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Featured researches published by S. Lenta.


Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition | 2012

Diagnosis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in children and adolescents: position paper of the ESPGHAN Hepatology Committee.

Pietro Vajro; S. Lenta; Piotr Socha; Anil Dhawan; Patrick McKiernan; Ulrich Baumann; Özlem Durmaz; Florence Lacaille; Valérie Anne Mclin; Valerio Nobili

ABSTRACT Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most common cause of chronic liver disease in children and adolescents in the United States, and most probably also in the rest of the industrialized world. As the prevalence of NAFLD in childhood increases with the worldwide obesity epidemic, there is an urgent need for diagnostic standards that can be commonly used by pediatricians and hepatologists. To this end, we performed a PubMed search of the adult and pediatric literature on NAFLD diagnosis through May 2011 using Topics and/or relevant Authors as search words. According to the present literature, NAFLD is suspected based on the association of fatty liver combined with risk factors (mainly obesity), after the exclusion of other causes of liver disease. The reference but imperfect standard for confirming NAFLD is liver histology. The following surrogate markers are presently used to estimate degree of steatosis and liver fibrosis and risk of progression to end-stage liver disease: imaging by ultrasonography or magnetic resonance imaging, liver function tests, and serum markers of liver fibrosis. NAFLD should be suspected in all of the overweight or obese children and adolescents older than 3 years with increased waist circumference especially if there is a NAFLD history in relatives. The typical presentation, however, is in children ages 10 years and older. The first diagnostic step in these children should be abdominal ultrasound and liver function tests, followed by exclusion of other liver diseases. Overweight/obese children with normal ultrasonographic imaging and normal liver function tests should still be monitored due to the poor sensitivity of these tests at a single assessment. Indications for liver biopsy include the following: to rule out other treatable diseases, in cases of clinically suspected advanced liver disease, before pharmacological/surgical treatment, and as part of a structured intervention protocol or clinical research trial.


Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition | 2011

Effects of Lactobacillus rhamnosus Strain GG in Pediatric Obesity-related Liver Disease

Pietro Vajro; Claudia Mandato; Maria Rosaria Licenziati; Adriana Franzese; Dino Franco Vitale; S. Lenta; M. Caropreso; Gianfranco Vallone; Rosaria Meli

Objective:Various lines of evidence suggest that malfunctioning of the gut–liver axis contributes to hepatic damage of rodents and humans with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. We evaluated the effects of short-term probiotic treatment in children with obesity-related liver disease who were noncompliant with lifestyle interventions. Patients and Methods:Twenty obese children (age 10.7 ± 2.1 years) with persisting hypertransaminasemia and ultrasonographic (US) bright liver were enrolled in this double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot study. At baseline, patients underwent clinical and laboratory anthropometric evaluation, measurement of the US hepatorenal ratio, standard liver function tests, oral glucose tolerance test, serum tumor necrosis factor-alpha, the glucose hydrogen breath test, and evaluation of serum antibodies to antipeptidoglycan-polysaccharide polymers. After exclusion of causes of liver disease other than obesity, patients received either probiotic Lactobacillus rhamnosus strain GG (12 billion CFU/day) or placebo for 8 weeks. Results:Multivariate analysis after probiotic treatment revealed a significant decrease in alanine aminotransferase (average variation vs placebo P = 0.03) and in antipeptidoglycan-polysaccharide antibodies (average variation vs placebo P = 0.03) irrespective of changes in BMI z score and visceral fat. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and US bright liver parameters remained fairly stable. Conclusions:Probiotic L rhamnosus strain GG warrants consideration as a therapeutic tool to treat hypertransaminasemia in hepatopathic obese children noncompliant with lifestyle interventions.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2009

Prevalence and Long-term Course of Macro-Aspartate Aminotransferase in Children

M. Caropreso; Giuliana Fortunato; S. Lenta; Daniela Palmieri; M. Esposito; Dino Franco Vitale; Raffaele Iorio; Pietro Vajro

OBJECTIVES To investigate the prevalence, association with clinical conditions, and long-term course of macro-aspartate aminotransferase (macro-AST). STUDY DESIGN Forty-four children with an isolated elevation of serum AST were screened for macro-AST with electrophoresis and % polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitable activity (PPA). RESULTS All children were healthy, except they had elevated AST values. Seventeen children (38.6%) were macro-AST-positive. They had higher AST values than the 27 children who were macro-AST-negative (P = .001). Values <67.1% PPA and >82.2% PPA were associated with a very low probability of being macro-AST-positive and macro-AST-negative, respectively. Thirty-eight children underwent clinical and laboratory follow-up (mean, 4.7 +/- 3.8; range, 1-16 years). All remained symptom-free. AST levels decreased significantly only in children who were macro-AST-negative (P = .006). Macroenzyme persisted in 6 of the 9 children who were macro-AST-positive after 6.0 +/- 4.1 years. CONCLUSIONS Macro-AST was present in more than one-third of children with an isolated increase of AST levels. The lack of pathological correlates in a long period argues for the benign nature of this phenomenon in childhood. We suggest that our %PPA thresholds can be used as a screening test and that electrophoresis be reserved for confirming positive screen test results and cases in which %PPA levels are of intermediate discriminant accuracy.


Italian Journal of Pediatrics | 2012

Therapeutic options in pediatric non alcoholic fatty liver disease: current status and future directions

Pietro Vajro; S. Lenta; Claudio Pignata; Mariacarolina Salerno; Roberta D’Aniello; Ida De Micco; Giulia Paolella; Giancarlo Parenti

The epidemics of overweight and obesity has resulted in a significant increase of non alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), a potentially progressive condition. Currently, obesity related hepatopathy represents therefore the main cause of pediatric chronic liver disease. The first choice treatment at all ages is weight loss and/or lifestyle changes, however compliance is very poor and a pharmacological approach has become necessary. In the present article we present a systematic literature review focusing on established pediatric NALFD drugs (ursodeoxycholic acid, insulin sensitizers, and antioxidants) and on innovative therapeutic options as well.Regarding the former ones, a pediatric pilot study highlighted that ursodeoxycholic acid is not efficient on transaminases levels and bright liver. Similarly, a recent large scale, multicenter randomized clinical trial (TONIC study) showed that also insulin sensitizers and antioxidant vitamin E have scarce effects on serum transaminase levels. Among a large series of novel therapeutic approaches acting on recently proposed different pathomechanisms, probiotics seem hitherto the most interesting and reasonable option for their safety and tolerability. Toll-like receptors modifiers, Pentoxifylline, and Farnesoid X receptors agonists have been still poorly investigated, and will need further studies before becoming possible promising innovative therapeutic strategies.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2014

Management of adults with paediatric-onset chronic liver disease: Strategic issues for transition care

Pietro Vajro; Lorenza Ferrante; S. Lenta; Claudia Mandato; Marcello Persico

Advances in the management of children with chronic liver disease have enabled many to survive into adulthood with or without their native livers, so that the most common of these conditions are becoming increasingly common in adult hepatology practice. Because the aetiologies of chronic liver disease in children may vary significantly from those in adulthood, adults with paediatric-onset chronic liver disease may often present with clinical manifestations unfamiliar to their adulthood physician. Transition of medical care to adult practice requires that the adulthood medical staff (primary physicians and subspecialists) have a comprehensive knowledge of childhood liver disease and their implications, and of the differences in caring for these patients. Pending still unavailable Scientific Society guidelines, this article examines causes, presentation modes, evaluation, management, and complications of the main paediatric-onset chronic liver diseases, and discusses key issues to aid in planning a program of transition from paediatric to adult patients.


Transplant Infectious Disease | 2009

Brain abscess due to Klebsiella pneumoniae in a liver-transplanted child

Pietro Vajro; Etienne Sokal; S. Maddaluno; M. Esposito; F. Caranci; G. Capuano; M. Caropreso; S. Lenta

Abstract: Brain abscesses are a rare, severe complication of orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). They are almost exclusively due to fungi, Nocardia, or Toxoplasma, and usually occur within months of surgery. Here we report the case of an adolescent who developed a brain abscess due to Klebsiella pneumoniae 11.5 years after OLT. Fever was absent and laboratory parameters were not indicative of infectious disease, and therefore the diagnosis of a central nervous system neoplasm was considered. Subsequent magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy led to a diagnosis of a brain abscess, and to prompt appropriate antibiotic treatment. This case shows that K. pneumoniae may cause a brain abscess long after liver transplantation. The appearance of neurological symptoms should alert clinicians to consider a brain abscess even in the absence of overt clinical/laboratory signs of inflammation, which may be blunted by chronic immunosuppression.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2004

Per-Rectal Portal Scintigraphy Is Complementary to Ultrasonography and Endoscopy in the Assessment of Portal Hypertension in Children with Chronic Cholestasis

Pietro Vajro; Luigi Celentano; Francesco Manguso; Gianfranco Vallone; S. Lenta; Claudia Mandato; Nicolina Di Cosmo; G. Capuano; Annamaria Staiano; Agesilao D’Arienzo


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2006

Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG treatment: A promising tool for improving hypertransaminasemia of obese children

M. Caropreso; S. Lenta; M. Passaretti; P. Colicchio; Claudia Mandato; G. Capuano; Adriana Franzese; Maria Immacolata Spagnuolo; Pietro Vajro


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2012

PO71 A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF PEDIATRIC NAFLD THERAPY: YEAR 2012

I. De Micco; R. D'Aniello; M. Sangermano; Claudia Mandato; Giulia Paolella; S. Lenta; Pietro Vajro


MINERVA Pediatrica | 2014

Conseguenze dell'obesità sulla salute del bambino e dell'adolescente

Giuliana Valerio; Maria Rosaria Licenziati; Melania Manco; Am Ambruzzi; Dario Bacchini; E Baraldi; Gianni Bona; Patrizia Bruzzi; Franco Cerutti; N Corciulo; Antonino Crinò; Adriana Franzese; Graziano Grugni; Lorenzo Iughetti; S. Lenta; Claudio Maffeis; Pierluigi Marzuillo; E. Miraglia del Giudice; Anita Morandi; Giuseppe Morino; B Moro; L. Perrone; Flavia Prodam; R Ricotti; Francesca Santamaria; Eugenio Zito; Rita Tanas

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M. Caropreso

University of Naples Federico II

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G. Capuano

University of Naples Federico II

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M. Esposito

University of Naples Federico II

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N. Di Cosmo

University of Naples Federico II

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S. Maddaluno

University of Naples Federico II

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Claudio Veropalumbo

University of Naples Federico II

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Raffaele Iorio

University of Naples Federico II

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Claudia Mandato

Boston Children's Hospital

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Adriana Franzese

University of Naples Federico II

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