Giada Rotunno
University of Florence
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Featured researches published by Giada Rotunno.
Leukemia | 2013
Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Terra L. Lasho; Paola Guglielmelli; Flavia Biamonte; Animesh Pardanani; Arturo Pereira; Christy Finke; Joannah Score; Naseema Gangat; Carmela Mannarelli; Rhett P. Ketterling; Giada Rotunno; Ryan A. Knudson; Maria Chiara Susini; Rebecca R. Laborde; Ambra Spolverini; Alessandro Pancrazzi; Lisa Pieri; Rossella Manfredini; Enrico Tagliafico; Roberta Zini; Amy V. Jones; Katerina Zoi; Andreas Reiter; Andrew S Duncombe; Daniela Pietra; Elisa Rumi; Francisco Cervantes; Giovanni Barosi; M Cazzola
Patient outcome in primary myelofibrosis (PMF) is significantly influenced by karyotype. We studied 879 PMF patients to determine the individual and combinatorial prognostic relevance of somatic mutations. Analysis was performed in 483 European patients and the seminal observations were validated in 396 Mayo Clinic patients. Samples from the European cohort, collected at time of diagnosis, were analyzed for mutations in ASXL1, SRSF2, EZH2, TET2, DNMT3A, CBL, IDH1, IDH2, MPL and JAK2. Of these, ASXL1, SRSF2 and EZH2 mutations inter-independently predicted shortened survival. However, only ASXL1 mutations (HR: 2.02; P<0.001) remained significant in the context of the International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS). These observations were validated in the Mayo Clinic cohort where mutation and survival analyses were performed from time of referral. ASXL1, SRSF2 and EZH2 mutations were independently associated with poor survival, but only ASXL1 mutations held their prognostic relevance (HR: 1.4; P=0.04) independent of the Dynamic IPSS (DIPSS)-plus model, which incorporates cytogenetic risk. In the European cohort, leukemia-free survival was negatively affected by IDH1/2, SRSF2 and ASXL1 mutations and in the Mayo cohort by IDH1 and SRSF2 mutations. Mutational profiling for ASXL1, EZH2, SRSF2 and IDH identifies PMF patients who are at risk for premature death or leukemic transformation.
Blood | 2014
Giada Rotunno; Carmela Mannarelli; Paola Guglielmelli; Annalisa Pacilli; Alessandro Pancrazzi; Lisa Pieri; Tiziana Fanelli; Alberto Bosi; Alessandro M. Vannucchi
Mutations in the calreticulin (CALR) gene were recently discovered in patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) lacking the JAK2V617F and MPLW515 mutations, but no information is available on the clinical correlates. In this series, CALR mutations were found in 15.5% of 576 World Health Organization-defined ET patients, accounting for 48.9% of JAK2 and MPL wild-type (wt) patients. CALR-mutated patients were preferentially male and showed higher platelet count and lower hemoglobin and leukocyte count compared with JAK2- and MPL-mutated patients. Patients carrying the CALR mutation had a lower risk of thrombosis than JAK2- and MPL-mutated patients; of interest, their risk was superimposable to patients who were wt for the above mutations. CALR mutation had no impact on survival or transformation to post-ET myelofibrosis. Genotyping for CALR mutations represents a novel useful tool for establishing a clonal myeloproliferative disorder in JAK2 and MPL wt patients with thrombocytosis and may have prognostic and therapeutic relevance.
Blood | 2014
Elisa Rumi; Daniela Pietra; Cristiana Pascutto; Paola Guglielmelli; Alejandra Martínez-Trillos; Ilaria Casetti; Dolors Colomer; Lisa Pieri; Marta Pratcorona; Giada Rotunno; Emanuela Sant’Antonio; Marta Bellini; Chiara Cavalloni; Carmela Mannarelli; Chiara Milanesi; Emanuela Boveri; Virginia Valeria Ferretti; Cesare Astori; Vittorio Rosti; Francisco Cervantes; Giovanni Barosi; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Mario Cazzola
We studied the impact of driver mutations of JAK2, CALR, (calreticulin gene) or MPL on clinical course, leukemic transformation, and survival of patients with primary myelofibrosis (PMF). Of the 617 subjects studied, 399 (64.7%) carried JAK2 (V617F), 140 (22.7%) had a CALR exon 9 indel, 25 (4.0%) carried an MPL (W515) mutation, and 53 (8.6%) had nonmutated JAK2, CALR, and MPL (so-called triple-negative PMF). Patients with CALR mutation had a lower risk of developing anemia, thrombocytopenia, and marked leukocytosis compared with other subtypes. They also had a lower risk of thrombosis compared with patients carrying JAK2 (V617F). At the opposite, triple-negative patients had higher incidence of leukemic transformation compared with either CALR-mutant or JAK2-mutant patients. Median overall survival was 17.7 years in CALR-mutant, 9.2 years in JAK2-mutant, 9.1 years in MPL-mutant, and 3.2 years in triple-negative patients. In multivariate analysis corrected for age, CALR-mutant patients had better overall survival than either JAK2-mutant or triple-negative patients. The impact of genetic lesions on survival was independent of current prognostic scoring systems. These observations indicate that driver mutations define distinct disease entities within PMF. Accounting for them is not only relevant to clinical decision-making, but should also be considered in designing clinical trials.
Leukemia | 2014
Paola Guglielmelli; Terra L. Lasho; Giada Rotunno; Joannah Score; Carmela Mannarelli; Alessandro Pancrazzi; Flavia Biamonte; Animesh Pardanani; Katerina Zoi; Andreas Reiter; Andrew S Duncombe; Tiziana Fanelli; Daniela Pietra; Elisa Rumi; Christy Finke; Naseema Gangat; Rhett P. Ketterling; Ryan A. Knudson; Curt A. Hanson; Alberto Bosi; Arturo Pereira; Rossella Manfredini; Francisco Cervantes; Giovanni Barosi; Marie Cazzola; Nicholas C.P. Cross; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Ayalew Tefferi
We recently defined a high-molecular risk category (HMR) in primary myelofibrosis (PMF), based on the presence of at least one of the five ‘prognostically detrimental’ mutated genes (ASXL1, EZH2, SRSF2 and IDH1/2). Herein, we evaluate the additional prognostic value of the ‘number’ of mutated genes. A total of 797 patients were recruited from Europe (n=537) and the Mayo Clinic (n=260). In the European cohort, 167 (31%) patients were HMR: 127 (23.6%) had one and 40 (7.4%) had two or more mutated genes. The presence of two or more mutations predicted the worst survival: median 2.6 years (hazard ratio (HR) 3.8, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2.6–5.7) vs 7.0 years (HR 1.9, 95% CI 1.4–2.6) for one mutation vs 12.3 years for no mutations. The results were validated in the Mayo cohort and prognostic significance in both cohorts was independent of International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS; HR 2.4, 95% CI 1.6–3.6) and dynamic IPSS (DIPSS)-plus (HR 1.9, 95% CI 1.2–3.1), respectively. Two or more mutations were also associated with shortened leukemia-free survival (HR 6.2, 95% CI 3.5–10.7), also Mayo validated. Calreticulin mutations favorably affected survival, independently of both number of mutations and IPSS/DIPSS-plus. We conclude that the ‘number’ of prognostically detrimental mutations provides added value in the combined molecular and clinical prognostication of PMF.
Blood | 2014
Paola Guglielmelli; Flavia Biamonte; Giada Rotunno; Valentina Artusi; Lucia Artuso; Isabella Bernardis; Elena Tenedini; Lisa Pieri; Chiara Paoli; Carmela Mannarelli; Rajmonda Fjerza; Elisa Rumi; Viktoriya Stalbovskaya; Matthew Squires; Mario Cazzola; Rossella Manfredini; Claire N. Harrison; Enrico Tagliafico; Alessandro M. Vannucchi
The JAK1/JAK2 inhibitor ruxolitinib produced significant reductions in splenomegaly and symptomatic burden and improved survival in patients with myelofibrosis (MF), irrespective of their JAK2 mutation status, in 2 phase III studies against placebo (COMFORT-I) and best available therapy (COMFORT-II). We performed a comprehensive mutation analysis to evaluate the impact of 14 MF-associated mutations on clinical outcomes in 166 patients included in COMFORT-II. We found that responses in splenomegaly and symptoms, as well as the risk of developing ruxolitinib-associated anemia and thrombocytopenia, occurred at similar frequencies across different mutation profiles. Ruxolitinib improved survival independent of mutation profile and reduced the risk of death in patients harboring a set of prognostically detrimental mutations (ASXL1, EZH2, SRSF2, IDH1/2) with an hazard ratio of 0.57 (95% confidence interval: 0.30-1.08) vs best available therapy. These data indicate that clinical efficacy and survival improvement may occur across different molecular subsets of patients with MF treated with ruxolitinib.
Blood | 2012
Tiziano Barbui; Jürgen Thiele; Francesco Passamonti; Elisa Rumi; Emanuela Boveri; Maria Luigia Randi; Irene Bertozzi; Filippo Marino; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Lisa Pieri; Giada Rotunno; Heinz Gisslinger; Bettina Gisslinger; Leonhard Müllauer; Guido Finazzi; Alessandra Carobbio; Andrea Gianatti; Marco Ruggeri; Ilaria Nichele; Emanuele Stefano Giovanni D'Amore; Alessandro Rambaldi; Ayalew Tefferi
We examined the prevalence and prognostic relevance of bone marrow reticulin fibrosis in 526 patients with World Health Organization-defined polycythemia vera evaluated at the time of initial diagnosis. Seventy-four patients (14%) displayed mostly grade 1 reticulin fibrosis, with only 2 cases showing higher-grade fibrosis. Presenting clinical and laboratory characteristics, including JAK2V617F allele burden, between patients with and without fibrosis were similar for the most part, with the exception of a higher prevalence of palpable splenomegaly in patients with fibrosis (P < .01). Patients with fibrosis were less prone to experience thrombosis during their clinical course (1.1 vs 2.7 per 100 patient-years; P = .03) and more prone to develop post-polycythemia vera myelofibrosis (2.2 vs 0.8 per 100 patient-years; P = .01). There was no significant difference between the 2 groups in terms of overall or leukemia-free survival. The present study clarifies the incidence, degree, and prognostic relevance of bone marrow fibrosis obtained at time of initial diagnosis of polycythemia vera.
Blood | 2013
Elisa Rumi; Daniela Pietra; Paola Guglielmelli; Roberta Bordoni; Ilaria Casetti; Chiara Milanesi; Emanuela Sant’Antonio; Virginia Valeria Ferretti; Alessandro Pancrazzi; Giada Rotunno; Marco Severgnini; Alessandro Pietrelli; Cesare Astori; Elena Fugazza; Cristiana Pascutto; Emanuela Boveri; Francesco Passamonti; Gianluca De Bellis; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Mario Cazzola
We studied mutations of MPL exon 10 in patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) or primary myelofibrosis (PMF), first investigating a cohort of 892 consecutive patients. MPL mutation scanning was performed on granulocyte genomic DNA by using a high-resolution melt assay, and the mutant allele burden was evaluated by using deep sequencing. Somatic mutations of MPL, all but one involving codon W515, were detected in 26/661 (4%) patients with ET, 10/187 (5%) with PMF, and 7/44 (16%) patients with post-ET myelofibrosis. Comparison of JAK2 (V617F)-mutated and MPL-mutated patients showed only minor phenotypic differences. In an extended group of 62 MPL-mutated patients, the granulocyte mutant allele burden ranged from 1% to 95% and was significantly higher in patients with PMF or post-ET myelofibrosis compared with those with ET. Patients with higher mutation burdens had evidence of acquired copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity (CN-LOH) of chromosome 1p in granulocytes, consistent with a transition from heterozygosity to homozygosity for the MPL mutation in clonal cells. A significant association was found between MPL-mutant allele burden greater than 50% and marrow fibrosis. These observations suggest that acquired CN-LOH of chromosome 1p involving the MPL location may represent a molecular mechanism of fibrotic transformation in MPL-mutated myeloproliferative neoplasms.
Leukemia | 2014
Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Giada Rotunno; Niccolò Bartalucci; G. Raugei; Valentina Carrai; Manjola Balliu; Carmela Mannarelli; Annalisa Pacilli; Laura Calabresi; Rajmonda Fjerza; Lisa Pieri; Alberto Bosi; Rossella Manfredini; Paola Guglielmelli
Mutations in the gene calreticulin (CALR) occur in the majority of JAK2- and MPL-unmutated patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) and primary myelofibrosis (PMF); identifying CALR mutations contributes to the diagnostic pathway of ET and PMF. CALR mutations are heterogeneous spanning over the exon 9, but all result in a novel common protein C terminus. We developed a polyclonal antibody against a 17-amino-acid peptide derived from mutated calreticulin that was used for immunostaining of bone marrow biopsies. We show that this antibody specifically recognized patients harboring different types of CALR mutation with no staining in healthy controls and JAK2- or MPL-mutated ET and PMF. The labeling was mostly localized in megakaryocytes, whereas myeloid and erythroid cells showed faint staining, suggesting a preferential expression of calreticulin in megakaryocytes. Megakaryocytic-restricted expression of calreticulin was also demonstrated using an antibody against wild-type calreticulin and by measuring the levels of calreticulin RNA by gene expression analysis. Immunostaining using an antibody specific for mutated calreticulin may become a rapid, simple and cost-effective method for identifying CALR-mutated patients complementing molecular analysis; furthermore, the labeling pattern supports the preferential expansion of megakaryocytic cell lineage as a result of CALR mutation in an immature hematopoietic stem cell.
Oncotarget | 2016
Francesca De Luca; Giada Rotunno; Francesca Salvianti; Francesca Galardi; Marta Pestrin; Stefano Gabellini; Lisa Simi; Irene Mancini; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Mario Pazzagli; Angelo Di Leo; Pamela Pinzani
Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) represent a “liquid biopsy” of the tumor potentially allowing real-time monitoring of cancer biology and therapies in individual patients. The purpose of the study was to explore the applicability of a protocol for the molecular characterization of single CTCs by Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) in order to investigate cell heterogeneity and provide a tool for a personalized medicine approach. CTCs were enriched and enumerated by CellSearch in blood from four metastatic breast cancer patients and singularly isolated by DEPArray. Upon whole genome amplification 3–5 single CTCs per patient were analyzed by NGS for 50 cancer-related genes. We found 51 sequence variants in 25 genes. We observed inter- and intra-patient heterogeneity in the mutational status of CTCs. The highest number of somatic deleterious mutations was found in the gene TP53, whose mutation is associated with adverse prognosis in breast cancer. The discordance between the mutational status of the primary tumor and CTCs observed in 3 patients suggests that, in advanced stages of cancer, CTC characteristics are more closely linked to the dynamic modifications of the disease status. In one patient the mutational profiles of CTCs before and during treatment shared only few sequence variants. This study supports the applicability of a non-invasive approach based on the liquid biopsy in metastatic breast cancer patients which, in perspective, should allow investigating the clonal evolution of the tumor for the development of new therapeutic strategies in precision medicine.
Leukemia | 2014
Elena Tenedini; Isabella Bernardis; Valentina Artusi; Lucia Artuso; Enrica Roncaglia; Paola Guglielmelli; Lisa Pieri; Costanza Bogani; Flavia Biamonte; Giada Rotunno; Carmela Mannarelli; Elisa Bianchi; Alessandro Pancrazzi; Tiziana Fanelli; G Malagoli Tagliazucchi; Sergio Ferrari; Rossella Manfredini; Alessandro M. Vannucchi; Enrico Tagliafico
With the intent of dissecting the molecular complexity of Philadelphia-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN), we designed a target enrichment panel to explore, using next-generation sequencing (NGS), the mutational status of an extensive list of 2000 cancer-associated genes and microRNAs. The genomic DNA of granulocytes and in vitro-expanded CD3+T-lymphocytes, as a germline control, was target-enriched and sequenced in a learning cohort of 20 MPN patients using Roche 454 technology. We identified 141 genuine somatic mutations, most of which were not previously described. To test the frequency of the identified variants, a larger validation cohort of 189 MPN patients was additionally screened for these mutations using Ion Torrent AmpliSeq NGS. Excluding the genes already described in MPN, for 8 genes (SCRIB, MIR662, BARD1, TCF12, FAT4, DAP3, POLG and NRAS), we demonstrated a mutation frequency between 3 and 8%. We also found that mutations at codon 12 of NRAS (NRASG12V and NRASG12D) were significantly associated, for primary myelofibrosis (PMF), with highest dynamic international prognostic scoring system (DIPSS)-plus score categories. This association was then confirmed in 66 additional PMF patients composing a final dataset of 168 PMF showing a NRAS mutation frequency of 4.7%, which was associated with a worse outcome, as defined by the DIPSS plus score.