Publications (14)37.2 Total impact
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Article: Viral kinetics during the first weeks of pegylated interferon and ribavirin treatment can identify patients at risk of relapse after its discontinuation: new strategies for such patients?
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ABSTRACT: Pegylated interferon (PEG-IFN) and ribavirin is the most effective treatment for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) hepatitis, but the rate of sustained virological response (SVR) remains approximately 50%, and 15-20% of all treated patients have a virological relapse after completing the treatment. Studies on the SVR have failed to discriminate between non-responders and relapsers. To identify the risk factors for relapse among patients with an end-of-treatment response (ETR). We retrospectively analyzed 281 patients consecutively treated with PEG-IFN and ribavirin with a follow-up period of at least 24 weeks. The baseline details collected on each patient included demographic data, histological features, and biochemical profiles. Forty-six patients (16.4%) relapsed during the first 6 months of follow-up after discontinuing the therapy. Relapser patients were significantly older, had more steatosis, fibrosis, and showed significantly lower rapid virological response (RVR) rates compared with SVR patients. By logistic regression analysis, only the absence of RVR was found to be significantly associated with relapses in both subgroups of patients with genotypes 1 and 4 (p < 0.004) and those with genotypes 2 and 3 (p < 0.006). Severe fibrosis was also predictive of relapsing disease, but only for genotypes 2 and 3 patients (p < 0.003). During the treatment, serum HCV-RNA decreased more rapidly in patients with SVR compared to non-responder and relapser patients (p < 0.001). Interestingly, relapser patients exhibited an intermediate serum HCV-RNA decay during the first 4 weeks of therapy. Among HCV patients treated with PEG-IFN and ribavirin, the absence of RVR was the most important independent predictor of relapse, independent of the HCV genotype. In the subgroup of genotypes 2 and 3 patients, the severity of fibrosis was also an important factor associated with the relapse rate.Infection 11/2011; 40(2):173-9. · 2.66 Impact Factor -
Article: Oral propranolol decreases intestinal permeability in patients with cirrhosis: another protective mechanism against bleeding?
The American Journal of Gastroenterology 12/2009; 104(12):3115-6. · 7.28 Impact Factor -
Article: Comparison of de novo tumours after liver transplantation with incidence rates from Italian cancer registries.
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ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study is to describe de novo post-liver transplant malignancies and compare their frequency with incidence rates from Italian cancer registries. Four hundred and seventeen patients subjected to liver transplantation, from 1991 to 2005, surviving for at least 30 days and without a previous diagnosis of cancer (including hepatocellular carcinoma), were evaluated for the development of de novo malignancies excluding non-melanoma skin cancers. During a total follow-up time of 2856 person-years, 43 de novo malignancies were diagnosed in 43 liver transplantation recipients (10.3%). The most common cancers were non-Hodgkin lymphoma (9 cases), cancer of the head and neck (8 cases), Kaposi's sarcoma (6 cases) and esophageal carcinoma (5 cases). The 1, 3, 5 and 10 years estimated survival rates were 69%, 57%, 53% and 42%. Patients with de novo cancers had a lower 10-year survival rate than patients without cancers (58% versus 76%, p=0.005). The risk of cancer after liver transplantation was nearly 3-fold higher than that of the general population of the same age and sex (95% CI: 1.9-3.6). De novo tumour sites or types with significantly elevated SIR included Kaposi's sarcoma (SIR=144), non-Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=13.8), esophagus (SIR=23.4), head and neck cancers (SIR=7) and cervix uteri (SIR=30.7). Tumours after liver transplantation are associated with lower long-term survival, confirming that cancer is a major cause of late mortality in liver transplantation.Digestive and Liver Disease 07/2009; 42(1):55-60. · 3.05 Impact Factor -
Article: Risk of Kaposi sarcoma after solid-organ transplantation: multicenter study in 4,767 recipients in Italy, 1970-2006.
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ABSTRACT: Given the high prevalence of infection with human herpesvirus type 8, Italy is an area of utmost interest for studying Kaposi sarcoma (KS). We investigated the risk of KS in transplant recipients compared with the general population. A longitudinal study was performed from 1970 to 2006 in 4767 kidney, heart, liver, and lung transplant recipients from 7 Italian transplantation centers. The sample included 72.3% male patients with an overall patient median age of 48 years. Patient-years (PYs) at risk for KS were computed from 30 days posttransplantation to the date of KS, death, last follow-up, or study closure (December 31, 2007). Standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) and 95% confidence intervals were computed to quantify the risk of KS in transplant recipients compared with the general Italian population. Incidence rate ratios were computed to identify risk factors using adjusted Poisson regression. Based on 33,621 PYs, KS was diagnosed in 73 patients (62 men): 31 in kidney recipients, 27 in heart recipients, 8 in liver recipients, and 7 in lung recipients. The overall incidence was 217 cases per 10(5) PYs, with a significantly increased SIR of 125. SIR was particularly high in women (n = 34) and lung recipients (n = 428) but decreased significantly with time posttransplantation. The primary predictors of increased risk of KS were male sex, older age, and lung transplantation. A 5-fold reduction was observed after 18 months posttransplantation. After adjustment, patients born in southern Italy compared with northern Italy demonstrated a significant 2.2-fold increased risk. Our findings confirm that in the early posttransplantation period, Italian patients who have undergone solid-organ transplantation, particularly those from southern Italy and those who are lung recipients, are at greater risk of KS compared with the general population. These findings underscore the need for appropriate models for monitoring transplant recipients for KS, especially those at greater risk and, in particular, in the early postoperative period.Transplantation Proceedings 06/2009; 41(4):1227-30. · 1.00 Impact Factor -
Article: De novo tumors are a major cause of late mortality after orthotopic liver transplantation.
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ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to describe de novo post-orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) malignancies for comparison with incidence rates in Italian cancer registries. Three hundred thirteen OLT patients engrafted from 1991 to 2006 and surviving 12 months without a previous diagnosis of cancer were evaluated for the development of de novo malignancies excluding nonmelanoma skin cancers. During a total follow-up time of 1753 PYs, 40 (12.8%) de novo malignancies were diagnosed in 40 recipients. The most common cancers were non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL; 20%), cancer of the head and neck (17%), Kaposi sarcoma (KS; 17%), and esophageal tumors (12%). The 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year estimated survival rates were 70%, 56%, 48%, and 39%. Patients with de novo cancers showed a lower 10-years survival rate (P = .0047) than patients without (39% vs 75%). The risk of cancer after OLT was 3-fold higher than that of the general population of the same age and gender (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.0-4.3). De novo tumor sites or types with significantly elevated standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) included KS (SIRs = 212), NHL (SIRs = 13.7), oesophagus (SIRs = 18.7), melanoma (SIRs = 10.1), and head and neck cancers (SIRs = 4.6). Tumors after OLT were associated with lower long-term survival, confirming that cancer is a major cause of late mortality.Transplantation Proceedings 06/2009; 41(4):1303-5. · 1.00 Impact Factor -
Article: Use of alternative and complementary therapies by inflammatory bowel disease patients in an Italian tertiary referral centre.
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ABSTRACT: Alternative and complementary therapies are increasingly used by patients with inflammatory bowel disease, but no data are available on their use in Italy. To ascertain the prevalence and pattern of the use of alternative and complementary therapies, and demographic and clinical factors associated with their use in a large sample of Italian inflammatory bowel disease patients. A structured questionnaire was administered to a cohort of outpatients at a tertiary referral centre. Five hundred and fifty-two patients completed the questionnaire; 156 (28%) reported using alternative and complementary therapies, which mainly involved homeopathy (43.6%), followed by controlled diets or dietary supplements (35.5%), herbs (28.2%), exercise (25.6%) and prayer (14.7%). Alternative and complementary therapies were used to ameliorate intestinal symptoms (52.5%), in the hope of being cured (41%) and to reduce the intake of drugs (39.7%). An improvement in well-being (45.5%) and inflammatory bowel disease symptoms (40.3%) were the most commonly reported benefits. A higher education (p=0.027), a more frequently relapsing disease (p=0.001) and dissatisfaction with the doctor's communication (p=0.001) correlated with alternative and complementary therapy use. Non-compliance with conventional drugs, disease severity and curiosity regarding novel therapies were predictors of alternative and complementary therapy use. Alternative and complementary therapies are frequently used by Italian inflammatory bowel disease patients. Doctors should improve their empathy and their understanding about possible benefits of alternative and complementary therapies.Digestive and Liver Disease 07/2007; 39(6):524-9. · 3.05 Impact Factor -
Article: Increased risk of NASH in patients carrying the C(-159)T polymorphism in the CD14 gene promoter region.
Gut 09/2006; 55(8):1212. · 10.11 Impact Factor -
Article: Nutritional state and energy balance in cirrhotic patients with or without hypermetabolism. Multicentre prospective study by the 'Nutritional Problems in Gastroenterology' Section of the Italian Society of Gastroenterology (SIGE).
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ABSTRACT: A total of 334 stable, compensated cirrhotic patients admitted to 10 Italian Gastroenterology Units were included in a prospective study to evaluate nutritional state and energy balance in liver cirrhosis. Nutritional state and calorie intake were examined in the total population, while adequacy of calorie intake versus measured total energy expenditure was evaluated in a comparable subpopulation and in 40 matched controls, by computing the energy balance. Our data demonstrated that: (i) malnutrition was present in 25% of the total patients and significantly correlated with the Child's group (A=16%; B=25%; C=44%); (ii) the type of malnutrition is influenced by mBEE: normometabolic patients exhibit a significant (p<0.005) reduction of mid-arm fat area while both hypermetabolic and hypometabolic patients show a significant (p<0.005) decline in kg of free fat mass; (iii) normometabolic and hypometabolic patients have a negative energy balance, due to a high level of physical activity (127+/-14 kJ) in the first group and a reduced energy intake/kg body weight (102+/-12 kJ) in the second; (iv) hypermetabolic patients have a positive energy balance due to decreased daily physical activity/kg body weight (108+/-28 kJ); (v) malnourished and normometabolic patients eat a significantly (p<0.05) reduced percentage of protein whereas malnourished and hypermetabolic patients eat a significantly increased percentage of fat (p<0.05). Although multivariate regression analysis confirms that the Child-Pugh's score is a better independent predictor of malnutrition, the measure of REE, TEE, calorie intake and energy balance need to be routinely performed in cirrhotic patients, in order to recognise hypermetabolic and hypometabolic patients (approximately 30%) in whom the nutritional and metabolic parameters are indispensable as a basis for designing and prescribing personalised nutritional strategies that can treat muscle malnutrition and thus improve the morbidity and mortality rates.Digestive and Liver Disease 09/2005; 37(9):681-8. · 3.05 Impact Factor -
Article: Transcriptional downregulation of tight junction protein ZO-1 in active coeliac disease is reversed after a gluten-free diet.
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ABSTRACT: Coeliac disease is an autoimmune enteropathy characterized by an enhanced permeability of the intestinal epithelial barrier. In epithelial cells paracellular permeability is regulated by intercellular tight junction. The cytoplasmic protein ZO-1 interacts directly with F-actin and plays a pivotal role in the structural and functional organization of tight junction. The aim of this study was to investigate the expression and localization of ZO-1 in the intestinal mucosa of coeliac patients. Twenty patients with active coeliac disease, seven of whom underwent a repeat biopsy following a gluten-free diet and 27 control subjects, were studied. In all subjects, three biopsies were obtained from distal duodenum during upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. ZO-1 protein localization and levels were detected by immunofluorescence followed by confocal microscopy analysis and immunoblotting. ZO-1 mRNA expression was assessed by RT-PCR. F-actin distribution was also investigated. In patients with active coeliac disease, both ZO-1 protein levels and mRNA were clearly reduced. Cytoskeletal organization was disrupted with F-actin staining concentrated at the subcortical and basal surface regions. Abnormalities in ZO-1 expression and actin organization were reversed after a gluten-free diet. In active coeliac disease, ZO-1 protein expression is downregulated at the transcriptional level in association with F-actin redistribution. These changes are completely reversed after a gluten-free diet and could contribute to the increased intestinal paracellular permeability observed in this disorder.Digestive and Liver Disease 06/2004; 36(5):337-41. · 3.05 Impact Factor -
Article: Lymphoproliferative disorders in heart transplant recipients: role of hepatitis C virus (HCV) and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection.
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ABSTRACT: Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLD) are a well known complication after orthotopic heart transplantation (OHT). Although Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection has long been implicated in the pathogenesis of such disorders, other factors may play a part. Because of its lymphotropic properties, hepatitis C virus (HCV) may induce clonal expansion of B-lymphocytes and lead to PTLD. The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential association between HCV and EBV infection and PTLD in OHT patients. The retrospective study considered 404 adult patients screened for HCV. EBV serology, histology, and molecular analysis on tissue biopsies were performed in the PTLD patients (10/404, 2.5%). HCV positivity was found in 36/404 (8.9%) patients. The EBV genome was expressed on all neoplastic tissue samples analyzed. A higher proportion of HCV-positive patients developed PTLD than the HCV-negative cases (8% vs 2%, P = 0.017). EBV has a demonstrated role in the onset of PTLD, but HCV infection probably has to be considered as well.Transplant International 02/2000; 13 Suppl 1:S402-5. · 2.92 Impact Factor -
Article: Nutrient intake, phisical activity & nutritional state in cirrhotic patients
Digestive and Liver Disease. 01/2000; 32:A119. -
Article: Gastrectomy, lack of gastric first pass metabolism of ethanol and alcoholic liver disease. Results of a multicentre study.
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ABSTRACT: Some conditions characterized by a loss (anatomical or functional) of parietal cells of the gastric antrum, containing an alcohol-dehydrogenase, may reduce the first pass metabolism of ethanol at that level and, simultaneously, raise its bioavailability. The observation that the first pass metabolism was drastically suppressed after gastrectomy would appear to suggest that the latter condition represents a risk for the development of liver damage in patients who continue to consume alcohol even in a non relevant amount. Consecutively enrolled in the study were 304 individuals of both sexes aged between 45 and 70 years of whom 114 gastrectomized and 190 pair-matched control subjects all submitted to an Upper Gastrointestinal Endoscopy for whatever disturbance. All the patients were diagnosed as having liver disease with routine clinical and instrumental means. Information was collected concerning the mean daily alcohol intake, both before and after the operation. The overall prevalence of hepatic lesions was shown to be higher in the gastrectomized than in the control group (42.1% vs 25.8%, p = 0.005). Moreover, referring only to alcohol-related hepatic lesions (steatosis, steato-fibrosis and cirrhosis), the prevalence was higher in the gastrectomized patients than in the controls (29.8% vs 17.9%, p = 0.02). As far as concerns alcohol consumption, the gastrectomized group had consumed 71 g/day and the control group 39 g/day alcohol per person (p < 0.05) in a similar period of time (35 and 33 years, respectively). Also the non alcohol-related liver damage (especially the viral type) was slightly higher in the gastrectomized patients (gastrectomized 12.3% vs control 7.9%, p = ns). Accordingly, the percentage of serum markers of viral infection was higher in this group (HBs Ag: gastrectomized 3.9% vs control 2.2%, p = ns; anti-HCV: gastrectomized 13.5% vs control 5.0%, p = 0.03). Finally, to test the eventual damaging effects of gastrectomy alone (excluding ethanol and/or viral infection), two groups of patients with a medium to low alcoholic negative assumption (30-60 g ethanol/day) and no signs of viral infection (HBsAg and anti-HCV negative) were extrapolated. In these two selected groups, the prevalence of alcoholic-related hepatic lesions were not statistically different (28 gastrectomized 20.3% vs 44 control 18.4%). In conclusion, data emerging from investigations on the population under study indicate that the alcohol and viral infection appear to play a more important role in determining hepatic lesions than gastroresection.Italian journal of gastroenterology and hepatology 06/1997; 29(3):243-8. -
Article: Transcriptional downregulation of tight junction protein ZO-1 in active coeliac disease is reversed after a gluten-free diet
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ABSTRACT: Coeliac disease is an autoimmune enteropathy characterized by an enhanced permeability of the intestinal epithelial barrier. In epithelial cells paracellular permeability is regulated by intercellular tight junction. The cytoplasmic protein ZO-1 interacts directly with F-actin and plays a pivotal role in the structural and functional organization of tight junction.Aim. The aim of this study was to investigate the expression and localization of ZO-1 in the intestinal mucosa of coeliac patients.Patients and methods. Twenty patients with active coeliac disease, seven of whom underwent a repeat biopsy following a gluten-free diet and 27 control subjects, were studied. In all subjects, three biopsies were obtained from distal duodenum during upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. ZO-1 protein localization and levels were detected by immunofluorescence followed by confocal microscopy analysis and immunoblotting. ZO-1 mRNA expression was assessed by RT-PCR. F-actin distribution was also investigated.Results. In patients with active coeliac disease, both ZO-1 protein levels and mRNA were clearly reduced. Cytoskeletal organization was disrupted with F-actin staining concentrated at the subcortical and basal surface regions. Abnormalities in ZO-1 expression and actin organization were reversed after a gluten-free diet.Conclusions. In active coeliac disease, ZO-1 protein expression is downregulated at the transcriptional level in association with F-actin redistribution. These changes are completely reversed after a gluten-free diet and could contribute to the increased intestinal paracellular permeability observed in this disorder.Digestive and Liver Disease. -
Article: Use of alternative and complementary therapies by inflammatory bowel disease patients in an Italian tertiary referral centre
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ABSTRACT: BackgroundAlternative and complementary therapies are increasingly used by patients with inflammatory bowel disease, but no data are available on their use in Italy.AimTo ascertain the prevalence and pattern of the use of alternative and complementary therapies, and demographic and clinical factors associated with their use in a large sample of Italian inflammatory bowel disease patients.MethodsA structured questionnaire was administered to a cohort of outpatients at a tertiary referral centre.ResultsFive hundred and fifty-two patients completed the questionnaire; 156 (28%) reported using alternative and complementary therapies, which mainly involved homeopathy (43.6%), followed by controlled diets or dietary supplements (35.5%), herbs (28.2%), exercise (25.6%) and prayer (14.7%). Alternative and complementary therapies were used to ameliorate intestinal symptoms (52.5%), in the hope of being cured (41%) and to reduce the intake of drugs (39.7%). An improvement in well-being (45.5%) and inflammatory bowel disease symptoms (40.3%) were the most commonly reported benefits. A higher education (p = 0.027), a more frequently relapsing disease (p = 0.001) and dissatisfaction with the doctor's communication (p = 0.001) correlated with alternative and complementary therapy use. Non-compliance with conventional drugs, disease severity and curiosity regarding novel therapies were predictors of alternative and complementary therapy use.ConclusionsAlternative and complementary therapies are frequently used by Italian inflammatory bowel disease patients. Doctors should improve their empathy and their understanding about possible benefits of alternative and complementary therapies.Digestive and Liver Disease.
Top Journals
Institutions
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2000–2011
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University of Padua
- Department of Surgery, Oncology and Gastroenterology - DiSCOG
Padova, Veneto, Italy
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2009
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Università degli studi di Udine
Udine, Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy
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