Publications (52)125.8 Total impact
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Article: Renal sinus pseudolymphoma in a patient with multiple carcinomas: a case report and a brief review of the literature.
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ABSTRACT: The term pseudolymphoma refers to a heterogeneous group of benign reactive T-cell or B-cell lymphoproliferative processes of diverse causes that simulate lymphoma clinically and histologically but usually undergo spontaneous remission. Its pathogenesis is still unclear. The prognosis is good although some evidence suggests that pseudolymphoma may progress to lymphoma. Pseudolymphoma of the urinary tract is extremely rare. We herein report a case of pseudolymphoma of the renal sinus in a 70-year-old man, associated with a high grade urothelial carcinoma of the bladder and to a prostatic adenocarcinoma (Gleason score 6). A brief review of the literature is included. The kidney showed a well-defined, whitish soft mass which involved the renal sinus. Microscopically, the lesion of the renal sinus consisted of a proliferation of small to medium size lymphocytes (CD20 positive and Bcl-2 negative) sometimes arranged in hyperplastic follicular structures. The diagnosis was confirmed by molecular studies which showed an oligopolyclonal IgH rearrangement. To the best of our knowledge, this is the second case of pseudolymphoma with a complete molecular characterization ever described in the renal sinus and the first one associated with multiple urogenital carcinomas.Histology and histopathology 10/2012; 27(10):1327-32. · 2.48 Impact Factor -
Article: Anti-angiogenetic effects of immune-reconstituted influenza virosomes assembled with parathyroid hormone-related protein derived peptide vaccine
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ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: C-IRIV/PTR-4 is a novel anticancer vaccine construct composed of immune-reconstituted influenza virosomes (IRIV) assembled with the PTH-rP derived peptide (PTR)-4, a synthetic CTL epitope with HLA-A(*)02.01 amino acid binding motifs. This peptide is able to generate a human PTH-rP specific CTL response with anti-tumor activity in vitro and in mice. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We have investigated the immunological and preventive anti-tumor activity of C-IRIV/PTR-4 compared with the soluble PTR-4 peptide, in HHD mice inoculated with autologous PTH-rP+ tumor cells. RESULTS: Peptide vaccination with either a soluble and an IRIV formulation showed similar immunological activity and the ability to purge the tumor tissue of tumor cell clones able to produce the target antigen (PTR-rP). The most efficient protection from tumor growth was however observed in animals vaccinated with C-IRIV/PTR-4 in which an additional IRIV related anti-angiogenetic effect was detected in the tumor tissue. CONCLUSIONS: These results confirm the immunological activity of PTR-4 vaccination and suggest a more efficacious therapeutic potential of C-IRIV/PTR-4 against bone metastases and malignancies like breast, prostate and lung which very often over-express PTH-rPCancer Lett. 05/2008; 263(2). -
Article: State of the art on autologous mesothelial transplant in animals and humans.
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ABSTRACT: Sixteen years ago rabbit and human mesothelial cells were successfully cultured and autoimplanted. The aim of the study was merely to demonstrate that mesothelial implant was possible and interesting not only in peritoneal dialysis, but also in the vaster field of medicine and surgery concerning all the mesothelial districts of the body. The aim of this paper is to recollect the steps which have led to autologous mesothelial transplantation and verify if the technique has been validated and adopted by others. Review of the literature published in the last 15 years shows that intraperitoneal transplantation of mesothelial cells has been effective in reducing the formation of peritoneal adhesions, and in remodeling the area of mesothelial denudation. New studies on the mesothelial cell opened the way to construction of transplantable tissue-engineered artificial peritoneum, to the utilization of mesothelial progenitor cells and to find simple methods to collect autologous mesothelial cells. Finally mesothelial transplantation may represent a new neovascular therapy in the prevention and treatment of ischemic coronary heart disease.The International journal of artificial organs 07/2007; 30(6):456-76. · 1.86 Impact Factor -
Article: Chemo-hormone therapy of non-well-differentiated endocrine tumours from different anatomic sites with cisplatinum, etoposide and slow release lanreotide formulation.
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ABSTRACT: We report the results of a phase II trial in patients with metastatic endocrine tumours from different sites, which aimed to evaluate the anti-tumour activity and toxicity of a cisplatinum and etoposide regimen administered in combination with the somatostatin agonist lanreotide given in slow release formulation. Between January 1999 and November 2003, 27 patients with histological diagnoses of endocrine tumours with different degrees of differentiation, excluding well differentiated carcinoid neoplasms, received intravenous (i.v.) administration of cisplatinum (30 mg m(-2)) and etoposide (100 mg m(-2)) on days 1-3 and intramuscular administration of 60 mg lanreotide on day 1, in a 21-day cycle. All of the patients were evaluable for toxicity and response. The treatment was very well tolerated as no grade 4 toxicity was observed. Four patients achieved a complete response, six a partial response, 12 experienced disease stabilisation and five disease progression. The average time to progression and to survival were 9 and 24 months respectively. These results suggest that this chemo-hormone therapy regimen is well tolerated and active in patients with non-well differentiated endocrine tumours.British Journal of Cancer 06/2007; 96(9):1343-7. · 5.04 Impact Factor -
Article: Expression of chemo-resistance markers in multiple metachronous teratoma metastasis following nonseminomatous germ cell tumor.
Minerva chirurgica 05/2006; 61(2):181-2. · 0.77 Impact Factor -
Article: Altered glutathione anti-oxidant metabolism during tumor progression in human renal-cell carcinoma.
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ABSTRACT: It has been proposed that oxidative stress develops in tumors, with important consequences for growth and progression. To investigate this hypothesis, we measured low m.w. thiols, disulfides, protein-mixed disulfides and a pool of major anti-oxidant enzymes in renal-cortex as well as renal-cell carcinoma (RCC) specimens at stages I-II and III. Our data showed (i) a significant increase in the levels of total intracellular glutathione at both tumor stages (levels were 2.6-2.8 fold higher than those in the normal renal cortex), (ii) a marked lowering of the GSH/GSSG ratio in stage I-II accompanied by a significant decrease of many GSH-dependent enzymes (i.e., GPX, GST, GGT, GR) and (iii) unchanged GSH/GSSG ratio and GSH-dependent enzyme activity in stage III with respect to normal renal cortex. These results indicate that relevant variations exist in the glutathione antioxidant system in the different stages of RCC and support the hypothesis that oxidative stress plays an important role in RCC growth and progression.International Journal of Cancer 02/2001; 91(1):55-9. · 5.44 Impact Factor -
Article: Macrophage migration inhibitory factor in prostatic adenocarcinoma: correlation with tumor grading and combination endocrine treatment-related changes.
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ABSTRACT: Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) is a ubiquitary cytokine whose expression has been investigated in tumors, showing a correlation between tumor aggressiveness and production of this protein by neoplastic cells. The aim of our study was to correlate MIF expression with tumor grade (Gleason scoring system) and histopathological changes after combined endocrine treatment (CET) of prostate adenocarcinoma. We analyzed MIF immunoreactivity in 124 paired needle biopsies and radical prostatectomy specimens from 62 prostate cancer patients, of which 20 had been treated with CET. In untreated prostates, MIF expression significantly correlated with tumor grading, being stronger in low-grade than in high-grade adenocarcinoma. In treated prostates, histopathological changes also correlated with MIF immunoreactivity, but not in a significant manner. The results of the current study demonstrated that with histological dedifferentiation, prostate adenocarcinoma cells show a reduced MIF expression. This finding may be the consequence of a reduced MIF synthesis or the result of an enhanced and altered secretion by tumor cells into the surrounding stroma. The consequent abnormal interaction between MIF and environmental factors might influence tumor growth and diffusion. On the other hand, the minor but not significantly reduced MIF expression by tumor cells after CET seems to exclude a hormonal regulation of MIF secretion.The Prostate 10/2000; 45(1):51-7. · 3.48 Impact Factor -
Article: Fractal analysis in human pathology.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 07/1999; 879:255-7. · 3.15 Impact Factor -
Article: Macrophage migration inhibitory factor in the human prostate: identification and immunocytochemical localization.
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ABSTRACT: Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) is a lymphokine originally identified for its capacity to inhibit the random migration of macrophages. Recent data have further extended knowledge of the physiological role of this protein, showing that MIF is produced by several human organs and tissues. The present study was intended to evaluate the expression and tissutal localization of MIF in the human prostate. Prostate tissues were obtained from patients undergoing surgical adenomectomy for benign prostatic hyperplasia and were analyzed by Western blot, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, immunohistochemistry, and immunoelectron microscopy. RESULTS. The presence of both MIF protein and mRNA was demonstrated in the prostate. Immunocytochemical studies localized MIF protein in the secretory luminal epithelial and basal layer cells. The present study demonstrated that the human prostate is a site of MIF synthesis. Macrophages populate the human prostate and represent an important mechanism of defense of integrity and functionality of the gland. It is speculated that MIF might play a role in preserving prostate physiological activity by maintaining its macrophage population.The Prostate 06/1999; 39(3):159-65. · 3.48 Impact Factor -
Article: Cell growth and death in malignant lymphomas. A quantitative analysis.
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ABSTRACT: To review the value of biopathologic factors in single lymphomatous patients across the boundaries of histologic classification. In a series of previous studies, based on a large collection of biopsy samples, the value of the above biopathologic characteristics in individual lymphomatous patients was quantitatively evaluated. The relationships between apoptotic index and growth fraction, in light of the expression of oncogenes, which regulate cell birth and death, were of particular value in determining the growth pattern of different lymphoma cases across the boundaries of histologic classification. The study of mechanisms that regulate cell proliferation and death might have therapeutic implications as the proper therapeutic approach should be based on detailed knowledge of the kinetic and molecular characteristics of each tumor.Analytical and quantitative cytology and histology / the International Academy of Cytology [and] American Society of Cytology 03/1999; 21(1):70-4. · 0.41 Impact Factor -
Article: [Granulomatous prostatitis as collateral effect of intravesical immunotherapy with BCG].
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ABSTRACT: Twenty-five male patients with superficial bladder cancer underwent intravesical Bacillus Calmette Guerin immunotherapy. A high incidence of side effects has occurred using three different substrains of BCG. Our interest has been focused on BCG related granulomatous prostatitis: we have found four asymptomatic patients with histologically diagnosed disease. We suppose therefore that its incidence is underestimated.Archivio italiano di urologia, andrologia: organo ufficiale [di] Società italiana di ecografia urologica e nefrologica / Associazione ricerche in urologia 10/1998; 70(4):177-82. -
Article: Congenital fibroepithelial polyp of prostatic urethra in an adult.
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ABSTRACT: To describe an unusual case of congenital fibroepithelial polyp of the prostatic urethra in an adult, presented with acute urinary retention. Cystouretrographic, endoscopical and pathological investigations are discussed. The definitive diagnosis of the tenth case of this benign lesion was made only after endoscopic resection and pathological examination. The complete resolution of the symptoms has been quick. We stress this unusual pathology in order to focus its peculiarity in aetiopathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment.Archivio italiano di urologia, andrologia: organo ufficiale [di] Società italiana di ecografia urologica e nefrologica / Associazione ricerche in urologia 10/1998; 70(4):173-5. -
Article: DNA ploidy pattern in papillary renal cell carcinoma. Correlation with clinicopathological parameters and survival.
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ABSTRACT: Papillary renal cell carcinoma (PRCC) is a less frequent histomorphologic variant of renal cortical carcinoma (RCC). Morphologically, PRCC differs from other forms of RCC in that it is associated with frequent tumor infiltration by macrophages and lymphocytes, and a tendency for central necrosis and cystic change. Follow-up data revealed that survival rates are higher among patients with PRCC than among patients with other forms of RCC. The authors explore the DNA content in a series of PRCC and correlate the findings with nuclear grade, pathological stage and survival. Using Flow Cytometry, we analysed the DNA ploidy pattern of 37 paraffin-embedded PRCC. At least 3 tumor fragments were analysed in each case. To obtain the reference diploid standard, the non-tumor renal tissue from the same case was added to the solution. Tumor ploidy was classified as diploid and aneuploid. The degree of DNA content abnormalities was given by the DNA Index (DI). An aneuploid DNA profile was found in 65% of the tumors. 25% of the aneuploid tumors presented near diploid peaks (1.10 < DI < 1.30; low degree aneuploidy), 25% were hyperdiploid, while 22% had a hypodiploid profile (DI < 0.90). A homogeneous DNA ploidy pattern was observed in 25 tumors (68%), while there was intratumoral heterogeneity in 12 tumors (32%). Patients with aneuploid DNA patterns had high grade/stage tumors and died at the end of the follow-up period, while patients with diploid/near diploid profiles had low grade/stage tumors and survived. However, the multi-way analysis of variance performed in order to investigate the prognostic significance of ploidy pattern against tumor stage and grade showed a highly significant main effect of ploidy pattern. Moreover, the patients with hypodiploid DNA profile presented the worst prognosis. These results suggest that the DNA profile of PRCC is a highly significant prognostic index.Pathology - Research and Practice 01/1998; 194(5):325-33. · 1.21 Impact Factor -
Article: Villous adenoma of the bladder.
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ABSTRACT: Villous adenomas of the bladder are rare tumors and up to now they have not been seen to undergo malignant transformation. We report a case of villous adenoma of the bladder with areas of adenocarcinoma in a 72-year-old man. We describe all the morphological, histochemical and immunohistochemical features characterizing this tumor. We recommend adequate pathological sampling and a thorough follow-up of patients with villous adenoma. The prognosis and the behaviour of these adenomatous papillary lesions, morphologically similar to colonic adenomas, in the bladder is unclear. We report a case with focal area of adenocarcinoma and review the literature.Minerva urologica e nefrologica = The Italian journal of urology and nephrology 10/1997; 49(3):169-71. -
Article: [Qualitative and quantitative parameters for prognosis in renal carcinoma in early and advanced stages].
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ABSTRACT: A minority of stage I renal cell cancers have a bad prognosis, a minority of those in stage II-IV may behave favorably. Are there parameters which characterize such cases? In this study, a number of qualitative and quantitative parameters are used to detect differences between cases with at least 9 years of survival and those with a survival of less than 9 years. 133 cases of renal cell cancer were subdivided into stage subgroups: Robson's I; Robson's II-IV. The following data and parameters were registered and/or measured: sex, stage, tumor size, histological type, mean nuclear profile area (mA) and pleomorphism (standard deviation of mean nuclear profile area--SDA) nuclear grade (NG) and combined nuclear grade (CNG), DNA index, cell proliferation, as determined by mitotic index (MI), per cent of PCNA positive cells (PCNA + cells %), per cent of S-phase cells (SP cells %), p53 and EGFR expression, intratumoral T lymphocytes. Older patients have a worse prognosis independently of the stage. Stage is the most discriminant qualitative parameter; tumor dimensions and both nuclear and combined nuclear grade are important too. Mean nuclear profile area and pleomorphism are also discriminant, while no prognostic value of histological type is shown and histology is not related to other parameters. Higher DNA index characterizes cases with worse prognosis, as well as MI, SP cells %, PCNA + cells %, and EGFR expression. No significant differences are detected for p53 expression and lymphoid infiltrates. A minority of patients with stage I tumors die within 9 years of diagnosis. They are older than survivors with the same stage, their tumors have larger nuclear area and greater pleomorphism, and are more frequently aneuploid with higher DNA index. A minority of patients with stage II-IV tumors survive at least 9 years from the time of diagnosis. They are younger than non-survivors in the same stages and have lower MI and PCNA positivity in the tumors, while other parameters are not discriminant.Pathologica 09/1997; 89(4):390-6. -
Article: Kidney vascular damage and cocaine.
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ABSTRACT: Cardiovascular damage is common in young cocaine addicts, and similar atherosclerotic lesions seem likely in the kidneys. To confirm this hypothesis, we performed histological examination of 40 kidney autopsy specimens classified as "cocaine-related deaths"; as controls, kidney specimens of 40 road accident victims were examined. Semiquantitative analysis showed that the ratio of the number of glomeruli affected by hyalinosis to the total number of glomeruli was 0.09 +/- 0.13 in addicts and 0.005 +/- 0.01 in controls; the difference was highly significant. The degree of periglomerular fibrosis was significantly higher in cocaine addicts than in accident victims. The ratio of glomeruli to tubular casts was 0.15 +/- 0.17 in cocaine addicts and 0.17 +/- 0.18 in controls (not significant). The degree of interstitial cellular infiltration was significantly higher in addicts than controls. A monunuclear cell infiltrate was observed prevalently in the medullary region. Arteriolar sclerosis was significantly higher in addicts than controls. Medial thickening, luminal narrowing and vessel obstruction were absent in the control group. Quantitative morphometric analysis of arterial structure showed significantly greater lumen circumference, intima circumference, media circumference, intima area, media area, intima thickness and media thickness in cocaine addicts than in controls.Clinical nephrology 06/1997; 47(5):298-303. · 1.17 Impact Factor -
Article: Stage-related differences of mitotic and apoptotic indices, and bcl-2 protein expression in diffusely growing non-Hodgkin's lymphomas.
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ABSTRACT: The present study examined whether growth characteristics of diffusely growing non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) may differ as a function of stage. Among 105 NHL of various types and sub-types (REAL [Revised European-American Lymphoma] classification), localized (Ann Arbor pathologic stages I + II) lymphomas exhibited clearly higher indices for mitotic activity, apoptosis and cell turnover, as well as a significantly lower percentage of cells containing immunohistochemically detectable bcl-2 protein, than disseminated (stages III + IV) NHL. A similar pattern emerged when high-grade (Kiel classification) lymphomas only were evaluated. Low-grade NHL showed analogous, but less marked, stage-dependent characteristics, with the exception of median percentages of bcl-2+ cells, which remained comparable in all stages. Our findings are consistent with the notion that dissemination of diffusely growing NHL is usually associated with reduced cell turnover and, in high-grade lymphomas, with the generation of longer-lived cells.International Journal of Cancer 12/1996; 68(4):436-40. · 5.44 Impact Factor -
Article: Transitional cell carcinoma of the ureteral stump 13 years after nephrectomy for benign disease.
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ABSTRACT: A case of primary carcinoma of the ureteral stump occurring 13 years after nephrectomy for benign disease is reported. The literature is reviewed.Urologia Internationalis 02/1996; 56(1):52-4. · 0.99 Impact Factor -
Article: Low versus high cell turnover in diffusely growing non-Hodgkin's lymphomas.
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ABSTRACT: Cell loss, perhaps as important as cell production in determining the size of an expanding cell population, has not usually been registered in quantitative cellular kinetic analyses of neoplastic disorders. The present retrospective study on various types and subtypes of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHLs; n = 170) was designed to test the usefulness of a novel additional parameter, the 'turnover index' (TI), which is the sum per case of the mitotic index and the apoptotic index. Results document that TIs clearly distinguished between categories and subtypes of NHLs according to the Kiel classification. Cluster analysis of TIs plotted against the percentage of Ki-67-positive cells per case revealed that about one-third of the high-grade malignancy lymphomas actually belonged to the low-turnover lymphomas. Overall survival was longer in the low- than in the high-turnover group of lymphomas. Assessment of TIs can, for practical diagnostic purposes, be replaced by counting mitotic figures and apoptotic cells in several high-power fields. The TI concept may help to interpret the kinetics of NHLs in terms of accumulation vs. proliferation of cells.The Journal of Pathology 01/1996; 177(4):335-41. · 6.32 Impact Factor -
Article: Primary gastric lymphomas (MALTomas): a nuclear image analysis comparison with lymph node monocytoid B-cells and marginal zones of spleen and Peyer's patches.
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ABSTRACT: Centrocyte-like cells of marginal zones of follicles of gastrointestinal lymphoid tissue, which have their analogous in marginal zone of splenic white pulp and in lymph node monocytoid B-lymphocytes, are thought to be the normal counterpart of lymphomas of MALT (MALTomas). However, the cell population of MALTomas is often polymorphic and also contains cells morphologically different from centrocytes. Since conventional morphologic analysis may not be accurate enough and the phenotype may change in different stages of B-cell lineage, the marginal zone of Peyer's patches (PMZ) and splenic white pulp (SMZ), the lymph node monocytoid B-lymphocytes (ML), 3 nodal monocytoid B-cell lymphomas (L) and 16 gastric MALTomas (M) were studied by means of automated nuclear image analysis for area, irregularity, and chromatin texture assessment. Immunophenotyping on paraffin sections and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for detecting monoclonality and t(14-18) chromosome breakpoints at DNA levels, on paraffin section extractions, were also done. In 14 MALTomas, clonal Ig heavy chain rearrangement was detected and in none of these were found t(14-18) chromosome breakpoints. The nuclei of the control group (PMZ, SMZ and ML) showed the same morphologic characteristics, ie. size, irregularity, chromatin texture. MALTomas and nodal lymphomas were distributed into 3 clusters: (1) with larger nuclei, light chromatin (euchromatin-richer) (5 MALTomas, 2 nodal lymphomas together with the control group); (2) nuclei with the same area size, but darker (eterochromatin-richer) (6 MALTomas and 1 nodal lymphoma); (3) with smaller and darker nuclei (5 MALTomas). Chromatin textural differences were maintained in the same nuclear size class in the 3 clusters. Only a few MALTomas had nuclear features not significantly different from controls, inter-case and intra-case variability being evident.Analytical cellular pathology: the journal of the European Society for Analytical Cellular Pathology 07/1995; 8(4):307-21.
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1982–2000
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Università degli Studi di Siena
Siena, Tuscany, Italy
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