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Dive into the research topics where Mario Migaldi is active.

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Featured researches published by Mario Migaldi.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2003

Pulmonary carcinomas with pleomorphic sarcomatoid or sarcomatous elements. A clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 75 cases

Giulio Rossi; Alberto Cavazza; Nathalie Sturm; Mario Migaldi; Nicola Facciolongo; Lucia Longo; Antonio Maiorana; Elisabeth Brambilla

We collected 75 primary pulmonary carcinomas with pleomorphic, sarcomatoid, or sarcomatous elements to better define their clinical, histologic, and immunohistochemical profile. The patients age ranged from 42 to 81 years (mean 65 years), and the male-to-female ratio was 9.7:1. Sixty-nine patients (92%) were smokers. Cough and hemoptysis were the most frequent presenting symptoms. Fifty-nine patients (65%) died of disease: only stage significantly predicts overall survival (p = 0.0273). Microscopically, based on the WHO criteria, 58 cases were classified as pleomorphic carcinoma (51 with an epithelial component, 7 composed exclusively of spindle and giant cells), 10 as spindle cell carcinoma, 3 as giant cell carcinoma, 3 as carcinosarcoma, and 1 as pulmonary blastoma. Immunohistochemically, in the tumors composed exclusively of spindle and/or giant cells, thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1) and cytokeratin 7 were positive in 55% and 70% of the cases, respectively, whereas surfactant protein-A was always negative. In pleomorphic carcinomas with an epithelial component, cytokeratin 7, TTF-1, and surfactant protein-A were positive in the sarcomatoid component in 62.7%, 43.1%, and 5.9% of the cases, respectively, whereas they were always negative in the sarcomatous part of carcinosarcomas and blastoma. In the epithelial component of pleomorphic carcinomas, cytokeratin 7, TTF-1, and surfactant protein-A were positive in 76.4%, 58.8%, and 39.2% of the cases, respectively, whereas the same antibodies did not react with the epithelial component of carcinosarcomas; in the case of blastoma, the epithelial part of the tumor was positive for cytokeratin 7 and TTF-1, whereas it was negative for surfactant protein-A. Cytokeratin 20 was always negative. In our opinion, this study: 1) supports the metaplastic histogenetic theory for this group of tumors; 2) shows that cytokeratin 7 and TTF-1, but not surfactant protein-A, are useful immunohistochemical markers in this setting; 3) confirms that stage is at the moment the only significant prognostic parameter, as in conventional non-small cell lung carcinomas; and 4) shows that this group of tumors has a worse prognosis than conventional non-small cell lung carcinoma at surgically curable stages I, justifying their segregation as an independent histologic type in the WHO classification.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Role of Chemotherapy and the Receptor Tyrosine Kinases KIT, PDGFRα, PDGFRβ, and Met in Large-Cell Neuroendocrine Carcinoma of the Lung

Giulio Rossi; Alberto Cavazza; Alessandro Marchioni; Lucia Longo; Mario Migaldi; Giuliana Sartori; Nazzarena Bigiani; Laura Schirosi; Christian Casali; Uliano Morandi; Nicola Facciolongo; Antonio Maiorana; Mario Bavieri; Leonardo M. Fabbri; Elisabeth Brambilla

Purpose Pulmonary large-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC) is a relatively uncommon, high-grade neuroendocrine tumor sharing several features with small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) but currently considered as a variant of non-SCLC and accordingly treated with poor results. Little is known about the optimal therapy of LCNEC and the possible therapeutic molecular targets. Patients and Methods We reviewed 83 patients with pure pulmonary LCNEC to investigate their clinicopathologic features, therapeutic strategy, and immunohistochemical expression and the mutational status of the receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) KIT, PDGFRα, PDGFRβ, and Met. Results LCNEC histology predicted a dismal outcome (overall median survival, 17 months) even in stage I patients (5-year survival rate, 33%). LCNEC strongly expressed RTKs (KIT in 62.7% of patients, PDGFRα in 60.2%, PDGFRβ in 81.9%, and Met in 47%), but no mutations were detected in the exons encoding for the relevant juxtamembrane domains. Tumor stage and size (≥ 3 cm)...


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2004

Primary Mucinous (so-called Colloid) Carcinomas of the Lung: A Clinicopathologic and Immunohistochemical Study With Special Reference to cdx-2 Homeobox Gene and muc2 Expression

Giulio Rossi; Bruno Murer; Alberto Cavazza; Lorena Losi; Pamela Natali; Alessandro Marchioni; Mario Migaldi; Giovanni Capitanio; Elisabeth Brambilla

Herein we describe the clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical features of 13 primary mucinous (colloid) carcinomas (MCs) of the lung, an uncommon and controversial tumor. The patients, 7 males and 6 females, ranged in age from 50 to 79 years (mean, 64.5 years). All the tumors presented as a peripheral solitary nodule with gelatinous cut-surface and well circumscribed but lacking a complete fibrous wall. The size ranged from 1 to 5.5 cm. Microscopically, they consisted of neoplastic elements floating in large mucin pools and focally lining the alveolar spaces. Eleven cases were predominantly composed of tall, columnar goblet cells (goblet cell-type MC), while 2 consisted of signet-ring tumor cells (signet-ring cell-type MC). Five tumors were incidentally discovered by chest radiographs, while the others were symptomatic. All patients underwent complete surgical resection (six lobectomies and seven wedge resections). Postoperative chemotherapy was performed in 3 cases. Overall, the median follow-up was 26 months (mean 33 months; range 9–95 months). All patients with goblet cell-type MC were alive and well, while the 2 patients with signet-ring cell-type MC died of disease. Immunohistochemically, all the 11 goblet cell-type MCs were strongly stained with CDX-2 and MUC2, 8 reacted with TTF-1, 6 with cytokeratin 20 (CK20), 9 with cytokeratin 7 (CK7), and 2 with MUC-5AC. Conversely, the two signet-ring cell-type MCs were stained with TTF-1, CK7, and MUC5AC but were negative for CDX-2, MUC2, and CK20. Surfactant apoprotein-A (SP-A) was positive in four goblet cell-type and one signet-ring cell-type MC. When compared with 10 mucinous bronchioloalveolar carcinomas (m-BAC), the latter reacted with CK7, CK20, MUC5AC, TTF-1, SP-A, CDX-2, and MUC2 in 100%, 90%, 100%, 30%, 10%, 0%, and 0% of the cases, respectively. In summary, MC of the lung represents an entity with two distinct clinicopathologic and immunophenotypic variants: 1) the goblet cell-type, presenting a more indolent clinical behavior and frequently co-expressing markers of intestinal and pulmonary differentiation; and 2) the more aggressive signet-ring cell-type, which retains only markers of pulmonary origin. On morphologic and immunohistochemical grounds, MCs are easily distinguishable from m-BAC. Since goblet cell-type MC strongly stains with CDX2, MUC2, and CK20, differential diagnosis with metastatic colorectal carcinoma is very challenging and requires appropriate clinical correlation.


American Journal of Pathology | 2003

Dystroglycan Expression Is Frequently Reduced in Human Breast and Colon Cancers and Is Associated with Tumor Progression

Alessandro Sgambato; Mario Migaldi; Micaela Montanari; Andrea Camerini; Andrea Brancaccio; Giulio Rossi; Rodolfo Cangiano; Carmen Losasso; Giovanni Capelli; Gian Paolo Trentini; Achille Cittadini

Dystroglycan (DG) is an adhesion molecule responsible for crucial interactions between extracellular matrix and cytoplasmic compartment. It is formed by two subunits, alpha-DG (extracellular) and beta-DG (transmembrane), that bind to laminin in the matrix and dystrophin in the cytoskeleton, respectively. In this study we evaluated by Western blot analysis the expression of DG in a series of human cancer cell lines of various histogenetic origin and in a series of human primary colon and breast cancers. Decreased expression of DG was observed in most of the cell lines and in both types of tumors and correlated with higher tumor grade and stage. Analysis of the mRNA levels suggested that expression of DG protein is likely regulated at a posttranscriptional level. Evaluation of alpha-DG expression by immunostaining in a series of archival cases of primary breast carcinomas confirmed that alpha-DG expression is lost in a significant fraction of tumors (66%). Loss of DG staining correlated with higher tumor stage (P = 0.022), positivity for p53 (P = 0.033), and high proliferation index (P = 0.045). A significant correlation was also observed between loss of alpha-DG and overall survival (P = 0.013 by log-rank test) in an univariate analysis. These data indicate that DG expression is frequently lost in human malignancies and suggest that this glycoprotein might play an important role in human tumor development and progression.


International Journal of Cancer | 2002

Cyclin D1 expression in papillary superficial bladder cancer: its association with other cell cycle-associated proteins, cell proliferation and clinical outcome.

Alessandro Sgambato; Mario Migaldi; Beatrice Faraglia; Graziella De Aloysio; Paolo Ferrari; Raffaele Ardito; Carmela De Gaetani; Giovanni Capelli; Achille Cittadini; Gian Paolo Trentini

Cyclin D1 contributes to regulate G1 progression by forming a complex with different cyclin‐dependent kinases. It has oncogenic properties and is frequently overexpressed in several human tumor types. In our study, expression of cyclin D1 and Ki67, a proliferation marker, was evaluated by immunohistochemistry in human papillary superficial (pTa‐pT1) bladder cancers and was correlated with p27Kip1, p21Waf1 and c‐erbB‐2 expression, with p53 gene status and protein expression, ploidy and cancer progression. Cyclin D1 expression was neither associated with tumor stage nor with tumor grade but high cyclin D1 expression (≥25% positive nuclei) was significantly associated with p53 gene mutation (p = 0.012), low p21Waf1 (p = 0.015) and high p27Kip1 (p = 0.016) protein expression. Ki67 expression was not associated with tumor stage but a high proliferation index (≥10% positive nuclei) was significantly associated with high tumor grade (p = 0.001) and with DNA aneuploidy (p = 0.005). There was no significant difference in proliferative activity between high and low cyclin D1 expressor tumors. Patients whose tumors showed high expression of cyclin D1 displayed a significantly longer disease‐free survival (p < 0.001 by log‐rank test). Increased Ki67 expression was significantly associated with shorter disease‐free survival (p = 0.003). Both cyclin D1 (p = 0.027; RR = 1.898) and Ki67 (p = 0.047; RR = 1.932) protein expressions were independent predictors of reduced disease‐free survival on a multivariate analysis that also included p27Kip1 expression and tumor stage. The simultaneous presence of low cyclin D1, low p27Kip1 and high Ki67 expression defined a “high‐risk” group of patients who displayed a significantly increased risk of recurrence (p < 0.0001). These results suggest that evaluation of cell cycle‐associated markers can help to identify high‐risk patients and may affect the management of patients with papillary superficial bladder cancer.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2004

TTF-1, Cytokeratin 7, 34βE12, and CD56/NCAM Immunostaining in the Subclassification of Large Cell Carcinomas of the Lung

Giulio Rossi; Alessandro Marchioni; Marina Milani; Rosa Scotti; Moira Foroni; A.M. Cesinaro; Lucia Longo; Mario Migaldi; Alberto Cavazza

We selected a 4-stain immunopanel including thyroid transcription factor (7ITF)-], cytokeratin (CK)7, 34betaE12, and CD56/neural cell adhesion molecule(NCAM) to subclassify a series of 45 pulmonary large cell carcinomas (LCCs) on bronchial biopsy. All cases consisted of a large tumor cell proliferation with abundant cytoplasm, vesicular nuclei, and prominent nucleoli. Immunohistochemically, 27 tumors (60%)were subclassified as adenocarcinoma (7TF-1 +/CK7+,24; CK7+ only, 3), 10 (22%) as squamous cell carcinoma (34betaE12+ only), and 4 (9%) as LCC with neuroendocrine differentiation (CD56+, variably stained with TTF-I and CK7, 34betaE12-). In 4 cases, the tumors coexpressed CK7 and 34betaE12 (3 cases) or were completely unstained (I case). Surgically resected tumors matched exactly with the corresponding original biopsy specimens in 21 of 23 cases; consistent CD56 expression was a reliable marker in confirming a diagnosis of large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma even on biopsy. Our results suggest that the proposed 4-stainset of commercially available markers might help subclassify LCC even in small biopsy material, validating expression-profiling studies aimed at lung cancer classification and permitting more consistent patient enrollment for trials with targeted treatments.


British Journal of Cancer | 1999

The asialoglycoprotein receptor in human hepatocellular carcinomas: its expression on proliferating cells

Davide Treré; Luigi Fiume; L Badiali De Giorgi; G Di Stefano; Mario Migaldi; Massimo Derenzini

SummaryThe expression of the asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGP-R) on human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells might be exploited to reduce the extrahepatic toxicity of DNA synthesis inhibitors by their conjugation with galactosyl-terminating peptides. In the present study we first assessed the frequency of ASGP-R expression in 60 HCCs. Secondly, we investigated whether the receptor was maintained on the plasma membranes of DNA synthesizing cancer cells. Needle biopsies of HCC were evaluated. Diagnosis and grading of HCC were performed on routine haematoxylin and eosin-stained sections according to Edmondson and Steiner (1953). Thirty-five tumours were grade I and II and were classified as well differentiated, while 25 tumours were grade III and IV and were classified as poorly differentiated. Sections from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded samples were incubated, after antigen retrieval, with an anti-ASGP-R monoclonal antibody revealed by secondary biotinylated antibody and streptavidin–biotin–peroxidase–diaminobenzidine reaction. A clear immunolabelling of plasma membranes of HCC cells was observed in 28 out of 35 (80%) well differentiated (grade I and II) and in five out of 25 (20%) poorly differentiated (grade III and IV) HCCs. The presence of the ASGP-R on the surface of DNA synthesizing cancer cells was also investigated after in vitro bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) labelling of HCC samples by immunohistochemical visualization of both the ASGP-R and incorporated BrdU on the same section. The results obtained clearly demonstrated that DNA synthesizing cancer cells expressed the ASGP-R on their surface. The presence of ASGP-R on cell plasma membrane in the majority of differentiated HCCs and its maintenance on proliferating cells encourages studies in order to restrict the action of the inhibitors of DNA synthesis of HCC cells by their conjugation with galactosyl-terminating carriers internalized through this receptor.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2009

EGFR and K-ras Mutations Along the Spectrum of Pulmonary Epithelial Tumors of the Lung and Elaboration of a Combined Clinicopathologic and Molecular Scoring System to Predict Clinical Responsiveness to EGFR Inhibitors

Giuliana Sartori; Alberto Cavazza; Alessandro Sgambato; Alessandro Marchioni; Fausto Barbieri; Lucia Longo; Mario Bavieri; Bruno Murer; Emmanuela Meschiari; Stefano Tamberi; Annamaria Cadioli; Fabrizio Luppi; Mario Migaldi; Giulio Rossi

We tested 418 neoplasms along the whole spectrum of primary lung tumor histotypes for epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and K-ras mutations. Clinicopathologic data from 154 patients undergoing treatment with EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) were retrospectively studied. A scoring system assigning a score for each positive or negative characteristic (+1, female sex, nonsmoking status, adenocarcinoma histotype, Asian ethnicity, and EGFR mutation; -1, current smoker and K-ras mutation; and 0, male sex, ex-smoker, nonadenocarcinoma histotype, and no mutations) was elaborated and tested with EGFR-TKI response. Salivary gland-type, mucin-rich, and neuroendocrine tumors do not harbor EGFR mutations. A subset of nonmucinous adenocarcinomas, not necessarily of the bronchioloalveolar type, is related to EGFR mutations. Three probability groups significantly correlating with response to EGFR-TKIs were identified. Of note, the addition of molecular results did not significantly change the predictive value obtained by the combination of clinicopathologic characteristics alone in this scoring system. K-ras mutations, significantly associated with the mucin-secreting type of adenocarcinoma, consistently predict lack of response in white patients.


Histopathology | 2005

PDGFR expression in differential diagnosis between KIT-negative gastrointestinal stromal tumours and other primary soft-tissue tumours of the gastrointestinal tract

Giulio Rossi; R. Valli; F. Bertolini; Alessandro Marchioni; Alberto Cavazza; C. Mucciarini; Mario Migaldi; M. Federico; G. P. Trentini; Alessandro Sgambato

Aims : To investigate the value of platelet‐derived growth factor receptors (PDGFRs) by immunohistochemistry in discriminating KIT‐negative gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GISTs) from other soft‐tissue neoplasms of the digestive tract.


Virchows Archiv | 2014

Large cell carcinoma of the lung: clinically oriented classification integrating immunohistochemistry and molecular biology

Giulio Rossi; Maria Cecilia Mengoli; Alberto Cavazza; D. Nicoli; Mattia Barbareschi; C. Cantaloni; Mauro Papotti; A. Tironi; Paolo Graziano; Massimiliano Paci; Alessandro Stefani; Mario Migaldi; Giuliana Sartori; Giuseppe Pelosi

This study aimed at challenging pulmonary large cell carcinoma (LLC) as tumor entity and defining different subgroups according to immunohistochemical and molecular features. Expression of markers specific for glandular (TTF-1, napsin A, cytokeratin 7), squamous cell (p40, p63, cytokeratins 5/6, desmocollin-3), and neuroendocrine (chromogranin, synaptophysin, CD56) differentiation was studied in 121 LCC across their entire histological spectrum also using direct sequencing for epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and v-Ki-ras2 Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (KRAS) mutations and FISH analysis for ALK gene translocation. Survival was not investigated. All 47 large cell neuroendocrine carcinomas demonstrated a true neuroendocrine cell lineage, whereas all 24 basaloid and both 2 lymphoepithelioma-like carcinomas showed squamous cell markers. Eighteen out of 22 clear cell carcinomas had glandular differentiation, with KRAS mutations being present in 39 % of cases, whereas squamous cell differentiation was present in four cases. Eighteen out of 20 large cell carcinomas, not otherwise specified, had glandular differentiation upon immunohistochemistry, with an exon 21 L858R EGFR mutation in one (5 %) tumor, an exon 2 KRAS mutation in eight (40 %) tumors, and an ALK translocation in one (5 %) tumor, whereas two tumors positive for CK7 and CK5/6 and negative for all other markers were considered adenocarcinoma. All six LCC of rhabdoid type expressed TTF-1 and/or CK7, three of which also harbored KRAS mutations. When positive and negative immunohistochemical staining for these markers was combined, three subsets of LCC emerged exhibiting glandular, squamous, and neuroendocrine differentiation. Molecular alterations were restricted to tumors classified as adenocarcinoma. Stratifying LCC into specific categories using immunohistochemistry and molecular analysis may significantly impact on the choice of therapy.

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Giulio Rossi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Alessandro Sgambato

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Gian Paolo Trentini

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Alberto Cavazza

Santa Maria Nuova Hospital

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Giuliana Sartori

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Alberto Farinetti

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Antonio Maiorana

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Carmela De Gaetani

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Achille Cittadini

The Catholic University of America

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Alessandro Marchioni

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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