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P Filippini,
G Liguori,
C Scolastico,
N Coppola,
A Lucariello, C Marrocco,
M R Catania,
L Ortega De Luna,
C Romano Carratelli,
P Marinelli,
E Sagnelli,
F Rossano
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ABSTRACT: The aim of our study was to determine the prevalence of genotypic resistance to nucleoside analogues and protease inhibitors before and after 1997, the year of introduction of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART) in Campania (Italy). Forty-eight plasma HIV-RNA positive patients who had not been previously treated for HIV infection (naïve) were enrolled in two Divisions of Infectious Diseases. The main demographic characteristics were collected for each subject and the primary mutant genotypes were sought only in HIV-RNA positive patients with viral loads higher than 10,000 copies/ml. The diagnosis of HIV infection dated back to before 1996 for 21 out of 48 patients and to after 2000 for the other 27. INNO-Line Probe Assay (LiPA) HIV-RT and INNO-LiPA HIV protease (Innogenetics, Italy) were used to detect mutations conferring resistance to zidovudine, didanosine, zalcitabine, lamivudine, stavudine, saquinavir, indinavir, rotonavir, nelfinavir and amprenavir. No mutations associated with primary resistance to nucleoside analogues and protease inhibitors were detected in the 21 patients who had acquired HIV infection before 1996, whereas one or more mutations were seen in three of the 27 (11.1%) patients with HIV infection diagnosed after 2000. This study confirms that LiPA is a suitable tool for epidemiological surveys of HIV genotypic primary resistance. Drug-resistant HIV-1 genotypes, resistant both to nucleoside analogues and protease inhibitors, were detected only in subjects who had acquired HIV infection after 2000, most of whom had zidovudine-resistant mutants. These data suggest that the introduction of HAART has brought about the circulation of drug-resistant HIV genotypes.
Journal of chemotherapy (Florence, Italy) 01/2005; 16(6):534-9. · 1.08 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Few data are available on histological features of chronic hepatitis B (HBV) and C (HCV) virus coinfection.
We enrolled 142 consecutive patients with viral chronic hepatitis on their first liver biopsy: 27 HBsAg and anti-HCV positive (case BC group), 57 HBsAg positive and anti-HCV negative (control B group) and 58 anti-HCV positive, HBsAg/anti-HBs/anti-HBc negative (control C group).
Patients in the case BC group showed serum HBVDNA (37% vs 71.9%, p < 0.005) and ground-glass hepatocytes (37% vs 66.7%, p < 0.01) less frequently than those in the control B group. The case BC group showed a lower prevalence of patients with detectable HCV-RNA than the control C group (60% vs 92.3%, p < 0.001) and a significantly higher fibrosis score (2.1 +/- 1.2 vs 1.5 +/- 1.1, p < 0.05). Of the 27 patients in the case BC group, 10 lacked serum HCV-RNA and showed significantly higher histological activity index (HAI) and fibrosis scores than those found in the 17 HCV-RNA positive (8.5 +/- 4.4 vs 5.4 +/- 2.4 for HAI, p < 0.05; 3.0 +/- 1.3 vs 1.69 +/- 1.0, p < 0.05 for fibrosis).
Liver histology seems to be more severe in chronic coinfection with HBV and HCV than in single infection, particularly when HCV replication is impaired.
Infection 06/2004; 32(3):144-8. · 2.66 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: To detect HIV antigens in circulating complement fixing immune complexes (ICs) we assessed an ELISA using wells of microtitre plates coated with F(ab)2 anti-C3b and monoclonal antibodies anti-HIV gp120 and anti-HIV p24. We tested 24 anti-HIV positive subjects (Group A), 10 anti-HIV negative subjects at risk of acquiring HIV infection (Group B), 20 normal controls (Group C) and 2 seroconversion panels. We found HIV antigens in ICs in all sera from seroconversion panels, in 25.5% of sera from subjects in Group A, in 28.6% of sera from subjects in Group B and in no serum from subjects in Group C. A subject in Group B acquired HIV infection during the observation. HIV antigens in ICs by our assay were detected 8 months before Anti-HIV and Ag by commercial ELISA.
Le infezioni in medicina: rivista periodica di eziologia, epidemiologia, diagnostica, clinica e terapia delle patologie infettive 08/1997; 5(3):178-81.
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ABSTRACT: To detect HlV proviral DNA in lymphocytes from subjects at risk of acquiring HIV infection, we assessed a Polymerase Chain Reaction Assay using the SK38 and SK39 primers for the amplification and the SK19 probe for the hybridization. The detection of amplified HIV-DNA was obtained by a new colorimetric method, the DNA enzyme immunoassay (DEIA). The PCR we performed allowed to detect HIV-pDNA in lymphocytes of 13 out of 64 subjects at risk of acquiring HIV infection. Seven of these 13 became anti-HIV positive during a follow up of 8 months.
Le infezioni in medicina: rivista periodica di eziologia, epidemiologia, diagnostica, clinica e terapia delle patologie infettive 07/1997; 5(2):111-3.
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ABSTRACT: To detect the presence of anti-HIV IgA in HIV infected subjects and in seronegative subjects at risk of infection, we assessed a Western Blot using nitrocellulose strips with HIV separated proteins. We tested at least 2 different serum samples from 9 anti-HIV positive subjects (Group A), 9 anti-HIV negative subjects at risk of infection (Group B) and 9 controls (Group C). One subject in Group B became anti-HIV positive during the observation. Anti-HIV IgA were detected in all patients of Group A, in 66.6% of patients of Group B and in no patient of Group C. The subject who seroconverted during the observation showed positivity for IgA anti-HIV in both serum samples, while anti-HIV IgG became detectable only on the second serum sample. A newborn from a seropositive mother showed maternal anti-HIV IgG on the first 2 out of 3 serum samples while showed anti-HIV IgA positivity on the third sample only. This child is still anti-HIV negative.
Le infezioni in medicina: rivista periodica di eziologia, epidemiologia, diagnostica, clinica e terapia delle patologie infettive 07/1997; 5(2):107-10.
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ABSTRACT: The diagnosis of HIV infection is generally lead using two different ELISAs to detect specific anti-HIV antibodies, the eventual reactivity must then be confirmed by a Western Blot The antibodies can be detected only 1-6 months after the infection; in fact in the earliest phases neither the antibodies, for their low titre, nor the specific antigens, for the antibodies could form immune complexes, can be detected by the achieved methods. Only the viral isolation can reveal the presence of the virus in this early phase, but the isolation must be conducted only in adequately safe laboratories (P3 laboratories). The only test able to replace the viral isolation is the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR). The PCR technique can be useful to reveal an HIV infection in its early phase and to monitor the infection progression and the efficacy of an antiretroviral treatment
Le infezioni in medicina: rivista periodica di eziologia, epidemiologia, diagnostica, clinica e terapia delle patologie infettive 02/1996; 4(4):183-8.
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E Sagnelli,
N Coppola, C Marrocco,
G Coviello,
G Rossi,
M Battaglia,
C Sagnelli,
V Messina,
A Tonziello,
C Scolastico,
P Filippini
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ABSTRACT: To verify whether serial determination of titre of IgM to HCV core protein (HCV IgM) may be useful to distinguish acute hepatitis C (AHC) from reactivation of chronic hepatitis C (r-CHC), we studied 18 consecutive patients with AHC (identified by seroconversion to anti-HCV) and 15 consecutive patients who had been anti-HCV positive for at least one year at the time of reactivation.
Samples of serum were obtained from all patients on hospitalisation and every 5 days during the follow-up and stored at -80 degrees C: 54 samples of serum for the AHC group and 41 for the r-CHC group. Titres of HCV IgM were calculated as Index values by a commercially available enzyme immunoassay (HCV-IgM EIA 2.0, Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, IL, USA).
No difference was observed between the two groups of patients as regards age, sex, risk factors for the acquisition of HCV infection, clinical and biochemical data on presentation, prevalence of cases with detectable viremia or distribution of HCV genotypes. HCV IgM was detected with an Index value of 350 or more in only 1 (6.7%) in the r-CHC group and in 17 (94.4%) in the AHC group (p<0.01). Moreover, during the early phase of the illness we observed a wide variation in the HCV IgM Index values in AHC and consistent values in r-CHC.
Our data indicate that AHC is characterised by high and variable titres of HCV IgM during the acute phase of the illness, which may be considered diagnostic, whereas in r-CHC the IgM titre remains stable and rarely reaches a high level.
Journal of biological regulators and homeostatic agents 17(2):207-10. · 5.18 Impact Factor