Giuseppe Di Mauro
University of Milan
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Publication
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International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology | 2010
Paola Marchisio; Luisa Bellussi; Giuseppe Di Mauro; Mattia Doria; Giovanni Felisati; Riccardo Longhi; Andrea Novelli; A. Speciale; Nicola Mansi; Nicola Principi
Acute otitis media (AOM) is the most common disease occurring in infants and children and has major medical, social and economic effects. If we consider the Italian pediatric population and the incidence rates in different age ranges it can be calculated that almost one million cases of AOM are diagnosed in Italy every year. Various attempts have been made internationally to clarify the most appropriate ways in which AOM should be managed. In Italy, this has been done at local or regional level but there have so far been no national initiatives. The objective of this guideline is to provide recommendations to pediatricians, general practitioners and otolaryngologists involved in the clinical management of acute otitis media in healthy children aged 2 months to 12 years. After a systematic review and grading of evidences from the literature, the document was drafted by a multidisciplinary panel with identified key clinical questions related to diagnosis, treatment of the acute episode, management of complications and prevention.
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2009
Paola Marchisio; E. Mira; Catherine Klersy; Fabio Pagella; Susanna Esposito; Sonia Bianchini; Giuseppe Di Mauro; Michela Fusi; Erica Nazzari; Marta Tagliabue; Luisa Bellussi; Nicola Principi
Background: Medical education and guidelines have been advocated as major means of improving the management of otitis media. Limited data are available concerning medical education in acute otitis media (AOM), and the association between medical education and attitudes about AOM guidelines has never been explored. Objectives: To assess the prevalence of medical education concerning AOM, of a positive attitude toward AOM guidelines and of appropriate diagnostic methods in a large sample of Italian pediatricians (PEDs) and otolaryngologist (ENTs) and to look for possible associations between them. Subjects and Methods: This cross-sectional survey was based on the responses of 2012 physicians (1160 PEDs and 852 ENTs) to a mailed anonymous questionnaire. Results: Very few (9%) of the responders had received any AOM medical education during medical school, but the number increased during residency (38%) and peaked in the postresidency period (53%) with slight differences between PEDs and ENTs. Forty percent reported a positive attitude toward AOM guidelines, with PEDs having a better attitude than ENTs (46% vs. 32%, P < 0.001). An appropriate diagnostic method for AOM was reported by only 21% of the physicians (PEDs 11% vs. ENTs 35%, P < 0.001). AOM medical education during postresidency and reporting the use of appropriate diagnostic methods were significantly associated with a positive attitude about AOM guidelines. Conclusions: Specific educational programs concerning AOM should be implemented and rigorously evaluated, before physicians become fully trained PEDs and ENTs, and maintained during postresidency. Evidence-based guidelines should be further incorporated into everyday practice of both PEDs and ENTs.
Paediatric Respiratory Reviews | 2014
Elena Chiappini; Rachele Mazzantini; Eugenia Bruzzese; Annalisa Capuano; Maria Chiara Colombo; Claudio Cricelli; Giuseppe Di Mauro; Susanna Esposito; Filippo Festini; Alfredo Guarino; Vito Leonardo Miniello; Nicola Principi; Paola Marchisio; Concetta Rafaniello; Francesco Rossi; Liberata Sportiello; Francesco Tancredi; Elisabetta Venturini; Luisa Galli; Maurizio de Martino
BACKGROUND Several guidelines for the management of respiratory tract infections in children are available in Italy, as well as in other European countries and the United States of America. However, poor adherence to guidelines and the sustained inappropriate use of antibiotics have been reported. In the outpatient setting, almost half of antibiotics are prescribed for the treatment of common respiratory tract infections. In Italy the antibiotic prescription rate is significantly higher than in other European countries, such as Denmark or the Netherlands, and also the levels of antibiotic resistance for a large variety of bacteria are higher. Therefore, the Italian Society of Preventive and Social Paediatrics organised a consensus conference for the treatment of respiratory tract infections in children to produce a brief, easily readable, evidence-based document. METHODS The conference method was used, according to the National Institute of Health and the National Plan Guidelines. A literature search was performed focusing on the current guidelines for the treatment of airway infections in children aged 1 month-18 years in the ambulatory setting. RESULTS Recommendations for the treatment of acute pharyngitis, acute otitis media, sinusitis, and pneumonia have been summarized. Conditions for which antibiotic treatment should not be routinely prescribed have been highlighted. CONCLUSION This evidence-based document is intended to accessible to primary care pediatricians and general practice physicians in order to make clinical practice uniform, in accordance with the recommendations of the current guidelines.
World Allergy Organization Journal | 2016
Giuseppe Di Mauro; Roberto Bernardini; Salvatore Barberi; Annalisa Capuano; Antonio Correra; Gian Luigi De'Angelis; Iride Dello Iacono; Maurizio de Martino; Daniele Ghiglioni; Dora Di Mauro; Marcello Giovannini; Massimo Landi; Gian Luigi Marseglia; Alberto Martelli; Vito Leonardo Miniello; Diego Peroni; Lucilla Ricottini Maria Giuseppa Sullo; Luigi Terracciano; Cristina Vascone; Elvira Verduci; Maria Carmen Verga; Elena Chiappini
BackgroundAllergic sensitization in children and allergic diseases arising therefrom are increasing for decades.Several interventions, functional foods, pro- and prebiotics, vitamins are proposed for the prevention of allergies and they can’t be uncritically adopted.ObjectiveThis Consensus document was developed by the Italian Society of Preventive and Social Paediatrics and the Italian Society of Paediatric Allergy and Immunology.The aim is to provide updated recommendations regarding allergy prevention in children.MethodsThe document has been issued by a multidisciplinary expert panel and it is intended to be mainly directed to primary care paediatricians.It includes 19 questions which have been preliminarily considered relevant by the panel. Relatively to each question, a literature search has been performed, according to the Italian National Guideline Program. Methodology, and a brief summary of the available literature data, has been provided.Many topics have been analyzed including the role of mother’s diet restriction, use of breast/formula/hydrolyzed milk; timing of introduction of complementary foods, role (if any) of probiotics, prebiotics, vitamins, exposure to dust mites, animals and to tobacco smoke.ResultsSome preventive interventions have a strong level of recommendation. (e.g., the dehumidifier to reduce exposure to mite allergens). With regard to other types of intervention, such as the use of partially and extensively hydrolyzed formulas, the document underlines the lack of evidence of effectiveness.No preventive effect of dietary supplementation with polyunsaturated fatty acids, vitamins or minerals has been demonstrated.There is no preventive effect of probiotics on asthma, rhinitis and allergic diseases. It has demonstrated a modest effect, but steady, in the prevention of atopic dermatitis.ConclusionsThe recommendations of the Consensus are based on a careful analysis of the evidence available.The lack of evidence of efficacy does not necessarily imply that some interventions may not be effective, but currently they can’t be recommended.
Expert Review of Anti-infective Therapy | 2015
Elena Chiappini; Angelo Camaioni; Marco Benazzo; Andrea Biondi; Sergio Bottero; Salvatore De Masi; Giuseppe Di Mauro; Mattia Doria; Susanna Esposito; Giovanni Felisati; Dino Felisati; Filippo Festini; Renato Maria Gaini; Luisa Galli; Claudio Gambini; Umberto Gianelli; Massimo Landi; Marco Lucioni; Nicola Mansi; Rachele Mazzantini; Paola Marchisio; Gian Luigi Marseglia; Vito Leonardo Miniello; Marta Nicola; Andrea Novelli; Marco Paulli; Marta Pillon; Paolo Pisani; Carlotta Pipolo; Nicola Principi
Cervical lymphadenopathy is a common disorder in children due to a wide spectrum of disorders. On the basis of a complete history and physical examination, paediatricians have to select, among the vast majority of children with a benign self-limiting condition, those at risk for other, more complex, diseases requiring laboratory tests, imaging and, finally, tissue sampling. At the same time, they should avoid expensive and invasive examinations when unnecessary. The Italian Society of Preventive and Social Pediatrics, jointly with the Italian Society of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, the Italian Society of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology, and other Scientific Societies, issued a National Consensus document, based on the most recent literature findings, including an algorithm for the management of cervical lymphadenopathy in children. Methods: The Consensus Conference method was used, following the Italian National Plan Guidelines. Relevant publications in English were identified through a systematic review of MEDLINE and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews from their inception through March 21, 2014. Results: Basing on literature results, an algorithm was developed, including several possible clinical scenarios. Situations requiring a watchful waiting strategy, those requiring an empiric antibiotic therapy, and those necessitating a prompt diagnostic workup, considering the risk for a severe underling disease, have been identified. Conclusion: The present algorithm is a practice tool for the management of pediatric cervical lymphadenopathy in the hospital and the ambulatory settings. A multidisciplinary approach is paramount. Further studies are required for its validation in the clinical field.
Journal of Perinatology | 2016
A Di Comite; S Esposito; A Villani; M Stronati; Nicola Principi; Samantha Bosis; Claudia Tagliabue; Laura Senatore; Beatrice Ascolese; Laura Lancella; Laura Cursi; Annalisa Grandin; Caterina Marabotto; Luisa Galli; Maurizio de Martino; Elena Chiappini; Carlotta Montagnani; Daniele Ciofi; Filippo Festini; Martina Anziati; Sabrina Becciani; Giulia Remaschi; Sara Sollai; Chiara Tersigni; Elisabetta Venturini; Alfredo Guarino; Andrea LoVecchio; Riccardo Scotto; Filippo Bernardi; Elisa Bertazzoni
This article reports the recommendations for managing neonatal tuberculosis (TB) drawn up by a group of Italian scientific societies. The Consensus Conference method was used, and relevant publications in English were identified through a systematic review of MEDLINE and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews from their inception until 31 December 2014. Group experts concluded that if suspicion is aroused, it is necessary to undertake promptly all of the investigations useful for identifying the disease not only in the newborn, but also in the mother and family contacts because a diagnosis of TB in the family nucleus can guide its diagnosis and treatment in the newborn. If the suspicion is confirmed, empirical treatment should be started. Breast-fed newborns being treated with isoniazid should be given pyridoxine supplementation at a dose of 1 mg kg−1 day−1. Mothers with active-phase TB can breast-feed once they have become smear negative after having received appropriate treatment.
Italian Journal of Pediatrics | 2018
Giuseppe Saggese; F. Vierucci; Flavia Prodam; Fabio Cardinale; Irene Cetin; Elena Chiappini; Gian Luigi de’ Angelis; Maddalena Massari; Emanuele Miraglia del Giudice; Michele Miraglia del Giudice; Diego Peroni; Luigi Terracciano; Rino Agostiniani; Domenico Careddu; Daniele Ghiglioni; Gianni Bona; Giuseppe Di Mauro; Giovanni Corsello
Vitamin D plays a pivotal role in the regulation of calcium-phosphorus metabolism, particularly during pediatric age when nutritional rickets and impaired bone mass acquisition may occur.Besides its historical skeletal functions, in the last years it has been demonstrated that vitamin D directly or indirectly regulates up to 1250 genes, playing so-called extraskeletal actions. Indeed, recent data suggest a possible role of vitamin D in the pathogenesis of several pathological conditions, including infectious, allergic and autoimmune diseases. Thus, vitamin D deficiency may affect not only musculoskeletal health but also a potentially wide range of acute and chronic conditions. At present, the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency is high in Italian children and adolescents, and national recommendations on vitamin D supplementation during pediatric age are lacking. An expert panel of the Italian Society of Preventive and Social Pediatrics reviewed available literature focusing on randomized controlled trials of vitamin D supplementation to provide a practical approach to vitamin D supplementation for infants, children and adolescents.
Expert Review of Anti-infective Therapy | 2017
Elena Chiappini; Barbara Bortone; Mattia Doria; Massimo Landi; Giuseppe Di Mauro; Paola Marchisio
ABSTRACT Introduction: With the aim to reduce inappropriate procedures and antibiotic therapy in the management of acute otitis media (AOM) in children, the Italian Society of Preventive and Social Pediatrics (SIPPS) proposed a top five list of recommendations for clinical practice. Areas covered: AOM is one of the most frequent reasons for antibiotic prescription in pediatric age. The over-estimation of AOM is associated with inappropriate treatment, increased costs, adverse events and spread of antibiotic resistance. Thus, the most recent guidelines provided stringent diagnostic criteria and considered the ‘watchful waiting’ approach, limiting the immediate antibiotic therapy to a well-characterized subgroup of children. Expert commentary: The five recommendations proposed are: 1) Do not diagnose AOM without having documented the presence of middle ear effusion 2) Do not diagnose AOM without examining the entire tympanic membrane; 3) Do not treat immediately all cases of AOM with antibiotics; 4) Do not administer ear analgesic drops until examining the whole tympanic membrane 5) Do not use macrolides in the AOM therapy. This list of top five recommendations could be a novel tool to spread the key messages on the guidelines and to promote the correct diagnostic procedures as well as a rational use of antibiotics in children.
Italian Journal of Pediatrics | 2014
Eugenio Baraldi; Marcello Lanari; Paolo Manzoni; Giovanni A. Rossi; Silvia Vandini; Alessandro Rimini; Costantino Romagnoli; Pierluigi Colonna; Andrea Biondi; Paolo Biban; Giampietro Chiamenti; Roberto Bernardini; Marco Cappa; Giuseppe Magazzù; Carlo Catassi; Antonio Urbino; Luigi Memo; Gianpaolo Donzelli; Carlo Minetti; Francesco Paravati; Giuseppe Di Mauro; Filippo Festini; Susanna Esposito; Giovanni Corsello
Italian Journal of Pediatrics | 2017
Paolo Brambilla; Marco Giussani; Angela Pasinato; Leonello Venturelli; Francesco Privitera; Emanuele Miraglia del Giudice; Sara Sollai; Giuseppe Di Mauro; Oliviero Bruni; Elena Chiappini
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Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico
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