Lidia Gatto
University of Bologna
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Featured researches published by Lidia Gatto.
Genetics in Medicine | 2015
Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo; Cristian Lolli; Margherita Nannini; Annalisa Astolfi; Valentina Indio; Maristella Saponara; Milena Urbini; Stefano La Rovere; Antony Gill; David Goldstein; Claudio Ceccarelli; Donatella Santini; Giulio Rossi; Michelangelo Fiorentino; Valerio Di Scioscio; Pietro Fusaroli; Anna Mandrioli; Lidia Gatto; Fausto Catena; Umberto Basso; Giorgio Ercolani; Antonio Daniele Pinna; Guido Biasco
Purpose:A subset of patients with KIT/PDGFRA wild-type gastrointestinal stromal tumors show loss of function of succinate dehydrogenase, mostly due to germ-line mutations of succinate dehydrogenase subunits, with a predominance of succinate dehydrogenase subunit A. The clinical outcome of these patients seems favorable, as reported in small series in which patients were individually described. This work evaluates a retrospective survival analysis of a series of patients with metastatic KIT/PDGFRA wild-type succinate dehydrogenase–deficient gastrointestinal stromal tumors.Methods:Sixty-nine patients with metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumors were included in the study (11 KIT/PDGFRA wild-type, of whom 6 were succinate dehydrogenase deficient, 5 were non–succinate dehydrogenase deficient, and 58 were KIT/PDGFRA mutant). All six succinate dehydrogenase–deficient patients harbored SDHA mutations. Kaplan–Meier curves and log-rank tests were used to compare the survival of patients with succinate dehydrogenase subunit A–mutant gastrointestinal stromal tumors with that of KIT/PDGFRA wild-type patients without succinate dehydrogenase deficiency and patients with KIT/PDGFRA-mutant gastrointestinal stromal tumors.Results:Follow-up ranged from 8.5 to 200.7 months. The difference between succinate dehydrogenase subunit A–mutant gastrointestinal stromal tumors and KIT/PDGFRA-mutant or KIT/PDGFRA wild-type non–succinate dehydrogenase deficient gastrointestinal stromal tumors was significant considering different analyses (P = 0.007 and P = 0.033, respectively, from diagnosis of gastrointestinal stromal tumor for the whole study population; P = 0.005 and P = 0.018, respectively, from diagnosis of metastatic disease for the whole study population; P = 0.007 for only patients who were metastatic at diagnosis).Conclusion:Patients with metastatic KIT/PDGFRA wild-type succinate dehydrogenase–deficient gastrointestinal stromal tumors harboring succinate dehydrogenase subunit A mutations present an impressively long survival. These patients should be identified in clinical practice to better tailor treatments and follow-up over time.Genet Med 17 5, 391–395.
Oncotarget | 2015
Maristella Saponara; Milena Urbini; Annalisa Astolfi; Valentina Indio; Giorgio Ercolani; Massimo Del Gaudio; Donatella Santini; Maria Giulia Pirini; Michelangelo Fiorentino; Margherita Nannini; Cristian Lolli; Anna Mandrioli; Lidia Gatto; Giovanni Brandi; Guido Biasco; Antonio Daniele Pinna; Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo
About 85% of GISTs are associated with KIT and PDGFRα gene mutations, which predict response to tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Although the outcomes in patients affected by GIST have dramatically improved, tumor progression control still remains a challenge. The aim of this study is the genomic characterization of individual metastatic KIT-exon 11-mutant GIST to identify additional aberrations and simultaneous molecular events representing potential therapeutic targets. Seven patients with metastatic GIST were studied with whole transcriptome sequencing and copy number analysis. Somatic single nucleotide variations were called; however, no shared mutated genes were detected except KIT. Almost all patients showed loss of genomic regions containing tumor suppressor genes, sometimes coupled with single nucleotide mutation of the other allele. Additionally, six fusion transcripts were found and three patients showed amplifications involving known oncogenes. Evaluating the concordance between CN status and mRNA expression levels, we detected overexpression of CCND2 and EGFR and silencing of CDKN2A, CDKN2C, SMARCB1, PTEN and DMD. Altered expression of these genes could be responsible for aberrant activation of signaling pathways that support tumor growth. In this work, we assessed the effect of Hedgehog pathway inhibition in GIST882 cells, which causes decrement of cell viability associated with reduction of KIT expression. Additional genomic alterations not previously reported in GIST were found even if not shared by all samples. This contributes to a more detailed molecular understanding of this disease, useful for identification of new targets and novel therapeutics and representing a possible point of departure for a truly individualized clinical approach.
Molecular Cancer Research | 2017
Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo; Milena Urbini; Valentina Indio; Gloria Ravegnini; Margherita Nannini; Matilde De Luca; Giuseppe Tarantino; Sabrina Angelini; Alessandro Gronchi; Bruno Vincenzi; Giovanni Grignani; Chiara Colombo; Elena Fumagalli; Lidia Gatto; Maristella Saponara; Manuela Ianni; Paola Paterini; Donatella Santini; M. Giulia Pirini; Claudio Ceccarelli; Annalisa Altimari; Elisa Gruppioni; Salvatore Lorenzo Renne; Paola Collini; Silvia Stacchiotti; Giovanni Brandi; Paolo G. Casali; Antonio Daniele Pinna; Annalisa Astolfi; Guido Biasco
Quadruple wild-type (WT) gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) is a genomic subgroup lacking KIT/PDGFRA/RAS pathway mutations, with an intact succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) complex. The aim of this work is to perform a wide comprehensive genomic study on quadruple WT GIST to improve the characterization of these patients. We selected 14 clinical cases of quadruple WT GIST, of which nine cases showed sufficient DNA quality for whole exome sequencing (WES). NF1 alterations were identified directly by WES. Gene expression from whole transcriptome sequencing (WTS) and miRNA profiling were performed using fresh-frozen, quadruple WT GIST tissue specimens and compared with SDH and KIT/PDGFRA-mutant GIST. WES identified an average of 18 somatic mutations per sample. The most relevant somatic oncogenic mutations identified were in TP53, MEN1, MAX, FGF1R, CHD4, and CTDNN2. No somatic alterations in NF1 were identified in the analyzed cohort. A total of 247 mRNA transcripts and 66 miRNAs were differentially expressed specifically in quadruple WT GIST. Overexpression of specific molecular markers (COL22A1 and CALCRL) and genes involved in neural and neuroendocrine lineage (ASCL1, Family B GPCRs) were detected and further supported by predicted miRNA target analysis. Quadruple WT GIST show a specific genetic signature that deviates significantly from that of KIT/PDGFRA-mutant and SDH-mutant GIST. Mutations in MEN1 and MAX genes, a neural-committed phenotype and upregulation of the master neuroendocrine regulator ASCL1, support a genetic similarity with neuroendocrine tumors, with whom they also share the great variability in oncogenic driver genes. Implications: This study provides novel insights into the biology of quadruple WT GIST that potentially resembles neuroendocrine tumors and should promote the development of specific therapeutic approaches. Mol Cancer Res; 15(5); 553–62. ©2017 AACR.
Clinical sarcoma research | 2017
Lidia Gatto; Margherita Nannini; Maristella Saponara; V. Di Scioscio; G. Beltramo; G. P. Frezza; Giorgio Ercolani; Antonio Daniele Pinna; Annalisa Astolfi; Milena Urbini; Giovanni Brandi; Guido Biasco; Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo
BackgroundGastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) is the most common mesenchymal neoplasm of the gastrointestinal tract. The main treatment for localized gastrointestinal stromal tumors is surgical resection. Unresectable or advanced GIST are poorly responsive to conventional cytotoxic chemotherapy but the introduction of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) marked a revolutionary step in the treatment of these patients, radically improving prognosis and clinical benefit. Historically GIST has been considered radiation-resistant, and the role of radiotherapy in the management of patients with GIST is currently restricted to symptomatic palliation in current treatment guidelines.Case presentationHere we report two patients affected by metastatic GIST, treated with radiotherapy and radiosurgery in combination with TKIs, achieving an unexpected objective response in the first case and a significant clinical benefit associated with a local tumor control of several months in the second case.ConclusionsThese and other successful experiences that are progressively accumulating, open up new scenarios of use of radiation therapy in various settings of treatment. GIST is not universally radioresistant and radiotherapy, especially if combined with molecularly targeted therapy, can improve the outcomes for patients diagnosed with GIST.
International Journal of Surgery Case Reports | 2013
Margherita Nannini; Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo; Fausto Catena; Stefania Romano; Salvatore Tondo; Maria Giulia Pirini; Cristian Lolli; Alessandra Maleddu; Anna Mandrioli; Lidia Gatto; Maristella Saponara; Maria Caterina Pallotti; Angelo Paolo Dei Tos; Antonio Daniele Pinna; Guido Biasco
INTRODUCTION The peritoneum is one of the most common sites of distant gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) metastases. In particular, GIST arising from the small intestine with resected minimal synchronous macroscopic peritoneal carcinomatosis or with primary tumor rupture has a higher risk of developing peritoneal recurrence. Current clinical practice does not envisage second-look surgery in GIST patients at high risk of developing peritoneal recurrence, and no literature data are available. PRESENTATION OF CASE We describe a 45-year-old woman who underwent emergency surgical resection of jejunal GIST presenting with spontaneous tumor rupture, synchronous ovarian and minimal macroscopic peritoneal involvement, and subsequent second-look surgery after 13 months of imatinib treatment. DISCUSSION Second-look surgery confirmed a 2.6cm lesion close to the mesenteric border of the fourth jejunal loop, and 11 peritoneal lesions with a macroscopic necrotic aspect related to treatment response. After conversion to an open procedure, a segmental jejunal resection was performed with removal of all peritoneal lesions and macroscopic radical cytoreduction. CONCLUSION Second-look surgery in selected GIST patients may be performed after at least 12 months of medical treatment with tyrosine-kinase inhibitors to identify those patients with limited peritoneal disease not disclosed by instrumental imaging who could undergo radical cytoreduction of peritoneal lesions.
Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology | 2017
Margherita Nannini; Maria Concetta Nigro; Bruno Vincenzi; Elena Fumagalli; Giovanni Grignani; Lorenzo D’Ambrosio; Giuseppe Badalamenti; Lorena Incorvaia; Raffaella Bracci; Silvia Gasperoni; Maristella Saponara; Lidia Gatto; Valentina Indio; Annalisa Astolfi; Valerio Di Scioscio; Paolo G. Casali; Giuseppe Tonini; Massimo Aglietta; Antonio Russo; Guido Biasco; Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo
Background: Regorafenib (REG) has now been approved as the standard third-line therapy in metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumour (GIST) patients at the recommended dose and schedule of 160 mg once daily for the first 3 weeks of each 4-week cycle. However, it has a relevant toxicity profile that mainly occurs within the first cycles of therapy, and dose and schedule adjustments are often required to reduce the frequency or severity of adverse events and to avoid early treatment discontinuation. To date, large amounts of data on the use of REG in metastatic GIST patients in daily clinical practice are not available, and we lack information about how this treatment personalization really affects the quality of life (QoL) of patients. The aim of the present retrospective study is to build a comprehensive picture of all alternative REG strategies adopted in daily clinical practice for use in metastatic GIST patients. Methods: Metastatic GIST patients treated with dose adjustment or alternative schedules of REG at seven reference Italian centres were retrospectively included. Results: For a total of 62 metastatic GIST patients, we confirmed that REG treatment adjustment is common in clinical practice and that it is very heterogeneous, with approximately 20 different strategies being adopted. Independent of which strategy is chosen, treatment personalization has led to a clinical benefit defined as complete or partial resolution of side effects in almost all patients, affecting the duration of REG treatment. Conclusions: The personalization of REG, even if it is heterogeneous, seems to be crucial to maximize the overall treatment duration.
Anti-Cancer Drugs | 2016
Maristella Saponara; Lidia Gatto; Di Nunno; Tabacchi E; Stefano Fanti; Di Scioscio; Margherita Nannini; Elisa Gruppioni; Annalisa Altimari; Michelangelo Fiorentino; D. Santini; Claudio Ceccarelli; Maurizio Zompatori; Guido Biasco; Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo
Imatinib is the standard first-line therapy for metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumors. It has markedly improved the prognosis and outcome of patients affected by gastrointestinal stromal tumors, especially in the case of exon 11 KIT mutations. Imatinib-associated adverse events are generally mild to moderate; however, in clinical practice, intolerance caused by chronic toxicities frequently leads to breaks in treatment. This is particularly true in elderly patients in whom age, decline in drug metabolism, and polypharmacy, with a possible drug–drug interaction, may influence the tolerability of imatinib. In the present article, we report our extensive experience with the management of imatinib therapy in a ‘real’ population, in particular in very elderly patients, discussing whether the use of personalized imatinib dosage could be a safe and advantageous option, enabling continuous administration, thus ensuring effective treatment. Only a few case reports in the literature provide data on outcome with low tailored dosage of imatinib and none of them has been carried out on a Western population. Here, we report four cases treated with low imatinib dosage as a safe and useful option enabling continued treatment with imatinib, improving tolerance, and maintaining good and lasting disease control.
Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology | 2018
Maristella Saponara; Valentina Ambrosini; Margherita Nannini; Lidia Gatto; Annalisa Astolfi; Milena Urbini; Valentina Indio; Stefano Fanti; Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo
Cardiac tumors are a very rare condition. Mostly, they are benign tumors (75%), with myxomas being the most frequent. The remaining 25% are malignant; either primary malignant sarcoma or secondary metastases. Given the small number of cases reported and the lack of prospective and randomized clinical trials, the level of evidence for the optimal multimodal treatment of primary cardiac sarcomas is very low and the optimal imaging diagnostic workup is not well established. In particular, 18F-FDG-PET/CT is not yet included in routine diagnosis of cardiac masses. Here, we report four illustrative clinical cases and a review of the literature on the current available data on the role of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET/CT imaging in cardiac tumors.
International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2018
Valentina Indio; Annalisa Astolfi; Giuseppe Tarantino; Milena Urbini; Janice Patterson; Margherita Nannini; Maristella Saponara; Lidia Gatto; Donatella Santini; Italo Faria do Valle; Gastone Castellani; Daniel Remondini; Michelangelo Fiorentino; Margaret Von Mehren; Giovanni Brandi; Guido Biasco; Michael C. Heinrich; M. A. Pantaleo
Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) carrying the D842V activating mutation in the platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha (PDGFRA) gene are a very rare subgroup of GIST (about 10%) known to be resistant to conventional tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and to show an indolent behavior. In this study, we performed an integrated molecular characterization of D842V mutant GIST by whole-transcriptome and whole-exome sequencing coupled with protein–ligand interaction modelling to identify the molecular signature and any additional recurrent genomic event related to their clinical course. We found a very specific gene expression profile of D842V mutant tumors showing the activation of G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) signaling and a relative downregulation of cell cycle processes. Beyond D842V, no recurrently mutated genes were found in our cohort. Nevertheless, many private, clinically relevant alterations were found in each tumor (TP53, IDH1, FBXW7, SDH-complex). Molecular modeling of PDGFRA D842V suggests that the mutant protein binds imatinib with lower affinity with respect to wild-type structure, showing higher stability during the interaction with other type I TKIs (like crenolanib). D842V mutant GIST do not show any actionable recurrent molecular events of therapeutic significance, therefore this study supports the rationale of novel TKIs development that are currently being evaluated in clinical studies for the treatment of D842V mutant GIST.
Comparative and Functional Genomics | 2018
Milena Urbini; Margherita Nannini; Annalisa Astolfi; Valentina Indio; Valentina Vicennati; Matilde De Luca; Giuseppe Tarantino; Federica Corso; Maristella Saponara; Lidia Gatto; Donatella Santini; Guido Di Dalmazi; Uberto Pagotto; Renato Pasquali; Andrea Pession; Guido Biasco; Maria Abbondanza Pantaleo
Background Pheochromocytomas (PCCs) show the highest degree of heritability in human neoplasms. However, despite the wide number of alterations until now reported in PCCs, it is likely that other susceptibility genes remain still unknown, especially for those PCCs not clearly syndromic. Methods Whole exome sequencing of tumor DNA was performed on a set of twelve PCCs clinically defined as sporadic. Results About 50% of PCCs examined had somatic mutations on the known susceptibility VHL, NF1, and RET genes. In addition to these driver events, mutations on SYNE1, ABCC10, and RAD54B genes were also detected. Moreover, extremely rare germline variants were present in half of the sporadic PCC samples analyzed, in particular variants of MAX and SAMD9L were detected in the germline of cases wild-type for mutations in the known susceptibility genes. Conclusions Additional somatic passenger mutations can be associated with known susceptibility VHL, NF1, and RET genes in PCCs, and a wide number of germline variants with still unknown clinical significance can be detected in these patients. Therefore, many efforts should be aimed to better define the pathogenetic role of all these germline variants for discovering novel potential therapeutic targets for this disease still orphan of effective treatments.