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Dive into the research topics where Maria Irno Consalvo is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Irno Consalvo.


Blood | 2010

Cytogenetic and molecular diagnostic characterization combined to postconsolidation minimal residual disease assessment by flow cytometry improves risk stratification in adult acute myeloid leukemia

Francesco Buccisano; Luca Maurillo; Alessandra Spagnoli; Maria Ilaria Del Principe; Daniela Fraboni; Paola Panetta; Tiziana Ottone; Maria Irno Consalvo; Serena Lavorgna; Pietro Bulian; Emanuele Ammatuna; Daniela F. Angelini; Adamo Diamantini; Selenia Campagna; Licia Ottaviani; Chiara Sarlo; Valter Gattei; Giovanni Del Poeta; William Arcese; Sergio Amadori; Francesco Lo Coco; Adriano Venditti

A total of 143 adult acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients with available karyotype (K) and FLT3 gene mutational status were assessed for minimal residual disease (MRD) by flow cytometry. Twenty-two (16%) patients had favorable, 115 (80%) intermediate, and 6 (4%) poor risk K; 19 of 129 (15%) carried FLT3-ITD mutation. Considering postconsolidation MRD status, patients with good/intermediate-risk K who were MRD(-) had 4-year relapse-free survival (RFS) of 70% and 63%, and overall survival (OS) of 84% and 67%, respectively. Patients with good- and intermediate-risk K who were MRD(+) had 4-year RFS of 15% and 17%, and OS of 38% and 23%, respectively (P < .001 for all comparisons). FLT3 wild-type patients achieving an MRD(-) status, had a better outcome than those who remained MRD(+) (4-year RFS, 54% vs 17% P < .001; OS, 60% vs 23%, P = .002). Such an approach redefined cytogenetic/genetic categories in 2 groups: (1) low-risk, including good/intermediate K-MRD(-) with 4-year RFS and OS of 58% and 73%, respectively; and (2) high risk, including poor-risk K, FLT3-ITD mutated cases, good/intermediate K-MRD(+) categories, with RFS and OS of 22% and 17%, respectively (P < .001 for all comparisons). In AML, the integrated evaluation of baseline prognosticators and MRD improves risk-assessment and optimizes postremission therapy.


Cancer | 2005

The addition of rituximab to fludarabine improves clinical outcome in untreated patients with ZAP-70-negative chronic lymphocytic leukemia†

Giovanni Del Poeta; Maria Ilaria Del Principe; Maria Irno Consalvo; Luca Maurillo; Francesco Buccisano; Adriano Venditti; Carla Mazzone; Antonio Bruno; Laura Gianní; Giovanni Capelli; Francesco Lo Coco; Maria Cantonetti; Valter Gattei; Sergio Amadori

Clinical trials of monoclonal antibodies in combination with chemotherapy have reported previously unattained response rates in patients with B‐cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B‐CLL); however, the analysis of ZAP‐70 protein and/or CD38 may explain better the discordant outcomes independent of treatment.


Blood | 2010

A monoclonal antibody against mutated nucleophosmin 1 for the molecular diagnosis of acute myeloid leukemias.

Alicja M. Gruszka; Serena Lavorgna; Maria Irno Consalvo; Tiziana Ottone; Chiara Martinelli; Mario Cinquanta; Giuseppe Ossolengo; Giancarlo Pruneri; Francesco Buccisano; Mariadomenica Divona; Michele Cedrone; Emanuele Ammatuna; Adriano Venditti; Ario de Marco; Francesco Lo-Coco; Pier Giuseppe Pelicci

Mutations in the nucleophosmin 1 (NPM1) gene are the most frequent genetic aberrations of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and define a clinically distinct subset of AML. A monoclonal antibody (T26) was raised against a 19-amino acid polypeptide containing the unique C-terminus of the type A NPM1 mutant protein. T26 recognized 10 of the 21 known NPM1 mutants, including the A, B, and D types, which cover approximately 95% of all cases, and did not cross-react with wild-type NPM1 or unrelated cellular proteins. It performed efficiently with different detection technologies, including immunofluorescence, immunohistochemistry, and flow cytometry. Within a series of consecutive de novo AML patients, 44 of 110 (40%) and 15 of 39 (38%) cases scored positive using the T26 antibody in immunofluorescence and flow cytometry assays, respectively. T26-positive cases were found to be all carrying mutations of NPM1 exclusively, as determined by molecular analysis. T26 is the first antibody that specifically recognizes a leukemia-associated mutant protein. Immunofluorescence or flow cytometry using T26 may thus become a new tool for a rapid, simple, and cost-effective molecular diagnosis of AMLs.


Hematology | 2005

Apoptosis and immaturity in acute myeloid leukemia.

Maria Ilaria Del Principe; Giovanni Del Poeta; Adriano Venditti; Francesco Buccisano; Luca Maurillo; Carla Mazzone; Antonio Bruno; Benedetta Neri; Maria Irno Consalvo; Francesco Lo Coco; Sergio Amadori

Abstract The primary cause of treatment failures in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the emergence of both resistant disease and early relapse. Among the most frequent agents of these phenomena are defects in the mitochondrial-mediated apoptotic pathway. This pathway is regulated by bcl-2 family of anti-apoptotic (bcl-2, bcl-xl, mcl-1) and pro-apoptotic proteins (bax, bad, bak). In particular, bcl-2 dimerizes with several members of bcl-2 family of proteins, altering the threshold of cell death. The flow cytometric quantitative measurement of bcl-2 and bax expression for the determination of bax/bcl-2 ratio provided crucial clinical information in AML: in our hands, lower bax/bcl-2 ratio conferred a very poor prognosis with decreased rates of complete remission (CR) and overall survival (OS). Moreover, striking correlations were found between lower bax/bcl-2 ratio and higher progenitor marker expression, such as CD34, CD117 and CD133 antigens, confirming the link between this apoptotic index and the maturation pathways. However, the capacity of bax/bcl-2 ratio to clearly identify patients with different prognosis with regard to CR and OS within the CD34+, CD117+ and CD133+ subgroups implies that other mechanisms, such as proliferation and/or cell cycle dysregulation may be involved to explain its clinical significance. Finally, small molecules that target both the receptor- and mitochondrial-mediated pathway of apoptosis are providing encouraging results in patients with relapsed and/or refractory disease (i.e. CDDOMe, bcl-2 antisense oligonucleotides, CEP-701, etc), confirming the key role of apoptotic mechanisms on the outcome of AML patients.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2010

Prognostic impact of ZAP-70 expression in chronic lymphocytic leukemia: mean fluorescence intensity T/B ratio versus percentage of positive cells

Francesca Rossi; Maria Ilaria Del Principe; Davide Rossi; Maria Irno Consalvo; Fabrizio Luciano; Antonella Zucchetto; Pietro Bulian; Riccardo Bomben; Michele Dal Bo; Marco Fangazio; Dania Benedetti; Massimo Degan; Gianluca Gaidano; Giovanni Del Poeta; Valter Gattei

BackgroundZAP-70 is an independent negative prognostic marker in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Usually, its expression is investigated by flow cytometric protocols in which the percentage of ZAP-70 positive CLL cells is determined in respect to isotypic control (ISO-method) or residual ZAP-70 positive T cells (T-method). These methods, however, beside suffering of an inherent subjectivity in their application, may give discordant results in some cases. The aim of this study was to assess the prognostic significance of these methods in comparison with another in which ZAP-70 expression was evaluated as a Mean-Fluorescence-Intensity Ratio between gated T and CLL cells (T/B Ratio-method).MethodsCytometric files relative to ZAP-70 determination according to the three readouts were retrospectively reviewed on a cohort of 173 patients (test set), all with complete clinical and biological prognostic assessment and time-to-treatment (TTT) available. Findings were then validated in an independent cohort of 341 cases from a different institution (validation set).ResultsThe optimal prognostic cut-offs for ZAP-70 expression were selected at 11% (ISO-method) or 20% of positive cells (T-method), as well as at 3.0 (T/B Ratio-method) in the test set; these cut-offs yielded 66, 60 and 73 ZAP-70+ cases, respectively. Univariate analyses resulted in a better separation of ZAP-70+ vs. ZAP-70- CLL patients utilizing the T/B Ratio, compared to T- or ISO-methods. In multivariate analyses which included the major clinical and biological prognostic markers for CLL, the prognostic impact of ZAP-70 appeared stronger when the T/B-Ratio method was applied. These findings were confirmed in the validation set, in which ZAP-70 expression, evaluated by the T- (cut-off = 20%) or T/B Ratio- (cut-off = 3.0) methods, yielded 180 or 127 ZAP-70+ cases, respectively. ZAP-70+ patients according to the T/B Ratio-method had shorter TTT, both if compared to ZAP-70- CLL, and to cases classified ZAP-70+ by the T-method only.ConclusionsWe suggest to evaluate ZAP-70 expression in routine settings using the T/B Ratio-method, given the operator and laboratory independent feature of this approach. We propose the 3.0 T/B Ratio value as optimal cut-off to discriminate ZAP-70+ (T/B Ratio less than 3.0) from ZAP-70- (T/B Ratio more/equal than 3.0) cases.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2003

Multidimensional Flow Cytometry for Detection of Minimal Residual Disease in Acute Myeloid Leukemia

Adriano Venditti; Luca Maurillo; Francesco Buccisano; Anna Tamburini; Giovanni Del Poeta; Maria Ilaria Del Principe; Paola Panetta; Maria Irno Consalvo; Carla Mazzone; Andrea Tendas; Margherita Trawinska; Vittorio Forte; Sergio Amadori

The term minimal residual disease (MRD) describes the situation in which, after chemotherapy for acute leukemia (AL), a morphologically normal bone marrow (BM) can still harbor a relevant amount of residual malignant cells. Several techniques are now amenable to investigate MRD, and all together they have designated a new era in which a re-definition of the current criteria of complete remission (CR) is required. Depending upon the measured level of MRD we can distinguish a variety of clinical situations ranging from a potentially cured disease to short-term remission. In the context of this spectrum of conditions there would be room for different therapeutic strategies ranging from no further therapy to pre-emptive therapy to treat early relapses (immunologic and/or molecular relapses). This review will focus on the state of art of MRD detection in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) using multidimensional flow cytometry (MFC), and will cover the laboratory and clinical aspects of this approach.


European Journal of Haematology | 2007

Evaluation of the prognostic relevance of l‐selectin and ICAM1 expression in myelodysplastic syndromes

Francesco Buccisano; Luca Maurillo; Anna Tamburini; Giovanni Del Poeta; Maria Ilaria Del Principe; Emanuele Ammatuna; Maria Irno Consalvo; Selenia Campagna; Licia Ottaviani; Chiara Sarlo; Daniela Renzi; Sabrina Faccia; Daniela Fraboni; Francesco Lo Coco; Sergio Amadori; Adriano Venditti

Objectives:  An aberrant pattern of expression of l‐selectin and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM1) may characterise CD34+ blast cells in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and secondary acute myeloid leukaemia (sAML).


Haematologica | 2018

Clonal genetic evolution at relapse of favorable-risk acute myeloid leukemia with NPM1 mutation is associated with phenotypic changes and worse outcomes

Carmen Martínez-Losada; Juana Serrano-López; Josefina Serrano-López; Nélida I. Noguera; Eduardo Garza; Liliana Piredda; Serena Lavorgna; Maria Irno Consalvo; Tiziana Ottone; Valentina Alfonso; Juan R. Peinado; María Victoria García-Ortiz; Teresa Morales-Ruiz; Andres Jerez; Ana María Hurtado; Pau Montesinos; José Cervera; Esperanza Such; Marian Ibañez; Amparo Sempere; Miguel A. Sanz; Francesco Lo-Coco; Joaquin Sanchez-Garcia

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a dynamic disease caused by accumulating, somatically acquired driver mutations generating branching competing clones.[1][1] In favorable-risk AML, high resolution genomic profiling by single nucleotide polymorphism array analysis of paired diagnostic-relapse NPM1 mut


American Journal of Hematology | 2018

Longitudinal detection of DNMT3A R882H transcripts in patients with acute myeloid leukemia

Tiziana Ottone; Valentina Alfonso; Licia Iaccarino; Syed Khizer Hasan; Melissa Mancini; Mariadomenica Divona; Serena Lavorgna; Laura Cicconi; Paola Panetta; Luca Maurillo; Maria Ilaria Del Principe; Maria Irno Consalvo; Luca Franceschini; Daniela F. Angelini; Luca Battistini; Gisella Guerrera; Marco De Bardi; Emiliano Fabiani; Giulia Falconi; William Arcese; Sergio Amadori; Francesco Buccisano; Adriano Venditti; Maria Teresa Voso; Francesco Lo-Coco

REFERENCES [1] Stein H, Pileri SA, Weiss LM, et al. Classical Hodgkin lymphoma, introduction. In: Swerdlow SH, Campo E, Harris NL, et al., eds. WHO Classification of Tumours of Haematopoietic and Lymphoid Tissues. Revised 4th ed. Lyon, France: IARC; 2017:424–430. [2] Aldinucci D, Gloghini A, Pinto A, et al. The classical Hodgkin’s lymphoma microenvironment and its role in promoting tumour growth and immune escape. J Pathol. 2010;221(3):248–263. [3] IARC. Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans. A Review of Human Carcinogens, Part B: Biological Agents/IARC Working Group on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans. Vol. 100. Lyon: IARC; 2012. [4] Steidl C, Connors JM, Gascoyne RD. Molecular pathogenesis of Hodgkin’s lymphoma: increasing evidence of the importance of the microenvironment. JCO. 2011;29(14):1812–1826. [5] Taylor J, Xiao W, Abdel-Wahab O. Diagnosis and classification of hematologic malignancies on the basis of genetics. Blood. 2017;130 (4):410–423. [6] Younes A, Ansell SM. Novel agents in the treatment of Hodgkin lymphoma: biological basis and clinical results. Semin Hematol. 2016; 53(3):186–189. [7] Friedberg JW, Forero-Torres A, Bordoni RE, et al. Frontline brentuximab vedotin in combination with dacarbazine or bendamustine in patients aged 60 years with HL. Blood. 2017;130(26):2829– 2837. [8] Bartlett NL. Emerging role of novel therapies in Hodgkin lymphoma: proceed with caution. Hematology Am Soc Hematol Educ Program. 2017;2017(1):317–323. [9] Shanbhag S, Ambinder RF. Hodgkin lymphoma: a review and update on recent progress. CA Cancer J Clin. In press. [10] Carbone A, Gloghini A, Castagna L, et al. Primary refractory and earlyrelapsed Hodgkin’s lymphoma: strategies for therapeutic targeting based on the tumour microenvironment. J Pathol. 2015;237(1):4–13.


Blood | 2006

Clinical significance of ZAP-70 protein expression in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia

Maria Ilaria Del Principe; Giovanni Del Poeta; Francesco Buccisano; Luca Maurillo; Adriano Venditti; Antonella Zucchetto; Rita Marini; Pasquale Niscola; Maria Irno Consalvo; Carla Mazzone; Licia Ottaviani; Paola Panetta; Antonio Bruno; Riccardo Bomben; Giovanna Suppo; Massimo Degan; Valter Gattei; Paolo de Fabritiis; Maria Cantonetti; Francesco Lo Coco; Domenico Del Principe; Sergio Amadori

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Adriano Venditti

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Giovanni Del Poeta

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Sergio Amadori

Sapienza University of Rome

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Luca Maurillo

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Francesco Buccisano

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Francesco Lo Coco

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Paola Panetta

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Chiara Sarlo

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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