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Dive into the research topics where Pier Paolo Piccaluga is active.

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Featured researches published by Pier Paolo Piccaluga.


Leukemia | 2007

Myeloid sarcoma: clinico-pathologic, phenotypic and cytogenetic analysis of 92 adult patients.

Stefano Pileri; Stefano Ascani; M C Cox; Cristina Campidelli; Francesco Bacci; Milena Piccioli; Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Claudio Agostinelli; S Asioli; Domenico Novero; M Bisceglia; Maurilio Ponzoni; A Gentile; P Rinaldi; V Franco; D Vincelli; A Pileri; R Gasbarra; Brunangelo Falini; Pier Luigi Zinzani; Michele Baccarani

Myeloid sarcoma (MS) is a rare neoplasm whose knowledge is largely based on case reports and/or technically dated contributions. Ninety-two MSs in adulthood with clinical data available were evaluated both morphologically and immunohistochemically. Seventy-four cases were also studied by fluorescent in situ hybridization on tissue sections and/or conventional karyotyping on bone marrow or peripheral blood. Histologically, 50% of the tumors were of the blastic type, 43.5% either monoblastic or myelomonocytic and 6.5% corresponded to different histotypes. CD68/KP1 was the most commonly expressed marker (100%), followed by myeloperoxidase (83.6%), CD117 (80.4%), CD99 (54.3%), CD68/PG-M1 (51%), CD34 (43.4%), terminal-deoxy-nucleotidyl-transferase (31.5%), CD56 (13%), CD61/linker for activation of T cells (2.2%), CD30 (2.2%) and CD4 (1.1%). Foci of plasmacytoid monocyte differentiation were observed in intestinal cases carrying inv16. Chromosomal aberrations were detected in about 54% of cases: monosomy 7(10.8%), trisomy 8(10.4%) and mixed lineage leukemia-splitting (8.5%) were the commonest abnormalities, whereas t(8;21) was rare (2.2%). The behavior was dramatic irrespective of presentation, age, sex, phenotype and cytogenetics. Most if not all, long survivors received bone-marrow transplantation. The present report expands the spectrum of our knowledge showing that MS has frequent monoblastic/myelomonocytic differentiation, displays distinctive phenotypic profile, carries chromosomal aberrations other than t(8;21), and requires supra-maximal therapy.


The Journal of Pathology | 1997

Antigen retrieval techniques in immunohistochemistry: comparison of different methods.

Stefano Pileri; Giovanna Roncador; Claudio Ceccarelli; Milena Piccioli; Aspasia Briskomatis; Elena Sabattini; Stefano Ascani; Donatella Santini; Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Ornella Leone; Stefania Damiani; Cesarina Ercolessi; Federica Sandri; Federica Pieri; Lorenzo Leoncini; Brunangelo Falini

Routine sections of normal and pathological samples fixed in 10 per cent buffered formalin or B5, including EDTA‐decalcified bone‐marrow biopsies, were tested with 61 antibodies following heating in three different fluids: 0·01 m citrate buffer (pH 6·0), 0·1 m Tris–HCl (pH 8·0), and 1 mm EDTA–NaOH solution (pH 8·0). The sections underwent either three cycles of microwave treatment (5 min each) or pressure cooking for 1–2 min. The alkaline phosphatase/anti‐alkaline phosphatase (APAAP) technique was used as the standard detection method; with 16 antibodies a slightly modified streptavidin–biotin complex (SABC)‐immunoperoxidase technique was applied in parallel. The results obtained were compared with those observed without any antigen retrieval (AR), or following section digestion with 0·05 per cent protease XIV at 37°C for 5 min. Chess‐board titration tests showed that all antibodies but one profited by AR. Protease XIV digestion represented the gold standard for five antibodies, while 55 produced optimal results following the application of heat‐based AR. By comparison with the other fluids, EDTA appeared to be superior in terms of both staining intensity and the number of marked cells. These results were independent of tissue processing, immunohistochemical approach, and heating device. Pressure cooking was found to be more convenient on practical grounds, as it allowed the simultaneous handling of a large number of slides and a time saving of 1 min 30 s, representing the proper time for the treatment.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2006

Marker Expression in Peripheral T-Cell Lymphoma: A Proposed Clinical-Pathologic Prognostic Score

Philip Went; Claudio Agostinelli; Andrea Gallamini; Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Stefano Ascani; Elena Sabattini; Francesco Bacci; Brunangelo Falini; Teresio Motta; Marco Paulli; Tullio Artusi; Milena Piccioli; Pier Luigi Zinzani; Stefano Pileri

PURPOSE Although peripheral T-cell lymphoma, unspecified (PTCL/U), is the most common T-cell tumor in Western countries, no study to date has been based on the application of a wide panel of markers to a large series of patients and assessed the impact of phenotype on survival. We evaluated the expression of 19 markers in 148 PTCLs/U and 45 PTCLs of the angioimmunoblastic type (AILD). PATIENTS AND METHODS The analysis was performed on tissue microarrays by immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization. Clinical data were available in 93 PTCL/U patients, most of whom had been included in a previous study proposing a prognostic index (PIT). RESULTS An aberrant phenotype with frequent loss of CD5 and/or CD7 was typical for PTCLs, irrespective of whether they were U or AILD. Aberrantly expressed proteins rarely included CD20, CD15, and CD30. Positivity for Epstein-Barr virus-associated small RNAs and CD15 expression emerged as adverse prognostic factors. Among PTCLs/U, the proliferation-associated protein Ki-67 turned out to be prognostically relevant and was integrated in a new predictive score, incorporating age (> 60 years), high lactate dehydrogenase, poor performance status, and Ki-67 > or = 80%. This score was associated with the patient outcome (P < .0001) and was found to be more robust than PIT (P = .0043) in the present series. CONCLUSION Our retrospective analysis shows a wide range of protein expression in PTCLs and proposes a new prognostic index. The latter represents one of the first examples of mixed score (including patient- and tumor-specific factors) applied to malignant lymphomas and may be the basis for future prospective therapeutic trials.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

Gene expression analysis of peripheral T cell lymphoma, unspecified, reveals distinct profiles and new potential therapeutic targets

Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Claudio Agostinelli; Maura Rossi; Katia Basso; Simonetta Zupo; Philip Went; Ulf Klein; Pier Luigi Zinzani; Michele Baccarani; Riccardo Dalla Favera; Stefano Pileri

Peripheral T cell lymphoma, unspecified (PTCL/U), the most common form of PTCL, displays heterogeneous morphology and phenotype, poor response to treatment, and poor prognosis. We demonstrate that PTCL/U shows a gene expression profile clearly distinct from that of normal T cells. Comparison with the profiles of purified T cell subpopulations (CD4+, CD8+, resting [HLA-DR-], and activated [HLA-DR+]) reveals that PTCLs/U are most closely related to activated peripheral T lymphocytes, either CD4+ or CD8+. Interestingly, the global gene expression profile cannot be surrogated by routine CD4/CD8 immunohistochemistry. When compared with normal T cells, PTCLs/U display deregulation of functional programs often involved in tumorigenesis (e.g., apoptosis, proliferation, cell adhesion, and matrix remodeling). Products of deregulated genes can be detected in PTCLs/U by immunohistochemistry with an ectopic, paraphysiologic, or stromal location. PTCLs/U aberrantly express, among others, PDGFRalpha, a tyrosine-kinase receptor, whose deregulation is often related to a malignant phenotype. Notably, both phosphorylation of PDGFRalpha and sensitivity of cultured PTCL cells to imatinib (as well as to an inhibitor of histone deacetylase) were found. These results, which might be extended to other more rare PTCL categories, provide insight into tumor pathogenesis and clinical management of PTCL/U.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2003

Molecular Characterization of a Non–Babesia divergens Organism Causing Zoonotic Babesiosis in Europe

Barbara L. Herwaldt; Simone M. Cacciò; Filippo Gherlinzoni; Horst Aspöck; Susan B. Slemenda; Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Giovanni Martinelli; Renate Edelhofer; Ursula Hollenstein; Giovanni Poletti; Silvio Pampiglione; Karin Löschenberger; Sante Tura; Norman J. Pieniazek

In Europe, most reported human cases of babesiosis have been attributed, without strong molecular evidence, to infection with the bovine parasite Babesia divergens. We investigated the first known human cases of babesiosis in Italy and Austria, which occurred in two asplenic men. The complete 18S ribosomal RNA (18S rRNA) gene was amplified from specimens of their whole blood by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). With phylogenetic analysis, we compared the DNA sequences of the PCR products with those for other Babesia spp. The DNA sequences were identical for the organism from the two patients. In phylogenetic analysis, the organism clusters with B. odocoilei, a parasite of white-tailed deer; these two organisms form a sister group with B. divergens. This evidence indicates the patients were not infected with B. divergens but with an organism with previously unreported molecular characteristics for the 18S rRNA gene.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012

The coding genome of splenic marginal zone lymphoma: activation of NOTCH2 and other pathways regulating marginal zone development

Davide Rossi; Vladimir Trifonov; Marco Fangazio; Alessio Bruscaggin; Silvia Rasi; Valeria Spina; Sara Monti; Tiziana Vaisitti; Francesca Arruga; Rosella Famà; Carmela Ciardullo; Mariangela Greco; Stefania Cresta; Daniela Piranda; Antony B. Holmes; Giulia Fabbri; Monica Messina; Andrea Rinaldi; Jiguang Wang; Claudio Agostinelli; Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Marco Lucioni; Fabrizio Tabbò; Roberto Serra; Silvia Franceschetti; Clara Deambrogi; Giulia Daniele; Valter Gattei; Roberto Marasca; Fabio Facchetti

Notch2 mutations represent the most frequent lesion in splenic marginal zone lymphoma.


Blood | 2009

Identification and molecular characterization of recurrent genomic deletions on 7p12 in the IKZF1 gene in a large cohort of BCR-ABL1-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients: on behalf of Gruppo Italiano Malattie Ematologiche dell'Adulto Acute Leukemia Working Party (GIMEMA AL WP)

Ilaria Iacobucci; Clelia Tiziana Storlazzi; Daniela Cilloni; Annalisa Lonetti; Emanuela Ottaviani; Simona Soverini; Annalisa Astolfi; Sabina Chiaretti; Antonella Vitale; Francesca Messa; Luciana Impera; Carmen Baldazzi; Pietro D'Addabbo; Cristina Papayannidis; Angelo Lonoce; Sabrina Colarossi; Marco Vignetti; Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Stefania Paolini; Domenico Russo; Fabrizio Pane; Giuseppe Saglio; Michele Baccarani; Robin Foà; Giovanni Martinelli

The BCR-ABL1 fusion gene defines the subgroup of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) with the worst clinical prognosis. To identify oncogenic lesions that combine with BCR-ABL1 to cause ALL, we used Affymetrix Genome-Wide Human SNP arrays (250K NspI and SNP 6.0), fluorescence in situ hybridization, and genomic polymerase chain reaction to study 106 cases of adult BCR-ABL1-positive ALL. The most frequent somatic copy number alteration was a focal deletion on 7p12 of IKZF1, which encodes the transcription factor Ikaros and was identified in 80 (75%) of 106 patients. Different patterns of deletions occurred, but the most frequent were those characterized by a loss of exons 4 through 7 (Delta4-7) and by removal of exons 2 through 7 (Delta2-7). A variable number of nucleotides (patient specific) were inserted at the conjunction and maintained with fidelity at the time of relapse. The extent of the Delta4-7 deletion correlated with the expression of a dominant-negative isoform with cytoplasmic localization and oncogenic activity, whereas the Delta2-7 deletion resulted in a transcript lacking the translation start site. The IKZF1 deletion also was identified in the progression of chronic myeloid leukemia to lymphoid blast crisis (66%) but never in myeloid blast crisis or chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia or in patients with acute myeloid leukemia. Known DNA sequences and structural features were mapped along the breakpoint cluster regions, including heptamer recombination signal sequences recognized by RAG enzymes during V(D)J recombination, suggesting that IKZF1 deletions could arise from aberrant RAG-mediated recombination.


Cancer Research | 2007

Gene Expression Analysis of Angioimmunoblastic Lymphoma Indicates Derivation from T Follicular Helper Cells and Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Deregulation

Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Claudio Agostinelli; Antonino Carbone; Luca Isaia Fantoni; Sergio Ferrari; Anna Gazzola; Annunziata Gloghini; Simona Righi; Maura Rossi; Enrico Tagliafico; Pier Luigi Zinzani; Simonetta Zupo; Michele Baccarani; Stefano Pileri

Angioimmunoblastic lymphoma (AILT) is the second most common subtype of peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) and is characterized by dismal prognosis. Thus far, only a few studies have dealt with its molecular pathogenesis. We performed gene expression profile (GEP) analysis of six AILT, six anaplastic large cell lymphomas (ALCL), 28 PTCL-unspecified (PTCL/U), and 20 samples of normal T lymphocytes (including CD4(+), CD8(+), and activated and resting subpopulations), aiming to (a) assess the relationship of AILT with other PTCLs, (b) establish the relationship between AILT and normal T-cell subsets, and (c) recognize the cellular programs deregulated in AILT possibly looking for novel potential therapeutic targets. First, we found that AILT and other PTCLs have rather similar GEP, possibly sharing common oncogenic pathways. Second, we found that AILTs are closer to activated CD4(+), rather than to resting or CD8(+) lymphocytes. Furthermore, we found that the molecular signature of follicular T helper cells was significantly overexpressed in AILT, reinforcing the idea that AILT may arise from such cellular counterpart. Finally, we identified several genes deregulated in AILT, including PDGFRA, REL, and VEGF. The expression of several molecules was then studied by immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays containing 45 independent AILT cases. Notably, we found that the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) was expressed not only by reactive cells, but also by neoplastic cells, and that nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) activation is uncommon in AILT, as suggested by frequent exclusively cytoplasmic c-REL localization. Our study provides new relevant information on AILT biology and new candidates for possible therapeutic targets such as PDGFRA (platelet-derived growth factor alpha) and VEGF.


Blood | 2014

Gene expression signatures delineate biological and prognostic subgroups in peripheral T-cell lymphoma.

Javeed Iqbal; George E. Wright; Chao Wang; Andreas Rosenwald; Randy D. Gascoyne; Dennis D. Weisenburger; Timothy C. Greiner; Lynette M. Smith; Shuangping Guo; Ryan A. Wilcox; Bin Tean Teh; Soon Thye Lim; Soon Yong Tan; Lisa M. Rimsza; Elaine S. Jaffe; Elias Campo; Antonio Martínez; Jan Delabie; Rita M. Braziel; James R. Cook; Raymond R. Tubbs; German Ott; Eva Geissinger; Philippe Gaulard; Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Stefano Pileri; Wing Y. Au; Shigeo Nakamura; Masao Seto; Françoise Berger

Peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) encompasses a heterogeneous group of neoplasms with generally poor clinical outcome. Currently 50% of PTCL cases are not classifiable: PTCL-not otherwise specified (NOS). Gene-expression profiles on 372 PTCL cases were analyzed and robust molecular classifiers and oncogenic pathways that reflect the pathobiology of tumor cells and their microenvironment were identified for major PTCL-entities, including 114 angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL), 31 anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-positive and 48 ALK-negative anaplastic large cell lymphoma, 14 adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma and 44 extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma that were further separated into NK-cell and gdT-cell lymphomas. Thirty-seven percent of morphologically diagnosed PTCL-NOS cases were reclassified into other specific subtypes by molecular signatures. Reexamination, immunohistochemistry, and IDH2 mutation analysis in reclassified cases supported the validity of the reclassification. Two major molecular subgroups can be identified in the remaining PTCL-NOS cases characterized by high expression of either GATA3 (33%; 40/121) or TBX21 (49%; 59/121). The GATA3 subgroup was significantly associated with poor overall survival (P = .01). High expression of cytotoxic gene-signature within the TBX21 subgroup also showed poor clinical outcome (P = .05). In AITL, high expression of several signatures associated with the tumor microenvironment was significantly associated with outcome. A combined prognostic score was predictive of survival in an independent cohort (P = .004).


Blood | 2014

A targeted mutational landscape of angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma

Oreofe O. Odejide; Oliver Weigert; Andrew A. Lane; Dan Toscano; Matthew A. Lunning; Nadja Kopp; Sunhee Kim; Diederik van Bodegom; Sudha Bolla; Jonathan H. Schatz; Julie Teruya-Feldstein; Ephraim P. Hochberg; Abner Louissaint; David M. Dorfman; Kristen E. Stevenson; Scott J. Rodig; Pier Paolo Piccaluga; Eric D. Jacobsen; Stefano Pileri; Nancy Lee Harris; Simone Ferrero; Giorgio Inghirami; Steven M. Horwitz; David M. Weinstock

The genetics of angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL) are very poorly understood. We defined the mutational landscape of AITL across 219 genes in 85 cases from the United States and Europe. We identified ≥2 mutations in 34 genes, nearly all of which were not previously implicated in AITL. These included loss-of-function mutations in TP53 (n = 4), ETV6 (n = 3), CCND3 (n = 2), and EP300 (n = 5), as well as gain-of-function mutations in JAK2 (n = 2) and STAT3 (n = 4). TET2 was mutated in 65 (76%) AITLs, including 43 that harbored 2 or 3 TET2 mutations. DNMT3A mutations occurred in 28 (33%) AITLs; 100% of these also harbored TET2 mutations (P < .0001). Seventeen AITLs harbored IDH2 R172 substitutions, including 15 with TET2 mutations. In summary, AITL is characterized by high frequencies of overlapping mutations in epigenetic modifiers and targetable mutations in a subset of cases.

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