Mauro Spriano
University of Genoa
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Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998
Gino Santini; L Salvagno; P. Leoni; T. Chisesi; C. De Souza; Mario Roberto Sertoli; Alessandra Rubagotti; A. M. Congiu; R. Centurioni; A. Olivieri; L. Tedeschi; M Vespignani; Sandro Nati; Monica Soracco; A. Porcellini; A Contu; C Guarnaccia; N Pescosta; I. Majolino; Mauro Spriano; Renato Vimercati; Edoardo Rossi; G Zambaldi; L Mangoni; V. Rizzoli
PURPOSE The aim of this multicenter randomized study was to compare conventional therapy with conventional plus high-dose therapy (HDT) and autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) as front-line treatment for poor-prognosis non-Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL). PATIENTS AND METHODS Between October 1991 and June 1995, 124 patients, aged 15 to 60 years, with diffuse intermediate- to high-grade NHL (Working Formulation criteria), stages II bulky (> or = 10 cm), III, or IV were enrolled. Sixty-one patients were randomized to receive etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone, and bleomycin (VACOP-B) for 12 weeks and cisplatin, cytarabine, and dexamethasone (DHAP) as a salvage regimen (arm A), and 63 to receive VACOP-B for 12 weeks plus HDT and ABMT (Arm B). RESULTS There was no significant difference in terms of complete remissions (CRS) in the two groups: 75% in arm A, and 73% in arm B. The median follow-up observation time was 42 months. The 6-year survival probability was 65% in both arms. There was no difference in disease-free survival (DFS) or progression-free survival (PFS) between the two groups. DFS was 60% and 80% (P = .1) and PFS was 48% and 60% (P = .4) for arms A and B, respectively. Procedure feasibility was the major problem. In arm B, 29% of enrolled patients did not undergo HDT and ABMT. A statistical improvement in terms of DFS (P = .008) and a favorable trend in terms of PFS (P = .08) for intermediate-/high- plus high-risk group patients assigned to HDT and ABMT was observed. CONCLUSION In this study, conventional chemotherapy followed by HDT and ABMT as front-line therapy seems no more successful than conventional treatment in terms of overall results. However, our results suggest that controlled studies of HDT plus ABMT should be proposed for higher risk patients.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2007
Samantha Pozzi; Raffaella Marcheselli; Stefano Sacchi; Luca Baldini; Francesco Angrilli; Elsa Pennese; Giovanni Quarta; Caterina Stelitano; Giuseppe Caparotti; Stefano Luminari; Pellegrino Musto; Donato Natale; Chiara Broglia; Angela Cuoghi; Daniele Dini; Paolo Di Tonno; Giovanna Leonardi; Graziano Pianezze; Vincenzo Pitini; Giuseppe Polimeno; Luisa Ponchio; Luciano Masini; Maurizio Musso; Mauro Spriano; Giuseppe Pollastri
Over a period of 28 months, we observed five cases of osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ) in cancer patients treated with bisphosphonates (BP) at our institution. This prompted us to undertake a retrospective, multicenter study to analyse the characteristics of patients who exhibited ONJ and to define the frequency of ONJ in multiple myeloma (MM). We identified 35 cases in Gruppo Italiano Studio Linfomi centers during the period 2002 – 05. The median time from cancer diagnosis to the clinical onset of ONJ was 70 months. In these 35 cases of ONJ, 24 appeared 20 – 60 months after starting BP treatment. The time for the onset of ONJ was significantly shorter for patients treated with zoledronic acid alone than for those treated with pamidronate followed by zoledronic acid. The frequency of ONJ in the MM group during the study period was 1.9%, although the nature of the present study may have resulted in an underestimation of ONJ cases. Our analysis strongly suggested an association between the use of BP and the occurrence of ONJ, although we were unable to identify any definite risk factors with a retrospective study. The most frequently ONJ-associated clinical characteristics were chemotherapy treatment, steroid treatment, advanced age, female sex, anemia, parodonthopaties/dental procedures and thalidomide (in the case of MM patients).
Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2008
Sonia Fabris; Laura Mosca; Giovanna Cutrona; Marta Lionetti; Daniela Intini; Serena Matis; Monica Colombo; Luca Agnelli; Massimo Gentile; Mauro Spriano; Vincenzo Callea; Gianluca Festini; Stefano Molica; Giorgio Lambertenghi Deliliers; Fortunato Morabito; Manlio Ferrarini; Antonino Neri
Distinct genetic abnormalities, such as TP53 deletion at 17p13.1, have been identified as having adverse prognostic relevance in B‐cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B‐CLL), and conventional cytogenetic studies have shown that TP53 deletion in B‐CLL is mainly associated with the loss of 17p due to complex chromosomal rearrangements. We used an integrative genomic approach to investigate the significance of 17p loss in 18 B‐CLLs in Binet stage A, carrying a TP53 monoallelic deletion detected by means of fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Genome‐wide DNA analysis using single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays of 12 of 18 samples showed 17p loss in 11 cases, with breakpoints scattered along the 17p11.2 region. FISH analysis confirmed these findings and revealed 17p loss in a small fraction of leukemic cells in the remaining TP53‐deleted case, and it also indicated 17p loss in the six cases not investigated by means of SNP arrays. Mutations in exons 2–11 of the remaining TP53 allele were found in 9 of 12 deleted samples. Gene‐expression profiling of 60 B‐CLLs, including seven patients with 17p loss, identified 40 differentially expressed genes in 17p‐ versus 17p normal samples, 35 of which were downregulated in 17p‐tumors. The majority (30 of 35) of these transcripts, including putative tumor suppressor genes, mapped to 17p, thus indicating a remarkable gene‐dosage effect. Our data provide evidence that 17p loss may play an additional pathogenetic role in B‐CLL and suggest that the concomitant loss of multiple tumor suppressor genes could be responsible for the highly adverse prognostic relevance associated with TP53 loss.
British Journal of Haematology | 2009
Fortunato Morabito; Giovanna Cutrona; Massimo Gentile; Serena Matis; Monica Colombo; Claudia Sonaglio; Sonia Fabris; Daniele Reverberi; Mauro Megna; Mauro Spriano; Eugenio Lucia; Edoardo Rossi; Vincenzo Callea; Carla Mazzone; Gianluca Festini; Simonetta Zupo; Stefano Molica; Antonino Neri; Manlio Ferrarini
IGHV mutational status and ZAP‐70 or CD38 expression correlate with clinical course in B‐cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL). The three markers may be discordant in the single case and there is no consensus on their combined use in clinical practise. This multicenter study investigated this issue. Two‐hundred and sixty‐two Binet stage A patients were studied for the three markers. Sixty patients were profiled with HG‐U133A gene expression chips. Disease progression was determined by time from diagnosis to treatment (TTT). The probability of being treatment‐free at 3 years was significantly shorter in patients with unmutated IGHV genes (IGHVunmut 66% vs. 93%, chi square of log‐rank = 30, P < 0·0001), ZAP‐70 positive (ZAP‐70pos 73% vs. 96%, chi square of log‐rank = 8·2, P = 0·004) or CD38‐positive cells (CD38pos 68% vs. 91%, chi square of log‐rank = 21, P < 0·0001). Cox multivariate regression analysis showed that the three markers had an independent predictive value for TTT of similar power. A prognostic system based on presence of none (low‐risk), one (intermediate‐risk) or two or three (high‐risk) markers was generated. Based on such criteria, 56%, 23% and 21% of cases were clustered in low (HR = 1), intermediate [HR = 2·8, 95% confidence interval (CI) 2·4–5·8] and high‐risk group (HR = 8·0, 95% CI 3·9–16·2). Specific transcriptional patterns were significantly associated with risk groups.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2010
Laura Mosca; Sonia Fabris; Marta Lionetti; Luca Agnelli; Fortunato Morabito; Giovanna Cutrona; Adrian Andronache; Serena Matis; Francesco Ferrari; Massimo Gentile; Mauro Spriano; Vincenzo Callea; Gianluca Festini; Stefano Molica; Giorgio Lambertenghi Deliliers; Silvio Bicciato; Manlio Ferrarini; Antonino Neri
Purpose: Chromosome 13q14 deletion occurs in a substantial number of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients and it is believed to play a pathogenetic role. The exact mechanisms involved in this lesion have not yet been fully elucidated because of its heterogeneity and the imprecise knowledge of the implicated genes. This study was addressed to further contribute to the molecular definition of this lesion in CLL. Experimental Design: We applied single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-array technology and gene expression profiling data to investigate the 13q14 deletion occurring in a panel of 100 untreated, early-stage (Binet A) patients representative of the major genetics, molecular, and biological features of the disease. Results: Concordantly with FISH analysis, SNP arrays identified 44 patients with del(13)(q14) including 11 cases with a biallelic deletion. The shorter monoallelic deletion was 635-kb long. The loss of the miR-15a/16-1 cluster occurred in all del(13)(q14) cases except in 2 patients with a monoallelic deletion, who retained both copies. MiR-15a/16 expression was significantly downregulated only in patients with the biallelic loss of the miRNA cluster compared to 13q normal cases. Finally, the natural grouping of SNP profiles by nonnegative matrix factorization algorithm showed that patients could be classified into 2 separate clusters, mainly characterized by short/biallelic versus wide/monoallelic 13q14 deletions. Supervised analyses of expression data showed that specific transcriptional profiles are correlated with these 2 genomic subgroups. Conclusions: Overall, our data highlight the presence of 2 distinct molecular types of 13q14 deletions, which may be of clinical relevance in CLL. Clin Cancer Res; 16(23); 5641–53. ©2010 AACR.
Haematologica | 2008
Giovanna Cutrona; Monica Colombo; Serena Matis; Marina Fabbi; Mauro Spriano; Vincenzo Callea; Ernesto Vigna; Massimo Gentile; Simonetta Zupo; Nicholas Chiorazzi; Fortunato Morabito; Manlio Ferrarini
The reasons why immunoglobulin gene mutation status and expression of ZAP-70 and CD38 influence disease progression in chronic lymphocytic leukemia are still undefined. This study shows that CD38+, ZAP-70+ cells have a greater capacity for signalling through the B-cell receptor and suggests a function for B-cell receptor signaling in promoting cell expansion. Background Patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia whose cells express CD38 and ZAP-70 and utilize unmutated Ig VH region genes have a very poor prognosis. We studied whether cells expressing CD38 and ZAP-70 are more susceptible to stimulation through B-cell receptors than are cells that do not express CD38 and ZAP-70. Design and Methods CD38-positive and CD38-negative leukemic cells were separated from single cases and compared for their response to B-cell receptor cross-linking and ZAP-70 expression. Cohort studies were also carried out by measuring the apoptotic response to surface immunoglobulin M (IgM) cross-linking in 82 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia and the protein tyrosine phosphorylation induced by surface IgM in 21 patients. Results CD38-positive cells, isolated from cases of chronic lymphocytic leukemia classified as CD38-positive or CD38-negative, expressed more ZAP-70 than the corresponding CD38-negative cells, exhibited more robust protein tyrosine phosphorylation and had a greater tendency to apoptosis upon B-cell receptor cross-linking. In the cohort studies, surface IgM-induced protein tyrosine phosphorylation correlated significantly with CD38 and ZAP-70 expression and with the absence of Ig VH gene mutations. Apoptosis induced by surface IgM cross-linking correlated significantly only with the proportion of CD38-positive cells. Difficulties in finding more definitive correlations were probably related to imprecision in the in vitro test system and in the definition of cases as positive or negative. Conclusions Collectively, these data indicate that CD38-positive, ZAP-70-positive cells have a greater capacity for signaling through the B-cell receptor and suggest a function for B-cell receptor signaling in promoting chronic lymphocytic leukemia cell expansion, especially within the CD38-positive fraction of the leukemic clone.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 1996
Angelo Michele Carella; Emma Prencipe; Ester Pungolino; Enrica Lerma; Francesco Frassoni; Edoardo Rossi; Domenico Giordano; D. Occhini; Anna Maria Gatti; Roberta Bruni; Mauro Spriano; Sandro Nati; Daniela Pierluigi; Marina Congiu; Renato Vimercati; Jean Louis Ravetti; Massimo Federico
High-dose therapy followed by autografting can cure patients with aggressive Hodgkins disease (HD) refractory or with early relapse to first-line combination chemotherapy. On the other hand, the eradication of the disease is rarely achieved in heavily pretreated patients. It has been suggested that patients with HD with very high risk characteristics at diagnosis, often relapse despite appropriate therapy with 7-8 drugs combination. Thus it seems to us that such patients are potential candidates for early autografting during first remission. Twelve years ago, we initiated a pilot study to investigate whether patients with very high risk characteristics, would benefit from early autografting. The application of early autografting was compared with our historical group of patients in complete remission after receiving MOPP/ABVD, who had the same negative prognostic characteristics, refused autografting and who did not receive other treatment after achieving complete remission. Among the 22 consecutive patients entered into the pilot study and autografted, 18 are alive and 17 (77%) remain alive in unmaintained remission at a median of 86 months. One patient (4%) died of interstitial pneumonitis in the transplantation group. Only 8/24 (33%) patients, who did not receive an autograft, are currently alive and disease free at a median of 89 months. In conclusion, the early application of autografting appears to improve the outcome in patients with very high risk HD who achieved remission with MOPP/ABVD.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 1996
Marino Clavio; Edoardo Rossi; Mauro Truini; Carrara P; Ravetti Jl; Mauro Spriano; Vimercati Ar; Gino Santini; Letizia Canepa; Ivana Pierri; L. Celesti; Maurizio Miglino; Castellaneta A; Eugenio Damasio; Marco Gobbi
Fifty-three consecutive cases of adult CD30+ anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) have been analyzed. Thirty-six were classified as Hodgkins disease like variety (HL) (67%) and seventeen as so-called common type (CT) (33%). All cases strongly expressed the CD30/Ki-1 antigen; the neoplastic cells expressed CD15, CD45 and EMA in 60%, 44% and 33% of cases, respectively; T. B and null phenotypes were found in 37%, 17% and 46% of cases. Bulky mediastinal, B symptoms, and extranodal disease at diagnosis were present in 36%, 49% and 25% of cases. EBV encoded latent membrane protein (LMP-1) was found in 10 cases. Of the 13 tested cases only 4 expressed a weak positivity of the CD40 molecule, in a fraction of the tumor cells; in the same cases CD21 was never found. Patients were treated with various protocols; of the 50 evaluable patients, 39 (78%) obtained a complete remission (CR), 3 (6%) a partial remission (PR) and 8 (16%) did not respond. The projected overall disease free survival (DFS) at 36 months is 70%. Only patients with advanced disease stage (III-IV) showed a statistically decreased DFS and survival. Only symptomatic and extranodal disease significantly appeared to influence survival. This study confirms the good outcome of this group of lymphomas and differs from other reports for some clinical (lower percentage of advanced stage, extranodal disease and skin infiltration) and pathological (HL/CT ratio and immunophenotype) features.
Blood | 2011
Marco Montillo; Alessandra Tedeschi; Valeria Belsito Petrizzi; Francesca Ricci; Monica Crugnola; Mauro Spriano; Pierangelo Spedini; Fiorella Ilariucci; Lilj Uziel; Immacolata Attolico; Eleonora Vismara; Angelo De Blasio; Alfonso Zaccaria; Enrica Morra
Although combination regimens have improved outcomes over monotherapy in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), patients eventually relapse. Combined fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and monoclonal anti-CD52 antibody alemtuzumab (FCC) provided synergistic cytotoxicity with effective clearing of minimal residual disease. This phase 2 study determined FCC efficacy and safety in relapsed/refractory CD52(+) B-CLL after ≥ 1 line of treatment. From January 2005 through June 2008, up to 6 courses of oral fludarabine 40 mg/m² per day, oral cyclophosphamide 250 mg/m² per day, and subcutaneous alemtuzumab (Mab-Campath) 10 mg (increased to 20 mg after first 10-patient cohort) were administered days 1 to 3 every 28 days. The primary objective was overall response rate (ORR); secondary objectives included response duration, time to disease progression, and safety and tolerability. ORR was 67% in 43 patients; 30% achieved complete response. ORR significantly improved with 1 versus ≥ 2 prior therapies (P = .018), and without versus with previous monoclonal antibody treatment (P = .003). Median progression-free survival was 24.4 months, not reached in patients achieving complete response. Median overall survival was 33.6 months. Myelosuppression was the most common adverse event, with a low percentage of cytomegalovirus reactivations and manageable infections. However, close vigilance of opportunistic infections is warranted. FCC provides effective immunotherapy in relapsed/refractory CLL, including in patients with poor-risk prognostic factors.
European Journal of Haematology | 2009
Marino Clavio; Maurizio Miglino; Mauro Spriano; Daniela Pietrasanta; Emanuela Vallebella; L. Celesti; L. Canepa; Ivana Pierri; Marina Cavaliere; Filippo Ballerini; Germana Beltrami; Edoardo Rossi; Renato Vimercati; Roberta Bruni; M. Congiu; Sandro Nati; Eugenio Damasio; Gino Santini; Marco Gobbi
Abstract: Fludarabine (25 mg/m2 for 5 d, every 4 wk, for 6 courses) was administered as first line therapy in 32 symptomatic chronic lymphoproliferative diseases. All CLL patients achieved at least partial response (5 CR, 2 nPR, 9 PR) but 44% of patients relapsed. In LG‐NHLs response and relapse rate were similar. Haematological toxicity was low. VDJ rearrangement PCR analysis was performed on marrow samples at diagnosis and at the time of response evaluation. In the 3 patients who underwent high dose therapy with peripheral blood progenitor cell rescue analysis was also performed on apheresis samples and on marrow samples at the end of the procedure. Clonal VDJ rearrangement was always evident after Fludarabine therapy even in those patients who achieved histological and immunophenotypic complete remission, whereas it disappeared in 2 of 3 patients who underwent HDT. Our data confirm that Fludarabine monotherapy can reduce the neoplastic mass to a subclinical level and suggest the possibility that high dose therapy might produce true complete remission.