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Featured researches published by Nicola Santoro.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2006

Fungal Infections in Children With Cancer A Prospective, Multicenter Surveillance Study

Elio Castagnola; Simone Cesaro; Mareva Giacchino; Susanna Livadiotti; Fabio Tucci; Giulio Andrea Zanazzo; Desirè Caselli; Ilaria Caviglia; Stefano Parodi; Roberto Rondelli; Pier Emilo Cornelli; Rossella Mura; Nicola Santoro; Giovanna Russo; Raffaella De Santis; Salvatore Buffardi; Claudio Viscoli; Riccardo Haupt; Mario R. Rossi

Background: Data on epidemiology and survival after fungal infections in patients with cancer are primarily based on studies in adults, whereas few data are available on children. Methods: A prospective, multicenter, 2-year surveillance of fungal infections in children receiving antineoplastic treatment was performed in 15 Italian centers. For each case, defined by means of EORTC-IFIG/NIAID-MSG, information was collected on age, phase of treatment, presence of neutropenia or lymphocytopenia, administration of antifungal drugs and survival. Results: Ninety-six episodes (42 proven [19 fungemias, 23 deep tissue infections], 17 probable and 37 possible invasive mycoses) were reported. Most of them (73%) followed aggressive chemotherapy, 21% allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and only 6% moderately aggressive treatment. Neutropenia was present in 77% of the episodes, and it had a longer duration before deep tissue mycosis as compared with fungemia (P = 0.020). Lymphocytopenia was present in 75% of the episodes observed in nonneutropenic patients. As compared with children with fungemia, patients with probable invasive mycoses had a 25.7-fold increased risk of death, whereas it was 7.7-fold greater in children with possible invasive mycoses and 5-fold higher in those with proven deep tissue infection (P = 0.004). The risk of death was also 3.8-fold higher in patients already receiving antifungals at the time of diagnosis of infection as compared with those not receiving antimycotic drugs. Conclusions: In children with cancer, aggressive antineoplastic treatment, severe and longlasting neutropenia and lymphocytopenia are associated with fungal infections. These features as the clinical pictures are similar to those reported in adults, but in children, the overall and the infection-specific (fungemia or mycosis with deep tissue infection) mortalities are lower.


Leukemia | 2010

Long-term results of the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology (AIEOP) Studies 82, 87, 88, 91 and 95 for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Valentino Conter; M Arico; G Basso; Andrea Biondi; Elena Barisone; Chiara Messina; Rosanna Parasole; G. De Rossi; F Locatelli; Andrea Pession; Nicola Santoro; Concetta Micalizzi; M. Citterio; Carmelo Rizzari; Daniela Silvestri; Roberto Rondelli; L Lo Nigro; Ottavio Ziino; Anna Maria Testi; Giuseppe Masera; Mg Valsecchi

We analyzed the long-term outcome of 4865 patients treated in Studies 82, 87, 88, 91 and 95 for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) of the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology (AIEOP). Treatment was characterized by progressive intensification of systemic therapy and reduction of cranial radiotherapy. A progressive improvement of results with reduction of isolated central nervous system relapse rate was obtained. Ten-year event-free survival increased from 53% in Study 82 to 72% in Study 95, whereas survival improved from 64 to 82%. Since 1991, all patients were treated according to Berlin-Frankfurt-Muenster (BFM) ALL treatment strategy. In Study 91, reduced treatment intensity (25%) yielded inferior results, but intensification of maintenance with high-dose (HD)-L-asparaginase (randomized) allowed to compensate for this disadvantage; in high-risk patients (HR, 15%), substitution of intensive polychemotherapy blocks for conventional BFM backbone failed to improve results. A marked improvement of results was obtained in HR patients when conventional BFM therapy was intensified with three polychemotherapy blocks and double delayed intensification (Study 95). The introduction of minimal residual disease monitoring and evaluation of common randomized questions by AIEOP and BFM groups in the protocol AIEOP-BFM-ALL 2000 are expected to further ameliorate treatment of children with ALL.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Renal Cell Carcinoma in Children: A Clinicopathologic Study

P. Indolfi; Monica Terenziani; Fiorina Casale; Modesto Carli; Gianni Bisogno; Amalia Schiavetti; Antonia Mancini; Roberto Rondelli; Andrea Pession; Alessandro Jenkner; Paolo Pierani; Paolo Tamaro; Bruno De Bernardi; Andrea Ferrari; Nicola Santoro; Maria Giuliano; Giovanni Cecchetto; Luigi Piva; Gianmarco Surico; M. Teresa Di Tullio

PURPOSE To identify the prognostic factors, treatment, and outcome of children affected by renal cell carcinoma (RCC). PATIENTS AND METHODS The series included 41 patients (18 males and 23 females) with a median age of 124 months observed at the 11 Italian Association for Pediatric Hematology and Oncology centers from January 1973 to January 2001. Clinical data, surgical notes, pathologic findings, and summaries of therapy were taken from the charts. RESULTS Seven (17%) of the 41 patients had a papillary histology, and 34 (82.4%) had nonpapillary histology. Eighteen patients (43.9%) had stage I, one patient (2.4%) had stage II, two patients (4.8%) had stage IIIA, 10 patients (24.3%) had stage IIIB, and nine patients (21.9%) had stage IV disease. One patient had a bilateral involvement at diagnosis. Seven patients experienced disease recurrence. Lung and liver were the most common distant lesions and usually were fatal. In this study, the major factor influencing the prognosis was the stage. Event-free survival at 20 years was 53.5% for all patients. Overall survival at 20 years was 54.9% for all patients. CONCLUSION RCC is a rare disease in children and adolescents. This neoplasm has a different clinical presentation in children compared with adults but the same outcome. In our experience, patients with localized disease could be cured by nephrectomy alone. Prospective studies in a larger number of patients are needed to confirm radiation therapy and biologic response modifiers as effective adjunct therapy in RCC stage III. The alternative therapy seems warranted in patients with advanced disease.


European Journal of Cancer | 1999

Bloodstream infections in children with cancer: a multicentre surveillance study of the Italian Association of Paediatric Haematology and Oncology

Claudio Viscoli; Elio Castagnola; Mareva Giacchino; Simone Cesaro; E Properzi; Fabio Tucci; Rossella Mura; Patrizia Alvisi; Giulio Andrea Zanazzo; G Surico; Federico Bonetti; L De Sio; G Izzi; A. Di Cataldo; Ottavio Ziino; F. Massolo; M. Nardi; Nicola Santoro; S Binda

A one-year prospective, multicentre surveillance study on aetiology, main clinical features and outcome of bloodstream infections in children with cancer was conducted in 18 paediatric haematology centres belonging to the Italian Association for Paediatric Haematology and Oncology. A total of 191 bloodstream infections were reported during the study period. Of them, 123 (64%) occurred in neutropenic and 68 (36%) in non-neutropenic patients. Gram-positive cocci caused 45% (85/191) of the episodes, gram-negative rods 41% (78/191), and fungi 9% (18/191). The remaining 5% (10/191) of the episodes were poly-microbial infections. A total of 204 pathogens were isolated (46% gram-positive cocci; 44% gram-negative rods; and 10% fungi). The aetiologic distribution was similar among neutropenic and non-neutropenic patients. A correlation between the infection and the presence of an indwelling central venous catheter was found in 20% (23/114) of the episodes among neutropenic patients and in 55% (23/62) among non-neutropenic patients. Gram-negative micro-organisms were isolated in an unusually high proportion of catheter-related infections (48%). The overall mortality rate from any cause within 30 days from the first positive blood culture was 11%, and was higher among patients who were neutropenic at the onset of the infection than among those who were not neutropenic (15 versus 4%, P = 0.03). In addition, the mortality was significantly higher in recipients of bone marrow transplantation than in patients with acute leukaemia or solid tumour (21, 11 and 6%, respectively) and was also higher in fungaemias and poly-microbial infections (22 and 30%) than in single gram-positive and gram-negative bacteraemias (11 and 6%).


Blood | 2013

Results of the AIEOP AML 2002/01 multicenter prospective trial for the treatment of children with acute myeloid leukemia

Andrea Pession; Riccardo Masetti; Carmelo Rizzari; Maria Caterina Putti; Fiorina Casale; Franca Fagioli; Matteo Luciani; Luca Lo Nigro; Giuseppe Menna; Concetta Micalizzi; Nicola Santoro; Anna Maria Testi; Marco Zecca; Andrea Biondi; Martina Pigazzi; Sergio Rutella; Roberto Rondelli; Giuseppe Basso; Franco Locatelli

We evaluated the outcome of 482 children with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) enrolled in the Associazione Italiana di Ematologia e Oncologia Pediatrica AML 2002/01 trial. Treatment was stratified according to risk group; hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) was used in high-risk (HR) children. Patients with core binding factor leukemia achieving complete remission (CR) after the first induction course were considered standard risk (SR; 99 patients), whereas the others (n = 383) were assigned to the HR group. Allogeneic (ALLO) or autologous (AUTO) HSCT was employed, respectively, in 141 and 102 HR patients after consolidation therapy. CR, early death, and induction failure rates were 87%, 3%, and 10%, respectively. Relapse occurred in 24% of patients achieving CR. The 8-year overall survival (OS), event-free survival (EFS), and disease-free survival (DFS) were 68%, 55%, and 63%, respectively. OS, EFS, and DFS for SR and HR patients were 83%, 63%, and 66% and 64%, 53%, and 62%. DFS was 63% and 73% for HR patients given AUTO-HSCT and ALLO-HSCT, respectively. In multivariate analysis, risk group, white blood cell >100 × 10(9)/L at diagnosis, and monosomal karyotype predicted poorer EFS. Risk-oriented treatment and broad use of HSCT result in a long-term EFS comparing favorably with previously published studies on childhood AML.


Leukemia | 2005

Prevalence and clinical implications of bone marrow involvement in pediatric anaplastic large cell lymphoma

Lara Mussolin; Marta Pillon; E. D'Amore; Nicola Santoro; Alessandra Lombardi; F. Fagioli; Luigi Zanesco; Angelo Rosolen

Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) harbors the reciprocal chromosomal translocation t(2;5)(p23;q35) in approximately 80% of the cases. The genes involved are nucleophosmin (NPM) and anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) and the resulting chimeric NPM–ALK protein is thought to play a key role in the pathogenesis of t(2;5) positive ALCL. Few data on bone marrow (BM) involvement in ALCL have been published and they mostly rely on morphological examination of BM smears. We studied 52 ALCL for NPM–ALK expression by RT-PCR: 47/52 biopsies were positive. In 41 of the 47 cases we obtained the BM at diagnosis and investigated the prevalence of minimal BM infiltration by RT-PCR and real-time PCR. Minimal disseminated disease was positive in 25/41 patients (61%), of whom six had morphologically infiltrated BM. Survival analysis demonstrated a 5-year progression-free survival of 41±11% for patients with molecularly positive BM vs 100% for patients with negative BM (P= 0.001). These results suggest that minimal BM involvement at diagnosis is a common event in pediatric ALCL and that minimal BM disease monitoring could identify patients at risk of relapse.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2008

Long-Term Results of the AIEOP-ALL-95 Trial for Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: Insight on the Prognostic Value of DNA Index in the Framework of Berlin-Frankfurt-Muenster–Based Chemotherapy

Maurizio Aricò; Maria Grazia Valsecchi; Carmelo Rizzari; Elena Barisone; Andrea Biondi; Fiorina Casale; Franco Locatelli; Luca Lo Nigro; Matteo Luciani; Chiara Messina; Concetta Micalizzi; Rosanna Parasole; Andrea Pession; Nicola Santoro; Anna Maria Testi; Daniela Silvestri; Giuseppe Basso; Giuseppe Masera; Valentino Conter

PURPOSE Between May 1995 and August 2000 the Associazione Italiana di Ematologia Oncologia Pediatrica conducted the ALL-95 study for risk-directed, Berlin-Frankfurt-Muenster (BFM) -oriented therapy of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia, aimed at exploring treatment reduction in standard-risk patients (SR) and intensification during continuation therapy in intermediate-risk patients (IR) as randomized questions and treatment intensification in high-risk patients (HR). The prognostic value of DNA index was explored in this setting. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 1,744 patients were enrolled (115, SR; 1,385, IR; and 244, HR). SR patients (DNA index >/= 1.16 and < 1.60; age, 1 to 5 years; and WBC < 20,000, non-T-immunophenotype, with no high-risk features) received a reduced induction therapy (no anthracyclines); IR patients were randomly assigned to receive or not receive vincristine and dexamethasone pulses during maintenance; HR therapy was based on a conventional BFM schedule intensified with three chemotherapy blocks followed by a double reinduction phase. RESULTS The event-free survival and overall survival probabilities at 10 years for the entire group were 72.5% (SE, 1.3) and 83.6% (SE, 0.9); 85.0% (SE, 3.4) and 95.5% (SE, 2.0) in SR, 75.1% (SE, 1.5) and 87.5% (SE, 0.9) in IR, and 51.0% (SE, 3.2) and 57.2% (SE, 3.3) in HR patients, respectively. Patients with a favorable DNA index had superior EFS in both IR (83.8% [2.7%] v 73.9% [1.7%]) and in HR (67.8% [9.4%] and 49.6% [3.5%]). Of the six patients with DNA index less than 0.8, only one remained in remission. CONCLUSION Favorable DNA index was associated with a better prognosis in IR and HR patients defined by presenting clinical criteria and treatment with a BFM-oriented chemotherapy.


Cancer | 2008

Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia and Down Syndrome Presenting Features and Treatment Outcome in the Experience of the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology (AIEOP)

Maurizio Aricò; Ottavio Ziino; Maria Grazia Valsecchi; Giovanni Cazzaniga; Carlo Baronci; Chiara Messina; Andrea Pession; Nicola Santoro; Giuseppe Basso; Valentino Conter

The presenting features and treatment outcome of 120 patients with Down syndrome (DS) and childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were compared with 6237 non‐DS patients treated in the same years.


Haematologica | 2011

Marriage and parenthood among childhood cancer survivors: a report from the Italian AIEOP Off-Therapy Registry

Emanuele Pivetta; Milena Maule; P Pisani; Daniela Zugna; Riccardo Haupt; Momcilo Jankovic; Maurizio Aricò; F. Casale; Anna Clerico; Luca Cordero di Montezemolo; Valentina Kiren; Franco Locatelli; Giovanna Palumbo; Andrea Pession; Marta Pillon; Nicola Santoro; Monica Terenziani; Maria Grazia Valsecchi; Elisa Dama; Corrado Magnani; Franco Merletti; Guido Pastore

Background The aim of this study was to describe the patterns of marriage and parenthood in a cohort of childhood cancer survivors included in the Off-Therapy Registry maintained by the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology. Design and Methods We analyzed a cohort of 6,044 patients diagnosed with cancer between 1960 and 1998, while aged 0 to 14 years and who were 18 years old or older by December 2003. They were followed up through the regional vital statistics registers until death or the end of follow up (October 30, 2006), whichever occurred first, and their marital status and date of birth of their children were recorded. The cumulative probabilities of being married and having a first child were computed by gender and compared by tumor type within the cohort. Marriage and fertility rates (the latter defined as the number of live births per woman-year) were compared with those of the Italian population of the same age, gender, area of residence and calendar period by means of the observed to expected (O/E) ratios. Results During the follow-up period, 4,633 (77%) subjects had not married. The marriage O/E ratios were 0.56 (95% CI: 0.51–0.61) and 0.70 (95% CI: 0.65–0.76) among men and women, respectively. Overall, 263 men had 367 liveborn children, and 473 women had 697 liveborn children. The female fertility O/E ratio was 0.57 (95% CI: 0.53–0.62) overall, and 1.08 (95% CI: 0.99–1.17) when analyses were restricted to married/cohabiting women Conclusions Childhood cancer survivors are less likely to marry and to have children than the general population, confirming the life-long impact of their previous disease on their social behavior and choices. The inclusion of counseling in the strategies of management and long-term surveillance of childhood cancer patients could be beneficial to survivors as they approach adulthood.


American Journal of Hematology | 2010

Prospective study of hemostatic alterations in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Paola Giordano; Angelo Claudio Molinari; Giovanni Carlo Del Vecchio; Paola Saracco; Giovanna Russo; Maria Altomare; Paolo Perutelli; Nicoletta Crescenzio; Nicola Santoro; Marina Marchetti; Domenico De Mattia; Anna Falanga

In a group of newly diagnosed acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) children we evaluated a number of hemostatic and inflammatory markers at diagnosis and at different time points during chemotherapy for the remission induction to identify alterations in the plasma levels of prothrombotic markers before and during the course of chemotherapy. The following plasma markers were evaluated: thrombin‐antithrombin complex (TAT), D‐Dimer, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI‐1), antithrombin, fibrinogen, von Willebrand factor (VWF) antigen and high molecular weight VWF (HMW‐VWF) multimers, P‐selectin, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF‐α), and interleukin 6 (IL‐6). Plasma samples were collected at the following time points: at T0 (baseline) and T1 (+24 days of therapy), T2 (+36 days therapy), and T3 (+64 days therapy). The results show that, at diagnosis, ALL children presented with laboratory signs of increased thrombin generation and fibrin formation (i.e. high TAT and D‐dimer levels), fibrinolysis inhibition (i.e. high PAI‐1 level), endothelial activation (i.e., high HMW‐VWF and soluble P‐selectin levels) and inflammation (i.e. high TNF‐alpha and IL‐6 levels). After starting induction therapy, the thrombin generation markers and inflammatory cytokines significantly decreased. To the opposite, PAI‐1 and P‐selectin significantly increased, suggesting an insult by chemotherapy on the vascular endothelium. These effects were more evident during steroid administration. Symptomatic venous thromboembolism (VTE) episodes developed in two cases during induction therapy, which did not allow the evaluation of the predictive value for VTE of laboratory markers. Am. J. Hematol., 2010.

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Valentino Conter

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Andrea Biondi

University of Milano-Bicocca

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