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Dive into the research topics where Massimiliano Bergallo is active.

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Featured researches published by Massimiliano Bergallo.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2007

Infliximab and the risk of latent viruses reactivation in active Crohn's disease

A. Lavagna; Massimiliano Bergallo; Marco Daperno; R. Sostegni; Cristina Costa; Rosalia Leto; L. Crocellà; Giancarlo Molinaro; Rodolfo Rocca; Rossana Cavallo; Angelo Pera

Background: Infliximab is used for refractory Crohns disease but there are concerns regarding long‐term safety. Recently, JC‐polyomavirus (JCV) was studied after 3 cases of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) were found after treatment with natalizumab. The aim of this study was to investigate the short‐term effect of infliximab on reactivation of several harmful latent viruses. Methods: Sixty consecutive patients scheduled for infliximab induction course were prospectively enrolled. Blood samples were taken before each infliximab infusion at 0, 2, 6, and 14 weeks. Specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analyses were performed to detect JCV, Epstein–Barr virus (EBV), human herpes virus‐6, (HHV‐6), ‐7, ‐8, and cytomegalovirus (CMV). Results: Indications to infliximab were luminal and fistulizing disease in 49 and 15 cases, respectively. Clinical improvement and remission were achieved in 54 (90%) and 39 (65%) of patients, respectively, at 6 weeks. No patient was JCV‐positive at any timepoint. EBV serology was positive for 59/60 patients (98%); EBV‐PCR tests were transiently positive (>40 copies/105 Peripheral blood mononuclear cells, PBMC) in 4 (7%) patients after infliximab, but in each case were negative at subsequent timepoints. All patients were negative for HHV‐6, ‐7, and ‐8 at all timepoints. CMV serology was positive in 42 patients (70%), but no CMV‐PCR‐positive patient was observed. There was no association between concomitant treatments or clinical characteristics and viral status. Conclusions: Our results support the safety of short‐term infliximab treatment with respect to latent virus reactivation. The long‐term effects of infliximab, particularly for the issue of lymphoproliferative disorders, warrants further studies with larger populations, but so far data are reassuring. (Inflamm Bowel Dis 2007)


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2003

B19 virus infection in renal transplant recipients

Rossana Cavallo; Chiara Merlino; Daniela Re; Christian Bollero; Massimiliano Bergallo; David Lembo; Tiziana Musso; G Leonardi; Giuseppe Paolo Segoloni; A. Negro Ponzi

BACKGROUND B19 virus infection with persistent anaemia has been reported in organ transplant recipients. Detection of B19 virus DNA in serum is the best direct marker of active infection. OBJECTIVE The present study evaluated the incidence and clinical role of active B19 virus infection in renal transplant recipients presenting with anaemia. STUDY DESIGN Forty-eight such recipients were investigated by nested PCR on serum samples. The controls were 21 recipients without anaemia. Active HCMV infection was also investigated as a marker of high immunosuppression. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS In 11/48 (23%) patients B19 virus DNA was demonstrated in serum versus only 1/21 (5%) of the controls. Ten of these 11 patients had already been seropositive at transplantation and active infection occurred in eight of them during the first 3 months after transplantation. The remaining patient experienced a primary infection 9 months after transplantation. Eight (73%) of these 11 patients displayed a concomitant HCMV infection and four (36%) showed increasing serum creatinine levels but none developed glomerulopathy; 3/11 (27%) recovered spontaneously from anaemia whereas 8/11 (73%) needed therapy. In conclusion, the relatively high occurrence (23%) of B19 virus infection in patients presenting with anaemia, suggests that it should be considered in the differential diagnosis of persistent anaemia in renal transplant recipients. Presence of the viral DNA should be assessed early from transplantation and the viral load should be monitored to follow persistent infection and better understand the relation between active infection and occurrence of anaemia, and to assess the efficacy of IVIG therapy and/or immunosuppression reduction in clearing the virus.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2008

Monitoring of BK virus replication in the first year following renal transplantation

Cristina Costa; Massimiliano Bergallo; Sara Astegiano; Maria Elena Terlizzi; Francesca Sidoti; Giuseppe Paolo Segoloni; Rossana Cavallo

BACKGROUND BK virus-associated nephropathy (BKVAN) is one of the most common viral diseases affecting renal allografts. Screening for viral replication may allow for earlier intervention with reduced allograft loss. A plasma viral load >10(4) copies/mL of BKV DNA is recommended for a presumed diagnosis of BKVAN. METHODS We monitored BKV load on serum and urine samples by Real-Time TaqMan PCR in 229 renal transplant recipients in the first year post-transplantation. Overall, 2025 serum and 2025 urine samples were evaluated. A graft biopsy was performed in 47/229 patients to investigate the declining renal function. Operating characteristics [sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value (NPV), positive predictive value (PPV)] and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis at different viral load values were calculated. RESULTS Serum BKV viral load was >10(4) in 5/229 patients (2.2%). A histological diagnosis of BKVAN was made in 3/229 patients (1.3%): 3/5 (60.0%) among those with serum viral load >10(4) and 3/4 (75.0%) in those with >1.6 x 10(4). Operating characteristics of a serum BK load of 10(4) for the diagnosis of BKVAN were as follows: sensitivity, 100%; specificity, 99.1%; NPV, 100%; PPV, 59.4%. Specificity and PPV rose to 99.6% and 75.0% when using a cut-off level of 1.6 x 10(4) copies/mL. CONCLUSIONS The recommended level of BK viraemia of 10(4) copies/mL is useful to identify patients at risk of BKVAN, although specificity and PPV increase by using a cut-off level of 1.6 x 10(4) copies/mL. BK replication may occur in the first 3 months post-transplantation and subsequently recede. Therefore, the temporal profile of BKV replication has to be accurately evaluated and occasionally elevated values should prompt a closer monitoring.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2009

Identification of the novel KI and WU polyomaviruses in human tonsils

Muhammed Babakir-Mina; Massimo Ciccozzi; Daniela Bonifacio; Massimiliano Bergallo; Cristina Costa; Rossana Cavallo; Luigi Di Bonito; Carlo Federico Perno; Marco Ciotti

BACKGROUND Three novel polyomaviruses have been recently discovered: KI, WU and MC polyomaviruses. Their role in human pathology is debated while tissue tropism and site of latency remain unknown. OBJECTIVE To test the hypothesis that KI, WU and MC polyomaviruses can infect human tonsils. STUDY DESIGN Archival paraffin-embedded tonsils from 91 patients affected by different tonsil diseases were screened by polymerase chain reaction to detect viral DNA of KIV, WUV, MCV, BKV and JCV. Phylogenetic and evolutionary analysis of the identified polyomaviruses was carried out. RESULTS Of the 91 tested specimens, 11 contained KIV DNA (12%), 4 WUV DNA (4.4%), 5 BKV DNA (5.5%). MCV and JCV were not detected. Phylogenetic analysis showed that KIVs identified in tonsils fall into a clade distinct from that containing KIVs isolated from respiratory secretions, respiratory tissue and feces. Moreover, four positively selected sites (4.5% of t-Ag sites) were found under strong positive selection (omega=11.4), with posterior probabilities above 0.99. All the sites were located in the N-terminal region of the small t antigen. CONCLUSIONS The results suggest that the novel KI and WU polyomaviruses can infect human tonsils. Future studies are needed to define their role in tonsil diseases.


Cytotherapy | 2014

Inactivated human platelet lysate with psoralen: a new perspective for mesenchymal stromal cell production in good manufacturing practice conditions

Sara Castiglia; Katia Mareschi; Luciana Labanca; Graziella Lucania; Marco Leone; Fiorella Sanavio; Laura Castello; Deborah Rustichelli; Elena Signorino; Monica Gunetti; Massimiliano Bergallo; Anna Maria Bordiga; Ivana Ferrero; Franca Fagioli

Abstract Background aims Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) are ideal candidates for regenerative and immunomodulatory therapies. The use of xenogeneic protein–free Good Manufacturing Practice–compliant growth media is a prerequisite for clinical MSC isolation and expansion. Human platelet lysate (HPL) has been efficiently implemented into MSC clinical manufacturing as a substitute for fetal bovine serum (FBS). Because the use of human-derived blood materials alleviates immunologic risks but not the transmission of blood-borne viruses, the aim of our study was to test an even safer alternative than HPL to FBS: HPL subjected to pathogen inactivation by psoralen (iHPL). Methods Bone marrow samples were plated and expanded in α-minimum essential medium with 10% of three culture supplements: HPL, iHPL and FBS, at the same time. MSC morphology, growth and immunophenotype were analyzed at each passage. Karyotype, tumorigenicity and sterility were analyzed at the third passage. Statistical analyses were performed. Results The MSCs cultivated in the three different culture conditions showed no significant differences in terms of fibroblast colony-forming unit number, immunophenotype or in their multipotent capacity. Conversely, the HPL/iHPL-MSCs were smaller, more numerous, had a higher proliferative potential and showed a higher Oct-3/4 and NANOG protein expression than did FBS-MSCs. Although HPL/iHPL-MSCs exhibit characteristics that may be attributable to a higher primitive stemness than FBS-MSCs, no tumorigenic mutations or karyotype modifications were observed. Conclusions We demonstrated that iHPL is safer than HPL and represents a good, Good Manufacturing Practice–compliant alternative to FBS for MSC clinical production that is even more advantageous in terms of cellular growth and stemness.


Dermatology | 2011

Th1, Th2, Th17 and regulatory T cell pattern in psoriatic patients: modulation of cytokines and gene targets induced by etanercept treatment and correlation with clinical response.

Pietro Quaglino; Massimiliano Bergallo; Renata Ponti; Emanuela Barberio; Stefano Cicchelli; E Buffa; Alessandra Comessatti; C Costa; Maria Elena Terlizzi; Sara Astegiano; Mauro Novelli; Rossana Cavallo; Maria Grazia Bernengo

Background: Psoriasis is sustained by pro-inflammatory CD4+ T helper cells mainly belonging to the Th1, Th17 and Th22 lineage. Objective: To identify whether treatment with the anti-tumour-necrosis-factor antagonist etanercept is able to induce significant modulations in transcription factor and cytokine mRNA gene expressions related to the different T cell immune response polarization (Th1, Th2, Th17 and regulatory T cells, Treg) and to correlate them with clinical response. Methods: The study population included 19 psoriasis patients treated with etanercept and 19 healthy subjects. Blood samples were collected at baseline and every 4 weeks during treatment. Taqman quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction was applied to analyse the expression of: Stat-4, T-bet, IL-12p35 and IFN-γ (Th1-related); GATA-3, IL-4 (Th2-related); Stat-3, RORγt, IL-23p19 (Th17-related); Foxp3, IL-2 (Treg-related). Flow cytometry was applied to analyse CD4+CD25+brightFoxp3+ cells in peripheral blood. Results: Upregulation of Th1 and Th17 and downregulation of Treg subsets was found at baseline. The response to etanercept could be associated with a significant reversal of the Th1/Th17 activation, and a concomitant upregulation of Th2 and Treg subsets. Conclusion: Our data may contribute to a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying the achievement of clinical response in psoriasis and could be helpful for the identification of early predictive markers of response.


Dermatology | 2009

Circulating CD4+CD25 bright FOXP3+ T cells are up-regulated by biological therapies and correlate with the clinical response in psoriasis patients.

Pietro Quaglino; Michela Ortoncelli; Alessandra Comessatti; Renata Ponti; Mauro Novelli; Massimiliano Bergallo; C. Costa; S. Cicchelli; Paola Savoia; Mg Bernengo

Background: Regulatory T-cell (Treg) modulation is one of the potential mechanisms of anti-tumour-necrosis-factor biological agents. However, literature data on psoriasis patients are lacking. Objective: To analyse the circulating CD4+CD25brightFOXP3+ subset in 30 patients with psoriasis vulgaris/arthropathic psoriasis treated with biologicals and to investigate its relationship with the clinical response. Methods: The CD25brightFOXP3+ expression within the CD4+ subset was determined by multi-parameter flow cytometry at baseline and during treatment. FOXP3 mRNA expression was analysed by real-time reverse transcription PCR. Results: A response was obtained in 16/17 patients (91.1%) with increased CD25brightFOXP3+ values and in only 3/11 patients (27.3%) who showed a CD25brightFOXP3+ decrease during biological treatment (p = 0.0001). Responders showed significantly higher values than did non-responders as from the first 2 months of treatment (p = 0.0032). A significantly higher posttreatment expression of mRNA FOXP3 was observed in responders compared to non-responders. Conclusion: Biological drugs induce a circulating Treg up-regulation in a significant percentage of patients; such an increase is an early predictive marker of response.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2003

Polyomavirus BK DNA quantification assay to evaluate viral load in renal transplant recipients

Chiara Merlino; Massimiliano Bergallo; Giorgio Gribaudo; Gabriella Gregori; Giuseppe Paolo Segoloni; Franca Giacchino; Alessandro Negro Ponzi; Rossana Cavallo

BACKGROUND Several studies have disclosed a correlation between polyomavirus BK (BKV) and interstitial nephritis in renal transplant recipients and its quantification in urine and serum is therefore required to assess the role of BKV infection in nephropathy. OBJECTIVE This paper describes a urine and serum BKV-DNA quantification protocol devised to evaluate the viral load. STUDY DESIGN Screening of samples containing > or =10(3)/ml viral genome copies by a semi-quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay is followed by precise quantification of the samples containing a high number of viral genomes in a quantitative-competitive (QC)-PCR assay. Generation of the competitor construct relied on the different sizes of wild-type and competitor amplicons. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS Screening by semi-quantitative PCR selects samples with a high number of viral genomes for use in the more labor-intensive and -expensive QC-PCR assay and thus provides a handy means for quantitative DNA analysis of large numbers of samples. The results obtained in BKV-DNA quantification in urine and serum samples from 51 renal transplant recipients (22 on treatment with tacrolimus (FK506) and 29 on cyclosporine A (Cy A)) are interesting: BKV-DNA findings (43.1%) in urine samples are in agreement with the BKV urinary shedding reported in literature (5-45%). With regard to immunosuppressive treatment, the percentage of activation of the infection (revealed by BKV-DNA detection in urine samples) in the two groups of therapy is similar (40.9% vs 44.8%). The observation that the viral load in urine is dissociated with that of serum suggests that both parameters should be investigated in evaluation of the pathogenetic role of BKV reactivation in renal transplant recipients. Moreover, our BKV-DNA quantification protocol could be used to monitor viral load in urine and serum samples from renal transplant recipients so as to detect those at risk of nephropathy and monitor their response to immunosuppression reduction therapy if it occurs.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2009

Epstein-Barr Virus in Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphomas: Evaluation of the Viral Presence and Significance in Skin and Peripheral Blood

Mauro Novelli; Chiara Merlino; Renata Ponti; Massimiliano Bergallo; Pietro Quaglino; Irene Cambieri; Alessandra Comessatti; Francesca Sidoti; Cristina Costa; Daniele Corino; Rossana Cavallo; Alessandro Negro Ponzi; Maria Teresa Fierro; Maria Grazia Bernengo

The importance of viral agents in the development of cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCL) is still debated. For this purpose, we retrospectively evaluated the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) presence in Sézary syndrome (SS), mycosis fungoides (MF), inflammatory dermatoses (ID), and healthy donors (HD) using different approaches: EBV-DNA was quantified in skin biopsies and peripheral blood using real-time PCR, EBV-encoded small RNA (EBER) transcripts were detected by in situ hybridization (ISH), and latent membrane protein1-2 antigens were detected by immunohistochemistry. Skin biopsies were EBV-DNA-positive in 8/30 (27%) SS, 7/71 (10%) MF, and 2/18 (11%) ID patients and in none of the 25 normal skin samples. Positive mRNA (EBER) signals, always confined to cerebriform T lymphocytes, were found in 5/30 SS patients (17%), whereas signals in all MF and ID patients were negative. The presence of EBV-DNA in skin and blood samples was associated with a significantly lower survival in MF/SS patients. In evaluating EBV serological status, most (>70%) SS, MF, and ID patients showed a serological reactivation demonstrated by the presence of anti-EA IgG. In conclusion, although the finding of EBV-DNA in CTCL does not prove its etiopathogenetic role and may be related instead to immunosuppression, our study demonstrates that it has prognostic relevance.


Transplantation Proceedings | 2010

Herpesviruses Detection by Quantitative Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction in Bronchoalveolar Lavage and Transbronchial Biopsy in Lung Transplant: Viral Infections and Histopathological Correlation

Cristina Costa; Luisa Delsedime; Paolo Solidoro; A. Curtoni; Massimiliano Bergallo; Daniela Libertucci; Sergio Baldi; Mauro Rinaldi; R. Cavallo

The monitoring of herpesvirus infection plays a central role in lung transplantation (LT). Herein we evaluated the prevalence of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), human herpesvirus-6 (HHV-6), human herpesvirus-7 (HHV-7), and Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) DNA in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and transbronchial biopsy (TBB) specimens from LT patients. We associated the findings with the occurrence of interstitial pneumonia, acute rejection, or organizing pneumonia. Viral DNA was detected using real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on 76 paired samples (BAL and TBB) from 27 patients who were receiving a universal combined prophylaxis (cytomegalovirus [CMV] immunoglobulin [Ig] + gancyclovir or valgancyclovir). Histopathological analysis was performed in accordance with the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT) criteria. Overall, HCMV results were positive in 25/76 (32.9%) specimens (BAL and/or TBB); HHV-6 in 16 (21.1%); HHV-7 in 40 (52.6%); and EBV in 13 (17.1%). Interstitial pneumonia was diagnosed in 6/76 (7.9%) cases: 5 (83.3%) were positive to HCMV (combined specimens; P < .0001); 5 (83.3%) to HHV-7; and 2 (33.3%) to EBV. An acute rejection episode was diagnosed in 19/76 (25%) cases: 7 (36.8%) were positive to HCMV; 5 (26.3%) to HHV-6; 10 (52.6%) to HHV-7, and 3 (15.8%) to EBV. No significant association was observed between virus detection or load and acute rejection. Organizing pneumonia was diagnosed in 4/76 (5.3%) cases: 1 (25%) positive to HCMV; 4 (100%) to HHV-6 (P < .05); 2 (50%) to HHV-7; and none to EBV. In conclusion, the prevalence of HCMV tended to be lower than that reported in the literature, confirming the importance of universal combined prophylaxis. HCMV was a relevant agent for interstitial pneumonia; although the small numbers limit the statistical analysis, our data did not support an association between herpesviruses and acute rejection episodes, whereas the role of HHV-6 in the pathogenesis of organizing pneumonia deserves further study. Viral detection on TBB could represent an adjunctive tool to complement that on BAL.

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