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Featured researches published by Luisa Delle Piane.


Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology | 2009

Follicular fluid content and oocyte quality: from single biochemical markers to metabolomics

Alberto Revelli; Luisa Delle Piane; Simona Casano; Emanuela Molinari; Marco Massobrio; Paolo F. Rinaudo

The assessment of oocyte quality in human in vitro fertilization (IVF) is getting increasing attention from embryologists. Oocyte selection and the identification of the best oocytes, in fact, would help to limit embryo overproduction and to improve the results of oocyte cryostorage programs. Follicular fluid (FF) is easily available during oocyte pick-up and theorically represents an optimal source on non-invasive biochemical predictors of oocyte quality. Unfortunately, however, the studies aiming to find a good molecular predictor of oocyte quality in FF were not able to identify substances that could be used as reliable markers of oocyte competence to fertilization, embryo development and pregnancy. In the last years, a well definite trend toward passing from the research of single molecular markers to more complex techniques that study all metabolites of FF has been observed. The metabolomic approach is a powerful tool to study biochemical predictors of oocyte quality in FF, but its application in this area is still at the beginning. This review provides an overview of the current knowledge about the biochemical predictors of oocyte quality in FF, describing both the results coming from studies on single biochemical markers and those deriving from the most recent studies of metabolomics


Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2011

Laparoscopic stripping of endometriomas negatively affects ovarian follicular reserve even if performed by experienced surgeons

Chiara Perono Biacchiardi; Luisa Delle Piane; Marco Camanni; Francesco Deltetto; Elena Delpiano; Gian Luigi Marchino; Gianluca Gennarelli; Alberto Revelli

In order to estimate the impact of laparoscopic stripping of endometriomas on the ovarian follicular reserve, 43 normo-ovulatory women were studied by endocrine (anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), FSH, LH, inhibin B, oestradiol) and ultrasonographic (antral follicle count (AFC)) methods before surgery, and 3 and 9 months after surgery. The operation was performed by experienced laparoscopists, particularly aware of the need to avoid damaging the healthy part of the ovary. Serum AMH concentrations significantly decreased after the operation (1.4±0.2 ng/ml after 3 months and 1.3±0.3 ng/ml after 9 months versus 3.0±0.4 ng/ml before surgery; P<0.0001), whereas basal FSH, LH, oestradiol and inhibin B concentrations remained unchanged. The volume of the operated ovary significantly diminished after surgery (P<0.0001), whereas the AFC was not significantly altered. Overall, the data show that laparoscopic stripping of endometriomas reduces ovarian reserve. The significant decrease of AMH after surgery confirms that part of the healthy ovarian pericapsular tissue, containing primordial and preantral follicles, is removed or damaged despite all the surgical efforts to be atraumatic. This must be carefully considered when laparoscopic cystectomy surgery is scheduled for patients with no relevant symptoms besides infertility or with already small ovarian reserve.


Fertility and Sterility | 2013

Live birth after orthotopic grafting of autologous cryopreserved ovarian tissue and spontaneous conception in Italy

Alberto Revelli; Gian Luigi Marchino; Elisabetta Dolfin; Emanuela Molinari; Luisa Delle Piane; Francesca Salvagno; Chiara Benedetto

OBJECTIVE To describe a live birth obtained in Italy after autologous orthotopic transplantation of cryopreserved ovarian cortical tissue. DESIGN Case report. SETTING University department of gynecology and obstetrics, reproductive medicine and IVF unit. PATIENT(S) A 29-year-old patient affected by β-thalassemia (intermedia phenotype) who underwent chemotherapy and bone marrow transplantation at age 21 years, resulting in a complete precocious ovarian failure. INTERVENTION(S) Before being treated with chemotherapy (busulfan, cyclophosphamide, and cyclosporine) for bone marrow transplantation, the patient underwent laparoscopic sampling of ovarian cortical tissue that was frozen and cryopreserved in liquid nitrogen. Eight years later, the ovarian tissue was thawed and grafted during laparoscopy at an orthotopic site. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Ultrasound and endocrine monitoring of the postgrafting restoration of ovarian function; conception, pregnancy, and live birth. RESULT(S) Three months after grafting, the decrease of circulating FSH levels and the parallel increase of E(2) levels demonstrated ovarian function restoration, which was confirmed by bidimensional ultrasound and color Doppler examinations. After some ovulatory cycles, the patient spontaneously conceived 16 months after transplantation. After 39 weeks of uneventful gestation, a healthy girl weighing 3,970 g was born. CONCLUSION(S) Autologous grafting of cryopreserved ovarian cortex at an orthotopic site may allow ovarian function restoration, spontaneous conception, and birth of a healthy baby.


Endocrinology | 2014

Use of a Mouse In Vitro Fertilization Model to Understand the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease Hypothesis

Sky Feuer; X. Liu; A. Donjacour; Wingka Lin; Rhodel Simbulan; G. Giritharan; Luisa Delle Piane; K.S. Kolahi; Kurosh Ameri; Emin Maltepe; Paolo F. Rinaudo

The Developmental Origins of Health and Disease hypothesis holds that alterations to homeostasis during critical periods of development can predispose individuals to adult-onset chronic diseases such as diabetes and metabolic syndrome. It remains controversial whether preimplantation embryo manipulation, clinically used to treat patients with infertility, disturbs homeostasis and affects long-term growth and metabolism. To address this controversy, we have assessed the effects of in vitro fertilization (IVF) on postnatal physiology in mice. We demonstrate that IVF and embryo culture, even under conditions considered optimal for mouse embryo culture, alter postnatal growth trajectory, fat accumulation, and glucose metabolism in adult mice. Unbiased metabolic profiling in serum and microarray analysis of pancreatic islets and insulin sensitive tissues (liver, skeletal muscle, and adipose tissue) revealed broad changes in metabolic homeostasis, characterized by systemic oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. Adopting a candidate approach, we identify thioredoxin-interacting protein (TXNIP), a key molecule involved in integrating cellular nutritional and oxidative states with metabolic response, as a marker for preimplantation stress and demonstrate tissue-specific epigenetic and transcriptional TXNIP misregulation in selected adult tissues. Importantly, dysregulation of TXNIP expression is associated with enrichment for H4 acetylation at the Txnip promoter that persists from the blastocyst stage through adulthood in adipose tissue. Our data support the vulnerability of preimplantation embryos to environmental disturbance and demonstrate that conception by IVF can reprogram metabolic homeostasis through metabolic, transcriptional, and epigenetic mechanisms with lasting effects for adult growth and fitness. This study has wide clinical relevance and underscores the importance of continued follow-up of IVF-conceived offspring.


Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology | 2009

A retrospective study on IVF outcome in euthyroid patients with anti-thyroid antibodies: effects of levothyroxine, acetyl-salicylic acid and prednisolone adjuvant treatments

Alberto Revelli; Simona Casano; Luisa Delle Piane; Giuseppina Grassi; Gianluca Gennarelli; Daniela Guidetti; Marco Massobrio

BackgroundAnti-thyroid antibodies (ATA), even if not associated with thyroid dysfunction, are suspected to cause poorer outcome of in vitro fertilization (IVF).MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed: (a) the prevalence of ATA in euthyroid infertile women, (b) IVF outcome in euthyroid, ATA+ patients, and (c) the effect of adjuvant treatments (levothyroxine alone or associated with acetylsalicylic acid and prednisolone) on IVF results in ATA+ patients. One hundred twenty-nine euthyroid, ATA+ women undergoing IVF were compared with 200 matched, ATA-controls. During IVF cycle, 38 ATA+ patients did not take any adjuvant treatment, 55 received levothyroxin (LT), and 38 received LT +acetylsalicylic acid (ASA)+prednisolone (P).ResultsThe prevalence of ATA among euthyroid, infertile patients was 10.5%, similar to the one reported in euthyroid women between 18 and 45 years. ATA+ patients who did not receive any adjuvant treatment showed significantly poorer ovarian responsiveness to stimulation and IVF results than controls. ATA+ patients receiving LT responded better to ovarian stimulation, but had IVF results as poor as untreated ATA+ women. Patients receiving LT+ASA+P had significantly higher pregnancy and implantation rates than untreated ATA+ patients (PR/ET 25.6% and IR 17.7% vs. PR/ET 7.5% and IR 4.7%, respectively), and overall IVF results comparable to patients without ATA (PR/ET 32.8% and IR 19%).ConclusionThese observations suggest that euthyroid ATA+ patients undergoing IVF could have better outcome if given LT+ASA+P as adjuvant treatment. This hypothesis must be verified in further randomized, prospective studies.


Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2010

IVF twins have similar obstetric and neonatal outcome as spontaneously conceived twins: a prospective follow-up study

Elena Vasario; Carlotta Bossotti; Enrico Libanori; Marilisa Biolcati; Silvana Arduino; Rita Spinelli; Luisa Delle Piane; Alberto Revelli; Tullia Todros

Studies comparing the outcome of spontaneous versus IVF twin pregnancies report heterogeneous results. This may depend on differences in the studied populations and/or in the management approach to twin pregnancy. The aim of the present study was to compare both maternal and perinatal outcomes in dichorionic diamniotic twin pregnancies who where spontaneously conceived or originated by successful homologous IVF. In order to get homogeneous observations, monochorionic twin pregnancies and triplet pregnancies were excluded. Moreover, to avoid any possible bias deriving from differences in the obstetric management, all pregnancies were managed by the same team applying fixed obstetric protocols. The study included 223 twin pregnancies, 84 conceived by IVF and 139 spontaneously conceived. Overall, maternal and perinatal outcomes were similar in the two groups: no significant differences were observed as far as gestational age at delivery, birthweight, perinatal morbidity and mortality, and rate of malformations were concerned. The rate of Caesarean section was slightly, but not significantly, higher in IVF pregnancies. In conclusion, the outcome of IVF twin pregnancies is comparable to that of spontaneously conceived twin pregnancies, provided that the same management criteria are applied.


Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology | 2011

Ovarian endometriomas and IVF: a retrospective case-control study

Francesca Bongioanni; Alberto Revelli; Gianluca Gennarelli; Daniela Guidetti; Luisa Delle Piane; Jan Holte

We performed this retrospective case-control study analyzing 428 first-attempt in vitro fertilization (IVF) cycles, among which 254 involved women with a previous or present diagnosis of ovarian endometriosis. First, the results of these 254 cycles were compared with 174 cycles involving patients with proven non-endometriotic tubal infertility having similar age and body mass index. Women with ovarian endometriosis had a significantly higher cancellation rate, but similar pregnancy, implantation and delivery rates as patients with tubal infertility. Second, among the women with ovarian endometriosis, the women with a history of laparoscopic surgery for ovarian endometriomas prior to IVF and no visual endometriosis at ovum pick-up (n = 112) were compared with the non-operated women and visual endometriomas at ovum pick-up (n = 142). Patients who underwent ovarian surgery before IVF had significantly shorter period, lower antral follicle count and required higher gonadotropin doses than patients with non-operated endometriomas. The two groups of women with a previous or present ovarian endometriosis did, however, have similar pregnancy, implantation and live birth rates. In conclusion, ovarian endometriosis does not reduce IVF outcome compared with tubal factor. Furthermore, laparoscopic removal of endometriomas does not improve IVF results, but may cause a decrease of ovarian responsiveness to gonadotropins.


Fertility and Sterility | 2013

Comparative analysis of fetal and neonatal outcomes of pregnancies from fresh and cryopreserved/thawed oocytes in the same group of patients

Paolo Emanuele Levi Setti; Elena Albani; Emanuela Morenghi; G. Morreale; Luisa Delle Piane; Giulia Scaravelli; Pasquale Patrizio

OBJECTIVE To analyze the fetal and neonatal outcomes of pregnancies achieved with fresh and/or frozen oocytes in the same group of patients. DESIGN Observational study and comparative analysis. SETTING Research unit of an academic medical center. PATIENT(S) A group of 855 women with cryopreserved oocytes and their resulting 954 assisted reproductive technology clinical pregnancies were enrolled and followed up during the same time period and in the same clinical setting; the outcomes of 197 pregnancies from frozen/thawed oocytes were compared with 757 obtained from fresh sibling oocyte cycles. INTERVENTION(S) None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Pregnancies were followed until delivery, and neonatal data (up to 28 days after delivery) were collected. RESULT(S) No significant differences were found between the use of fresh and frozen oocytes in the rates of therapeutic abortions for fetal anomaly (1.5% vs. 0.8%) and ectopic pregnancies (3.6% vs. 2.9%), but a significantly higher rate of spontaneous abortions at ≤ 12 weeks (17.6% vs. 26.9%) was observed in the frozen/thawed oocytes group. No statistical differences were found in major anomalies at birth (2.8% vs. 4.6%). Despite no difference in gestational age at delivery, the mean birth weights were significantly lower with fresh oocyte pregnancies, both in singleton (2,725 ± 727 g) and twins (2,128 ± 555 g), than with frozen-thawed oocytes (3,231 ± 615 g and 2,418 ± 492 g, respectively). However, the analysis of the 63 patients who obtained pregnancies both in fresh and thawed cycles (138 pregnancies) showed no differences in the abortion rate and in the mean birth weight. CONCLUSION(S) These results provide strong support to the notion that fetal and perinatal complications and congenital anomalies do not differ between pregnancies from frozen-thawed and fresh oocytes. The significantly lower mean birth weight observed with pregnancies from fresh oocytes supports similar observations reported for pregnancies from embryo cryopreservation and requires further prospective studies.


Obstetrics and Gynecology International | 2012

Oocyte Cryostorage to Preserve Fertility in Oncological Patients

Alberto Revelli; Emanuela Molinari; Francesca Salvagno; Luisa Delle Piane; Elisabetta Dolfin; Simona Ochetti

Thanks to the progress in oncostatic treatments, young women affected by cancer have a fairly good chance of surviving the disease and leading a normal post-cancer life. Quite often, however, polychemiotherapy and/or radiotherapy can induce ovarian damage and significantly reduce the content of follicles and oocytes inside the ovary, thus predisposing the patient to menstrual disorders, infertility, and precocious menopause. Several techniques have been proposed to preserve fertility in these patients; among them oocyte collection and cryopreservation prior to the oncostatic treatment has been widely applied in the last decade. The proper indications, the permitting conditions, the available hormonal stimulation protocols, as well as the effectiveness and limits of this option will be discussed herein, with a comprehensive and up-to-date review of the two techniques commonly used to cryostore oocytes, the slow-freezing technique and the vitrification technique.


Reproductive Sciences | 2015

Behavior and Brain Gene Expression Changes in Mice Exposed to Preimplantation and Prenatal Stress

Fabrizio Strata; G. Giritharan; Francesca Di Sebastiano; Luisa Delle Piane; Chia-Ning Kao; A. Donjacour; Paolo F. Rinaudo

Preimplantation culture of mouse embryos has been suggested to result in reduced anxiety-like behavior in adulthood. Here, we investigated the effects of in vitro fertilization (IVF), embryo culture, and different diets on anxiety-like behavior using the elevated plus maze (EPM). We hypothesized that exposure to suboptimal conditions during the preimplantation stage would interact with the suboptimal diet to alter behavior. The expression of genes related to anxiety was then assessed by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction in various brain regions. When fed a normal diet during gestation and a moderately high-fat Western diet (WD) postnatally, naturally conceived (NC) and IVF mice showed similar anxiety-like behavior on the EPM. However, when fed a low-protein diet prenatally and a high-fat diet postnatally (LP/HF), NC mice showed a modest increase in anxiety-like behavior, whereas IVF mice showed the opposite: a strongly reduced anxiety-like behavior on the EPM. The robust reduction in anxiety-like behavior in IVF males fed the LP/HF diets was, intriguingly, associated with reduced expression of MAO-A, CRFR2, and GABA markers in the hypothalamus and cortex. These findings are discussed in relation to the developmental origin of health and disease hypothesis and the 2-hit model, which suggests that 2 events, occurring at different times in development, can act synergistically with long-term consequences observed during adulthood.

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A. Donjacour

University of California

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