation in prostate cancer correlates with overall prognosis and disease progression after androgen-deprivation therapy, although its specific mechanisms are currently poorly understood. A role of Notch pathway has been reported in determining neuroendocrine phenotype of normal and neoplastic tissues. The aim of this study was to analyze whether this pathway might affect neuroendocrine differentiation in prostate cancer. Human achaete-scute homolog 1 (hASH1), a pivotal member of the Notch pathway, was investigated in 80 prostate cancers selected and grouped according to chromogranin A immunohistochemistry, as follows: prostate cancers without neuroendocrine differentiation, untreated (25 cases); prostate cancers with neuroendocrine differentiation, untreated (40 cases); prostate cancers with previous androgen-deprivation therapy, all having neuroendocrine differentiation (15 cases). Human ASH1 protein was analyzed by immunohistochemistry, whereas the presence of hASH1 mRNA transcripts was investigated on paraffin material by real-time PCR. By immunohistochemistry, hASH1 was colocalized with chromogranin A in neuroendocrine cells of normal prostatic gland. It was absent in all but one prostate cancers without neuroendocrine differentiation, whereas it was positive in 25% of prostate cancers with neuroendocrine differentiation/untreated, with a significant correlation with the extent of neuroendocrine features (P=0.02). Moreover, comparing untreated and treated prostate cancers with neuroendocrine differentiation, a positive association with androgen-deprivation therapy was observed (P=0.01). In prostate cancers with neuroendocrine differentiation, RNA analysis confirmed the association of higher transcript levels in androgen deprivation-treated compared with untreated patients (P=0.01). In addition, hASH1 mRNA analysis in microdissected chromogranin A-positive and chromogranin A-negative areas within the same tumor demonstrated a two- to sevenfold increase of hASH1 mRNA expression in chromogranin A-positive tumor cell populations.


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2008

Excision Repair Cross Complementing-1 and Topoisomerase IIα Gene Expression in Small-Cell Lung Cancer Patients Treated with Platinum and Etoposide: A Retrospective Study

Paolo Ceppi; Marina Longo; Marco Volante; Silvia Novello; Susanna Cappia; Elisa Bacillo; Giovanni Selvaggi; Silvia Saviozzi; Raffaele Calogero; Mauro Papotti; Giorgio V. Scagliotti

Hypothesis: Aim of the study was to quantify ERCC1, RRM1, and TopoII&agr; mRNA expression profile as predictive factors for response and survival in SCLC patients treated with platinum/etoposide. Methods: Total RNA was extracted from microdissected sections of 103 formalin-fixed, paraffin embedded biopsies. Relative quantification was performed by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using intron-spanning probes. Results: Eighty-five samples (83%) were successfully amplified. Median overall survival (OS) was 9.9 months; 45 patients had limited disease (LD) (OS = 13.1) and 40 had extensive disease (ED) (OS = 7.1). Fifty-six (65%) patients had an objective response to treatment. A gene expression was detectable in all samples and a correlation between ERCC1 and RRM1 (Rs = 0.34, p = 0.0011) was found. According to response to treatment, it was found that lower TopoII&agr; expression was associated to a better response in LD patients (p = 0.025) and, more interestingly, those who had a complete response had lower TopoII&agr; than both partial and nonresponsive patients (p = 0.015). At univariate analysis LD patients with low ERCC1 had significantly longer survival (median survival 14.9 versus 9.9, p = 0.012), whereas RRM1 and TopoII&agr; levels showed no influence on outcome. At the multivariate analysis, ERCC1 was confirmed to be an independent prognostic factor for survival in LD patients. No significant role was found for ERCC1, RRM1 and TopoII&agr; in ED patients. Conclusions: ERCC1 and TopoII&agr; are candidate markers in predicting clinical outcome and response to treatment in LD SCLC patients and are worth of further investigation in a prospective study.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2006

Galectin-3 and Ki-67 expression in multiglandular parathyroid lesions

Enrico Saggiorato; Nicoletta Bergero; Marco Volante; Elisa Bacillo; Rosj Rosas; Guido Gasparri; Fabio Orlandi; Mauro Papotti

Hyperplastic and neoplastic parathyroid lesions may present overlapping morphologic features, and several markers have been proposed to distinguish benign from malignant growths. Recently, it was reported that galectin-3 is a useful marker of malignancy in uniglandular parathyroid diseases. To investigate galectin-3 and Ki-67 immunoexpression in parathyroid hyperplastic disease, 63 multiglandular lesions (13 primary, 40 secondary, and 10 tertiary hyperplasia cases) were analyzed and compared with 45 control cases of parathyroid adenomas and 24 carcinomas. Our data showed that hyperplastic lesions responsible for primary nonfamilial or tertiary hyperparathyroidism, as well as parathyroid adenomas, were negative for galectin-3, as opposed to carcinomas. In addition, secondary and familial primary hyperplasia cases were surprisingly positive for galectin-3 in approximately two thirds of cases. All hyperplastic lesions (positive or negative for galectin-3) had a low Ki-67 index. Based on these findings, secondary hyperplasia has a low proliferative potential but an unexplained galectin-3 reactivity, which reduces its diagnostic role in differentiating benign from malignant nodules in the context of multiglandular parathyroid diseases.


Virchows Archiv | 2007

Co-expression of EGF receptor, TGFα and S6 kinase is significantly associated with colorectal carcinomas with distant metastases at diagnosis

Marco Tampellini; Marina Longo; Susanna Cappia; Elisa Bacillo; Irene Alabiso; Marco Volante; Luigi Dogliotti; Mauro Papotti

Autocrine tumour growth factor alpha (TGFα)/epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) stimulation in colorectal carcinoma (CRC) cells regulates cell adhesion and invasiveness via ribosomal protein S6 kinase (S6K) phosphorylation in pre-clinical studies. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether TGFα and EGFR expression might be correlated with a higher metastatic behaviour in human tumours. Paraffin-embedded material was retrospectively collected from 101 primitive CRCs including all stage IV patients at diagnosis treated at our Institution from 1999 to 2004 (50 cases, Group B) and 51 stage II–III control cases (Group A). EGFR and TGFα expression, together with signalling molecules (including signal transducer and activator of transcription [STAT3], serine–treonine kinase [Akt], mitogen-activated protein kinase [MAPK], mammalian target of rapamycin [mTOR] and S6K) in selected samples, was evaluated by immunohistochemistry using the EGFR Dako antibody. A total of 68/101 (67.3%) cases were EGFR positive and 79/101 (78.2%) cases were TGFα positive. EGFR/TGFα co-expression differed significantly (p = 0.02) between Group A and Group B tumours (23/51, 45.1% vs 34/50, 68.0%, respectively), whereas no differences in STAT, Akt, mTOR expression was evident between the two groups. Conversely, there was a significantly higher expression of phosphorylated S6K in stage IV cases (Group B) than in the controls (Group A; 70.4% vs 38.7%; p = 0.02). In agreement with in vitro data, EGFR, TGFα and S6K co-expression in human CRC was significantly higher in patients with advanced stage at diagnosis.


Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2006

Epithelial microchimerism: Consistent finding in human liver transplants

S. Gaia; Susanna Cappia; Antonina Smedile; Elisa Bacillo; Ezio Gaia; Luciano Gubetta; Mario Rizzetto

Background:  Eleven liver biopsies from six male patients who received a liver transplant (LT) from female donors were examined in order to determine whether male host‐derived hepatic cells were present in female grafts that exhibited minimal or important inflammatory damage.


Journal of Glaucoma | 2010

Do antiglaucomatous prostaglandins induce melanogenesis in human conjunctiva?: an impression cytology pilot study.

Andrea Cagigrigoriu; Elena Boero; Alessandra Boles Carenini; Teresa Rolle; Susanna Cappia; Elisa Bacillo; Mauro Papotti; Dario Gregori; Filippo Vitale Brovarone; Federico Grignolo

PurposeTo determine the effect of antiglaucomatous prostaglandin analogs on conjunctival melanogenesis. MethodsFor this pilot study, 30 glaucomatous patients treated with prostaglandin drops (alone and in association to β-blockers) and 30 control subjects (15 healthy volunteers and 15 patients treated with β-blockers) were included in this transversal, single masked, case-control, observational study. Skin complexion, eye color, conjunctival pigmentation, lacrimal tests, and corneal fluorescein staining were evaluated. Immunoreactivity for Tyrosinase was assayed on conjunctival imprints. ResultsTwenty percent of patients treated with prostaglandins and 10% of the control subjects clinically manifested conjunctival pigmentation (P=0.279). Only 4% (8/198) of the conjunctival specimens were positive to Tyrosinase immunostaining, with no statistically significant difference among the groups (P=0.449). In all cases, the proportion of positive cells was below 4%. When compared with subjects having negative specimens, those with positive immunostains did not show any statistically significant difference in skin complexion, eye color or exposure to irritants, and ultraviolet (P>0.05). ConclusionsAccording to our preliminary results, prostaglandin antiglaucomatous analogs do not significantly enhance pigmentation in the superficial layers of the conjunctiva. The existence of the Tyrosinase enzyme in the superficial layers of the conjunctiva suggests that basal melanocytes may transfer their melanogenic apparatus to superficial epithelial cells.

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