Mario Masarone
University of Salerno
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Featured researches published by Mario Masarone.
Reviews on Recent Clinical Trials | 2015
Mario Masarone; Alessandro Federico; Ludovico Abenavoli; Carmela Loguercio; Marcello Persico
Non Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD), defined as the presence of a significant amount of lipid accumulation in the liver (at least in 5% of hepatocytes), represents a challenging issue for the Hepatologists. NAFLD is not represented by a single entity, but rather by two different entities that have different natural history and evolution that range from simple fat accumulation in the liver (without any consequence), to necroinflammation, fibrosis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The reason of these differences has to be found in the host characteristics and associated risk factors. Globally, its prevalence among liver diseases, and in the general population, is rising in the recent years along with its associated conditions: obesity, insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome and diabetes. This increment, together with the reported clinical conditions, may be accounted for changes in dietary habits and the increase of sedentary lifestyle. Its diffusion seems to be pandemic, given that it is beginning to affect the populations in the developing world due to the spread of Western lifestyle. This is particularly worrying in young adults and children in what seems to have become the main cause of liver disease. Even if the real rate of global incidence of NAFLD are not known, its worldwide prevalence in general population is estimated to be 20-30% in Western Countries and 5-18% in Asia and it is increasing over time. In this review we will report on the global and regional prevalence of NAFLD, the principal risk factors and the natural history of its different presentations.
Journal of Viral Hepatitis | 2006
Marcello Persico; S. Perrotta; Eliana Persico; L. Terracciano; A. Folgori; L. Ruggeri; A. Nicosia; Raffaella Vecchione; Vincenzo La Mura; Mario Masarone; Roberto Torella
Summary. Some chronic hepatitis C (CHC) patients exhibit persistently normal alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels (PNAL). Patients with PNAL experience significantly milder disease. In order to understand the differences between CHC patients with elevated ALT levels compared with those with PNAL better, we compared epidemiological, immunological and histological findings, in particular, the value of proliferating hepatocyte activity (PCNA) between the two groups of patients. We studied 40 chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) carriers with increased ALT who underwent liver biopsy for histological diagnosis and determination of clinical prognosis, and 24 PNAL patients under follow‐up for 10 years. Immunological response to different HCV genomic epitopes was tested in both the control group and in PNAL subjects. PCNA values from liver specimens of all patients as well as liver biopsies of PNAL patients at time points 0 and 5 years were calculated according to Hall et al.Age, sex and body mass index (BMI) were not significantly different between the two groups. The median liver histology stage was significantly higher in HCV carriers vs the PNAL group (2.5, range = 2–6 vs 1.5, range = 1–2; P < 0.01). Among PNAL patients, histological stage was not statistically different at the three time points considered. Interferon (IFN)‐gamma production was comparable in the two groups. PCNA was significantly higher in the group with elevated ALT levels vs the PNAL group (8%, range = 4–15%vs 5% range = 3–8%; P < 0.05) and no statistically significant differences were found in PNAL patients at time points 0, 5 and 10 years. This study confirms that progression to cirrhosis is slow or absent in PNAL patients after 10 years of follow‐up. Accordingly, the hepatic proliferative activity index is low and seems to be stable over time.
United European gastroenterology journal | 2015
A.G. Gravina; Alessandro Federico; E. Ruocco; A. Lo Schiavo; Mario Masarone; Concetta Tuccillo; F Peccerillo; Agnese Miranda; Lorenzo Romano; C de Sio; I. de Sio; Marcello Persico; Vincenzo Ruocco; Gabriele Riegler; C. Loguercio; Marco Romano
Background and aims Recent studies suggest a potential relationship between rosacea and Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection or small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), but there is no firm evidence of an association between rosacea and H. pylori infection or SIBO. We performed a prospective study to assess the prevalence of H. pylori infection and/or SIBO in patients with rosacea and evaluated the effect of H. pylori or SIBO eradication on rosacea. Methods We enrolled 90 patients with rosacea from January 2012 to January 2013 and a control group consisting of 90 patients referred to us because of mapping of nevi during the same period. We used the 13C Urea Breath Test and H. pylori stool antigen (HpSA) test to assess H. pylori infection and the glucose breath test to assess SIBO. Patients infected by H. pylori were treated with clarithromycin-containing sequential therapy. Patients positive for SIBO were treated with rifaximin. Results We found that 44/90 (48.9%) patients with rosacea and 24/90 (26.7%) control subjects were infected with H. pylori (p = 0.003). Moreover, 9/90 (10%) patients with rosacea and 7/90 (7.8%) subjects in the control group had SIBO (p = 0.6). Within 10 weeks from the end of antibiotic therapy, the skin lesions of rosacea disappeared or decreased markedly in 35/36 (97.2%) patients after eradication of H. pylori and in 3/8 (37.5%) patients who did not eradicate the infection (p < 0.0001). Rosacea skin lesions decreased markedly in 6/7 (85.7%) after eradication of SIBO whereas of the two patients who did not eradicate SIBO, one (50%) showed an improvement in rosacea (p = 0.284). Conclusions Prevalence of H. pylori infection was significantly higher in patients with rosacea than control group, whereas SIBO prevalence was comparable between the two groups. Eradication of H. pylori infection led to a significant improvement of skin symptoms in rosacea patients.
World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2014
Alessandro Federico; C. Zulli; Ilario de Sio; Anna Del Prete; Marcello Dallio; Mario Masarone; Carmela Loguercio
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has become the most common liver disorder in Western countries and is increasingly being recognized in developing nations. Fatty liver disease encompasses a spectrum of hepatic pathology, ranging from simple steatosis to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma and end-stage liver disease. Moreover, NAFLD is often associated with other metabolic conditions, such as diabetes mellitus type 2, dyslipidemia and visceral obesity. The most recent guidelines suggest the management and treatment of patients with NAFLD considering both the liver disease and the associated metabolic co-morbidities. Diet and physical exercise are considered the first line of treatment for patients with NAFLD, but their results on therapeutic efficacy are often contrasting. Behavior therapy is necessary most of the time to achieve a sufficient result. Pharmacological therapy includes a wide variety of classes of molecules with different therapeutic targets and, often, little evidence supporting the real efficacy. Despite the abundance of clinical trials, NAFLD therapy remains a challenge for the scientific community, and there are no licensed therapies for NAFLD. Urgently, new pharmacological approaches are needed. Here, we will focus on the challenges facing actual therapeutic strategies and the most recent investigated molecules.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Loreta A. Kondili; Giovanni Battista Gaeta; Maurizia Rossana Brunetto; Alfredo Di Leo; Andrea Iannone; T. Santantonio; Adele Giammario; Giovanni Raimondo; Roberto Filomia; C. Coppola; Daniela Caterina Amoruso; Pierluigi Blanc; Barbara Del Pin; Liliana Chemello; Luisa Cavalletto; F. Morisco; L. Donnarumma; Maria Grazia Rumi; Antonio Gasbarrini; M. Siciliano; Marco Massari; Romina Corsini; B. Coco; S. Madonia; Marco Cannizzaro; Anna Linda Zignego; Monica Monti; Francesco Paolo Russo; A. Zanetto; Marcello Persico
Background Few data are available on the virological and clinical outcomes of advanced liver disease patients retreated after first-line DAA failure. Aim To evaluate DAA failure incidence and the retreatment clinical impact in patients treated in the advanced liver disease stage. Methods Data on HCV genotype, liver disease severity, and first and second line DAA regimens were prospectively collected in consecutive patients who reached the 12-week post-treatment and retreatment evaluations from January 2015 to December 2016 in 23 of the PITER network centers. Results Among 3,830 patients with advanced fibrosis (F3) or cirrhosis, 139 (3.6%) failed to achieve SVR. Genotype 3, bilirubin levels >1.5mg/dl, platelet count <120,000/mm3 and the sofosbuvir+ribavirin regimen were independent predictors of failure by logistic regression analysis. The failure rate was 7.6% for patients treated with regimens that are no longer recommended or considered suboptimal (sofosbuvir+ribavirin or simeprevir+sofosbuvir±ribavirin), whereas 1.4% for regimens containing sofosbuvir combined with daclatasvir or ledipasvir or other DAAs. Of the patients who failed to achieve SVR, 72 (51.8%) were retreated with a second DAA regimen, specifically 38 (52.7%) with sofosbuvir+daclatasvir, 27 (37.5%) with sofosbuvir+ledipasvir, and 7 (9.7%) with other DAAs ±ribavirin. Among these, 69 (96%) patients achieved SVR12 and 3 (4%) failed. During a median time of 6 months (range: 5–14 months) between failure and the second DAA therapy, the Child-Pugh class worsened in 12 (16.7%) patients: from A to B in 10 patients (19.6%) and from B to C in 2 patients (10.5%), whereas it did not change in the remaining 60 patients. Following the retreatment SVR12 (median time of 6 months; range: 3–12 months), the Child-Pugh class improved in 17 (23.6%) patients: from B to A in 14 (19.4%) patients, from C to A in 1 patient (1.4%) and from C to B in 2 (2.9%) patients; it remained unchanged in 53 patients (73.6%) and worsened in 2 (2.8%) patients. Of patients who were retreated, 3 (4%) had undergone OLT before retreatment (all reached SVR12 following retreatment) and 2 (2.8%) underwent OLT after having achieved retreatment SVR12. Two (70%) of the 3 patients who failed to achieve SVR12 after retreatment, and 2 (2.8%) of the 69 patients who achieved retreatment SVR12 died from liver failure (Child-Pugh class deteriorated from B to C) or HCC complications. Conclusions Failure rate following the first DAA regimen in patients with advanced disease is similar to or lower than that reported in clinical trials, although the majority of patients were treated with suboptimal regimens. Interim findings showed that worsening of liver function after failure, in terms of Child Pugh class deterioration, was improved by successful retreatment in about one third of retreated patients within a short follow-up period; however, in some advanced liver disease patients, clinical outcomes (Child Pugh class, HCC development, liver failure and death) were independent of viral eradication.
BMC Gastroenterology | 2014
Mario Masarone; Amalia De Renzo; Vincenzo La Mura; Ferdinando Carlo Sasso; Marco Romano; Giuseppe Signoriello; Valerio Rosato; Fabiana Perna; Fabrizio Pane; Marcello Persico
BackgroundOccult HBV infection (OBI) is defined by the persistence of HBV in the liver without serum HBsAg and HBVDNA. It represents a life-threatening event during immunosuppressive chemotherapies. An OBI occurs in approximately 18% of HBcAb + patients. International guidelines suggest surveillance for HBV markers in immunosuppressed patients. In Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL), the prevalence of OBI reactivation remains to be established.MethodsIn order to determine the prevalence of occult HBV reactivation in a large cohort of patients during chemotherapy for NHL, we analysed 498 NHL patients in a centre of Southern Italy. We evaluated HBV markers, NHL type, treatment type and occurrence of HBV reactivation.ResultsForty % of patients were treated with monoclonal antibodies and 60.3% without. Ninety-six patients were HBcAb+, HBsAg-. HBV reactivation occurred in ten subjects of this subgroup. All of them were successfully treated with Lamivudine. None of the patients experienced liver-related death. The prevalence of OBI reactivation was of 10.42% in HBcAb + HBsAb- patients. This event occurred in 50% of patients treated with mild immunosuppressive therapies. Each reactivation was treated with Lamivudine.DiscussionThis report suggests that a strict surveillance is important and cost-effective in HBcAb + HBsAg- NHL patients treated with mild immunosuppressive therapies, in order to detect an occult HBV reactivation.
BMC Gastroenterology | 2017
Marcello Persico; Mario Masarone; Antonio Damato; Mariateresa Ambrosio; Alessandro Federico; Valerio Rosato; Tommaso Bucci; Albino Carrizzo; Carmine Vecchione
BackgroundNAFLD is associated to Insulin Resistance (IR). IR is responsible for Endothelial Dysfunction (ED) through the impairment of eNOS function. Although eNOS derangement has been demonstrated in experimental models, no studies have directly shown that eNOS dysfunction is associated with NAFLD in humans. The aim of this study is to investigate eNOS function in NAFLD patients.MethodsFifty-four NAFLD patients were consecutively enrolled. All patients underwent clinical and laboratory evaluation and liver biopsy. Patients were divided into two groups by the presence of NAFL or NASH. We measured vascular reactivity induced by patients’ platelets on isolated mice aorta rings. Immunoblot assays for platelet-derived phosphorylated-eNOS (p-eNOS) and immunohistochemistry for hepatic p-eNOS have been performed to evaluate eNOS function in platelets and liver specimens. Flow-mediated-dilation (FMD) was also performed. Data were compared with healthy controls.ResultsTwenty-one (38, 8%) patients had NAFL and 33 (61, 7%) NASH. No differences were found between groups and controls except for HOMA and insulin (p < 0.0001). Vascular reactivity demonstrated a reduced function induced from NAFLD platelets as compared with controls (p < 0.001), associated with an impaired p-eNOS in both platelets and liver (p < 0.001). NAFL showed a higher impairment of eNOS phosphorylation in comparison to NASH (p < 0.01). In contrast with what observed in vitro, the vascular response by FMD was worse in NASH as compared with NAFL.ConclusionsOur data showed, for the first time in humans, that NAFLD patients show a marked eNOS dysfunction, which may contribute to a higher CV risk. eNOS dysfunction observed in platelets and liver tissue didn’t match with FMD.
International Journal of Clinical Practice | 2016
Valerio Rosato; Ludovico Abenavoli; Alessandro Federico; Mario Masarone; Marcello Persico
Alcohol is the most commonly used addictive substance and alcoholic liver disease (ALD) is a major cause of chronic liver disease worldwide, responsible for 47.9% of all liver chronic deaths. Despite ALD has a significant burden on the health, few therapeutic advances have been made in the last 40 years, particularly in the long‐term management of these patients.
Hepatology | 2018
Marcello Persico; Andrea Aglitti; Rosa Caruso; Amalia De Renzo; Carmine Selleri; Catello Califano; Ludovico Abenavoli; Alessandro Federico; Mario Masarone
The association of hepatitis C virus (HCV) with non‐Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL) has been demonstrated throughout the world. The new interferon‐free direct antiviral agents (DAAs) showed high efficacy and safety, and preliminary data seem to confirm their activity on low‐grade NHL. The question arises as whether or not—and how—to treat the HCV‐positive patients suffering from diffuse large B‐cell lymphomas (DLBCLs). The aim of this observational study was to evaluate whether DAA antiviral treatment of DLBCL/HCV‐infected patients in concomitance with chemotherapy is a safe and effective option. Twenty (13 males and 7 females) HCV genotype 1b‐positive subjects, undergoing chemotherapy for DLBCL, were enrolled between June 2015 and December 2015. After informed consent, all patients underwent antiviral therapy (AVT) with sofosbuvir/ledipasvir and chemotherapy (14 rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone and 6 cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone) for DLBCL. Complete hematological (Revised European‐American Lymphoma classification, Ann Arbor, and International Prognostic Index [IPI] scores) and hepatological (viral markers, liver stiffness, and biochemical parameters) evaluations were made. A historical retrospective cohort of 101 DLBCL/HCV‐positive patients not undergoing AVT was enrolled for comparison. DAA‐treated and untreated patients were similar for sex distribution, IPI score, and NHL stage, and differed for age (older in treated), chemotherapy and use of AVT. Overall survival (OS) and disease‐free survival (DFS) were evaluated among a 52‐week of follow‐up. No statistical difference was found in OS after 52 weeks (P = 0.122), whereas a statistically significant higher DFS was achieved in treated patients (P = 0.036). At the multivariate analysis, only IPI score and AVT were independently correlated with a better DFS. No differences in adverse events were reported. Conclusion: DAA treatment in concomitance with chemotherapy was shown to be safe and effective in influencing remission of aggressive lymphomas in HCV patients. (Hepatology 2018;67:48‐55).
Internal and Emergency Medicine | 2015
Antonio Pagano; Fabio Giuliano Numis; Giuseppe Visone; Concetta Pirozzi; Mario Masarone; Marinella Olibet; Rodolfo Nasti; Fernando Schiraldi; Fiorella Paladino
Lung ultrasound (LUS) in the emergency department (ED) has shown a significant role in the diagnostic workup of pulmonary edema, pneumothorax and pleural effusions. The aim of this study is to assess the reliability of LUS for the diagnosis of acute pneumonia compared to chest X-ray (CXR) study. The study was conducted from September 2013 to March 2015. 107 patients were admitted to the ED with a clinical appearance of pneumonia. All the patients underwent a CXR study, read by a radiologist, and an LUS, performed by a trained ED physician on duty. Among the 105 patients, 68 were given a final diagnosis of pneumonia. We found a sensitivity of 0.985 and a specificity of 0.649 for LUS, and a sensitivity of 0.735 and specificity of 0.595 for CXR. The positive predictive value for LUS was 0.838 against 0.7 for CXR. The negative predictive value of LUS was 0.960 versus 0.550 for CXR. This study has shown sensitivity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of LUS compared to the CXR study for the diagnosis of acute pneumonia. These results suggest the use of bedside thoracic US first-line diagnostic tool in patients with suspected pneumonia.