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Dive into the research topics where Massimiliano Copetti is active.

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Featured researches published by Massimiliano Copetti.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2012

Resting state fMRI in Alzheimer's disease: beyond the default mode network

Federica Agosta; Michela Pievani; Cristina Geroldi; Massimiliano Copetti; Giovanni B. Frisoni; Massimo Filippi

Using resting state (RS) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the connectivity patterns of the default mode (DMN), frontoparietal, executive, and salience networks were explored in 13 Alzheimers disease (AD) patients, 12 amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) patients, and 13 healthy controls. Compared with controls and aMCI, AD was associated with opposing connectivity effects in the DMN (decreased) and frontal networks (enhanced). The only RS abnormality found in aMCI patients compared with controls was a precuneus connectivity reduction in the DMN. RS fMRI group differences were only partly related to gray matter atrophy. In AD patients, the mean executive network connectivity was positively associated with frontal-executive and language neuropsychological scores. These results suggest that AD is associated with an alteration of large-scale functional brain networks, which extends well beyond the DMN. In AD, the limited resources of the DMN may be paralleled, in an attempt to maintain cognitive efficiency, by an increased prefrontal connectivity. A medial parietal RS fMRI signal change seems to be present since the early phase of AD.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Beneficial Metabolic Effects of Prompt Surgical Treatment in Patients with an Adrenal Incidentaloma Causing Biochemical Hypercortisolism

Iacopo Chiodini; Valentina Morelli; Antonio Stefano Salcuni; Cristina Eller-Vainicher; Massimo Torlontano; Francesca Coletti; Laura Iorio; Antonello Cuttitta; Angelo Ambrosio; Leonardo Vicentini; Fabio Pellegrini; Massimiliano Copetti; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Maura Arosio; Bruno Ambrosi; Vincenzo Trischitta; Alfredo Scillitani

CONTEXT In patients with adrenal incidentalomas, subclinical hypercortisolism (SH) is associated with an increased prevalence of the metabolic syndrome. The effect of surgical/conservative approach is debated. OBJECTIVE The objective of the study was to determine the effect of the surgical and conservative approaches on the metabolic syndrome in patients with adrenal incidentalomas. DESIGN This was a retrospective longitudinal study (18-48 months follow-up). SETTING The study was conducted on an in- and outpatient basis. PATIENTS One hundred eight patients with adrenal incidentalomas were studied for the presence of SH, which was diagnosed in the presence of more than two of the following: urinary free cortisol greater than 70 microg per 24 h (193 nmol per 24 h), cortisol after 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test greater than 3.0 microg/dl (83 nmol/liter), ACTH less than 10 pg/ml (2.2 pmol/liter). INTERVENTIONS Surgery was performed in 25 patients with SH (group TrSH+) and 30 without SH (group TrSH-), whereas the conservative approach was chosen by 16 patients with SH (group UntrSH+) and 37 without SH (group UntrSH-). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES During the follow-up, the improvement/worsening of body weight, blood pressure, or glucose and cholesterol levels was defined in the presence of a greater than 5% weight decrease/increase and following the European Society of Cardiology or the Adult Treatment Panel III criteria, respectively. RESULTS In group TrSH+, weight, blood pressure, and glucose levels improved (32, 56, and 48%, respectively) more frequently than in group UntrSH+ (12.5%, P = 0.05; 0.0%, P < 0.0001; 0.0%, P = 0.001; and 0.0%, P = 0.0014, respectively). In group UntrSH+, blood pressure, glucose, and low-density lipoprotein levels worsened more frequently (50.0, 37.5, and 50.0%, respectively) than in group TrSH+ (0.0%, P < 0.0001; 0.0%, P = 0.001; and 20.0%, P = 0.05, respectively). CONCLUSIONS Regarding the various components of the metabolic syndrome, in patients with adrenal incidentalomas and SH, surgery is beneficial.


Radiology | 2012

Multiple Sclerosis: Effects of Cognitive Rehabilitation on Structural and Functional MR Imaging Measures—An Explorative Study

Massimo Filippi; Gianna Riccitelli; Flavia Mattioli; Ruggero Capra; Chiara Stampatori; Elisabetta Pagani; Paola Valsasina; Massimiliano Copetti; Andrea Falini; Giancarlo Comi; Maria A. Rocca

PURPOSE To evaluate brain changes after cognitive rehabilitation in patients with clinically stable relapsing-remitting (RR) multiple sclerosis (MS) by using neuropsychologic assessment and structural and functional magnetic resonance (MR) imaging techniques. MATERIALS AND METHODS The study was conducted with approval of the involved institutional review boards. Written informed consent was obtained from each participant. Twenty patients with RR MS and cognitive deficits at baseline were randomly assigned to undergo treatment (n = 10), which entailed computer-assisted cognitive rehabilitation of attention and information processing and executive functions, or to serve as a control subjects (n = 10) without cognitive rehabilitation. All patients underwent a standardized neuropsychologic assessment and MR imaging at baseline and after 12 weeks. Changes in gray matter (GM) volumes on three-dimensional T1-weighted images and changes in normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) architecture on diffusion-weighted images were assessed. Changes in functional activity at functional MR imaging during the Stroop task and at rest were also investigated by using linear models. RESULTS As compared with their performance at baseline, the patients in the treatment group improved at tests of attention and information processing and executive functions. Neither structural modifications to GM volume nor modifications to NAWM architecture were detected at follow-up in both groups. Functional MR imaging demonstrated modifications of the activity of the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC)/precuneus and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (PFC) during the Stroop task, as well as modifications of the activity of the anterior cingulum, PCC and/or precuneus, left dorsolateral PFC, and right inferior parietal lobule at rest in the treatment group compared with the control group. In the treatment group, functional MR imaging changes were correlated with cognitive improvement (P < .0001 to .01). CONCLUSION Rehabilitation of attention and information processing and executive functions in RR MS may be effected through enhanced recruitment of brain networks subserving the trained functions.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 2012

Effects of Antiplatelet Therapy on Mortality and Cardiovascular and Bleeding Outcomes in Persons With Chronic Kidney Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Suetonia C. Palmer; Lucia Di Micco; Mona Razavian; Jonathan C. Craig; Vlado Perkovic; Fabio Pellegrini; Massimiliano Copetti; Giusi Graziano; Gianni Tognoni; Meg Jardine; Angela C Webster; Antonio Nicolucci; Sophia Zoungas; Giovanni F.M. Strippoli

BACKGROUND Antiplatelet agents are used to prevent cardiovascular events; however, treatment effects may differ in persons with chronic kidney disease (CKD) because atherosclerotic disease is less prevalent, whereas bleeding hazards may be increased in this population. PURPOSE To summarize the effects of antiplatelet treatment on cardiovascular events, mortality, and bleeding in persons with CKD. DATA SOURCES Embase and Cochrane databases through November 2011 without language restriction. STUDY SELECTION Randomized trials that included adults with CKD and compared antiplatelet agents with standard care, placebo, or no treatment. DATA EXTRACTION Data for populations, interventions, outcomes, and risk for bias were extracted. Quality of evidence for treatment effects on myocardial infarction, death, and bleeding was summarized by using Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation guidelines. DATA SYNTHESIS Nine trials (all post hoc subgroup analyses for CKD) involving 9969 persons who had acute coronary syndromes or were undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention and 31 trials involving 11,701 persons with stable or no cardiovascular disease were identified. Low-quality evidence has found that in persons with acute coronary syndromes, glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors or clopidogrel plus standard care compared with standard care alone had little or no effect on all-cause or cardiovascular mortality or on myocardial infarction but increased serious bleeding. Compared with placebo or no treatment in persons with stable or no cardiovascular disease, antiplatelet agents prevented myocardial infarction but had uncertain effects on mortality and increased minor bleeding according to generally low-quality evidence. LIMITATIONS Data for antiplatelet agents in persons with CKD are frequently derived from post hoc analyses of trials of broader populations. Definitions for bleeding outcomes and trial duration were heterogeneous. CONCLUSION Benefits for antiplatelet therapy among persons with CKD are uncertain and are potentially outweighed by bleeding hazards. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE None.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Mirna Expression Profiles Identify Drivers in Colorectal and Pancreatic Cancers

Ada Piepoli; Francesca Tavano; Massimiliano Copetti; Tommaso Mazza; Orazio Palumbo; Anna Panza; Francesco Fabio di Mola; Valerio Pazienza; Gianluigi Mazzoccoli; Giuseppe Biscaglia; Annamaria Gentile; Nicola Mastrodonato; Massimo Carella; Fabio Pellegrini; Pierluigi Di Sebastiano; Angelo Andriulli

Background and Aim Altered expression of microRNAs (miRNAs) hallmarks many cancer types. The study of the associations of miRNA expression profile and cancer phenotype could help identify the links between deregulation of miRNA expression and oncogenic pathways. Methods Expression profiling of 866 human miRNAs in 19 colorectal and 17 pancreatic cancers and in matched adjacent normal tissues was investigated. Classical paired t-test and random forest analyses were applied to identify miRNAs associated with tissue-specific tumors. Network analysis based on a computational approach to mine associations between cancer types and miRNAs was performed. Results The merge between the two statistical methods used to intersect the miRNAs differentially expressed in colon and pancreatic cancers allowed the identification of cancer-specific miRNA alterations. By miRNA-network analysis, tissue-specific patterns of miRNA deregulation were traced: the driving miRNAs were miR-195, miR-1280, miR-140-3p and miR-1246 in colorectal tumors, and miR-103, miR-23a and miR-15b in pancreatic cancers. Conclusion MiRNA expression profiles may identify cancer-specific signatures and potentially useful biomarkers for the diagnosis of tissue specific cancers. miRNA-network analysis help identify altered miRNA regulatory networks that could play a role in tumor pathogenesis.


Bipolar Disorders | 2011

Tract-specific white matter structural disruption in patients with bipolar disorder

Francesco Benedetti; Martina Absinta; Maria A. Rocca; Daniele Radaelli; Sara Poletti; A. Bernasconi; Sara Dallaspezia; Elisabetta Pagani; Andrea Falini; Massimiliano Copetti; Cristina Colombo; Giancarlo Comi; Enrico Smeraldi; Massimo Filippi

OBJECTIVES A growing body of evidence suggests that, independent of localized brain lesions, mood disorders can be associated with dysfunction of brain networks involved in the modulation of emotional and cognitive behavior. We used diffusion tensor (DT) tractography to quantify the presence and extent of structural injury to the connections between the amygdala and other brain regions, which included the subgenual, the supragenual and posterior cingulate, the parahippocampal, the orbitofrontal and dorsolateral prefrontal cortices, as well as the insula. METHODS Using a 3.0 Tesla scanner, conventional and DT magnetic resonance imaging sequences of the brain were acquired from 15 adult patients with major depressive disorder (MDD), 15 with bipolar disorder (BD), and 21 age-matched healthy controls. Using FSL software, diffusivity changes of the white matter (WM) fiber bundles belonging to the emotional network were measured. RESULTS Compared to controls and MDD patients, BD patients had significantly decreased average fractional anisotropy, increased average mean diffusivity, and increased average axial and radial diffusivity values in the majority of the WM fiber bundles connecting structures of the anterior limbic network (p-values ranging from 0.002 to 0.040). Medication load did not influence the results with the exception of lithium, which was associated with normal diffusivity values in tracts connecting the amygdala with the subgenual cingulate cortex. CONCLUSIONS We detected specific WM abnormalities, suggestive of disrupted integrity of fiber bundles in the brains of patients with BD. These abnormalities might contribute to understanding both mood dysregulation and cognitive disturbances in BD, and might provide an objective marker to monitor treatment efficacy in this condition.


Cancer Cell | 2012

The EphA2 Receptor Drives Self-Renewal and Tumorigenicity in Stem-Like Tumor-Propagating Cells from Human Glioblastomas

Elena Binda; Alberto Visioli; Fabrizio Giani; Giuseppe Lamorte; Massimiliano Copetti; Ken Pitter; Jason T. Huse; Laura Cajola; Nadia Zanetti; Francesco DiMeco; Lidia De Filippis; Annunziato Mangiola; Giulio Maira; Carmelo Anile; Pasquale De Bonis; Brent A. Reynolds; Elena B. Pasquale; Angelo L. Vescovi

In human glioblastomas (hGBMs), tumor-propagating cells with stem-like characteristics (TPCs) represent a key therapeutic target. We found that the EphA2 receptor tyrosine kinase is overexpressed in hGBM TPCs. Cytofluorimetric sorting into EphA2(High) and EphA2(Low) populations demonstrated that EphA2 expression correlates with the size and tumor-propagating ability of the TPC pool in hGBMs. Both ephrinA1-Fc, which caused EphA2 downregulation in TPCs, and siRNA-mediated knockdown of EPHA2 expression suppressed TPCs self-renewal ex vivo and intracranial tumorigenicity, pointing to EphA2 downregulation as a causal event in the loss of TPCs tumorigenicity. Infusion of ephrinA1-Fc into intracranial xenografts elicited strong tumor-suppressing effects, suggestive of therapeutic applications.


Neurology | 2016

Accuracy of clinical diagnosis of Parkinson disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Giovanni Rizzo; Massimiliano Copetti; Simona Arcuti; Davide Martino; Andrea Fontana; Giancarlo Logroscino

Objective: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of clinical diagnosis of Parkinson disease (PD) reported in the last 25 years by a systematic review and meta-analysis. Methods: We searched for articles published between 1988 and August 2014. Studies were included if reporting diagnostic parameters regarding clinical diagnosis of PD or crude data. The selected studies were subclassified based on different study setting, type of test diagnosis, and gold standard. Bayesian meta-analyses of available data were performed. Results: We selected 20 studies, including 11 using pathologic examination as gold standard. Considering only these 11 studies, the pooled diagnostic accuracy was 80.6% (95% credible interval [CrI] 75.2%–85.3%). Accuracy was 73.8% (95% CrI 67.8%–79.6%) for clinical diagnosis performed mainly by nonexperts. Accuracy of clinical diagnosis performed by movement disorders experts rose from 79.6% (95% CrI 46%–95.1%) of initial assessment to 83.9% (95% CrI 69.7%–92.6%) of refined diagnosis after follow-up. Using UK Parkinsons Disease Society Brain Bank Research Center criteria, the pooled diagnostic accuracy was 82.7% (95% CrI 62.6%–93%). Conclusion: The overall validity of clinical diagnosis of PD is not satisfying. The accuracy did not significantly improve in the last 25 years, particularly in the early stages of disease, where response to dopaminergic treatment is less defined and hallmarks of alternative diagnoses such as atypical parkinsonism may not have emerged. Misclassification rate should be considered to calculate the sample size both in observational studies and randomized controlled trials. Imaging and biomarkers are urgently needed to improve the accuracy of clinical diagnosis in vivo.


Neurology | 2011

A multicenter assessment of cervical cord atrophy among MS clinical phenotypes.

Maria A. Rocca; Mark A. Horsfield; Stefania Sala; Massimiliano Copetti; Paola Valsasina; Sarlota Mesaros; Vittorio Martinelli; Domenico Caputo; Tatjana Stosic-Opincal; Jelena Drulovic; Giancarlo Comi; Massimo Filippi

Objective: In this multicenter study, a new semiautomatic method for segmenting the cervical cord from C2 to C5 was used to investigate the correlation between cord atrophy and clinical disability in a large sample of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). Methods: T2 and 3-dimensional T1-weighted cervical cord scans and dual-echo brain scans were acquired from 143 healthy controls, 22 patients with clinically isolated syndromes (CIS), 101 patients with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS), 79 patients with secondary progressive MS (SPMS), 58 patients with benign MS (BMS), and 75 patients with primary progressive MS (PPMS) in 3 European centers. Normalized cervical cord cross-sectional area (CSAn) was measured by an active surface cord model. Between-group comparisons were performed using linear mixed-effect models. A nonparametric kernel estimator was used to obtain smoothed plots of CSA along the cervical cord. Results: Cord CSAn was significantly lower in PPMS vs healthy controls, BMS vs RRMS, SPMS vs BMS, and RRMS. From C2 to C5, a net separation and definition of the plots of patients with BMS, PPMS, and SPMS was seen with respect to those of the other study groups. CSAn was correlated with Expanded Disability Status Scale (r = −0.49, p < 0.0001), with a differential effect among disease clinical phenotypes: no association in either CIS or in BMS; association in RRMS (r = −0.30, p = 0.001), SPMS (r = −0.34, p = 0.001), and PPMS (r = −0.27, p = 0.01). Conclusions: Cervical cord atrophy provides a relevant and useful marker for the characterization of clinical heterogeneity of patients with MS. The stability of this measure among different centers supports its use as potential outcome measure to monitor disease progression in multicenter trials.


Cortex | 2013

Functional network connectivity in the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia.

Massimo Filippi; Federica Agosta; Elisa Scola; Elisa Canu; Giuseppe Magnani; Alessandra Marcone; Paola Valsasina; Francesca Caso; Massimiliano Copetti; Giancarlo Comi; Stefano F. Cappa; Andrea Falini

INTRODUCTION The aim of this study was to investigate, using resting state (RS) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the functional connectivity within and among brain networks in patients with the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), compared with healthy controls and patients with probable Alzheimers disease (pAD). METHODS Twelve bvFTD patients were compared with 30 controls and 18 pAD patients. Functional connectivity within the salience, default mode (DMN), executive (EXN), attention/working memory (ATT/WM), and dorsal attentional networks was assessed using independent component analysis. The temporal associations among RS networks (RSNs) were explored using the functional network connectivity toolbox. RESULTS A decreased dorsal salience network (DSN) connectivity, mainly involving the anterior cingulum, was observed in bvFTD versus controls and pAD. BvFTD was also characterized by a decreased ventral salience network connectivity in the basal ganglia, and divergent connectivity effects versus controls in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (decreased) and precuneus (enhanced) within the right ATT/WM network. The dorsal attentional network had a decreased connectivity with the DMN and EXN in bvFTD versus controls, and a decreased connectivity with the DSN versus pAD. CONCLUSIONS RSN functional abnormalities occur in bvFTD, involving not only the salience network, but also the DMN and fronto-parietal network associated with ATT and WM modulation. The pattern of functional changes differs from that seen in pAD. The altered interactions among RSN observed in bvFTD and pAD may provide a new venue to explore the functional correlates of cognitive abnormalities in neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders.

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Massimo Filippi

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Andrea Fontana

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Federica Agosta

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Giancarlo Comi

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Andrea Falini

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Maria A. Rocca

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Vincenzo Trischitta

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Evaristo Maiello

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Vito Michele Fazio

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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