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Publication
Featured researches published by Tatiana Mancini.
Endocrinology and Metabolism Clinics of North America | 2008
Tatiana Mancini; Felipe F. Casanueva; Andrea Giustina
Any process interfering with dopamine synthesis, its transport to the pituitary gland, or its action at the level of lactotroph dopamine receptors can cause hyperprolactinemia. As described in this article, considering the complexity of prolactin regulation, many factors could cause hyperprolactinemia, and hyperprolactinemia can have clinical effects not only on the reproductive axis. Once any drug effects are excluded, prolactinomas are the most common cause of hyperprolactinemia. The most frequent symptom is hypogonadism in both genders. Medical and surgical therapies generally have excellent results, and most prolactinomas are well controlled or even cured in some cases.
Pituitary | 2004
Tatiana Mancini; Mauro Doga; Gherardo Mazziotti; Andrea Giustina
Structural and functional impairment of skeletal system is a relevant cause of morbidity and disability in patients with Cushings syndrome (CS). Approximately 30–50% of patients with CS experience fractures (particularly at the spinal level) consistent with the 50% incidence of osteoporosis. Growth failure, pubertal arrest are the hallmarks of CS in children and growing adolescents leading to reduced final adult height and peak bone mass. The decrease in osteoblast number and function, through different mechanisms, seems to play a central role in the bone loss in CS. Patients with CS have decreased serum levels of osteocalcin and alkaline phosphatase. Considering the preferential bone loss in the cancellous skeleton it is reasonable to measure BMD, possibly with Dual X-rays absorptiometry (DEXA) at lumbar spine, in all patients with CS.Patients cured from CS have increased prevalence of spine damage: therefore, a radiological follow-up of the skeleton should be included in the management of patients with CS not only during the active phase but also after cure.Glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis is reversible. The recovery of bone loss in CS is slow, taking approximately ten years to become complete. In the meanwhile, patients with severe osteopenia are exposed to a high risk of fracture. Alendronate may induce a more rapid improvement in BMD than cortisol normalization alone and it could be useful in patients with persistent postsurgical hypercortisolism to prevent further bone loss. The decision to discontinue antiresorptive therapy should be based on clinical monitoring and DEXA measurements.
Bone | 2009
Tatiana Mancini; Gherardo Mazziotti; Mauro Doga; Rita Carpinteri; Niksa Simetovic; Pier Paolo Vescovi; Andrea Giustina
OBJECTIVE To investigate the relationship between osteoporotic vertebral fractures and rosiglitazone treatment and the influence on this association of bone mineral density (BMD) and duration of diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS In this cross-sectional study, we evaluated BMD by DXA and the prevalence of radiological vertebral fractures identified by a quantitative morphometric analysis in 43 males with type 2 diabetes under metformin alone (22 cases) or associated with rosiglitazone (21 cases) and in 22 control non-diabetic subjects attending an out-patient bone clinic. RESULTS Vertebral fractures were found in 46.5% of diabetic males (p=0.06 vs. control subjects) with higher prevalence in patients treated with rosiglitazone plus metformin as compared with those under treatment with metformin alone (66.7% vs. 27.3%; p=0.01). The patients on rosiglitazone plus metformin were significantly younger and with greater body mass index (BMI). Multivariate logistic regression analysis demonstrated that rosiglitazone plus metformin treatment maintained the significant correlation with the occurrence of vertebral fractures (odds ratio 6.5, C.I. 1.3-38.1, p=0.03) even after correction for age and BMI. Within the rosiglitazone-exposed group, the occurrence of vertebral fractures was not correlated with BMD, age, duration of diabetes, duration of medical treatment, dose of rosiglitazone, serum glycosylated hemoglobin and total testosterone values. CONCLUSIONS The use of rosiglitazone is associated with an increased prevalence of vertebral fractures in males with type 2 diabetes. These findings call for a wide screening of bone status in diabetic patients treated with rosiglitazone and the use of spine X-ray in combination with DXA in this assessment.
Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 2012
Giorgio Arnaldi; Tatiana Mancini; G. Tirabassi; Laura Trementino; Marco Boscaro
Cushing’s syndrome (CS) is a clinical condition resulting from chronic exposure to glucocorticoid excess. As a consequence, hypercortisolism contributes significantly to the early development of systemic disorders by direct and/or indirect effects. Complications such as obesity, hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, and hypercoagulability cause premature atherosclerosis and increase cardiovascular mortality. Impairment of the skeletal system is a relevant cause of morbidity and disability in these patients especially due to the high prevalence of vertebral fractures. In addition, muscle weakness, emotional lability, depression, and impairment of quality of life are very common. Clinical management of these patients is complex and should be particularly careful in identifying global cardiovascular risks and aim at controlling all complications. Although the primary goal in the prevention and treatment of complications is the correction of hypercortisolism, treatment does not completely eliminate these comorbidities. Given that cardiovascular risk and fracture risk can persist after cure, early detection of each morbidity could prevent the development of irreversible damage. In this review we present the various complications of CS and their pathogenetic mechanisms. We also suggest the clinical management of these patients based on our extensive clinical experience and on the available literature.
Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management | 2010
Tatiana Mancini; Teresa Porcelli; Andrea Giustina
Endogenous Cushing syndrome is an endocrine disease caused by excessive secretion of adrenocorticotropin hormone in approximately 80% of cases, usually by a pituitary corticotroph adenoma (Cushing disease [CD]). It is a heterogeneous disorder requiring a multidisciplinary and individualized approach to patient management. The goals of treatment of CD include the reversal of clinical features, the normalization of biochemical changes with minimal morbidity, and long-term control without recurrence. Generally, the treatment of choice is the surgical removal of the pituitary tumor by transsphenoidal approach, performed by an experienced surgeon. Considering the high recurrence rate, other treatments should be considered. Second-line treatments include more radical surgery, radiation therapy, medical therapy, and bilateral adrenalectomy. Drug treatment has been targeted at the hypothalamic or pituitary level, at the adrenal gland, and also at the glucocorticoid receptor level. Frequently, medical therapy is performed before surgery to reduce the complications of the procedure, reducing the effects of severe hypercortisolism. Commonly, in patients in whom surgery has failed, medical management is often essential to reduce or normalize the hypercortisolemia, and should be attempted before bilateral adrenalectomy is considered. Medical therapy can be also useful in patients with CD while waiting for pituitary radiotherapy to take effect, which can take up to 10 years or more. So far, results of medical treatment of CD have not been particularly relevant; however, newer tools promise to change this scenario. The aim of this review is to analyze the results and experiences with old and new medical treatments of CD and to reevaluate medical therapies for complications of CD and hypopituitarism in patients with cured CD.
Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 2011
G. Tirabassi; B. Kola; M. Ferretti; R. Papa; Tatiana Mancini; Franco Mantero; Marina Scarpelli; Marco Boscaro; Giorgio Arnaldi
Background: Fine-needle aspiration (FNA) of adrenal masses is a method currently indicated in lesions suspected of being extra-adrenal in origin; even though its diagnostic reliability has already been determined in many studies, few have used histological examination obtained after adrenalectomy for diagnostic confirmation. Aim: To analyze the diagnostic performance of adrenal FNA in subjects with an available histological confirmation. Subjects and methods: Fifty subjects (26 benign adrenal lesions, 9 primary malignant lesions, and 15 metastatic lesions) who had undergone ultrasound (US)-guided adrenal FNA and then adrenalectomy were re-analyzed retrospectively. Results: FNA guaranteed a sensitivity of 85.7% and a specificity of 100% in all subjects; after having divided the subjects into oncologic and non-oncologic groups, the sensitivity of the test in oncologic patients (100%) increased significantly compared to non-oncologic (57.1%) with no difference in specificity (100% in both groups). Considering also non-diagnostic samples in our analysis (no.=11; 22% of all samples studied), FNA correctly diagnosed malignancy only in 75% of the cases and benignancy only in 66.6%; however, even after including nondiagnostic samples, the percentage of correct malignancy diagnosis remained significantly higher in oncologic (93.3%) than in non-oncologic patients (44.4%) without significant statistical difference between the 2 groups regarding the percentage of correct benignancy diagnosis (respectively 100% and 63.6%). Conclusions: Our study, based on histological confirmation, underlines the low discriminant value of US-guided adrenal FNA, though the method may have value in oncologic patients.
Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 2008
Andrea Giustina; Tatiana Mancini; P. F. Boscani; E. De Menis; E.C. degli Uberti; Ezio Ghigo; Enio Martino; F. Minuto; A. Colao; Com.E.T.A. (COMorbidities Evaluation)
Background: During the course of acromegaly, cardiovascular, respiratory, and metabolic co-morbidities contribute to enhanced mortality. In 2002, the Pituitary Society and the European Neuroendocrine Association sponsored a Consensus Workshop in Versailles during which guidelines for diagnosis and treatment of co-morbidities in acromegaly were defined. However, as for other guidelines previously issued in the field, no data are available on their clinical application. Aim: The aim of this work coordinated by the Italian Study group on co-morbidities evaluation and treatment in acromegaly (COM.E.T.A.) was to assess, on a national basis, the application in the clinical practice of the Versailles criteria for diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular comorbities in acromegaly. Materials and methods: In January 2007 an ad hoc designed questionnaire was sent by mail to 130 endocrine Centers in Italy. Results: The guidelines have been generally well perceived and translated in clinical practice. Specifically: 1) echocardiography is considered the mainstay for the diagnosis and follow-up; 2) ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and blood lipid assessment are performed in most hypertensive patients; 3) most endocrinologists directly manage hypertension and are aware of the uncertainty of the effect of the control of the disease on blood pressure levels; 4) ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptors blockers are first-choice anti-hypertensive treatment; 5) approximately half of the centers consider somatostatin analogues of paramount relevance for biochemical control of disease; 6) awareness that left ventricular hypertrophy and heart failure are the most relevant cardiovascular complications is high although the impact of ischemic, arrhythmic, and valvular complications on prognosis is less well perceived. Conclusion: The results of the present survey suggest that previuosly issued guidelines are generally carefully followed in the clinical practice. On the other side, a certain lack of awareness of emerging aspects of the cardiovascular comorbities of acromegaly confirms the necessity of periodically updating the guidelines based on the availability of new clinical information.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2003
G. Arnaldi; Alberto Angeli; A. B. Atkinson; Xavier Bertagna; F. Cavagnini; George P. Chrousos; Giovanni A. Fava; James W. Findling; Rc Gaillard; Ashley B. Grossman; B. Kola; André Lacroix; Tatiana Mancini; Franco Mantero; John Newell-Price; Lynnette K. Nieman; Nicoletta Sonino; Mary Lee Vance; Andrea Giustina; Marco Boscaro
Pituitary | 2011
Gherardo Mazziotti; Tatiana Mancini; Marilda Mormando; Ernesto De Menis; Antonio Bianchi; Mauro Doga; Teresa Porcelli; Pier Paolo Vescovi; Laura De Marinis; Andrea Giustina
International Journal of Cardiology | 2007
Roberto Lorusso; Giuseppe De Cicco; Cesare Beghi; Tiziano Gherli; Enzo Poli; Domenico Corradi; Roberta Maestri; Stefania Bonadonna; Tatiana Mancini; Andrea Giustina