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Dive into the research topics where Michelino De Laurentiis is active.

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Featured researches published by Michelino De Laurentiis.


Breast Cancer Research | 2011

Circulating tumor cells as prognostic and predictive markers in metastatic breast cancer patients receiving first-line systemic treatment

Mario Giuliano; Antonio Giordano; Summer Jackson; Kenneth R. Hess; Ugo De Giorgi; Michal Mego; Beverly C. Handy; Naoto T. Ueno; Ricardo H. Alvarez; Michelino De Laurentiis; Sabino De Placido; Vicente Valero; Gabriel N. Hortobagyi; James M. Reuben; Massimo Cristofanilli

IntroductionCirculating tumor cells (CTCs) represent an independent predictor of outcome in patients with metastatic breast cancer (MBC). We assessed the prognostic impact of CTCs according to different first-line systemic treatments, and explored their potential predictive value in MBC patients.MethodsWe retrospectively evaluated 235 newly diagnosed MBC patients, treated at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. All patients had a baseline CTC assessment performed with CellSearch®. Progression-free survival and overall survival were compared with the log-rank test between groups, according to CTC count (< 5 vs. ≥ 5) and type of systemic therapy. We further explored the predictive value of baseline CTCs in patients receiving different treatments.ResultsAt a median follow-up of 18 months, the CTC count was confirmed to be a robust prognostic marker in the overall population (median progression-free survival 12.0 and 7.0 months for patients with CTC < 5 and ≥ 5, respectively; P < 0.001). Conversely, in patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor-2-overexpressed/amplified tumors receiving trastuzumab or lapatinib, the baseline CTC count was not prognostic (median progression-free survival 14.5 months for patients with CTC < 5 and 16.1 months for those with CTC ≥ 5; P = 0.947). Furthermore, in patients with human epidermal growth factor receptor-2 normal tumors, a baseline CTC count ≥ 5 identified subjects who derived benefit from more aggressive treatments, including combination chemotherapy and chemotherapy plus bevacizumab.ConclusionsThis analysis suggests that the prognostic information provided by CTC count may be useful in patient stratifications and therapeutic selection, particularly in the group with positive CTCs, in which various therapeutic choices may procure differential palliative benefit.


International Journal of Cancer | 1996

Differential immunohistochemical detection of transforming growth factor α, amphiregulin and CRIPTO in human normal and malignant breast tissues

Luigi Panico; Antonio D'Antonio; Gaetano Salvatore; Ernesto Mezza; Giampaolo Tortora; Michelino De Laurentiis; Sabino De Placido; Thomas J. Giordano; Maria J. Merino; David S. Salomon; William J. Gullick; Guido Pettinato; Stuart J. Schnitt; A. Raffaele Bianco; Fortunato Ciardiello

The expression of growth factors, such as transforming growth factor α (TGFα), amphiregulin (AR) and CRIPTO, a type‐1 tyrosine‐kinase growth factor receptor‐(erbB‐2), and a tumor‐suppressor gene (p53), that have been implicated in the development and/or the progression of breast cancer, was evaluated by immunohistochemistry in 100 human primary infiltrating breast carcinomas (IBC). AR and CRIPTO immunoreactivity was also assessed in 55 human breast ductal carcinomas in situ (DCIS). Within the 100 IBC, 80, 50, 73, 17, and 34 tumors expressed moderate to high levels of TGFα, AR, CRIPTO, erbB‐2, and p53 respectively. In addition, AR and CRIPTO immunoreactivity were found in 11 and in 26 out of 55 DCIS respectively. In contrast, only 4, 3, and 2 out of 10 normal mammary‐gland samples were weakly positive for TGFα, AR, and CRIPTO expression, respectively, whereas none was positive for erbB‐2 or p53. Within the 100 IBC, expression of erbB‐2 significantly correlated with high histologic and nuclear grading, with high growth fraction, and with estrogen‐receptor(ER)‐ and progesterone‐receptor(PgR)‐negative tumors. A statistically significant correlation was also observed between p53 expression and high histologic grading, high growth fraction, and PgR‐negative tumors. In contrast, no significant correlations were found between TGFα, AR, and CRIPTO immunoreactivity and various clinicopathological parameters, with the exception of a positive correlation between TGFα and ER expression. These data demonstrate that TGFα, AR, and CRIPTO expression are significantly increased in malignant mammary epithelium relative to normal epithelium. In particular, the differential expression of CRIPTO may serve as a potential tumor marker for breast carcinogenesis.


Lancet Oncology | 2014

Bevacizumab plus chemotherapy versus chemotherapy alone as second-line treatment for patients with HER2-negative locally recurrent or metastatic breast cancer after first-line treatment with bevacizumab plus chemotherapy (TANIA): an open-label, randomised phase 3 trial

Gunter von Minckwitz; Fabio Puglisi; Javier Cortes; Eduard Vrdoljak; N. Marschner; Christoph C. Zielinski; Cristian Villanueva; Gilles Romieu; István Láng; Eva Ciruelos; Michelino De Laurentiis; Corinne Veyret; Sabine de Ducla; Ulrich Freudensprung; Stefanie Srock; J. Gligorov

BACKGROUND Combining bevacizumab with first-line or second-line chemotherapy improves progression-free survival in HER2-negative locally recurrent or metastatic breast cancer. We assessed the efficacy and safety of further bevacizumab therapy in patients with locally recurrent or metastatic breast cancer whose disease had progressed after treatment with bevacizumab plus chemotherapy. METHODS In this open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial, we recruited patients who had HER2-negative locally recurrent or metastatic breast cancer that had progressed after receiving 12 weeks or more of first-line bevacizumab plus chemotherapy from 118 centres in 12 countries. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) by use of a central interactive voice response system using a block randomisation schedule (block size four) stratified by hormone receptor status, first-line progression-free survival, selected chemotherapy, and lactate dehydrogenase concentration, to receive second-line single-agent chemotherapy either alone or with bevacizumab (15 mg/kg every 3 weeks or 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks). Second-line therapy was continued until disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or consent withdrawal. At progression, patients randomly assigned to chemotherapy alone received third-line chemotherapy without bevacizumab; those randomly assigned to bevacizumab continued bevacizumab with third-line chemotherapy. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival from randomisation to second-line progression or death in the intention-to-treat population. This trial is ongoing, and registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01250379. FINDINGS Between Feb 17, 2011, and April 3, 2013, 494 patients were randomly assigned to treatment (247 in each group). The median duration of follow-up at the time of this prespecified primary progression-free survival analysis was 15·9 months (IQR 9·1-21·7) in the chemotherapy-alone group and 16·1 months (10·6-22·7) in the combination group. Progression-free survival was significantly longer for those patients treated with bevacizumab plus chemotherapy than for those with chemotherapy alone (median: 6·3 months [95% CI 5·4-7·2] vs 4·2 months [3·9-4·7], respectively, stratified hazard ratio [HR] 0·75 [95% CI 0·61-0·93], two-sided stratified log-rank p=0·0068). The most common grade 3 or more adverse events were hypertension (33 [13%] of 245 patients receiving bevacizumab plus chemotherapy vs 17 [7%] of 238 patients receiving chemotherapy alone), neutropenia (29 [12%] vs 20 [8%]), and hand-foot syndrome (27 [11%] vs 25 [11%]). Grade 3 proteinuria occurred in 17 (7%) of 245 patients receiving combination therapy and one (<1%) of 238 patients receiving chemotherapy alone. Serious adverse events were reported in 61 (25%) of 245 patients receiving bevacizumab plus chemotherapy versus 44 (18%) of 238 patients receiving chemotherapy alone. INTERPRETATION These results suggest that continued VEGF inhibition with further bevacizumab is a valid treatment option for patients with locally recurrent or metastatic HER2-negative breast cancer whose disease was stabilised or responded to first-line bevacizumab with chemotherapy. FUNDING F Hoffmann-La Roche.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1998

c-erbB2 expression predicts tamoxifen efficacy in breast cancer patients

Sabino De Placido; Chiara Carlomagno; Michelino De Laurentiis; Angelo Raffaele Bianco

Abstractc-erbB2 is a proto-oncogene that encodes the trans- membrane protein p185. This protein shares considerable sequence and structure homology with members of the epidermal growth factor receptor family and it is believed to cooperate with these receptors in the signal transduction process in order to control cell proliferation. Overexpression of c-erbB2, with or without gene amplification, is frequently found in breast cancer, and a body of evidence suggests it is implicated in the development of resistance to the anti-estrogen tamoxifen. Scientific evidence strongly supports a correlation between c-erbB2 overexpression and lack of efficacy of tamoxifen in both advanced and adjuvant settings. However, given the important therapeutic repercussion of this topic, further studies are required before c- erbB2 evaluation can be routinely used to select patients who are likely to benefit from tamoxifen administration.


International Journal of Cancer | 2000

Resistance to taxanes is induced by c‐erbB‐2 overexpression in human MCF‐10A mammary epithelial cells and is blocked by combined treatment with an antisense oligonucleotide targeting type I protein kinase A

Fortunato Ciardiello; Rosa Caputo; Grazia Pomatico; Michelino De Laurentiis; Sabino De Placido; A. Raffaele Bianco; Giampaolo Tortora

We have tested the sensitivity of human MCF‐10A mammary epithelial cells and of their transformed derivatives overexpressing an activated c‐Ha‐ras gene (MCF‐10A Ha‐ras cells), the c‐erbB‐2 gene (MCF‐10A c‐erbB‐2 cells) or both genes (MCF‐10A HE cells) to different cytotoxic drugs. As compared with parental MCF‐10A cells, the transformed cells exhibited an increased sensitivity to topoisomerase I‐ and topoisomerase II‐inhibitors, and to platinum‐derivatives with a 2‐ to 10‐fold reduction in IC50 values. A remarkable difference in sensitivity was observed following treatment with taxanes. While MCF‐10A Ha‐ras cells showed an increased sensitivity, MCF‐10A c‐erbB‐2 and MCF‐10A HE cells exhibited a relative resistance to taxol and taxotere, with an approximately 3.5‐ to 6.5‐fold higher IC50 as compared with MCF‐10A cells suggesting that c‐erbB‐2 overexpression has a dominant effect compared with an activated c‐Ha‐ras gene. The type I cAMP‐dependent protein kinase (PKAI) is overexpressed in cancer cells. Inhibition of PKAI by antisense oligonucleotides targeting its RIα regulatory subunit results in cancer cell growth inhibition. To evaluate the effect of blocking PKAI on MCF‐10A cell sensitivity to taxanes, we treated these cells with taxol or taxotere in combination with a PKAI antisense oligonucleotide. Treatment with this agent, but not with a control scramble sequence, was able to overcome the effect of c‐erbB‐2 overexpression on MCF‐10A cell sensitivity to taxol and taxotere, with a 20‐ to 40‐fold shift in the IC50 values for the 2 drugs. Int. J. Cancer 85:710–715, 2000.


Oncology | 1995

Prognostic Significance of Necrosis, Elastosis, Fibrosis and Inflammatory Cell Reaction in Operable Breast Cancer

Chiara Carlomagno; Francesco Perrone; Rossella Lauria; Michelino De Laurentiis; Ciro Gallo; Alessandro Morabito; Guido Pettinato; Luigi Panico; Teresa Bellelli; Anna Apicella; Giuseppe Petrella; Raffaele Bianco; Sabino De Placido

We analyzed retrospectively the relationships and the prognostic significance of four anatomopathological features (elastosis, fibrosis, necrosis, inflammatory cell reaction) of the primary tumor in a series of 1,457 cases of infiltrating ductal carcinoma observed at our institution from January 1978 to December 1991. Necrosis, elastosis, fibrosis and inflammatory cell reaction were strongly associated among themselves (all p < 0.0001), the only exception being necrosis and elastosis. Necrosis was significantly related to tumor size (odds ratio [OR] = 5.40, p < 0.0001) and tumor grade (OR = 2.22, p < 0.0001). Univariate analysis showed that the presence of necrosis and cell reaction were significantly related to worse survival (p < 0.0001 and p = 0.03, respectively). Multivariate analysis, including the four variables plus nodal status, tumor size, grading, adjuvant therapy, age and first order interactions, revealed that greater tumor size (p < 0.0001), positive nodal status (p < 0.0001), higher histologic grade (p < 0.0001) and presence of inflammatory cell reaction (p = 0.0007) independently worsened survival. On the other hand, adjuvant therapy had a significant independent role in preventing deaths (p = 0.03). The only first-order interaction retained in the model was that between grading and cell reaction (p = 0.002). Cell reaction had a different prognostic behaviour in the groups G1-G2 and G3: in the former group, survival was worse (p = 0.0001) when the inflammatory cell reaction was present. In conclusion, we demonstrate that cell reaction is an independent prognostic factor in the G1-G2 subgroup of patients, and propose a hypothesis as to the role of cell reaction in primary breast cancer.


BMC Cancer | 2013

Molecular profiles of screen detected vs. symptomatic breast cancer and their impact on survival: results from a clinical series.

Anna Crispo; Maddalena Barba; Giuseppe D’Aiuto; Michelino De Laurentiis; Maria Grimaldi; Massimo Rinaldo; Giuseppina Caolo; Massimiliano D’Aiuto; Immacolata Capasso; Emanuela Esposito; Alfonso Amore; Maurizio Di Bonito; Gerardo Botti; Maurizio Montella

BackgroundStage shift is widely considered a major determinant of the survival benefit conferred by breast cancer screening. However, factors and mechanisms underlying such a prognostic advantage need further clarification. We sought to compare the molecular characteristics of screen detected vs. symptomatic breast cancers and assess whether differences in tumour biology might translate into survival benefit.MethodsIn a clinical series of 448 women with operable breast cancer, the Kaplan-Meier method and the log-rank test were used to estimate the likelihood of cancer recurrence and death. The Cox proportional hazard model was used for the multivariate analyses including mode of detection, age at diagnosis, tumour size, and lymph node status. These same models were applied to subgroups defined by molecular subtypes.ResultsScreen detected breast cancers tended to show more favourable clinicopathological features and survival outcomes compared to symptomatic cancers. The luminal A subtype was more common in women with mammography detected tumours than in symptomatic patients (68.5 vs. 59.0%, p=0.04). Data analysis across categories of molecular subtypes revealed significantly longer disease free and overall survival for screen detected cancers with a luminal A subtype only (p=0.01 and 0.02, respectively). For women with a luminal A subtype, the independent prognostic role of mode of detection on recurrence was confirmed in Cox proportional hazard models (p=0.03). An independent role of modality of detection on survival was also suggested (p=0.05).ConclusionsMolecular subtypes did not substantially explain the differences in survival outcomes between screened and symptomatic patients. However, our results suggest that molecular profiles might play a role in interpreting such differences at least partially.Further studies are warranted to reinterpret the efficacy of screening programmes in the light of tumour biology.


BioMed Research International | 2015

Prognostic Value of Cancer Stem Cells Markers in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer.

Francesca Collina; Maurizio Di Bonito; Valeria Li Bergolis; Michelino De Laurentiis; Carlo Vitagliano; Margherita Cerrone; F. Nuzzo; Monica Cantile; Gerardo Botti

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) has a significant clinical relevance of being associated with a shorter median time to relapse and death and does not respond to endocrine therapy or other available targeted agents. Increased aggressiveness of this tumor, as well as resistance to standard drug therapies, may be associated with the presence of stem cell populations within the tumor. Several stemness markers have been described for the various histological subtypes of breast cancer, such as CD44, CD24, CD133, ALDH1, and ABCG2. The role of these markers in breast cancer is not clear yet and above all there are conflicting opinions about their real prognostic value. To investigate the role of CSCs markers in TNBC cancerogenesis and tumor progression, we selected 160 TNBCs samples on which we detected protein expression of CD44, CD24, CD133, ALDH1, and ABCG2 by immunohistochemistry. Our results highlighted a real prognostic role only for CD44 in TNBCs. All other CSCs markers do not appear to be related to the survival of TNBC patients. In conclusion, despite the fact that the presence of the cancer stem cells in the tumor provides important information on its potential aggressiveness, today their detection by immunohistochemistry is not sufficient to confirm their role in carcinogenesis, because specific markers probably are not yet identified.


Drug Design Development and Therapy | 2015

The role of taxanes in triple-negative breast cancer: literature review

Giorgio Mustacchi; Michelino De Laurentiis

Breast cancer (BC) is the most frequent tumor worldwide. Triple-negative BCs are characterized by the negative estrogen and progesterone receptors and negative HER2, and represent 15% of all BCs. In this review, data on the use of taxanes in triple-negative BCs are analyzed, concluding they are effective in any clinical setting (neoadjuvant, adjuvant, and metastatic). Further, the role of nab-paclitaxel (formulation of albumin-bound paclitaxel) in these tumors is also evaluated. The available data show the clinical potential of nab-paclitaxel based combinations in terms of long-duration response, increased survival, and better quality of life of patients with triple-negative metastatic BC. The ongoing trials will give further information on the better management of this type of tumor.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2017

Programmed Death Ligand 1 (PD-L1) Tumor Expression Is Associated with a Better Prognosis and Diabetic Disease in Triple Negative Breast Cancer Patients

Gerardo Botti; Francesca Collina; Giosuè Scognamiglio; Federica Rao; Valentina Peluso; Rossella De Cecio; Michela Piezzo; G. Landi; Michelino De Laurentiis; Monica Cantile; Maurizio Di Bonito

Triple Negative Breast Cancers (TNBC) subtype is an aggressive disease with poor clinical outcome. The only treatment available is surgery followed by chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) is a trans-membrane protein expressed on a wide variety of cells including immune cells, epithelial and vascular endothelial cells. Recently, PD-1/PD-L1 pathway signaling was described as an adaptive immune resistance mechanism enacted by the tumor cells to evade the immune response. Its presence on tumor cell membranes, acquired for this reason, through time, is an important prognostic value. However, data available in the literature about PD-L1 immunohistochemical expression in breast cancer are often discordant and not uniform, probably for the use of different antibodies clones and the high molecular heterogeneity of the different tumor types. The absence of target therapies, in particular for TNBC, has shifted the clinical attention mainly on the role of PD-L1 in this subtype of breast cancer. In this study, we evaluated tumor and TIL (tumor infiltrating lymphocytes) PDL-1 expression in a series of TNBC, included in Tissue Micro Arrays (TMAs), to define its real prognostic value, optimizing immunohistochemistry method with an “approved for diagnostic assay” antibody. PD-L1 expression directly correlated with proliferation index (Ki-67), glycemia, the presence of diabetes and indirectly with menopausal status, presence of lymph node metastasis and relapse. The analysis of Kaplan–Meier showed that an increased PD-L1 expression was strongly associated with better disease-free survival (DFS) but not correlated with overall survival (OS). Our data confirmed that PD-L1 could be an important marker for prognostic stratification and for planning immune checkpoint inhibitors therapies in patients with TNBC.

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Sabino De Placido

University of Naples Federico II

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Grazia Arpino

University of Naples Federico II

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Gerardo Botti

National Institutes of Health

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Mario Giuliano

University of Naples Federico II

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Ferdinando Riccardi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Francesco Schettini

University of Naples Federico II

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Maurizio Di Bonito

National Institutes of Health

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A. Raffaele Bianco

University of Naples Federico II

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