Giorgio Giuliani
Biotec
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Featured researches published by Giorgio Giuliani.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Maria Trojano; Guglielmo Lucchese; Giusi Graziano; Bruce Taylor; Steve Simpson; Vito Lepore; Francois Grand'Maison; Pierre Duquette; Guillermo Izquierdo; Pierre Grammond; Maria Pia Amato; Roberto Bergamaschi; Giorgio Giuliani; Cavit Boz; Raymond Hupperts; Vincent Van Pesch; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Edgardo Cristiano; Marcela Fiol; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Maria Laura Saladino; Freek Verheul; Mark Slee; Damiano Paolicelli; Carla Tortorella; Mariangela D'Onghia; Pietro Iaffaldano; Vita Direnzo; Helmut Butzkueven
Background A female/male (F/M) ratio increase over time in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients was demonstrated in many countries around the world. So far, a direct comparison of sex ratio time-trends among MS populations from different geographical areas was not carried out. Objective In this paper we assessed and compared sex ratio trends, over a 60-year span, in MS populations belonging to different latitudinal areas. Methods Data of a cohort of 15,996 (F = 11,290; M = 4,706) definite MS with birth years ranging from 1930 to 1989 were extracted from the international MSBase registry and the New Zealand MS database. Gender ratios were calculated by six decades based on year of birth and were adjusted for the F/M born-alive ratio derived from the respective national registries of births. Results Adjusted sex ratios showed a significant increase from the first to the last decade in the whole MS sample (from 2.35 to 2.73; p = 0.03) and in the subgroups belonging to the areas between 83° N and 45° N (from 1.93 to 4.55; p<0.0001) and between 45° N to 35° N (from 1.46 to 2.30; p<0.05) latitude, while a sex ratio stability over time was found in the subgroup from areas between 12° S and 55° S latitude. The sex ratio increase mainly affected relapsing-remitting (RR) MS. Conclusions Our results confirm a general sex ratio increase over time in RRMS and also demonstrate a latitudinal gradient of this increase. These findings add useful information for planning case-control studies aimed to explore sex-related factors responsible for MS development.
Neurology | 2014
Vilija Jokubaitis; Vivien Li; Tomas Kalincik; Guillermo Izquierdo; Suzanne J. Hodgkinson; Raed Alroughani; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Alessandra Lugaresi; Pierre Duquette; Marc Girard; Michael Barnett; Francois Grand'Maison; Maria Trojano; Mark Slee; Giorgio Giuliani; Cameron Shaw; Cavit Boz; D. Spitaleri; Freek Verheul; Jodi Haartsen; Danny Liew; Helmut Butzkueven
Objective: To determine early risk of relapse after switch from natalizumab to fingolimod; to compare the switch experience to that in patients switching from interferon-β/glatiramer acetate (IFN-β/GA) and those previously treatment naive; and to determine predictors of time to first relapse on fingolimod. Methods: Data were obtained from the MSBase Registry. Relapse rates (RRs) for each patient group were compared using adjusted negative binomial regression. Survival analyses coupled with adjusted Cox regression were used to model predictors of time to first relapse on fingolimod. Results: A total of 536 patients (natalizumab-fingolimod [n = 89]; IFN-β/GA-fingolimod [n = 350]; naive-fingolimod [n = 97]) were followed up for a median 10 months. In the natalizumab-fingolimod group, there was a small increase in RR on fingolimod (annualized RR [ARR] 0.38) relative to natalizumab (ARR 0.26; p = 0.002). RRs were generally low across all patient groups in the first 9 months on fingolimod (RR 0.001–0.13). However, 30% of patients with disease activity on natalizumab relapsed within the first 6 months on fingolimod. Independent predictors of time to first relapse on fingolimod were the number of relapses in the prior 6 months (hazard ratio [HR] 1.59 per relapse; p = 0.002) and a gap in treatment of 2–4 months compared to no gap (HR 2.10; p = 0.041). Conclusions: RRs after switch to fingolimod were low in all patient groups. The strongest predictor of relapse on fingolimod was prior relapse activity. Based on our data, we recommend a maximum 2-month treatment gap for switches to fingolimod to decrease the hazard of relapse. Classification of evidence: This study provides Class IV evidence that RRs are not higher in patients with multiple sclerosis switching to fingolimod from natalizumab compared to those patients switching to fingolimod from other therapies.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Tomas Kalincik; Tim Spelman; Maria Trojano; Pierre Duquette; Guillermo Izquierdo; Pierre Grammond; Alessandra Lugaresi; Raymond Hupperts; Edgardo Cristiano; Vincent Van Pesch; Francois Grand'Maison; D. Spitaleri; Maria Edite Rio; S. Flechter; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Giorgio Giuliani; Aldo Savino; Maria Pia Amato; Thor Petersen; Ricardo Fernandez-Bolanos; Roberto Bergamaschi; Gerardo Iuliano; Cavit Boz; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Norma Deri; Orla Gray; Freek Verheul; Marcela Fiol; Michael Barnett; Erik van Munster
Objectives To compare treatment persistence between two dosages of interferon β-1a in a large observational multiple sclerosis registry and assess disease outcomes of first line MS treatment at these dosages using propensity scoring to adjust for baseline imbalance in disease characteristics. Methods Treatment discontinuations were evaluated in all patients within the MSBase registry who commenced interferon β-1a SC thrice weekly (n = 4678). Furthermore, we assessed 2-year clinical outcomes in 1220 patients treated with interferon β-1a in either dosage (22 µg or 44 µg) as their first disease modifying agent, matched on propensity score calculated from pre-treatment demographic and clinical variables. A subgroup analysis was performed on 456 matched patients who also had baseline MRI variables recorded. Results Overall, 4054 treatment discontinuations were recorded in 3059 patients. The patients receiving the lower interferon dosage were more likely to discontinue treatment than those with the higher dosage (25% vs. 20% annual probability of discontinuation, respectively). This was seen in discontinuations with reasons recorded as “lack of efficacy” (3.3% vs. 1.7%), “scheduled stop” (2.2% vs. 1.3%) or without the reason recorded (16.7% vs. 13.3% annual discontinuation rate, 22 µg vs. 44 µg dosage, respectively). Propensity score was determined by treating centre and disability (score without MRI parameters) or centre, sex and number of contrast-enhancing lesions (score including MRI parameters). No differences in clinical outcomes at two years (relapse rate, time relapse-free and disability) were observed between the matched patients treated with either of the interferon dosages. Conclusions Treatment discontinuations were more common in interferon β-1a 22 µg SC thrice weekly. However, 2-year clinical outcomes did not differ between patients receiving the different dosages, thus replicating in a registry dataset derived from “real-world” database the results of the pivotal randomised trial. Propensity score matching effectively minimised baseline covariate imbalance between two directly compared sub-populations from a large observational registry.
Brain | 2013
Tomas Kalincik; Vino Vivek; Vilija Jokubaitis; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Maria Trojano; Guillermo Izquierdo; Alessandra Lugaresi; Francois Grand'Maison; Raymond Hupperts; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Roberto Bergamaschi; Gerardo Iuliano; Raed Alroughani; Vincent Van Pesch; Maria Pia Amato; Mark Slee; Freek Verheul; Ricardo Fernandez-Bolanos; Marcela Fiol; D. Spitaleri; Edgardo Cristiano; Orla Gray; Jose Antonio Cabrera-Gomez; Vahid Shaygannejad; Joseph Herbert; Steve Vucic; Merilee Needham; Tatjana Petkovska-Boskova; Carmen-Adella Sirbu; Pierre Duquette
The aim of this work was to evaluate sex differences in the incidence of multiple sclerosis relapses; assess the relationship between sex and primary progressive disease course; and compare effects of age and disease duration on relapse incidence. Annualized relapse rates were calculated using the MSBase registry. Patients with incomplete data or <1 year of follow-up were excluded. Patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis were only included in the sex ratio analysis. Relapse incidences over 40 years of multiple sclerosis or 70 years of age were compared between females and males with Andersen-Gill and Tweedie models. Female-to-male ratios stratified by annual relapse count were evaluated across disease duration and patient age and compared between relapse-onset and primary progressive multiple sclerosis. The study cohort consisted of 11 570 eligible patients with relapse-onset and 881 patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis. Among the relapse-onset patients (82 552 patient-years), 48,362 relapses were recorded. Relapse frequency was 17.7% higher in females compared with males. Within the initial 5 years, the female-to-male ratio increased from 2.3:1 to 3.3:1 in patients with 0 versus ≥4 relapses per year, respectively. The magnitude of this sex effect increased at longer disease duration and older age (P < 10(-12)). However, the female-to-male ratio in patients with relapse-onset multiple sclerosis and zero relapses in any given year was double that of the patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis. Patient age was a more important determinant of decline in relapse incidence than disease duration (P < 10(-12)). Females are predisposed to higher relapse activity than males. However, this difference does not explain the markedly lower female-to-male sex ratio in primary progressive multiple sclerosis. Decline in relapse activity over time is more closely related to patient age than disease duration.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Tim Spelman; Vilija Jokubaitis; Maria Trojano; Guillermo Izquierdo; Francois Grand’Maison; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Cavit Boz; Alessandra Lugaresi; Marc Girard; Pierre Grammond; Gerardo Iuliano; Marcela Fiol; Jose Antonio Cabrera-Gomez; Ricardo Fernandez-Bolanos; Giorgio Giuliani; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Edgardo Cristiano; Joseph Herbert; Tatjana Petkovska-Boskova; Roberto Bergamaschi; Vincent Van Pesch; Fraser Moore; Norbert Vella; Mark Slee; Vetere Santiago; Michael Barnett; Eva Havrdova; Carolyn Young; Carmen-Adella Sirbu; Mary Tanner
Objectives We conducted a prospective study, MSBASIS, to assess factors leading to first treatment discontinuation in patients with a clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) and early relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Methods The MSBASIS Study, conducted by MSBase Study Group members, enrols patients seen from CIS onset, reporting baseline demographics, cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features and Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) scores. Follow-up visits report relapses, EDSS scores, and the start and end dates of MS-specific therapies. We performed a multivariable survival analysis to determine factors within this dataset that predict first treatment discontinuation. Results A total of 2314 CIS patients from 44 centres were followed for a median of 2.7 years, during which time 1247 commenced immunomodulatory drug (IMD) treatment. Ninety percent initiated IMD after a diagnosis of MS was confirmed, and 10% while still in CIS status. Over 40% of these patients stopped their first IMD during the observation period. Females were more likely to cease medication than males (HR 1.36, p = 0.003). Patients treated in Australia were twice as likely to cease their first IMD than patients treated in Spain (HR 1.98, p = 0.001). Increasing EDSS was associated with higher rate of IMD cessation (HR 1.21 per EDSS unit, p<0.001), and intramuscular interferon-β-1a (HR 1.38, p = 0.028) and subcutaneous interferon-β-1a (HR 1.45, p = 0.012) had higher rates of discontinuation than glatiramer acetate, although this varied widely in different countries. Onset cerebral MRI features, age, time to treatment initiation or relapse on treatment were not associated with IMD cessation. Conclusion In this multivariable survival analysis, female sex, country of residence, EDSS change and IMD choice independently predicted time to first IMD cessation.
Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2012
Jeannette Lechner-Scott; B Spencer; T. de Malmanche; John Attia; Michael Fitzgerald; Maria Trojano; Francois Grand'Maison; J Antonio C Gomez; Guillermo Izquierdo; Pierre Duquette; Marc Girard; Pierre Grammond; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Raymond Hupperts; Roberto Bergamaschi; Cavit Boz; Giorgio Giuliani; Vincent Van Pesch; G. Iuliano; Marcela Fiol; Edgardo Cristiano; Freek Verheul; M Laura Saladino; Mark Slee; Michael Barnett; N. Deri; S. Flechter; Norbert Vella; Cameron Shaw; Joseph Herbert
Background: With the advent of MRI scanning, the value of lumbar puncture to assess oligoclonal band (OCB) statusfor the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (MS) is increasingly uncertain. One major issue is that the reported frequency of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-restricted oligoclonal banding for the diagnosis of MS varies considerably in different studies. In addition, the relationship between OCB positivity and disease outcome remains uncertain, as reported studies are generally too small to assess comparative disability outcomes with sufficient power. Methods: In order to further investigate variation of OCB positivity in patients with MS, we utilized MSBase, a longitudinal, Web-based collaborative MS outcomes registry following clinical cohorts in several continents and latitudes. We also assessed whether OCB positivity affects long-term disability outcome. Results: A total of 13,242 patient records were obtained from 37 MS specialist centres in 19 different countries. OCB status was documented in 4481 (34%) patients and 80% of these were OCB positive. The presence of OCB was associated with degree of latitude (p = 0.02). Furthermore, the outcome of patients negative for CSF-specific OCB was significantly better in comparison to the OCB positive patients, as assessed by Expanded Disability Status Scale change (p < 0.001). Conclusions: The results of this study indicate that latitude could explain some of the inconsistencies in OCB status reported in different populations. The study confirms that OCB positivity in MS is associated with a worse long-term prognosis.
Journal of Medical Ethics | 2003
Eugenio Pucci; Natascia Belardinelli; G. Borsetti; Giorgio Giuliani
Objectives: To evaluate relatives’ attitudes towards informing patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) about their diagnosis. Setting: A university hospital in Italy. Methods: The closest relatives of each of 71 subjects diagnosed for the first time as having AD were interviewed, using a semistructured questionnaire. Spontaneous requests by relatives not to communicate issues concerning the diagnosis were also recorded. Results: Forty three (60.6%) relatives spontaneously requested that patients not be fully informed. After being interviewed, nobody thought that the patient should be given all the information. Justifications were related to the fear of the onset or worsening of depressive symptoms in the patient. Conclusions: In Italy relatives’ opposition to informing AD patients appears to be common. Knowledge of the relatives’ attitudes may be useful for clinicians but disclosure of diagnosis should be based on the clinical evaluation of the patient and on a prudent evaluation of the relationship between the patient and her/his relative caregiver.
Annals of Neurology | 2014
Tim Spelman; Orla Gray; Maria Trojano; Thor Petersen; Guillermo Izquierdo; Alessandra Lugaresi; Raymond Hupperts; Roberto Bergamaschi; Pierre Duquette; Pierre Grammond; Giorgio Giuliani; Cavit Boz; Freek Verheul; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Michael Barnett; Francois Grand'Maison; Maria Edite Rio; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Vincent Van Pesch; Ricardo Fernández Bolaños; Shlomo Flechter; Leontien Den Braber-Moerland; Gerardo Iuliano; Maria Pia Amato; Mark Slee; Edgardo Cristiano; Maria Laura Saladino; Mark Paine; Norbert Vella; Krisztian Kasa
Previous studies assessing seasonal variation of relapse onset in multiple sclerosis have had conflicting results. Small relapse numbers, differing diagnostic criteria, and single region studies limit the generalizability of prior results. The aim of this study was to determine whether there is a temporal variation in onset of relapses in both hemispheres and to determine whether seasonal peak relapse probability varies with latitude.
European Journal of Neurology | 2004
Eugenio Pucci; Elisabetta Cartechini; Cristiana Taus; Giorgio Giuliani
With the aim of contributing to the knowledge of attitudes, patterns and motivations for the use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) for multiple sclerosis (MS), 109 MS outpatients, or their close relative in cases of mental status impairment, were interviewed using a semi‐structured questionnaire. The main results are: (i) 35.7% used at least one CAM at least once; (ii) homeopathy and diets were the most common; (iii) 39.4% showed a positive attitude towards CAM; (iv) a perceived benefit was recorded in 61.5% of cases; (v) the referral source was a physician in only 12.8% of cases; (vi) caring neurologist was not consulted in 82% and generalist was not consulted in 67% of cases; (vii) of 61 CAM interventions, 21 were expected to be disease‐modifying and 40 symptomatic; (viii) CAM negatively influenced compliance with conventional medical management in very few cases (2/39); (ix) a higher expanded disability status scale (EDSS) was observed in CAM users; and (x) in those who used CAM during last 3 years (21.1%), the approximate mean cost per year per person was 483 €. In Italy, the use of CAM in MS is widespread but costly. This study has provided further baseline data on which to assess trends in CAM use and has highlighted issues for patients and conventional doctors about the use of CAM to deal with health problems. More research into the implications of concurrent use of CAM with conventional medicine on public health care is required.
Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2014
Stella Hughes; Tim Spelman; Orla Gray; Cavit Boz; Maria Trojano; Alessandra Lugaresi; Guillermo Izquierdo; Pierre Duquette; Marc Girard; Francois Grand'Maison; Pierre Grammond; Celia Oreja-Guevara; Raymond Hupperts; Roberto Bergamaschi; Giorgio Giuliani; Jeannette Lechner-Scott; Michael Barnett; Maria Edite Rio; Vincent Van Pesch; Maria Pia Amato; Gerardo Iuliano; Mark Slee; Freek Verheul; Edgardo Cristiano; Ricardo Fernandez-Bolanos; Dieter Poehlau; Maria Laura Saladino; Norma Deri; Jose Antonio Cabrera-Gomez; Norbert Vella
Background: Several studies have shown that pregnancy reduces multiple sclerosis (MS) relapses, which increase in the early postpartum period. Postpartum relapse risk has been predicted by pre-pregnancy disease activity in some studies. Objective: To re-examine effect of pregnancy on relapses using the large international MSBase Registry, examining predictors of early postpartum relapse. Methods: An observational case–control study was performed including pregnancies post-MS onset. Annualised relapse rate (ARR) and median Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) scores were compared for the 24 months pre-conception, pregnancy and 24 months postpartum periods. Clustered logistic regression was used to investigate predictors of early postpartum relapses. Results: The study included 893 pregnancies in 674 females with MS. ARR (standard error) pre-pregnancy was 0.32 (0.02), which fell to 0.13 (0.03) in the third trimester and rose to 0.61 (0.06) in the first three months postpartum. Median EDSS remained unchanged. Pre-conception ARR and disease-modifying treatment (DMT) predicted early postpartum relapse in a multivariable model. Conclusion: Results confirm a favourable effect on relapses as pregnancy proceeds, and an early postpartum peak. Pre-conception DMT exposure and low ARR were independently protective against postpartum relapse. This novel finding could provide clinicians with a strategy to minimise postpartum relapse risk in women with MS planning pregnancy.