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Dive into the research topics where Riitta Mäkitaro is active.

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Featured researches published by Riitta Mäkitaro.


The Lancet Respiratory Medicine | 2017

Long-term efficacy and safety of α1 proteinase inhibitor treatment for emphysema caused by severe α1 antitrypsin deficiency: an open-label extension trial (RAPID-OLE).

Noel G. McElvaney; Jonathan Burdon; Mark Holmes; Allan R. Glanville; Peter Wark; Philip J. Thompson; Paul Hernandez; Jan Chlumsky; Helmut Teschler; Joachim H. Ficker; Niels Seersholm; Alan Altraja; Riitta Mäkitaro; Joanna Chorostowska-Wynimko; Marek Sanak; Paul I Stoicescu; Eeva Piitulainen; Oliver Vit; Marion Wencker; Michael A. Tortorici; Michael Fries; Jonathan Edelman; Kenneth R. Chapman

BACKGROUND Purified α1 proteinase inhibitor (A1PI) slowed emphysema progression in patients with severe α1 antitrypsin deficiency in a randomised controlled trial (RAPID-RCT), which was followed by an open-label extension trial (RAPID-OLE). The aim was to investigate the prolonged treatment effect of A1PI on the progression of emphysema as assessed by the loss of lung density in relation to RAPID-RCT. METHODS Patients who had received either A1PI treatment (Zemaira or Respreeza; early-start group) or placebo (delayed-start group) in the RAPID-RCT trial were included in this 2-year open-label extension trial (RAPID-OLE). Patients from 22 hospitals in 11 countries outside of the USA received 60 mg/kg per week A1PI. The primary endpoint was annual rate of adjusted 15th percentile lung density loss measured using CT in the intention-to-treat population with a mixed-effects regression model. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00670007. FINDINGS Between March 1, 2006, and Oct 13, 2010, 140 patients from RAPID-RCT entered RAPID-OLE: 76 from the early-start group and 64 from the delayed-start group. Between day 1 and month 24 (RAPID-RCT), the rate of lung density loss in RAPID-OLE patients was lower in the early-start group (-1·51 g/L per year [SE 0·25] at total lung capacity [TLC]; -1·55 g/L per year [0·24] at TLC plus functional residual capacity [FRC]; and -1·60 g/L per year [0·26] at FRC) than in the delayed-start group (-2·26 g/L per year [0·27] at TLC; -2·16 g/L per year [0·26] at TLC plus FRC, and -2·05 g/L per year [0·28] at FRC). Between months 24 and 48, the rate of lung density loss was reduced in delayed-start patients (from -2·26 g/L per year to -1·26 g/L per year), but no significant difference was seen in the rate in early-start patients during this time period (-1·51 g/L per year to -1·63 g/L per year), thus in early-start patients the efficacy was sustained to month 48. INTERPRETATION RAPID-OLE supports the continued efficacy of A1PI in slowing disease progression during 4 years of treatment. Lost lung density was never recovered, highlighting the importance of early intervention with A1PI treatment. FUNDING CSL Behring.


Respiratory Research | 2012

Snail promotes an invasive phenotype in lung carcinoma

Heta Merikallio; Taina Turpeenniemi-Hujanen; Paavo Pääkkö; Riitta Mäkitaro; Kaarteenaho Riitta; Sirpa Salo; Tuula Salo; Terttu Harju; Ylermi Soini

BackgroundSnail is a transcriptional factor which is known to influence the epitheliomesenchymal transition (EMT) by regulating adhesion proteins such as E-cadherin and claudins as well as matrix metalloproteases (MMP).MethodsTo evaluate the functional importance of snail, a transciptional factor involved in EMT in lung tumors, we investigated its expression in a large set of lung carcinomas by immunohistochemistry. Expression of snail and effects of snail knockdown was studied in cell lines.ResultsNuclear snail expression was seen in 21% of cases this being strongest in small cell lung carcinomas (SCLC). There was significantly greater snail expression in SCLC compared to squamous cell or adenocarcinoma. Positive snail expression was associated with poor survival in the whole material and separately in squamous cell and adenocarcinomas. In Cox regression analysis, snail expression showed an independent prognostic value in all of these groups. In several cell lines knockdown of snail reduced invasion in both matrigel assay and in the myoma tissue model for invasion. The influence of snail knockdown on claudin expression was cell type specific. Snail knockdown in these cell lines modified the expression of MMP2 and MMP9 but did not influence the activation of these MMPs to any significant degree.ConclusionsThe results show that snail plays an important role in the invasive characteristics of lung carcinoma influencing the survival of the patients. Snail knockdown might thus be one option for targeted molecular therapy in lung cancer. Snail knockdown influenced the expression of claudins individually in a cell-line dependent manner but did not influence MMP expressions or activations to any significant degree.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2011

Zeb1 and twist are more commonly expressed in metastatic than primary lung tumours and show inverse associations with claudins.

Heta Merikallio; Riitta Kaarteenaho; Paavo Pääkkö; Siri Lehtonen; Pasi Hirvikoski; Riitta Mäkitaro; Terttu Harju; Ylermi Soini

Background Zeb1 and twist regulate expression of genes which take part in epitheliomesenchymal transition (EMT). Claudins are tight junctional proteins regulating polarity and paracellular permeability of epithelial cells. Aims and methods To study Zeb1 and twist in 289 primary and 54 metastatic lung tumours and their relation to expression of claudins 1–5 and 7 by immunohistochemistry. Results Metastatic tumours showed a significantly lower expression of zeb1 and twist (33.0% and 38.0% vs 5.0% and 14.5%, p<0.001 for both) and they also had a significantly lower expression of claudin 1 (p<0.001), claudin 4 (p<0.001), claudin 5 (p=0.001) and claudin 7 (p<0.001) than did primary tumours. Primary lung tumours showed a strong inverse association between zeb1 and claudin 1 (p=0.024) and claudin 2 (p=0.003). For twist an inverse association was found with claudin 5 (p=0.007). In metastatic tumours zeb1 was inversely associated with claudin 7 (p=0.050) and twist with claudin 5 (p=0.025). Overexpression of claudin 5 was associated with decreased survival (p=0.017). For zeb1 or twist, no association with survival was observed in primary or metastatic tumours. Conclusions According to protein expression, involvement of zeb1 and twist in EMT in primary lung tumours is relatively infrequent. Carcinomas metastatic to the lung showed a significantly higher expression of these transcriptional factors than primary lung tumours, indicating their probable importance in the metastatic process. Zeb1 and twist were inversely associated with several claudins, indicating a role in their down-regulation.


European Journal of Cancer | 2011

Impact of smoking on the expression of claudins in lung carcinoma

Heta Merikallio; Riitta Kaarteenaho; Paavo Pääkkö; Siri Lehtonen; Pasi Hirvikoski; Riitta Mäkitaro; Terttu Harju; Ylermi Soini

RATIONALE Tight junctions regulate the paracellular permeability and orientation of cells and claudins are key components of tight junctions. OBJECTIVES To study the influence of cigarette smoke on claudin expression in vitro and in lung cancer patients. METHODS We studied the effect of smoking on claudin expression by exposing a bronchial cell line (BEAS-2B) and two carcinoma cell lines (SK-LU1 and SK-MES1) to tobacco smoke for 48 h and analysed their claudin mRNA expression. The relation between smoked pack years and protein expression of claudins 1-5 and 7 in 344 lung cancer patients was determined by immunohistochemistry. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS In BEAS-2B cells and SK-LU1 cells, an initial increase was followed by a decline in the mRNA expression of several claudins. In SK-MES1 cells, no evident elevation in claudin expression was observed. Intense claudin 1 and 4 positivity was found more often in cancer samples of smokers and ex-smokers compared to non-smokers (p<0.001 and p=0.003, respectively). Heavy smokers with longer than 40 pack-years consumption had more often intense claudin 1 (p=0.011), 4 (p=0.050) or 7 (p=0.058) expression in squamous cell carcinoma compared to non-smokers or smokers with fewer pack-years. Claudin 1 positivity predicted a better survival in adenocarcinoma (p=0.044) and in squamous cell carcinoma (p=0.027) and claudin 4 positivity in adenocarcinoma only (p=0.048). In squamous cell carcinoma, claudin 7 positivity was associated with a better survival (p=0.011). CONCLUSIONS Bronchial BEAS-2B cells and SK-LU1 cells respond to tobacco smoke by changing their claudin mRNA synthesis and resulting tight junction permeability changes may thus contribute to tobacco induced carcinogenesis both during initiation and progression. This concept is strengthened by findings in the clinical tumour material, where tobacco consumption was associated with claudin expression.


Lung Cancer | 2015

Nonpredominant lepidic pattern correlates with better outcome in invasive lung adenocarcinoma.

Johanna M. Mäkinen; Kirsi Laitakari; Shirley Johnson; Riitta Mäkitaro; Risto Bloigu; Elisa Lappi-Blanco; Riitta Kaarteenaho

OBJECTIVES Histologic heterogeneity is a typical feature of pulmonary adenocarcinoma. This study aimed to deconstruct the intratumoral growth pattern composition and to examine the prognostic relevance of the current lung adenocarcinoma classification in a series of Finnish lung cancer patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS A cohort of 112 patients with surgically operated stage I-IV lung adenocarcinoma was retrospectively reviewed. Histologic subtyping was performed according to the classification system established by the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer/American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society (IASLC/ATS/ERS). Systematically collected clinical information including survival data was correlated with the subtype status. In addition, emphasis was placed on the nonpredominant histologic patterns, gender and smoking history. RESULTS The most common subtype was acinar predominant adenocarcinoma with 56 cases (50%). Most tumors were composed of a mixture of two or more growth patterns, and single pattern tumors were rare (9.8%). Micropapillary predominant adenocarcinoma and solid predominant adenocarcinoma were the subtypes with the lowest disease-specific survival rates (5-year DSS 21.4% and 30.4%; shared mean DSS 46.3 months, p=0.040). A nonpredominant lepidic component was observed in 24 (21.4%) tumors, and its presence predicted a better outcome (mean DSS 127.4 months vs. 55.7 months, p=0.001). This association was confirmed by multivariate analysis (p=0.004). Solid pattern and solid, papillary, micropapillary and cribriform predominant histology associated with smoking (p<0.001), while mucinous pattern was more common in nonsmokers (p<0.001) and in women (p=0.050). CONCLUSIONS Micropapillary and solid predominant adenocarcinomas showed significantly lower survival rate than other major subtypes, yet the prognostic value of the current lung adenocarcinoma classification is not limited only to the predominant growth patterns. The more favorable outcome associated with the nonpredominant lepidic pattern further emphasizes the importance of histologic subtyping and assessment of tumor heterogeneity in the diagnostics of lung adenocarcinoma.


Scandinavian Cardiovascular Journal | 1998

Benign intrathoracic tumours : A population survey in Northern Finland

Riitta Mäkitaro; Esko Huhti; Paavo Pääkkö; Vuokko L. Kinnula

Benign intrathoracic tumours are uncommon, but their occurrence in unselected populations is poorly defined. We reviewed all cases of suspected intrathoracic tumour in a population (440,000) in northern Finland during 1990 through 1992. Diagnostic investigations included fiberoptic bronchoscopy and computed tomography in all cases. Of the 653 intrathoracic tumours, 36 were benign. The male/female ratio in these 36 cases was 1.25; the mean age was 54 years. Twenty-three of the lesions were symptomless, found at health check or examination for other disease. Bronchoscopy did not confirm the diagnosis of any benign tumour. Thoracotomy was considered necessary in most cases and histologic diagnosis was therefore available in 24 (67%). Hamartoma was the most common benign lung tumour. This prospective study in an unselected population confirms previous findings in surgical series concerning benign intrathoracic tumours and their histology.


Histopathology | 2017

Histological features of malignancy correlate with growth patterns and patient outcome in lung adenocarcinoma

Johanna M. Mäkinen; Kirsi Laitakari; Shirley Johnson; Riitta Mäkitaro; Risto Bloigu; Paavo Pääkkö; Elisa Lappi-Blanco; Riitta Kaarteenaho

Until the launch of the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer/American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society adenocarcinoma classification in 2011, there were no uniform histological grading criteria for pulmonary adenocarcinomas. The current classification highlights the prognostic importance of the various histological growth patterns observed in these morphologically heterogeneous neoplasias. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the classic histological parameters of malignancy in correlation with the growth patterns and patient outcomes in a series of 112 surgically operated stage I–IV lung adenocarcinomas.


Cancer Research | 2002

Soluble Syndecan-1 and Serum Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor Are New Prognostic Factors in Lung Cancer

Heikki Joensuu; Anu Anttonen; Minna Eriksson; Riitta Mäkitaro; Henrik Alfthan; Vuokko L. Kinnula; Sirpa Leppä


Clinical Cancer Research | 2001

Elevated Serum Levels of Type I Collagen Degradation Marker ICTP and Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinase (TIMP) 1 Are Associated with Poor Prognosis in Lung Cancer

Sanna Ylisirniö; Matti Höyhtyä; Riitta Mäkitaro; Paavo Pääakkö; Juha Risteli; Vuokko L. Kinnula; Taina Turpeenniemi-Hujanen; Arja Jukkola


Cancer Letters | 2006

Tissue MMP-2/TIMP-2-complex are better prognostic factors than serum MMP-2, MMP-9 or TIMP-1 in Stage I–III lung carcinoma

S. Hoikkala; Paavo Pääkkö; Ylermi Soini; Riitta Mäkitaro; V. Kinnula; Taina Turpeenniemi-Hujanen

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Ylermi Soini

University of Eastern Finland

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Vuokko L. Kinnula

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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