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Dive into the research topics where Josanne Vassallo is active.

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Featured researches published by Josanne Vassallo.


European Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2014

Relation of the Mediterranean diet with the incidence of gestational diabetes

Basil G. Karamanos; A Thanopoulou; Eleni Anastasiou; S Assaad-Khalil; N Albache; M Bachaoui; C B Slama; H El Ghomari; Aleksandra Jotic; Nebojsa Lalic; A Lapolla; C Saab; Michel Marre; Josanne Vassallo; Charles Savona-Ventura

Background/objectives:Some studies document relationships of the incidence of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) with individual components of the diet, but studies exploring relationships with patterns of eating are lacking. This observational study aimed to explore a possible relationship between the incidence of GDM and the Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) pattern of eating.Subjects/methods:In 10 Mediterranean countries, 1076 consecutive pregnant women underwent a 75-g OGTT at the 24th–32nd week of gestation, interpreted both by the ADA_2010 and the International Association of the Diabetes and Pregnancy Study Groups (IADPSG)_2012 criteria. The dietary habits were assessed by a previously validated questionnaire and a Mediterranean Diet Index (MDI) was computed, reflecting the degree of adherence to the MedDiet pattern of eating: a higher MDI denoting better adherence.Results:After adjustment for age, BMI, diabetes in the family, weight gain and energy intake, subjects with GDM, by either criterion, had lower MDI (ADA_2010, 5.8 vs 6.3, P=0.028; IADPSG_2012, 5.9 vs 6.4, P<0.001). Moreover, the incidence of GDM was lower in subjects with better adherence to the MedDiet (higher tertile of MDI distribution), 8.0% vs 12.3%, OR=0.618, P=0.030 by ADA_2010 and 24.3% vs 32.8%, OR=0.655, P=0.004 by IADPSG_2012 criteria. In subjects without GDM, MDI was negatively correlated with both fasting plasma glucose and AUC glucose, P<0.001 for both.Conclusions:Adherence to a MedDiet pattern of eating is associated with lower incidence of GDM and better degree of glucose tolerance, even in women without GDM. The possibility to use MedDiet for the prevention of GDM deserves further testing with intervention studies.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2013

A composite risk assessment model to screen for gestational diabetes mellitus among Mediterranean women.

Charles Savona-Ventura; Josanne Vassallo; Michel Marre; Basil G. Karamanos

To determine whether clinical risk assessment for gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) may preclude the need for universal screening with an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) in situations of economic restraint.


Endocrine Pathology | 2012

Expression and Clinical Significance of Wnt Players and Survivin in Pituitary Tumours

Robert Formosa; Mark Gruppetta; Sharon Falzon; Graziella Santillo; James DeGaetano; Angela Xuereb-Anastasi; Josanne Vassallo

Deregulation of the Wnt pathway has been implicated in oncogenesis of numerous tissues including the pituitary gland. Immunohistochemical localization and quantification of β-catenin, Cyclin D1, c-MYC and Survivin expression in 47 pituitary adenomas (35 non-functioning, seven GH-secreting, three prolactinomas, two ACTH-secreting tumour) and six normal controls was undertaken in this study and correlation of protein expression to patient and tumour characteristics analysed. β-catenin was strictly membrane-bound with no difference observed between normal and tumour tissue. In contrast, Cyclin D1 and c-MYC localization was nuclear and significantly higher in tumour versus normal tissue (p < 0.05). c-MYC expression correlated negatively with age at diagnosis (p = 0.006, R = −0.395) while Cyclin D1 expression correlated positively with age (p = 0.036, R = 0.306) and was higher in males than in females (p = 0.036). c-MYC expression was significantly lower in patients with functional tumours requiring octreotide treatment and in patients with non-functioning tumours suffering from hypopituitarism. Survivin expression was extremely low in tumours and absent in normal controls. Involvement of the canonical Wnt pathway appears to be minimal, given the segregation of β-catenin to the membrane. Our data suggest that c-MYC may have an important role in early pituitary tumorigenesis while Cyclin D1 is likely to promote tumour growth at a later stage. We also report a novel gender difference in Cyclin D1 expression, the biological significance of which merits further analysis. The reported reduction of c-MYC in functional tumours subsequently treated with octreotide further supports a role of c-MYC in early tumorigenesis and not in recurrence. The decrease in c-MYC in patients with hypopituitarism provides the first in vivo evidence for hormonal regulation of c-MYC expression.


Diabetes Care | 2013

Comment on: Zhu et al. Fasting Plasma Glucose at 24–28 Weeks to Screen for Gestational Diabetes Mellitus: New Evidence From China. Diabetes Care 2013;36:2038–2040

Charles Savona-Ventura; Josanne Vassallo; Michel Marre; Basil G. Karamanos

The article by Zhu et al. (1) published in Diabetes Care concludes that a fasting plasma glucose (FPG) at 24–28 weeks’ gestation can be used in low-resource regions as a screening test to identify gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) in Chinese patients. However, in their experience, a screening protocol using FPG cutoff points of ≥4.4 and ≤5.0 mmol/L would fail to identify about 12% of the GDM cases and require a formal oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) to be performed in about half of the pregnant population (1). These observations contrast with our findings in a circum-Mediterranean population (2). In our …


Pituitary | 2017

Expression of cell cycle regulators and biomarkers of proliferation and regrowth in human pituitary adenomas

Mark Gruppetta; Robert Formosa; Sharon Falzon; Sabrina Ariff Scicluna; Edward Falzon; James Degeatano; Josanne Vassallo

PurposeThe pathogenesis of pituitary adenomas (PA) is complex. Ki-67, pituitary tumour transforming gene (PTTG), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), cyclin D1, c-MYC and pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide (PACAP) protein expression were analysed and correlated with tumour and patient characteristics.Methods74 pituitary tumour samples (48 non-functional PA, 26 functional PAs); Immunohistochemical analysis of protein expression, retrospective analysis of MR images and in vitro analysis of octreotide treatment was carried out on GH3 cells.ResultsPTTG expression was negatively associated with age and positively with PA size, regrowth and Ki-67 index. Cyclin D1 correlated with Ki-67 and tumour size. c-MYC negatively correlated with size of tumour and age; and correlated with PTTG expression. Somatostatin analogue treatment was associated with lower Ki-67, PTTG and Cyclin D1 expression while T2 hypointense PAs were associated with lower PTTG, cyclin D1, c-MYC and Ki-67. In vitro analyses confirmed the effect of somatostatin analogue treatment on Pttg and Cyclin D1 expression.ConclusionsInteresting and novel observations on the differences in expression of tumour markers studied are reported. Correlation between Ki-67 expression, PTTG nuclear expression and recurrence/regrowth of PAs, emphasizes the role that Ki-67 and PTTG expression have as markers of increased proliferation. c-MYC and PTTG nuclear expression levels were correlated providing evidence that PTTG induces c-MYC expression in PAs and we propose that c-MYC might principally have a role in early pituitary tumorigenesis. Evidence is shown that the anti-proliferative effect of somatostatin analogue treatment in vivo occurs through regulation of the cell cycle.


Hormones and Cancer | 2017

Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor–Interacting Protein (AIP) N-Terminus Gene Mutations Identified in Pituitary Adenoma Patients Alter Protein Stability and Function

Robert Formosa; Josanne Vassallo

Mutations spanning the entire aryl hydrocarbon receptor–interacting protein (AIP) gene have been found in isolated familial cases of pituitary adenomas (PA). Missense mutations located in the N-terminus of the gene have been identified in several patients. However, the functional significance of these mutations remains a matter of controversy. In most studies, the N-terminus of AIP has been shown to regulate protein stability and subcellular localization of the AIP-AHR-HSP90 complex but not to be involved in protein–protein interactions. Other studies found that the N-terminal domain interacts directly with other proteins. The aim of this study was to analyze whether specific N-terminus AIP mutations identified in PA patients would be functionally different from wild-type (WT) AIP. In vitro analyses were used to assess the role of known N-terminus variants, a locally identified mutant, R9Q, and three other commonly genotyped N-terminus mutations R16H, V49M and K103R are found in PA patients. Given the functional effect of WT AIP on cAMP signalling alterations caused by N-terminus mutants on this pathway were also analyzed in GH3 cells. Results indicate that N-terminus mutations lead to de-regulation of the effect of WT AIP on cAMP signalling and increased cAMP thresholds in GH3 cells resulting in increased growth hormone (GH) secretion. Cycloheximide chase analysis identified a variation in protein degradation patterns between WT and N-terminus variants. Therefore, both functional and structural studies reveal that N-terminus mutations in the AIP gene alter protein behaviour significantly and hence can truly be pathogenic in nature.


Obesity science & practice | 2016

Prevalence of obesity in Malta

Sarah Cuschieri; Josanne Vassallo; Neville Calleja; Ryan Camilleri; Axisa Ayrton Borg; Gary Bonnici; Yimeng Zhang; Nikolai P. Pace; Julian Mamo

Obesity is a global epidemic with the Mediterranean island of Malta being no exception. The World Health Organization (WHO) has identified Malta as one of the European countries with the highest obesity prevalence.


Journal of Perinatal Medicine | 2016

Biological and biochemical characteristics of a Mediterranean population with Gestational Diabetes Mellitus

Charles Savona-Ventura; Josanne Vassallo; Johann Craus; Eleni Anastasiou; Aleksandra Jotic; Nebojsa Lalic; Claude Ben Slama; Adele Rovira Loscos; Angela Napoli; Giona Roma

Abstract The interplay of various nutrients provided to the developing foetus determines the growth potential of the conceptus. This study assessed the inter-relationship between these nutrients in a Mediterranean population including 1062 pregnant, previously non-diabetic women. These underwent an oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT) and were accordingly classified into gestational hyperglycaemic and normoglycaemic groups. Fasting insulin, HbA1c, and lipid profiles were further assessed, and the anthropomorphic characteristics of the mother and child at birth were measured. Lipid profiles were compared between the two groups and related to the biological characteristics of the mother and child at birth. Gestational hyperglycaemia was significantly associated with elevated triglycerides (P<0.0001) and decreased low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) (P=0.02). There were no significant changes in total cholesterol and high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels. Maternal BMI correlated positively with the various glycaemic indices (P<0.0001) and triglycerides (P<0.0001), but inversely with cholesterol (P<0.0001), HDL-C (P<0.0001) and LDL-C (P<0.0001). The infant birth weight correlated positively with maternal body weight (P<0.0001), LDL-C (P<0.0001) and the glycaemic indices (P<0.0001), but negatively with cholesterol (P<0.0001), triglycerides (P<0.0001), HDL-C (P<0.0001) and FBG (P<0.0001). This study confirms that the maternal body mass index (BMI), insulin resistance, and LDL-C levels positively contribute towards foetal growth, whereas a negative correlation was noted with cholesterol, triglycerides, and HDL-C.


Global Health, Epidemiology and Genomics | 2016

Diabetes, pre-diabetes and their risk factors in Malta : a study profile of national cross-sectional prevalence study

Sarah Cuschieri; Josanne Vassallo; Neville Calleja; Nikolai P. Pace; Julian Mamo

Background Type 2 diabetes mellitus constitutes a global epidemic and a major burden on health care systems across the world. Prevention of this disease is essential, and the development of effective prevention strategies requires validated information on the disease burden and the risk factors. Embarking on a nationally representative cross-sectional study is challenging and costly. Few countries undertake this process regularly, if at all. Method This paper sets out the evidence-based protocol of a recent cross-sectional study that was conducted in Malta. Data collection took place from November 2014 to January 2016. Results This study presents up-to-date national data on diabetes and its risk factors (such as obesity, smoking, physical activity and alcohol intake) that will soon be publicly available. Conclusion This protocol was compiled so that the study can be replicated in other countries. The protocol contains step-by-step descriptions of the study design, including details on the population sampling, the permissions required and the validated measurement tools used.


Gynecological Endocrinology | 2013

An unusual site for calciphylaxis: a case report

Martina Muscat; Mark Brincat; James DeGaetano; Josanne Vassallo; Jean Calleja-Agius

Background: Calciphylaxis is a rare condition characterized by calcification of the tunica media of small arteries with or without endovascular fibrosis, extravascular calcification and vascular thrombosis, leading to tissue ischemia and hence necrosis of tissues supplied by respective vessel. Case report: An 83-year-old lady presented with a 2-week history of rapidly progressing painful necrotic vulval lesion. This patient was being treated medically with bisphosphonates for mild hypercalcaemia secondary to a parathyroid adenoma. The diagnosis of calciphylaxis was made by biopsy of lesion, revealing extensive necrotic areas and multiple abscesses with numerous thrombosed and calcified blood vessels. Conclusions: This case shows an unusual presentation of calciphylaxis, in a patient with primary hyperparathyroidism, in the absence of end stage renal failure. The pathogenesis of the condition is still relatively unknown. Particularly of note in this case is the presentation of the lesion 9 months after the start of treatment with bisphosphonate after the relative decrease of serum parathyroid levels and serum calcium levels. This leads to the question of initiation of the pathology – did the bisphosphonate treatment have an input in initiation of the lesion? The case under review adds a new differential diagnosis to necrotic vulval lesions, other than malignancy.

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Basil G. Karamanos

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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