Tiziana D'Adda
University of Parma
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Featured researches published by Tiziana D'Adda.
Helicobacter | 1997
Bruno Annibale; Massimo Marignani; Cinzia Azzoni; G. D'Ambra; Pietro Caruana; Tiziana D'Adda; Gianfranco Delle Fave; Cesare Bordi
Usually, atrophic body gastritis has been considered an autoimmune disease characterized by the presence of parietal cell antibodies. Previous investigations into the role of Helicobacter pylori infection have obtained conflicting results. The aim of this study was to investigate the prevalence and role of H. pylori in a prospectively investigated population of patients with corpus‐predominant atrophic gastritis.
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 1997
Cesare Bordi; Alberto Falchetti; Cinzia Azzoni; Tiziana D'Adda; Gabriella Canavese; Achille Guariglia; Donatella Santini; Paola Tomassetti; Maria Luisa Brandi
In recent classifications of gastric endocrine tumors, tumors arising in patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN-1) are regarded to be regulated by the concomitant hypergastrinemia resulting from to pancreatic or, most commonly, duodenal gastrinomas and to have a benign behavior. In this article, we report on two cases of MEN-1 gastric neuroendocrine tumors having a fatal course. Case 1 was a young male with hyperparathyroidism and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and with florid development of multiple gastric carcinoids and multiple duodenal gastrinomas. Metastases occurred in the liver, of exclusive gastric origin, in periduodenal lymph nodes, of exclusive duodenal origin, and in perigastric lymph nodes, of mixed origin. The patient died 48 months after diagnosis. Case 2 was an adult female patient with hyperparathyroidism, adrenocortical disorders, and gastric tumors but no hypergastrinemia. The patient died 3 months after tumor diagnosis. At autopsy, the stomach showed multiple benign carcinoids and two independent neuroendocrine carcinomas not reported before in MEN-1 and massively metastatizing to lymph nodes, liver, and peritoneum. Multiple islet cell tumors mostly producing pancreatic polypeptide were found, whereas gastrinomas were seen in neither the pancreas nor the duodenum. Allelic losses at the MEN-1 gene locus in chromosome 11q13, the mechanism responsible for tumor development in MEN-1 syndrome, were demonstrated in the carcinoid tumors of case 1 and in the neuroendocrine carcinoma of case 2. We conclude that gastric neuroendocrine tumors in patients with MEN-1 may have a poor outcome, they have the same genetic mechanism as MEN-1 tumors in other organs, and they may be independent of the trophic effect of hypergastrinemia.
The Journal of Pathology | 1999
Tiziana D'Adda; Sonja Candidus; Helmut Denk; Cesare Bordi; Heinz Höfler
Type I gastric carcinoid tumours associated with corporal (body of stomach) atrophic gastritis (CAG) are benign tumours developing as the final step of a hyperplastic precursor sequence. The neoplastic nature of these tumours has been assumed but never proved. Type III gastric carcinoid tumours and neuroendocrine carcinomas are malignant neoplasms without known precursor lesions. To assess the neoplastic nature of type I carcinoids, the clonal status of 35 tumours from 23 female patients was investigated using the human androgen receptor (HUMARA) gene test, which is based on the pattern of X‐chromosome inactivation. For comparison, the same test was also performed on four type III carcinoids and two neuroendocrine carcinomas. DNA extracted from paraffin sections was digested with Hha I restriction enzyme and then amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using established HUMARA primers. The PCR products were analysed in an automated DNA sequencer. In a complementary analysis of the same tumours, loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on the X chromosome was studied using three polymorphic markers (DXS989, DXS1003, DXS1192) in a PCR‐microsatellite‐based technique. After exclusion of non‐informative cases, 14 of 16 type I carcinoids were found to be monoclonal on the basis of the pattern of X‐chromosome inactivation. Monoclonality was also documented in one of three type III carcinoids and in the single neuroendocrine carcinoma, on the basis of LOH at the HUMARA locus, which per se can be regarded as evidence for clonality. Extensive LOH of the X chromosome involving at least two markers, was found in all metastasizing tumours (two type III carcinoids and two neuroendocrine carcinomas), but in none of the 27 benign carcinoids of types I and III. These results indicate that most type I carcinoids are true monoclonal neoplasms and that malignant evolution in gastric neuroendocrine tumours is associated with extensive allelic deletion of one X chromosome. Copyright
Cell and Tissue Research | 1989
Tiziana D'Adda; A. Bertelè; Francesco Paolo Pilato; Cesare Bordi
SummaryAn ultrastructural morphometric study of the endocrine cells of the oxyntic mucosa of the stomach in gastric biopsies collected from five male and five female healthy volunteers aged 19–31 was performed. No sex-related differences were disclosed. Endocrine cells accounted for 1.2±0.4% of the epithelial volume and 0.9±0.4% of the mucosal volume, i.e., including the lamina propria. After classification of the specific endocrine cell types according to the ultrastructural morphology of secretory granules, the volume densities of ECL, P and D cells (30±9%, 24±7%, and 22±4% of the entire endocrine cell mass, respectively) were higher than those of other endocrine cell types. In particular, EC cells contributed less than 10% and X cells represented a very low proportion of the total cells. Non-granulated profiles of cells which in all other respects appeared to be endocrine were also found with a volume density of 8±4%. D cells were distinguished by the high fraction of cytoplasm occupied by secretory granules (31±5%). Subdivision of the whole mucosa into four horizontal segments revealed the endocrine cells to be mostly distributed in the three lower, with virtually no endocrine cells in the superficial segment. The quantitative ultrastructural analysis of the endocrine cell population of the normal human oxyntic mucosa provided by this study may allow a better evaluation of physiological and pharmacological variations of the endocrine cell population.
Microscopy Research and Technique | 2000
Cesare Bordi; Tiziana D'Adda; Cinzia Azzoni; Gabriella Ferraro
This review discusses the current concepts for the classification of gastric endocrine cells subdivided according to the type of mucosa in which they are located. In the oxyntic mucosa, the most important cell type is the ECL cell, involved in the synthesis and secretion of histamine. Proteins involved in many aspects of the biology of ECL cells including the response to the gastrin stimulus, membrane transport and docking, prevention of apoptosis, calcium homeostasis, autocrine activity, and maintenance of the differentiated cell phenotype have been localized to this cell type. Other cells of the oxyntic mucosa include: the D and EC cells producing somatostatin and serotonin, respectively, delivered through long cell processes; the X (or A‐like) cells, possibly producing endothelin; and the D1 and P cells of unknown function and possibly representing morphological variants of other cell types. In the antral mucosa, the three important cell types are represented by: the gastrin‐producing G cells; the somatostatin‐producing D cells, which are anatomically and functionally associated with G cells; and the serotonin‐producing EC cells, which are located at the bottom of antral glands. Microsc. Res. Tech. 48:258–271, 2000
The Journal of Pathology | 2005
Silvia Pizzi; Cinzia Azzoni; Lorena Bottarelli; Nicoletta Campanini; Tiziana D'Adda; Claudio Pasquali; Giulio Rossi; Guido Rindi; Cesare Bordi
The Ras‐association domain family 1A (RASSF1A) tumour suppressor gene is inactivated in a variety of solid tumours, usually by epigenetic silencing of the promoter and/or allelic loss of its locus at 3p21.3. RASSF1A induces cell cycle arrest through inhibition of cyclin D1 accumulation. In this work, 62 endocrine tumours from different sites in the gut were investigated for methylation of the RASSF1A promoter using the polymerase chain reaction, the presence of 3p21.3 deletions by loss of heterozygosity analysis, and cyclin D1 expression by immunohistochemistry. Methylation was found in 20/62 (32%) cases and was restricted to foregut tumours; deletion at 3p21.3 was found in 15/58 (26%) informative cases and restricted to malignant foregut tumours; cyclin D1 hyperexpression was found in 31/58 (53%) cases and correlated with RASSF1A methylation. Our data suggest that RASSF1A is involved in the development of endocrine tumours derived from the foregut only, and that the presence of both RASSF1A methylation and 3p21.3 deletion is associated with malignancy. These results may provide a rationale for foregut‐targeted therapy for aggressive endocrine carcinomas entailing the use of demethylating agents. Copyright
Human Pathology | 1994
Cesare Bordi; Alberto Falchetti; R. Buffa; Cinzia Azzoni; Tiziana D'Adda; Pietro Caruana; Guido Rindi; Maria Luisa Brandi
Using immunohistochemical techniques a subpopulation of endocrine cells in the human oxyntic mucosa was found to react with antibodies against basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF). These cells were identified as histamine-producing enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells and, to a minor extent, serotonin-producing enterochromaffin cells. Basic fibroblast growth factor immunoreactive cells were most frequently found in hyperplastic lesions of ECL cells occurring in hypergastrinemic patients (20 of 27 cases) and in ECL cell carcinoid tumors (10 of 17 cases). In addition, bFGF mRNA was demonstrated by Northern blot analysis of homogenates from two gastric carcinoids cytologically characterized as pure ECL cell tumors. Although the function of bFGF in normal cells remains unknown, its production in neoplastic conditions may be responsible for the associated desmoplastic and angioblastic proliferations. Moreover, secretion of bFGF by hyperplastic or neoplastic ECL cells may contribute to the circulating levels of the bFGF-like mitogenic factor identified in patients affected by multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 syndrome.
The Journal of Pathology | 1997
Cesare Bordi; Bruno Annibale; Cinzia Azzoni; Massimo Marignani; Gabriella Ferraro; Giorgio Antonelli; Tiziana D'Adda; G. D'Ambra; Gianfranco Delle Fave
The aim of the present study was to evaluate the correspondence of the classification of non‐antral endocrine cell growths proposed by Solcia and co‐workers with clinical features and non‐endocrine mucosal changes. For this purpose, 94 cases of newly diagnosed atrophic body gastritis were investigated using endoscopic biopsies and compared with 18 control subjects. The patients were subdivided into the following four groups according to the most severe pattern of endocrine cell proliferation found in the body mucosa, as shown by chromogranin A immunostaining: group 1, normal pattern (7 cases, 7·5 per cent); group 2, simple hyperplasia (6 cases, 6·5 per cent); group 3, linear hyperplasia (24 cases, 25·8 per cent); group 4; micronodular hyperplasia (56 cases, 60·2 per cent). Adenomatoid hyperplasia was found in only one case, thus precluding further analysis. Patients in groups 1 and 2 had lower acid secretion, higher gastrin level, and higher mean scores in all histopathological variables of chronic gastritis considered by the Sydney system when compared with controls, but did not differ among them in any parameter investigated. When compared with groups 1 and 2, patients of groups 3 and 4 showed higher values of circulating gastrin, higher scores of glandular atrophy, and lower values of acid secretion and of mononuclear and neutrophil inflammatory cell infiltration. Moreover, group 4 patients differed significantly from those of group 3 in their higher gastrin levels and atrophy scores, and lower scores of neutrophil cell infiltration. On the basis of these results, it is proposed that for practical purposes the normal and the simple hyperplasia patterns may be incorporated into a single group. It is concluded that this classification in its simplified form, based on a qualitative histological approach, shows clinical relevance without the need to perform expensive, time‐consuming morphometric evaluations.
Cancer | 1989
M. L. Caruso; Francesco Paolo Pilato; Tiziana D'Adda; Maria Teresa Baggi; L. Fucci; A. M. Valentini; M. Lacatena; Cesare Bordi
A case of multiple gastric carcinoids and nonantral atrophic gastritis in which the larger tumor was a composite carcinoid‐adenocarcinoma is presented. The two components of the composite tumor immunohistochemically showed clear‐cut diverging functional differentiations although the available evidence supported a common histogenesis from the metaplastic intestinal epithelium of the gastric mucosa. The carcinoid tissue of the composite tumor, which showed “atypical” features, also differed from the other, pure carcinoids, in which the histologic appearance was “typical.” Total gastrectomy performed 1 month after the original gastric resection with antrectomy disclosed regressive changes in the endocrine cell proliferations of the gastric stump consistent with the withdrawal of a stimulating effect of the antral gastrin.
Digestion | 1986
Cesare Bordi; Francesco Paolo Pilato; G. Carfagna; C. Ferrari; Tiziana D'Adda; R. Sivelli; A. Bertelè; Germano Missale
Eighteen cases of severe hyperplasia of fundic argyrophil cells observed during routine histologic examination of endoscopic gastric biopsy specimens from unselected patients with upper gastro-intestinal symptomatology were investigated. All patients, except one, were female with a mean age of 57 years. Atrophic gastritis of fundic mucosa with severe hypo- or achlorhydria was present in all cases. Hypergastrinaemia (of antral origin) was found in 15 subjects in which circulating gastrin levels were determined. Pernicious anaemia was seen in 1 patient. At light microscopy, the hyperplastic fundic cells were stained by the Grimelius and the Sevier-Munger silver methods and, in approximately 30% of cases, by lead-haematoxylin. In addition, these cells reacted with anti chromogranin antibodies. In 8 of 9 patients studied by electron-microscopy, enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells were found to be the more frequent cell type. D1 cells prevailed in 1 case and were rare in the others. The frequency of P cells was intermediate between that of ECL cells and that of D1 cells. In conclusion, our observations indicate that: argyrophil cell hyperplasia of atrophic fundic mucosa is prevalently found in women with hypergastrinaemia, and the hyperplastic process involves mostly the ECL type of gastric endocrine cells. It is noteworthy that similar associations have been shown to be present in patients affected by fundic carcinoid tumours and atrophic gastritis.