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Dive into the research topics where Rossella Franceschini is active.

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Featured researches published by Rossella Franceschini.


Autoimmunity Reviews | 2015

Effectiveness and tuberculosis-related safety profile of interleukin-1 blocking agents in the management of Behçet's disease

Luca Cantarini; Giuseppe Lopalco; Francesco Caso; Luisa Costa; Florenzo Iannone; Giovanni Lapadula; Maria Grazia Anelli; Rossella Franceschini; Cristina Menicacci; Galeazzi M; Carlo Selmi; Donato Rigante

Behçets disease (BD) is a multi-systemic disorder of unknown etiology characterized by relapsing oral-genital ulcers, uveitis, and involvement of the articular, gastrointestinal, neurologic, and vascular systems. Although the primum movens of this condition remains unknown, a tangled plot combining autoimmune and autoinflammatory pathways has been hypothesized to explain its start and recurrence. In-depth analysis of BD pathogenetic mechanisms, involving dysfunction of multiple proinflammatory molecules, has opened new modalities of treatment: different agents targeting interleukin-1 have been studied in recent years to manage the most difficult and multi-resistant cases of BD. Growing experience with anakinra, canakinumab and gevokizumab is discussed in this review, highlighting the relative efficacy of each drug upon the protean BD clinical manifestations. Safety and tolerability of interleukin-1 antagonists in different doses have been confirmed by numerous observational studies on both large and small cohorts of patients with BD. In particular, the potential for Mycobacterium tuberculosis reactivation and tuberculosis development appears to be significantly lower with interleukin-1 blockers compared to tumor necrosis factor-α inhibitors, thus increasing the beneficial profile of this approach.


Dermatology | 2014

Inhibition of interleukin-1 by canakinumab as a successful mono-drug strategy for the treatment of refractory Behçet's disease: a case series.

Antonio Vitale; Donato Rigante; Francesco Caso; Maria Giuseppina Brizi; Mauro Galeazzi; Luisa Costa; Rossella Franceschini; Orso Maria Lucherini; Luca Cantarini

Recommendations related to ocular, mucosal and cutaneous involvement of Behçets disease (BD) are mainly evidence-based, but in cases of vascular, neurological and gastrointestinal involvement there are no guidelines to define the best treatment strategy. We report three adult patients with BD, who received an interleukin-1β inhibitor by subcutaneous injections, canakinumab (at the dosage of 150 mg every 6 weeks), after failure shown by corticosteroids and different combinations of immunosuppressant agents. The prompt and sustained clinical efficacy demonstrated by canakinumab as a monotherapy supports the opportunity of using this specific anti-interleukin-1β agent as a valid therapeutic option for resistant or refractory BD. Open trials and observational studies should be performed to test canakinumab efficacy on a larger number of patients. The most appropriate dosage and intervals between administrations should be decided according to the individual patient, severity or recurrence of clinical manifestations and major organ involvement.


European Journal of Immunology | 2014

The purinergic P2×7 receptor is expressed on monocytes in Behçet's disease and is modulated by TNF-α.

Monica Castrichini; Pietro Enea Lazzerini; Alessandra Gamberucci; Pier Leopoldo Capecchi; Rossella Franceschini; Mariarita Natale; Mohamed Hammoud; Antonio Moramarco; Stefania Zimbone; Elena Gianchecchi; Cinzia Montilli; Gianluca Ricci; Enrico Selvi; Luca Cantarini; Mauro Galeazzi; Franco Laghi-Pasini

The P2×7 receptor (P2×7r) is expressed in innate immune cells (e.g. monocyte/macrophages), playing a key role in IL‐1β release. Since innate immune activation and IL‐1β release seem to be implicated in Behçets disease (BD), a systemic immune‐inflammatory disorder of unknown origin, we hypothesized that P2×7r is involved in the pathogenesis of the disease. Monocytes were isolated from 18 BD patients and 17 healthy matched controls. In BD monocytes, an increased P2×7r expression and Ca2+ permeability induced by the selective P2×7r agonist 2′‐3′‐O‐(4‐benzoylbenzoyl)ATP (BzATP) was observed. Moreover, IL‐1β release from LPS‐primed monocytes stimulated with BzATP was markedly higher in BD patients than in controls. TNF‐α‐incubated monocytes from healthy subjects almost reproduced the findings observed in BD patients, as demonstrated by the increase in P2×7r expression and BzATP‐induced Ca2+ intake. Our results provide evidence that in BD monocytes both the expression and function of the P2×7r are increased compared with healthy controls, as the possible result, at least in part, of a positive modulating effect of TNF‐α on the receptor. These data indicate P2×7r as a new potential therapeutic target for the control of BD, further supporting the rationale for the use of anti‐TNF‐α drugs in the treatment of the disease.


International Journal of Rheumatic Diseases | 2017

Safety profile of biologic agents for Behçet's disease in a multicenter observational cohort study.

Luca Cantarini; Rosaria Talarico; Elena Generali; Giacomo Emmi; Giuseppe Lopalco; Luisa Costa; Elena Silvestri; Francesco Caso; Rossella Franceschini; Rolando Cimaz; Florenzo Iannone; Mauro Galeazzi; Carlo Selmi

The primary aim of this study was to explore the safety profile of biologic treatments in Behçets disease (BD), based on their mechanism of action; the secondary aim was to study any potential variation in terms of retention rate according to each single drug.


Clinical Rheumatology | 2015

Bilateral dexamethasone intravitreal implant in a young patient with Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease and refractory uveitis

Maria Eugenia Latronico; Donato Rigante; Francesco Caso; Luca Cantarini; Luisa Costa; Laura Nieves-Martín; Claudio Traversi; Rossella Franceschini

Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada disease (VKHD) is a multisystemic disorder characterized by granulomatous panuveitis with exudative retinal detachments, often associated with neurologic and cutaneous manifestations. Therapy relies mainly on the use of corticosteroids, administrated as oral or intravenous high-dose pulses, and immunosuppressants. However, since macular edema and retinal detachment can often be refractory to systemic therapies, intravitreal triamcinolone acetate has been used successfully. Herein, we report the first case of refractory bilateral panuveitis in a young patient with VKHD successfully treated with dexamethasone intravitreal implant.


Clinical Rheumatology | 2015

The protean ocular involvement in monogenic autoinflammatory diseases: state of the art

Vittoria Bascherini; Carmela Granato; Giuseppe Lopalco; Giacomo Emmi; Lorenzo Vannozzi; Daniela Bacherini; Rossella Franceschini; Florenzo Iannone; Annabella Salerni; Francesco Molinaro; Mario Messina; Bruno Frediani; Carlo Selmi; Donato Rigante; Luca Cantarini

Ocular involvement is frequent in the monogenic autoinflammatory disorders and generally occurs as spontaneously recurring inflammatory events at different ocular sites caused by the aberrant release of proinflammatory cytokines, mainly IL-1β. Over the past decade, we witnessed a significant growth of eye abnormalities associated with idiopathic granulomatous disorders, familial Mediterranean fever, tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic syndrome, mevalonate kinase deficiency, and cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome. The pathogenetic mechanisms of these disorders have shown the evidence of disrupted cytokine signaling, but the explanation for the heterogeneous ocular involvement remains to be elucidated. We herein review the monogenic autoinflammatory disorders affecting the eye, describing their main clinical features with specific regard to the ocular involvement, which can lead to decreased visual acuity and even blindness, if the primary disorder is undetected or left untreated.


Clinical Rheumatology | 2014

Serum amyloid-A in Behçet's disease.

Antonio Vitale; Donato Rigante; Giuseppe Lopalco; Maria Giuseppina Brizi; Francesco Caso; Rossella Franceschini; Rosario Denaro; Mauro Galeazzi; Leonardo Punzi; Florenzo Iannone; Giovanni Lapadula; Antonella Simpatico; Edoardo Marrani; Luisa Costa; Rolando Cimaz; Luca Cantarini

Serum amyloid-A (SAA) is an acute phase protein, synthesized by the liver and previously investigated as a marker of disease activity in many rheumatologic disorders. Its significance in Behçet’s disease (BD), a chronic inflammatory disorder at the crossroad between autoimmune and autoinflammatory syndromes, is still unraveled. Our aim was to assess the role of SAA levels as a potential marker of disease activity in patients with BD. According to our findings, the occurrence of oral aphthosis, neurological impairment, and ocular disease is significantly associated with SAA serum levels higher than 30, 50, and 150 mg/L, respectively. We also suggest that increased SAA levels might identify a thrombotic risk in BD with previous or concurrent vascular involvement.


Clinical Rheumatology | 2017

The emerging role of interleukin (IL)-1 in the pathogenesis and treatment of inflammatory and degenerative eye diseases

Claudia Fabiani; Jurgen Sota; Gian Marco Tosi; Rossella Franceschini; Bruno Frediani; Mauro Galeazzi; Donato Rigante; Luca Cantarini

Interleukin (IL)-1 plays a key role in the pathogenesis and thereafter in the search for specific treatments of different inflammatory and degenerative eye diseases. Indeed, an overactivity of IL-1 might be an initiating factor for many immunopathologic sceneries in the eye, as proven by the efficacy of the specific IL-1 blockade in different ocular diseases. For instance, the uveitis in monogenic autoinflammatory disorders, such as Blau syndrome and cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome, or in complex polygenic autoinflammatory disorders, such as Behçet’s disease, has been successfully treated with IL-1 blockers. Similarly, therapy with the IL-1 receptor antagonist anakinra has proven successful also in scleritis and episcleritis in the context of different rheumatic conditions. Moreover, interesting findings deriving from animal models of ocular disease have set a rational basis from a therapeutic viewpoint to manage patients also with dry eye disease and a broadening number of ocular inflammatory and degenerative conditions, which start from an imbalance between IL-1 and its receptor antagonist.


Cornea | 2011

In vivo confocal microscopy and anterior segment optical coherence tomography in a case of alternaria keratitis.

Gianluca Martone; Patrizia Pichierri; Rossella Franceschini; Antonio Moramarco; Leonardo Ciompi; Gian Marco Tosi; Angelo Balestrazzi

Purpose: To report a case of Alternaria alternata keratitis analyzed with in vivo confocal microscopy (IVCM) and anterior segment optical coherence tomography (OCT). Methods: A 68-year-old man with unilateral keratitis was evaluated using IVCM (Heidelberg Retina Tomograph II; Heidelberg, Germany) and anterior segment OCT (Visante OCT; Carl Zeiss Meditec, Dublin, CA). Results: IVCM demonstrated the presence of small, round, hyperreflective cells surrounded by hyporeflective irregular areas and highly reflective dendritic shaped cells at the level of the epithelium. Stromal examination revealed many hypereflective filamentous structures, and some hyporeflective perpendicular lines and hyperreflective oval bodies were clearly visible along the filaments. Anterior segment OCT examination demonstrated a thickened cornea due to diffuse edema and an irregular corneal surface corresponding to the ulcer. There were hyperreflective areas beneath the epithelium representing the infiltrate. Microbiological examination of corneal scrapings demonstrated the presence of Alternaria alternata. After 1 month of antifungal treatment, IVCM demonstrated a significant reduction of the inflammatory cells and a hyperreflective scar-like tissue. Branching hyphal infiltrates were no longer present. OCT also documented the healing process and the complete recovery of the central and peripheral stromal thickness. Conclusions: IVCM and anterior segment OCT could be useful for the early diagnosis and treatment of fungal keratitis.


Clinical Rheumatology | 2017

IL-6 blockade in the management of non-infectious uveitis

Giuseppe Lopalco; Claudia Fabiani; Jurgen Sota; Orso Maria Lucherini; Gian Marco Tosi; Bruno Frediani; Florenzo Iannone; Mauro Galeazzi; Rossella Franceschini; Donato Rigante; Luca Cantarini

Several pathogenetic studies have paved the way for a newer more rational therapeutic approach to non-infectious uveitis, and treatment of different forms of immune-driven uveitis has drastically evolved in recent years after the advent of biotechnological drugs. Tumor necrosis factor-α targeted therapies, the first-line recommended biologics in uveitis, have certainly led to remarkable results in patients with non-infectious uveitis. Nevertheless, the decision-making process turns out to be extremely difficult in anti-tumor necrosis factor or multidrug-resistant cases. Interleukin (IL)-6 holds a critical role in the pathogenic pathways of uveitis, due to its extended and protean range of effects. On this background, manipulation of IL-6 inflammatory cascade has unraveled encouraging outcomes. For instance, rising evidence has been achieved regarding the successful use of tocilizumab, the humanized monoclonal antibody targeted against the IL-6 receptor, in treating uveitis related to juvenile idiopathic arthritis or Behçet’s disease. Similar findings have also been reported for uveitis associated with systemic disorders, such as rheumatoid arthritis or multicentric Castleman disease, but also for idiopathic uveitis, the rare birdshot chorioretinopathy, and even in cases complicated by macular edema. This work provides a digest of all current experiences and evidences concerning IL-6 blockade, as suggested by the medical literature, proving its potential role in the management of non-infectious uveitis.

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Donato Rigante

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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