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Dive into the research topics where Federica Melazzini is active.

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Featured researches published by Federica Melazzini.


Blood | 2010

Eltrombopag for the treatment of the inherited thrombocytopenia deriving from MYH9 mutations

Alessandro Pecci; Paolo Gresele; Catherine Klersy; Anna Savoia; Patrizia Noris; Tiziana Fierro; Valeria Bozzi; Anna Maria Mezzasoma; Federica Melazzini; Carlo L. Balduini

Platelet transfusion is currently the primary medical treatment for reducing thrombocytopenia in patients with inherited thrombocytopenias. To evaluate whether stimulating megakaryopoiesis could increase platelet count in these conditions, we treated patients with a severe thrombocytopenia induced by MYH9 mutations (MYH9-related disease) with a nonpeptide thrombopoietin receptor agonist, eltrombopag. Twelve adult patients with MYH9-RD and platelet counts of less than 50 × 10(9)/L received 50 mg of eltrombopag orally per day for 3 weeks. Patients who achieved a platelet count higher than 150 × 10(9)/L stopped therapy, those with 100 to 150 platelets × 10(9)/L continued treatment at the same eltrombopag dose for 3 additional weeks, while those with less than 100 platelets × 10(9)/L increased the eltrombopag dose to 75 mg for 3 weeks. Major responses (platelet count of at least 100 × 10(9)/L or 3 times the baseline value) were obtained in 8 patients, minor responses (platelet counts at least twice the baseline value) in 3. One patient did not respond. Bleeding tendency disappeared in 8 of 10 patients with bleeding symptoms at baseline. Mild adverse events were reported in 2 patients. The availability of thrombopoietin mimetics opened new prospects in the treatment of inherited thrombocytopenias. This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01133860 (European Union Drug Regulating Authorities Clinical Trials number 2008-001903-42).


Haematologica | 2011

Clinical and genetic aspects of Bernard-Soulier syndrome: searching for genotype/phenotype correlations

Anna Savoia; Annalisa Pastore; Daniela De Rocco; Elisa Civaschi; Mariateresa Di Stazio; Roberta Bottega; Federica Melazzini; Valeria Bozzi; Alessandro Pecci; Silvana Magrin; Carlo L. Balduini; Patrizia Noris

Background Bernard-Soulier syndrome is a severe bleeding disease due to a defect of GPIb/IX/V, a platelet complex that binds the von Willebrand factor. Due to the rarity of the disease, there are reports only on a few cases compromising any attempt to establish correlations between genotype and phenotype. In order to identify any associations, we describe the largest case series ever reported, which was evaluated systematically at the same center. Design and Methods Thirteen patients with the disease and seven obligate carriers were enrolled. We collected clinical aspects and determined platelet features, including number and size, expression of membrane glycoproteins, and ristocetin induced platelet aggregation. Mutations were identified by direct sequencing of the GP1BA, GP1BB, and GP9 genes and their effect was shown by molecular modeling analyses. Results Patients all had a moderate thrombocytopenia with giant platelets and a bleeding tendency whose severity varied among individuals. Consistent with expression levels of GPIbα always lower than 10% of control values, platelet aggregation was absent or severely reduced. Homozygous mutations were identified in the GP1BA, GP1BB and GP9 genes; six were novel alterations expected to destabilize the conformation of the respective protein. Except for obligate carriers of a GP9 mutation with a reduced GPIb/IX/V expression and defective aggregation, all the other carriers had no obvious anomalies. Conclusions Regardless of mutations identified, the patients’ bleeding diathesis did not correlate with thrombocytopenia, which was always moderate, and platelet GPIbα expression, which was always severely impaired. Obligate carriers had features similar to controls though their GPIb/IX/V expression showed discrepancies. Aware of the limitations of our cohort, we cannot define any correlations. However, further investigations should be encouraged to better understand the causes of this rare and underestimated disease.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2009

Platelet size distinguishes between inherited macrothrombocytopenias and immune thrombocytopenia.

Patrizia Noris; Catherine Klersy; Marco Zecca; Luca Arcaini; Alessandro Pecci; Federica Melazzini; V. Terulla; Valeria Bozzi; Chiara Ambaglio; Francesco Passamonti; Franco Locatelli; Carlo L. Balduini

Summary.  Background: Distinguishing inherited thrombocytopenias from immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) can be difficult, and patients are therefore at risk of misdiagnosis and inappropriate treatments. Although it is known that the most common inherited forms of thrombocytopenia are characterized by increased platelet size, the diagnostic power of this feature has never been investigated. Objectives: The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that platelet size can be used to differentiate ITP from inherited macrothrombocytopenias. Patients/methods: We measured mean platelet volume (MPV) and mean platelet diameter (MPD), within 2 h of blood sampling, in 35 patients with inherited macrothrombocytopenias [15 MYH9‐related disease (MYH9‐RD), three biallelic and 17 monoallelic Bernard–Soulier syndrome (BSS)], and 56 with ITP. Using receiving operating characteristic analysis, we searched for the best cut‐off values to differentiate between these conditions. Results: As expected, platelets were larger in inherited macrothrombocytopenias than in ITP. An MPD larger than 3.3 μm differentiated MYH9‐RD and BSS from ITP with 0.89 sensitivity and 0.88 specificity, and an MPV larger than 12.4 fL had 0.83 sensitivity and 0.89 specificity. Combining MPD with MPV increased sensitivity and specificity to 0.97 and 0.89, respectively. Conclusion: Platelet size evaluation by both an appropriate cell counter and blood film examination is useful for differentiating inherited macrothrombocytopenias from ITP.


Haematologica | 2012

Clinical and laboratory features of 103 patients from 42 Italian families with inherited thrombocytopenia derived from the monoallelic Ala156Val mutation of GPIbα (Bolzano mutation)

Patrizia Noris; Silverio Perrotta; Roberta Bottega; Alessandro Pecci; Federica Melazzini; Elisa Civaschi; Sabina Russo; Silvana Magrin; Giuseppe Loffredo; Veronica Di Salvo; Giovanna Russo; Maddalena Casale; Daniela De Rocco; Claudio Grignani; Marco Cattaneo; Carlo Baronci; Alfredo Dragani; V. Albano; Momcilo Jankovic; Saverio Scianguetta; Anna Savoia; Carlo L. Balduini

Background Bernard-Soulier syndrome is a very rare form of inherited thrombocytopenia that derives from mutations in GPIbα, GPIbβ, or GPIX and is typically inherited as a recessive disease. However, some years ago it was shown that the monoallelic c.515C>T transition in the GPIBA gene (Bolzano mutation) was responsible for macrothrombocytopenia in a few Italian patients. Design and Methods Over the past 10 years, we have searched for the Bolzano mutation in all subjects referred to our institutions because of an autosomal, dominant form of thrombocytopenia of unknown origin. Results We identified 42 new Italian families (103 cases) with a thrombocytopenia induced by monoallelic Bolzano mutation. Analyses of the geographic origin of affected pedigrees and haplotypes indicated that this mutation originated in southern Italy. Although the clinical expression was variable, patients with this mutation typically had a mild form of Bernard-Soulier syndrome with mild thrombocytopenia and bleeding tendency. The most indicative laboratory findings were enlarged platelets and reduced GPIb/IX/V platelet expression; in vitro platelet aggregation was normal in nearly all of the cases. Conclusions Our study indicates that monoallelic Bolzano mutation is the most frequent cause of inherited thrombocytopenia in Italy, affecting 20% of patients recruited at our institutions during the last 10 years. Because many people from southern Italy have emigrated during the last century, this mutation may have spread to other countries.


Blood | 2014

Platelet diameters in inherited thrombocytopenias: analysis of 376 patients with all known disorders.

Patrizia Noris; Ginevra Biino; Alessandro Pecci; Elisa Civaschi; Anna Savoia; Marco Seri; Federica Melazzini; Giuseppe Loffredo; Giovanna Russo; Valeria Bozzi; Lucia Dora Notarangelo; Paolo Gresele; Paula G. Heller; Nuria Pujol-Moix; Shinji Kunishima; Marco Cattaneo; James B. Bussel; Erica De Candia; Claudia Cagioni; Ugo Ramenghi; Serena Barozzi; Fabrizio Fabris; Carlo L. Balduini

Abnormalities of platelet size are one of the distinguishing features of inherited thrombocytopenias (ITs), and evaluation of blood films is recommended as an essential step for differential diagnosis of these disorders. Nevertheless, what we presently know about this subject is derived mainly from anecdotal evidence. To improve knowledge in this field, we evaluated platelet size on blood films obtained from 376 patients with all 19 forms of IT identified so far and found that these conditions differ not only in mean platelet diameter, but also in platelet diameter distribution width and the percentage of platelets with increased or reduced diameters. On the basis of these findings, we propose a new classification of ITs according to platelet size. It distinguishes forms with giant platelets, with large platelets, with normal or slightly increased platelet size, and with normal or slightly decreased platelet size. We also measured platelet diameters in 87 patients with immune thrombocytopenia and identified cutoff values for mean platelet diameter and the percentage of platelets with increased or reduced size that have good diagnostic accuracy in differentiating ITs with giant platelets and with normal or slightly decreased platelet size from immune thrombocytopenia and all other forms of IT.


British Journal of Haematology | 2013

Platelet size for distinguishing between inherited thrombocytopenias and immune thrombocytopenia: a multicentric, real life study

Patrizia Noris; Catherine Klersy; Paolo Gresele; Fiorina Giona; Paola Giordano; Pietro Minuz; Giuseppe Loffredo; Alessandro Pecci; Federica Melazzini; Elisa Civaschi; Annamaria Mezzasoma; Monica Piedimonte; Fabrizio Semeraro; Dino Veneri; Francesco Menna; Laura Ciardelli; Carlo L. Balduini

The most frequent forms of inherited thrombocytopenia (IT) are characterized by platelet size abnormalities and it has been suggested that this parameter is useful for their differentiation from immune thrombocytopenia (ITP). Recently, a monocentric study identified cut‐off values for mean platelet volume (MPV) and mean platelet diameter (MPD) with good diagnostic accuracy in this respect. To validate these cut‐off values in a different and larger case series of patients, we enrolled 130 subjects with ITP and 113 with IT in six different centres. The platelet count and MPV was each measured by the instrument routinely used in each institution. In some centres, platelet count was also measured by optical microscopy. MPD was evaluated centrally by image analysis of peripheral blood films. The previously identified cut‐off value for MPV had 91% specificity in distinguishing ITP from inherited macrothrombocytopenias (mono and biallelic Bernard‐Soulier, MYH9‐related disease), while its sensitivity was greatly variable depending on the instrument used. With an appropriate instrument, specificity was 83%. The diagnostic accuracy of MPD was lower than that obtained with MPV. We concluded that MPV is a useful parameter for differentiating ITP from IT provided that it is measured by appropriate cell counters.


Platelets | 2016

New roles for mean platelet volume measurement in the clinical practice

Patrizia Noris; Federica Melazzini; Carlo L. Balduini

Abstract Several hundreds of studies recently investigated mean platelet volume (MPV) as measured by electronic cell counters in a wide variety of acquired diseases, and most of them found that platelet size was significantly increased with respect to healthy subjects. On this basis, it has been suggested that MPV can be used for diagnostic purposes. Moreover, investigation of subjects with arterial thrombosis not only revealed that their platelets were larger than those of controls, but also found that a high MPV predicted poor prognosis. Despite the large amount of available data, the pathogenesis of increased platelet size in these conditions is unclear. In particular, we do not know whether the increased platelet size is the cause or the consequence of thrombosis. Differences in MPV between patients and controls are usually very small and they reach the statistical significance because of the large number of investigated patients and the standardized methodology for MPV measurement. In real life, the wide variability of MPV possibly due to platelet count, sex, age, and ethnicity, as well as the very poor standardization of the methodologies used for MPV measurement, makes it impossible to decide whether an individual patient has normal or instead slightly increased MPV. So, MPV has presently no role in making diagnosis and defining prognosis in any acquired illness.


Haematologica | 2016

Clinical and pathogenic features of ETV6-related thrombocytopenia with predisposition to acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Federica Melazzini; Flavia Palombo; Alessandra Balduini; Daniela De Rocco; Caterina Marconi; Patrizia Noris; Chiara Gnan; Tommaso Pippucci; Valeria Bozzi; Michela Faleschini; Serena Barozzi; Michael Doubek; Christian A. Di Buduo; Katerina Stano Kozubik; Lenka Radová; Giuseppe Loffredo; Šárka Pospíšilová; Caterina Alfano; Marco Seri; Carlo L. Balduini; Alessandro Pecci; Anna Savoia

ETV6-related thrombocytopenia is an autosomal dominant thrombocytopenia that has been recently identified in a few families and has been suspected to predispose to hematologic malignancies. To gain further information on this disorder, we searched for ETV6 mutations in the 130 families with inherited thrombocytopenia of unknown origin from our cohort of 274 consecutive pedigrees with familial thrombocytopenia. We identified 20 patients with ETV6-related thrombocytopenia from seven pedigrees. They have five different ETV6 variants, including three novel mutations affecting the highly conserved E26 transformation-specific domain. The relative frequency of ETV6-related thrombocytopenia was 2.6% in the whole case series and 4.6% among the families with known forms of inherited thrombocytopenia. The degree of thrombocytopenia and bleeding tendency of the patients with ETV6-related thrombocytopenia were mild, but four subjects developed B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia during childhood, resulting in a significantly higher incidence of this condition compared to that in the general population. Clinical and laboratory findings did not identify any particular defects that could lead to the suspicion of this disorder from the routine diagnostic workup. However, at variance with most inherited thrombocytopenias, platelets were not enlarged. In vitro studies revealed that the maturation of the patients’ megakaryocytes was defective and that the patients have impaired proplatelet formation. Moreover, platelets from patients with ETV6-related thrombocytopenia have reduced ability to spread on fibrinogen. Since the dominant thrombocytopenias due to mutations in RUNX1 and ANKRD26 are also characterized by normal platelet size and predispose to hematologic malignancies, we suggest that screening for ETV6, RUNX1 and ANKRD26 mutations should be performed in all subjects with autosomal dominant thrombocytopenia and normal platelet size.


Platelets | 2017

Inherited thrombocytopenias—recent advances in clinical and molecular aspects

Carlo L. Balduini; Federica Melazzini; Alessandro Pecci

Abstract Since the beginning of the century, our knowledge of inherited thrombocytopenias greatly advanced, and we presently know 30 forms with well-defined genetic defects. This great advancement changed our view of these disorders, as we realized that most patients have only mild thrombocytopenia with inconspicuous bleeding or no bleeding tendency at all. However, better knowledge of inherited thrombocytopenias also revealed that some of the most prevalent forms expose to the risk of acquiring during infancy or adulthood additional disorders that endanger the life of patients much more than hemorrhages. Thus, inherited thrombocytopenias are complex disorders with quite different clinical features and prognosis. Identification of novel genes whose mutations result in low platelet count greatly advanced also our knowledge of the megakaryocyte biology and proved beyond any doubt that the defective proteins play an essential role in platelet biogenesis or survival in humans. Based on the study of inherited thrombocytopenias, we better understood the sequence of molecular events regulating megakaryocyte differentiation, maturation, and platelet release. Since nearly 50% of patients have as yet unidentified genetic or molecular mechanisms underlying their inherited thrombocytopenia, further studies are expected to reveal new clinical entities and new molecular mechanisms of platelet production.


British Journal of Haematology | 2015

Analysis of 65 pregnancies in 34 women with five different forms of inherited platelet function disorders.

Elisa Civaschi; Catherine Klersy; Federica Melazzini; Nuria Pujol-Moix; Cristina Santoro; Marco Cattaneo; Cécile Lavenu-Bombled; Loredana Bury; Pietro Minuz; Paquita Nurden; Ana Rosa Cid; Adam Cuker; Véronique Latger-Cannard; Rémi Favier; Ilaria Nichele; Patrizia Noris

This study evaluated 65 pregnancies in 34 women with five different inherited platelet function disorders. Gestation was similar to that of the general population. Severe bleeds requiring blood transfusions were observed in 50% of deliveries in Glanzmann thrombasthenia (GT), but not in the patients with delta storage pool disease, Hermansky‐Pudlak syndrome, P2Y12 defect or defect of thromboxane A2 receptor. Of note, severe haemorrhage also occurred in women with GT who had received prophylactic platelet transfusions, suggesting that better preventive treatments are required. Diagnosis and degree of spontaneous bleeding tendency before pregnancy were reliable parameters to predict the delivery‐related bleeding risk.

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