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Dive into the research topics where Milvia Casato is active.

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Featured researches published by Milvia Casato.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1987

Treatment of idiopathic mixed cryoglobulinemia with alpha interferon

Lorenzo Bonomo; Milvia Casato; Antonella Afeltra; Domenico Caccavo

Seven patients with type II idiopathic mixed cryoglobulinemia were treated with recombinant human leukocyte interferon (alpha interferon). In all of them, a conspicuous reduction of circulating cryoglobulins was noted, together with a definite, remarkable improvement of the clinical pattern. The immunologic parameters (natural killer cell activity and phagocytosis, among others) improved as well; side effects were usually mild and transient. Increases in the cryoglobulin level occurred in a few cases, but they were at least partly sensitive to readministration of alpha interferon treatment. The favorable results obtained in these cases of idiopathic cryoglobulinemia seem to be consistent and prolonged.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Hepatitis C Virus Drives the Unconstrained Monoclonal Expansion of VH1–69-Expressing Memory B Cells in Type II Cryoglobulinemia: A Model of Infection-Driven Lymphomagenesis

Maurizio Carbonari; Elisabetta Caprini; Tiziana Tedesco; Francesca Mazzetta; Valeria Tocco; Milvia Casato; Giandomenico Russo; Massimo Fiorilli

Chronic hepatitis C virus infection causes B cell lymphoproliferative disorders that include type II mixed cryoglobulinemia and lymphoma. This virus drives the monoclonal expansion and, occasionally, the malignant transformation of B cells producing a polyreactive natural Ab commonly encoded by the VH1–69 variable gene. Owing to their property of producing natural Ab, these cells are reminiscent of murine B-1 and marginal zone B cells. We used anti-Id Abs to track the stages of differentiation and clonal expansion of VH1–69+ cells in patients with type II mixed cryoglobulinemia. By immunophenotyping and cell size analysis, we could define three discrete stages of differentiation of VH1–69+ B cells: naive (small, IgMhighIgDhighCD38+CD27−CD21highCD95−CD5−), “early memory” (medium-sized, IgMhighIgDlowCD38−CD27+CD21lowCD95+CD5+), and “late memory” (large-sized, IgMlowIgDlow-negCD38−CD27lowCD21low-negCD5−CD95−). The B cells expanded in cryoglobulinemia patients have a “memory” phenotype; this fact, together with the evidence for intraclonal variation, suggests that antigenic stimulation by hepatitis C virus causes the unconstrained expansion of activated VH1–69+ B cells. In some cases, these cells replace the entire pool of circulating B cells, although the absolute B cell number remains within normal limits. Absolute monoclonal VH1–69+ B lymphocytosis was seen in three patients with cryoglobulinemia and splenic lymphoma; in two of these patients, expanded cells carried trisomy 3q. The data presented here indicate that the hepatitis C virus-driven clonal expansion of memory B cells producing a VH1–69+ natural Ab escapes control mechanisms and subverts B cell homeostasis. Genetic alterations may provide a further growth advantage leading to an overt lymphoproliferative disorder.


Hepatology | 2016

Prospective study of guideline-tailored therapy with direct-acting antivirals for hepatitis C virus-associated mixed cryoglobulinemia.

Laura Gragnani; Marcella Visentini; Elisa Fognani; T. Urraro; Adriano De Santis; Luisa Petraccia; Marie Perez; Giorgia Ceccotti; Stefania Colantuono; Milica Mitrevski; Cristina Stasi; Martina Del Padre; Monica Monti; Elena Gianni; Alessandro Pulsoni; Massimo Fiorilli; Milvia Casato; Anna Linda Zignego

Hepatitis C virus (HCV)‐associated mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC) vasculitis commonly regresses upon virus eradication, but conventional therapy with pegylated interferon and ribavirin yields approximately 40% sustained virologic responses (SVR). We prospectively evaluated the efficacy and safety of sofosbuvir‐based direct‐acting antiviral therapy, individually tailored according to the latest guidelines, in a cohort of 44 consecutive patients with HCV‐associated MC. In two patients MC had evolved into an indolent lymphoma with monoclonal B‐cell lymphocytosis. All patients had negative HCV viremia at week 12 (SVR12) and at week 24 (SVR24) posttreatment, at which time all had a clinical response of vasculitis. The mean (±standard deviation) Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score decreased from 5.41 (±3.53) at baseline to 2.35 (±2.25) (P < 0.001) at week 4 on treatment to 1.39 (±1.48) (P < 0.001) at SVR12 and to 1.27 (±1.68) (P < 0.001) at SVR24. The mean cryocrit value fell from 7.2 (±15.4)% at baseline to 2.9 (±7.4)% (P < 0.01) at SVR12 and to 1.8 (±5.1)% (P < 0.001) at SVR24. Intriguingly, in the 2 patients with MC and lymphoma there was a partial clinical response of vasculitis and ∼50% decrease of cryocrit, although none experienced a significant decrease of monoclonal B‐cell lymphocytosis. Adverse events occurred in 59% of patients and were generally mild, with the exception of 1 patient with ribavirin‐related anemia requiring blood transfusion. Conclusion: Interferon‐free, guideline‐tailored therapy with direct‐acting antivirals is highly effective and safe for HCV‐associated MC patients; the overall 100% rate of clinical response of vasculitis, on an intention‐to‐treat basis, opens the perspective for curing the large majority of these so far difficult‐to‐treat patients. (Hepatology 2016;64:1473‐1482)


Autoimmunity Reviews | 2011

A phase II, single-arm multicenter study of low-dose rituximab for refractory mixed cryoglobulinemia secondary to hepatitis C virus infection.

Marcella Visentini; Serena Ludovisi; Antonio Petrarca; Federica Pulvirenti; Marco Zaramella; Monica Monti; Valentina Conti; Jessica Ranieri; Stefania Colantuono; Elisa Fognani; Alessia Piluso; Carmine Tinelli; Anna Linda Zignego; Mario U. Mondelli; Massimo Fiorilli; Milvia Casato

Eradication of hepatitis C virus (HCV) by antiviral therapy is the treatment of choice for mixed cryoglobulinemia secondary to this infection, but many patients fail to achieve sustained viral responses and need second-line treatments. Several studies have demonstrated that the infusion of the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab is highly effective for refractory mixed cryoglobulinemia, with a clinical response in approximately 80% of patients, although the relapse rate is high. Virtually all published studies employed a rituximab dosage of 375mg/m(2) given four times, a schedule used for treating non-Hodgkins lymphomas. Based on a prior pilot study, we designed a phase II single-arm two-stage study (EUDRACT n. 2008-000086-38) to evaluate the efficacy of a lower dosage of rituximab, 250mg/m(2) given twice, for refractory mixed cryoglobulinemia. We present here the preliminary results in the first 27 patients enrolled. The overall response rate in 24 evaluable patients was 79%, and the mean time to relapse was 6.5months, similar to the 6.7months reported in studies with high-dose rituximab. Side effects were comparable to those seen in patients treated with high-dose. Increase of HCV viral load, reported in some high-dose studies, was not observed in our patients. Low-dose rituximab may provide a more cost/effective and possibly safer alternative for treating refractory HCV-associated mixed cryoglobulinemia.


Autoimmunity Reviews | 2016

International diagnostic guidelines for patients with HCV-related extrahepatic manifestations. A multidisciplinary expert statement

Clodoveo Ferri; Manuel Ramos-Casals; Anna Linda Zignego; Luca Arcaini; Dario Roccatello; Alessandro Antonelli; David Saadoun; Anne Claire Desbois; Marco Sebastiani; Milvia Casato; Peter Lamprecht; Alessandra Mangia; Athanasios G. Tzioufas; Zobair M. Younossi; Patrice Cacoub

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is responsible for both hepatic and extra-hepatic disorders (HCV-EHDs); these latter are correlated on one hand clearly with HCV lymphotropism causing immune-system dysregulation as well as with viral oncogenic potential, and on the other hand probably with chronic inflammatory status causing cardio-metabolic complications as well as neurocognitive disturbances. The spectrum of HCV-EHDs ranges from mild or moderate manifestations, such as arthralgia, sicca syndrome, peripheral neuropathy, to severe, life-threatening complications, mainly vasculitis and neoplastic conditions. Given the clinical heterogeneity of HCV-EHDs, HCV-infected individuals are inevitably referred to different specialists according to the presenting/prevalent symptom(s); therefore, the availability of comprehensive diagnostic guidelines is necessary for a patients whole assessment that is decisive for early diagnosis and correct therapeutic approach of various hepatic and HCV-EHDs, regardless of the specific competencies of different physicians or referral centers. In this respect, a multidisciplinary network of experts, the International Study Group of Extrahepatic Manifestations Related to Hepatitis C Virus Infection (ISG-EHCV), was organized with the intention to formulate diagnostic guidelines for the work-up of possible HCV-EHDs. There was a broad consensus among ISG-EHCV members on the proposed guidelines, which essentially are based on two main levels of patients assessment. At the referral stage, it is proposed that all patients with HCV infection should be invariably examined by means of first-line diagnostic procedures including virological and hepatic parameter evaluation, as well as the detection of clinical findings that may suggest one or more HCV-EHDs. This preliminary assessment should reveal specific HCV-EHDs, which will be deeper analyzed by means of second-line, targeted investigations. The proposed multidisciplinary expert statement represents the first attempt to draw comprehensive diagnostic guidelines for HCV-infected individuals encompassing the entire spectrum of HCV-related disorders, namely typical hepatic manifestations along with less common, often unpredictable HCV-EHDs. The HCV-EHDs may compromise to a substantial degree the overall disease outcome in a significant number of HCV-infected individuals that renders their timely identification and treatment an imperative. In conclusion, the application of standardized but thorough diagnostic guidelines of HCV-EHDs is advisable at the referral stage as well as during the follow-up period of HCV infected patients. It is envisioned that the proposed strategy will result in improvement of clinical outcomes in such patients.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 1999

Mixed cryoglobulinemia secondary to visceral Leishmaniasis.

Milvia Casato; Francesco G. De Rosa; Leopoldo P. Pucillo; Ignazio Ilardi; Bruno Di Vico; Lelio R. Zorzin; Maria Laura Sorgi; Pamela Fiaschetti; Rossella Coviello; Bruno Laganà; Massimo Fiorilli

We describe a case of type II mixed cryoglobulinemia, with monoclonal IgMkappa rheumatoid factor, associated with visceral leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania infantum. Involvement of Leishmania antigen(s) in the formation of cryoprecipitable immune complexes was suggested by the fact that cryoglobulinemic vasculitis subsided after antiparasite therapy and that anti-Leishmania antibodies, as well as rheumatoid factor, were enriched in the cryoprecipitate. We observed 2 additional patients with visceral leishmaniasis and cryoglobulinemic vasculitis. All 3 patients had seemingly contracted leishmaniasis in Italy, were hepatitis C virus negative, and were initially diagnosed as having autoimmune disorders. These findings indicate that Leishmania can be an etiologic agent of type II mixed cryoglobulinemia. This parasitosis should be taken into consideration in the differential diagnosis of vasculitides in endemic areas.


Genes and Immunity | 2014

Genome-wide association study of hepatitis C virus- and cryoglobulin-related vasculitis

Anna Linda Zignego; Genevieve L Wojcik; Patrice Cacoub; Marcella Visentini; Milvia Casato; Alessandra Mangia; Rachel Latanich; Edgar D. Charles; Laura Gragnani; Benjamin Terrier; Valeria Piazzola; Lynn B. Dustin; Salim I. Khakoo; Michael P. Busch; George M. Lauer; Arthur Y. Kim; Laurent Alric; David L. Thomas; Priya Duggal

The host genetic basis of mixed cryoglobulin vasculitis is not well understood and has not been studied in large cohorts. A genome-wide association study was conducted among 356 hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA-positive individuals with cryoglobulin-related vasculitis and 447 ethnically matched, HCV RNA-positive controls. All cases had both serum cryoglobulins and a vasculitis syndrome. A total of 899 641 markers from the Illumina HumanOmni1-Quad chip were analyzed using logistic regression adjusted for sex, as well as genetically determined ancestry. Replication of select single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) was conducted using 91 cases and 180 controls, adjusting for sex and country of origin. The most significant associations were identified on chromosome 6 near the NOTCH4 and MHC class II genes. A genome-wide significant association was detected on chromosome 6 at SNP rs9461776 (odds ratio=2.16, P=1.16E−07) between HLA-DRB1 and DQA1: this association was further replicated in additional independent samples (meta-analysis P=7.1 × 10−9). A genome-wide significant association with cryoglobulin-related vasculitis was identified with SNPs near NOTCH4 and MHC Class II genes. The two regions are correlated and it is difficult to disentangle which gene is responsible for the association with mixed cryoglobulinemia vasculitis in this extended major histocompatibility complex region.


Autoimmunity Reviews | 2015

Efficacy of low-dose rituximab for the treatment of mixed cryoglobulinemia vasculitis: Phase II clinical trial and systematic review

Marcella Visentini; Carmine Tinelli; Stefania Colantuono; Monica Monti; Serena Ludovisi; Laura Gragnani; Milica Mitrevski; Jessica Ranieri; Elisa Fognani; Alessia Piluso; Massimo Granata; Annalisa De Silvestri; Valeria Scotti; Mario U. Mondelli; Anna Linda Zignego; Massimo Fiorilli; Milvia Casato

OBJECTIVE To evaluate whether rituximab at a low dose of 250 mg/m(2) × 2 may be as effective as at higher dosages, most commonly 375 mg/m(2)×4, used in previous studies on the treatment of patients with refractory mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC) vasculitis associated with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. METHODS We conducted a phase 2, single-arm two-stage trial (EUDRACT n. 2008-000086-38) of low-dose rituximab in 52 patients with HCV-associated MC who were ineligible/intolerant or non-responder to antiviral therapy. The primary outcomes were response of vasculitis evaluated by the Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score (BVAS) at months 3, 6 and 12, rate of relapses and time to relapse, and rate of adverse events. Our data were compared with those reported in 19 published studies selected among 291 reviewed in a literature search. RESULTS The cumulative response rate (complete and partial) at month 3 was 81% in our patients, and 86% in 208 patients from studies using high-dose rituximab. The relapse rate and median time to relapse were, respectively, 41% and 6 months in our study, and 32% and 7 months in high-dose studies. Treatment-related adverse events were 11.5% in our study and 19.9% in high-dose studies. None of these differences was statistically significant. CONCLUSION Rituximab at a low dosage of 250 mg/m(2) × 2 is as effective as at higher dosages for treating MC vasculitis. This low-dose regimen may improve the cost/benefit profile of rituximab therapy for MC.


Autoimmunity Reviews | 2013

Clonal expansion and functional exhaustion of monoclonal marginal zone B cells in mixed cryoglobulinemia: the yin and yang of HCV-driven lymphoproliferation and autoimmunity.

Marcella Visentini; Valentina Conti; Cristina Cristofoletti; Cristina Lazzeri; Ramona Marrapodi; Giandomenico Russo; Milvia Casato; Massimo Fiorilli

Monoclonal marginal zone (MZ) B cells expressing a V(H)1-69-encoded idiotype accumulate in HCV-associated mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC). These cells recognize the E2 protein of HCV and their massive clonal expansion reflects the propensity of MZ B cells to proliferate robustly upon antigenic stimulation by microorganisms, a property that makes them prone to neoplastic transformation. V(H)1-69(+) B cells of MC patients are phenotypically heterogeneous and resemble either mature MZ B cells (IgM(+)CD27(+)CD21(high)) or the unusual CD21(low) B cells that accumulate in other immunological disorders such as common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) or HIV infection. The CD21(low) V(H)1-69(+) B cells of MC patients, like those of CVID and HIV patients, are anergic to BCR and TLR9 stimulation and display deregulation of several anergy-related genes; proliferative anergy is also observed in CD21(high) MZ-like V(H)1-69(+) B cells, that over-express the antiproliferative transcriptional repressor Stra13. Upon evolution to splenic marginal zone lymphoma, MZ-like V(H)1-69(+) B cells down-regulate Stra13 and partially recover their capacity to proliferate in response to TLR9 ligation. Like yin and yang, robust clonal expansion and early proliferative anergy may be viewed as the opposite forces balancing the responses of human MZ B cells to chronic microbial stimuli. Disruption of this balance facilitates autoimmunity and lymphoproliferation.


European Journal of Immunology | 2012

Clonal B cells of HCV-associated mixed cryoglobulinemia patients contain exhausted marginal zone-like and CD21 low cells overexpressing Stra13

Marcella Visentini; Maria Cagliuso; Valentina Conti; Maurizio Carbonari; Marina Cibati; Giulia Siciliano; Cristina Cristofoletti; Giandomenico Russo; Milvia Casato; Massimo Fiorilli

A clonal population of B cells expressing a VH1‐69‐encoded idiotype accumulates in hepatitis C virus (HCV) associated mixed cryoglobulinemia (MC). These cells are phenotypically heterogeneous, resembling either typical marginal zone (MZ) B cells (IgM+IgD+CD27+CD21+) or the exhausted CD21low B cells that accumulate in HIV infection or in common variable immunodeficiency. We show that both the MZ‐like and the CD21low VH1‐69+ B cells of MC patients are functionally exhausted, since they fail to respond to TLR and BCR ligands. The proliferative defect of VH1‐69+ B cells can be overcome by co‐stimulation of TLR9 and BCR in the presence of interleukin(IL)‐2 and IL‐10. The MZ‐like VH1‐69+ B cells do not express the inhibitory receptors distinctive of CD21low B cells, but display constitutive activation of extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK) and attenuated BCR/ERK signaling. These cells also express abundant transcripts of Stra13 (DEC1, Bhlhb2, Sharp2, Clast5), a basic helix‐loop‐helix transcription factor that acts as a powerful negative regulator of B‐cell proliferation and homeostasis. Our findings suggest that MZ B cells activated by HCV undergo functional exhaustion associated with BCR signaling defects and overexpression of a key antiproliferative gene, and may subsequently become terminally spent CD21low B cells. Premature exhaustion may serve to prevent the outgrowth of chronically stimulated MZ B cells.

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Massimo Fiorilli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marcella Visentini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Bruno Laganà

Sapienza University of Rome

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Rossella Coviello

Sapienza University of Rome

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Lorenzo Bonomo

The Catholic University of America

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Guido Antonelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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