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Dive into the research topics where Giuseppe Cariti is active.

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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Cariti.


Journal of Viral Hepatitis | 2007

A short course of pegylated interferon-alpha in acute HCV hepatitis

Guido Calleri; Giuseppe Cariti; F. Gaiottino; F. G. De Rosa; Olivia Bargiacchi; Sabrina Audagnotto; S. Quaglia; T. De Blasi; P. Romano; Antonio Traverso; G. Leo; R. Carbone; B. Del Mastro; M. Tinelli; Pietro Caramello; G. Di Perri

Summary.  Acute hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection evolves to chronicity in 50–84% cases. Treatment with interferon‐α (IFN‐α) was repeatedly found to provide sustained cure rates higher than that in chronic HCV infection, but the optimal treatment strategy has not yet been defined. In a multicentre open‐label study, we investigated the therapeutic performance of a short course of pegylated (peg) IFN‐α in patients with acute HCV hepatitis. Peg IFN‐α2b, 1.0–1.5 μg/kg weekly, was administered for 12 weeks. Forty‐six patients were enrolled; 26 of them were intravenous drug users. Eleven patients had jaundice. Treatment was started within 1–90 days from the peak alanine aminotransferase. Treatment was well tolerated with a single dropout (2%). Thirty‐three of 46 patients (72%) had a sustained virological response (SVR) after a 6 months post‐treatment follow‐up, 8 (17%) relapsed after treatment and 4 were nonresponders (9%). A lower peak viraemia, receiving at least 1.2 μg/kg of peg IFN‐α, and a negative HCV‐RNA at week 4 and week 12 were predictors of SVR. Thus, in patients with early (week 4) viral response, a short course of peg IFN‐α at a weekly dose >1.2 μg/kg, may be a valuable option for the treatment of acute HCV hepatitis.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2010

Practice guidelines for the treatment of hepatitis C: Recommendations from an AISF/SIMIT/SIMAST expert opinion meeting

Daniele Prati; Antonio Gasbarrini; Francesco Mazzotta; Evangelista Sagnelli; Giampiero Carosi; Nicola Abrescia; Alfredo Alberti; Silvia Ambu; P. Andreone; Angelo Andriulli; Mario Angelico; Giorgio Antonucci; Antonio Ascione; Luca Saverio Belli; Raffaele Bruno; Savino Bruno; Patrizia Burra; Calogero Cammà; N. Caporaso; Giuseppe Cariti; Umberto Cillo; Nicola Coppola; A. Craxì; Andrea De Luca; Eleonora De Martin; Vito Di Marco; S. Fagiuoli; Carlo Ferrari; Giovanni Battista Gaeta; Massimo Galli

It is increasingly clear that a tailored therapeutic approach to patients with hepatitis C virus infection is needed. Success rates in difficult to treat and low-responsive hepatitis C virus patients are not completely satisfactory, and there is the need to optimise treatment duration and intensity in patients with the highest likelihood of response. In addition, the management of special patient categories originally excluded from phase III registration trials needs to be critically re-evaluated. This article reports the recommendations for the treatment of hepatitis C virus infection on an individual basis, drafted by experts of three scientific societies.


Journal of Hepatology | 2001

Interferon and amantadine in combination as initial treatment for chronic hepatitis C patients

Marco Tabone; C. Laudi; Benedetto Delmastro; Alberto Biglino; Massimo Andreoni; Franco Chieppa; Renato Bonardi; Giuseppe Cariti; Salvatore Cusumano; Franco Brunello; Guido Calleri; Aldo Manca; Patrizia Della Monica; Laura Sidoli; Mario Rizzetto; Angelo Pera

BACKGROUND/AIMS To evaluate the efficacy and tolerance of amantadine in combination with interferon in the treatment of chronic hepatitis C. METHODS Multi-centre trial including 180 chronic hepatitis C patients without cirrhosis, randomly enrolled to receive interferon 6 MU every other day for 6 months followed by 3 MU for further 6 months (group A, 90 patients), or the same schedule plus amantadine 200 mg/day (group B, 90 patients). Primary end-point was a sustained virological and biochemical response, secondary end-points were on-treatment (third month) and end-of-treatment response rates. RESULTS The two groups had similar demographic, biochemical and virological characteristics. A sustained response after 6 months follow-up was observed in 17% of group A and 24% of group B patients (P not significant), an end-of-treatment response was observed in 37% in group A and 47% in group B (P not significant), an on-treatment response was observed in 46% in group A and 61% in group B patients (P < 0.05). No major side effects due to amantadine administration were observed. CONCLUSIONS Adding amantadine to interferon did not improve the sustained treatment efficacy. However, the rate of early response at the third month of therapy was significantly higher in the combination therapy group.


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 2012

Inosine triphosphatase polymorphisms and ribavirin pharmacokinetics as determinants of ribavirin-associate anemia in patients receiving standard anti-HCV treatment.

Antonio DʼAvolio; Alessia Ciancio; Marco Siccardi; Antonina Smedile; Lorena Baietto; Marco Simiele; Marucco Da; Giuseppe Cariti; Andrea Calcagno; de Requena Dg; Mauro Sciandra; Jessica Cusato; Troshina G; Stefano Bonora; Mario Rizzetto; Di Perri G

Background Functional variants of inosine triphosphatase (ITPA) were recently found to protect against ribavirin (RBV)-induced hemolytic anemia. However, no definitive data are yet available on the role of plasma RBV concentrations on hemoglobin (Hb) decrement. Moreover, no data have been published on the possible interplay between these 2 factors. Methods A retrospective analysis included 167 patients. The ITPA variants rs7270101 and rs1127354 were genotyped and tested using the &khgr;2 test for association with Hb reduction at week 4. We also investigated, using multivariate logistic regression, the impact of RBV plasma exposure on Hb concentrations. Results Both single nucleotide polymorphisms were associated with Hb decrease. The carrier of at least 1 variant allele in the functional ITPA single nucleotide polymorphisms was associated with a lower decrement of Hb (−1.1 g/dL), as compared with patients without a variant allele (−2.75 g/dL; P = 4.09 × 10−8). RBV concentrations were not influenced by ITPA genotypes. A cut-off of 2.3 &mgr;g/mL of RBV was found to be associated with anemia (area-under-receiver operating characteristic = 0.630, sensitivity = 50.0%, and specificity = 69.5%, P = 0.008). In multivariate logistic regression analyses, the carrier of a variant allele (P = 0.005) and plasma RBV concentrations <2.3 &mgr;g/mL (P = 0.016) were independently associated with protection against clinically significant anemia at week 4. Conclusions Although no direct relationship was found between ITPA polymorphisms and plasma RBV concentrations, both factors were shown to be significantly associated with anemia. A multivariate regression model based on ITPA genetic polymorphisms and RBV trough concentration was developed for predicting the risk of anemia. By relying upon these 2 variables, an individualized management of anemia seems to be feasible in recipients of pegylated interferon–RBV therapy.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2008

The use of trough ribavirin concentration to predict sustained virological response and haematological toxicity in HIV/HCV-co-infected patients treated with ribavirin and pegylated interferon

D. Aguilar Marucco; D Gonzalez de Requena; Stefano Bonora; C Tettoni; Marino Bonasso; T. De Blasi; Antonio D'Avolio; Mauro Sciandra; Marco Siccardi; Lorena Baietto; Laura Trentini; Alessandro Sinicco; Giuseppe Cariti; G. Di Perri

OBJECTIVES To study the association between trough ribavirin concentration (C(trough)) with sustained virological response (SVR) and haemoglobin (Hb) decrease in HIV/hepatitis C virus (HCV)-co-infected (HIV+/HCV+) patients treated with anti-HCV therapy. METHODS HIV+/HCV+ patients treated with ribavirin and pegylated interferon were prospectively evaluated. Qualitative and quantitative HCV-RNA, Hb levels and ribavirin C(trough) were measured at baseline and weeks 2, 4, 12, 24, 36 and 48 during therapy. HCV-RNA was also measured at 24 weeks after the end of therapy. Efficacy analysis was performed on patients with a definitive virological outcome (SVR, relapser and non-responder), whereas for toxicity analysis, dropouts were considered until the last available observation. RESULTS Fifty-two patients (54.7% with genotype 1 or 4) were included. Overall, no correlation between ribavirin C(trough) and early virological response (EVR) nor SVR was found. However, in patients with genotype 1 or 4, ribavirin C(trough) was independently associated with EVR (P = 0.036) and SVR (P = 0.046). A ribavirin C(trough) cut-off of 1600 ng/mL was found to be associated with both EVR (chi(2) = 5.69, P = 0.028) and SVR (chi(2)=4.2, P = 0.04). Higher ribavirin C(trough) correlated with Hb decrease (R = -0.361, P = 0.009) and was independently associated with an Hb decrease of >4 g/dL (P = 0.009). Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis indicated that a ribavirin C(trough) of >2300 ng/mL was associated with an Hb decrease of >4 g/dL (chi(2) = 8.08, P = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS Our study confirmed a relationship between ribavirin exposure and both efficacy and toxicity. Moreover, we found ribavirin C(trough) cut-offs for both SVR in genotypes 1 and 4 and overall haematological toxicity. These findings deserve further clinical evaluation.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2007

Twelve-Week Treatment of Acute Hepatitis C Virus with Pegylated Interferon-α-2b in Injection Drug Users

Francesco Giuseppe De Rosa; Olivia Bargiacchi; Sabrina Audagnotto; Silvia Garazzino; Giuseppe Cariti; Guido Calleri; Olga Lesioba; Stefania Belloro; Riccardo Raiteri; Giovanni Di Perri

Injection drug use is the leading risk factor for infection with hepatitis C virus, and interferon (IFN) treatment in this context is associated with a poor rate of adherence. In this article, we review our experience with injection drug users with acute hepatitis C who are treated with pegylated IFN- alpha -2b for 12 weeks. Acute hepatitis C was diagnosed according to standardized criteria, and patients were treated with a median dosage of IFN- alpha -2b of 1.33 microg/kg per week. A sustained virological response was achieved in 17 (74%) of 23 patients. A sustained virological response was achieved in 14 (87%) of 16 patients treated with a dosage of >or=1.33 microg/kg per week and in 3 (43%) of 7 patients treated with a lower dosage. Sustained virological response was significantly associated only with a pegylated IFN- alpha -2b dosage >or=1.33 microg/kg per week (P=.022). A 12-week regimen of pegylated IFN to treat injection drug users with hepatitis C has a compliance that is much higher than that reported with a 24-week regimen. Adverse effects are minimal if patients are carefully selected.


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 2012

Negative Predictive Value of IL28B, SLC28A2, and CYP27B1 SNPs and Low RBV Plasma Exposure for Therapeutic Response to PEG/IFN-RBV Treatment.

Antonio D'Avolio; Alessia Ciancio; Marco Siccardi; Antonina Smedile; Marco Simiele; Jessica Cusato; Lorena Baietto; Aguilar Marucco D; Giuseppe Cariti; Andrea Calcagno; Gonzalez de Requena D; Mauro Sciandra; Troshina G; Caviglia Gp; Stefano Bonora; Mario Rizzetto; Di Perri G

Objectives: The response rate to treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus-genotype 1 and 4 infections was recently found to be strongly influenced by many polymorphisms. The aim of our study was to carry out an integrated analysis of the effects of polymorphisms and ribavirin (RBV) plasma exposure on outcome. Methods: The retrospective analysis included 174 patients. IL28B, CYP27B1, SLC29A1, SLC28A3, and SLC28A2 polymorphisms were genotyped and tested for association with sustained virological response. The impact of RBV plasma exposure during the first 3 months of therapy on outcome was also investigated. Results: Considering patients infected by hepatitis C virus-1/4, 3 polymorphisms (IL28B rs8099917TT, CYP27B1 rs4646536TT, and CNT2 rs11854484TT) were associated with sustained virological response. The number of negative variant allele and low RBV exposure were correlated to percentage increasing to therapy failure, suggesting some degree of cumulative effect of the 4 factors. A cutoff of 2.5 &mgr;g/mL of RBV was found to be associated with outcome (area under ROC [AUROC] curve = 0.64, sensitivity = 55.0%, and specificity = 71.2%, P = 0.020). In multivariate logistic regression analyses, each variant allele and RBV plasma exposure cutoff were independently associated with outcome. Conclusions: In this study, we found that additional polymorphisms and RBV plasma exposure are also able to influence the achievement of response. Regardless of the magnitude of RBV pharmacokinetic exposure, the negative predictive value of the polymorphisms here investigated is much stronger than the positive one.


Antiviral Research | 2013

Association of ITPA polymorphisms rs6051702/rs1127354 instead of rs7270101/rs1127354 as predictor of ribavirin-associated anemia in chronic hepatitis C treated patients

Antonio D’Avolio; Amedeo De Nicolò; Jessica Cusato; Alessia Ciancio; Lucio Boglione; Silvia Strona; Giuseppe Cariti; Giulia Troshina; Gian Paolo Caviglia; Antonina Smedile; Mario Rizzetto; Giovanni Di Perri

Functional variants rs7270101 and rs1127354 of inosine triphosphatase (ITPA) were recently found to protect against ribavirin (RBV)-induced hemolytic anemia. However, no definitive data are yet available on the role of no functional rs6051702 polymorphism. Since a simultaneous evaluation of the three ITPA SNPs for hemolytic anemia has not yet been investigated, we aimed to understand the contribution of each SNPs and its potential clinical use to predict anemia in HCV treated patients. A retrospective analysis included 379 HCV treated patients. The ITPA variants rs6051702, rs7270101 and rs1127354 were genotyped and tested for association with achieving anemia at week 4. We also investigated, using multivariate logistic regression, the impact of each single and paired associated polymorphism on anemia onset. All SNPs were associated with Hb decrease. The carrier of at least one variant allele in the functional ITPA SNPs was associated with a lower decrement of Hb, as compared to patients without a variant allele. In multivariate logistic regression analyses the carrier of a variant allele in the rs6051702/rs1127354 association (OR=0.11, p=1.75×10(-5)) and Hb at baseline (OR=1.51, p=1.21×10(-4)) were independently associated with protection against clinically significant anemia at week 4. All ITPA polymorphisms considered were shown to be significantly associated with anemia onset. A multivariate regression model based on ITPA genetic polymorphisms was developed for predicting the risk of anemia. Considering the characterization of pre-therapy anemia predictors, rs6051702 SNP in association to rs1127354 is more informative in order to avoid this relevant adverse event.


Liver International | 2013

Kinetics and prediction of HBsAg loss during therapy with analogues in patients affected by chronic hepatitis B HBeAg negative and genotype D

Lucio Boglione; Antonio D'Avolio; Giuseppe Cariti; Gabriella Gregori; Elisa Burdino; Lorena Baietto; Jessica Cusato; Valeria Ghisetti; Francesco Giuseppe De Rosa; Giovanni Di Perri

In patients affected by chronic hepatitis because of HBV infection, long‐term suppressive therapy with nucleos(t)ides analogues in the HBeAg− patients has shown low effects on HBsAg titre (qHBsAg) decrease, and HBsAg loss is difficult to achieve. Thus, in this type of patients the main goals of antiviral therapy is the suppression of HBV‐DNA and ALT normalization.


Journal of Viral Hepatitis | 2013

Sequential therapy with entecavir and PEG-INF in patients affected by chronic hepatitis B and high levels of HBV-DNA with non-D genotypes

Lucio Boglione; Antonio D'Avolio; Giuseppe Cariti; M.G. Milia; Marco Simiele; Amedeo De Nicolò; Valeria Ghisetti; G. Di Perri

Complete eradication of hepatitis B virus (HBV) is rarely achieved. Treatment options include currently available nucleos(t)ide analogues and pegylated interferon. The aim of our exploratory study was to assess the effectiveness of sequential therapy for chronic hepatitis B (CHB) vs the current standard of care. We evaluated an association with entecavir and pegylated interferon alfa‐2a (PEG‐IFN) in 20 patients with hepatitis B, high HBV viremia and genotypes A, B, C and E. Patients received entecavir alone for 12 weeks, then entecavir and PEG‐IFN for 12 weeks, lastly PEG‐IFN alone for 36 weeks. The results were compared with 20 patients (control group) treated in the past with 48 weeks of PEG‐IFN monotherapy. Our results show that complete sustained virological response (SVR) and partial SVR were, respectively, 60% and 80% in the study group and 10% and 30% in the control group; anti‐HBe seroconversion rate were 76.9% vs 15%, and anti‐HBs seroconversion were 20% vs 0%, respectively. We found a correlation among different genotypes and virological and serological outcomes – genotype C has a better virological response, while genotype A had a better serological response, and E genotype had a poor response. These results show that a sequential approach is a promising strategy of treatment in patients with CHB and high viremia in comparison with PEG‐IFN monotherapy. The E genotype seems to have the worse rate of response and requires other treatment strategies.

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