Paola Tomietto
University of Ferrara
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Featured researches published by Paola Tomietto.
Rheumatology | 2012
Marcello Govoni; Stefano Bombardieri; Alessandra Bortoluzzi; Luisa Caniatti; C. Casu; Fabrizio Conti; Salvatore De Vita; Andrea Doria; I. Farina; Gianfranco Ferraccioli; Elisa Gremese; E. Mansutti; Marta Mosca; Melissa Padovan; Matteo Piga; Angela Tincani; Maria Rosaria Tola; Paola Tomietto; Marco Taglietti; Francesco Trotta; Guido Valesini; Margherita Zen; Alessandro Mathieu
OBJECTIVE To analyse risk factors and comorbidities potentially associated with CNS involvement in a large cohort of Italian patients affected by SLE. METHODS A number of generic (not strictly SLE related) and specific (disease related) risk factors to which all patients have been exposed in the span of 5 years before the first neuropsychiatric (NP) event or before the last available observation were checked for and their distribution was analysed in 959 SLE patients with and without NP involvement; all the first NP events that occurred in a time frame of 10 years were recorded and categorized as SLE related or SLE unrelated. RESULTS Three hundred and twenty-six SLE patients with and 633 SLE patients without NP manifestations were included in the study. A total of 469 NP events were recorded. Headache (26.1%), cerebrovascular events (22.7%), mood disorders (8.9%), seizures (14.4%) and cognitive dysfunctions (9.5%) were the most frequent SLE-related NP events. More risk factors [mean 4.52 (2.44) vs 3.73 (2.01); P < 0.0001] were observed in patients with than without NP involvement. Overall, aPLs, LA and APS were factors more strongly associated with NP involvement. CONCLUSIONS In SLE, NP involvement and aPLs were confirmed as closely related. Furthermore, other modifiable generic risk factors, such as hypertension, carotid vasculopathy and dyslipidaemia, appeared to be related to the occurrence of cerebral vascular accident (CVA) and cognitive dysfunctions, suggesting the need for a more intensive preventive strategy to optimize the management of NP lupus.
Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2013
Luca Quartuccio; Martina Fabris; Elena Pontarini; S. Salvin; Alen Zabotti; Maurizio Benucci; M. Manfredi; Domenico Biasi; Viviana Ravagnani; Fabiola Atzeni; Piercarlo Sarzi-Puttini; Pia Morassi; Fabio Fischetti; Paola Tomietto; Laura Bazzichi; Marta Saracco; Raffaele Pellerito; Marco A. Cimmino; Franco Schiavon; Valeria Carraro; Angelo Semeraro; Roberto Caporali; Lorenzo Cavagna; Roberto Bortolotti; Giuseppe Paolazzi; Marcello Govoni; Stefano Bombardieri; Salvatore De Vita
Objective The polymorphism 158V/F of Fc fragment of IgG (FCGR) type 3A may influence the response to rituximab (RTX) in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We investigated the FCG3A polymorphism in a large cohort of RA patients treated with RTX, also by considering the possible loss of response from month +4 to +6 after RTX and the presence of established predictors of response. Methods The study analysed 212 RA patients. European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) response was evaluated at months +4 and +6 after the first RTX infusion. The FCGR3A polymorphism was analysed by PCR followed by Sanger sequencing. Results The FCGR3A genotypes were associated with EULAR response (good or moderate) at month +6 (response in 34/38 (89.5%) VV vs 70/106 (66%) VF and in 51/77 (66.2%) FF patients; p=0.01), but not at month +4 (response in 32/37 (86.5%) VV vs 69/102 (67.6%) VF and 53/73 (72.6%) FF patients; p=0.09). Loss of response was observed only in VF and FF carriers ((VV vs VF vs FF: 0/37 (0%) vs 11/102 (10.8%) vs 12/73 (16.4%); p=0.02)). Probability of response at month +6 was very high when at least two of the three following items selected by multivariate analysis were present: positive rheumatoid factor and/or anticyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies, previous treatment with ≤1 anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) agent, and 158VV FCGR3A genotype (p<0.0001; OR 7.9, 95% CI 4.1 to 15.1). Conclusions The 158VV FCGR3A genotype was associated with response to RTX in a large cohort of RA patients. Patient genotyping may be helpful to plan RTX treatment, and may be integrated with clinical predictors.
Rheumatology | 2015
Alessandra Bortoluzzi; Carlo Alberto Scirè; Stefano Bombardieri; Luisa Caniatti; Fabrizio Conti; Salvatore De Vita; Andrea Doria; Gianfranco Ferraccioli; Elisa Gremese; E. Mansutti; Alessandro Mathieu; Marta Mosca; Melissa Padovan; Matteo Piga; Angela Tincani; Maria Rosaria Tola; Paola Tomietto; Guido Valesini; Margherita Zen; Marcello Govoni
OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to develop and validate an algorithm to assist the attribution of neuropsychiatric (NP) events to underlying disease in SLE patients. METHODS Phase 1 identified and categorized candidate items to be included in the algorithm for the attribution of an NP event to SLE and their relative weights through a literature-informed consensus-driven process. Using a retrospective training cohort of SLE, phase 2 validated items selected in phase 1 and refined weights through a data-driven process, fitting items as independent variables and expert evaluation (clinical judgement) as reference standard in logistic models. Phase 3 consisted of a validation process using an external multicentre retrospective SLE cohort. RESULTS Phase 1 identified four different items: timing of the NP event, type of event, confounding factors and favouring factors. The training and validating cohorts included 228 and 221 patients, respectively. Each patient experienced at least one NP event characterized using the ACR case definition. In these samples, items selected in phase 1 showed good performance in discriminating patients with NPSLE: the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve using dichotomous outcomes was 0.87 in the training set and 0.82 in the validating set. Relevant cut-offs of the validated score identify events with a positive predictive value of 100% (95% CI 93.2, 100) and 86.3% (95% CI 76.2, 93.2) in the training and validating cohorts, respectively. CONCLUSION A new algorithm based on a probability score was developed and validated to determine the relationship between NP events and SLE.
Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism | 2015
Ennio Lubrano; Antonio Spadaro; Giorgio Amato; Maurizio Benucci; Ilaria Cavazzana; Maria Sole Chimenti; Giovanni Ciancio; Giuseppe D’Alessandro; Rossella De Angelis; Salvatore Lupoli; Alfredo Maria Lurati; Caterina Naclerio; Romualdo Russo; Angelo Semeraro; Paola Tomietto; Carmelo Zuccaro; Gabriele De Marco
OBJECTIVES To systematically review the evidence for a synergistic effect of combining rehabilitation with biological anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF) therapy in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS). METHODS Data were analysed to identify the most effective rehabilitation programmes, the best endpoints for effectiveness, and patient subgroups most likely to benefit from combination therapy. Systematic MEDLINE and Embase searches were performed to identify studies evaluating rehabilitation programmes and biological therapy in patients with AS. Evidence was categorised by study type, and efficacy, adverse effects and other outcomes were summarised. RESULTS Of the 75 studies identified, 13 investigated the combination of a rehabilitation programme with TNF inhibitor therapy, while the remainder studied rehabilitation with standard therapy (often not specified). Data from these few studies suggest that combined rehabilitation plus anti-TNF therapy is more effective in terms of symptom severity, disease activity, disability and quality-of-life indices versus biologic alone or rehabilitation with standard medical therapy, or, in non-comparative studies, compared with baseline. The most effective rehabilitation appears to be supervised or in-patient programmes with an educational component. Available data do not provide guidance on most appropriate endpoints or identify patients most likely to benefit from combination therapy. Combined, TNF inhibitor and rehabilitation therapy appear to have a synergistic effect, possibly due to increased adherence to exercise. Exercise regimes are more effective if supervised and include an education component. CONCLUSIONS Further randomized, controlled trials comparing endpoints and investigating longer-term benefits of combining TNF inhibitors with rehabilitation in different AS subgroups are needed.
Arthritis Care and Research | 2016
Melissa Padovan; Matteo Filippini; Angela Tincani; Elisabetta Lanciano; Eleonora Bruschi; Oscar Epis; P. Garau; Alessandro Mathieu; Eleonora Celletti; Leopoldo Giani; Paola Tomietto; Fabiola Atzeni; Piercarlo Sarzi Puttini; Francesca Zuliani; Salvatore De Vita; Francesco Trotta; Anastasio Grilli; Massimo Puoti; Marcello Govoni
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) with concomitant hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection represents a therapeutic challenge due to the risk of HBV reactivation under immunosuppressive treatment. To date there are few data coming from anecdotal case reports that concern HBV reactivation following treatment with abatacept. This observational retrospective study was aimed to assess the safety profile of abatacept in this particular clinical setting.
Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2004
Paola Tomietto; Elisa Gremese; Barbara Tolusso; Paolo Venturini; Salvatore De Vita; Gianfranco Ferraccioli
The Journal of Rheumatology | 2007
Paola Tomietto; Serena D'Agostini; Virginia Annese; Salvatore De Vita; Gianfranco Ferraccioli
The Journal of Rheumatology | 2005
Martina Fabris; Barbara Tolusso; Emma Di Poi; Paola Tomietto; Stefania Sacco; Elisa Gremese; Gianfranco Ferraccioli
Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology | 2018
Miguel A. González-Gay; Carlomaurizio Montecucco; Albert Selva-O'Callaghan; Ernesto Trallero-Araguas; Ovynd Molberg; Helena Andersson; Jorge Rojas-Serrano; Diana Isabel Perez-Roman; Jutta Bauhammer; Christoph Fiehn; Rossella Neri; Simone Barsotti; Hannes M. Lorenz; Andrea Doria; Anna Ghirardello; Florenzo Iannone; Margherita Giannini; Franco Franceschini; Ilaria Cavazzana; Konstantinos Triantafyllias; Maurizio Benucci; Maria Infantino; M. Manfredi; Fabrizio Conti; Andreas Schwarting; Giandomenico Sebastiani; Annamaria Iuliano; Giacomo Emmi; Elena Silvestri; Marcello Govoni
Reumatismo | 2011
Paola Tomietto; V. Annese; S. D’Agostini; E. Gremese; E. Di Poi; G. Ferraccioli