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Dive into the research topics where Marco Mirra is active.

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Featured researches published by Marco Mirra.


AIDS | 2000

Quality of life outcomes of combination zidovudine- didanosine-nevirapine and zidovudine-didanosine for antiretroviral-naive advanced HIV-infected patients.

Raffaella Bucciardini; Albert W. Wu; Marco Floridia; Vincenzo Fragola; Daniela Ricciardulli; Carlo Tomino; Liliana Elena Weimer; Maria Franca Pirillo; Marco Mirra; Massimo Marzi; Giacomo Giannini; Clementina Maria Galluzzo; Mauro Andreotti; Maurizio Massella; Stefano Vella

ObjectivesTo evaluate the quality of life outcomes in antiretroviral-naive patients randomized to zidovudine plus didanosine versus zidovudine plus didanosine plus nevirapine for treatment of advanced HIV disease (the Istituto Superiore di Sanità 047 trial). DesignA 48-week randomized, double-blind trial. MethodsSixty patients were enrolled and evaluated over 24 weeks. Quality of life was assessed using a modified version of the Medical Outcomes Study-HIV Health Survey. For analysis, we calculated two summary scores reflecting the physical (PHS) and the mental (MHS) components of health. ResultsAlthough the three-drug combination was superior at inducing immunologic and virologic responses, the two-drug regimen was superior for both PHS and MHS, especially at week 8 where differences were both statistically and clinically significant (5.8 and 9.2 points, respectively, P < 0.02 for both). Quality of life changes paralleled trends in body weight and Karnofsky performance status score. ConclusionAlthough a three-drug antiretroviral therapy regimen was superior in terms of short term virologic/immunologic response, the two-drug regimen was better in terms of quality of life. In general, triple therapy remains the most effective treatment option. However, quality of life assessments can yield results that may be discordant with and complementary to those obtained using conventional endpoints. Comparative trials should collect a comprehensive range of outcome measures, including patient-reported quality of life, in order to provide clinicians and patients with additional information that may influence treatment decisions.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Retention in Care of Adult HIV Patients Initiating Antiretroviral Therapy in Tigray, Ethiopia: A Prospective Observational Cohort Study

Raffaella Bucciardini; Vincenzo Fragola; Teshome Abegaz; Stefano Lucattini; Atakilt Halifom; Eskedar Tadesse; Micheal Berhe; Katherina Pugliese; Andrea Binelli; Paola De Castro; Roberta Terlizzi; Luca Fucili; Massimiliano Di Gregorio; Marco Mirra; Erika Olivieri; Tsigemariam Teklu; Teame Zegeye; Amanuel Haile; Stefano Vella; Loko Abraham; Hagos Godefay

Introduction Although Ethiopia has been scaling up the antiretroviral therapy (ART) services, low retention in care of patients remains one of the main obstacles to treatment success. We report data on retention in care and its associated determinants in Tigray, Ethiopia. Methods We used data from the CASA project, a prospective observational and multi-site study of a cohort of HIV-infected patients who initiated ART for the first time in Tigray. Four participating health facilities (HFs) located in the South of Tigray were considered for this study. Patients were followed for one year after ART initiation. The main outcome measure was represented by the current retention in care, defined as the proportion of patients who were alive and receiving ART at the same HF one year after ART initiation. Patients who started ART between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2013 were included in this analysis. Patients were followed for one year after ART initiation. The determinants of retention were analysed using univariate and multivariate Cox Proportional Hazards model with robust sandwich estimates to account for within HF correlation. Results The four participating HFs in Tigray were able to retain overall 85.1% of their patients after one year from starting ART. Loss to follow-up (5.5%) and transfers to other HF (6.6) were the main determinant of attrition. A multivariate analysis shows that the factors significantly associated with retention were the type of HF, gender and active TB. Alamata health center was the HF with the highest attrition rate (HR 2.99, 95% CI: 2.77–3.23). Active TB (HR 1.72, 95% CI: 1.23–2.41) and gender (HR 1.64, 95% CI: 1.10–2.56) were also significantly associated with attrition. Conclusions Although Ethiopia has significantly improved access to the ART program, achieving and maintaining a satisfactory long-term retention rate is a future goal. This is difficult because of different retention rates among HFs. Moreover specific interventions should be directed to people of different sex to improve retention in care in male population.


AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 2009

Immediate versus Delayed Surgical Intervention for Reconstructive Therapy of HIV-Associated Facial Lipoatrophy: A Randomized Open-Label Study

Pasquale Narciso; Raffaella Bucciardini; Valerio Tozzi; Rita Bellagamba; Jelena Ivanovic; Marinella Giulianelli; Sabrina Scevola; Antonio Palummieri; Vincenzo Fragola; Maurizio Massella; Luca Fracasso; Roy De Vita; Paola Pierro; Annamaria Del Maestro; Marco Mirra; Liliana Elena Weimer

We assessed the safety and efficacy of reconstructive therapy with facial fillers for the treatment of HIV-associated facial lipoatrophy (FLA) through a randomized, controlled, open-label single-center study. A total of 134 HIV-infected patients with severe FLA were randomly assigned to receive immediate (67 patients) or delayed (67 patients) facial injections of poly-l-lactic acid (PLA) or polyacrylamide gel (PAIG). Outcome measures included changes in physician and patient FLA severity scale, adverse events, and changes in health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and anxiety using validated measures. The mean average study follow-up was 27 weeks for the immediate and 25 weeks for the delayed subjects. Adverse events were mild and resolved after a mean of 4 days. Compared to patients randomized to the delayed treatment group, patients assigned to the immediate treatment group had significantly lower physician-rated (0.0 versus -3.0; p < 0.0001) and patient-rated (0.1 versus -1.8; p < 0.0001) FLA severity scores. By contrast, measures exploring HRQoL and anxiety did not show any significant difference between patients randomized to the immediate and deferred groups. Reconstructive therapy with facial fillers was effective and safe and led to significant improvements in FLA severity. However, no significant gains in HRQoL, relational and psychological consequences of body changes, and anxiety-related concerns were observed. Studies should be performed to identify patients who could maximally benefit from filling interventions for FLA.


Biologics: Targets & Therapy | 2008

T20QoL: an observational multicenter cohort study to evaluate the quality of life in HIV-patients treated with enfuvirtide (ENF, T-20) in combination with an optimized background therapy

Raffaella Bucciardini; Maurizio Massella; A Corpolongo; P Narciso; Vincenzo Fragola; Marco Mirra; S Donnini; O Viganò; S Costarelli; V Tozzi

Aim: To evaluate the impact of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) enfuvirtide-based (ENF-based) salvage regimens of treatment-experienced HIV patients, in an observational multicenter cohort study. Methods: HRQoL was measured in a cohort of 16 patients over a 6-month follow-up using 2 instruments: the ISSQoL (Istituto Superiore di Sanità Quality of Life), a recently validated HIV-specific questionnaire; the EQ-5D (EuroQol), a generic widely used instrument. ENF was given at standard dosage along with an optimized background regimen. Results: Most of HRQoL dimensions showed improvement in ENF-treated patients at the post-baseline time points. Social functioning was the only dimension showing a negative effect. Monthly care costs of antiretroviral drugs for HIV patients taking ENF plus an optimized background regimen were approximately €2,348 per patient-month (range €382–€2,940). Conclusion: Our results show that the addition of ENF to an optimized background salvage-HAART may positively affect HRQoL not only in clinical trials but also in a sample population of patients used in a routine clinical practice.


Patient Preference and Adherence | 2010

A factor analytic study of the Italian national institute of health quality of life - core evaluation form (ISSQoL-CEF)

M Lauriola; Rita Murri; Maurizio Massella; Marco Mirra; S Donnini; Vincenzo Fragola; J Ivanovic; M Pavoni; G Mancini; Raffaella Bucciardini

Objectives: The Italian National Institute of Health Quality of Life – Core Evaluation Form (ISSQoL-CEF) is a specific questionnaire measuring health-related quality of life for human immunodeficiency virus-infected people in the era of highly active antiretroviral therapy. The main goal of this study was to examine the construct validity of this questionnaire by confirmation of its hypothesized dimensional structure. Methods: Baseline quality of life data from four clinical studies were collected and a confirmatory factor analysis of the ISSQoL-CEF items was carried out. Both first-order and second-order factor models were tested: Model 1 with nine correlated first-order factors; Model 2 with three correlated second-order factors (Physical, Mental, and Social Health); Model 3 with two correlated second-order factors (Physical and Mental/Social Health); Model 4 with only one second-order factor (General Health). Results: A total of 261 patients were surveyed. Model 1 had a good fit to the data. Model 2 had an acceptable fit to the data and it was the best of all hierarchical models. However, Model 2 fitted the data worse than Model 1. Conclusions: The findings of in this study, consistent with the results of previous study, pointed out the construct validity of the ISSQoL-CEF.


BMJ Global Health | 2017

Predictors of attrition from care at 2 years in a prospective cohort of HIV-infected adults in Tigray, Ethiopia

Raffaella Bucciardini; Vincenzo Fragola; Teshome Abegaz; Stefano Lucattini; Atakilt Halifom; Eskedar Tadesse; Micheal Berhe; Katherina Pugliese; Luca Fucili; Massimiliano Di Gregorio; Marco Mirra; Paola De Castro; Roberta Terlizzi; Paola Tatarelli; Andrea Binelli; Teame Zegeye; Michela Campagnoli; Stefano Vella; Loko Abraham; Hagos Godefay

Introduction Ethiopia has experienced rapid expansion of antiretroviral therapy (ART). However, as long-term retention in ART therapy is key for ART effectiveness, determinants of attrition need to be identified so appropriate interventions can be designed. Methods We used data from the ‘Cohort of African people Starting Antiretroviral therapy’ (CASA) project, a prospective study of a cohort of HIV-infected patients who started ART in seven health facilities (HFs). We analysed the data of patients who had started first-line ART between January 2013 and December 2014. The Kaplan–Meier method was used to estimate the probability of retention at different time points. The Cox proportional hazards model was used to identify factors associated with attrition. Results A total of 1198 patients were included in the study. Kaplan–Meier estimates of retention in care were 83.9%, 82.1% and 79.8% at 12, 18 and 24 months after starting ART, respectively. Attrition was mainly due to loss to follow-up, transferred-out patients and documented mortality. A multivariate Cox proportional hazard model showed that male sex, CD4 count <200 cells/µL and the type of HF were significantly associated with attrition. Conclusions The observed attrition differences according to gender suggest that separate interventions designed for women and men should be explored. Moreover, innovative strategies to increase HIV testing should be supported to avoid CD4 levels falling too low, a factor significantly associated with higher attrition in our study. Finally, specific studies to analyse the reasons for different levels of attrition among HFs are required.


Aids Research and Therapy | 2016

Validation of a self-reported HIV symptoms list: the ISS-HIV symptoms scale

Raffaella Bucciardini; Katherina Pugliese; Daniela Francisci; Andrea Costantini; Elisabetta Schiaroli; Miriam Cognigni; Chiara Tontini; Stefano Lucattini; Luca Fucili; Massimiliano Di Gregorio; Marco Mirra; Vincenzo Fragola; Sara Pompili; Rita Murri; Stefano Vella

BackgroundTo describe the development and the psychometric properties of the Istituto Superiore di Sanità-HIV symptoms scale (lSS-HIV symptoms scale).MethodsThe ISS-HIV symptom scale was developed by an Italian working team including researchers, physicians and people living with HIV. The development process went through the following steps: (1) review of HIV/AIDS literature; (2) focus group; (3) pre-test analysis; (4) scale validation.ResultsThe 22 symptoms of HIV-ISS symptoms scale were clustered in five factors: pain/general discomfort (7 items); depression/anxiety (4 items); emotional reaction/psychological distress (5 items); gastrointestinal discomfort (4 items); sexual discomfort (2 items). The internal consistence reliability was for all factors within the minimum accepted standard of 0.70.ConclusionsThe results of this study provide a preliminary evidence of the reliability and validity of the ISS-HIV symptoms scale. In the new era where HIV infection has been transformed into a chronic diseases and patients are experiencing a complex range of symptoms, the ISS-HIV symptoms scale may represent an useful tool for a comprehensive symptom assessment with the advantage of being easy to fill out by patients and potentially attractive to physicians mainly because it is easy to understand and requires short time to interpret the results.


AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 2007

Health-related quality of life outcomes in HIV-infected patients starting different combination regimens in a randomized multinational trial: the INITIO-QoL substudy.

Raffaella Bucciardini; Vincenzo Fragola; Maurizio Massella; Cosimo Polizzi; Marco Mirra; Ruth L. Goodall; Dianne Carey; Fleur Hudson; Roberto Zajdenverg; Marco Floridia


Rapporti ISTISAN | 2015

PITER-HCV cohort study as part of the Italian platform for the study of viral hepatitis therapies

La Kondili; Mg Quaranta; L Falzano; A Mallano; Marco Mirra; Le Weimer; Luca Fucili; M Di Gregorio; Stefano Lucattini; M Massella; Roberta Terlizzi; Erika Olivieri; F Magnani; A Mattei; Stefano Rosato; Me Tosti; Vella; Luchino Chessa


Archive | 2015

La Piattaforma Italiana per lo studio della Terapia delle Epatiti Virali (PITER): il primo grande studio nazionale sull'infezione cronica da virus dell'epatite C

La Kondili; L Falzano; A Mallano; Mg Quaranta; Marco Mirra; Le Weimer; Luca Fucili; M Di Gregorio; Stefano Lucattini; M Massella; Roberta Terlizzi; Erika Olivieri; F Magnani; A Mattei; Stefano Rosato; Me Tosti; Stefano Vella; Rete Collaborativa dei Centri Clinici Piter; Luchino Chessa

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Raffaella Bucciardini

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Vincenzo Fragola

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Luca Fucili

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Stefano Lucattini

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Stefano Vella

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Maurizio Massella

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Roberta Terlizzi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Erika Olivieri

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Katherina Pugliese

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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