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Featured researches published by Sandro Binda.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2000

Cytomegalovirus DNA detection in Guthrie cards: a powerful tool for diagnosing congenital infection.

Maria Barbi; Sandro Binda; Valeria Primache; Simona Caroppo; Patrizia Didò; Paola Guidotti; Carlo Corbetta; Davide Melotti

BACKGROUND A simple and reliable diagnosis of congenital cytomegalovirus infection is necessary both for clinical and epidemiological purposes. This could be accomplished through the demonstration of cytomegalovirus (CMV) DNA in blood spots (DBS) on Guthrie cards. OBJECTIVES (1) To assess the sensitivity and specificity of the method (DBS test) in diagnosing congenital CMV infection compared with viral isolation and (2) to evaluate the applications of the test to the late diagnosis of congenital CMV. STUDY DESIGN The method was tested on the cards of (1) 509 babies examined through viral isolation within their third week of life (72 positive cases) and (2) 191 children studied after 3 weeks of life (25 days to 5 years). Blood was eluted from Guthrie cards and heat extracted. The products of a nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplifying one region in the CMV glycoprotein B (gB) gene were detected by agarose gel electrophoresis. RESULTS DBS test was positive in all 72 congenitally infected babies and in four of the 437 negative at cytomegalovirus isolation (sensitivity 100%, specificity 99%). Infection in 16 of the 92 infants with a late viral isolation was demonstrated to be congenital by the test, which also detected congenital infection in 18 of 83 children in whom viral culture was not performed (13 with and five without symptoms). Fifty-six additional control cases tested negative. CONCLUSIONS DBS test is a reliable assay for diagnosing congenital cytomegalovirus infection and could be used as an alternative to viral culture. It is able to reveal whether ascertained CMV infection is congenital or postnatal at an age when viral isolation is not able to do so. It can assess the role of risky procedures such as transfusion and it can ascertain the etiology of morbid conditions diagnosed late or of controversial origin.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2003

A wider role for congenital cytomegalovirus infection in sensorineural hearing loss.

Maria Barbi; Sandro Binda; Simona Caroppo; Umberto Ambrosetti; Carlo Corbetta; Paola Sergi

Background. Diagnostic problems in identifying congenital infection cases in infancy have thus far impaired the assessment of the role of congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in the etiology of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL). Objective. To estimate the impact of congenital infection in children with SNHL by detection of CMV DNA in stored samples of neonatal dried blood (dried blood spots test). Methods. The Guthrie cards of 130 children with hearing loss >40 dB hearing loss were retrieved from the regional screening center. CMV DNA was extracted by thermal shock and amplified by PCR. Results. The percentage of SNHL cases attributable to congenital CMV infection was 10% (9 of 87) in infants whose SNHL had been diagnosed in their first 2 months of life and 34.2% (13 of 38) in children with deafness of unidentified cause that was diagnosed in early childhood. In the latter group 42.7% (12 of 28) of the children with a hearing loss of >70 dB were CMV-positive. Conclusions. The results suggest that congenital CMV infection has a more relevant role in the etiology of SNHL than previously reported. The data obtained in both groups suggest that 20 to 30% of all deafness cases are caused by CMV. The percent of congenital CMV cases alone appears to account for all the cases previously attributed to all congenital infections. More than 40% of deafness cases with an unknown cause, needing rehabilitation, are caused by congenital CMV.


Clinical and Diagnostic Virology | 1996

Diagnosis of congenital cytomegalovirus infection by detection of viral DNA in dried blood spots

Maria Barbi; Sandro Binda; Valeria Primache; Cristina Luraschi; Carlo Corbetta

BACKGROUND The reference method of cytomegalovirus (CMV) isolation from urine or saliva is not a feasible routine technique for all newborns, and laboratory diagnosis of this infection would be useful both for epidemiological purposes and to enable prompt institution of adequate measures to identify and correct late sequelae. Extraction and amplification of viral DNA from dried blood spots (DBS) collected from babies in the first days of life during routine screening for genetic and metabolic disorders has been proposed for the early diagnosis of viral congenital infections. OBJECTIVES To test the method for CMV DNA extraction from DBS and to evaluate the results obtained in newborns with and without a diagnosis of congenital infection based on viral isolation from urine and or saliva at birth. STUDY DESIGN DBS from Guthrie cards collected in babies who underwent virological tests for CMV infection were tested for CMV DNA by observers blinded to the virological results. DNA was extracted from DBS both in water and in cell culture medium according to Shibata et al. with minor modifications. The products of nested polymerase chain reactions (PCR) amplifying two regions in the IE1 and gp58 genes were detected by agarose gel electrophoresis. Strict control measures were adopted to avoid carryovers and contaminations. RESULTS DBS from the eight symptomatic and 11 asymptomatic congenitally infected babies were positive when extraction was performed in medium, whereas extraction in water failed to identify two of the asymptomatic cases. The results obtained with the two extraction methods agreed in the remaining cases; the 71 CMV negative control babies were negative and two out of 21 cases of supposed postnatal infection were diagnosed as congenital on the basis of a positive DBS. All positive cases were identified by gp58 PCR but only slightly over half of them by IE1 PCR. Extraction in medium was more efficient than in water. CONCLUSIONS The method of CMV DNA extraction in medium followed by amplification of the gp58 region showed 100% sensitivity and specificity compared with isolation in cell culture. Therefore, we propose this procedure to diagnose congenital CMV infection at birth and also later.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2006

Multicity Italian study of congenital cytomegalovirus infection.

Maria Barbi; Sandro Binda; Simona Caroppo; Agata Calvario; Cinzia Germinario; Anna Bozzi; Maria Luisa Tanzi; Licia Veronesi; I. Mura; Andrea Piana; Giuliana Solinas; Lorenza Pugni; Giulio Bevilaqua; Fabio Mosca

Background: Cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection is the most frequent congenital infection in humans. Its prevalence and the frequency of disabling sequelae must be assessed in different populations to permit the formulation or assessment of preventive measures. Objectives: To check the prevalence of congenital infection and seroprevalence in Italy; to verify the rate of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) in infected infants; and to assess the proportion of children with SNHL attributable to congenital CMV infection. Methods: Diagnosis of congenital CMV infection was sought in 9032 children born between March 2002 and February 2003 by testing for viral DNA [CMV dried blood spot (DBS) test] in each newborns Guthrie card and confirmation by isolation of CMV from urine collected in the first 3 weeks of life; CMV IgG testing in 1200 women of childbearing age; clinical and audiologic tests in the first 24 months for infected children; CMV DBS tests on the Guthrie cards collected from screening centers for 77 children (3 months-5 years) presenting SNHL of 40 dB or more. Results: CMV infection was diagnosed in 14 asymptomatic and 2 symptomatic newborns (0.18%). CMV seroprevalence was 80%. In 2 infected infants, transient, unilateral SNHL was found. Nineteen of the 71 children with SNHL >70 dB were congenitally infected. Conclusions: The prevalence of congenital CMV infection is low in Italy. Population characteristics limiting the circulation of CMV strains in adult women might explain this. The fact that CMV contributes to significant SNHL highlights the need for preventive measures.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2001

CMV gB genotypes and outcome of vertical transmission: study on dried blood spots of congenitally infected babies

Maria Barbi; Sandro Binda; Simona Caroppo; Valeria Primache; Patrizia Didò; Paola Guidotti; Carlo Corbetta; Davide Melotti

BACKGROUND The role of the virulence of the infecting cytomegalovirus (CMV) strain in the transmission of the virus from mother to fetus and the outcome of the fetal infection has not received much attention yet. Molecular analysis of the gene coding for the surface glycoprotein B (gB) has been used to investigate the relationship between genotype and virulence in groups of immunosuppressed patients. OBJECTIVES (1) to assess the prevalence of different gB genotypes in babies with congenital CMV infection; (2) to investigate the possible relationship between genotype and severity of congenital CMV disease; (3) to evaluate the possibility of using dried blood on Guthrie cards (DBS) for genotyping. STUDY DESIGN CMV DNA was extracted from DBS and from urine/saliva samples collected in the first two weeks of life of 98 congenitally infected babies, half of which were symptomatic at birth. Genotyping was performed through RFLP analysis of the region corresponding to the cleavage site of the gB protein. RESULTS The most prevalent genotype was gB1 (42%) followed by gB3 (26%), gB2 (19%) and gB4 (13%). Rates of disease and CNS damages were higher among children infected by gB1 (35%, 17%) and gB3 (31%, 28%) than in those infected by gB2 and gB4 (20%, 17% and 13%, 15%, respectively). These differences however did not reach the statistical significance. The parallel typing of DBS and urine/saliva strains gave a full concordance of results. CONCLUSIONS All four major CMV gB genotypes (gB1-4) can cause a congenital infection but none seems to be associated to the development and the severity of disease. The possibility of using the neonatal DBS for genotyping opens a way to the examination of large numbers of cases of congenital CMV infection.


BMC Microbiology | 2008

External quality assessment of cytomegalovirus DNA detection on dried blood spots

Maria Barbi; William G. Mackay; Sandro Binda; Anton M van Loon

BackgroundTesting for viral DNA in neonatal blood dried on paper (DBS) has proved a valid means of diagnosing congenital CMV infection with both clinical and epidemiological relevance. To assess the quality of the detection of CMV-DNA on DBS in laboratories performing this test a proficiency panel consisting of nine samples with two blood spots on each filter paper was produced and distributed. Six samples were derived from whole blood, negative for CMV DNA and antibody, and spiked with cell-grown CMV Towne in various concentrations (7.3 × 102 – 9.6 × 105 copies/ml), one was a CMV positive clinical specimen (3.9 × 106 copies/ml), and two samples were CMV-negative whole blood.ResultsThe 27 responding laboratories from 14 countries submitted 33 datasets obtained by means of conventional PCR (n = 5) or real-time PCR (n = 28) technologies. A correct positive result was reported in at least 91% of datasets in samples with a viral load of 8.8 × 104 copies/ml or higher. However only 59% and 12% identified the 9.4 × 103 and 7.3 × 102 copies/ml samples, respectively, correctly as positive. False positive results were reported by 9% of laboratories and in 11% of datasets.ConclusionThese results indicate a clear need for improvement of methods as sensitivity and false-positivity still appear to be a major problem in a considerable number of laboratories.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 1998

Congenital cytomegalovirus infection in a northern Italian region

Maria Barbi; Sandro Binda; Valeria Primache; D. Clerici

Knowledge of the prevalence of congenital cytomegalovirus infection is necessary to evaluate the need for prevention. We performed a multicentre one-year study involving 11 neonatology divisions to ascertain the prevalence in Lombardy. Cytomegalovirus was isolated by culturing saliva samples from all babies born (n=1268) of two 15-day sample periods and from 185 neonates with suspected congenital CMV based on clinical and laboratory findings and the history. The overall prevalence of congenital infection was 0.47% (6/1268) in the sample period group and 5% (9/185) in the second group. Clinical monitoring revealed sequelae in two of three children with symptomatic infection and no asymptomatic child at age two years. In a subgroup of 205 babies including 14 of the infected infants we also evaluated a test to detect cytomegalovirus DNA in the Guthrie cards obtained in neonatal screening for genetic and metabolic disorders. The tests sensitivity was 100% and specificity 98.5%, encouraging its use for early identification of infected neonates and for large epidemiological studies.


AIDS | 1992

Immunization in children with HIV seropositivity at birth : antibody response to polio vaccine and tetanus toxoid

Maria Barbi; Maria Rosa Biffi; Sandro Binda; Mariangela Clerici-Schoeller; G. Ferraris; Cristina Luraschi; Paola Masella; Pierluigi Mazzoni; Alberto Pozzi; Fabrizio Pregliasco; Nicola Principi; Maurizio Sticca; Domenico Vaggi; Gian Vincenzo Zuccotti

ObjectiveTo evaluate the humoral response to routine childhood immunization of HIV-infected children. DesignResponse rate, antibody titres and persistence after polio and tetanus vaccination were compared in 72 children with HIV seropositivity at birth and divided according to HIV infection status as determined by clinical and laboratory tests. MethodsPolio antibodies were titred in a microneutralization test (positive titres, ≥1:4), and antibody to tetanus toxoid with a passive haemagglutination method (protective titres, ≥1:1024). ResultsThe response rates to polio and tetanus vaccination (>80 and >75%) were similar in the HIV-infected and non-infected children, as were antibody levels. In the subgroup with sera obtained some months after the last dose of vaccine, polio antibody levels decreased in all four HIV-infected and in three of the seven non-infected children; protective tetanus antitoxin levels were detected in three of the six infected and in all three non-infected children. ConclusionsThis study demonstrates the ability of children with HIV infection to respond adequately to the two vaccines considered, although tetanus antitoxin levels were inferior, compared with those in the seroreverted children. The unsatisfactory antibody levels observed in the admittedly few HIV-positive children studied some months after the last vaccination could be the result of a lower initial protective level and not necessarily an expression of severely impaired immunocompetence. The administration of booster doses in addition to the traditional immunization schedule could be useful in children with HIV infection.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 1996

Cytomegalovirus in peripheral blood leukocytes of infants with congenital or postnatal infection.

Maria Barbi; Sandro Binda; Valeria Primache; Chiara Novelli

BACKGROUND Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most frequent agent of viral infection in the fetus; it causes varying damage, particularly neurologic, which becomes evident at birth or in infancy in about 20% of infected individuals. Postnatal acquisition is usually asymptomatic and without sequelae. Laboratory diagnosis of congenital and postnatal infection is based on the demonstration of virus in urine. OBJECTIVES To investigate the systemic spread of CMV in neonates with congenital or postnatal infection and to evaluate its significance in diagnosis and in monitoring anti-CMV treatments. DESIGN Quantitative determinations of infective CMV (viremia) and viral antigen pp65 (antigenemia) were performed on peripheral blood leukocytes (PBL) from the buffy coat of heparinized blood from children with a diagnosis of congenital (n = 19) or postnatal (n = 19) infection based on viral isolation from urine. RESULTS Antigen pp65 in PBL was detected particularly in children with symptomatic infection, both congenital (100%) and postnatal (79%; P > 0.05), and significantly less frequently (50%; P < 0.001) in those with asymptomatic infection. Viremia was observed less often but always in association with antigenemia. Both tests became negative within 6 months. Neither viral titer nor persistent positivity was related to clinical manifestations. In the nine infants given anti-CMV therapy (ganciclovir and/or hyperimmune gamma-globulins) an early suspension of treatment resulted in the appearance of antigenemia and/or viremia. CONCLUSIONS Cytomegalovirus was detected in PBL mainly in the most severely affected children. Monitoring antigenemia and viremia in CMV-infected infants is recommended to demonstrate persistent systemic infection and to evaluate virologic results of treatment.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2014

High frequency of Merkel cell polyomavirus DNA in the urine of kidney transplant recipients and healthy controls

Lucia Signorini; Mirco Belingheri; Federico Ambrogi; Elisabetta Pagani; Sandro Binda; Rosalia Ticozzi; Mariano Ferraresso; Luciana Ghio; Bruno Giacon; Pasquale Ferrante; Serena Delbue

BACKGROUND Polyomavirus (PyV) infection is common, ranging from 60% to 100% depending on the virus. The urinary excretion rates of JC virus (JCV) and BK virus (BKV) have been extensively studied, but less is known about the more recently discovered PyVs. OBJECTIVES To investigate the urinary excretion of Merkel cell PyV (MCPyV), which is associated with Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC), in kidney transplant recipients and healthy subjects, as well as those of lymphotropic polyomavirus (LPV), which was isolated from the B-cells of African green monkeys but has also been found in human blood, JCV and BKV. STUDY DESIGN Urine samples were collected from 62 adult (ATP) and 46 pediatric (PTP) kidney transplant recipients and from 67 adult (AHC) and 40 pediatric (PHC) healthy controls. DNA was isolated and analyzed using real-time PCR (Q-PCR) to determine the viral loads of MCPyV, LPV, JCV and BKV. RESULTS MCPyV DNA was more frequently detected (p<0.05) in the PTP (36.9%) and PHC (30.0%) groups compared to JCV (8.7% in PTP, 12.5% in PHC), BKV (6.5% in PTP, 2.5% in PHC), and LPV (2.2% in PTP, 5% in PHC) and in the AHC (47.8%) group compared to BKV (13.4%) and LPV (0%). CONCLUSIONS Based on the results, it could be concluded that: (a) Despite the rarity of MCC, MCPyV is a common infection; (b) MCPyV demonstrates an excretion pattern similar to those of JCV and BKV, persisting in the kidney and infecting skin cells upon reactivation, with subsequent integration and transformation.

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Lucia Fiore

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Fabio Mosca

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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