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Featured researches published by G. Del Poeta.


Leukemia | 1998

Prognostic relevance of the expression of Tdt and CD7 in 335 cases of acute myeloid leukemia

Adriano Venditti; G. Del Poeta; Francesco Buccisano; Anna Tamburini; Mc Cox-Froncillo; Germano Aronica; Antonio Bruno; B Del Moro; Anna Maria Epiceno; Alessandra Battaglia; Laura Forte; Massimiliano Postorino; V Cordero; S Santinelli; S. Amadori

We have analyzed the expression of Tdt and CD7 in 335 cases of unequivocal acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Tdt was expressed in 80 (25%) of 321 evaluable cases. Twenty-six of 77 (34%) Tdt+ patients assessable for response, entered complete remission (CR) vs 121 of 209 (58%) Tdt− cases (P < 0.001). cd7 was expressed in 102 of 332 (30%) evaluable cases; 37 of 93 assessable (40%) cd7+ patients attained a CR as compared to 114/204 (56%) CD7− (P = 0.013). Duration of survival was significantly shorter for patients with CD7+ or Tdt+ AML (P = 0.006 and 0.001, respectively). In a multivariate analysis, Tdt was found to significantly adverse achievement of CR (P = 0.018), while CD7 affected duration of CR (P = 0.037). Overall the expression of either Tdt or CD7 correlated with a relatively high expression of CD34 (P < 0.001), gp-170 (P = 0.003), lymphoid antigens (LyAg) (P < 0.001), t(9;22) or anomalies of chromosome 5/7 (P < 0.001). finally, we pooled the patients into four phenotypic classes, according to the presence of tdt, cd7 or both: [tdt−CD7−], [Tdt+CD7−], [Tdt−CD7+] and [Tdt+CD7+]. The category [Tdt+CD7+] was characterized by a more unfavorable outcome as suggested by a lower rate of CR (P < 0.001) and a shorter duration of survival as compared to cases [tdt−CD7−], [Tdt+CD7−] and [Tdt−CD7+] (P = 0.002). This figure is consistent with the frequent convergence in the subset [Tdt+CD7+] of GP-170 positivity (P = 0.003), translocation t(9;22), anomalies of chromosome 5 and/or 7 (P < 0.001) and signs of lineage infidelity (deviant expression of lymphoid antigens) (P < 0.001). we conclude that the expression of tdt or cd7 is associated with an unfavorable outcome and that the combination of both defines a clinical subset with a poorer prognosis due to the significantly higher association with mdr phenotype, and ‘poor prognostic’ chromosomal abnormalities.


Leukemia | 2003

Pretransplant minimal residual disease level predicts clinical outcome in patients with acute myeloid leukemia receiving high-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation

Adriano Venditti; Luca Maurillo; Francesco Buccisano; G. Del Poeta; C Mazzone; A. Tamburini; M. I. Del Principe; Maria Irno Consalvo; P. De Fabritiis; L Cudillo; Alessandra Picardi; A. Franchi; Francesco Lo Coco; S. Amadori

A total of 31 adult patients with AML entered in the EORTC/GIMEMA AML-10 trial, who received autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) after induction and consolidation chemotherapy, were prospectively evaluated for minimal residual disease (MRD) by multidimensional flow cytometry (MFC). Using a cutoff level of 3.5 × 10−4 leukemic cells pre-ASCT, 12 patients (39%) were stratified to MRD high-risk group and 19 (61%) into MRD low-risk group. During follow-up, all patients who were in the high-risk group relapsed at a median time of 7 months; in the low-risk group, five patients relapsed at a median time of 11 months and 14 remained in remission for 56 (range 7–80) months (P=0.00004). Longitudinal MFC determinations post-ASCT showed increased MRD levels in three of the five patients who underwent subsequent relapse, while disease recurrence was unpredicted in the remaining two cases. The pre-ASCT MRD status was the factor most strongly associated with relapse risk in the multivariate analysis (P=0.0014). We conclude that: (1) pre-ASCT MRD status predicts successful outcome in patients receiving ASCT; (2) high-dose chemotherapy conditioning regimen followed by ASCT has no impact on the unfavorable prognostic value of high pre-ASCT MRD level; and (3) sequential MRD monitoring post-ASCT may allow the prediction of impending relapse.


Leukemia | 2001

The prognostic value of cytogenetics is reinforced by the kind of induction/consolidation therapy in influencing the outcome of acute myeloid leukemia - Analysis of 848 patients

Giuseppe Visani; P Bernasconi; M Boni; G Castoldi; Stefania Ciolli; M Clavio; Maria Christina Cox; Antonio Cuneo; G. Del Poeta; D Dini; D Falzetti; Renato Fanin; M Gobbi; Alessandro Isidori; F Leoni; Vincenzo Liso; M Malagola; G Martinelli; Christina Mecucci; P P Piccaluga; Maria Concetta Petti; Roberto Rondelli; Domenico Russo; Mario Sessarego; Giorgina Specchia; Nicoletta Testoni; Giuseppe Torelli; Franco Mandelli; Sante Tura

We studied the impact of cytogenetics and kind of induction/consolidation therapy on 848 adult acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients (age 15–83). The patients received three types of induction/consolidation regimen: standard (daunorubicin and cytosine arabinoside (3/7); two cycles); intensive (idarubicin, cytosine arabinoside and etoposide (ICE), plus mitoxantrone and intermediate-dose Ara-C (NOVIA)); and low-dose (low-dose cytosine arabinoside). CR patients under 60 years of age, if an HLA-identical donor was available received allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT); otherwise, as part of the program, they underwent autologous (auto)-SCT. CR rates significantly associated with ‘favorable’ (inv(16), t(8;21)), ‘intermediate’ (‘no abnormality’, abn(11q23), +8, del(7q)) and ‘unfavorable’ (del (5q), −7, abn(3)(q21q26), t(6;9), ‘complex’ (more than three unrelated cytogenetic abnormalities)) karyotypes (88% vs65% vs 36%, respectively; P = 0.0001). these trends were confirmed in all age groups. on therapeutic grounds, intensive induction did not determine significant increases of cr rates in any of the considered groups, with respect to standard induction. low-dose induction was associated with significantly lower cr rates. considering disease-free survival (dfs), multivariate analysis of the factors examined (including karyotype grouping) showed that only age >60 years significantly affected outcome. However, in cases where intensive induction was adopted, ‘favorable’ karyotype was significantly related to longer DFS (P = 0.04). This was mainly due to the favorable outcome of t(8;21) patients treated with intensive induction. Patients receiving allo-SCT had significantly longer DFS (P = 0.005); in particular, allo-SCT significantly improved DFS in the ‘favorable’ and ‘intermediate’ groups (P = 0.04 and P = 0.048, respectively). In conclusion our study could provide some guidelines for AML therapy: (1) patients in the ‘favorable’ karyotype group seem to have a longer DFS when treated with an intensive induction/consolidation regimen, adopted before auto-SCT instead of standard induction; this underlines the importance of reinforcement of chemotherapy, not necessarily based on repeated high-dose AraC cycles. Allo-SCT, independently of induction/consolidation therapy, should be considered an alternative treatment; (2) patients in the ‘intermediate’ karyotype group should receive allo-SCT; (3) patients in the ‘unfavorable’ karyotype group should be treated using investigational chemotherapy, considering that even allo-SCT cannot provide a significantly longer DFS, but only a trend to a better prognosis.


Leukemia | 2005

Fulminant B hepatitis in a surface antigen-negative patient with B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia after rituximab therapy.

Pasquale Niscola; M. I. Del Principe; Luca Maurillo; Adriano Venditti; F Buccisano; Daniela Piccioni; S. Amadori; G. Del Poeta

Fulminant B hepatitis in a surface antigen-negative patient with B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia after rituximab therapy


Leukemia | 2012

The CD49d/CD29 complex is physically and functionally associated with CD38 in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells

Antonella Zucchetto; Tiziana Vaisitti; Dania Benedetti; Erika Tissino; Valeria Bertagnolo; Davide Rossi; Riccardo Bomben; M. Dal Bo; M. I. Del Principe; A Gorgone; Gabriele Pozzato; Gianluca Gaidano; G. Del Poeta; Fabio Malavasi; Silvia Deaglio; Valter Gattei

CD49d and CD38 are independent negative prognostic markers in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Their associated expression marks a disease subset with a highly aggressive clinical course. Here, we demonstrate a constitutive physical association between the CD49d/CD29 integrin complex and CD38 in primary CLL cells and B-cell lines by (i) cocapping, (ii) coimmunoprecipitation and (iii) cell adhesion experiments using CD49d-specific substrates (vascular-cell adhesion molecule-1 or CS-1/H89 fibronectin fragments). The role of CD38 in CD49d-mediated cell adhesion was studied in CD49d+CD38+ and CD49d+CD38− primary CLL cells, and confirmed using CD38 transfectants of the originally CD49d+CD38− CLL-derived cell line Mec-1. Results indicate that CD49d+CD38+ cells adhered more efficiently onto CD49d-specific substrates than CD49d+CD38− cells (P<0.001). Upon adhesion, CD49d+CD38+ cells underwent distinctive changes in cell shape and morphology, with higher levels of phosphorylated Vav-1 than CD49d+CD38− cells (P=0.0006) and a more complex distribution of F-actin to the adhesion sites. Lastly, adherent CD49d+CD38+ cells were more resistant to serum-deprivation-induced (P<0.001) and spontaneous (P=0.03) apoptosis than the CD49d+CD38− counterpart. Altogether, our results point to a direct role for CD38 in enhancing CD49d-mediated adhesion processes in CLL, thus providing an explanation for the negative clinical impact exerted by these molecules when coexpressed in neoplastic cells.


Leukemia | 2006

CD49d in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia: correlated expression with CD38 and prognostic relevance.

Antonella Zucchetto; Riccardo Bomben; M. Dal Bo; Pietro Bulian; Dania Benedetti; Paola Nanni; G. Del Poeta; Massimo Degan; Valter Gattei

CD49d in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia: correlated expression with CD38 and prognostic relevance


Leukemia | 2012

The miR-17 ∼ 92 family regulates the response to Toll-like receptor 9 triggering of CLL cells with unmutated IGHV genes

Riccardo Bomben; Stefania Gobessi; M. Dal Bo; Stefano Volinia; Daniela Marconi; Erika Tissino; Dania Benedetti; Antonella Zucchetto; Davide Rossi; Gianluca Gaidano; G. Del Poeta; Luca Laurenti; Dg Efremov; Valter Gattei

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cells from clinically aggressive cases have a greater capacity to respond to external microenvironmental stimuli, including those transduced through Toll-like-receptor-9 (TLR9). Concomitant microRNA and gene expression profiling in purified CLL cells (n=17) expressing either unmutated (UM) or mutated (M) IGHV genes selected microRNAs from the miR-17∼92 family as significantly upregulated and in part responsible for modifications in the gene expression profile of UM CLL cells stimulated with the TLR9 agonist CpG. Notably, the stable and sustained upregulation of miR-17∼92 microRNAs by CpG was preceded by a transient induction of the proto-oncogene MYC. The enforced expression of miR-17, a major member from this family, reduced the expression of the tumor suppressor genes E2F5, TP53INP1, TRIM8 and ZBTB4, and protected cells from serum-free-induced apoptosis (P⩽0.05). Consistently, transfection with miR-17∼92 family antagomiRs reduced Bromo-deoxy-uridine incorporation in CpG-stimulated UM CLL cells. Finally, miR-17 expression levels, evaluated in 83 CLL samples, were significantly higher in UM (P=0.03) and ZAP-70high (P=0.02) cases. Altogether, these data reveal a role for microRNAs of the miR-17∼92 family in regulating pro-survival and growth-promoting responses of CLL cells to TLR9 triggering. Overall, targeting of this pathway may represent a novel therapeutic option for management of aggressive CLL.


Leukemia | 2016

NOTCH1 mutations associate with low CD20 level in chronic lymphocytic leukemia: evidence for a NOTCH1 mutation-driven epigenetic dysregulation

Federico Pozzo; Tamara Bittolo; Francesca Arruga; Pietro Bulian; Paolo Macor; Erika Tissino; Gizdic B; Francesca Rossi; Riccardo Bomben; Antonella Zucchetto; Dania Benedetti; Massimo Degan; Giovanni D'Arena; Annalisa Chiarenza; Francesco Zaja; Gabriele Pozzato; Davide Rossi; Gianluca Gaidano; G. Del Poeta; Silvia Deaglio; Valter Gattei; M. Dal Bo

In chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), NOTCH1 mutations have been associated with clinical resistance to the anti-CD20 rituximab, although the mechanisms behind this peculiar behavior remain to be clarified. In a wide CLL series (n=692), we demonstrated that CLL cells from NOTCH1-mutated cases (87/692) were characterized by lower CD20 expression and lower relative lysis induced by anti-CD20 exposure in vitro. Consistently, CD20 expression by CLL cells was upregulated in vitro by γ-secretase inhibitors or NOTCH1-specific small interfering RNA and the stable transfection of a mutated (c.7541-7542delCT) NOTCH1 intracellular domain (NICD-mut) into CLL-like cells resulted in a strong downregulation of both CD20 protein and transcript. By using these NICD-mut transfectants, we investigated protein interactions of RBPJ, a transcription factor acting either as activator or repressor of NOTCH1 pathway when respectively bound to NICD or histone deacetylases (HDACs). Compared with controls, NICD-mut transfectants had RBPJ preferentially complexed to NICD and showed higher levels of HDACs interacting with the promoter of the CD20 gene. Finally, treatment with the HDAC inhibitor valproic acid upregulated CD20 in both NICD-mut transfectants and primary CLL cells. In conclusion, NOTCH1 mutations are associated with low CD20 levels in CLL and are responsible for a dysregulation of HDAC-mediated epigenetic repression of CD20 expression.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 1999

Enumeration of CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells for clinical transplantation: comparison of three different methods.

Adriano Venditti; Alessandra Battaglia; G. Del Poeta; Francesco Buccisano; Luca Maurillo; Anna Tamburini; B Del Moro; Anna Maria Epiceno; M Martiradonna; T. Caravita; S Santinelli; Gaspare Adorno; Alessandra Picardi; Francesco Zinno; Alessandro Lanti; Antonio Bruno; Giovanna Suppo; A. Franchi; G Franconi; S. Amadori

Three different methods for determination of CD34+ cells in G-CSF-mobilized peripheral blood were compared. The methods were: the Milan/Mulhouse protocol, the ISHAGE guidelines for CD34+ cells enumeration and our own protocol. The procedure we have adopted is essentially a Milan/Mulhouse protocol-derived methodology combined with a multiparametric approach using the PAINT-A-GATE software analysis program. The samples were collected from 70 patients affected by acute leukemia, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, Hodgkin’s lymphoma, myeloma and breast cancer who were scheduled to receive autologous PBSC transplantation. PBSC collection was performed following mobilization with subcutaneous G-CSF at 5–10 μg/kg/day. A minimum target of 2 × 106/kg CD34+ cells was considered an acceptable harvest to ensure a safe transplant. On average, three aphereses per patient were performed and a total of 204 apheresis samples were analyzed. Regression analysis of the percentage and absolute number of CD34+ cells, as calculated with each method, achieved an excellent correlation in spite of methodological differences. In fact, both CD34+dim and CD34+CD45− events were included in our gating strategy. In the setting of a triple staining associating CD34, CD38 and CD45, we identified a variable fraction of CD34+CD38+CD45− cells which would be otherwise undetected due to its CD45 negativity. To this end, we used a new technology referred to as laser-scanning cytometry (LSC) which allowed the isolation and morphological identification of CD34+CD45− cells. By comparing CD34+CD45+ and CD34+CD45− cells, we found that they share a common morphology, thus confirming the hypothesis that the latter are to be considered for CD34+ cell calculation. The median number of CD34+ cells/kg, as calculated by the three methods, was: 4.79 × 106/kg (range 1–570) for the Milan/Mulhouse protocol, 3.9 × 106/kg (range 0.8–498) for the ISHAGE one, and 5.17 × 106/kg (range 2–599) for our protocol. The median time to ANC and PLT engraftment was 11 (range 9–24) and 20 (range 10–70) days, respectively. Our protocol achieved the best correlation between CD34+ cells/kg and time to ANC/PLT recovery according to the Spearman’s rank test (r = −40 and P < 0.015 for anc, r= −46 and P = 0.005 for PLT). We conclude that (1) CD45 does not appear the ideal partner of HPCA-2 for determination of hematopoietic progenitors in mobilized peripheral blood; and (2) for clinical application, a single staining with 8G12 appears simple, reliable and feasible when rigorous procedures for sample preparation and acquisition are followed and an adequate software for multiparametric analysis is available.


Annals of Hematology | 1996

FISH analysis for CML monitoring

M. C. Cox Froncillo; Laura Maffei; Maria Cantonetti; G. Del Poeta; R. Lentini; Antonio Bruno; M. Masi; M. Tribalto; S. Amadori

Abstract Conventional cytogenetics is considered the gold standard for evaluating CML during interferon (IFN) treatment. Drawbacks to this approach are the small number of metaphases available during IFN therapy and the impossibility of scoring interphase cells. We applied, besides cytogenetics, double-color FISH (dc-FISH) detection of BCR-ABL gene fusion to monitor 20 CML patients on IFN. dc-FISH easily detected 200 cells per specimen, while with cytogenetic examination a mean of 16.1 mitoses per sample were scored. Though the correlation of dc-FISH and cytogenetic data was good (r=0.77, p<0.001), the discrepancy between the two methods as regards the proportion of leukemic cells in the marrow was often important. dc-FISH detected a relevant proportion of BCR-ABL+ cells in three patients classified as complete cytogenetic responders and showed that, after 9–12 months of IFN treatment, a significant reduction of BCR-ABL+ cells was present in all the 20 patients tested. This might suggest that all CML patients are potentially responsive to IFN. Though more data are required, we think that dc-FISH is more informative than cytogenetic analysis for CML monitoring. Notably because of the simplicity of the procedure, this method could be easily standardized among different laboratories, thus permitting cross-comparison in therapeutic trials.

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Adriano Venditti

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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S. Amadori

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Antonio Bruno

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Francesco Buccisano

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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R. Stasi

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Luca Maurillo

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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M. I. Del Principe

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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