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Dive into the research topics where Grazia Bossi is active.

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Featured researches published by Grazia Bossi.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2014

Clinical Features and Follow-Up in Patients with 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome.

Caterina Cancrini; Pamela Puliafito; Maria Cristina Digilio; Annarosa Soresina; Silvana Martino; Roberto Rondelli; Rita Consolini; Fabio Cardinale; Andrea Finocchi; Maria Luisa Romiti; Baldassarre Martire; Rosa Bacchetta; V. Albano; Adriano Carotti; Fernando Specchia; Davide Montin; Emilia Cirillo; Guido Cocchi; Antonino Trizzino; Grazia Bossi; Ornella Milanesi; Chiara Azzari; Giovanni Corsello; Claudio Pignata; Alessandro Aiuti; Maria Cristina Pietrogrande; Bruno Marino; Alberto G. Ugazio; Alessandro Plebani; Paolo Rossi

OBJECTIVE To investigate the clinical manifestations at diagnosis and during follow-up in patients with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome to better define the natural history of the disease. STUDY DESIGN A retrospective and prospective multicenter study was conducted with 228 patients in the context of the Italian Network for Primary Immunodeficiencies. Clinical diagnosis was confirmed by cytogenetic or molecular analysis. RESULTS The cohort consisted of 112 males and 116 females; median age at diagnosis was 4 months (range 0 to 36 years 10 months). The diagnosis was made before 2 years of age in 71% of patients, predominantly related to the presence of heart anomalies and neonatal hypocalcemia. In patients diagnosed after 2 years of age, clinical features such as speech and language impairment, developmental delay, minor cardiac defects, recurrent infections, and facial features were the main elements leading to diagnosis. During follow-up (available for 172 patients), the frequency of autoimmune manifestations (P = .015) and speech disorders (P = .002) increased. After a median follow-up of 43 months, the survival probability was 0.92 at 15 years from diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS Our data show a delay in the diagnosis of 22q11.2 deletion syndrome with noncardiac symptoms. This study provides guidelines for pediatricians and specialists for early identification of cases that can be confirmed by genetic testing, which would permit the provision of appropriate clinical management.


International Journal of Immunopathology and Pharmacology | 2008

A prospective study on children with initial diagnosis of transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy: results from the Italian Primary Immunodeficiency Network.

Viviana Moschese; S Graziani; Ma Avanzini; Rita Carsetti; M. Marconi; M La Rocca; L Chini; Claudio Pignata; A Soresina; Rita Consolini; Grazia Bossi; Antonino Trizzino; Silvana Martino; Fabio Cardinale; P Bertolini; Gianluigi Marseglia; M Zecca; S Di Cesare; Isabella Quinti; Roberto Rondelli; Maria Cristina Pietrogrande; Paolo Giorgi Rossi; Alessandro Plebani

Transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy (THI) is a heterogenous disorder characterized by reduced serum IgG levels in early infancy. A putative diagnosis is initially made after exclusion of other causes of hypogammaglobulinemia while a definitive diagnosis of THI can only be made a posteriori in patients with normalization of IgG levels. The aim of this study is to characterize clinical and immunological features of children with an initial diagnosis of THI in correlation to natural outcome, and to assess predictive laboratory parameters of clinical evolution for this disorder. We prospectively analysed clinical and immunological characteristics of 77 THI children at initial diagnosis and of 57 patients at follow-up. Memory B cell subsets and in vitro immunoglobulin production were evaluated. Seventy patients (91%) showed clinical symptoms. Patients suffered from infections (91%), allergies (47%) and autoimmune disease (4%). During follow-up 41/57 children (72%) normalized IgG values, mostly within 24 months of age (p<0.001), allowing the diagnosis of THI. The 16 children who did not normalize their IgG levels showed a higher frequency of severe infections and autoimmune disease (p<0.01). Moreover, they expressed a reduced frequency of IgM and switched memory B cells (p<0.01) and an inability to produce IgG in vitro (p<0.02). We conclude that most patients with an initial diagnosis of THI spontaneously recover within 24 months of age and have a benign clinical course, while a subgroup of children with undefined hypogammaglobulinemia share a clinical and immunological profile with other primary immunodeficiencies. Early recognition of children with hypogammaglobulinemia during infancy who are likely to suffer from permanent immunodeficiencies later in life would allow prompt and appropriate laboratory and clinical interventions.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1999

Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis in a patient with deletion of 22q11.2.

Maurizio Aricò; Alberto Bettinelli; Rita Maccario; Rita Clementi; Grazia Bossi; Cesare Danesino

We report on a new patient with deletion of 22q11 associated with hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis and a fatal outcome. She had minor facial anomalies and cardiac malformation corresponding to those described in del (22q11) syndrome, normal T and B cell function and NK activity; bone marrow aspiration showed active erythrophagocytosis. Our case in addition to two other children reported previously suggest that such a rare association between lymphocyte-macrophage activation and deletion of 22q11 may be more frequent than previously recognized.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2016

Pediatric Tuberculosis in Italian Children: Epidemiological and Clinical Data from the Italian Register of Pediatric Tuberculosis

Luisa Galli; Laura Lancella; Chiara Tersigni; Elisabetta Venturini; Elena Chiappini; Barbara Maria Bergamini; Margherita Codifava; Cristina Venturelli; Giulia Tosetti; Caterina Marabotto; Laura Cursi; Elena Boccuzzi; Silvia Garazzino; Pier-Angelo Tovo; Michele Pinon; Daniele Le Serre; Laura Castiglioni; Andrea Lo Vecchio; Alfredo Guarino; Eugenia Bruzzese; Giuseppe Losurdo; Elio Castagnola; Grazia Bossi; Gian Luigi Marseglia; Susanna Esposito; Samantha Bosis; Rita Grandolfo; Valentina Fiorito; Piero Valentini; Danilo Buonsenso

Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Over the last decades, TB has also emerged in the pediatric population. Epidemiologic data of childhood TB are still limited and there is an urgent need of more data on very large cohorts. A multicenter study was conducted in 27 pediatric hospitals, pediatric wards, and public health centers in Italy using a standardized form, covering the period of time between 1 January 2010 and 31 December 2012. Children with active TB, latent TB, and those recently exposed to TB or recently adopted/immigrated from a high TB incidence country were enrolled. Overall, 4234 children were included; 554 (13.1%) children had active TB, 594 (14.0%) latent TB and 3086 (72.9%) were uninfected. Among children with active TB, 481 (86.8%) patients had pulmonary TB. The treatment of active TB cases was known for 96.4% (n = 534) of the cases. Overall, 210 (39.3%) out of these 534 children were treated with three and 216 (40.4%) with four first-line drugs. Second-line drugs where used in 87 (16.3%) children with active TB. Drug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis were reported in 39 (7%) children. Improving the surveillance of childhood TB is important for public health care workers and pediatricians. A non-negligible proportion of children had drug-resistant TB and was treated with second-line drugs, most of which are off-label in the pediatric age. Future efforts should concentrate on improving active surveillance, diagnostic tools, and the availability of antitubercular pediatric formulations, also in low-endemic countries.


International Journal of Immunogenetics | 2014

HLA class III genes involvement in Kawasaki disease: a case-control study in Caucasian population

Elisa Maggioli; Chiara Boiocchi; Michele Zorzetto; Savina Mannarino; Grazia Bossi; Mariaclara Cuccia

Kawasaki disease (KD) is an acute, multisystemic, febrile vasculitis of unknown aetiology, which affects young children mainly under 5 years of age. The clinical variability has until now prevented to decrypt KD aetiological factors. Recently, the importance of genetics and the pivotal role of the immune system have emerged. To investigate in this direction, genomic DNA from 74 Caucasian KD cases and 440 healthy controls has been analysed to characterize functional polymorphisms of relevant HLA class III genes: AGER ‐429 and ‐374, TNF ‐857, ‐308 and ‐238, HSPA1A +190, HSPA1B +1267 and HSPA1L +2437. Allele, genotype and haplotype frequencies were therefore compared with the chi‐squared test and Fishers exact test. Our data showed significant deviations between patients with Kawasaki disease and controls concerning the TNF ‐308 polymorphism genotype (GG: P = 0.0449) and allele (G,A: P = 0.0433) and ‐238 polymorphism genotype frequencies (AA: P = 0.0351). Moreover, we found differences concerning the HSPA1A +190 polymorphism (GC: P = 0.0317) and the HSPA1L +2437 polymorphism (TT: P = 0.0072; TC: P = 0.0250; T: P = 0.0037; C: P = 0.0037). The calculation of TNF ‐238 and HSPA1L haplotype frequencies also pointed out a statistically significant decrease in patients of CG haplotype (P = 0.0001), which could have a role in protecting from the inflammatory processes that characterize the disease progression. The results obtained point to a possible involvement of the entire HLA class III region in KD susceptibility.


Transfusion | 1999

GB virus type C infection in patients treated for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Maurizio Aricò; Morena Bissolati; Grazia Bossi; Margherita Asti; Antonella Cerino; Dísirée Caselli; Antonio Ricci; Catherine Klersy; Enrico Maria Silini; Mario U. Mondelli

BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of GB virus type C (GBV‐C) infection in subjects treated for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) or non‐Hodgkins lymphoma.


Genes and Immunity | 2015

Genetic epistasis between killer immunoglobulin-like receptors and human leukocyte antigens in Kawasaki disease susceptibility.

Grazia Bossi; Savina Mannarino; Maria Cristina Pietrogrande; Patrizia Salice; R M Dellepiane; A. L. Cremaschi; G Corana; A Tozzo; Cristina Capittini; A De Silvestri; Carmine Tinelli; Annamaria Pasi; Miryam Martinetti

Kawasaki disease (KD) is a pediatric acute multisystemic vasculitis complicated by development of coronary artery lesions. The breakthrough theory on KD etiopathogenesis points to pathogens/environmental factors triggered by northeastern wind coming from China. Natural Killer cells and T lymphocytes express the inhibitory/activating Killer Immunoglobulin-like Receptors (KIR) to elicit an immune response against pathogens by binding to human leukocyte antigens (HLA) class I epitopes. We first report on the role of KIR/HLA genetic epistasis in a sample of 100 Italian KD children. We genotyped KIR, HLA-A, HLA-B and HLA-C polymorphisms, and compared KD data with those from 270 Italian healthy donors. The HLA-A*11 ligand for KIR2DS2/2DS4/3DL2 was a KD susceptibility marker by itself (odds ratio (OR)=3.85, confidence interval (CI)=1.55–9.53, P=0.004). Although no epistasis between HLA-A*11 and KIR2DS2/S4 emerged, HLA-A*11 also engages KIR3DL2, a framework gene encoding for a pathogen sensor of CpG-oligodeoxynucleotides (CpG-ODN), and KD blood mononuclear cells are actually prone to pathogen CpG-ODN activation in the acute phase. Moreover, carriers of KIR2DS2/HLA-C1 and KIR2DL2/HLA-C1 were more frequent among KD, in keeping with data demonstrating the involvement of these HLA/KIR couples in autoimmune endothelial damage. The highest KD risk factor was observed among carriers of KIR2DL2 and two or more HLA ligands (OR=10.24, CI=1.87–56.28; P=0.007).


Pediatric Dermatology | 2018

Pediatric Old World cutaneous leishmaniasis treated with oral fluconazole: A case series

Andrea Michelerio; Stefania Barruscotti; Grazia Bossi; Valeria Brazzelli

Cutaneous leishmaniasis has an incidence of 0.7–1.2 million cases per year and represents a growing concern in the outpatient dermatologic practice in Europe because of imported cases due to increased travel to risk areas and to immigration phenomena. When dealing with children, the treatment can be challenging because of side effects and pain of classic antimonial therapy leading to poor rates of course completion and requirement of sedation for several children.


Italian Journal of Pediatrics | 2018

Kawasaki disease: guidelines of Italian Society of Pediatrics, part II - treatment of resistant forms and cardiovascular complications, follow-up, lifestyle and prevention of cardiovascular risks

Alessandra Marchesi; Isabella Tarissi de Jacobis; Donato Rigante; Alessandro Rimini; Walter Malorni; Giovanni Corsello; Grazia Bossi; Sabrina Buonuomo; Fabio Cardinale; Elisabetta Cortis; Fabrizio De Benedetti; Andrea De Zorzi; Marzia Duse; Domenico Del Principe; Rosa Maria Dellepiane; Livio D’Isanto; Maya El Hachem; Susanna Esposito; Fernanda Falcini; Ugo Giordano; Maria Cristina Maggio; Savina Mannarino; Gianluigi Marseglia; Silvana Martino; Giulia Marucci; Rossella Massaro; Christian Pescosolido; Donatella Pietraforte; Maria Cristina Pietrogrande; Patrizia Salice

This second part of practical Guidelines related to Kawasaki disease (KD) has the goal of contributing to prompt diagnosis and most appropriate treatment of KD resistant forms and cardiovascular complications, including non-pharmacologic treatments, follow-up, lifestyle and prevention of cardiovascular risks in the long-term through a set of 17 recommendations.Guidelines, however, should not be considered a norm that limits the treatment options of pediatricians and practitioners, as treatment modalities other than those recommended may be required as a result of peculiar medical circumstances, patient’s condition, and disease severity or individual complications.


Italian Journal of Pediatrics | 2018

Kawasaki disease: guidelines of the Italian Society of Pediatrics, part I - definition, epidemiology, etiopathogenesis, clinical expression and management of the acute phase

Alessandra Marchesi; Isabella Tarissi de Jacobis; Donato Rigante; Alessandro Rimini; Walter Malorni; Giovanni Corsello; Grazia Bossi; Sabrina Buonuomo; Fabio Cardinale; Elisabetta Cortis; Fabrizio De Benedetti; Andrea De Zorzi; Marzia Duse; Domenico Del Principe; Rosa Maria Dellepiane; Livio D’Isanto; Maya El Hachem; Susanna Esposito; Fernanda Falcini; Ugo Giordano; Maria Cristina Maggio; Savina Mannarino; Gianluigi Marseglia; Silvana Martino; Giulia Marucci; Rossella Massaro; Christian Pescosolido; Donatella Pietraforte; Maria Cristina Pietrogrande; Patrizia Salice

The primary purpose of these practical guidelines related to Kawasaki disease (KD) is to contribute to prompt diagnosis and appropriate treatment on the basis of different specialists’ contributions in the field. A set of 40 recommendations is provided, divided in two parts: the first describes the definition of KD, its epidemiology, etiopathogenetic hints, presentation, clinical course and general management, including treatment of the acute phase, through specific 23 recommendations.Their application is aimed at improving the rate of treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin and the overall potential development of coronary artery abnormalities in KD. Guidelines, however, should not be considered a norm that limits treatment options of pediatricians and practitioners, as treatment modalities other than those recommended may be required as a result of peculiar medical circumstances, patient’s condition, and disease severity or complications.

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Antonino Trizzino

Boston Children's Hospital

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Claudio Pignata

University of Naples Federico II

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L Chini

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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S Graziani

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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