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Dive into the research topics where Genny Meini is active.

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Featured researches published by Genny Meini.


Retrovirology | 2010

Comparative determination of HIV-1 co-receptor tropism by Enhanced Sensitivity Trofile, gp120 V3-loop RNA and DNA genotyping

M. Prosperi; Laura Bracciale; Massimiliano Fabbiani; Simona Di Giambenedetto; Francesca Razzolini; Genny Meini; Manuela Colafigli; Angela Marzocchetti; Roberto Cauda; Maurizio Zazzi; Andrea De Luca

BackgroundTrofile® is the prospectively validated HIV-1 tropism assay. Its use is limited by high costs, long turn-around time, and inability to test patients with very low or undetectable viremia. We aimed at assessing the efficiency of population genotypic assays based on gp120 V3-loop sequencing for the determination of tropism in plasma viral RNA and in whole-blood viral DNA. Contemporary and follow-up plasma and whole-blood samples from patients undergoing tropism testing via the enhanced sensitivity Trofile® (ESTA) were collected. Clinical and clonal geno2pheno[coreceptor] (G2P) models at 10% and at optimised 5.7% false positive rate cutoff were evaluated using viral DNA and RNA samples, compared against each other and ESTA, using Cohens kappa, phylogenetic analysis, and area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUROC).ResultsBoth clinical and clonal G2P (with different false positive rates) showed good performances in predicting the ESTA outcome (for V3 RNA-based clinical G2P at 10% false positive rate AUROC = 0.83, sensitivity = 90%, specificity = 75%). The rate of agreement between DNA- and RNA-based clinical G2P was fair (kappa = 0.74, p < 0.0001), and DNA-based clinical G2P accurately predicted the plasma ESTA (AUROC = 0.86). Significant differences in the viral populations were detected when comparing inter/intra patient diversity of viral DNA with RNA sequences.ConclusionsPlasma HIV RNA or whole-blood HIV DNA V3-loop sequencing interpreted with clinical G2P is cheap and can be a good surrogate for ESTA. Although there may be differences among viral RNA and DNA populations in the same host, DNA-based G2P may be used as an indication of viral tropism in patients with undetectable plasma viremia.


Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2012

Prevalence of HIV-1 integrase mutations related to resistance to dolutegravir in raltegravir naïve and pretreated patients.

Francesco Saladini; Genny Meini; Claudia Bianco; Laura Monno; Grazia Punzi; Monica Pecorari; Vanni Borghi; M. Di Pietro; Gaetano Filice; Maria Rita Gismondo; Valeria Micheli; G. Penco; Tiziana Carli; A. De Luca; Maurizio Zazzi

The prevalence of HIV-1 integrase mutations related to resistance to the next-generation integrase inhibitor (INI), dolutegravir (DTG), was assessed in 440 INI-naïve subjects and in 120 patients failing a raltegravir (RTG)-containing regimen. Of the mutations selected by DTG in vitro, S153FY was not detected in any isolate while L101I and T124A were highly prevalent in both groups and significantly associated with non-B subtype. RTG-selected double and triple mutants, mostly the G140S/Q148H variant, were detected in only 32 (26.7%) RTG-treated patients. As L101I and T124A do not appear to exert any major effect in vivo and double and triple mutants resistant to DTG are infrequently selected by RTG, DTG can be effectively used in INI-naïve patients and may retain activity in many patients failing RTG.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Switch to maraviroc with darunavir/r, both QD, in patients with suppressed HIV-1 was well tolerated but virologically inferior to standard antiretroviral therapy: 48-Week results of a randomized trial

Barbara Rossetti; Roberta Gagliardini; Genny Meini; G Sterrantino; Vincenzo Colangeli; Re Maria Carla; Alessandra Latini; Manuela Colafigli; Francesca Vignale; Stefano Rusconi; Valeria Micheli; Antonio Di Biagio; Giancarlo Orofino; Valeria Ghisetti; Alessandra Fantauzzi; Vincenzo Vullo; Pierfrancesco Grima; Daniela Francisci; Claudio M. Mastroianni; Andrea Antinori; Michele Trezzi; Lucia Lisi; Pierluigi Navarra; Benedetta Canovari; Antonella d'Arminio Monforte; Silvia Lamonica; Alessandro D’Avino; Maurizio Zazzi; Simona Di Giambenedetto; Andrea De Luca

Objectives Primary study outcome was absence of treatment failure (virological failure, VF, or treatment interruption) per protocol at week 48. Methods Patients on 3-drug ART with stable HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL and CCR5-tropic virus were randomized 1:1 to maraviroc with darunavir/ritonavir qd (study arm) or continue current ART (continuation arm). Results In June 2015, 115 patients were evaluable for the primary outcome (56 study, 59 continuation arm). The study was discontinued due to excess of VF in the study arm (7 cases, 12.5%, vs 0 in the continuation arm, p = 0.005). The proportion free of treatment failure was 73.2% in the study and 59.3% in the continuation arm. Two participants in the study and 10 in the continuation arm discontinued therapy due to adverse events (p = 0.030). At VF, no emergent drug resistance was detected. Co-receptor tropism switched to non-R5 in one patient. Patients with VF reported lower adherence and had lower plasma drug levels. Femoral bone mineral density was significantly improved in the study arm. Conclusion Switching to maraviroc with darunavir/ritonavir qd in virologically suppressed patients was associated with improved tolerability but was virologically inferior to 3-drug therapy.


Medicine | 2016

Dysfunctional phenotypes of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells are comparable in patients initiating ART during early or chronic HIV-1 infection.

Sylvie Amu; Rebecka Lantto Graham; Aikaterini Nasi; Carina Bengtsson; Bence Rethi; Sam Sorial; Genny Meini; Maurizio Zazzi; Bo Hejdeman; Francesca Chiodi

AbstractEarly initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART) is becoming a common clinical practice according to current guidelines recommending treatment to all HIV-1-infected patients. However, it is not known whether ART initiated during the early phase of infection prevents the establishment of abnormal phenotypic features previously reported in CD4+ and CD8+T cells during chronic HIV-1 infection. In this cross-sectional study, blood specimens were obtained from 17 HIV-1-infected patients who began ART treatment shortly after infection (early ART [EA]), 17 age-matched HIV-1-infected patients who started ART during chronic phase of infection (late ART [LA]), and 25 age-matched non-HIV-1-infected controls. At collection of specimens, patients in EA and LA groups had received ART for comparable periods of time. Total HIV-1 DNA was measured in white blood cells by quantitative PCR. The concentration of 9 inflammatory parameters and 1 marker of fibrosis, including sCD14 and &bgr;-2 microglobulin, was measured in plasma. Furthermore, expression of markers of abnormal immune activation (human leukocyte antigen - antigen D related [HLA-DR] and CD38), exhaustion (programmed death 1, CD28, CD57) and terminal differentiation (CD127) was measured on CD4+ and CD8+T cells. T-cell proliferation was measured through Ki67 expression. The copies of total HIV-1 DNA in blood were significantly lower (P = 0.009) in EA compared with that in LA group. Only the expression of HLA-DR on naïve CD4+ T cells distinguished EA from LA, whereas expression of 3 surface markers distinguished T-cell populations of HIV-1-infected patients from controls. These included HLA-DR distinguishing CD4+ T cells from EA compared with controls, and also CD38 and CD127 on CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, respectively, distinguishing both groups of patients from controls. The sCD14 levels were significantly higher in EA patients, and &bgr;-2 microglobulin levels were higher in LA group compared with that in controls. Our results demonstrate an equivalent abnormal expression of activation (HLA-DR and CD38 on CD4+ T cells) and terminal differentiation (CD127 on CD8+ T cells) markers in T cells from both EA and LA patients. The size of total HIV-1 DNA copies in blood of EA was lower compared with LA patients. These findings suggest that some abnormalities taking place in the T-cell compartment during primary HIV-1 infection may not be corrected by early ART.


Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2012

Human immunodeficiency virus-1 B and non-B subtypes with the same drug resistance pattern respond similarly to antiretroviral therapy

M. Franzetti; M. Violin; G. Casazza; Genny Meini; A. Callegaro; P. Corsi; Franco Maggiolo; A. R. Pignataro; S. Paolucci; Nicola Gianotti; Daniela Francisci; R. Rossotti; G. Filice; T. Carli; Maurizio Zazzi; Claudia Balotta

We analysed the 12-week virological response to protease inhibitor (PI) or non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) therapy in 1108 patients carrying B or non-B human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 subtypes with matched resistance mutation patterns. Response rates were not significantly different for non-B and B subtypes stratified for treatment status (51.5% vs. 41.5% in naïve patients; 46.7% vs. 38.7% in experienced patients) or regimens (46.9% vs. 39.7% with PI; 56.7% vs. 40% with NNRTI). No difference in response was detected in patients harbouring B and non-B subtypes with any resistance profile. Further studies are advisable to fully test this approach on larger datasets.


BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making | 2011

A prognostic model for estimating the time to virologic failure in HIV-1 infected patients undergoing a new combination antiretroviral therapy regimen

Mattia Prosperi; Simona Di Giambenedetto; Iuri Fanti; Genny Meini; Bianca Bruzzone; Annapaola Callegaro; G. Penco; Patrizia Bagnarelli; Valeria Micheli; Elisabetta Paolini; Antonio Di Biagio; Valeria Ghisetti; Massimo Di Pietro; Maurizio Zazzi; Andrea De Luca

BackgroundHIV-1 genotypic susceptibility scores (GSSs) were proven to be significant prognostic factors of fixed time-point virologic outcomes after combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) switch/initiation. However, their relative-hazard for the time to virologic failure has not been thoroughly investigated, and an expert system that is able to predict how long a new cART regimen will remain effective has never been designed.MethodsWe analyzed patients of the Italian ARCA cohort starting a new cART from 1999 onwards either after virologic failure or as treatment-naïve. The time to virologic failure was the endpoint, from the 90th day after treatment start, defined as the first HIV-1 RNA > 400 copies/ml, censoring at last available HIV-1 RNA before treatment discontinuation. We assessed the relative hazard/importance of GSSs according to distinct interpretation systems (Rega, ANRS and HIVdb) and other covariates by means of Cox regression and random survival forests (RSF). Prediction models were validated via the bootstrap and c-index measure.ResultsThe dataset included 2337 regimens from 2182 patients, of which 733 were previously treatment-naïve. We observed 1067 virologic failures over 2820 persons-years. Multivariable analysis revealed that low GSSs of cART were independently associated with the hazard of a virologic failure, along with several other covariates. Evaluation of predictive performance yielded a modest ability of the Cox regression to predict the virologic endpoint (c-index≈0.70), while RSF showed a better performance (c-index≈0.73, p < 0.0001 vs. Cox regression). Variable importance according to RSF was concordant with the Cox hazards.ConclusionsGSSs of cART and several other covariates were investigated using linear and non-linear survival analysis. RSF models are a promising approach for the development of a reliable system that predicts time to virologic failure better than Cox regression. Such models might represent a significant improvement over the current methods for monitoring and optimization of cART.


Journal of Medical Virology | 2010

Low rate of virological failure and maintenance of susceptibility to HIV-1 protease inhibitors with first-line lopinavir/ritonavir-based antiretroviral treatment in clinical practice.

M. Prosperi; Maurizio Zazzi; Grazia Punzi; Laura Monno; Grazia Colao; Paola Corsi; Simona Di Giambenedetto; Genny Meini; Valeria Ghisetti; Stefano Bonora; Monica Pecorari; Maria Rita Gismondo; Patrizia Bagnarelli; Tiziana Carli; Andrea De Luca

Protease inhibitor (PI)‐resistant HIV‐1 has hardly ever been detected at failed boosted PI‐based first‐line antiretroviral regimens in clinical trials. However, this phenomenon has not been investigated in clinical practice. To address this gap, data from patients starting a first‐line lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/rtv)‐based therapy with available baseline HIV‐1 RNA load, a viral genotype and follow‐up viral load after 3 and 6 months of treatment were extracted from the Italian Antiretroviral Resistance Cohort Analysis (ARCA) observational database. Based on survival analysis, 39 (7.1%) and 43 (7.8%) of the 548 examined patient cases had an HIV‐1 RNA >500 and >50 copies/ml, respectively, after 6 months of treatment. Cox proportional hazard models detected baseline HIV‐1 RNA (RH 1.79, 95%CI 1.10–2.92 per 1 − log10 increase, P = 0.02) and resistance to the nucleoside backbone (RH 1.04, 95%CI 1.02–1.06 per 10‐point increase using the Stanford HIVdb algorithm, P < 0.001) as independent predictors of HIV‐1 RNA at >500 copies/ml, but not at the >50 copies/ml cutoff criteria. Higher baseline viral load, older patient age, heterosexual route of infection and use of tenofovir/emtricitabine were predictors of failure at month 3 using the 50‐copy and/or 500‐copy threshold. Resistance to LPV/rtv did not occur or increase in any of the available 36 follow‐up HIV‐1 genotypes. Resistance to the nucleoside backbone (M184V) developed in four cases. Despite the likely differences in patient population and adherence, both the low rate of virological failure and the lack of development of LPV/rtv resistance documented in clinical trials are thus confirmed in clinical practice. J. Med. Virol. 82:1996–2003, 2010.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2016

First external quality assurance program of the Italian HLA-B*57:01 Network assessing the performance of clinical virology laboratories in HLA-B*57:01 testing

Genny Meini; Cinzia Dello Russo; Tiziano Allice; Renata Barresi; Roberta D'Arrigo; Francesca Falasca; Maria Rosaria Lipsi; Stefania Paolucci; Stefania Zanussi; Raffaele Antonetti; Fausto Baldanti; Giancarlo Basaglia; Bianca Bruzzone; Ennio Polilli; Valeria Ghisetti; Leopoldo Paolo Pucillo; Ombretta Turriziani; Antonella Pirazzoli; Pierluigi Navarra; Maurizio Zazzi

BACKGROUND Since the HLA-B*57:01 allele is strongly associated with abacavir hypersensitivity reaction, testing for the presence of HLA-B*57:01 is mandatory before administration of abacavir. While HLA-B*57:01 testing is usually provided by pharmacogenetics, genetics or blood transfusion services, clinical virology laboratories can be an optimal opportunity for HLA-B*57:01 testing since they receive blood samples for routine HIV monitoring and have the expertise for convenient and less expensive PCR-based point mutation assays. OBJECTIVES The Italian HLA-B*57:01 Network gathers accredited clinical virology laboratories offering HLA-B*57:01 testing in Italy with the aim to share protocols, test new methods, develop and maintain external quality assurance (EQA) programs. STUDY DESIGN A panel of 9HLA-B*57:01-positive and 16HLA-B*57:01-negative frozen blood samples were blindly distributed to 10 units including 9 clinical virology laboratories and one reference pharmacology laboratory. Each laboratory was free to use its own routine method for DNA extraction and HLA-B*57:01 testing. RESULTS DNA was extracted by automated workstations in 6 units and by manual spin columns in 4. Eight units used the Duplicα Real Time HLA-B*57:01 kit by Euroclone and two units used two different PCR homemade protocols. All the 10 units correctly identified all the 25 samples. CONCLUSIONS The first HLA-B*57:01 EQA program run in Italy showed that clinical virology units are equipped and proficient for providing HLA-B*57:01 testing by inexpensive assays easy to integrate into their routine.


Journal of the International AIDS Society | 2014

Switch to raltegravir-based regimens and HIV DNA decrease in patients with suppressed HIV RNA

Claudia Bianco; Genny Meini; Barbara Rossetti; Silvia Lamonica; Annalisa Mondi; Simone Belmonti; Luri Fanti; Nicoletta Ciccarelli; Simona Di Giambenedetto; Maurizio Zazzi; Andrea De Luca

Raltegravir intensification is associated with an increase in 2‐LTR episomal HIV DNA= circles, indicating a persistent low‐level replication, in some individuals in ART with suppressed HIV RNA. We aimed at monitoring residual plasma HIV RNA and cellular HIV DNA in virologically suppressed patients switching to a raltegravir‐based regimen.


Hiv Clinical Trials | 2014

Genotypic determination of HIV tropism in a cohort of patients perinatally infected with HIV-1 and exposed to antiretroviral therapy.

Antonio Di Biagio; Andrea Parisini; Bianca Bruzzone; Roberta Prinapori; Marinella Lauriola; Stefania Paolucci; Alessio Signori; Renata Barresi; Giancarlo Icardi; Silvia Calderisi; Genny Meini; Chiara Dentone; Giovanni Cenderello; Michele Guerra; Anna Maccabruni; Stefano Rusconi; Claudio Viscoli

Abstract The aim of this study was to determine the coreceptor tropism by performing genotypic HIV-1 tropism testing in a cohort of patients perinatally infected with HIV-1 and exposed to antiretroviral therapy. Genotypic coreceptor tropism was determined in patients with HIV-1 RNA<100 copies/mL using PBMC samples by gp120 V3 sequencing followed by geno2pheno interpretation (set at a false positive rate [FPR] of 20%) and in patients with >100 copies/mL using plasma samples (set at a FPR of 20%), according to European guidelines. Out of 55 patients, 50 had an HIV-1 subtype B strain, and mean (SD) age was 18.2 (4.6) years. The median duration of antiretroviral therapy was 13 years (range, 3–23). Thirty-three (60%) patients harbored the R5 virus. At the time of the testing, the median CD4+ T lymphocyte cell count and percentage were 705 cells/mm3 (474–905) and 32.5% in group R5 and 626 cells/mm3 (450–755) and 31.7% in group X4/D-M, respectively. The nadir of CD4+ T-cell count in groups R5 and X4/D-M were 322 cells/mm3 (230–427) and 340 cells/mm3 (242–356), respectively. These differences were not statistically significant. Fifteen patients had HIV-1 RNA >50 copies/mL. The median HIV-1 RNA and HIV-1 DNA were comparable in both groups without a statistical difference. The study provides an overview of the prevalence of coreceptor tropism in a cohort of patients who were vertically infected with HIV-1. The high prevalence of X4/D-M-tropic strains may simply reflect the long-term exposure to HIV.

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Simona Di Giambenedetto

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Enzo Boeri

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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