Maria Domenica Simone
University of Rome Tor Vergata
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Featured researches published by Maria Domenica Simone.
Blood | 2010
Pietro Sodani; Antonella Isgrò; Javid Gaziev; Paola Polchi; Katia Paciaroni; Marco Marziali; Maria Domenica Simone; Andrea Roveda; Aldo Montuoro; Cecilia Alfieri; Gioia De Angelis; Cristiano Gallucci; Buket Erer; Giancarlo Isacchi; Francesco Zinno; Gaspare Adorno; Alessandro Lanti; Lawrence Faulkner; Manuela Testi; Marco Andreani; Guido Lucarelli
Fetomaternal microchimerism suggests immunological tolerance between mother and fetus. Thus, we performed primary hematopoietic stem cell transplantation from a mismatched mother to thalassemic patient without an human leukocyte antigen-identical donor. Twenty-two patients with thalassemia major were conditioned with 60 mg/kg hydroxyurea and 3 mg/kg azathioprine from day -59 to -11; 30 mg/m(2) fludarabine from day -17 to -11; 14 mg/kg busulfan starting on day -10; and 200 mg/kg cyclophosphamide, 10 mg/kg thiotepa, and 12.5 mg/kg antithymocyte globulin daily from day -5 to -2. Fourteen patients received CD34(+)-mobilized peripheral blood and bone marrow progenitor cells; 8 patients received marrow graft-selected peripheral blood stem cells CD34(+) and bone marrow CD3/CD19-depleted cells. T-cell dose was adjusted to 2 x 10(5)/kg by fresh marrow cell addback at the time of transplantation. Both groups received cyclosporine for graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis for 2 months after transplantation. Two patients died (cerebral Epstein-Barr virus lymphoma or cytomegalovirus pneumonia), 6 patients reject their grafts, and 14 showed full chimerism with functioning grafts at a median follow-up of 40 months. None of the 14 patients who showed full chimerism developed acute or chronic graft-versus-host disease. These results suggest that maternal haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is feasible in patients with thalassemia who lack a matched related donor.
Blood | 2010
Javid Gaziev; Laurent Nguyen; Christian Puozzo; Alessia Francesca Mozzi; Marialuisa Casella; Michela Perrone Donnorso; Paolo Gravina; Pietro Sodani; Marco Marziali; Antonella Isgrò; Maria Domenica Simone; Marco Andreani; Amanda Formosa; Manuela Testi; Giorgio Federici; Sergio Bernardini; Guido Lucarelli
We prospectively studied the pharmacokinetics (PK) and clinical outcomes of intravenous busulfan (Bu) in 71 children with preexisting liver damage who underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for thalassemia. Intravenous Bu was administered every 6 hours as part of a conditioning regimen with PK-based dose adjustment to target a conservative area under the concentration-versus-time curve (AUC) range (900-1350 microMol*min). The first-dose Bu clearance (CL) was significantly higher than the subsequent daily CL that remained unchanged in the ensuing days. One-third of patients required dose escalation based on dose 1 AUC, whereas dose reduction was needed in the subsequent days. At doses 5, 9, and 13, 78%, 81%, and 87% of patients, respectively, achieved the target range of AUC. A population PK analysis confirmed that the first-dose CL was 20% higher and that body weight was the most important covariate to explain PK variability. Patients with variant GSTA1*B had a 10% lower Bu CL than wild-type. These results suggest that the disease-specific behavior of intravenous Bu PK should be considered for PK-guided dose adjustment in patients with thalassemia, and the use of a conservative AUC range resulted in low toxicity, good engraftment, and good survival rate.
Hematological Oncology | 1999
Maria Domenica Simone; Stefano De Santis; Eliana Vigneti; Giuseppe Papa; S. Amadori; Luigi Aloe
Nerve growth factor (NGF) is a well characterized molecule required for the survival and differentiation of a variety of cell types both in the peripheral and central nervous system. Numerous studies published in recent years have demonstrated that NGF affects different functional activities of mature immune and hematopoietic cells. Other studies have revealed that hematopoietic progenitor cells from bone marrow, umbilical cord blood and peripheral blood are receptive to the action of NGF and that bone marrow stromal cells produce/respond to NGF during different steps of normal hematopoiesis. Elevated levels of NGF have been found in a number of inflammatory diseases, including those of autoimmune nature and in myeloproliferative pathologies. This review presents these data and discusses the hypothesis of a possible functional role of NGF in immune and hematopoietic disorders. Copyright
British Journal of Haematology | 1994
Adriano Venditti; Giovanni Del Poeta; Roberto Stasi; Mario Masi; Antonio Bruno; Francesco Buccisano; Cristina Cox; Ugo Coppetelli; Germano Aronica; Maria Domenica Simone; Giuseppe Papa; Maurizio Tribalto; Sergio Amadori
Summary. We describe our experience in the identification of 19 cases of AML‐MO categorized among 200 consecutive AML cases. Leukaemic cells from our cases were morphologically marked by agranuler basophilic cytoplasm, finely dispersed chromatin and prominent nucleoli. In two cases heavily vacuolated and monocytoid‐shaped blasts were also observed. Cytochemistry (MPO, SBB, αANAE, αNBE, NASDCAE, AP, PAS) was negative in 14 cases, five cases expressing a very faint cytoplasmic positivity for αNBE (not exceeding 30% of the blasts) and αANAE (not exceeding 41%) which was sodium fluoride resistant. In these five cases other monocytic markers (e.g. CD14) were not in favour of myelomonocytic differentiation. All the cases were anti‐MPO positive at frequency > 10%. Phenotypic analysis also revealed myeloid features with all the patients having at least one myeloid antigen (CD13, CD33, CD15), Tdt was expressed in nine cases and CD7 in six cases. All cases but one were positive for CD34. Cytogenetic analysis, performed in 16 cases, showed no adequate growth in two cases and no consistent abnormality in four; among the remaining 10 cases no consistent abnormality was observed, the most common finding was trisomy 8 (two cases) and 4 (two cases) and aberrations of chromosomes 2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 12 and 21. No cases of (t9;22), Ph chromosome were observed. Interestingly three out of five patients with faint αNBE/αANAE positivity relapsed as typical M4 (one case) or M5a (two cases).
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2008
J Gaziev; P Sodani; G Lucarelli; Paola Polchi; Sarah Marktel; K Paciaroni; M Marziali; Antonella Isgrò; Maria Domenica Simone; Andrea Roveda; Aldo Montuoro; Alessandro Lanti; C Alfieri; G De Angelis; C Gallucci; Fabio Ciceri; Maria Grazia Roncarolo
There is a substantial incidence of graft failure in patients with thalassemia after myeloablative conditioning regimens especially in class 3 patients in whom its incidence could be as high as 8–38.5%. Most patients with graft failure have recurrence of thalassemic marrow. Historically, results of second transplants for thalassemia were poor because of a high rejection rate and/or increased TRM. Sixteen patients with thalassemia recurrence following rejection of the first graft and with a median age of 9 years (range, 4–20) were given second transplants using BM (n=7) or PBSC (n=9) after preparation with a new treatment protocol. All but two patients received stem cells from the same donor. The median interval between two transplants was 28 months (range, 8–204). The sustained engraftment rate was high (94%) with only one patient having primary graft failure. The probability of overall survival, event-free survival, TRM and graft failure were 79, 79, 16 and 6%, respectively. There were three transplant-related deaths. Thirteen patients are alive with Lansky/Karnofsky score of 100. This intensified treatment protocol was well tolerated with no significant increase in toxicity. The excellent results obtained with this new preparative regimen allow us to recommend it for second transplantation for patients with thalassemia recurrence.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 1995
Giovanni Del Poeta; Roberto Stasi; Adriano Venditti; Cristina Cox; Germano Aronica; Mario Masi; Antonio Bruno; Maria Domenica Simone; Francesco Buccisano; Giuseppe Papa
The clinical significance of the expression of CD7 antigen on the blasts of 207 consecutive patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) was evaluated. For this purpose, fifty-three CD7+ patients (23 females and 30 males; mean age 52 years) were analyzed and classified into the following subtypes according to French-American-British (FAB) classification: 7 M0, 13 M1, 9 M2, 1 M3, 9 M4, 14 M5. Immunophenotypic studies were carried out by flow cytometry and blast cells were selected on the basis of forward light scatter gating and pan-myeloid marker, either CD13 or CD33. All the CD7+ patients were negative for surface CD3 and T-cell-receptor (TCR) molecules. We found no correlation between CD7 expression and sex, age, hepatosplenomegaly and/or central nervous system involvement. The immaturity of CD7+ leukemic cells was supported by the high expression of CD34 (P = 0.001). CD7 positivity was significantly associated with a white blood cell count (WBC) greater than 100 x 10(9)/L (P = 0.003). P-Glycoprotein (P-170) expression was also evaluated in 135 patients by a flow-cytometric assay: there was a close relationship between CD7 and P-170 positivity (P < 0.001). For remission induction, all patients received therapeutic regimens routinely used for AML. The complete remission (CR) rate was significantly lower in CD7+ cases (32% vs 74%, P = 0.001). The overall survival and disease free survival rate of CD7+ AML was lower than those of CD7- patients (P < 0.001 and = 0.002, respectively). CD7+ AML with coexpression of CD14 had a particularly unfavourable response and prognosis in comparison with CD7+ patients without CD14.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2012
G Lucarelli; J Gaziev; Antonella Isgrò; P Sodani; K Paciaroni; C Alfieri; G De Angelis; M Marziali; Maria Domenica Simone; C Gallucci; Andrea Roveda; F Saltarelli; Fabio Torelli; Marco Andreani
Many patients with thalassemia have been cured with BMT since the first successful transplant in 1981. Allogeneic stem cell gene therapy is the only treatment option for patients with sickle cell anemia (SCA). A total of 11 patients with a median age of 12 years (range, 2–16), affected by SCA, received hematopoietic SCT from HLA-identical, related donors following a myeloablative-conditioning regimen. Indications for transplantation were vaso-occlusive crisis, acute chest syndrome, avascular bone necrosis, chronic RBC transfusions, or hemorrhagic stroke. All patients had sustained engraftment. One patient became a stable mixed chimera with 25% of donor cells at 4 years after transplantation. One patient died at 1 year after transplantation. The probability of survival, SCA-free survival and TRM at 5 years after transplant were 90, 90 and 10%, respectively. All 10 surviving patients remained free of any SCA-related events after transplantation. In conclusion, these data confirm SCT from a suitable HLA-matched, related donor should become the primary option for curing children with SCA. There is an excellent survival rate and a return to normal life, free of SCA-related events.
Pediatric Reports | 2011
Pietro Sodani; Antonella Isgrò; Javid Gaziev; Katia Paciaroni; Marco Marziali; Maria Domenica Simone; Andrea Roveda; Gioa De Angelis; Cristiano Gallucci; Fabio Torelli; Giancarlo Isacchi; Francesco Zinno; Fabiola Landi; Gaspare Adorno; Alessandro Lanti; Manuela Testi; Marco Andreani; Guido Lucarelli
The cure for thalassemia involves correcting the genetic defect in a hematopoietic stem cell that results in reduced or absent β-globin synthesis and an excess of α-globin dimers. Intracellular precipitation and accumulation of α- dimers results in ineffective erythropoiesis and hemolytic anemia. Replacing the abnormal thalassemic marrow with allogeneic normal or heterozygous stem cells carrying the functional gene restores appropriate β-globin chain synthesis.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 1997
Giovanni Del Poeta; Adriano Venditti; Germano Aronica; Roberto Stasi; Maria Cristina Cox; Francesco Buccisano; Antonio Bruno; Anna Tamburini; Giovanna Suppo; Maria Domenica Simone; Anna Maria Epiceno; Beatrice Del Moro; Mario Masi; Giuseppe Papa; Sergio Amadori
Detection of the multidrug resistance P-glycoprotein (PGP) phenotype was performed at the time of diagnosis in 223 patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) by flow cytometry using C219 Monoclonal Antibody (MoAb). On the other hand, JSB1 MoAb was tested in 173 of these samples. At onset, PGP was detected in 57.4% of cases with C219 and 75.9% of cases with JSB1. There was no correlation between PGP expression and sex, age, marrow blast percentage or extramedullary disease. On the contrary, strict correlations were noted either between C219 negativity and FAB M3 subtype or between C219 positivity and FAB M5 group (P = 0.003). Significant correlation was found between PGP phenotype and CD7, as 143 of 223 samples had similar patterns of staining with C219 (P < 0.0001). Finally, there was a close relationship between C219 and JSB1 positivity: all the C219+ cases were positive for JSB1 (P < 0.0001). Concerning the karyotype, most patients with monosomy or del (7) were MDR positive; on the other hand, most patients with t(8;21) or t(15;17) were MDR negative. Rh123 accumulation studies showed a significant decrease of mean fluorescence intensities both in C219 and in JSB1 positive cases in comparison with PGP negative ones (P < 0.001). A significant decrease of remission induction rates (CR) was highlighted both between C219+ and C219- and between JSB1+ and JSB1- cases (32.1% v 62.1% and 32.6% v 73.8%, respectively, with P < 0.0001). The overall survival and the remission duration (CCR) were significantly shorter both in C219+ and in JSB1+ patients with no relationship to age. Furthermore, a higher rate of early relapses was noted among MDR+ when compared with MDR- patients both for C219+ and JSB1+ cases. The combination (C219- JSB1+) identified a subset of patients with an intermediate prognosis. On multivariate analysis, C219 and JSB1 were confirmed to be independent prognostic factors for achievement of CR, overall survival and CCR. In conclusion, the assessment of MDR phenotype by flow cytometry is a crucial prognostic factor of treatment outcome in AML.
Pediatrics International | 2009
Arianna Zangrilli; Elena Campione; Laura Diluvio; Evelin Jasmine Paternò; Augusto Orlandi; Maria Domenica Simone; Sergio Chimenti
Chronic cutaneous graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is a severe clinical and pathological manifestation that occurs in patients after allogenic peripheral blood stem cell or bone marrow transplantation. Acute and chronic forms of cutaneous GVHD show various manifestations including exanthema, erythrodermia and toxic epidermal necrolysis as acute reactions, and lichenoid or sclerodermatous changes as chronic reactions. The beginning of the treatment of chronic GVHD is systemic immunosuppression and the efficacy of extracorporeal photopheresis, UVA1 phototherapy, and narrowband UVB phototherapy is currently under investigation for treatment of GVHD. Nevertheless, cutaneous chronic GVHD may also respond to topical therapy such as corticosteroids, azathioprine, tacrolimus and pimecrolimus. Pimecrolimus (SDZ ASM 981) is part of the new class of novel ascomycin immunomodulating macrolactams, and was developed for the treatment of inflammatory skin disease. We report a case of a generalized cutaneous GVHD in a 9-year-old Iranian boy that occurred after bone-marrow transplantation for b-thalassemia major. The patient showed a significant improvement with topical pimecrolimus 1% cream twice daily for 9 weeks.