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Dive into the research topics where G. Mariani is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Mariani.


Thrombosis Research | 2009

Management of bleeding and of invasive procedures in patients with platelet disorders and/or thrombocytopenia: Guidelines of the Italian Society for Haemostasis and Thrombosis (SISET)

Alberto Tosetto; Carlo L. Balduini; Marco Cattaneo; E. De Candia; G. Mariani; A.C. Molinari; E. Rossi; Sergio Siragusa

The optimal management of bleeding or its prophylaxis in patients with disorders of platelet count or function is controversial. The bleeding diathesis of these patients is usually mild to moderate: therefore, transfusion of platelet concentrates may be inappropriate, as potential adverse effects might outweigh its benefit. The availability of several anti-hemorrhagic drugs further compounds this problem, mainly because the efficacy/suitability of the various treatment options in different clinical manifestations is not well defined. In these guidelines, promoted by the Italian Society for Studies on Haemostasis and Thrombosis (Società Italiana per lo Studio dellEmostasi e della Trombosi [SISET]), we aim at offering the best available evidence to help the physicians involved in the management of patients with disorders of platelet count or function. Literature review and appraisal of available evidence are discussed for different clinical settings and for different available treatments, including platelet concentrates (PC), recombinant activated factor VII, desmopressin, antifibrinolytics, aprotinin and local hemostatic agents.


Haematologica | 2013

Prophylaxis in congenital factor VII deficiency: indications, efficacy and safety. Results from the Seven Treatment Evaluation Registry (STER)

Mariasanta Napolitano; Muriel Giansily-Blaizot; Alberto Dolce; Jean-François Schved; Guenter Auerswald; Jørgen Ingerslev; Jens Bjerre; Carmen Altisent; Pimlak Charoenkwan; Lisa Michaels; Ampaiwan Chuansumrit; Giovanni Di Minno; Umran Caliskan; G. Mariani

Because of the very short half-life of factor VII, prophylaxis in factor VII deficiency is considered a difficult endeavor. The clinical efficacy and safety of prophylactic regimens, and indications for their use, were evaluated in factor VII-deficient patients in the Seven Treatment Evaluation Registry. Prophylaxis data (38 courses) were analyzed from 34 patients with severe factor VII deficiency (<1-45 years of age, 21 female). Severest phenotypes (central nervous system, gastrointestinal, joint bleeding episodes) were highly prevalent. Twenty-one patients received recombinant activated factor VII (24 courses), four received plasma-derived factor VII, and ten received freshfrozen plasma. Prophylactic schedules clustered into “frequent” courses (three times weekly, n=23) and “infrequent” courses (≤2 times weekly, n=15). Excluding courses for menorrhagia, “frequent” and “infrequent” courses produced 18/23 (78%) and 5/12 (41%) “excellent” outcomes, respectively; relative risk, 1.88; 95% confidence interval, 0.93-3.79; P=0.079. Long term prophylaxis lasted from 1 to >10 years. No thrombosis or new inhibitors occurred. In conclusion, a subset of patients with factor VII deficiency needed prophylaxis because of severe bleeding. Recombinant activated factor VII schedules based on “frequent” administrations (three times weekly) and a 90 μg/kg total weekly dose were effective. These data provide a rationale for long-term, safe prophylaxis in factor VII deficiency (clinicaltrials.gov: NCT01269138).


American Journal of Hematology | 2011

Residual vein thrombosis for assessing duration of anticoagulation after unprovoked deep vein thrombosis of the lower limbs: The extended DACUS study

Sergio Siragusa; Alessandra Malato; Giorgia Saccullo; Alfonso Iorio; Mauro Di Ianni; Clementina Caracciolo; Lucio Lo Coco; Simona Raso; Marco Santoro; Francesco Paolo Guarneri; Antonino Tuttolomondo; Antonio Pinto; Iliana Pepe; Alessandra Casuccio; Vincenzo Abbadessa; Giuseppe Licata; Giovan Battista Rini; G. Mariani; Gaetana Di Fede

The safest duration of anticoagulation after idiopathic deep vein thrombosis (DVT) is unknown. We conducted a prospective study to assess the optimal duration of vitamin K antagonist (VKA) therapy considering the risk of recurrence of thrombosis according to residual vein thrombosis (RVT). Patients with a first unprovoked DVT were evaluated for the presence of RVT after 3 months of VKA administration; those without RVT suspended VKA, while those with RVT continued oral anticoagulation for up to 2 years. Recurrent thrombosis and/or bleeding events were recorded during treatment (RVT group) and 1 year after VKA withdrawal (both groups). Among 409 patients evaluated for unprovoked DVT, 33.2% (136 of 409 patients) did not have RVT and VKA was stopped. The remaining 273 (66.8%) patients with RVT received anticoagulants for an additional 21 months; during this period of treatment, recurrent venous thromboembolism and major bleeding occurred in 4.7% and 1.1% of patients, respectively. After VKA suspension, the rates of recurrent thrombotic events were 1.4% and 10.4% in the no‐RVT and RVT groups, respectively (relative risk = 7.4; 95% confidence interval = 4.9–9.9). These results indicate that in patients without RVT, a short period of treatment with a VKA is sufficient; in those with persistent RVT, treatment extended to 2 years substantially reduces, but does not eliminate, the risk of recurrent thrombosis. Am. J. Hematol. 2011.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2012

Replacement therapy for bleeding episodes in factor VII deficiency. A prospective evaluation.

G. Mariani; Mariasanta Napolitano; Alberto Dolce; R. Pérez Garrido; Angelika Batorova; Mehran Karimi; Helen Platokouki; Günter Auerswald; A.-M. Bertrand; G. Di Minno; Jean-François Schved; Jens Bjerre; Jørgen Ingerslev; B. Sørensen; Arlette Ruiz-Saez

Patients with inherited factor VII (FVII) deficiency display different clinical phenotypes requiring ad hoc management. This study evaluated treatments for spontaneous and traumatic bleeding using data from the Seven Treatment Evaluation Registry (STER). One-hundred one bleeds were analysed in 75 patients (41 females; FVII coagulant activity <1-20%). Bleeds were grouped as haemarthroses (n=30), muscle/subcutaneous haematomas (n=16), epistaxis (n=12), gum bleeding (n=13), menorrhagia (n=16), central nervous system (CNS; n=9), gastrointestinal (GI; n=2) and other (n=3). Of 93 evaluable episodes, 76 were treated with recombinant, activated FVII (rFVIIa), eight with fresh frozen plasma (FFP), seven with plasma-derived FVII (pdFVII) and two with prothrombin-complex concentrates. One-day replacement therapy resulted in very favourable outcomes in haemarthroses, and was successful in muscle/subcutaneous haematomas, epistaxis and gum bleeding. For menorrhagia, single- or multiple-dose schedules led to favourable outcomes. No thrombosis occurred; two inhibitors were detected in two repeatedly treated patients (one post-rFVIIa, one post-pdFVII). In FVII deficiency, most bleeds were successfully treated with single intermediate doses (median 60 µg/kg) of rFVIIa. For the most severe bleeds (CNS, GI) short- or long-term prophylaxis may be optimal.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2013

Bleeding symptoms at disease presentation and prediction of ensuing bleeding in inherited FVII deficiency

M. N. D. Di Minno; Alberto Dolce; G. Mariani

Individuals with inherited factor VII (FVII) deficiency display bleeding phenotypes ranging from mild to severe, with 30% of patients having always been asymptomatic (non-bleeding). In 626 FVII-deficient individuals, by analysing data from the International Factor VII (IF7) Registry and the Seven Treatment Evaluation Registry (STER), we determined whether bleeding type at disease presentation and FVII coagulant activity (FVIIc) predict ensuing bleeds. At disease presentation/diagnosis, 272 (43.5%) individuals were non-bleeding, 277 (44.2%) had minor bleeds, and 77 (12.3%) had major bleeds. During a median nine-year index period (IP) observation, 87.9% of non-bleeding individuals at presentation remained asymptomatic, 75.1% of minor-bleeders had new minor bleeds, and 83.1% of major-bleeders experienced new major bleeds. After adjusting for FVIIc levels and other clinical and demographic variables, the relative risk (RR) for ensuing bleedings during the IP was 6.02 (p <0.001) and 5.87 (p <0.001) in individuals presenting with major and minor bleeds, respectively. Conversely, compared to non-bleeding individuals, a 10.95 (p = 0.001) and 28.21 (p <0.001) RR for major bleedings during the IP was found in those with minor and with major bleeds at presentation, respectively. In conclusion, in FVII deficiency, the first major bleeding symptom is an independent predictor of the risk of subsequent major bleeds.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2009

Major differences in bleeding symptoms between factor VII deficiency and hemophilia B.

Francesco Bernardi; Alberto Dolce; Mirko Pinotti; Amy D. Shapiro; Elena Santagostino; Flora Peyvandi; A. Batorova; Jean-François Schved; Jørgen Ingerslev; G. Mariani

Summary.u2002 Background:u2002The autosomally‐inherited factor VII (FVII) deficiency and X‐linked hemophilia B offer an attractive model to investigate whether reduced levels of FVII and FIX, acting in the initiation and amplification of coagulation respectively, influence hemostasis to a different extent in relation to age and bleeding site. Methods:u2002Hemophilia B patients (nu2003=u2003296) and FVII‐deficient males (nu2003=u2003109) were compared for FVII/FIX clotting activity, F7/F9 genotypes and clinical phenotypes in a retrospective, multi‐centre, cohort study. Results:u2002Major clinical differences between diseases were observed. Bleeding occurred earlier in hemophilia B (median age 2.0u2003years, IR 0.9–5.0) than in FVII deficiency (5.2u2003years, IR 1.9–15.5) and the bleeding‐free survival in FVII deficiency was similar to that observed in ‘mild’ hemophilia B (Pu2003=u20030.96). The most frequent disease‐presenting symptoms in hemophilia B (hematomas and oral bleeding) differed from those in FVII deficiency (epistaxis and central nervous system bleeding). Differences were confirmed by analysis of FVII‐deficient women. Conclusions:u2002Our data support the notion that low FVII levels sustain hemostasis better than similarly reduced FIX levels. On the other hand, minute amounts of FVII, differently to FIX, are needed to prevent fatal bleeding, as indicated by the rarity of null mutations and the associated life‐threatening symptoms in FVII deficiency, which contributes towards shaping clinical differences between diseases in the lowest factor level range. Differences between diseases are only partially explained by mutational patterns and could pertain to the specific roles of FVII and FIX in coagulation phases and to vascular bed‐specific components.


Haemophilia | 2014

Inhibitors to factor VII in congenital factor VII deficiency

Angelika Batorova; G. Mariani; A. R. De Saez; Ü. Caliskan; Mehran Karimi; Mirko Pinotti; Mariasanta Napolitano; Alberto Dolce; B. Sørensen; Jørgen Ingerslev

FVIII inhibitors are more likely to have uncommon FVIII haplotypes not seen in caucasians. Our patient was hemizygous for FVIII haplotype H2 and his donor was heterozygous for H1 and H2. We speculate that ‘mismatch’ of FVIII haplotypes between donor and recipient might have contributed to inhibitor development, but we cannot prove this in a chimeric immune system that was in part from a donor heterozygous for FVIII H1 and H2 haplotypes. Regardless of the mechanism by which the inhibitor arose in our patient, this case serves as a useful example of successful management of bleeding with OBI-1 and subsequent elimination of the inhibitor without disrupting his stem cell transplant. Acknowledgements


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2008

Vitamin K-induced modification of coagulation phenotype in VKORC1 homozygous deficiency.

Giovanna Marchetti; Pierpaolo Caruso; Barbara Lunghi; Mirko Pinotti; Mariasanta Napolitano; Alessandro Canella; G. Mariani; Francesco Bernardi

Summary.u2002 Background:u2002Combined vitamin K‐dependent clotting factor (VKCF) deficiency type 2 (VKCFD2) is a rare bleeding disorder caused by mutated vitamin K 2,3‐epoxide reductase complex subunit 1 (VKORC1) gene. Methods and results:u2002An Italian patient with moderate to severe bleeding tendency was genotyped, and found to be homozygous for the unique VKORC1 mutation (Arg98Trp) so far detected in VKCFD2. The activity levels of VKCFs were differentially reduced, and inversely related to the previously estimated affinity of procoagulant factor propeptides for the γ‐carboxylase. The normal (factor IX) or reduced antigen levels (other VKCFs) produced a gradient in specific activities. Vitamin K supplementations resulted in reproducible, fast and sustained normalization of PT and APTT. At 24u2003h the activity/antigen ratios of VKCFs were close to normal, and activity levels were completely (factor VII and IX), virtually (prothrombin, factor X and protein C) or partially (protein S) restored. Thrombin generation assays showed a markedly shortened lag time. The time to peak observed at low tissue factor concentration, potentially mimicking the physiological trigger and able to highlight the effect of reduced protein S levels, was shorter than that in pooled normal plasma. At 72u2003h the thrombin generation times were normal, and the decrease in activity of procoagulant VKCFs was inversely related to their half‐life in plasma. The improved coagulation phenotype permitted the uneventful clinical course after invasive diagnostic procedures. Conclusions:u2002Modification of coagulation phenotypes in VKCFD2 after vitamin K supplementation was clinically beneficial, and provided valuable patterns of factor specific biosynthesis, half‐life and decay.


Annals of Hematology | 2014

Iron-dependent erythropoiesis in women with excessive menstrual blood losses and women with normal menses

Mariasanta Napolitano; Alberto Dolce; Giuseppe Celenza; Elvira Grandone; Maria Grazia Perilli; Sergio Siragusa; Gaspare Carta; Assunta Orecchioni; G. Mariani

In women of fertile age, iron loss consequent to excessive menstrual discharge is by far the most frequent cause of iron-deficient anemia. However, the relationship between menstrual discharge and iron loss is poorly understood. In this prospective study, total menstrual and iron losses were assayed in a large cohort of non-anemic women and women with excessive menstrual blood losses (menorrhagia) in order to provide data useful for intervention. One hundred and five Caucasian women aged 20–45xa0years were recruited. Blood cell count and serum ferritin (SF) levels were determined in each case before menses. Menstrual fluid losses (MFL) were determined using a standardized pads’ weight method. Hematin concentration was assayed by a variant of the Alkaline Hematin Method from which iron concentration was calculated. Mean SF levels were 36.2 (range 8.6–100) ng/ml in healthy women and 6.4 (range 5–14) ng/ml in patients with menorrhagia. Median values of iron lost/cycle were 0.87xa0mg in healthy women and 5.2xa0mg in patients with menorrhagia (ranges 0.102–2.569 and 1.634–8.665xa0mg, respectively, pu2009<u20090.001). In women with menorrhagia, iron lost/cycle strongly correlated (0.789, pu2009<u20090.001) with MFL. In conclusion, healthy women with normal menses lose, on average, 1xa0mg iron/cycle. Average iron losses in patients with menorrhagia are, at least in our cohort, on average, five-to-six times higher than normal. Most women with menorrhagia had totally depleted iron stores. Indirect, quantitative evaluation of iron lost with menses may be useful to assess the risk of developing iron-deficient anemia in individual patients.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2014

Coagulation factor VII variants resistant to inhibitory antibodies

A. Branchini; M. Baroni; C. Pfeiffer; A. Batorova; Muriel Giansily-Blaizot; Jean-François Schved; G. Mariani; Francesco Bernardi; Mirko Pinotti

Replacement therapy is currently used to prevent and treat bleeding episodes in coagulation factor deficiencies. However, structural differences between the endogenous and therapeutic proteins might increase the risk for immune complications. This study was aimed at identifying factor (F)VII variants resistant to inhibitory antibodies developed after treatment with recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa) in a FVII-deficient patient homozygous for the p.A354V-p.P464Hfs mutation, which predicts trace levels of an elongated FVII variant in plasma. We performed fluorescent bead-based binding, ELISA-based competition as well as fluorogenic functional (activated FX and thrombin generation) assays in plasma and with recombinant proteins. We found that antibodies displayed higher affinity for the active than for the zymogen FVII (half-maximal binding at 0.54 ± 0.04 and 0.78 ± 0.07 BU/ml, respectively), and inhibited the coagulation initiation phase with a second-order kinetics. Isotypic analysis showed a polyclonal response with a large predominance of IgG1. We hypothesised that structural differences in the carboxyl-terminus between the inherited FVII and the therapeutic molecules contributed to the immune response. Intriguingly, a naturally-occurring, poorly secreted and 5-residue truncated FVII (FVII-462X) escaped inhibition. Among a series of truncated rFVII molecules, we identified a well-secreted and catalytically competent variant (rFVII-464X) with reduced binding to antibodies (half-maximal binding at 0.198 ± 0.003 BU/ml) as compared to the rFVII-wt (0.032 ± 0.002 BU/ml), which led to a 40-time reduced inhibition in activated FX generation assays. Taken together our results provide a paradigmatic example of mutation-related inhibitory antibodies, strongly support the FVII carboxyl-terminus as their main target and identify inhibitor-resistant FVII variants.

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Angelika Batorova

Comenius University in Bratislava

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Siragusa S

University of New Mexico

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