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Dive into the research topics where Maria Grazia Cusi is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Grazia Cusi.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Chemo-Immunotherapy of Metastatic Colorectal Carcinoma With Gemcitabine Plus FOLFOX 4 Followed by Subcutaneous Granulocyte Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor and Interleukin-2 Induces Strong Immunologic and Antitumor Activity in Metastatic Colon Cancer Patients

Pierpaolo Correale; Maria Grazia Cusi; Kwong Y. Tsang; Maria Teresa Del Vecchio; Stefania Marsili; Marco La Placa; Chiara Intrivici; Angelo Aquino; Lucia Micheli; Cristina Nencini; Francesco Ferrari; Giorgio Giorgi; Enzo Bonmassar; Guido Francini

PURPOSE Tumor cell killing by anticancer drugs may be supported by their immuno- and pharmacologic effects. Chemotherapy is in fact able to (A) upregulate tumor-associated antigen expression, including carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) or other target molecules such as thymidylate synthase (TS); and (B) downregulate tumor cell resistance to the death signals induced by tumor antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes. This provides the rationale for combining chemo- and immunotherapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS We describe the results of a translational phase II trial designed to evaluate the toxicity, antitumor activity and immunologic effects of gemcitabine + FOLFOX-4 (oxaliplatin, fluorouracil, and folinic acid) polychemotherapy followed by the subcutaneous administration of granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor and low-dose interleukin-2 in colorectal carcinoma patients. The study involved 29 patients (16 males and 13 females with a mean age of 69 years), 21 of whom had received a previous line of treatment, and 19 had liver involvement. RESULTS The treatment was well tolerated and induced very high objective response (68.9%) and disease control rates (96.5%), with an average time to progression of 12.5 months. An immunologic study of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) taken from 20 patients showed an enhanced proliferative response to colon carcinoma antigen and a significant reduction in suppressive regulatory T lymphocytes (CD4+CD25T-reg+). A cytofluorimetric study of the PBMCs of five HLA-A(*)02.01+ patients who achieved an objective response showed an increased frequency of cytolytic T lymphocyte precursors specific for known CEA- and TS-derived epitopes. CONCLUSION The results show that our regimen has strong immunologic and antitumor activity in colorectal cancer patients and deserves to be investigated in phase III trials.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2001

Encephalitis without Meningitis Due to Sandfly Fever Virus Serotype Toscana

Daniele Dionisio; Marcello Valassina; Maria Grazia Ciufolini; Angela Vivarelli; Francesco Esperti; Maria Grazia Cusi; Antonella Marchi; Franca Mazzoli; Cinzia Lupi

The role of Toscana (TOS) virus in producing encephalitis without meningitis is uncertain. We studied 2 cases of TOS virus encephalitis without meningitis by means of nested polymerase chain reaction assay and DNA sequencing. Findings confirm that TOS virus may directly cause encephalitis and suggest the usefulness of DNA sequencing in investigating relationships between TOS virus molecular patterns and the spectrum of neurological involvement.


Journal of Medical Virology | 2009

Epidemiological and clinical study of viral respiratory tract infections in children from Italy

Massimiliano Fabbiani; Chiara Terrosi; Barbara Martorelli; Melissa Valentini; Laura Bernini; Carla Cellesi; Maria Grazia Cusi

Impact of recently discovered viruses on epidemiology of acute respiratory tract infections (ARTI) is still unclear. We studied the impact of recently discovered human metapneumovirus (hMPV), human bocavirus (HBoV), and new coronaviruses (HCoV‐NL63 and HKU1) on the global epidemiology of ARTI. From October 2006 to April 2007, 237 pediatric patients affected by ARTI were enrolled in our study. Specimens were tested for respiratory viruses by polymerase chain reaction. One hundred twenty‐four out of 237 samples (52.3%) were positive for one or more viruses. Picornaviruses were the most prevalent viruses (n = 61, 43.6%), followed by respiratory syncytial virus (n = 34, 24.3%) and Adenovirus (n = 25, 17.9%); hMPV (n = 9, 6.4%) was the fourth most common virus detected. HBoV and HCoV showed a low prevalence (respectively 2.9% and 2.1%). RSV was the prevalent agent of LRTI (38%). Viruses were identified in more than 50% of the studied ARTI, providing useful information on clinical features and epidemiology of specific agents affecting children in cold months. Although routine surveillance of respiratory viruses does not seem cost‐effective, continuous monitoring of ARTI etiology could be a useful tool for planning resources for the development of new vaccines and antiviral agents. J. Med. Virol. 81:750–756, 2009


International Journal of Cancer | 2003

Treatment of colon and breast carcinoma cells with 5-fluorouracil enhances expression of carcinoembryonic antigen and susceptibility to HLA-A(*)02.01 restricted, CEA-peptide-specific cytotoxic T cells in vitro

Pierpaolo Correale; Angelo Aquino; Antonio Giuliani; Monia Pellegrini; Lucia Micheli; Maria Grazia Cusi; Cristina Nencini; Roberto Petrioli; Salvatore Prete; Liana De Vecchis; Mario Turriziani; Giorgio Giorgi; Enzo Bonmassar; Guido Francini

Cancer vaccines directed against tumor associate antigen (TAA) have produced encouraging results in preclinical models but not in cancer patients. A major limitation of this strategy is the relative degree of tolerance to these antigens and the low and heterogeneous tumor cell expression of TAA and major histocompatibility complex (MHC). Previous studies have shown that 5‐fluorouracil (5‐FU) can upregulate the expression of membrane‐associated carcino‐embryonic antigen (CEA), and MHC molecules in colon and breast carcinoma cell lines. We have investigated whether this drug can also enhance their sensitivity to the lytic effects of CEA‐peptide specific Cytotoxic T cell lymphocytes (CTL). The CEA peptide‐specific CTLs generated in our laboratory from normal HLA‐A(*)02.01+ donor PBMCs, were able to kill HLA‐A(*)02.01+/CEA+ breast (MCF‐7‐T103) and colon (HLA‐A(*)02.01 gene‐transfected HT‐29 and C22.20) carcinoma cells in HLA‐A(*)02.01 restricted manner. The treatment of target cells with 5‐FU, enhanced their CEA expression and susceptibility to CTL‐mediated lysis. Cold competition assays confirmed these results, thus supporting the hypothesis that immune target cell lysis and 5‐FU mediated enhancement were dependent on CEA peptide presentation by cancer cells. 5‐FU treatment of functionally “mature” CTL after in vitro expansion, did not reduce their cytolytic activity against MT‐2 target cells but, when the anti‐metabolite was added during the immune‐sensitization phase, CTL generation was significantly inhibited. These results provide a rationale for investigating a possible new role of 5‐FU as an immuno targeting amplifier agent in breast and colorectal cancer patients immunized with CEA‐directed cancer vaccines.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Dendritic Cell-Mediated Cross-Presentation of Antigens Derived from Colon Carcinoma Cells Exposed to a Highly Cytotoxic Multidrug Regimen with Gemcitabine, Oxaliplatin, 5-Fluorouracil, and Leucovorin, Elicits a Powerful Human Antigen-Specific CTL Response with Antitumor Activity in Vitro

Pierpaolo Correale; Maria Grazia Cusi; Maria Teresa Del Vecchio; Angelo Aquino; Salvatore Prete; Kwong Y. Tsang; Lucia Micheli; Cristina Nencini; Marco La Placa; Francesco Montagnani; Chiara Terrosi; Michele Caraglia; Vincenzo Formica; Giorgio Giorgi; Enzo Bonmassar; Guido Francini

Gemcitabine, oxaliplatin, leucovorin, and 5-fluorouracil (GOLF) is a novel multidrug regimen inducing high levels of necrosis and apoptosis in colon carcinoma cells. This regimen is also able to promote a process of Ag remodeling including up-regulation of immunotherapy targets like carcinoembryonic Ag (CEA), thymidylate synthase (TS). We have conducted a preclinical study aimed to investigate whether these drug-induced modifications would also enhance colon cancer cell immunogenicity. Several CTL lines were thus generated by in vitro stimulating human HLA-A(*)02.01+ PBMCs, from normal donors and colon cancer patients, with autologous dendritic cells cross-primed with cell lysates of colon cancer cells untreated, irradiated, or previously exposed to different drug treatments including the GOLF regimen. Class I HLA-restricted cytolytic activity of these CTL lines was tested against colon cancer cells and CEA and TS gene transfected target cells. These experiments revealed that CTLs sensitized with GOLF-treated cancer cells were much more effective than those sensitized with the untreated colon carcinoma cells or those exposed to the other treatments. CTL lines sensitized against the GOLF-treated colon cancer cells, also expressed a greater percentage of T-lymphocyte precursors able to recognize TS- and CEA-derived peptides. These results suggest that GOLF regimen is a powerful antitumor and immunomodulating regimen that can make the tumor cells a suitable means to induce an Ag-specific CTL response. These results suggest that a rationale combination of GOLF chemotherapy with cytokine-based immunotherapy could generate a chemotherapy-modulated Ag-specific T-lymphocyte response in cancer patients able to destroy the residual disease survived to the cytotoxic drugs.


Journal of Medical Virology | 2000

Detection of neurotropic viruses circulating in Tuscany: the incisive role of Toscana virus.

Marcello Valassina; Francesca Meacci; Pier Egisto Valensin; Maria Grazia Cusi

Acute meningitis is perhaps the most frequent among central nervous system infections. We report a study considering 277 cases of meningitis hospitalized in the southern Tuscany area (Italy) during the period from 1995 to 1998 investigated by tissue culture and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) methods. The cytochemical analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid samples suggested the diagnosis of aseptic meningitis, recognized as viral meningitis in 104 cases by detection of viral DNA or RNA. The results collected by tissue culture technique, available for 95 clinical samples, reported a positive isolation for only 12 cases. The viruses identified in the neurological infection were Toscana virus (81%), enterovirus (12%), mumps virus (3%), measles virus (1%), and herpes virus type 1 (3%). These data demonstrate the incisive role of the RNA viruses as the cause of meningitis, and overall the relevance of Toscana virus. J. Med. Virol. 60:86–90, 2000.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

Immunity feedback and clinical outcome in colon cancer patients undergoing chemoimmunotherapy with gemcitabine + FOLFOX followed by subcutaneous granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor and aldesleukin (GOLFIG-1 Trial).

Pierpaolo Correale; Pierosandro Tagliaferri; Antonella Fioravanti; Maria Teresa Del Vecchio; Cinzia Remondo; Francesco Montagnani; Maria Saveria Rotundo; Chiara Ginanneschi; Ignazio Martellucci; Edoardo Francini; Maria Grazia Cusi; Pierfrancesco Tassone; Guido Francini

Purpose: GOLFIG chemoimmunotherapy regimen proved to be a safe and very active chemoimmunotherapy regimen in advanced colon cancer patients. We have thus investigated the immunobiological feedback to the treatment and its possible correlation with the clinical outcome of these patients. Experimental Design: This clinical and immunologic study involved 46 patients, 27 males and 19 females, enrolled in the GOLFIG-1 phase II trial who received gemcitabine (1,000 mg/m2 on days 1 and 15), oxaliplatin (85 mg/m2 on days 2 and 16), levofolinic acid (100 mg/m2 on days 1, 2, 15, and 16), and 5-fluorouracil (400 mg/m2 as a bolus, and 800 mg/m2 as a 24-hour infusion on days 1, 2, 15, and 16) followed by s.c. granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (100 μg, on days 3-7) and interleukin 2 (0.5 × 106 IU twice a day on days 8-14 and 17-29). Results: The regimen was confirmed to be safe and very active in pretreated patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. A subgroup analysis of these patients revealed a prolonged time to progression and survival in six patients who developed late signs of autoimmunity. A multivariate analysis validated the occurrence of autoimmunity signs as an independent predictor of favorable outcome. A parallel immunologic study detected in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells of these patients a progressive increase in lymphocyte and eosinophil counts, amplification in central memory, a marked depletion of immunosuppressive regulatory T cells, and activation of colon cancer–specific cytotoxic T cells. Conclusions: Our results suggest that immunity feedback to GOLFIG regimen and its antitumor activity are tightly correlated.


International Journal of Cancer | 2012

Cetuximab ± chemotherapy enhances dendritic cell-mediated phagocytosis of colon cancer cells and ignites a highly efficient colon cancer antigen-specific cytotoxic T-cell response in vitro

Pierpaolo Correale; Cirino Botta; Maria Grazia Cusi; M.T. Del Vecchio; M.M. De Santi; G. Gori Savellini; Elena Bestoso; Serena Apollinari; Susanna Mannucci; Monica Marra; Alberto Abbruzzese; A. Aquino; M. Turriziani; L. Bonmassar; Michele Caraglia; Pierosandro Tagliaferri

Cetuximab is a human/mouse chimeric IgG1 monoclonal antibody (mAb) to epidermal growth factor receptor, approved for colorectal carcinoma treatment in combination with chemotherapy. The immune‐mediated effects elicited by its human fraction of crystallization moiety might critically contribute to the overall anti‐tumor effectiveness of the antibody. We therefore investigated cetuximab ability to promote colon cancer cell opsonization and phagocytosis by human dendritic cells (DCs) that are subsequently engaged in antigen‐cross presentation to cytotoxic T‐lymphocyte (CTL) precursors. Human colon cancer cell lines were evaluated for susceptibility to DC‐mediated phagocytosis before and after treatment with chemotherapy ± cetuximab in vitro. Human DCs loaded with control or drug‐treated cetuximab‐coated colon cancer cells were used to in vitro generate cytotoxic T cell clones from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of human leucocyte antigen‐A(*)02.01+ donors. T‐cell cultures were characterized for immune‐phenotype and tumor‐antigen specific CTL activity. The results confirmed that treatment of tumor cells with irinotecan + L‐folinate + 5‐flurouracil (ILF) or with gemcitabine + ILF increased tumor antigen expression. Moreover, malignant cells exposed to chemotherapy and cetuximab were highly susceptible to phagocytosis by human DCs and were able to promote their activation. The consequent DC‐mediated cross‐priming of antigens derived from mAb‐covered/drug‐treated cancer cells elicited a robust CTL anti‐tumor response. On the basis of our data, we suggest a possible involvement of CTL‐dependent immunity in cetuximab anti‐cancer effects.


The Open Virology Journal | 2010

Toscana Virus Epidemiology: From Italy to Beyond

Maria Grazia Cusi; Gianni Gori Savellini; Giacomo Zanelli

Toscana virus (TOSV) is an arthropod-borne virus which is transmitted to humans by Phlebotomus spp sandflies. Infection is the cause of brain injuries, such as aseptic meningitis and meningoencephalitis, in Italy mainly during the summer. More recently some unusual clinical manifestations due to TOSV with severe sequelae, such as ischemic complications and hydrocephalus, have been reported. TOSV represents an important emerging pathogen and its presence is being investigated in several European countries on the Mediterranean basin, including Italy, France, Spain, Portugal and Cyprus. Phylogenetic analysis has distinguished two genotypes of TOSV, A and B; the first is circulating mainly in Italy and the second in Spain, indicating a different geographic distribution possibly related to the vector. This distribution, evolving with the climate, globalization and habitat modification, has implications for the epidemiology of TOSV.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2003

Serological Survey of Toscana Virus Infections in a High-Risk Population in Italy

Marcello Valassina; Melissa Valentini; Agostino Pugliese; Pier Egisto Valensin; Maria Grazia Cusi

ABSTRACT Toscana virus is the most important agent responsible for meningitis in central Italy. We report a serosurveillance study, using an immunoenzymatic assay, of 360 serum samples harvested from a high-risk population occupationally exposed to Toscana virus in two regions of Italy, Tuscany and Piedmont. The results indicates a seroprevalence of Toscana virus of 77.2% in the forestry workers, particularly in the Tuscany region. This fact is strictly correlated with the ecological niches specific for the survival of Toscana virus arthropod vector.

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