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Dive into the research topics where Paola Vitiello is active.

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Featured researches published by Paola Vitiello.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Maraviroc as intensification strategy in HIV-1 positive patients with deficient immunological response: an Italian randomized clinical trial.

Stefano Rusconi; Paola Vitiello; Fulvio Adorni; Elisa Colella; Emanuele Focà; Amedeo Capetti; Paola Meraviglia; C. Abeli; Stefano Bonora; Marco D’Annunzio; Antonio Di Biagio; Massimo Di Pietro; Luca Butini; Giancarlo Orofino; Manuela Colafigli; Gabriella d’Ettorre; Daniela Francisci; Giustino Parruti; Alessandro Soria; Anna Rita Buonomini; Chiara Tommasi; Silvia Mosti; Francesca Bai; Silvia Di Nardo Stuppino; Manuela Morosi; Marco Montano; Pamela Tau; Esther Merlini; Giulia Marchetti

Background Immunological non-responders (INRs) lacked CD4 increase despite HIV-viremia suppression on HAART and had an increased risk of disease progression. We assessed immune reconstitution profile upon intensification with maraviroc in INRs. Methods We designed a multi-centric, randomized, parallel, open label, phase 4 superiority trial. We enrolled 97 patients on HAART with CD4+<200/µL and/or CD4+ recovery ≤25% and HIV-RNA<50 cp/mL. Patients were randomized 1:1 to HAART+maraviroc or continued HAART. CD4+ and CD8+ CD45+RA/RO, Ki67 expression and plasma IL-7 were quantified at W0, W12 and W48. Results By W48 both groups displayed a CD4 increase without a significant inter-group difference. A statistically significant change in CD8 favored patients in arm HAART+maraviroc versus HAART at W12 (p=.009) and W48 (p=.025). The CD4>200/µL and CD4>200/µL + CD4 gain ≥25% end-points were not satisfied at W12 (p=.24 and p=.619) nor at W48 (p=.076 and p=.236). Patients continuing HAART displayed no major changes in parameters of T-cell homeostasis and activation. Maraviroc-receiving patients experienced a significant rise in circulating IL-7 by W48 (p=.01), and a trend in temporary reduction in activated HLA-DR+CD38+CD4+ by W12 (p=.06) that was not maintained at W48. Conclusions Maraviroc intensification in INRs did not have a significant advantage in reconstituting CD4 T-cell pool, but did substantially expand CD8. It resulted in a low rate of treatment discontinuations. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00884858 http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT00884858


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2011

Comparative evaluation of seven resistance interpretation algorithms and their derived genotypic inhibitory quotients for the prediction of 48 week virological response to darunavir-based salvage regimens

Daniel Gonzalez de Requena; Stefano Bonora; Ottavia Viganò; Andrea Calcagno; C. Cometto; Antonio D'Avolio; Lorena Baietto; Valeria Ghisetti; Silvia Magnani; Stefania Ferramosca; Paola Vitiello; Massimo Galli; Stefano Rusconi; Giovanni Di Perri

BACKGROUND the darunavir genotypic inhibitory quotient (gIQ) has been suggested as one of the predictors of virological response to darunavir-containing salvage regimens. Nevertheless, which resistance algorithm should be used to optimize the calculation of gIQ is still debated. The aim of our study was to compare seven different free-access resistance algorithms and their derived gIQs as predictors of 48 week virological response to darunavir-based salvage therapy in the clinical setting. METHODS patients placed on two nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors + 600/100 mg of darunavir/ritonavir twice daily  ±  enfuvirtide were prospectively evaluated. Virological response was assessed at 48 weeks. Darunavir resistance interpretation was performed according to seven different algorithms, of which two were weighted algorithms. Analysis of other factors potentially associated with virological response at 48 weeks was performed. RESULTS fifty-six treatment-experienced patients were included. Overall, 35 patients (62.5%) had a virological response at 48 weeks. Receiver operator characteristic curve analysis showed that De Meyers weighted score (WS) and its derived gIQ (gIQ WS) were the most accurate parameters defining virological response, and related cut-offs showed the best sensitivity/specificity pattern. In univariate logistic regression analysis, baseline log viral load (P = 0.028), optimized background score ≥ 2 (P = 0.048), WS >5 (P = 0.001) and WS gIQ ≥ 600 (P < 0.0001) were independently associated with virological response. In multivariate analysis, only baseline log viral load (P = 0.008) and WS gIQ ≥ 600 (P < 0.0001) remained in the model. CONCLUSIONS in our study, although different resistance interpretation algorithms and derived gIQs were associated with virological response, gIQ WS was the most accurate predictive model for achieving a successful virological response.


Journal of the International AIDS Society | 2010

Maraviroc intensification for HIV-1-positive immunological non-responders (INRs) despite virological suppression during HAART

Stefano Rusconi; Paola Vitiello; Fulvio Adorni; Elisa Colella; Emanuele Focà; Amedeo Capetti; Paola Meraviglia; C. Abeli; Stefano Bonora; M D'Annunzio; A. Di Biagio; A Di Pietro; Luca Butini; G. Orofino; S Farina; Gabriella D'Ettorre; Daniela Francisci; Alessandro Soria; Anna Rita Buonomini; Chiara Tommasi; Mp Trotta; M Capasso; Esther Merlini; Giulia Marchetti

7‐11 November 2010, Tenth International Congress on Drug Therapy in HIV Infection, Glasgow, UK


Hiv Medicine | 2010

Prevalence of mutations and determinants of genotypic resistance to etravirine (TMC125) in a large Italian resistance database (ARCA).

P. di Vincenzo; Stefano Rusconi; Fulvio Adorni; Paola Vitiello; Franco Maggiolo; Daniela Francisci; A. Di Biagio; Laura Monno; Andrea Antinori; Enzo Boeri; Grazia Punzi; Carlo Federico Perno; Annapaola Callegaro; Bianca Bruzzone; Maurizio Zazzi

To evaluate whether etravirine (TMC125) might be effective in patients failing therapy with current nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs), we analysed the prevalence of TMC125 mutations and the possible determinants of genotypic resistance to this drug among sequences reported to a large database in Italy [Antiretroviral Resistance Cohort Analysis (ARCA)].


Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2013

Factors associated with virological success with raltegravir-containing regimens and prevalence of raltegravir-resistance-associated mutations at failure in the ARCA database

Stefano Rusconi; Paola Vitiello; Fulvio Adorni; Bianca Bruzzone; A. De Luca; Valeria Micheli; Paola Meraviglia; Renato Maserati; M. Di Pietro; Grazia Colao; G. Penco; A. Di Biagio; Grazia Punzi; Laura Monno; Maurizio Zazzi

Raltegravir (RAL) is the only licensed human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) integrase inhibitor. The factors associated with the virological response to RAL-containing regimens and the prevalence of integrase mutations associated with RAL failure deserve further investigation. From the Antiretroviral Resistance Cohort Analysis database, we selected triple-class-experienced subjects failing their current treatment with complete treatment history available. Selection criteria included HIV-RNA, CD4 count and HIV genotype within 3 months of RAL initiation. Factors associated with 24-week response were analysed; genotypic sensitivity scores (GSS) and weighted-GSS were evaluated. Virological response was achieved in 74.3% of 105 subjects. Mutations associated with RAL failure were detected in 12/24 subjects with an integrase genotype, with the prevalence of Q148H + G140S. Each extra unit of GSS (p 0.05, OR 2.62; 95% CI 1.00-6.87). was found to be a associated with response. Weighted-GSS had borderline statistical significance (p 0.063, OR 2.04; 95% CI 0.96-4.33) When stratifying for different cut-offs (<1 as reference, 1-1.49, ≥1.5), a borderline significant increase in the probability of response appeared for GSS ≥1.5 (p 0.053, OR 4.00; 95% CI 0.98-16.25). GSS ≥1 showed the highest sensitivity, 82.6%. Receiver operating characteristic curves depicted the widest area under the curve (0.663, p 0.054) of GSS ≥1. Unresponsiveness to RAL-containing regimens among triple-class-experienced subjects was low. The activity of the background regimen was strongly associated with response. Although few integrase genotypes were available at failure, half of these were without integrase resistance mutations. The substantial rate of RAL failure in the absence of known RAL-resistance mutations may be associated with adherence issues and this issue warrants further analysis in longer observations.


International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2016

Switch from unboosted protease inhibitor to a single-tablet regimen containing rilpivirine improves cholesterol and triglycerides

Antonio Di Biagio; Niccolò Riccardi; Lucia Taramasso; Amedeo Capetti; Giovanni Cenderello; Alessio Signori; Paola Vitiello; Michele Guerra; Giuseppe Vittorio De Socio; Giovanni Cassola; Tiziano Quirino; Claudio Viscoli

This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy, tolerability and potential savings of combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) simplification from an unboosted protease inhibitor (PI) regimen with atazanavir or fosamprenavir to a single-tablet regimen (STR) based on rilpivirine/emtricitabine/tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (RPV/FTC/TDF) among HIV-1-infected patients with HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL. This was a retrospective, multicentre, open-label, 12-week trial. Plasma HIV-1-RNA levels, CD4+ cell counts, cholesterol, triglycerides, bilirubin, glycaemia, creatinine and physical examination were performed at baseline and at scheduled follow-up. All patient costs were calculated and were estimated for 52 weeks of therapy. Fifty-one patients were enrolled [28 male (54.9%)]. At baseline, 30 patients (58.8%) were treated with FTC/TDF, 20 (39.2%) with abacavir/lamivudine and 1 (2.0%) with lamivudine/zidovudine. Thirty-three patients (64.7%) received atazanavir. All patients maintained HIV-RNA <50 copies/mL; the median CD4+ cell count remained stable. Mean triglycerides decreased from 124 mg/dL (range, 39-625) at enrolment to 108.7 mg/dL (range, 39-561) at study end (P = 0.25). At baseline, mean cholesterol was 172.8 ± 38.1 mg/dL and decreased to 161.9 ± 38.6 mg/dL (P = 0.038); likewise, median total bilirubin decreased from 1.07 mg/dL (range, 0.2-4.7) to 0.6 mg/dL (range, 0.13-3.1) (P <0.001). cART-related annual cost reduction with a STR was €3155.47 per patient (-24%). Non-cART patient management expenses were €402.68 vs. €299.10 for atazanavir or fosamprenavir and STR regimens, respectively. Switching to RPV/FTC/TDF from an unboosted PI in virologically suppressed HIV-infected patients is safe and is associated with a reduction in triglycerides, cholesterol and cART-related costs.


Journal of Women & Aging | 2018

Use of quantitative ultrasound as bone mineral density evaluation in an Italian female population living with HIV: A real-life experience

Paola Vitiello; Lucia Taramasso; Elena Ricci; Paolo Maggi; Canio Martinelli; Chiara Gabrielli; Giuseppe Vittorio De Socio; Valentina Di Cristo; Stefano Rusconi; Katia Falasca; Barbara Menzaghi; Alessandro Tebini; Antonio Di Biagio

ABSTRACT This is a multicenter cross-sectional study where we aimed to detect the rate of osteopenia/osteoporosis in an HIV female population (WLWHIV) by means of “heel quantitative ultrasound” (QUS) measurement. We enrolled 273 patients, mean age 48.1 years, 36% menopausal, 96% on combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). Calcaneal measure of bone mass index by QUS revealed osteopenia and osteoporosis in 76 (27.8%) and 16 (5.9%) WLWHIV. Our data underline the correlation between low QUS parameters and traditional risk factors for osteoporosis rather than with cART exposure, thus suggesting the crucial importance of detection and correction of traditional risk factors for osteoporosis in WLWHIV.


JHA - Journal of HIV and Ageing | 2017

Sindrome di Fanconi Tenofovir-correlata in paziente con coinfezione HIV/HBV: un problema di gestione clinica@@@Tenofovir-related Fanconi's syndrome in an HIV/HBV coinfected patient: a clinical challenge

Alessandro Tebini; Claudia Zeroli; Maria Grazia Pizzi; Paola Vitiello; Tiziana Quirino

Riassunto La sindrome di Fanconi è un raro evento avverso di tenofovir disoproxil fumarato (TDF). L’osteonecrosi è una condizione multifattoriale descritta nei pazienti HIV-positivi, il cui meccanismo eziologico è dibattuto. Riportiamo il primo caso di un paziente coinfetto HIV-1/HBV trattato con successo con elvitegravir/cobicistat/emtricitabina/tenofovir alafenamide dopo una sindrome di Fanconi TDF-correlata, con miglioramento della funzionalità renale e completa regressione di una precoce osteonecrosi della testa del femore, con un follow-up di 1 anno. Abstract Fanconi’s syndrome is a rare side-effect of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF). Osteonecrosis is a multifactorial condition reported among HIV-positive patients, whose etiological mechanism is still debated. We report the first case of an HIV-1/HBV coinfected patient successfully treated with elvitegravir/cobicistat/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide after a TDF-related Fanconi’s syndrome, with improvement of renal function and complete regression of an early-stage osteonecrosis of femoral head, with 1-year follow-up.


Journal of the International AIDS Society | 2008

Darunavir exhibits a potent activity as boosted PI in subjects on a salvage antiretroviral regimen

Paola Vitiello; Stefania Ferramosca; M Lo Cicero; Pdv Di Vincenzo; M Capasso; Massimo Galli; Me Moroni; Stefano Rusconi

Methods 20 virologically multifailed subjects received a new HAART regimen composed by two NRTI and DRV as boosted PI; 16/20 were under T20 treatment. Immunovirological response was determined through CD4+ cell counts and viral load (VL) detection. Genotypic analysis on HIV-RNA was performed from plasma samples at the baseline (BL) and on proviral DNA from PBMCs at different time points: BL, week 4, 12, 24, 36 and 48. HIV-RNA was extracted from patients with HIV-RNA >400 copies/ mL and processed by RT-PCR. Nested-PCR for all samples was carried out in order to sequence pol and env gene, proviral DNA was quantified by real-time PCR.


AIDS | 2017

Discontinuation of treatment and adverse events in an Italian cohort of patients on dolutegravir.

Paolo Bonfanti; Giordano Madeddu; Roberto Gulminetti; Nicola Squillace; Giancarlo Orofino; Paola Vitiello; Stefano Rusconi; Benedetto Maurizio Celesia; Paolo Maggi; Elena Ricci

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Fulvio Adorni

National Research Council

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