Maurizio Pietrogrande
University of Milan
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Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2012
S. De Vita; Luca Quartuccio; Miriam Isola; Cesare Mazzaro; P. Scaini; Marco Lenzi; Mauro Campanini; C. Naclerio; A. Tavoni; Maurizio Pietrogrande; Clodoveo Ferri; Mt Mascia; Paola Masolini; Alen Zabotti; M. Maset; Dario Roccatello; Anna Linda Zignego; Pietro Pioltelli; Armando Gabrielli; Davide Filippini; Oreste Perrella; Sergio Migliaresi; Massimo Galli; Stefano Bombardieri; Giuseppe Monti
OBJECTIVE To conduct a long-term, prospective, randomized controlled trial evaluating rituximab (RTX) therapy for severe mixed cryoglobulinemia or cryoglobulinemic vasculitis (CV). METHODS Fifty-nine patients with CV and related skin ulcers, active glomerulonephritis, or refractory peripheral neuropathy were enrolled. In CV patients who also had hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection, treatment of the HCV infection with antiviral agents had previously failed or was not indicated. Patients were randomized to the non-RTX group (to receive conventional treatment, consisting of 1 of the following 3: glucocorticoids; azathioprine or cyclophosphamide; or plasmapheresis) or the RTX group (to receive 2 infusions of 1 gm each, with a lowering of the glucocorticoid dosage when possible, and with a second course of RTX at relapse). Patients in the non-RTX group who did not respond to treatment could be switched to the RTX group. Study duration was 24 months. RESULTS Survival of treatment at 12 months (i.e., the proportion of patients who continued taking their initial therapy), the primary end point, was statistically higher in the RTX group (64.3% versus 3.5% [P < 0.0001]), as well as at 3 months (92.9% versus 13.8% [P < 0.0001]), 6 months (71.4% versus 3.5% [P < 0.0001]), and 24 months (60.7% versus 3.5% [P < 0.0001]). The Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score decreased only after treatment with RTX (from a mean ± SD of 11.9 ± 5.4 at baseline to 7.1 ± 5.7 at month 2; P < 0.001) up to month 24 (4.4 ± 4.6; P < 0.0001). RTX appeared to be superior therapy for all 3 target organ manifestations, and it was as effective as conventional therapy. The median duration of response to RTX was 18 months. Overall, RTX treatment was well tolerated. CONCLUSION RTX monotherapy represents a very good option for severe CV and can be maintained over the long term in most patients.
Autoimmunity Reviews | 2011
Maurizio Pietrogrande; Salvatore De Vita; Anna Linda Zignego; Pietro Pioltelli; Domenico Sansonno; Salvatore Sollima; Fabiola Atzeni; Francesco Saccardo; Luca Quartuccio; Savino Bruno; Raffaele Bruno; Mauro Campanini; Marco Candela; Laura Castelnovo; Armando Gabrielli; G.B. Gaeta; Piero Marson; Maria Teresa Mascia; Cesare Mazzaro; Francesco Mazzotta; Pier Luigi Meroni; Carlomaurizio Montecucco; Elena Ossi; Piccinino F; Daniele Prati; Massimo Puoti; Piersandro Riboldi; Agostino Riva; Dario Roccatello; Evangelista Sagnelli
OBJECTIVE The objective of this review was to define a core set of recommendations for the treatment of HCV-associated mixed cryoglobulinemia syndrome (MCS) by combining current evidence from clinical trials and expert opinion. METHODS Expert physicians involved in studying and treating patients with MCS formulated statements after discussing the published data. Their attitudes to treatment approaches (particularly those insufficiently supported by published data) were collected before the consensus conference by means of a questionnaire, and were considered when formulating the statements. RESULTS An attempt at viral eradication using pegylated interferon plus ribavirin should be considered the first-line therapeutic option in patients with mild-moderate HCV-related MCS. Prolonged treatment (up to 72 weeks) may be considered in the case of virological non-responders showing clinical and laboratory improvements. Rituximab (RTX) should be considered in patients with severe vasculitis and/or skin ulcers, peripheral neuropathy or glomerulonephritis. High-dose pulsed glucocorticoid (GC) therapy is useful in severe conditions and, when necessary, can be considered in combination with RTX; on the contrary, the majority of conference participants discouraged the chronic use of low-medium GC doses. Apheresis remains the elective treatment for severe, life-threatening hyper-viscosity syndrome; its use should be limited to patients who do not respond to (or who are ineligible for) other treatments, and emergency situations. Cyclophosphamide can be considered in combination with apheresis, but the data supporting its use are scarce. Despite the limited available data, colchicine is used by many of the conference participants, particularly in patients with mild-moderate MCS refractory to other therapies. Careful monitoring of the side effects of each drug, and its effects on HCV replication and liver function tests is essential. A low-antigen-content diet can be considered as supportive treatment in all symptomatic MCS patients. Although there are no data from controlled trials, controlling pain should always be attempted by tailoring the treatment to individual patients on the basis of the guidelines used in other vasculitides. CONCLUSION Although there are few controlled randomised trials of MCS treatment, increasing knowledge of its pathogenesis is opening up new frontiers. The recommendations provided may be useful as provisional guidelines for the management of MCS.
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2011
S. De Vita; F. Soldano; Miriam Isola; Giuseppe Monti; Armando Gabrielli; A. G. Tzioufas; Clodoveo Ferri; G. Ferraccioli; Luca Quartuccio; L. Corazza; G. De Marchi; M Ramos Casals; Michalis Voulgarelis; Marco Lenzi; Francesco Saccardo; Paolo Fraticelli; Mt Mascia; Domenico Sansonno; Patrice Cacoub; Matija Tomšič; A. Tavoni; Maurizio Pietrogrande; A.L. Zignego; Salvatore Scarpato; Cesare Mazzaro; Pietro Pioltelli; Serge Steinfeld; Peter Lamprecht; Stefano Bombardieri; Massimo Galli
Background To develop preliminary classification criteria for the cryoglobulinaemic syndrome or cryoglobulinaemic vasculitis (CV). Methods Study part I developed a questionnaire for CV to be included in the formal, second part (study part II). Positivity of serum cryoglobulins was defined by experts as an essential condition for CV classification. In study part II, a core set of classification items (questionnaire, clinical and laboratory items, as agreed) was tested in three groups of patients and controls—that is, group A (new patients with the CV), group B (controls with serum cryoglobulins but lacking CV) and group C (controls without serum cryoglobulins but with features which can be observed in CV). Results In study part I (188 cases, 284 controls), a positive response to at least two of three selected questions showed a sensitivity of 81.9% and a specificity of 83.5% for CV. This questionnaire was employed and validated in study part II, which included 272 patients in group A and 228 controls in group B. The final classification criteria for CV, by pooling data from group A and group B, required the positivity of questionnaire plus clinical, questionnaire plus laboratory, or clinical plus laboratory items, or all the three, providing a sensitivity of 88.5% and a specificity of 93.6% for CV. By comparing data in group A versus group C (425 controls), the same classification criteria showed a sensitivity 88.5% and a specificity 97.0% for CV. Conclusion Classification criteria for CV were developed, and now need validation.
The American Journal of Medicine | 1989
Clodoveo Ferri; Maurizio Pietrogrande; R. Cecchetti; A. Tavoni; Alberto Cefalo; Giampiero Buzzetti; Claudio Vitali; Stefano Bombardieri
PURPOSE The effects of a low-antigen-content diet (LAC diet) versus a standard normocaloric diet on the signs and symptoms of mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC) were compared in a crossover randomized study. PATIENTS AND METHODS The study consisted of 24 outpatients with MC, and was carried out in a 48-week period. After 18 weeks of either the LAC or the placebo diet, patients returned to a totally unrestricted diet for 12 weeks (washout period) and crossed over to the second half of the study for the other 18 weeks. RESULTS After three weeks of the restricted LAC diet, the cryocrit decreased from 3.5 +/- 3.4% (mean +/- SD) to 2.3 +/- 2.0% (p less than 0.01), and the circulating immune complex levels decreased from 48 +/- 30% to 39 +/- 34% (p less than 0.01). At the same time, the purpura score (p less than 0.05), glutamic pyruvic transaminase level (p less than 0.01), and gamma glutamyl transferase level (p less than 0.001) significantly improved. Splenic reticuloendothelial function, measured as the half-life of heat-damaged autologous red cells, decreased from 41 +/- 21 minutes to 21 +/- 10 minutes (p less than 0.005). In contrast, no significant parallel clinical, biochemical, and immunologic changes occurred in the same patients during the placebo (standard normocaloric) diet. CONCLUSION These data show that an LAC diet decreases the amount of circulating immune complexes in MC and can modify certain signs and symptoms of the disease. These effects of the LAC diet may be explained by postulating a functional restoration of the mononuclear phagocytic system.
Journal of Visual Languages and Computing | 1991
Piero Mussio; Maurizio Pietrogrande; Marco Protti
In many different fields of science and technology, visual expressions formed by diagrams, sketches, plots and even images are traditionally used to communicate not only data but also procedures. When these visual expressions are systematically used within a scientific community, bi-dimensional notations often develop which allow the construction of complex messages from sets of primitive icons. This paper discusses how these notations can be translated into visual languages and organized into an interactive environment designed to improve the users ability to explore scientific problems. To facilitate this translation, the use of Conditional Attributed Rewriting Systems has been extended to visual language definition. The case of a visual language in the programming of a simulation of populations of hepatic cells is studied. A discussion is given of how such a visual language allows the construction of programs through the combination of graphical symbols which are familiar to the physician or which schematize shapes familiar to him in that they resemble structures the observes in real experiments. It is also shown how such a visual approach allows the user to focus on the solution of his problems, avoiding any request for unnecessary precision and most requests for house-keeping data during the interaction.
Rheumatology | 2014
Luca Quartuccio; Miriam Isola; L. Corazza; Manuel Ramos-Casals; Soledad Retamozo; Gaafar Ragab; Mostafa Naguib Zoheir; Manal Abdel-Moneim El-Menyawi; Mohamed Nabil Salem; Domenico Sansonno; Gianfranco Ferraccioli; Elisa Gremese; Athanasios G. Tzioufas; Michael Voulgarelis; Dimitris Vassilopoulos; Salvatore Scarpato; Nicolò Pipitone; Carlo Salvarani; Loïc Guillevin; Benjamin Terrier; Patrice Cacoub; Davide Filippini; Francesco Saccardo; Armando Gabrielli; Paolo Fraticelli; Marco Sebastiani; Matija Tomšič; A. Tavoni; Cesare Mazzaro; Pietro Pioltelli
OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to validate the classification criteria for cryoglobulinaemic vasculitis (CV). METHODS Twenty-three centres were involved. New patients with CV (group A) and controls, i.e. subjects with serum cryoglobulins but lacking CV based on the gold standard of clinical judgment (group B) and subjects without cryoglobulins but with clinical features that can be observed in the course of CV (group C), were studied. Positivity of serum cryoglobulins was necessary for CV classification. Sensitivity and specificity of the criteria were calculated by comparing group A vs group B. The group A vs group C comparison was done to demonstrate the possible diagnostic utility of the criteria. RESULTS The study included 268 patients in group A, 182 controls in group B and 193 controls in group C (small vessel vasculitis, 51.8%). The questionnaire (at least 2/3 positive answers) showed 89.0% sensitivity and 93.4% specificity; the clinical item (at least 3/4 clinical involvement) showed 75.7% sensitivity and 89.0% specificity and the laboratory item (at least 2/3 laboratory data) showed 80.2% sensitivity and 62.4% specificity. The sensitivity and specificity of the classification criteria (at least 2/3 positive items) were 89.9% and 93.5%, respectively. The comparison of group A with group C demonstrated the clinical utility of the criteria in differentiating CV from CV mimickers. CONCLUSION Classification criteria for CV were validated in a second, large, international study confirming good sensitivity and specificity in a complex systemic disease.
computer based medical systems | 1991
Piero Mussio; Maurizio Pietrogrande; Paolo Bottoni; Maurizio Dell'Oca; E. Arosio; E. Sartirana; M. R. Finanzon; Nicola Dioguardi
A method for identifying and counting cells and biological structures in histological liver tissue sections is presented. The method uses several image processing operators. The final classification results from contextual fusion of different clues. The overall flow of information among the active components of the cell description procedure (CDP) is outlined. The CDP is constructed and validated by a sequence of exploration and confirmation phases. Exploration takes place when a set of known images that is progressively improved until the results are satisfactory is worked out through the CDP. The confirmation phase may then start, working out a new set of images (of the same type but not analyzed before) and proceeding until acceptable sets of agents are generated. The completion of a first exploration phase has identified some major fields of improvement such as the identification of revision criteria for the refinement of the F-nuclei class.<<ETX>>
Journal of Autoimmunity | 2015
Luca Quartuccio; Francesca Zuliani; L. Corazza; P. Scaini; Roberta Zani; Marco Lenzi; A. Tavoni; Marco Sebastiani; Simone Baldovino; T. Urraro; Francesco Saccardo; Costanza Sbreglia; Cesare Mazzaro; Piero Pioltelli; Paolo Fraticelli; Davide Filippini; Armando Gabrielli; Oreste Perrella; Salvatore Scarpato; Dario Roccatello; Anna Linda Zignego; Clodoveo Ferri; Stefano Bombardieri; Maurizio Pietrogrande; Giuseppe Monti; Massimo Galli; Salvatore De Vita
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the efficacy and safety in the long term of a retreatment regimen with Rituximab (RTX) alone administered at clinical relapse in cryoglobulinemic vasculitis (CV). METHODS Thirty patients with severe HCV-related CV, previously enrolled in the multicentre Italian trial on RTX in the treatment of CV, were retrospectively evaluated after the end of the trial. All of them were managed with RTX alone at clinical relapse, if any. Disease activity at the last available follow up was defined as complete remission (absence of active disease), partial remission (response > 50% of at least one manifestation among glomerulonephritis, peripheral neuropathy or skin ulcers) or active disease. RESULTS The mean follow up after the first RTX cycle was 72.6 (20.4) months. After the end of the trial, 21/30 (70%) patients showed an active follow up [81.7 (10.9) months)], 3/30 (10%) lost follow up and 6/30 (20%) died. 12/21 (57.1%) patients were in complete disease remission, 5/21 (23.8%) showed a partial response and 4/21 (19%) had an active disease. 17/30 (56.7%) patients needed retreatment for relapse with a mean time to retreatment of 22.3 (12.1) months. Treatment survival of this regimen was 7.6 (0.3) years. Recurrent non-severe infections occurred in 3/30, with chronic hypogammaglobulinemia in 2/3 patients. CONCLUSIONS A long-term regimen of retreatment with RTX alone given at clinical relapse seems to be effective and safe in CV, with a low rate of infections and severe hypogammaglobulinemia.
Archive | 1990
Enrico Barichella; Maurizio Beretta; Nicola Dioguardi; Piero Mussio; Marco Padula; Maurizio Pietrogrande; Marco Protti
The use of simulation tools is becoming more and more frequent in the everyday activity of the physician, at both researcher and practitioner levels.
ieee symposium on visual languages | 1990
Piero Mussio; Maurizio Pietrogrande; Marco Protti; Franco Colombo; Maria Finadri; Pietro Gentini
The interactive system for hepatologist experimentation (ISHeE) is a visual explorative environment designed to allow a community of hepatologists to formalize, check, validate, and discuss their pathology and physiology liver models. In this environment the programming of simulation experiments is achieved by the use of visual languages. The use of conditional attributed rewriting systems is extended to the visual language definition, and the case of a visual language for programming the simulation of a population of hepatic cells is studied. How such a visual language allows the construction of programs which are expressed by the combination of graphical symbols which are familiar to the physician or which schematize shapes familiar to the physician and resemble the simulated system observed in the experiments is discussed. It is shown how a visual approach avoids the request of unnecessary precision during the interaction, leaving the user to focus on the solution of the problem.<<ETX>>