Guido Antonelli
University of Pisa
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Featured researches published by Guido Antonelli.
Hepatology | 1995
Luigi Roffi; Guido Colloredo Mels; Guido Antonelli; Giorgio Bellati; Fabio Panizzuti; Alberto Piperno; Massimo Pozzi; Davide Ravizza; Giovanni Angeli; Ferdinando Dianzani; Giuseppe Mancia
Recombinant interferon alfa (r-IFN alpha 2) has been shown to normalize the aminotransferase levels in approximately 50% of patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV). Few patients experience a relapse during the treatment, in spite of a complete initial response (breakthrough). We studied 191 HCV Ab-positive patients with histologically proven chronic hepatitis. All of them were treated with r-IFN alpha 2 (3 MU three times a week). A complete response was seen in 54.4%. However, 12 of 104 responders experienced a breakthrough. At the time of breakthrough, neutralizing IFN antibodies were positive in 6 of 12 patients. Binding IFN antibodies were positive in all of these 12 patients. Continued treatment with r-IFN alpha 2, even at higher doses, did not restore the previous response in any patient. All of them were then switched to natural lymphoblastoid IFN, and this rapidly restored a complete response in all of the patients.
Journal of Interferon and Cytokine Research | 1999
Guido Antonelli; Eleonora Simeoni; Ombretta Turriziani; Ramon Tesoro; Alessandro Redaelli; Luigi Roffi; Laura Antonelli; Mauro Pistello; Ferdinando Dianzani
MxA, a protein with selective activity against certain viruses, is an accepted specific indicator of type I interferon (IFN) activity. We have developed an internally controlled quantitative-competitive PCR to measure the amounts of MxA mRNA expressed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). This assay is more sensitive, quantitative, and easily applied to serial clinical samples than previously described methods. We have applied this assay retrospectively to 27 patients with chronic active hepatitis C given IFN-alpha2. Most such patients gain no sustained benefit but nevertheless suffer from the side effects, expense, and inconvenience of the treatment. Fourteen of the 27 had been classified on clinical grounds as responders and 13 as nonresponders at the end of a 6 month treatment period. We measured MxA mRNA in PBMC obtained before and after 8 weeks of IFN-alpha2 treatment. All the patients expressed some level of mRNA before treatment began, and after 8 weeks of treatment, the level rose in 19. This increase was significant (p < 0.001) only in patients classified as responders. This strongly suggests that hepatitis C virus (HCV) patients who express increased amounts of MxA mRNA in their PBMC during IFN-alpha treatment are most likely to obtain long-term benefit. If this finding is confirmed in future prospective studies, it will provide an extremely important predictive marker for managing IFN-alpha therapy in patients with HCV.
Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2008
Gianluigi Giannelli; Guido Antonelli; G. Fera; S. D. Vecchio; E. Riva; C. Broccia; O. Schiraldi; Ferdinando Dianzani
It is known that IFN therapy can induce the development of anti‐IFN antibodies. In order to evaluate the biological and clinical significance of both neutralizing (NA) and non‐neutralizing (binding) antibodies, 123 patients with chronic hepatitis C treated with recombinant IFN‐α were examined. Among them, 15 were positive for NA and 24 for binding antibodies. The kinetics of NA appearance show that, in general, they develop early during the first 3 months of treatment. Moreover, NA seem to be clinically relevant, since they may be responsible for non‐responsiveness to treatment in 53% of patients who develop them. The evaluation of the clinical significance of binding antibodies is more difficult. They appear significantly earlier in non‐responders than in responders, but no differences were observed in the overall percentage of seroconversion between responders and non‐responders. Thus, it is not possible at the moment to establish their possible role in inducing non‐responsiveness.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 1999
Guido Antonelli; Eleonora Simeoni; Francesca Bagnato; Carlo Pozzilli; Ombretta Turriziani; Ramon Tesoro; Paola Di Marco; Claudio Gasperini; C. Fieschi; Ferdinando Dianzani
The development of neutralizing antibodies (NAbs) to interferon (IFN) is a common phenomenon of IFN beta therapy for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) patients. Here we examine the specificity of NAbs developed during therapy for RRMS with recombinant interferon (rIFN) beta-1a or rIFN beta-1b, and study the effect of switching from rIFN beta-1a to rIFN beta-1b on the incidence and specificity of NAbs. The relative ability to neutralize rIFN beta-1a and beta-1b was assayed in sera positive for NAbs derived from RRMS patients treated with either rIFN beta-1a (N=9) or rIFN beta-1b (N=16), while the incidence and specificity of NAbs to IFN beta developed during therapy were studied in 50 RRMS patients who were treated for two years with rIFN beta-1a followed by a further year either switching to rIFN beta-1b (N=34) or continuing treatment with rIFN beta-1a (N=16). The results show that all positive sera, independent of the source, may recognize both forms of rIFN beta and that a further year of treatment does not significantly affect the incidence and specificity of the NAbs developed during the first two years of treatment even if treatment is switched to a different type of IFN beta. The data then suggests that it is unlikely that the administration of rIFN beta-1b to anti-rIFN beta-1a NAbs-positive patients can overcome the inhibitory effect exerted by the serum antibodies (and vice versa), and that a further period of treatment with IFN beta-1b in patients previously treated with rIFN beta-1a does not significantly change the pattern of antibody response to IFN beta.
Journal of Virology | 2001
Fabrizio Maggi; Mauro Pistello; Marialinda Vatteroni; Silvano Presciuttini; Santino Marchi; Patrizia Isola; Claudia Fornai; Sabina Fagnani; Elisabetta Andreoli; Guido Antonelli; Mauro Bendinelli
ABSTRACT TT virus (TTV) is a recently identified widespread DNA virus of humans that produces persistent viremia in the absence of overt clinical manifestations. In an attempt to shed light on the dynamics of chronic infection, we measured the levels of TTV in the plasma of 25 persistently infected patients during the first 3 months of alpha interferon (IFN-α) treatment for concomitant hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. The first significant decline of TTV loads was observed at day 3 versus day 1 for HCV. Subsequently, the loads of TTV became progressively lower in most patients, but some initial responders relapsed before the end of the follow-up, suggesting that at least in some subjects the effects of IFN on TTV can be very short-lived. No correlation between the responses of TTV and HCV to therapy was found. Fitting the viremia data obtained during the first week of treatment into previously developed mathematical models showed that TTV sustains very active chronic infections, with over 90% of the virions in plasma cleared and replenished daily and a minimum of approximately 3.8 × 1010 virions generated per day. Low levels of TTV were occasionally detected in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells of patients who had cleared plasma viremia, thus corroborating previous results showing that these cells may support TTV replication and/or persistence.
Farmaco | 2000
Marco Macchia; Guido Antonelli; Federico Calvani; Valeria Di Bussolo; Filippo Minutolo; Elisabetta Orlandini; Ramon Tesoro; Ombretta Turriziani
This paper reports the synthesis and the antiviral properties of a series of 9-[(2-methyleneaminoxyethoxy)methyl]guanine derivatives, which can be viewed as analogues of the antiherpes drug Acyclovir (ACV) from which they differ in the replacement of its hydroxy group with variously substituted methyleneaminoxy moieties. Some of the newly synthesized compounds proved to possess a certain activity against HSV-1, albeit lower than that of ACV.
Antiviral Chemistry & Chemotherapy | 1993
Ferdinando Dianzani; Guido Antonelli; Ombretta Turriziani; E. Riva; G. Dong; D. Bellarosa
Human immunodeficiency virus type I (HIV-1) resistant to the proteinase inhibitor Ro 31–8959 has been obtained by growing HIV-IIIB in C8166 cell cultures in the presence of inhibitory concentrations of the drug. Ro 31-8959-resistant HIV-1 obtained after five passages in the presence of the drug was capable of replicating, as measured by infectious virus yield, in the presence of concentrations of Ro 31-8959 able to inhibit completely the replication of the parental HIV-IIIB. Cloning of the Ro 31–8959-resistant viral preparations revealed that a number of different strains of HIV-1 with various degrees of sensitivity to Ro 31–8959 emerged during propagation of HIV-IIIB in C8166 cells in the presence of the drug. The most resistant strain shows an ID50 value of 21.8 nM that is 13.2 fold higher than the value observed in HIV-IIIB infected C8166 cells.
Antiviral Research | 1994
Guido Antonelli
Since the 1970s, people started to use interferon as a therapeutic agent against infectious and neoplastic diseases. Since the beginning of its therapeutical use, it was demonstrated that some patients produce, when treated with interferon, antibodies able to neutralize its biological activity. This paper will review and discuss what it is currently known about the technical, biological, and clinical aspects of these antibodies.
Antiviral Research | 1996
D. Bellarosa; Guido Antonelli; F. Bambacioni; D. Giannotti; G. Viti; R. Nannicini; A. Giachetti; Ferdinando Dianzani; Myriam Witvrouw; R. Pauwels; Jan Desmyter; E. De Clercq
A series of pyridobenzothiodiazepindioxides such as the 11-ethyl-6,8,9-trimethyl-6,11-dihydro-pyrido[2,3-f] [2,1,5]benzothiodiazepine-5,5-dioxide and arylpiridodiazepines such as the 6,7-dihydro-7-methyl-12-ethyl-pyrido[2,3-b] pyrido(2,3-4,5]furo[2,3-f][1,4]diazepin-6(12H)-thio and the 6,7-dihydro-7-methyl-12-ethyl-pyrido[2,3-b]pyrido- [2,3-4,5]thieno[2,3-f][1,4] diazepin-6(12H)-thione were found to inhibit human immunodeficiency virus type 1 [HIV-1(IIIB)] replication at a concentration of 0.003-0.04 microM without being cytotoxic at a 3,000- to 15,000-fold higher concentration. These compounds proved effective against a variety of HIV-1 strains, including those that are resistant to 3-azido-3 deoxythymidine (AZT), but not against HIV-2, simian immunodeficiency virus or herpes simplex virus. An HIV-1 strain containing the 188 Tyr-->His mutation in the reverse transcriptase displayed severely reduced sensitivity to the compounds. The specificity of these compounds is due to an interaction with the reverse transcription process. The 6,7-dihydro-7-methyl-12-ethyl-pyrido[2,3-b]pyrido [2,3-4,5]thieno[2,3-f][1,4]diazepin-6(12H)-thione (MEN 10979) enhanced the anti-HIV-1 activity of AZT and dideoxyinosine (ddI) in a synergistic manner. The new arylpyrido-diazepine and -thiodiazepine derivatives appear to be drug candidates for the treatment of HIV-1 infection.
International Journal of Immunopathology and Pharmacology | 2011
Raffaella Nenna; Paola Papoff; Corrado Moretti; Alessandra Pierangeli; G. Sabatino; F. Costantino; F. Soscia; Giulia Cangiano; Valentina Ferro; Maurizio Mennini; Serena Salvadei; Carolina Scagnolari; Guido Antonelli; Fabio Midulla
We investigated clinical characteristics and complications, particularly type 1 diabetes onset, in children hospitalized for 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) virus and compared number of consultations, rate of hospitalization and virus identification in children hospitalized for acute respiratory symptoms (ARS) during the winter season 2009–2010 and 2004–2005. Patients were tested for 2009 H1N1 virus and 14 respiratory viruses on pharyngeal brush/nasal aspirates, using a RT-PCR or nested PCR assays. Consultations and hospitalizations were extracted from operative system GIPSE. The total number of consultations increased by 12%, consultation rate for ARS by 13% and number of hospitalizations by 56% from 2004–2005 to 2009–2010. In 2004–2005, Influenza A virus was identified in only 7% of hospitalized children, while in 2009–2010 the 2009 H1N1 virus was identified in 21%. Three children attending the hospital for ARS and 2009 H1N1 infection had ketoacidosis as the onset manifestation of type 1 diabetes. By comparing the number of new diabetes diagnoses among the two winter seasons, we found a higher number of new diagnoses in October 2009 January 2010 than in the same period in 2004–2005 (19 vs 10). Six children (13%), all presenting with pre-existing diseases, were admitted to the pediatric intensive care unit. No children died. The outbreak of this novel virus has increased pediatric consultation rates and hospitalizations compared with previous winters without causing deaths. The children at highest risk for severe infection are those with comorbidities. The 2009 H1N1 virus seems in some way involved in the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes.