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Dive into the research topics where Nadia Piva is active.

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Featured researches published by Nadia Piva.


Leukemia | 2001

Clinical importance of interphase cytogenetics detecting occult chromosome lesions in myelodysplastic syndromes with normal karyotype

Gian Matteo Rigolin; Renato Bigoni; Raffaella Milani; Francesco Cavazzini; Maria Grazia Roberti; Antonella Bardi; Paola Agostini; M G Della Porta; Alessia Tieghi; Nadia Piva; Antonio Cuneo; G Castoldi

At diagnosis, approximately half of myelodysplastic (MDS) patients presents a normal karyotype by conventional cytogenetic analysis (CCA). Fluorescent in situhybridization (FISH) is more sensitive than CCA allowing for the detection of minor clones and of submicroscopic lesions. We have analyzed by FISH 101 MDS patients with normal karyotype for the occurrence of the abnormalities which are most frequently observed in MDS (ie −5/5q−, −7/7q−, +8, 17p−). In 18 patients, 15 to 32% of interphase cells were found to carry one FISH abnormality. Six patients presented trisomy 8, five had del(5)(q31), five del(7)(q31), one monosomy 7 and one del(17)(p13). FISH abnormalities were more frequently observed among patients with an increased percentage of bone marrow blasts (P = 0.001). FISH abnormalities were also associated with a higher rate of progression into AML (13/18 vs 12/83, P < 0.001) and were predictive for a worse prognosis (P < 0.001). Multivariate analysis indicated that FISH positivity and IPSS risk group were independent predictors for a poor survival (P = 0.0057 and 0.0123, respectively) and for leukemic transformation (P = 0.0006 and 0.035, respectively). Leukemic transformation in FISH-positive patients was associated in all cases with an expansion of the abnormal clone. Our data demonstrated that a significant proportion of MDS patients with normal karyotype presented, if analyzed by FISH, clones of cytogenetically abnormal cells which played a determinant role in the progression of the disease. The presence of FISH abnormalities identified a group of MDS patients with normal karyotype characterized by an inferior prognosis.


British Journal of Haematology | 1998

Exposure to myelotoxic agents and myelodysplasia: case–control study and correlation with clinicobiological findings

Gian Matteo Rigolin; Antonio Cuneo; Maria Grazia Roberti; Antonella Bardi; Renato Bigoni; Nadia Piva; Claudia Minotto; Paola Agostini; Cristiano De Angeli; Laura del Senno; Romedio Spanedda; Gianluigi Castoldi

To better define the role of exposure to myelotoxic agents in the genesis of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), we carried out (a) a case–control study for the determination of the relative risk (RR) of developing MDS, including 178 consecutive patients and 178 sex‐ and age‐matched controls; (b) a study of clinicobiological features in MDS arising after occupational exposure to myelotoxic agents and in MDS in ‘non‐exposed’ patients. The definition of the ‘exposure’ status was based on a predetermined questionnaire, with calculation of an ‘exposure’ index (hours/day × days/year × years). Cumulative exposure to pesticides or to organic solvents, for >2400 h, was recorded in 48 and 25 MDS patients, respectively, compared to 27 and four controls (P < 0.00001; RR 3.74; 95% confidence interval 2.02–5.37). Older age and an excess of refractory anaemia with ringed sideroblasts and refractory anaemia with excess of blasts was noted among ‘exposed’ MDS‐patients (group 1), compared to non‐exposed MDS‐patients (group 2). 68.3% patients in group 1 had clonal chromosome changes, compared with 43.2% patients in group 2. Complex karyotypes, −7/7q−, −5/5q−, +8, 7p and 17p aberrations were seen more frequently in group 1, whereas a normal karyotype, isolated 5q− or 20q− occurred more frequently in group 2. The association of exposure to myelotoxic agents with older age at presentation and with unfavourable chromosome changes accounted for the shorter survival observed in ‘exposed’ patients. These data show that occupational exposure to pesticides and organic solvents in our region resulted in an increased RR of developing MDS and that a distinct cytogenetic profile was associated with MDS in ‘exposed’ patients. These findings provide strong indirect evidence that these agents may play a role in the pathogenesis of MDS, preferentially targeting some of the chromosome regions which are frequently involved in therapy‐related myeloid neoplasias.


British Journal of Haematology | 1992

Non-radioactive in situ hybridization for the detection and monitoring of trisomy 12 in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia

Antonio Cuneo; Iwona Wlodarska; M. Sayed Aly; Nadia Piva; M. G. Carli; Franca Fagioli; A. Tallarico; I. Pazzi; L. Ferrari; J.J. Cassiman; Herman Van den Berghe; G Castoldi

Summary. Non‐radioactive in situ hybridization (NISII) with a chromosome 12‐specific alpha satellite probe was performed on 20 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) with normal karyotype (15 cases) or with inadequate mitotic yield (5 cases) from mitogen‐stimulated cultures.


Leukemia Research | 1992

Morphologic, immunologic and cytogenetic studies in acute myeloid leukemia following occupational exposure to pesticides and organic solvents.

Antonio Cuneo; Franca Fagioli; Isabella Pazzi; Antonella Tallarico; Rita Previati; Nadia Piva; M.Gretel Carli; Massimo Balboni; Gianluigi Castoldi

In order to analyze the correlation between environmental exposure and the clinicopathological picture in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), cytogenetic, cyto-immunologic and clinical studies were performed in 70 newly diagnosed AML patients, 30 of which were anamnestically exposed to pesticides (21 cases) or to organic solvents (9 cases). Clonal chromosome aberrations, with involvement of chromosome 5 and/or 7 were more frequently encountered among exposed patients. While the classical t(15;17), t(8;21) and t(9;11) were detected more frequently among non-exposed patients, other recurring chromosome changes in the exposed group were: rearrangements leading to total or partial monosomy 17p (5 cases), structural aberrations involving the band 16q22 (4 cases), trisomy 11q (2 cases), breaks involving bands 6p23, 7p14, 11q13 (2 cases each). Cytologically, trilineage myelodysplasia was observed in 21 exposed patients, whereas morphologic aberrations of the non-blast cell population were confined to a minority of cells in most patients non-exposed. Immunologic studies revealed positivity for the CD34 stem cell marker in 80% exposed patients vs 22% in the non-exposed group. Conventional chemotherapy achieved complete remission in 3/21 patients exposed and in 16/32 patients non-exposed. Median survival was 2 months in the former group and 9 months in the latter group. These findings show that AML following occupational exposure to pesticides and organic solvents may represent a distinct cytogenetic and clinicopathological entity.


British Journal of Haematology | 1995

Atypical chronic lymphocytic leukaemia witht(ll;14)(ql3;q32): karyotype evolution and prolymphocytic transformation

Antonio Ciineo; Massimo Balboni; Nadia Piva; Gian Matteo Rigolin; Maria Grazia Roberti; Cristina Mejak; Sabrina Moretti; Renato Bigoni; Rosa Balsamo; Pierluigi Cavazzini; Gianluigi Castoldi

Summary. In order to define better the cytological and clinical features of atypical B‐cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B‐CLL) with t(ll;14)(ql3;q32), sequential morphologic immunological and cytogenetic studies were performed in seven patients belonging to a series of 72 consecutive cases presenting with a diagnosis of CLL or atypical CLL according to the FAB criteria.


Leukemia | 1997

Chromosome aberrations in atypical chronic lymphocytic leukemia : a cytogenetic and interphase cytogenetic study

Renato Bigoni; Antonio Cuneo; Maria Grazia Roberti; Antonella Bardi; Gian Matteo Rigolin; Nadia Piva; Gianluigi Scapoli; Romedio Spanedda; Massimo Negrini; Florencia Bullrich; Maria Luisa Veronese; Carlo M. Croce; G Castoldi

To define better the chromosomal profile of atypical chronic lymphocytic leukemia (aCLL), cytogenetic and interphase cytogenetic studies were performed in 43 cases, using mitogen-stimulated cultures and DNA probes detecting the two most frequently occurring aberrations in CLL, ie +12 and 13q14 deletions. All cases showed monoclonal CD5/CD19-positive lymphocytosis, with more than 10% large lymphocytes and/or prolymphocytes in peripheral blood smears and reactivity with FMC7, or bright expression of surface immunoglobulins in a fraction of the cases. Karyotype aberrations were detected in 27 of 43 cases (62.8%). Recurrent chromosome changes were +12 (nine cases), 13q14 aberrations (five cases), 11q anomalies (three cases), 6q21-q23 abnormalities and 4q anomalies with different breakpoints (two cases each). Additional chromosome changes were seen in four cases with +12, in three cases with 13q14 anomalies, in two cases with 11q anomalies, in one case with 6q and 4q anomalies. Trisomy 12 was associated with 13q14 anomalies in three cases, one of which also had an 11q abnormality; other associations, found in one case each, were: 13q14 deletion with a 6q anomaly, 11q anomaly with 13q− and 7q−, a 6q anomaly with 7q− and +12. Interphase cytogenetics confirmed the results of chromosome banding analysis and showed that six patients with normal karyotype or no mitosis in fact had concomitant +12 and 13q14 deletion in four cases and isolated +12 or 13q14 deletion in one case each, with a resultant 76% overall incidence of cytogenetic abnormalities. The presence of +12, 13q14 deletions, 11q, and 6q21-q23 anomalies in 19 cases was associated with a 2-month median interval between diagnosis and start of treatment, as compared with a 24-month median interval in 14 cases with normal karyotype or non-recurrent chromosome changes (P = 0.003). We conclude that aCLL is characterized by a relatively high incidence of chromosome anomalies, with recurrent chromosome changes, involving chromosomes 12, 13q14, 6q21q23, 11q, and, possibly, 4q. The presence of complex karyotypes, with concomitant abnormalities of 13q, +12, 6q, 11q, suggests that the development of sequential chromosome changes, rather than any single specific anomaly, may underlie leukemogenesis in this cytologic subset of CLL, partially accounting for the relatively aggressive clinical course.


Cancer | 1992

Distinct cytogenetic and clinicopathologic features in acute myeloid leukemia after occupational exposure to pesticides and organic solvents

Franca Fagioli; Antonio Cuneo; Nadia Piva; Maria Gretel Carli; Rita Previati; Massimo Balboni; Paolo Tomasi; Daniele Cariani; Gianluigi Scapoli; Gianluigi Castoldi

Background. To study the correlation of environmental exposure to potentially mutagenic agents and the clinicopathologic picture in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), clinical features, morphologic characteristics, immuno‐phenotype, and cytogenetics were studied in 59 patients with newly diagnosed AML.


Leukemia | 1998

Fluorescence in situ hybridization for the detection and monitoring of the Ph-positive clone in chronic myelogenous leukemia: comparison with metaphase banding analysis

Antonio Cuneo; Renato Bigoni; B Emmanuel; E Smit; Gian Matteo Rigolin; Maria Grazia Roberti; Antonella Bardi; Nadia Piva; Gianluigi Scapoli; G Castoldi; H. Van den Berghe; A. Hagemeijer

In order to analyze the efficiency of interphase FISH for the detection and monitoring of Ph+ cells in chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) under interferon (IFN) treatment, the following experiments were performed: (1) 98 specimens derived from 32 patients were analyzed in parallel by dual-color FISH and by conventional chromosome analysis (CCA). A 300/200 kb BCR/ABL probe was used in all tests and a smaller 35.5/39 kb probe was tested in parallel in 22 BM samples; (2) 30 BM samples were prepared by direct harvest and by 24-h culture and were analyzed in parallel; (3) PB and BM samples obtained simultaneously from 11 patients were analyzed. The cut-off point for the recognition of BCR/ABL fusion was set at 2.4%, calculated as the mean percent of false positivity in 11 controls plus 3 s.d. A very close correlation was observed (r = 0.994, r2 = 0.988, P < 0.0001) between the percentages of ph+ cells as assessed by CCA and by interphase FISH in 98 samples (26 at diagnosis). There was a moderate overestimation of the frequency of Ph+ cells by FISH with respect to CCA, that was more evident at low-to-medium values of Ph positivity. Seven specimens without Ph+ metaphases (17–50 cells analyzed) were shown to carry 2.5–8% interphase cells with BCR/ABL fusion. Similar percentages of BCR/ABL+ nuclei were recorded in 22 samples hybridized using the 300/200 kb and the 35.5/39 kb probe-sets (variation range: 0–5%, mean 2.3%). A very good correlation between the frequency of Ph+ interphase cells was observed when analyzing in parallel BM preparations after direct harvest and after 24-h culture. Underestimation of the percentage of BCR/ABL+ cells was noted to occur in 2/11 PB samples, compared to BM samples, the remaining nine cases showing superimposable results at either sites. We arrived at the following conclusions: (1) dual-color FISH enables an accurate detection and monitoring of the size of the Ph-positive clone in CML at diagnosis and after IFN-therapy; (2) FISH is more accurate than CCA, especially at low levels of Ph-positive cells; (3) testing of directly harvested BM samples is feasible and accurate, giving the opportunity to perform centralized FISH analysis in the context of multicentre trials; (4) the percentage of BCR/ABL+ PB cells usually, though not invariably, reflects the frequency of mutated cells in the BM.


British Journal of Haematology | 1996

Richter's syndrome in a case of atypical chronic lymphocytic leukaemia with the t(11;14)(q13;q32): role for a p53 exon 7 gene mutation

Antonio Cuneo; Cristiano De Angeli; Maria Grazia Roberti; Nadia Piva; Renato Bigoni; Domenica Gan dini; Gian Matteo Rigolin; Sabrina Moretti; Pierluigi Cavaz zini; Laura del Senno; Gianluigi C Astoldi

Clinicobiological, histological, cytogenetic and molecular genetic studies were performed in a case of atypical B‐cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B‐CLL) with the t(11;14)(q13;q32) evolving into Richters syndrome (RS) in order (a) to determine the clonal relationship between the cell of origin for B‐CLL and RS, and (b) to analyse genetic events underlying the disease progression in this patient.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 1993

Chromosome aberrations in CD34-positive acute myeloid leukemia: Correlation with clinicopathologic features☆

Franca Fagioli; Antonio Cuneo; Maria Gretel Carli; Antonella Bardi; Nadia Piva; Rita Previati; Gian Matteo Rigolin; Luisa Ferrari; Romedio Spanedda; Gianluigi Castoldi

Morphologic, immunologic, and cytogenetic features were studied in 30 newly diagnosed patients with CD34-positive (CD34+) de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in comparison with 30 patients with CD34-negative (CD34-) AML. Karyotype at diagnosis was abnormal in 25/30 CD34+ AML patients, of which nine had major karyotype aberrations (MAKA). Clonal chromosome changes were detected in 9/30 patients with CD34- AML. The most frequent chromosome aberration in CD34+ patients was -5/5q-, an aberration showing a strong association with the M2 FAB subtype of AML. Other recurring chromosome changes involved chromosome 16q (four cases) and chromosome 17p (three cases). Total or partial monosomy 7q was detected in three cases. Among CD34- AML, two patients had the classical t(15;17) and two had structural aberrations of 6q. Among patients with CD34+ AML, nine had MAKA in association with trilineage myelodysplasia (TMDS). TMDS was infrequent in CD34+ AML without MAKA and in CD34- AML. Complete remission (CR) was achieved in 8/30 CD34+ AML (26%), as compared with 22/30 CD34- AML (73%), and median survival was 2 months in the former group and 8 months in the latter. No patient with CD34+ AML and MAKA achieved CR, whereas 8/21 CD34+ AML without complex chromosome changes or with normal karyotype achieved CR. In conclusion, a distinct cytogenetic profile may be associated with CD34+ AML. Cytogenetic findings in CD34+ AML may be clinically relevant in that they may disclose a subset of patients with MAKA with a low CR rate.

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Franca Fagioli

Boston Children's Hospital

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