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Dive into the research topics where Irene Ricca is active.

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Featured researches published by Irene Ricca.


Leukemia | 2009

Telomere length is an independent predictor of survival, treatment requirement and Richter's syndrome transformation in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Davide Rossi; C Lobetti Bodoni; Elisa Genuardi; Luigia Monitillo; Daniela Drandi; Michaela Cerri; Clara Deambrogi; Irene Ricca; Alberto Rocci; Simone Ferrero; Elisa Bernocco; Daniela Capello; L De Paoli; L Bergui; Michela Boi; Paola Omedè; Massimo Massaia; Corrado Tarella; Roberto Passera; M Boccadoro; Gianluca Gaidano; M Ladetto

Telomere length (TL) has been associated with outcome in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The aim of this extensive analysis carried out on 401 CLL patients was to assess TL conclusively as a prognostic biomarker. Our study included two cohorts used as learning (191 patients) and blinded validation series (210 patients). A TL cutoff of 5000 bp was chosen by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis and Youdens index in the learning series. In this series, TL⩽5000 bp was independently associated to a worse outcome for both overall survival (OS; 105.5 vs 281 months, P<0.001) and treatment-free survival (TFS; 24.6 vs 73 months, P<0.001). In the blinded validation series, TL⩽5000 bp was confirmed as an independent outcome predictor for OS (79.8 vs not reached, P<0.001) and TFS (15.2 vs 130.8 months, P<0.001). Moreover, TL⩽5000 bp independently predicted the risk of Richters syndrome (5-year risk: 18.9 vs 6.4%, P=0.016). Within CLL subsets defined by biological predictors, TL consistently identified patient subgroups harboring unfavorable prognosis. These results demonstrate that TL is a powerful independent predictor of multiple outcomes in CLL, and contributes to refine the prognostic assessment of this disease when utilized in combination with other prognostic markers. We thus believe that this prognostic biomarker has the potential for a more widespread use in CLL.


Experimental Hematology | 2001

A validated real-time quantitative PCR approach shows a correlation between tumor burden and successful ex vivo purging in follicular lymphoma patients.

Marco Ladetto; Selina Sametti; John W. Donovan; Dario Ferrero; Monica Astolfi; Manfred Mitterer; Irene Ricca; Daniela Drandi; Paolo Corradini; Paolo Coser; Alessandro Pileri; John G. Gribben; Corrado Tarella

OBJECTIVE Purging procedures are increasingly used to provide stem cell collections devoid of contaminating tumor cells. In follicle center lymphoma (FCL), most approaches eradicate polymerase chain reaction (PCR);-detectable disease in only a fraction of harvests undergoing ex vivo manipulation. In this study we evaluated whether there is a relationship between tumor burden of stem cell harvests and successful clearance of PCR-detectable disease following ex vivo manipulation. MATERIALS AND METHODS To address this issue, we developed a real-time PCR approach for quantitative measurement of tumor contamination using the bcl-2 rearrangement. Real-time PCR was used to evaluate the relationship between tumor burden of stem-cell harvests and purging effectiveness in PCR(+) samples derived from 10 FCL patients. Ex vivo purging was performed using the MaxSep cell separator (Baxter Immunotherapy, Deerfield, IL, USA). RESULTS Our real-time PCR method proved effective, sensitive, accurate, and reproducible. Four collections were successfully cleared of minimal residual disease (MRD) whereas six remained PCR(+). Real-time PCR showed that the four collections successfully cleared of MRD had a prepurging tumor burden significantly lower than those remaining PCR(+) (p = 0.04). CONCLUSION This study provides the first evidence that evaluation of tumor burden in stem-cell harvests by real-time PCR can predict the effectiveness of therapeutic intervention in non-Hodgkins lymphoma. Based on these findings, we foresee a more widespread use of this technique to evaluate the impact of different therapeutic approaches in FCL.


Leukemia | 2001

Concurrent administration of high-dose chemotherapy and rituximab is a feasible and effective chemo/immunotherapy for patients with high-risk non-Hodgkin's lymphoma

Marco Ladetto; F Zallio; Sonia Vallet; Irene Ricca; A Cuttica; Daniele Caracciolo; Paolo Corradini; Monica Astolfi; S Sametti; Federica Volpato; Paola Bondesan; Umberto Vitolo; Mario Boccadoro; Alessandro Pileri; Alessandro M. Gianni; Corrado Tarella

The aim of this study was to investigate feasibility, tolerability and efficacy of rituximab-supplemented high-dose sequential chemotherapy (R-HDS) with peripheral blood progenitor cell autografting as frontline or salvage treatment in patients with advanced non-Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL). Thirty-two patients have been treated: 14 at disease onset and 18 with relapsed or progressive disease. R-HDS regimens included six courses of rituximab. Rituximab was delivered either concurrently with high-dose chemotherapy to exploit the in vivo purging properties of the drug as well as at the end of the treatment plan to target minimal residual disease. All patients treated at disease onset completed their treatment with no life-threatening toxicity, while two toxic deaths due to severe bilateral pneumonia were observed among patients treated due to relapsed or refractory disease. Thirteen of 14 patients treated up-front achieved CR. Among pre-treated patients 10 of 18 achieved CR with better results in patients with relapsed (seven of eight) compared to progressive disease (three of 10). PCR analysis was carried out in indolent lymphoma patients: nine of nine follicular lymphomas and three of six CD5-positive NHL collected PCR-negative peripheral blood progenitor cell harvests. The results of this pilot study show that R-HDS is feasible and effective with acceptable toxicity when used at disease onset. In pre-treated patients this treatment also showed promising results, although the risk of severe infections needs to be considered.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

PCR-Detectable Nonneoplastic Bcl-2/IgH Rearrangements Are Common in Normal Subjects and Cancer Patients at Diagnosis but Rare in Subjects Treated With Chemotherapy

Marco Ladetto; Daniela Drandi; Mara Compagno; Monica Astolfi; Federica Volpato; Claudia Voena; Anna Novarino; Berardino Pollio; Alfredo Addeo; Irene Ricca; Patrizia Falco; Federica Cavallo; Sonia Vallet; Paolo Corradini; Alessandro Pileri; Giacomo Tamponi; Antonio Palumbo; Oscar Bertetto; Mario Boccadoro; Corrado Tarella

PURPOSE To assess whether nonneoplastic Bcl-2/IgH rearrangements act as a confounding factor in the setting of minimal residual disease analysis by evaluating their incidence in a panel of lymphoma-free subjects, including cancer-free donors and chemotherapy-naive and chemotherapy-treated cancer patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 501 nonlymphoma subjects have been assessed: 258 cancer-free patients and 243 patients with malignancies other than lymphoma, 112 of whom were chemotherapy-naive. Patients were primarily assessed by nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR), followed by real-time quantitative PCR if they scored positive. In addition, six initially PCR-positive cancer-free donors were prospectively reassessed by qualitative and quantitative PCR after 30 and 60 days. RESULTS The overall incidence of Bcl-2/IgH positivity was 9.6%, with a median number of 11 rearrangements per 1,000,000 diploid genomes (range, 0 to 2,845 rearrangements), as assessed by real-time PCR. The incidence was similar in healthy subjects and cancer patients at diagnosis (12% and 12.5%; P = not significant). In contrast, the incidence of this translocation was only 2.3% in chemotherapy-treated patients (P <.001). In addition, three initially PCR-positive cancer-free donors showed persistence of their rearrangements when assessed after 30 and 60 days. CONCLUSION The low incidence of nonneoplastic Bcl-2/IgH rearrangements following chemotherapy provides further evidence of the prognostic role of persistent PCR-positivity in the posttreatment molecular follow-up of follicular lymphoma patients.


Leukemia | 2007

Telomere length identifies two different prognostic subgroups among VH-unmutated B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients

Irene Ricca; Alberto Rocci; Daniela Drandi; Roberto Francese; Mara Compagno; C Lobetti Bodoni; F De Marco; Monica Astolfi; Luigia Monitillo; Sonia Vallet; R Calvi; F Ficara; Paola Omedè; Rosalba Rosato; Andrea Gallamini; Carlo Marinone; L Bergui; M Boccadoro; Corrado Tarella; M Ladetto

Some evidences suggest that telomere restriction fragment length (TRF-L) is an effective indicator of histopathogenesis in B-cell tumors. As histopathogenesis is relevant for B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) prognosis, TRF-L was assessed by Southern blot in 201 patients and compared to variable immunoglobulin heave chain gene mutational status (VH-MS) and to other known prognostic features. Overall survival (OS), time to first treatment (TTFT) and progression-free survival (PFS) were evaluated. Our results indicate the following: (1) TRF-L is heterogeneous among B-CLL patients (median 6014 bp, range 1465–16 762); (2) TRF-L correlates to VH-MS (r2=0.1994, P<0.0001) with VH-mutated patients showing long and VH-unmutated short telomeres; however, 41% of VH-unmutated and 5% of VH-mutated patients did not show this correlation and were thus defined as ‘discordant’; (3) TRF-L effectively predicts outcome in terms of TTFT, PFS and OS; (4) VH-unmutated discordant patients have a better clinical outcome than VH-unmutated concordant patients (OS P<0.01, PFS P<0.05) and similar to that of VH-mutated patients (OS, PFS P=NS). Compared to VH-unmutated concordant patients, VH-unmutated discordant patients showed no peculiarity in their immunoglobulin rearrangement nor in their flow cytometry or fluorescence in situ hybridization profile. In conclusion, TRF-L can be helpful to refine prognostication of B-CLL patients, particularly those with a VH-unmutated immunoglobulin sequence.


Leukemia | 1999

Negative immunomagnetic ex vivo purging combined with high-dose chemotherapy with peripheral blood progenitor cell autograft in follicular lymphoma patients: evidence for long-term clinical and molecular remissions.

Corrado Tarella; Paolo Corradini; Monica Astolfi; Paola Bondesan; Daniele Caracciolo; Cristina Cherasco; M Ladetto; Fulvia Giaretta; Irene Ricca; Umberto Vitolo; A Pileri; Dario Ferrero

The feasibility and efficacy of a novel immunomagnetic ex vivo negative purging method was evaluated on peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPC) from 13 non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma patients (eight follicular, FL; three mantle cell, MCL; two FL with histologic transformation). A peculiar feature of the study was the collection of PBPC after prolonged tumor debulking. Our method included a stem cell enrichment phase followed by cell incubation with anti-B cell MoAbs (anti-CD19, CD20, CD22, CD23), addition of immunobeads, and then positive cell removal by passage on a Max-Sep (Baxter Immunotherapy) cell separator. Engraftment was rapid and stable. Hematological values were assessed 1 and 2 years after the autograft. Purging efficacy was molecularly assessed in a panel of 11 patients who showed persistence of PCR-detectable lymphoma cells on PBPC harvests despite intensified chemotherapeutic debulking. PCR-negativity was obtained in vitro and persisted in vivo after autograft in three FL patients; five more FL patients, whose purged PBPC were PCR+, converted to stable (3 patients) or fluctuating (two patients) PCR negativity after autograft. MCL patients never reached PCR negativity. Thus, ex vivo purging may have a role for FL patients harvesting PCR-positive PBPC after intensified chemotherapy. In contrast, the addition of ex vivopurging seems to be of little if any benefit for MCL patients.


Leukemia | 2005

Marked telomere shortening in mobilized peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPC) following two tightly spaced high-dose chemotherapy courses with G-CSF.

Irene Ricca; Mara Compagno; Marco Ladetto; Alberto Rocci; Maria Dell'Aquila; Paola Omedè; F De Marco; S D'Antico; Daniele Caracciolo; Dario Ferrero; Carmelo Carlo-Stella; Corrado Tarella

The purpose of the study was to compare telomere length (TL) in peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPC) collected after two tightly spaced high-dose (hd) chemotherapy courses. We assessed 37 previously untreated lymphoma patients undergoing a hd-chemotherapy program with autografting. They sequentially received hd-cyclophosphamide (CY) and hd-Ara-C, both followed by PBPC harvesting. Both post-CY and post-Ara-C harvests were assessed for TL by Southern blot analysis. In 12 patients, the assay was also performed on purified CD34+ cells. All patients displayed high PBPC mobilization following both hd-CY and hd-Ara-C. In all but one patient, TL was shorter in PBPC collected after Ara-C compared to CY: 7226 bp (range: 4135–9852) vs 8282 bp (range 4895–14860) (P<0.0001). This result was confirmed on CD34+ cells. Platelet recovery in patients receiving post-Ara-C PBPC was significantly slower compared to those receiving post-CY PBPC. In conclusion, (i) administration of tightly spaced hd-chemotherapy courses induces marked telomere shortening on harvested PBPC; (ii) engraftment kinetics seem slower, with delayed platelet recovery, in patients autografted with PBPC suffering marked TL erosion; (iii) long-term follow-up is required to verify whether PBPC with shortened telomeres display defective engraftment stability and/or risk of secondary leukemia; (iv) TL evaluation is advisable whenever new mobilization procedures are developed.


Experimental Hematology | 2003

Recurrence of Bcl-2/IgH polymerase chain reaction positivity following a prolonged molecular remission can be unrelated to the original follicular lymphoma clone

Marco Ladetto; Barbara Mantoan; Irene Ricca; Monica Astolfi; Daniela Drandi; Mara Compagno; Sonia Vallet; Maria Dell'Aquila; Alda Alfarano; Paola Rossatto; Alberto Rocci; Umberto Vitolo; Paolo Corradini; Mario Boccadoro; Corrado Tarella

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to evaluate whether reappearance of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) positivity for the Bcl-2/IgH translocation following a phase of molecular remission in autografted follicular lymphoma (FL) patients is always associated with reappearance of the original neoplastic clone. PATIENTS AND METHODS The molecular follow-up of 119 autografted Bcl-2/IgH positive patients was evaluated by nested PCR. In case of molecular recurrence, direct sequencing of involved rearrangements has been performed both at diagnosis and at the time of recurrence. The two sequences then were compared in terms of breakpoints, N insertions, and JH usage. RESULTS Seventy-five patients achieving molecular remission were identified in our patient sample (63%). Of these patients, eight (10.6%) experienced molecular recurrence. Direct sequencing of the Bcl-2/IgH translocation performed at diagnosis and recurrence showed identical rearrangements in six subjects and unrelated rearrangements in two. As opposed to most true molecular relapses, unrelated rearrangements always occurred several years after transplantation. To date, the two subjects carrying unrelated rearrangements show no signs of active lymphoproliferative disease. CONCLUSIONS This report is the first evidence that Bcl-2/IgH rearrangements unrelated to the original tumor clone can lead to false-positive results during the molecular follow-up of autografted FL patients. Based on these results, we recommend confirmation by direct sequencing, at least for patients experiencing molecular relapse 2 or more years after the end of treatment. This will be particularly important for patients enrolled in clinical trials that schedule additional treatment in case of molecular evidence of persistent disease activity.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2010

Comparative assessment of telomere length before and after hematopoietic SCT: role of grafted cells in determining post-transplant telomere status

Marco Ruella; Alberto Rocci; Irene Ricca; Cristiana Carniti; C Labetti Bodoni; Marco Ladetto; Daniele Caracciolo; Mario Boccadoro; Carmelo Carlo-Stella; Paolo Corradini; Corrado Tarella

Our objective was to characterize the role of grafted cells in determining telomere length (TL) after hematopoietic SCT (HSCT). A total of 20 patients undergoing autografts had PBSC collected after two sequential mobilization courses: TL in the first collection was significantly longer than in the second. For their autografts, 10 patients used PBSC from the first collection and 10 from the second. TL was also investigated before and after HSCT and on the graft in 10 allogeneic HSCT. After autografting, patients receiving PBSC from the first collection had BM TL reflecting that of grafted cells (median bp: 7730 on PBSC vs 7610 on post-HSCT BM, P=NS) and significantly longer than TL of the second collection; analogously, patients autografted with PBSC from the second collection had BM TL reflecting that of grafted cells (7360 on PBSC vs 7120 on post-HSCT BM, P=NS) and significantly shorter compared with the first collection. In the allograft setting, eight patients had their pre-transplant TL significantly shorter than donor PBSC (5960 vs 7110; P=0.0005); following HSCT, BM TL (median 7380 bp) was identical to that of the graft (P=NS). We conclude that grafted cells have a major role in determining TL after HSCT.


Vox Sanguinis | 2013

Efficacy of rituximab-bendamustine in cold agglutinin haemolytic anaemia refractory to previous chemo-immunotherapy: a case report

Angela Gueli; Daniela Gottardi; Huijing Hu; Irene Ricca; Alberto De Crescenzo; Corrado Tarella

Primary cold agglutinin disease (CAD) is a haemolytic anaemia caused by high titres of cold antibodies, usually IgM, directed against red blood cells1,2. Cold agglutinins are present at low titres in all normal individuals, but at high concentrations, the agglutinins can have pathological consequences. In the cool peripheral circulation, cold agglutinin-coated red blood cells activate the complement cascade to the C3b/C3d stage and in the hepatic circulation C3b+ erythrocytes trigger phagocytosis by macrophages. An autoimmune disorder is responsible for the high titres of circulating cold antibodies and CAD accounts for approximately 13–15% of cases of autoimmune haemolytic anaemia3. Moreover, CAD has been found to be associated with a clonal lymphoproliferative disorder in many cases. Indeed, the cold agglutinins are monoclonal IgM in more than 90% of CAD patients and the presence of a lymphoid neoplasm, in particular B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL), has been observed in approximately 75% of patients with primary CAD4,5. Treatments, including corticosteroids or alkylating agents, which are effective in other forms of autoimmune haemolytic anaemia are usually ineffective in CAD. On the other hand, half of the patients with CAD respond to rituximab alone, a drug that has markedly improved the prognosis of patients with B-cell lymphomas. Moreover, combining rituximab with fludarabine has further improved the outcome of CAD patients, with a 75% overall response rate being achieved in a recent, prospective trial6. Most CAD patients are elderly and their advanced age makes the use of potentially harmful therapies questionable. It is, therefore, reasonable to search for less toxic regimens for CAD patients. Recently, bendamustine, a molecule analogous to fludarabine, has been successfully employed in the treatment of low-grade B-cell NHL7,8. Compared to fludarabine, bendamustine has fewer side effects and an excellent tolerability. Thus, bendamustine with rituximab might be an effective chemo-immunotherapy option for elderly patients with CAD. The case report here presented, gives support to the use of bendamustine in CAD.

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