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Dive into the research topics where Nicola Sgherza is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicola Sgherza.


Molecules | 2014

Challenges and Opportunities of MicroRNAs in Lymphomas

Giacoma De Tullio; Vincenza De Fazio; Nicola Sgherza; Carla Minoia; Simona Serratì; Francesca Merchionne; Giacomo Loseto; Angela Iacobazzi; Antonello Rana; Patrizia Petrillo; Nicola Silvestris; Pasquale Iacopino; Attilio Guarini

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs that control the expression of many target messenger RNAs (mRNAs) involved in normal cell functions (differentiation, proliferation and apoptosis). Consequently their aberrant expression and/or functions are related to pathogenesis of many human diseases including cancers. Haematopoiesis is a highly regulated process controlled by a complex network of molecular mechanisms that simultaneously regulate commitment, differentiation, proliferation, and apoptosis of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC). Alterations on this network could affect the normal haematopoiesis, leading to the development of haematological malignancies such as lymphomas. The incidence of lymphomas is rising and a significant proportion of patients are refractory to standard therapies. Accurate diagnosis, prognosis and therapy still require additional markers to be used for diagnostic and prognostic purpose and evaluation of clinical outcome. The dysregulated expression or function of miRNAs in various types of lymphomas has been associated with lymphoma pathogenesis. Indeed, many recent findings suggest that almost all lymphomas seem to have a distinct and specific miRNA profile and some miRNAs are related to therapy resistance or have a distinct kinetics during therapy. MiRNAs are easily detectable in fresh or paraffin-embedded diagnostic tissue and serum where they are highly stable and quantifiable within the diagnostic laboratory at each consultation. Accordingly they could be specific biomarkers for lymphoma diagnosis, as well as useful for evaluating prognosis or disease response to the therapy, especially for evaluation of early relapse detection and for greatly assisting clinical decisions making. Here we summarize the current knowledge on the role of miRNAs in normal and aberrant lymphopoiesis in order to highlight their clinical value as specific diagnosis and prognosis markers of lymphoid malignancies or for prediction of therapy response. Finally, we discuss their controversial therapeutic role and future applications in therapy by modulating miRNA.


Haematologica | 2013

Outcome of 82 chronic myeloid leukemia patients treated with nilotinib or dasatinib after failure of two prior tyrosine kinase inhibitors

Antonella Russo Rossi; Massimo Breccia; Elisabetta Abruzzese; Fausto Castagnetti; Luigiana Luciano; Antonella Gozzini; Mario Annunziata; Bruno Martino; Fabio Stagno; Francesco Cavazzini; Mario Tiribelli; Giuseppe Visani; Patrizia Pregno; Pellegrino Musto; Carmen Fava; Nicola Sgherza; Francesco Albano; Gianantonio Rosti; Giuliana Alimena; Giorgina Specchia

There have been few reports of a response to dasatinib or nilotinib after failure of two prior sequential tyrosine kinase inhibitors. We report the outcome of 82 chronic phase patients who received nilotinib or dasatinib as third-line alternative tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy. Thirty-four patients failed to respond to nilotinib and were started on dasatinib as third-line tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy while 48 patients were switched to nilotinib after dasatinib failure. Overall, we obtained a cytogenetic response in 32 of 82 patients and major molecular response in 13 patients; disease progression occurred in 12 patients. At last follow up, 70 patients (85.4%) were alive with a median overall survival of 46 months. Our results show that third-line tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy in chronic myeloid leukemia patients after failure of two prior sequential tyrosine kinase inhibitors may induce a response that, in some instances, could prolong overall survival and affect event-free survival.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2015

αβ-Double Negative CD4/CD8 (CD56) T cell (DNTs) in metastatic melanoma: basal frequency and behaviour during Ipilimumab treatment. Preliminary evaluations

Giacoma De Tullio; Sabino Strippoli; Rosa Angarano; Vincenza De Fazio; Nicola Sgherza; Antonio Negri; Anna Albano; Pasquale Iacopino; Attilio Guarini; Michele Guida

Background The knowledge of the immune system role on melanoma has accelerated the translation of key advancements into medical breakthroughs like ipilimumab, an anti-CTLA4 immunomodulating antibody. Ipilimumab works amazingly well only in a limited number of patients and its effects on T-cell subpopulations as well as on immune response remains to be elucidated. Recently, it was described a new subset of immunomodulating T-cells, known as Double-negative T-cells (DNTs) expressing either ab or gδ T-cell receptors (TCR) but lacking CD4, CD8,CD56. The DNTs contribute specifically to antitumor immunity since involved in immune regulation and tolerance acting as regulatory T-cells (Treg) and/or cytotoxic T-cells and they contribute to in vivo anti-melanoma immunity as previously reported [1-5]. However no data are available on their frequency in melanoma, as well as the effects of ipilimimumab on DNTs functional attitude in immunomodulation and on modulating their expression during the therapy. We aimed to evaluate the modulation of DNT frequency in Metastatic Melanoma (MM) patients treated with ipilimumab during the therapy in order to explore their potential role on clinical outcome and therapy response.


Hematological Oncology | 2018

Epidemiology, outcome, and risk factors for infectious complications in myelofibrosis patients receiving ruxolitinib: A multicenter study on 446 patients

Nicola Polverelli; Giuseppe A. Palumbo; Gianni Binotto; Elisabetta Abruzzese; Giulia Benevolo; Micaela Bergamaschi; Alessia Tieghi; Massimiliano Bonifacio; Massimo Breccia; Lucia Catani; Mario Tiribelli; Mariella D'Adda; Nicola Sgherza; Alessandro Isidori; Francesco Cavazzini; Bruno Martino; Roberto Latagliata; Monica Crugnola; Florian Heidel; Costanza Bosi; Adalberto Ibatici; Francesco Soci; Domenico Penna; Luigi Scaffidi; Franco Aversa; Roberto M. Lemoli; Umberto Vitolo; Antonio Cuneo; Domenico Russo; Michele Cavo

Infections represent one of the major concerns regarding the utilization of ruxolitinib (RUX) in patients with myelofibrosis. With the aim to investigate epidemiology, outcome and risk factors for infections in RUX‐exposed patients, we collected clinical and laboratory data of 446 myelofibrosis patients treated with RUX between June 2011 and November 2016 in 23 European Hematology Centers. After a median RUX exposure of 23.5 months (range, 1‐56), 123 patients (28%) experienced 161 infectious events (grades 3‐4 32%, fatal 9%), for an incidence rate of 17 cases per 100 pts/y. The rate of infections tended to decrease over time: 14% of patients developed the first infection within 6 months, 5% between 6 and 12 months, 3.7% between 12 and 18 months, 3.4% between 18 and 24 months, and 7.9% thereafter (P < .0001). Respiratory tract infections were more frequently observed (81 events, 50%), and bacteria were the most frequent etiological agents (68.9%). However, also viral (14.9%) and fungal infections (2.5%) were observed. In multivariate analysis, previous infectious event (HR 2.54; 95% CI, 1.51‐4.28; P = .0005) and high international prognostic score system category (IPSS) (HR 1.53; 95% CI, 1.07‐2.20; P = .021) significantly correlated with higher infectious risk. On the contrary, spleen reduction ≥50% from baseline after 3 months of treatment (P = .02) was associated with better infection‐free survival. Taken together, these findings reinforce the concept of disease severity as the most important risk factor for infections, and describe, for the first time, that a positive therapeutic effect in reducing splenomegaly may also reduce subsequent infectious complications.


international symposium on neural networks | 2015

A supervised CAD to support telemedicine in hematology

Vitoantonio Bevilacqua; Domenico Buongiorno; Pierluigi Carlucci; Ferdinando Giglio; Giacomo Tattoli; Attilio Guarini; Nicola Sgherza; Giacoma De Tullio; Carla Minoia; Anna Scattone; Giovanni Simone; Francesco Girardi; Alfredo Zito; Loreto Gesualdo

This paper presents the design and the implementation of a Computer Aided Diagnosis (CAD) system for the clinical analysis of Peripheral Blood Smears (PBS also called Blood Film). The proposed system is able to count and classify the five types of leucocytes located in the tail of a PBS for computing the leukocyte formula. Image processing and segmentation techniques were used to extract 33 leucocytes features (morphological, chromatic and texture-based). Only 7 features, selected by using the Information Gain Ranking algorithm of Weka platform, were used to evaluate the classification performance of two different classifiers: Back Propagation Neural Network (BPNN) and Decision Tree (DT). From the comparison between the two proposed approaches we can argue that the BPNN performed better than the DT on the validation set. Finally, the Neural Network classifier was evaluated with a test set composed of 1274 leucocytes obtaining good results in terms of Precision (87.9%) and Sensitivity (97.4%).


Hematological Oncology | 2018

Efficacy and safety of ruxolitinib in intermediate‐1 IPSS risk myelofibrosis patients: Results from an independent study

Francesca Palandri; Mario Tiribelli; Giulia Benevolo; Alessia Tieghi; Francesco Cavazzini; Massimo Breccia; Micaela Bergamaschi; Nicola Sgherza; Nicola Polverelli; Monica Crugnola; Alessandro Isidori; Gianni Binotto; Florian H. Heidel; Francesco Buccisano; Bruno Martino; Roberto Latagliata; Marco Spinsanti; Lydia Kallenberg; Giuseppe Palumbo; Elisabetta Abruzzese; Luigi Scaffidi; Antonio Cuneo; Michele Cavo; Nicola Vianelli; Massimiliano Bonifacio

Patients with myelofibrosis at intermediate‐1 risk according to the International Prognostic Score System are projected to a relatively long survival; nonetheless, they may carry significant splenomegaly and/or systemic constitutional symptoms that hamper quality of life and require treatment. Since registrative COMFORT studies included only patients at intermediate‐2/high International Prognostic Score System risk, safety and efficacy data in intermediate‐1 patients are limited. We report on 70 intermediate‐1 patients treated with ruxolitinib according to standard clinical practice that were evaluated for response using the 2013 IWG‐MRT criteria. At 6 months, rates of spleen and symptoms response were 54.7% and 80% in 64 and 65 evaluable patients, respectively. At 3 months, ruxolitinib‐induced grade 3 anemia and thrombocytopenia occurred in 40.6% and 2.9% of evaluable patients, respectively. Notably, 11 (15.9%) patients experienced at least one infectious event ≥grade 2. Most (82.6%) patients were still on therapy after a median follow‐up of 27 months. These data support the need for standardized guidelines that may guide the decision to initiate ruxolitinib therapy in this risk category, balancing benefit expectations and potential adverse effects.


British Journal of Haematology | 2018

Ruxolitinib in elderly patients with myelofibrosis: impact of age and genotype. A multicentre study on 291 elderly patients

Francesca Palandri; Lucia Catani; Massimiliano Bonifacio; Giulia Benevolo; Florian Heidel; Giuseppe A. Palumbo; Monica Crugnola; Elisabetta Abruzzese; Daniela Bartoletti; Nicola Polverelli; Micaela Bergamaschi; Mario Tiribelli; Massimo Breccia; Francesco Cavazzini; Alessia Tieghi; Gianni Binotto; Alessandro Isidori; Bruno Martino; Mariella D'Adda; Costanza Bosi; Elena Sabattini; Umberto Vitolo; Franco Aversa; Adalberto Ibatici; Roberto M. Lemoli; Nicola Sgherza; Antonio Cuneo; Giovanni Martinelli; G. Semenzato; Michele Cavo

Ruxolitinib is a JAK1/2 inhibitor that may control myelofibrosis (MF)‐related splenomegaly and symptoms and can be prescribed regardless of age. While aging is known to correlate with worse prognosis, no specific analysis is available to confirm that ruxolitinib is suitable for use in older populations. A clinical database was created in 23 European Haematology Centres and retrospective data on 291 MF patients treated with ruxolitinib when aged ≥65 years were analysed in order to assess the impact of age and molecular genotype on responses, toxicities and survival. Additional mutations were evaluated by a next generation sequencing (NGS) approach in 69 patients with available peripheral blood samples at the start of ruxolitinib treatment. Compared to older (age 65–74 years) patients, elderly (≥75 years) showed comparable responses to ruxolitinib, but higher rates of drug‐induced anaemia and thrombocytopenia and worse survival. Nonetheless, the ruxolitinib discontinuation rate was comparable in the two age groups. Number and types of molecular abnormalities were comparable across age groups. However, the presence of high molecular risk (HMR) mutations significantly affected survival, counterbalancing the effect of aging. Indeed, elderly patients with <2 HMR mutated genes had a comparable survival to older patients with ≥2 HMR mutations. Given that responses were not influenced by age, older age per se should not be a limitation for ruxolitinib administration. NGS analysis of HMR mutations also confirmed a strong predictive value in elderly patients.


Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2018

A Comparison of the Conditioning Regimens BEAM and FEAM for Autologous Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation in Lymphoma: An Observational Study on 1038 Patients From Fondazione Italiana Linfomi

Jacopo Olivieri; Federico Mosna; Matteo Pelosini; Angelo Fama; Sara Rattotti; Margherita Giannoccaro; Giuseppe Carli; Maria Chiara Tisi; Simone Ferrero; Nicola Sgherza; Anna Maria Mazzone; Dario Marino; Teresa Calimeri; Giacomo Loseto; Francesco Saraceni; Gabriella Tomei; Simona Sica; Giulia Perali; Katia Codeluppi; Atto Billio; Attilio Olivieri; Enrico Orciuolo; Rossella Matera; Piero Maria Stefani; Carlo Borghero; Paola Ghione; Nicola Cascavilla; Francesco Lanza; Patrizia Chiusolo; Silvia Finotto

BEAM (carmustine [bis-chloroethylnitrosourea (BCNU)]-etoposide-cytarabine-melphalan) chemotherapy is the standard conditioning regimen for autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) in lymphomas. Owing to BCNU shortages, many centers switched to fotemustine-substituted BEAM (FEAM), lacking proof of equivalence. We conducted a retrospective cohort study in 18 Italian centers to compare the safety and efficacy of BEAM and FEAM regimens for ASCT in lymphomas performed from 2008 to 2015. We enrolled 1038 patients (BEAM = 607, FEAM = 431), of which 27% had Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), 14% indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), and 59% aggressive NHL. Baseline characteristics including age, sex, stage, B-symptoms, extranodal involvement, previous treatments, response before ASCT, and overall conditioning intensity were well balanced between BEAM and FEAM; notable exceptions were median ASCT year (BEAM = 2011 versus FEAM = 2013, P < .001), Sorror score ≥3 (BEAM = 15% versus FEAM = 10%, P = .017), and radiotherapy use (BEAM = 18% versus FEAM = 10%, P < .001). FEAM conditioning resulted in higher rates of gastrointestinal and infectious toxicities, including severe oral mucositis grade ≥3 (BEAM = 31% versus FEAM = 44%, P < .001), and sepsis from Gram-negative bacteria (mean isolates/patient: BEAM = .1 versus FEAM = .19, P < .001). Response status at day 100 post-ASCT (overall response: BEAM = 91% versus FEAM = 88%, P = .42), 2-year overall survival (83.9%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 81.5% to 86.1%) and progression-free survival (70.3%; 95% CI, 67.4% to 73.1%) were not different in the two groups. Mortality from infection was higher in the FEAM group (subhazard ratio, 1.99; 95% CI, 1.02 to 3.88; P = .04). BEAM and FEAM do not appear different in terms of survival and disease control. However, due to concerns of higher toxicity, fotemustine substitution in BEAM does not seem justified, if not for easier supply.


International Journal of Hematology | 2013

Use of tyrosine kinase inhibitors in a patient with Brugada syndrome and chronic myeloid leukemia

Nicola Sgherza; Antonella Russo Rossi; Paolo Colonna; Paola Carluccio; Mario Delia; Giorgina Specchia

The treatment and prognosis of chronic myeloid leukemia have dramatically changed since the introduction of tyrosine kinase inhibitors, but although several clinical trials have examined their safety with respect to heart function, no data are yet available about the use of these drugs in patients with Brugada syndrome. We report a case of Brugada syndrome diagnosed during tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy in a 69-year-old Caucasian male with meningioma and chronic myeloid leukemia. This case report highlights the importance of an integrated approach among hematologists and cardiologists to ensure appropriate treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors in patients affected by chronic myeloid leukemia who also suffer from Brugada syndrome.


Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2013

Outcome of Allogeneic Peripheral Blood Stem Cell Transplantation by Donor Graft CD3+/Tregs Ratio: A Single-Center Experience

Mario Delia; Domenico Pastore; Anna Mestice; Paola Carluccio; Tommasina Perrone; Francesco Gaudio; Alessandra Ricco; Nicola Sgherza; Francesco Albano; Giorgina Specchia

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Bruno Martino

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Massimo Breccia

Sapienza University of Rome

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Elisabetta Abruzzese

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Giacomo Loseto

National Cancer Research Institute

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