83 results on '"TRIASSI, MARIA"'
Search Results
2. COVID-19 Post-Exposure Evaluation (COPE) Study: Assessing the Role of Socio-Economic Factors in Household SARS-CoV-2 Transmission within Campania Region (Southern Italy)
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Gentile, Ivan, Iorio, Martina, Zappulo, Emanuela, Scotto, Riccardo, Maraolo, Alberto Enrico, Buonomo, Antonio Riccardo, Pinchera, Biagio, Muto, Giuseppina, Iervolino, Carmela, Villari, Riccardo, Schiano Moriello, Nicola, Scirocco, Maria Michela, Triassi, Maria, Paternoster, Mariano, Russo, Vincenzo, Viceconte, Giulio, Federico Ii Covid-Team, null, Gentile, Ivan, Iorio, Martina, Zappulo, Emanuela, Scotto, Riccardo, Maraolo, Alberto Enrico, Buonomo, Antonio Riccardo, Pinchera, Biagio, Muto, Giuseppina, Iervolino, Carmela, Villari, Riccardo, Schiano Moriello, Nicola, Scirocco, Maria Michela, Triassi, Maria, Paternoster, Mariano, Russo, Vincenzo, Viceconte, Giulio, and Federico Ii Covid-Team, Null
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COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,household ,poverty ,regional studies ,Campania (Italy) ,Economic Factor ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Italy ,Retrospective Studie ,Humans ,regional studie ,Economic Factors ,Human ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Campania is the sixth poorest region of Italy, and it is the region with the highest income inequality. The secondary attack rates of SARS-CoV-2 among households are found to be substantially heterogeneous among published studies and are influenced by socio-economic factors. We conducted a retrospective study to describe the role of socio-economic factors in the household transmission of SARS-CoV-2 among patients living in Campania Region and referring to “Federico II” Hospital. We interviewed 413 subjects followed-up for COVID-19 between the 8 March 2020 and the 24 May 2021 with the aim to collect demographic, clinical, economic, and social data regarding their household and the index cases. The variables associated with SARS-CoV-2 attack rate higher than 50% among households were higher age (p = 0.023) and higher Charlson Comorbidity Index of the index case (p = 0.023) and, for household characteristics, higher number of families per house (p = 0.02), location of the houses in Naples’ suburbs (Chi2 = 5.3, p = 0.02) and in Caserta City area (Chi2 = 4, p = 0.04), and renting the house compared to owning it (Chi2 = 5.83, p = 0.01). This study confirms the finding described by other authors that household transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is correlated with the income inequality of the analyzed geographical area as well as with the indicators of health and economic wealth of the families, and this correlation also applies to the Campania Region.
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- 2022
3. Hospital discharges-based search of acute flaccid paralysis cases 2007-2016 in Italy and comparison with the National Surveillance System for monitoring the risk of polio reintroduction
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Stefanelli, Paola, Bellino, Stefania, Fiore, Stefano, Fontana, Stefano, Amato, Concetta, Buttinelli, Gabriele, Ansaldi, Filippo, Binda, Sandro, Pellegrinelli, Laura, Bonaccorsi, Guglielmo, Lorini, Chiara, Brusaferro, Silvio, Camilloni, Barbara, Capannolo, Benita, Mancini, Cristiana, Carraro, Valter, Castiglia, Paolo, Arghittu, Antonella, D'Errico, Marcello Mario, De Stefano, Carlo, Foca, Alfredo, CinziaGerminario, Larocca, Angela, Giammanco, Giovanni M, De Grazia, Simona, Grasso, Guido Maria, DanielaLombardi, Russo, Francesca, Napoletano, Giuseppina, Zanella, Francesca, Spertini, Silvia, Veronesi, Licia, Affanni, Paola, Triassi, Maria, Pennino, Francesca, Vairo, Francesco, Stefanelli, P., Bellino, S., Fiore, S., Fontana, S., Amato, C., Buttinelli, G., Ansaldi, F., Binda, S., Pellegrinelli, L., Bonaccorsi, G., Lorini, C., Brusaferro, S., Camilloni, B., Capannolo, B., Mancini, C., Carraro, V., Castiglia, P., Arghittu, A., D'Errico, M. M., De Stefano, C., Foca, A., Germinario, C., Larocca, A., Giammanco, G. M., De Grazia, S., Grasso, G. M., Lombardi, D., Russo, F., Napoletano, G., Zanella, F., Spertini, S., Veronesi, L., Affanni, P., Triassi, M., Pennino, F., Vairo, F., Stefanelli P., Bellino S., Fiore S., Fontana S., Amato C., Buttinelli G., Ansaldi F., Binda S., Pellegrinelli L., Bonaccorsi G., Lorini C., Brusaferro S., Camilloni B., Capannolo B., Mancini C., Carraro V., Castiglia P., Arghittu A., D'errico M.M., De Stefano C., Foca A., Germinario C., Larocca A., Giammanco G., De Grazia S., Grasso G.M., Lombardi D., Russo F., Napoletano G., Zanella F., Spertini S., Veronesi L., Affanni P., Triassi M., Pennino F., and Vairo F.
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Male ,Settore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia Clinica ,Pediatrics ,ERADICATION ,Acute flaccid paralysi ,0302 clinical medicine ,WORLDWIDE ,Epidemiology ,Paralysis ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Public, Environmental & Occupational Health ,0303 health sciences ,Polio ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Hospital Records ,Acute flaccid paralysis ,Patient Discharge ,Poliomyelitis ,Italy ,Child, Preschool ,Population Surveillance ,Female ,Diagnosis code ,medicine.symptom ,Hospital discharge record ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Encephalitis ,Research Article ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Myelitis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Poliomyelitis eradication ,Hospital discharge records ,Hospital Record ,Humans ,National surveillance system ,Preschool ,Science & Technology ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Infant ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,medicine.disease ,Paralysi ,Poliomyeliti ,business - Abstract
Background Acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) surveillance has been adopted globally as a key strategy for monitoring the progress of the polio eradication initiative. Hereby, to evaluate the completeness of the ascertainment of AFP cases in Italy, a hospital-discharges based search was carried out. Methods AFP cases occurring between 2007 and 2016 among children under 15 years of age were searched in the Italian Hospital Discharge Records (HDR) database using specific ICD-9-CM diagnostic codes. AFP cases identified between 2015 and 2016 were then compared with those notified to the National Surveillance System (NSS). Results Over a 10-year period, 4163 hospital discharges with diagnosis of AFP were reported in Italy. Among these, 956 (23.0%) were acute infective polyneuritis, 1803 (43.3%) myopathy, and 1408 (33.8%) encephalitis, myelitis and encephalomyelitis. During the study period, a decreasing trend was observed for all diagnoses and overall the annual incidence rate (IR) declined from 5.5 to 4.5 per 100,000 children. Comparing NSS with HDR data in 2015–2016, we found a remarkable underreporting, being AFP cases from NSS only 14% of those recorded in HDR. In particular, the acute infective polyneuritis cases reported to NSS accounted for 42.6% of those detected in HDR, while only 0.9% of myopathy cases and 13.1% of encephalitis/myelitis/encephalomyelitis cases have been notified to NSS. The highest AFP IRs per 100,000 children calculated on HDR data were identified in Liguria (17.4), Sicily (5.7), and Veneto (5.1) Regions; regarding the AFP notified to the NSS, 11 out of 21 Regions failed to reach the number of expected cases (based on 1/100,000 rate), and the highest discrepancies were observed in the Northern Regions. Overall, the national AFP rate was equal to 0.6, therefore did not reach the target value. Conclusions AFP surveillance data are the final measure of a country’s progress towards polio eradication. The historical data obtained by the HDR have been useful to assess the completeness of the notification data and to identify the Regions with a low AFP ascertainment rate in order to improve the national surveillance system.
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- 2019
4. Long-term Follow-up of Kidney Transplants in a Region of Southern Italy
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Napoli C., Grimaldi V., Cacciatore F., TRIASSI, MARIA, Giannattasio P., Picascia A., Carrano R., RENDA, ANDREA, Abete P., FEDERICO, STEFANO, ABETE, PASQUALE, Napoli, C., Grimaldi, V., Cacciatore, F., Triassi, Maria, Giannattasio, P., Picascia, A., Carrano, R., Renda, Andrea, Abete, P., Federico, Stefano, and Abete, Pasquale
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Graft Rejection ,Male ,Time Factors ,Human leukocyte antigen mismatch ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Restarting dialysis ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,HLA Antigens ,Risk Factors ,law ,Odds Ratio ,Cause of death ,Kidney ,biology ,Graft Survival ,Age Factors ,Middle Aged ,Intensive care unit ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Italy ,Histocompatibility ,Hypertension ,Antibody ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Waiting Lists ,Human leukocyte antigen ,Young Adult ,Renal Dialysis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Kidney transplant ,Dialysis ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Retrospective Studies ,Transplantation ,Creatinine ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Kidney Transplantation ,Surgery ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Objectives: Several donor and recipient factors are known to be associated with graft loss in a kidney transplant. In this retrospective single-center study, we analyzed the effect of clinical and immunologic factors on kidney transplant outcomes in our region in Italy. Materials and Methods: The study included 245 transplanted recipients from deceased donors at Federico II University of Naples, Kidney Transplant Centre, between the years 2000 and 2006. Age, cause of death, history of hypertension, hypotension or cardiac arrest, length of time spent in the intensive care unit, serum creatinine levels and human leukocyte antigen typing all were evaluated in the donors. Age, time spent on the wait list, human leukocyte antigen typing, antibody sensitization, and allocation were evaluated in the recipients. Age, donor/recipient matching, and human leukocyte antigen mismatches also were evaluated. Results: Cox regression analysis showed that in recipients, time spent on the wait list increased the risk of restarting dialysis (OR 1.019, 95% CI: 1.000-1.038; P =.050) and dying (OR 1.017, 95% CI: 1.000-1.038; P =.032). Patients who received a kidney from a donor with a history of hypertension presented a major risk of death (OR 3.212, 95% CI: 1.190-8.668; P =.021), while human leukocyte antigen-A mismatch increased the risk of restarting dialysis (OR 3.137, 95% CI: 1.255-7.842; P =.014). Conclusions: In our study, in recipients, time spent on the wait list, and a history of hypertension were associated with a greater risk of death. Human leukocyte antigen-A mismatch is associated with a greater risk of restarting dialysis.
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- 2014
5. Environmental quality of the operating theaters in Campania Region: long lasting monitoring results
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TRIASSI, MARIA, NARDONE, Antonio, MONTUORI, PAOLO, Novi, C, Russo, I, Triassi, Maria, Novi, C, Nardone, Antonio, Russo, I, and Montuori, Paolo
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Campania Region ,Italy ,Operating theaters ,Environmental monitoring - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The health risk level in the operating theaters is directly correlated to the safety level offered by the healthcare facilities. This is the reason why the national Authorities released several regulations in order to monitor better environmental conditions of the operating theaters, to prevent occupational injuries and disease and to optimize working conditions. For the monitoring of environmental quality of the operating theaters following parameters are considered: quantity of supplied gases, anesthetics concentration, operating theatres volume measurement, air change rate, air conditioning system and air filtration. The objective is to minimize the risks in the operating theaters and to provide the optimal environmental working conditions. This paper reports the environmental conditions of operating rooms performed for several years in the public hospitals of the Campania Region. METHODS: Investigation of environmental conditions of 162 operating theaters in Campania Region from January 2012 till July 2014 was conducted. Monitoring and analysis of physical and chemical parameters was done. The analysis of the results has been made considering specific standards suggested by national and international regulations. RESULTS: The study showed that 75% of the operating theaters presented normal values for microclimatic monitoring, while the 25% of the operating theaters had at least one parameter outside the limits. The monitoring of the anesthetics gases showed that in 9% of measurements of nitrous oxides and 4% of measurements of halogenated was not within the normal values.
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- 2015
6. Healthcare resource utilization and costs for multiple sclerosis management in the Campania region of Italy: Comparison between centre-based and local service healthcare delivery.
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Moccia, Marcello, Tajani, Andrea, Acampora, Rosa, Signoriello, Elisabetta, Corbisiero, Guido, Vercellone, Adriano, Sergianni, Primo, Pennino, Francesca, Lanzillo, Roberta, Palladino, Raffaele, Capacchione, Antonio, Brescia Morra, Vincenzo, Lus, Giacomo, and Triassi, Maria
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CHILD care services ,MULTIPLE sclerosis ,MEDICAL personnel ,MEDICAL care ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Background: Multiple sclerosis (MS) requires multidisciplinary management. We evaluated differences in healthcare resource utilization and costs between Federico II and Vanvitelli MS Centres of Naples (Italy), representative of centralised (i.e., MS Care Unit) and local service-based models of multidisciplinary care, respectively. Methods: We included MS patients continuously seen at the same local healthcare services and MS Centre (Federico II = 187; Vanvitelli = 90) from 2015 to 2017. Healthcare resources for MS treatment and management were collected and costs were calculated. Adherence was estimated as the rate of medication possession ratio (MPR) during 3-years of follow-up. Mixed-effect linear regression models were used to estimate differences in all outcomes between Federico II and Vanvitelli. Results: Patients at Federico II had more consultations within the MS centre (p<0.001), blood tests (p<0.001), and psychological/cognitive evaluations (p = 0.040). Patients at Vanvitelli had more consultations at local services (p<0.001). Adherence was not-significantly lower at Vanvitelli (p = 0.060), compared with Federico II. Costs for MS treatment and management were 10.6% lower at Vanvitelli (12417.08±8448.32EUR) (95%CI = -19.0/-2.7%;p = 0.007), compared with Federico II (15318.57±10919.59EUR). Discussion: Healthcare services were more complete (and expensive) at the Federico II centralised MS Care Unit, compared with the Vanvitelli local service-based organizational model. Future research should evaluate whether better integration between MS Centres and local services can lead to improved MS management and lower costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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7. The use of MSAP reveals epigenetic diversity of the invasive clonal populations of Arundo donax L.
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Guarino, Francesco, Cicatelli, Angela, Brundu, Giuseppe, Improta, Giovanni, Triassi, Maria, and Castiglione, Stefano
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GIANT reed ,DNA methylation ,CYTOLOGY ,POPULATION biology - Abstract
Among the most widespread plant species with clonal reproduction Arundo donax L. represents one of most studied one characterized by very low genetic biodiversity. Although it is a perennial rhizomatous tall grass native to eastern and southern Asia, it spreads only asexually in the invaded range all over the world thriving very well in a large array of pedo-climatic conditions. This ability to morphologically or physiologically adapt to a broad array of conditions could be attributed to epigenetic mechanisms. To shade light on this relevant issue, 96 stems of A. donax from spontaneous populations distributed across the Italian invaded range (island of Sardinia, Northern and Southern Italy) were analysed. Leaf DNAs were extracted and processed through AFLPs and MSAPs for defining either genetic and epigenetic profiles. Both analyses clearly showed that the A. donax populations of Sardinia island are genetically distinct from those of Italian mainland; AFLPs showed an extremely low genetic biodiversity due to vegetative reproduction, whilst, epi-biodiversity, estimated through MSAP marker, increased within the analyzed populations. These results suggest that the capability of A. donax to invade and thrive in diverse environmental conditions can be, at least, partially attributed to a higher epigenetic variability. Therefore, the different DNA methylation status may have significant and important biological meaning, in particular, in the case of invasive clonal plants such as A. donax, also for the biodiversity definition, and MSAP marker can be considered an useful and cost effective marker to reveal it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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8. [Risk assessment of cemetery workers of Naples. Ergonomic evaluation of manual load transfer and evaluation of total bacterial concentration during some steps of work: body transfer, inhumation, exhumation]
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TRIASSI, MARIA, Lopreiato S, Napoletano PV, Loria S., Triassi, Maria, Lopreiato, S, Napoletano, Pv, and Loria, S.
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Risk ,Mortuary Practice ,total bacterial concentration ,Cemetery worker ,Communicable Diseases ,Risk Assessment ,Occupational Diseases ,Weight-Bearing ,Italy ,Risk Factors ,Occupational Exposure ,Inhumation ,Humans ,Ergonomics - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to describe the type of activity of cemetery workers of Naples and to evaluate the associated risks, through microbiological and ergonomic risk assessment.
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- 2004
9. [Environmental quality in operating rooms in Campania]
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TRIASSI, MARIA, MONTUORI, PAOLO, Arnese A, Campaiola C, COCCHIERI, RENATA, Triassi, M, Montuori, P, Arnese, Antonio, Campaiola, C, AMODIO COCCHIERI, R., Triassi, Maria, Montuori, Paolo, Arnese, A, and Cocchieri, Renata
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Environmental quality ,Operating Rooms ,Italy ,Air Pollution, Indoor ,Air Microbiology ,Operating room - Published
- 2001
10. STUDIO SULLA QUALITA' AMBIENTALE DI SALE OPERATORIE IN CAMPANIA
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TRIASSI, MARIA, MONTUORI, PAOLO, A. ARNESE, C. CAMPAIOLA, R. AMODIO COCCHIERI, Triassi, Maria, Montuori, Paolo, A., Arnese, C., Campaiola, and R., AMODIO COCCHIERI
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Operating Rooms ,Italy ,Air Pollution, Indoor ,Air Microbiology - Published
- 2001
11. [The validity of the certification of natimortality: the experience of a local study]
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D'Argenio P, Arsieri R, Pugliese A, D'ARMIENTO, MARIA, Russo R, Vecchione R., TRIASSI, MARIA, D'Argenio, P, Triassi, Maria, Arsieri, R, Pugliese, A, D'Armiento, Maria, Russo, R, and Vecchione, R.
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Certification of natimortality ,Congenital malformations ,Italy ,Cause of Death ,Infant Mortality ,Infant, Newborn ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,Autopsy ,Fetal Death ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Wigglesworth classification ,Death Certificates - Abstract
Although several study confirmed the inaccuracy of information in death certificates, very few investigations were performed to assess the validity of stillbirth certificate reporting. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the extent to which the clinical diagnosis of stillbirth cause reported in certificates can be considered sensitive and specific. Eighty-five consecutive stillbirths were independently classified by two neonatologists with certificate information, using the new Wigglesworth classification, and the reliability of the classification process was evaluated. Afterwards we compared the classes made with certificate causes and the ones made with clinical-autoptic data (the "gold standard") and we estimated sensitivity and specificity of certificate cause of stillbirth. The reliability of the classification process was very high. Values of sensitivity were considered unacceptable, mainly in the field of congenital malformations, intra-partum asphyxia and other specific causes. By contrast, specificity was found to be satisfactory. The accuracy of clinical stillbirth diagnosis is not sufficient and good description needs the contribute of post-mortem necropsy.
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- 1995
12. Exposure to active and passive smoking during pregnancy and severe small for gestational age at term.
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Fantuzzi, Guglielmina, Vaccaro, Valentina, Aggazzotti, Gabriella, Righi, Elena, Kanitz, Stefano, Barbone, Fabio, Sansebastiano, Giuliano, Battaglia, Mario Alberto, Leoni, Valerio, Fabiani, Leila, Triassi, Maria, Sciacca, Salvatore, and Facchinetti, Fabio
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CIGARETTE smokers ,PREGNANCY ,PREGNANT women ,GESTATIONAL age ,NEWBORN infants - Abstract
Objective. The objective of this study was to assess the relationship between active smoking as well as environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure and severe small for gestational age (SGA) at term in a sample of pregnant Italian women. Methods. A case-control study was conducted in nine cities in Italy between October 1999 and September 2000. Cases of severe SGA were singleton, live born, at term children with a birth weight ≤ 5th percentile for gestational age. Controls (10:1 to cases) were enrolled from among singleton at term births that occurred in the same hospitals one or two days after delivery of the case, with a birth weight > 10th percentile for gestational age. A total of 84 cases of severe SGA and 858 controls were analyzed. A self-administered questionnaire was used to assess active smoking and ETS exposure, as well as potential confounders. Results. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed a relationship between active smoking during pregnancy and severe SGA (adjusted odds ratio (OR) 2.10, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.13-3.68). ETS exposure was associated with severe SGA (adjusted OR 2.51, 95% CI 1.59-3.95) with a dose-response relationship to the number of smokers in the home. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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13. Work-related injuries in young workers: an Italian multicentric epidemiological survey
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Aggazzotti, Gabriella, Elena Righi, Patorno, Elisabetta, Fantuzzi, Guglielmina, Fabiani, Leila, Giuliani, Anna Rita, Grappasonni, Iolanda, Petrelli, Fabio, Ricciardi, Walter, La Torre, Giuseppe, Sciacca, Salvatore, Angelillo, Italo, Bianco, Aida, Nobile, Carmelo, Gregorio, Pasquale, Lupi, Silvia, Perlangeli, Vincenza, Bonazzi, Chiara, Laviola, Francesco, Triassi, Maria, Iorfida, Evelina, Montegrosso, Sara, Rivosecchi, Paola, Serra, Maria Cristina, Adorisio, Eugenio, Gramiccia, Alessandra, Mura, Ida, Castiglia, Paolo, Romano, Gabriele, Poli, Albino, Tardivo, Stefano, Aggazzotti, G, Righi, E, Patorno, E, Fantuzzi, G, Fabiani, L, Giuliani, A, Grappasonni, I, Petrelli, F, Ricciardi, W, La Torre, G, Sciacca, S, Angelillo, I, Bianco, A, Nobile, C, Gregorio, P, Lupi, S, Perlangeli, V, Bonazzi, M, Laviola, F, Triassi, M, Iorfida, E, Montegrosso, S, Rivosecchi, P, Serra, M, Adorisio, E, Gramiccia, A, Mura, I, Castiglia, P, Romano, G, Poli, A, Tardivo, S, Giuliani, Ar, LA TORRE, G, Bonazzi, C, Serra, Mc, and Triassi, Maria
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Male ,Adolescent ,Databases, Factual ,MED/42 - IGIENE GENERALE E APPLICATA ,Sex Factor ,Databases ,Sex Factors ,Accidents, Occupational ,Humans ,work-related injuries ,Age Factor ,young workers ,Factual ,epidemiology ,prevention ,Wounds and Injurie ,Age Factors ,Female ,Italy ,Wounds and Injuries ,multicentric survey ,Occupational ,work-related injuries, young workers, epidemiology, prevention ,Accidents ,work related injuries - Abstract
Emergency departments records from 33 hospitals were reviewed to disclose work-related injuries occurred in teen-subjects living in 14 Italian cities. During January-June 2000, 317 work-related injuries were reported. Male subjects, 17 year old, working in the industrial field, resulted the most affected, probably due to the fact that among young workers this sex and age class is the most represented one. Cluster analysis identified two groups of work-related injuries: one includes mainly transportation injuries causing lower extremities or multiple body sites traumas. The other is more strictly related to specific working tasks and includes mostly traumas and cut wounds in hand/wrist and head, together with eye lesions. A more intensive supervision on the use of protective equipment, a more appropriate training in hazard recognition and safe work practices, including operation of vehicles in the work site, must be implemented to reduce work-related injuries.
14. A case study to investigate the impact of overcrowding indices in emergency departments
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Giovanni Improta, Massimo Majolo, Eliana Raiola, Giuseppe Russo, Giuseppe Longo, Maria Triassi, Improta, Giovanni, Majolo, Massimo, Raiola, Eliana, Russo, Giuseppe, Longo, Giuseppe, and Triassi, Maria
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Prospective Studie ,Crowding ,Italy ,Emergency department work index (EDWIN) ,Emergency Medicine ,ED evaluation indice ,Humans ,National Emergency Department Overcrowding Scale (NEDOCS) ,Prospective Studies ,Overcrowding in emergency department (ED) ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Forecasting ,Human - Abstract
Background Emergency department (ED) overcrowding is widespread in hospitals in many countries, causing severe consequences to patient outcomes, staff work and the system, with an overall increase in costs. Therefore, health managers are constantly looking for new preventive and corrective measures to counter this phenomenon. To do this, however, it is necessary to be able to characterize the problem objectively. For this reason, various indices are used in the literature to assess ED crowding. In this work, we explore the use of two of the most widespread crowding indices in an ED of an Italian national hospital, investigate their relationships and discuss their effectiveness. Methods In this study, two of the most widely used indices in the literature, the National Emergency Department Overcrowding Scale (NEDOCS) and the Emergency Department Working Index (EDWIN), were analysed to characterize overcrowding in the ED of A.O.R.N. “A. Cardarelli” of Naples, which included 1678 clinical cases. The measurement was taken every 15 minutes for a period of 7 days. Results The results showed consistency in the use of EDWIN and NEDOCS indices as measures of overcrowding, especially in severe overcrowding conditions. Indeed, in the examined case study, both EDWIN and NEDOCS showed very low rates of occurrence of severe overcrowding (2–3%). In contrast, regarding differences in the estimation of busy to overcrowded ED rates, the EDWIN index proved to be less sensitive in distinguishing these variations in the occupancy of the ED. Furthermore, within the target week considered in the study, the results show that, according to both EDWIN and NEDOCS, higher overcrowding rates occurred during the middle week rather than during the weekend. Finally, a low degree of correlation between the two indices was found. Conclusions The effectiveness of both EDWIN and NEDOCS in measuring ED crowding and overcrowding was investigated, and the main differences and relationships in the use of the indices are highlighted. While both indices are useful ED performance metrics, they are not always interchangeable, and their combined use could provide more details in understanding ED dynamics and possibly predicting future critical conditions, thus enhancing ED management.
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- 2022
15. Association between COVID-19 and Sick Leave for Healthcare Workers in a Large Academic Hospital in Southern Italy: An Observational Study
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Raffaele Palladino, Michelangelo Mercogliano, Claudio Fiorilla, Alessandro Frangiosa, Sabrina Iodice, Stefano Sanduzzi Zamparelli, Emma Montella, Maria Triassi, Alessandro Sanduzzi Zamparelli, Palladino, Raffaele, Mercogliano, Michelangelo, Fiorilla, Claudio, Frangiosa, Alessandro, Iodice, Sabrina, Sanduzzi Zamparelli, Stefano, Montella, Emma, Triassi, Maria, and SANDUZZI ZAMPARELLI, Alessandro
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Hospitals, University ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,sick leave ,symptoms ,public health ,healthcare workers ,CAT score ,Italy ,Health Personnel ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Humans ,Sick Leave - Abstract
Studies have shown that the pandemic has led to an increase in sick leave periods among healthcare workers (HCWs); however, this might have changed over time considering increase in vaccination coverage and change in COVID-19 variant predominance. Therefore, we conducted an observational study to evaluate whether the type of symptoms and the duration of sick leave period for healthcare workers working in a large university hospital in the South of Italy changed between January 2021 and January 2022; 398 cases of COVID-19 were identified for a total of 382 subjects involved. A total of 191 subjects answered the questionnaire about symptoms; of these, 79 had COVID-19 during the period from March 2020 until February 2022. The results showed a decrease of about 1.2 days in sick leave period for each quarter without finding significant differences in the perception of symptoms. It is possible to hypothesize a contribution from the Omicron variant to the decrease in sick leave period in the last quarter, from vaccination coverage, from optimization of COVID-19 management, and from change in the regulations for the assessment of positivity.
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- 2022
16. Lean thinking to improve emergency department throughput at AORN Cardarelli hospital
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Anna Maria Ferraro, Maria Romano, Maria Vincenza Di Cicco, Ciro Verdoliva, Anna Borrelli, Mario Cesarelli, Maria Triassi, Giovanni Improta, Improta, Giovanni, Romano, Maria, Di Cicco, Maria Vincenza, Ferraro, Anna, Borrelli, Anna, Verdoliva, Ciro, Triassi, Maria, and Cesarelli, Mario
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Quality management ,Time Factors ,Time Factor ,Efficiency, Organizational ,Health informatics ,Lean manufacturing ,Health administration ,Workflow ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hospital Administration ,Medicine ,Humans ,Operations management ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Quality improvement ,Lean thinking ,Organizational Case Studie ,Public health ,business.industry ,Emergency department ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,Nursing research ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Overcrowding ,Triage ,Italy ,Organizational Case Studies ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Human ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Throughout the world, emergency departments (ED) are characterized by overcrowding and excessive waiting times. Furthermore, the related delays significantly increase patient mortality and make inefficient use of resources to the detriment of the satisfaction of employees and patients. In this work, lean thinking is applied to the ED of Cardarelli Hospital of Naples with the aim of increasing patient flow, improving the processes that contribute to facilitating the flow of patients through the various stages of medical treatment and eliminating all bottlenecks (queue) as well as all activities that generate waste. Methods This project was performed at National Hospital A.O.R.N. A. Cardarelli of Naples. The historical times of access to the ED were analysed from January 2015 to June 2015, for a total of 16,563 records. Subsequently, starting in November 2015, corrective actions were implemented according to the Lean Approach. Data collected after the introduced improvements were collected from April 2016 to June 2016 and compared to those collected during the starting period. Results The results acquired before application of the Lean Thinking strategy illustrated the as-is process with its drawbacks. An analysis of the non-added value activities was performed to identify the procedures that need to be improved. After implementation of the corrective actions, we observed a positive increase in the performance of the ED, quantified as percentages of hospitalized patients according to triage codes and waiting times. Conclusion This work demonstrates the applicability of Lean Thinking to ED processes and its effectiveness in terms of increasing the efficiency of services and reducing waste (waiting times).
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- 2018
17. 'One Health' Approach for Health Innovation and Active Aging in Campania (Italy)
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Cristina Ponsiglione, Giovanni Tramontano, Giovanni Annuzzi, Maddalena Illario, Rosa Zampetti, Anna Marro, Jean Bousquet, Giannamaria Vallefuoco, Regina Roller-Wirnsberger, Guido Iaccarino, Gaetano Cafiero, Alberto Lombardi, Aurelio Crudeli, Giancarlo Bracale, Maria Triassi, Mariarosa A. B. Melone, Mario Losasso, Donatella Tramontano, Umberto Bracale, Maurizio Taglialatela, Maria Luisa Chiusano, Luigi Riccio, Vincenzo De Luca, Carmine Vecchione, Ugo Trama, Francesco Cacciatore, Pietro Buono, De Luca, V., Tramontano, G., Riccio, L., Trama, U., Buono, P., Losasso, M., Bracale, U. M., Annuzzi, G., Zampetti, R., Cacciatore, F., Vallefuoco, G., Lombardi, A., Marro, A., Melone, M. A. B., Ponsiglione, C., Chiusano, M. L., Bracale, G., Cafiero, G., Crudeli, A., Vecchione, C., Taglialatela, M., Tramontano, D., Iaccarino, G., Triassi, M., Roller-Wirnsberger, R., Bousquet, J., Illario, M., De Luca, Vincenzo, Tramontano, Giovanni, Riccio, Luigi, Trama, Ugo, Buono, Pietro, Losasso, Mario, Marcello Bracale, Umberto, Annuzzi, Giovanni, Zampetti, Rosa, Cacciatore, Francesco, Vallefuoco, Giannamaria, Lombardi, Alberto, Marro, Anna, Melone, Mariarosa Anna Beatrice, Ponsiglione, Cristina, Luisa Chiusano, Maria, Bracale, Giancarlo, Cafiero, Gaetano, Crudeli, Aurelio, Vecchione, Carmine, Taglialatela, Maurizio, Tramontano, Donatella, Iaccarino, Guido, Triassi, Maria, Roller-Wirnsberger, Regina, and Bousquet and Maddalena Illario, Jean
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Aging ,Economic growth ,Population ,digital health ,Review ,information and communication technologies ,silver economy ,Healthy Aging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,active and healthy aging ,Health care ,health innovation ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Ecosystem ,health care economics and organizations ,Health policy ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,information and communication technologie ,business.industry ,future health and health care ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,health policy ,Digital health ,One Health ,Italy ,030228 respiratory system ,General partnership ,Sustainability ,Quality of Life ,Public Health ,Business ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Human - Abstract
This article describes how innovations are exploited in Campania (Italy) to improve health outcomes, quality of life, and sustainability of social and healthcare services. Campania's strategy for digitalization of health and care and for healthy aging is based on a person-centered, life-course, “One Health” approach, where demographic change is considered capable of stimulating a growth dynamic linked to the opportunities of combining the “Silver Economy” with local assets and the specific health needs of the population. The end-users (citizens, patients, and professionals) contribute to the co-creation of products and services, being involved in the identification of unmet needs and test-bed activity. The Campania Reference Site of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Aging is a flexible regional ecosystem to address the challenge of an aging population with a life-course approach. The good practices, developed in the context of research and innovation projects and innovative procurements by local stakeholders and collaborations with international networks, have been allowing the transfer of innovative solutions, knowledge, and skills to the stakeholders of such a multi-sectoral ecosystem for health.
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- 2021
18. Seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 Assessed by Four Chemiluminescence Immunoassays and One Immunocromatography Test for SARS-Cov-2
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Pellegrino Cerino, Alfonso Gallo, Biancamaria Pierri, Carlo Buonerba, Denise Di Concilio, Maria Concetta Cuomo, Lucia Vassallo, Gabriella Lo Conte, Annachiara Coppola, Antonio Pizzolante, Giovanni Boccia, Veronica Ferrucci, Luigi Atripaldi, Maria Triassi, Daniela Pacella, Michele Cennamo, Paolo Romano, Teresa Maria Sorbo, Alessandro Furno, Oriana Catapano, Aldo Contina, Giuseppe Perruolo, Maurizio D'Amora, Daniela Terracciano, Giuseppe Portella, Cerino, Pellegrino, Gallo, Alfonso, Pierri, Biancamaria, Buonerba, Carlo, Di Concilio, Denise, Cuomo, Maria Concetta, Vassallo, Lucia, Lo Conte, Gabriella, Coppola, Annachiara, Pizzolante, Antonio, Boccia, Giovanni, Ferrucci, Veronica, Atripaldi, Luigi, Triassi, Maria, Pacella, Daniela, Cennamo, Michele, Romano, Paolo, Sorbo, Teresa Maria, Furno, Alessandro, Catapano, Oriana, Contina, Aldo, Perruolo, Giuseppe, D'Amora, Maurizio, Terracciano, Daniela, and Portella, Giuseppe
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Luminescence ,Context (language use) ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Serology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cohen's kappa ,rapid test ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,medicine ,Seroprevalence ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,rapid tests ,Original Research ,030304 developmental biology ,Immunoassay ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,seroprevalence ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,Virology ,immunoassays ,serological test ,Immunoglobulin M ,Italy ,biology.protein ,Public Health ,Antibody ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,business - Abstract
The onset of the new SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus encouraged the development of new serologic tests that could be additional and complementary to real-time RT-PCR-based assays. In such a context, the study of performances of available tests is urgently needed, as their use has just been initiated for seroprevalence assessment. The aim of this study was to compare four chemiluminescence immunoassays and one immunochromatography test for SARS-Cov-2 antibodies for the evaluation of the degree of diffusion of SARS-CoV-2 infection in Salerno Province (Campania Region, Italy). A total of 3,185 specimens from citizens were tested for anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies as part of a screening program. Four automated immunoassays (Abbott and Liaison SARS-CoV-2 CLIA IgG and Roche and Siemens SARS-CoV-2 CLIA IgM/IgG/IgA assays) and one lateral flow immunoassay (LFIA Technogenetics IgG–IgM COVID-19) were used. Seroprevalence in the entire cohort was 2.41, 2.10, 1.82, and 1.85% according to the Liaison IgG, Abbott IgG, Siemens, and Roche total Ig tests, respectively. When we explored the agreement among the rapid tests and the serologic assays, we reported good agreement for Abbott, Siemens, and Roche (Cohen's Kappa coefficient 0.69, 0.67, and 0.67, respectively), whereas we found moderate agreement for Liaison (Cohen's kappa coefficient 0.58). Our study showed that Abbott and Liaison SARS-CoV-2 CLIA IgG, Roche and Siemens SARS-CoV-2 CLIA IgM/IgG/IgA assays, and LFIA Technogenetics IgG-IgM COVID-19 have good agreement in seroprevalence assessment. In addition, our findings indicate that the prevalence of IgG and total Ig antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 at the time of the study was as low as around 3%, likely explaining the amplitude of the current second wave.
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- 2021
19. Symptoms of mental health problems among Italian adolescents in 2017–2018 school year: a multicenter cross-sectional study
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Maria Triassi, Elena Raffetti, Alessia Maccaro, Elia Croce, Ilaria Loperto, Sara Mentasti, Federica Crivillaro, Antonella Elvetico, Francesco Donato, Donato, Francesco, Triassi, Maria, Loperto, Ilaria, Maccaro, Alessia, Mentasti, Sara, Crivillaro, Federica, Elvetico, Antonella, Croce, Elia, and Raffetti, Elena
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Cross-sectional study ,Logistic regression ,Odds ,Smoking behavior ,03 medical and health sciences ,Screen time ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Environmental health ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Students ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Schools ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Bullying ,Social environment ,General Medicine ,Mental health ,mental health, adolescents ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Behaviors ,Risk factors ,Social context ,Female ,Italy ,Risk Factors ,Adolescent Behavior ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Identifying individual and contextual factors that influence adolescent well-being is a research priority. This study aimed to assess the prevalence of symptoms of mental health problems and some related factors in Italian adolescents in 2017–2018. Methods The present study was a cross-sectional survey among 3002 students aged 15–16 years who resided in two Italian provinces, in North and South Italy. Symptoms of mental health problems were assessed using the SDQ and CES-DC, and students’ risk-taking behaviors and school climate perception were assessed. All information was collected anonymously. Logistic regression models were used to assess the associations of tobacco and alcohol use, screen time, bullying, and school climate with symptoms of mental health problems. Results One student out of five reported symptoms of mental health problems, with a more than double proportion among girls than boys (28.7% vs 10.4% with depressive symptoms, respectively). Thirty percent and 40% of students smoked tobacco or drank alcoholic beverages at least once in the past month, and more than 40% reported being victims or authors of bullying in the past 6 months. Smoking behavior, alcohol consumption, screen time, bullying, and negative school climate had 1.2- to 3.3-fold increased odds of symptoms of mental health problems without substantial differences between sexes and geographical areas. Conclusions Tobacco and alcohol use, screen time, bullying, and school climate were independently associated with symptoms of mental health problems in a large sample of 15–16-year-old Italian adolescents without substantial gender and geographical differences.
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- 2021
20. Efficiency measures of emergency departments: an Italian systematic literature review
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Francesco Clemente, Lucia Sara D'Angiolella, Maria Triassi, Danilo Di Laura, Ida Santalucia, Ginevra Squassabia, Giovanni Improta, Lorenzo G. Mantovani, Di Laura, Danilo, D'Angiolella, Lucia, Mantovani, Lorenzo, Squassabia, Ginevra, Clemente, Francesco, Santalucia, Ida, Improta, Giovanni, Triassi, Maria, Di Laura, D, D'Angiolella, L, Mantovani, L, Squassabia, G, Clemente, F, Santalucia, I, Improta, G, and Triassi, M
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Medicine (General) ,emergency department ,Leadership and Management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Scopus ,Cochrane Library ,R5-920 ,Health care ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,Operations management ,media_common ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Emergency department ,performance measures ,Identification (information) ,Systematic review ,Italy ,Life expectancy ,Systematic Review ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,business ,healthcare quality improvement ,Delivery of Health Care ,performance measure - Abstract
Life expectancy globally increased in the last decades: the number of people aged 65 or older is consequently projected to grow, and healthcare demand will increase as well. In the recent years, the number of patients visiting the hospital emergency departments (EDs) rocked in almost all countries of the world. These departments are crucial in all healthcare systems and play a critical role in providing an efficient assistance to all patients. A systematic literature review covering PubMed, Scopus and the Cochrane Library was performed from 2009 to 2019. Of the 718 references found in the literature research, more than 25 studies were included in the current review. Different predictors were associated with the quality of EDs care, which may help to define and implement preventive strategies in the near future. There is no harmonisation in efficiency measurements reflecting the performance in the ED setting. The identification of consistent measures of efficiency is crucial to build an evidence base for future initiatives. The aim of this study is to review the literature on the problems encountered in the efficiency of EDs around the world in order to identify an organisational model or guidelines that can be implemented in EDs to fill inefficiencies and ensure access optimal treatment both in terms of resources and timing. This review will support policy makers to improve the quality of health facilities, and, consequently of the entire healthcare systems.
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- 2021
21. Multiple Sclerosis in the Campania Region (South Italy): Algorithm Validation and 2015–2017 Prevalence
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Maria Pia Sormani, Nicola Capasso, Vincenzo Brescia Morra, Martina Petruzzo, Marcello Moccia, Raffaele Palladino, Roberta Lanzillo, Ilaria Loperto, Maria Grazia Fumo, Maria Triassi, Roberta Giordana, Moccia, Marcello, Brescia Morra, Vincenzo, Lanzillo, Roberta, Loperto, Ilaria, Giordana, Roberta, Fumo, Maria Grazia, Petruzzo, Martina, Capasso, Nicola, Triassi, Maria, Sormani, Maria Pia, and Palladino, Raffaele
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Male ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,prevalence ,Prevalence ,lcsh:Medicine ,Environmental Sciences & Ecology ,Toxicology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Clinical registry ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,Healthcare data ,Public, Environmental & Occupational Health ,Retrospective Studies ,OUTCOMES ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,INSIGHTS ,SIZE ,Italy ,multiple sclerosi ,routinely collected healthcare data ,Cohort ,Female ,Routinely collected healthcare data ,business ,Algorithm ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Environmental Sciences ,Algorithms - Abstract
We aim to validate a case-finding algorithm to detect individuals with multiple sclerosis (MS) using routinely collected healthcare data, and to assess the prevalence of MS in the Campania Region (South Italy). To identify individuals with MS living in the Campania Region, we employed an algorithm using different routinely collected healthcare administrative databases (hospital discharges, drug prescriptions, outpatient consultations with payment exemptions), from 1 January 2015 to 31 December 2017. The algorithm was validated towards the clinical registry from the largest regional MS centre (n = 1460). We used the direct method to standardise the prevalence rate and the capture-recapture method to estimate the proportion of undetected cases. The case-finding algorithm including individuals with at least one MS record during the study period captured 5362 MS patients (females = 64.4%, age = 44.6 ±, 12.9 years), with 99.0% sensitivity (95% CI = 98.3%, 99.4%). Standardised prevalence rate per 100,000 people was 89.8 (95% CI = 87.4, 92.2) (111.8 for females [95% CI = 108.1, 115.6] and 66.2 for males [95% CI = 63.2, 69.2]). The number of expected MS cases was 2.7% higher than cases we detected. We developed a case-finding algorithm for MS using routinely collected healthcare data from the Campania Region, which was validated towards a clinical dataset, with high sensitivity and low proportion of undetected cases. Our prevalence estimates are in line with those reported by international studies conducted using similar methods. In the future, this cohort could be used for studies with high granularity of clinical, environmental, healthcare resource utilisation, and pharmacoeconomic variables.
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- 2020
22. Hair mercury levels in an urban population from southern Italy: Fish consumption as a determinant of exposure
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Díez, Sergi, Montuori, Paolo, Pagano, Adele, Sarnacchiaro, Pasquale, Bayona, Josep M., and Triassi, Maria
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MERCURY , *HAIR , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *FISH as food , *DENTAL amalgams , *BODY weight , *BODY size , *REGRESSION analysis , *AGE , *GENDER - Abstract
Mercury levels in hair of a general population, 237 adults aged between 35–45, in Naples, Italy, were assessed. The subjects were asked to fill in a questionnaire about age, gender, body weight, height, body mass index (BMI), fish consumption, number, surface and area of dental amalgam fillings. Total mercury (THg) concentrations in human hair ranged from 0.221 to 3.402 μg/g and the mean value for the subjects under study was 0.638 μg/g. Study participants were divided into three groups in accordance with fish consumption and dental amalgam: ANF (amalgam and no fish); NAF (no amalgam but with fish) and AAF (amalgam and fish). Significant differences in THg were found in the three groups (p <0.05). A multiple linear regression analysis showed a weak but significant correlation of THg content in hair with respect to gender and age, but almost no association was found between THg and dental fillings. Conversely, a strong correlation was obtained between THg and fish consumption regardless of the group evaluated. Finally, mercury levels in hair exceeded the levels corresponding to the EPA reference dose (RfD) of 0.1 μg Hg/kg body weight per day (1 μg Hg/g hair) in 6% of the population (4% men and 2% women). However, the THg limits in our subjects were not exceeded according to the WHO guidelines, which use a benchmark dose of 0.23 μg Hg/kg bw/day (14 μg Hg/g maternal hair). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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23. Costs of clinical trials with anticancer biological agents in an Oncologic Italian Cancer Center using the activity-based costing methodology
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Sandro Pignata, Antonio Nardone, Giacomo Pascarella, Antonella Petrillo, Paolo A. Ascierto, Nicola Maurea, Francesco Perrone, Alessandro Morabito, Agnese Montanino, Roberta D’Aniello, Gianfranco De Feo, Secondo Lastoria, Gerardo Botti, Laura Arenare, Marcello Curvietto, Ernesta Cavalcanti, Piera Maiolino, Arturo Capasso, Maria Triassi, Francesca Laudato, Pascarella, Giacomo, Capasso, Arturo, Nardone, Antonio, Triassi, Maria, Pignata, Sandro, Arenare, Laura, Ascierto, Paolo, Curvietto, Marcello, Maiolino, Piera, D'Aniello, Roberta, Montanino, Agnese, Laudato, Francesca, De Feo, Gianfranco, Botti, Gerardo, Perrone, Francesco, Petrillo, Antonella, Cavalcanti, Ernesta, Lastoria, Secondo, Maurea, Nicola, and Morabito, Alessandro
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Male ,Melanomas ,Total cost ,Cancer Treatment ,Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,Health care ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Clinical Trials (Cancer Treatment) ,Activity-based costing ,health care economics and organizations ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Multidisciplinary ,Health Care Costs ,Anticancer Biological ,Phase III clinical investigation ,Italy ,Oncology ,Female ,Oncology Agents ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Drug Research and Development ,Science ,Immunology ,MEDLINE ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Audit ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Drug Costs ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antibody Therapy ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Humans ,Clinical Trials ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Cancers and Neoplasms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic ,Family medicine ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Clinical Immunology ,Clinical Medicine ,business - Abstract
AimThe aim of the present study was to assess the estimated "per patient" total cost for a single Oncologic Italian Cancer Center participating in a multicenter clinical trial with new anticancer biological agents using the activity-based costing (ABC) methodology.MethodologyNine randomized phase 3 clinical trials employing biological agents at the National Cancer Institute of Napoli, Italy, were analyzed to indentify "per patient" costs of each trial, according to the ABC methodology. The average consumption of resources for a patient completing the entire planned treatment was estimated for each trial. Through interviews of the personnel (doctors, nurses and technicians) and by analyses of the clinical trials protocols, the main activities of the 9 clinical trials were identified and, for each trial, the complete health care pathway of the patients and the treatment programmes were minutely reconstructed. Drug costs were not included because provided by Sponsors.Principal findingsThe average costs of the pre-study, treatment, monitoring, follow-up, audit, and administrative activities accounted for 2.357, 4.783, 700, 372, 1.263, and 9 Euro, respectively. The average total cost estimated for all "per patient" activities, including overhead costs, was 11.379 Euro. Staff costs accounted for € 5.988, while costs of diagnostic test accounted for 3.494 Euro. Clinical trials with immunotherapeutic drugs accounted for higher costs (+601 Euro as oncological staff costs, +1.318 Euro as intermediate services cost and +384 Euro as overheads).ConclusionsThe average total cost estimated for all "per patient" activities of a clinical trial with new anticancer biological agents was 11.379 Euro using the ABC methodology.
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- 2019
24. Health-care inequalities in Italy: challenges for the Government
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Annamaria Colao, Alfredo Mazza, Alessandro Miani, Fabio Pollice, Antonio Scala, Manuela Pulimeno, Maria Triassi, Alessandro Distante, Prisco Piscitelli, Antonella De Donno, Piscitelli, P., Miani, A., Mazza, A., Triassi, M., Donno, A. D., Scala, A., Pulimeno, M., Distante, A., Pollice, Fabio, Colao, A., Piscitelli, Prisco, Miani, Alessandro, Mazza, Alfredo, Triassi, Maria, DE DONNO, Maria Antonella, Scala, Antonio, Pulimeno, Manuela, Distante, Alessandro, and Colao, Annamaria
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Economic growth ,Government ,Health Equity ,Inequality ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,MEDLINE ,Health equity ,Italy ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Political science ,Health care ,Humans ,Healthcare Disparities ,business ,media_common - Published
- 2019
25. Molecular Characterization of Coxsackievirus B5 Isolates from Sewage, Italy 2016–2017
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Gabriele Buttinelli, Concetta Amato, Paolo Castiglia, Stefano Fiore, Paola Stefanelli, Licia Veronesi, Simona De Grazia, Antonella Cicala, Angela Maria Vittoria Larocca, Andrea Cossu, Francesca Pennino, Silvia Spertini, Sabine Gamper, Giovanni M. Giammanco, Roberta Zoni, Stefano Fontana, Angelo Siragusa, Maria Triassi, Cinzia Germinario, Fontana, S., Fiore, S., Buttinelli, G., Amato, C., Veronesi, L., Zoni, R., Triassi, M., Pennino, F., Giammanco, G. M., De Grazia, S., Cicala, A., Siragusa, Danilo, Gamper, S., Spertini, S., Castiglia, P., Cossu, A., Germinario, C., Larocca, A. M. V., Stefanelli, P., Fontana, Stefano, Fiore, Stefano, Buttinelli, Gabriele, Amato, Concetta, Veronesi, Licia, Zoni, Roberta, Triassi, Maria, Pennino, Francesca, Giammanco, Giovanni Maurizio, De Grazia, Simona, Cicala, Antonella, Siragusa, Angelo, Gamper, Sabine, Spertini, Silvia, Castiglia, Paolo, Cossu, Andrea, Germinario, Cinzia, Larocca, Angela Maria Vittoria, and Stefanelli, Paola
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0301 basic medicine ,Settore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia Clinica ,Epidemiology ,Viral protein ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,viruses ,030106 microbiology ,Sewage ,010501 environmental sciences ,Biology ,Coxsackievirus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Brief Communication ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Viral Proteins ,Phylogenetic analysi ,Non-polio enteroviruse ,Phylogenetics ,Virology ,medicine ,Phylogeny ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Polioviruse ,Phylogenetic analysis ,CV-B5 ,Phylogenetic tree ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,Non-polio enteroviruses ,biology.organism_classification ,Enterovirus B, Human ,Italy ,GenBank ,Polioviruses ,Coxsackieviru ,business ,Food Science ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Hereby, the partial Viral Protein 1 sequences of Coxsackievirus B5 (CV-B5) from sewage samples, collected in Italy from 2016 to 2017, were compared with those available in GenBank from clinical samples. Phylogenetic analysis highlighted: (I) the predominant circulation of CV-B5 genogroup B in Italy, and (II) the presence of two new sub-genogroups.
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- 2019
26. Distribution, sources and ecological risk assessment of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in water and sediments from Tiber River and estuary, Italy
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Maria Triassi, Paolo Montuori, Sara Aurino, Pasquale Sarnacchiaro, Antonio Nardone, Fatima Garzonio, Montuori, Paolo, Aurino, Sara, Garzonio, Fatima, Sarnacchiaro, Pasquale, Nardone, Antonio, and Triassi, Maria
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Geologic Sediments ,Environmental Engineering ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Source ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Mediterranean sea ,Rivers ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecological risk ,Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons ,Contaminant load ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Risk assessment ,Tiber river ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Hydrology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Sediment ,Estuary ,Contamination ,Particulates ,Pollution ,Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon ,Italy ,Toxic equivalent quantity (TEQ) ,Environmental chemistry ,Dissolved phase ,Environmental science ,Equivalent concentration ,Estuaries ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The concentration, source and ecological risk of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in the Tiber River and its environmental impact on the Tyrrhenian Sea (Central Mediterranean Sea) were estimated. The 16 priority PAHs were determined in the water dissolved phase (DP), suspended particulate matter (SPM) and sediments collected from 21 sites in four different seasons. Total concentrations of PAHs ranged from 10.3 to 951.6 ng L− 1 and from 36.2 to 545.6 ng g− 1 in water (sum of DP and SPM) and in sediment samples, respectively. The compositions of PAHs showed that 2- to 4-ring PAHs were abundant in DP, 4- to 6-ring PAHs were predominant in SPM samples, and 4- to 5-ring PAHs were abundant in sediments. The diagnostic ratio analysis indicated that the PAHs mainly had a pyrolytic source. The toxic equivalent concentration of carcinogenic PAHs was 45.3 ngTEQ g− 1, suggesting low carcinogenic risk for Tiber River. Total PAHs loads into the sea were calculated in about 3161.7 kg year− 1 showing that this river is one of the main contribution sources of these contaminants to the Tyrrhenian Sea.
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- 2016
27. Application of data mining in a cohort of Italian subjects undergoing myocardial perfusion imaging at an academic medical center
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Mario Cesarelli, Imma Latessa, Valeria Cantoni, Maria Triassi, Alberto Cuocolo, Giovanni Improta, Luigi Iuppariello, Carlo Ricciardi, Ricciardi, Carlo, Cantoni, Valeria, Improta, Giovanni, Iuppariello, Luigi, Latessa, Imma, Cesarelli, Mario, Triassi, Maria, and Cuocolo, Alberto
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Informatics ,CAD ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Naive Bayes classifier ,Myocardial perfusion imaging ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Data Mining ,Humans ,Aged ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,Academic Medical Centers ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Myocardial Perfusion Imaging ,Analytics platform, Cardiology, Data mining, Decision-making, Myocardial perfusion imaging ,Bayes Theorem ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Computer Science Applications ,Random forest ,Tree (data structure) ,Italy ,Cohort ,Female ,Supervised Machine Learning ,Radiology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Software ,Emission computed tomography - Abstract
Introduction Coronary artery disease (CAD) is still one of the primary causes of death in the developed countries. Stress single-photon emission computed tomography is used to evaluate myocardial perfusion and ventricular function in patients with suspected or known CAD. This study sought to test data mining and machine learning tools and to compare some supervised learning algorithms in a large cohort of Italian subjects with suspected or known CAD who underwent stress myocardial perfusion imaging. Methods The dataset consisted of 10,265 patients with suspected or known CAD. The analysis was conducted using Knime analytics platform in order to implement Random Forests, C4.5, Gradient boosted tree, Naive Bayes, and K nearest neighbor (KNN) after a procedure of features filtering. K-fold cross-validation was employed. Results Accuracy, error, precision, recall, and specificity were computed through the above-mentioned algorithms. Random Forests and gradients boosted trees obtained the highest accuracy (>95%), while it was comprised between 83% and 88%. The highest value for sensitivity and specificity was obtained by C4.5 (99.3%) and by Gradient boosted tree (96.9%). Naive Bayes had the lowest precision (70.9%) and specificity (72.0%), KNN the lowest recall and sensitivity (79.2%). Conclusions The high scores obtained by the implementation of the algorithms suggests health facilities consider the idea of including services of advanced data analysis to help clinicians in decision-making. Similar applications of this kind of study in other contexts could support this idea.
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- 2020
28. Reducing the risk of healthcare-associated infections through Lean Six Sigma: The case of the medicine areas at the Federico II University Hospital in Naples (Italy)
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Giovanni Improta, Paolo Montuori, Maria Triassi, Liberatina Carmela Santillo, Mario Cesarelli, Improta, Giovanni, Cesarelli, Mario, Montuori, Paolo, Santillo, Liberatina Carmela, and Triassi, Maria
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Healthcare associated infections ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Care process ,Healthcare services research ,Efficiency, Organizational ,Hospitals, University ,03 medical and health sciences ,Nursing ,0502 economics and business ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Healthcare-associated infection ,Lean Six Sigma ,healthcare‐associated infections ,Cross Infection ,Public health ,business.industry ,Data Collection ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,05 social sciences ,Healthcare ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,virus diseases ,Diabetology ,Effective management ,Original Articles ,medicine.disease ,University hospital ,Quality Improvement ,Italy ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Original Article ,Root Cause Analysis ,Medical emergency ,0305 other medical science ,business ,050203 business & management ,Total Quality Management - Abstract
Rationale, aims, and objectives Lean Six Sigma (LSS) has been recognized as an effective management tool for improving healthcare performance. Here, LSS was adopted to reduce the risk of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs), a critical quality parameter in the healthcare sector. Methods Lean Six Sigma was applied to the areas of clinical medicine (including general medicine, pulmonology, oncology, nephrology, cardiology, neurology, gastroenterology, rheumatology, and diabetology), and data regarding HAIs were collected for 28,000 patients hospitalized between January 2011 and December 2016. Following the LSS define, measure, analyse, improve, and control cycle, the factors influencing the risk of HAI were identified by using typical LSS tools (statistical analyses, brainstorming sessions, and cause-effect diagrams). Finally, corrective measures to prevent HAIs were implemented and monitored for 1 year after implementation. Results Lean Six Sigma proved to be a useful tool for identifying variables affecting the risk of HAIs and implementing corrective actions to improve the performance of the care process. A reduction in the number of patients colonized by sentinel bacteria was achieved after the improvement phase. Conclusions The implementation of an LSS approach could significantly decrease the percentage of patients with HAIs.
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- 2018
29. Environmental Pollution from Illegal Waste Disposal and Health Effects: A Review on the 'Triangle of Death'
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Antonio Nardone, Maddalena Illario, Oreste Caporale, Rossella Alfano, Maria Triassi, Paolo Montuori, Triassi, Maria, Alfano, R, Illario, Maddalena, Nardone, Antonio, Caporale, O, and Montuori, Paolo
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Reply ,Hazardous Waste ,Databases, Factual ,human biomonitoring ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Population ,Scopus ,lcsh:Medicine ,Environmental pollution ,Review ,human health ,Human health ,Campania Region ,Hazardous waste ,Environmental health ,Health care ,Dumping ,incineration ,Humans ,waste ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,landfill ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Refuse Disposal ,Geography ,Italy ,Environmental Pollution ,business ,Environmental Monitoring ,Waste disposal - Abstract
The term “triangle of death” was used for the first time by Senior and Mazza in the journal The Lancet Oncology referring to the eastern area of the Campania Region (Southern Italy) which has one of the worst records of illegal waste dumping practices. In the past decades, many studies have focused on the potential of illegal waste disposal to cause adverse effects on human health in this area. The great heterogeneity in the findings, and the bias in media communication has generated great healthcare doubts, anxieties and alarm. This paper addresses a review of the up-to-date literature on the “triangle of death”, bringing together the available information on the occurrence and severity of health effects related to illegal waste disposal. The Scopus database was searched using the search terms “waste”, “Campania”, “Naples”, “triangle of death” and “human biomonitoring”. Despite the methodological and sampling heterogeneity between the studies, this review examines the evidence from published data concerning cancer incidence, childhood mortality and birth defects, so that the current situation, knowledge gaps and research priorities can be established. The review aims to provide a contribution to the scientific community, and to respond to the concerns of the general population.
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- 2015
30. Large-Scale Survey of Human Enteroviruses in Wastewater Treatment Plants of a Metropolitan Area of Southern Italy
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Francesca Pennino, Stefano Fiore, Andrea Battistone, Gabriele Buttinelli, Antonio Nardone, Roberto Delogu, Sara Aurino, I. Torre, Concetta Amato, Maria Triassi, Paolo Montuori, Pennino, Francesca, Nardone, Antonio, Montuori, Paolo, Aurino, Sara, Torre, Ida, Battistone, Andrea, Delogu, Roberto, Buttinelli, Gabriele, Fiore, Stefano, Amato, Concetta, and Triassi, Maria
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0301 basic medicine ,Veterinary medicine ,Wastewater treatment plant ,Epidemiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,030106 microbiology ,Sewage ,Wastewater ,medicine.disease_cause ,Water Purification ,03 medical and health sciences ,Virology ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Enterovirus Infections ,Humans ,Water pollution ,Effluent ,Enterovirus ,business.industry ,Waterborne diseases ,medicine.disease ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesi ,Waste treatment ,Poliovirus ,PCR ,Italy ,Human enteroviru ,Environmental science ,Sewage treatment ,business ,Water contamination ,Food Science ,Poliomyelitis - Abstract
Human enteroviruses (HEVs) occur in high concentrations in wastewater and can contaminate receiving environmental waters, constituting a major cause of acute waterborne disease worldwide. In this study, we investigated the relative abundance, occurrence, and seasonal distribution of polio and other enteroviruses at three wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) in Naples, Southern Italy, from January 2010 to December 2014. Influent and effluent samples from the three WWTPs were collected monthly. One hundred and sixty-one of the 731 wastewater samples collected (22.0%) before and after water treatment were CPE positive on RD cells; while no samples were positive on L20B cells from any WWTPs. Among the 140 non-polio enterovirus isolated from inlet sewage, 69.3% were Coxsackieviruses type B and 30.7% were Echoviruses. Among these, CVB3 and CVB5 were most prevalent, followed by CVB4 and Echo6. The twenty-one samples tested after treatment contained 6 CVB4, 5 CVB3, 3 Echo11, and 2 Echo6; while other serotypes were isolated less frequently. Data on viral detection in treated effluents of WWTPs confirmed the potential environmental contamination by HEVs and could be useful to establish standards for policies on wastewater management.
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- 2017
31. Spatial distribution and partitioning of polychlorinated biphenyl and organochlorine pesticide in water and sediment from Sarno River and Estuary, Southern Italy
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Maria Triassi, Antonio Nardone, Evelina Fasano, Teresa Cirillo, Francesco Esposito, Paolo Montuori, Montuori, Paolo, Cirillo, Teresa, Fasano, Evelina, Nardone, Antonio, Esposito, Francesco, and Triassi, Maria
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Heptachlor ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,DDT ,Polychlorinated biphenyl ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dieldrin ,Mediterranean sea ,Rivers ,Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated ,Mediterranean Sea ,Contaminant transport processes ,Environmental Chemistry ,Aldrin ,Pesticides ,Endosulfan ,Organochlorine pesticide ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Sarno River ,Sediment ,Estuary ,General Medicine ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,Pollution ,Italy ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Environmental science ,Estuaries ,River outflow ,Hexachlorocyclohexane ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The Sarno River is nicknamed "the most polluted river in Europe". The main goal of this study is to enhance our knowledge on the Sarno River water and sediment quality and on its environmental impact on the gulf of Naples (Tyrrhenian Sea, Central Mediterranean Sea) in order to become a useful assessment tool for the regional administrations. For these reasons, 32 selected polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and aldrin, α-BHC, β-BHC, δ-BHC, γ-BHC (lindane), 4,4'-DDD, 4,4'-DDE, 4,4'-DDT, dieldrin, endosulfan I, endosulfan II, endosulfan sulphate, endrin, endrin aldehyde, heptachlor, heptachlor epoxide (isomer B) and methoxychlor were determined in the water dissolved phase (DP), suspended particulate matter (SPM) and sediments. Total concentrations of PCBs ranged from 1.4 to 24.9 ng L(-1) in water (sum of DP and SPM) and from 1.01 to 42.54 ng g(-1) in sediment samples. The concentrations of total organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) obtained in water (sum of DP and SPM) ranged from 0.54 to 7.32 ng L(-1) and from 0.08 to 5.99 ng g(-1) in sediment samples. Contaminant discharges of PCBs and OCPs into the sea were calculated in about 1,247 g day(-1) (948 g day(-1) of PCBs and 326 g day(-1) of OCPs), showing that this river should account as one of the main contribution sources of PCBs and OCPs to the Tyrrhenian Sea.
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- 2013
32. Risk factors for Candida parapsilosis bloodstream infection in a neonatal intensive care unit: a case-control study
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Vita Dora Iula, Francesco Raimondi, Anna Di Popolo, Carmine Garzillo, Raffaele Zarrilli, Lidija Bogdanovic, Maria Bagattini, Maria Triassi, Maria Rosaria Catania, Garzillo, Carmine, Bagattini, Maria, Bogdanovic, Lidija, DI POPOLO, Anna, Iula, VITA DORA, Catania, MARIA ROSARIA, Raimondi, Francesco, Triassi, Maria, and Zarrilli, Raffaele
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neonatal intensive care unit ,Candida parapsilosis ,Itraconazole ,030106 microbiology ,Risk factor analysi ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Healthcare-associated infections ,Risk Assessment ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,030225 pediatrics ,Intensive Care Units, Neonatal ,Genotype ,medicine ,Humans ,Healthcare-associated infection ,Genotyping ,Fungemia ,Cross Infection ,biology ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Research ,Candidiasis ,Infant, Newborn ,Gestational age ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Risk factor analysis ,Italy ,Case-Control Studies ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Low birth weight ,Candida parapsilosi ,Female ,business ,Fluconazole ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Candida parapsilosis is increasingly responsible for invasive candidiasis in neonates. This study investigates phenotypic and genotypic features of C. parapsilosis microbial isolates and underlying clinical conditions associated with acquisition of C. parapsilosis in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) in Italy. Methods Identification of C. parapsilosis was performed by VITEK® 2 and MALDI TOF and confirmed by analysis of internal transcribed spacer ribosomal DNA sequences. Genotyping was performed by PCR fingerprinting. Antifungal susceptibility of strains was evaluated by microdilution. A case-control study was designed to identify risk factors for C. parapsilosis bloodstream infection. Results During the study period (April 2009- April 2012), C. parapsilosis was responsible for 6 umbilical catheter and 11 central catheter-associated bloodstream infection in 17 neonates in the NICU. Molecular typing identified identical fingerprinting profile in all C. parapsilosis isolates from neonates. Fifteen of 17 C. parapsilosis isolates were susceptible to all antifungal drugs, two isolates were resistant to fluconazole and intermediate susceptible to itraconazole. Low birthweight, gestational age and time to exposure to assisted ventilation were risk factors for C. parapsilosis infection in neonates in the NICU at univariate and multivariate analysis. Conclusion C. parapsilosis bloodstream infections in the NICU were caused by a single epidemic clone. Low birthweight, gestational age and time to exposure to invasive devices, with predominance of assisted ventilation, were the clinical conditions associated with C. parapsilosis bloodstream infection in the NICU. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13052-017-0332-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2016
33. Estimation of heavy metal loads from Tiber River to the Tyrrhenian Sea and environmental quality assessment
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Sara Aurino, Maria Triassi, Paolo Montuori, Antonio Nardone, Fatima Garzonio, Montuori, Paolo, Aurino, Sara, Garzonio, Fatima, Nardone, Antonio, and Triassi, Maria
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Geologic Sediments ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Seasonal variation ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Mediterranean sea ,Rivers ,Metals, Heavy ,Water Quality ,medicine ,Mediterranean Sea ,Environmental Chemistry ,Ecotoxicology ,Contaminant load ,Environmental quality ,Risk assessment ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Hydrology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Sediment ,Estuary ,Ecological assessment ,General Medicine ,Particulates ,Seasonality ,medicine.disease ,Pollution ,Heavy metal ,Italy ,Environmental science ,Particulate Matter ,River outflow ,Estuaries ,Tiber River ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
In order to evaluate the heavy metal pollution in the Tiber River and its environmental impact on the Tyrrhenian Sea (Central Mediterranean Sea), eight heavy metals (As, Hg, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn) were determined in the water dissolved phase, suspended particulate matter and sediment samples collected from 21 sites in different seasons. Total heavy metal concentrations ranged from 34.88 to 4201.23 μg L−1 in water (as the sum of the water dissolved phase and suspended particulate matter) and from 42.81 to 1686.84 mg kg−1 in sediment samples. The total selected heavy metal load contribution into the sea is calculated in about 21,257.85 kg year−1, showing that this River should account as one of the main contribution sources of heavy metals in the Mediterranean Sea. In relation to the ecological assessment, the Tiber River and Estuary would be considered as an area in which the ecological integrity is possibly at risk.
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- 2016
34. Estimates of Tiber River organophosphate pesticide loads to the Tyrrhenian Sea and ecological risk
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Pasquale Sarnacchiaro, Antonio Nardone, Paolo Montuori, Sara Aurino, Salvatore Polichetti, Fatima Garzonio, Maria Triassi, Montuori, Paolo, Aurino, Sara, Garzonio, Fatima, Sarnacchiaro, Pasquale, Polichetti, Salvatore, Nardone, Antonio, and Triassi, Maria
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Diazinon ,Environmental Engineering ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Methidathion ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Organophosphate pesticide ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mediterranean sea ,Organophosphorus Compounds ,Rivers ,Mediterranean Sea ,Water Pollution, Chemical ,Environmental Chemistry ,Pesticides ,Contaminant load ,Waste Management and Disposal ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Risk assessment ,Hydrology ,Eco-toxicity ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Estuary ,Pesticide ,Pollution ,chemistry ,Italy ,Environmental chemistry ,Chlorpyrifos ,Malathion ,Environmental science ,Estuaries ,River outflow ,Dimethoate ,Tiber River ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The organophosphate pesticides pollution in the Tiber River and its environmental impact on the Tyrrhenian Sea (Central Mediterranean Sea) were estimated. Eight selected organophosphate pesticides (diazinon, dimethoate, malathion, chlorpyrifos, pirimiphos-methyl, fenitrothion, methidathion, tolclofos-methyl) were determined in the water dissolved phase, suspended particulate matter and sediment samples collected from 21 sites in different seasons. Total organophosphate pesticides concentrations ranged from 0.40 to 224.48 ng L-1 in water (as the sum of the water dissolved phase and suspended particulate matter) and from 1.42 to 68.46 ng g(-1) in sediment samples. Contaminant discharges of organophosphate pesticides into the sea were calculated in about 545.36 kg year(-1) showing that this river should be consider as one of the main contribution sources of organophosphate pesticides to the Tyrrhenian Sea. In relation to the eco-toxicological assessment, the concentrations of most OPPs in the water and sediments from the Tiber River and its estuary were lower than guideline values.
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- 2016
35. Use of Framingham Risk Score as a Clinical Tool for the Assessment of Fitness for Work: Results From a Cohort Study
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Oreste Caporale, Antonio Nardone, I. Torre, Raffaele Palladino, Maria Triassi, Denise Fiorentino, Palladino, Raffaele, Caporale, Oreste, Nardone, Antonio, Fiorentino, Denise, Torre, Ida, and Triassi, Maria
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Gerontology ,animal structures ,Work Capacity Evaluation ,cohort analysi ,MEDLINE ,1110 Nursing ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Risk Assessment ,Environmental & Occupational Health ,human experiment ,03 medical and health sciences ,hazard ratio ,0302 clinical medicine ,male ,Risk Factors ,Medicine ,Humans ,participant observation ,030212 general & internal medicine ,human ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Retrospective Studies ,Framingham Risk Score ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,adult ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,diagnosi ,female ,Italy ,1117 Public Health And Health Services ,Cohort ,Framingham risk score ,business ,Risk assessment ,worker ,Cohort study ,instrument validation - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study is to validate the use of the Framingham Risk Score (FRS) as clinical tool to predict the risk of diagnosis of unsuitability for work in a cohort of Italian workers. Methods: A cohort of workers has been observed from January 2006 to March 2014. FRS was calculated at each visit. Health surveillance diagnosis of unsuitability for work was selected as outcome. Results: Two thousand eight hundred fifty seven workers were observed, 58.9% were men, mean age was 51.6 (±6.7), the mean FRS was 15.1% (±10.7%). Increased values of FRS at baseline were associated with increased rate of diagnosis of unsuitability for work (Hazard ratio [HR], 11.2, 95%CI, 3.3 to 37.8). Conclusions: FRS is a strong predictor of diagnosis of unsuitability for work and should be used as a clinical tool for the assessment of fitness for work in health surveillance
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- 2016
36. Polychlorinated biphenyls and organochlorine pesticides in Tiber River and Estuary: Occurrence, distribution and ecological risk
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Fatima Garzonio, Sara Aurino, Paolo Montuori, Maria Triassi, Montuori, Paolo, Aurino, Sara, Garzonio, Fatima, and Triassi, Maria
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Geologic Sediments ,Insecticides ,Environmental Engineering ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Heptachlor Epoxide ,Heptachlor ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Polychlorinated biphenyl ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Dieldrin ,Rivers ,Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated ,Environmental Chemistry ,Aldrin ,Contaminant load ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Endosulfan ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Risk assessment ,Organochlorine pesticide ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Toxicity equivalent (TEQ) ,Estuary ,Polychlorinated Biphenyls ,Pollution ,Italy ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Endrin ,Environmental science ,Estuaries ,Lindane ,Tiber River ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) pollution in the Tiber River and its environmental impact on the Tyrrhenian Sea (Central Mediterranean Sea) were estimated. 32 PCBs and 17 OCPs (aldrin, α-BHC, β-BHC, δ-BHC, lindane, p,p'-DDD, p,p'-DDE, p,p'-DDT, dieldrin, endosulfan I, endosulfan II, endosulfan sulfate, endrin, endrin aldehyde, heptachlor, heptachlor epoxide, methoxychlor) were determined in the water dissolved phase (DP), suspended particulate matter (SPM) and sediment samples. Total concentrations of PCBs ranged from 0.54 to 74.75ngL(-1) in water (sum of DP and SPM) and from 3.73 to 79.30ngg(-1) dry weigh in sediment samples; while the concentrations of total OCPs collected in water (sum of DP and SPM) ranged from 0.07 to 7.04ngL(-1) and from 0.66 to 10.02ngg(-1) dry weigh in sediment samples. Contaminant discharges into the sea were calculated in about 227.08kgyear(-1) for PCBs and 24.91kgyear(-1) for OCPs, showing that this river should account as one of the main contribution sources of PCBs and OCPs to the Tyrrhenian Sea. The ∑TEQPCB from the sediment samples ranged from 0.0006 to 0.37ngg(-1) with an average level of 0.13ngg(-1). Based on Sediments Quality Guidelines, biological adverse effects on aquatic ecosystem were rare to occasional for PCB and OCP levels in Tiber water system.
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- 2016
37. Molecular epidemiology and mechanisms of rifampicin resistance in Acinetobacter baumannii isolates from Italy
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Marie Francoise Tripodi, Mariano Bernardo, Susanna Cuccurullo, Riccardo Utili, Maria Giannouli, Gerardino Amato, Anna Di Popolo, Raffaele Zarrilli, Maria Triassi, Emanuele Durante-Mangoni, Giannouli, M, Di Popolo, A, Durante Mangoni, E, Bernardo, M, Cuccurullo, S, Amato, G, Tripodi, M. F., Triassi, Maria, Utili, R, Zarrilli, Raffaele, DURANTE MANGONI, Emanuele, Tripodi, Mf, Triassi, M, Utili, Riccardo, and Zarrilli, R.
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Acinetobacter baumannii ,Microbiology (medical) ,Membrane permeability ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Biology ,Microbiology ,Bacterial Proteins ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,Genotype ,polycyclic compounds ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Genotyping ,Molecular Epidemiology ,Molecular epidemiology ,DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,General Medicine ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,rpoB ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Infectious Diseases ,Italy ,Mutation ,Colistin ,bacteria ,Rifampin ,Rifampicin ,Acinetobacter Infections ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Use of rifampicin (RIF) in combination with colistin (COL) has been proposed for the treatment of multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii infections owing to in vitro synergism. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the molecular epidemiology and mechanisms of RIF resistance in 57 clinical isolates of A. baumannii in two tertiary care hospitals in Naples (Italy) from 2006 to 2010. Amongst the collection, 36 isolates showed high RIF minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) (256 mg/L to ≥512 mg/L), 16 showed intermediate MICs (8–16 mg/L) and 5 had low MICs (4 mg/L). Of the 36 isolates with elevated RIF MICs, 35 were assigned to sequence type ST2 and 1 to ST78. Amongst the 57 isolates, 35 carried at least one mutation in rpoB , including H535L in 9 isolates and double mutations D525N and P544L in 7 isolates, whilst 22 showed no rpoB mutations. Treatment with the efflux pump inhibitor phenyl-arginine-β-naphthylamide (PAβN) of resistant isolates with no mutations in rpoB and different RIF MICs reduced the MIC by >10-fold and restored the synergism between RIF and COL in time–kill studies, whilst it had no effect on strains carrying rpoB mutations. In conclusion, the emergence of elevated RIF MICs in A. baumannii isolates from our geographical area was mostly caused by mutations in rpoB ; low to intermediate RIF MICs were also caused by altered membrane permeability to the drug. The phenomenon was contributed by the selection of two prevalent clones both assigned to ST2 genotype. These data may have implications for the correct identification of cases with A. baumannii infection that would not benefit from addition of RIF to COL.
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- 2012
38. Respiratory function in power plant workers exposed to nitrogen dioxide
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Maria Triassi, U Carbone, Paolo Montuori, C Novi, Carbone, Umberto, Montuori, Paolo, Novi, C, and Triassi, Maria
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Male ,inorganic chemicals ,Spirometry ,Vital capacity ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nitrogen Dioxide ,Vital Capacity ,Population ,complex mixtures ,Pulmonary function testing ,Toxicology ,FEV1 ,FEV1/FVC ratio ,respiratory function ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Occupational Exposure ,Respiration ,Humans ,Medicine ,Respiratory function ,education ,education.field_of_study ,power generation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,power plant ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Environmental exposure ,respiratory system ,Respiration Disorders ,FER ,FVC ,respiratory tract diseases ,Occupational Diseases ,Italy ,Physical therapy ,business ,Power Plants - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Power plant workers are potentially exposed to nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and may therefore be at higher risk of pulmonary diseases than the general population. AIMS: To assess the association of NO2 exposure with spirometric abnormalities in power plant workers. METHODS: Forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1), forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory ratio (FER = FEV1/FVC) were correlated with demographic characteristics, smoking history and environmental exposure to NO2 in power plant workers exposed to environmental NO2 at work and in a control group of administrative employees. Twenty-four hour environmental NO2 concentrations were measured at each workplace. RESULTS: The concentrations of environmental NO2 ranged from 1.21 to 7.82mg m(-3) with a mean value of 3.91 + 1.51mg m(-3). The results showed that FEV1 and FVC were significantly lower in 347 power plant workers than in the 349 controls (P < 0.001). The FER was significantly correlated with age, environmental NO2 concentration, smoking and height. CONCLUSIONS: Occupational exposure to NO2 emissions in power plants is significantly associated with lung function abnormalities as assessed by spirometry. Spirometric measurements in power plant workers exposed to NO2 emissions may be an effective means of detecting early signs of impaired respiratory health in this group of workers.
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- 2014
39. Hair mercury levels in an urban population from southern Italy: Fish consumption as a determinant of exposure
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Sergi Díez, Pasquale Sarnacchiaro, Adele Pagano, Paolo Montuori, Josep M. Bayona, Maria Triassi, Díez, S, Montuori, Paolo, Pagano, A, Sarnacchiaro, P, Bayona, Jm, and Triassi, Maria
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Adult ,Male ,Urban Population ,Population ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Dentistry ,Food Contamination ,Body weight ,Dental Amalgam ,Animal science ,stomatognathic system ,Animals ,Humans ,education ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,A determinant ,lcsh:GE1-350 ,education.field_of_study ,Reference dose ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Fishes ,Mercury ,Middle Aged ,Fish consumption ,Body Height ,Mercury (element) ,Hair mercury ,stomatognathic diseases ,Italy ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,business ,Body mass index ,Mercury, Hair, Fish consumption, Dental amalgam, Italy ,Environmental Monitoring ,Hair - Abstract
Mercury levels in hair of a general population, 237 adults aged between 35–45, in Naples, Italy, were assessed. The subjects were asked to fill in a questionnaire about age, gender, body weight, height, body mass index (BMI), fish consumption, number, surface and area of dental amalgam fillings. Total mercury (THg) concentrations in human hair ranged from 0.221 to 3.402 μg/g and the mean value for the subjects under study was 0.638 μg/g. Study participants were divided into three groups in accordance with fish consumption and dental amalgam: ANF (amalgam and no fish); NAF (no amalgam but with fish) and AAF (amalgam and fish). Significant differences in THg were found in the three groups (p
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- 2008
40. Molecular epidemiology of a clonal outbreak of multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii in a university hospital in Italy
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Susanna Cuccurullo, Enrico Ragone, Raffaele Zarrilli, Marie Francoise Tripodi, A. Di Popolo, Nicola Galdieri, Annunziata Mattei, R. Utili, Maria Bagattini, Maria Triassi, R. Casillo, Valeria Crivaro, Zarrilli, Raffaele, Casillo, R, DI POPOLO, A, Tripodi, M. F., Bagattini, M, Cuccurullo, S, Crivaro, V, Ragone, E, Mattei, A, Galdieri, N, Triassi, Maria, Utili, R., Zarrilli, R., Casillo, R., Bagattini, M., Cuccurullo, S., Crivaro, V., Ragone, E., Mattei, A., Galdieri, N., Triassi, M., Utili, Riccardo, Zarrilli, R, and Tripodi, Mf
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Acinetobacter baumannii ,Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,Imipenem ,carbapenem resistance ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Integron ,molecular epidemiology ,beta-Lactamases ,Microbiology ,Disease Outbreaks ,Hospitals, University ,Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial ,Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis ,medicine ,polycyclic compounds ,Humans ,Antibacterial agent ,Aged ,Cross Infection ,Molecular epidemiology ,biology ,outbreak ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,biology.organism_classification ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field ,Community-Acquired Infections ,Intensive Care Units ,Infectious Diseases ,Carbapenems ,Italy ,nosocomial infection ,biology.protein ,Colistin ,bacteria ,epidemiology ,Female ,A. baumannii ,OXA-58 ,medicine.drug ,Acinetobacter Infections - Abstract
This study investigated the molecular epidemiology of a clonal outbreak of multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii that occurred between June 2003 and June 2004 in a tertiary-care hospital in Naples, Italy. A. baumannii was isolated from 74 patients, of whom 38 were infected and 36 were colonised. Thirty-three patients had ventilator-associated pneumonia, three had hospital-acquired pneumonia, and two had sepsis. Genotypic analysis of 45 available A. baumannii isolates revealed two distinct pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) patterns. Of these, PFGE pattern 1 was represented by isolates from 44 patients and was identical to that of an epidemic A. baumannii clone isolated in another hospital of Naples during 2002. All A. baumannii isolates of PFGE type 1 showed identical multiresistant antibiotypes, characterised by resistance to all antimicrobial agents tested, including carbapenems, with the exception of colistin. In these isolates, inhibition of OXA enzymes by 200 mM NaCl reduced the imipenem MIC by up to four-fold. Molecular analysis of antimicrobial resistance genes showed that all A. baumannii isolates of PFGE type 1 harboured a class 1 integron containing the aacA4, orfX and blaOXA-20 gene cassettes, an ampC gene and a blaOXA-51-like allele. Moreover, a blaOXA-58-like gene surrounded by the regulatory elements ISAba2 and ISAba3 was identified in a 30-kb plasmid from A. baumannii isolates of PFGE type 1, but not PFGE type 2. Thus, selection of a single A. baumannii clone producing an OXA-58-type carbapenem-hydrolysing oxacillinase was responsible for the increase in the number of A. baumannii infections that occurred in this hospital.
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- 2007
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41. Preterm delivery and exposure to active and passive smoking during pregnancy: a case?control study from Italy
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Guglielmina Fantuzzi, Fabio Facchinetti, Fabio Barbone, Gabriella Aggazzotti, S. Kanitz, Salvatore Sciacca, Elena Righi, V. Leoni, Leila Fabiani, Maria Triassi, Emma Bertucci, Mario Alberto Battaglia, Giuliano Sansebastiano, Fantuzzi, G, Aggazzotti, G, Righi, E, Facchinetti, F, Bertucci, E, Kanitz, S, Barbone, F, Sansebastiano, G, Battaglia, Ma, Leoni, V, Fabiani, L, Sciacca, S, and Triassi, Maria
- Subjects
environmental tobacco smoke ,maternal smoking ,preterm delivery ,Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Passive smoking ,Epidemiology ,case-control study ,Logistic regression ,medicine.disease_cause ,Tobacco smoke ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Preterm delivery ,Medicine ,business.industry ,Smoking ,Confounding ,Infant, Newborn ,Case-control study ,medicine.disease ,Italy ,exposure to active and passive smoking ,Maternal Exposure ,Case-Control Studies ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Premature Birth ,Gestation ,Female ,Tobacco Smoke Pollution ,business - Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the relationship between preterm/early preterm delivery and active smoking as well as environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure in a sample of pregnant Italian women. A case-control study was conducted in nine cities in Italy between October 1999 and September 2000. Cases of preterm birth were singleton babies born before the 37th gestational week; babies born before the 35th gestational week were considered early preterm births. Controls were babies with gestational ages >or= 37th week. A total of 299 preterm cases (including 105 early preterm) and 855 controls were analysed. A self-administered questionnaire was used to assess active smoking and ETS exposure, as well as potential confounders. Multivariable logistic regression analysis showed a relationship between active smoking during pregnancy and preterm/early preterm delivery [adjusted ORs: 1.53; 95% CI 1.05, 2.21 and 2.00; 95% CI 1.16, 3.45, respectively]. A dose-response relationship was found for the number of cigarettes smoked daily. The adjusted ORs were 1.54 and 1.69 for preterm babies and 1.90 and 2.46 for early preterm babies for 1-10 and >10 cigarettes/day respectively. ETS exposure was associated with early preterm delivery [adjusted OR 1.56; 95% CI 0.99, 2.46] with a dose-response relationship with the number of smokers in the home. Smoking during pregnancy was strongly associated with preterm delivery with a dose-response effect. ETS exposure in non-smoking women was associated only with early preterm delivery.
- Published
- 2007
42. Season of birth and Parkinson's disease: possible relationship?
- Author
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Raffaele Palladino, I. Torre, Marcello Moccia, Paolo Barone, Carmine Vitale, Emma Montella, Maria Triassi, Teresa De Pascale, Palladino, R, Moccia, M, De Pascale, T, Montella, E, Torre, Ida, Vitale, C, Barone, P, and Triassi, Maria
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Season of birth ,Cross-sectional study ,Parkinson's disease ,Dermatology ,Disease Outbreaks ,symbols.namesake ,McNemar's test ,medicine ,Trend ,80 and over ,Humans ,Parkinson ,Vitamin D ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Chi-Square Distribution ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Medicine (all) ,Incidence ,Case-control study ,Sun ,Parturition ,Retrospective cohort study ,Parkinson Disease ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Birth ,Season ,Case-Control Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Italy ,Seasons ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychiatry and Mental Health ,2708 ,Bonferroni correction ,symbols ,business ,Chi-squared distribution ,Demography - Abstract
The amount of sun exposure in early life and consequent vitamin D3 level may influence the risk of developing Parkinson's disease (PD). Yet few studies have previously investigated birth trends in PD related to a possible seasonality and sun exposure. The aim of this study was to investigate a possible relationship between PD risk and sun exposure looking at seasonal birth variation of PD subjects in the homogenous geographic area of Naples, Italy. We selected 898 PD subjects and matched with 1796 controls. McNemar's test with Bonferroni correction and autocorrelation were used to test seasonality in birth trends. No difference was found for the month and season of birth between PD subjects and controls. We found a 3.3 % increase of PD female subjects born in September (3.3 %) and 4.1 % increase of PD male subjects born in spring comparing to controls but were not significant after Bonferroni correction. This study evaluated for the first time the seasonal birth trends in relation to PD risk in a Southern European population. We found no association between seasonal birth variations and risk of PD.
- Published
- 2015
43. Spatial distribution and partitioning of organophosphates pesticide in water and sediment from Sarno River and Estuary, Southern Italy
- Author
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Teresa Cirillo, Maria Triassi, Paolo Montuori, Sara Aurino, Antonio Nardone, Montuori, Paolo, Aurino, S, Nardone, Antonio, Cirillo, Teresa, and Triassi, Maria
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Pollution ,Contaminant transport processe ,Geologic Sediments ,Insecticides ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Organophosphate pesticide ,Mediterranean sea ,Organophosphorus Compounds ,Rivers ,Mediterranean Sea ,Environmental Chemistry ,Contaminant load ,Water pollution ,media_common ,Hydrology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Sarno River ,Sediment ,Estuary ,General Medicine ,Pesticide ,Particulates ,Italy ,Environmental chemistry ,Environmental science ,Water quality ,Temporal trend ,Estuaries ,River outflow ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The organophosphates pesticide (OPP) pollution in the Sarno River and its environmental impact on the Gulf of Naples (Tyrrhenian Sea, Central Mediterranean Sea) were estimated. Nine selected OPPs (diazinon, dimethoate, malathion, chlorpyrifos, dichlorvos, fenitrothion, methidathion, tolclofos-methyl, azinphos-methyl) were determined in the water dissolved phase (DP), suspended particulate matter (SPM) and sediment samples. Total OPP concentrations ranged from 5.58 to 39.25 ng L(-1) in water (as the sum of the DP and SPM) and from 0.19 to 3.98 ng g(-1) in sediment samples. Contaminant discharges of OPPs into the sea were calculated in about 48,064.08 g year(-1), showing that this river should account as one of the main contribution sources of OPPs to the Tyrrhenian Sea.
- Published
- 2015
44. Surveillance of healthcare-associated infections in a neonatal intensive care unit in Italy during 2006-2010
- Author
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Valeria Crivaro, Maria Triassi, Lidija Bogdanovic, Maria Bagattini, Maria Rosaria Catania, Raffaele Zarrilli, Francesco Raimondi, Vita Dora Iula, Crivaro, Valeria, Bogdanovic, Lidija, Bagattini, Maria, Iula, Vita Dora, Catania, MARIA ROSARIA, Raimondi, Francesco, Triassi, Maria, and Zarrilli, Raffaele
- Subjects
Male ,Healthcare associated infections ,medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,Neonatal intensive care unit ,health care facilities, manpower, and services ,Birth weight ,Active surveillance ,Healthcare-associated infections ,Medical microbiology ,Risk Factors ,Intensive Care Units, Neonatal ,Sepsis ,Intensive care ,medicine ,Birth Weight ,Humans ,Infection control ,Neonatal intensive care units ,Healthcare-associated infection ,Intensive care medicine ,Cross Infection ,Infection Control ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Infant, Newborn ,Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated ,virus diseases ,Length of Stay ,Infectious Diseases ,Italy ,Urinary Tract Infections ,Female ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Background: Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) are a frequent complication associated with hospitalization of infants in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs). The aim of this study was to evaluate and describe the results of surveillance of HAIs in a III level NICU in Naples, Italy during 2006-2010. Methods: The surveillance covered 1,699 neonates of all birth weight (BW) classes with > 2 days NICU stay. Infections were defined using standard Centers for Disease Control and Prevention definitions adapted to neonatal pathology and were considered to be healthcare-associated if they developed > 2 days after NICU admission. Results: One hundred-fifty-three HAIs were diagnosed with a frequency of 9% and an incidence density of 3.5 per 1000 days of hospital stay. HAIs developed in all BW classes, but patients weighing
- Published
- 2015
45. Rotavirus Genotypes in Sewage Treatment Plants and in Children Hospitalized with Acute Diarrhea in Italy in 2010 and 2011
- Author
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Caterina Serra, Rosalba Campagnuolo, Franco Maria Ruggeri, Giovanni Ianiro, Andrea Gaggioli, Giovanni M. Giammanco, Paolo Bonomo, Paolo Castiglia, Antonella Cicala, Maria Chironna, Lucia Fiore, Cinzia Germinario, Maria Triassi, Roberto Delogu, Andrea Battistone, Ruggeri, Franco M, Bonomo, Paolo, Ianiro, Giovanni, Battistone, Andrea, Delogu, Roberto, Germinario, Cinzia, Chironna, Maria, Triassi, Maria, Campagnuolo, Rosalba, Cicala, Antonella, Giammanco, Giovanni M., Castiglia, Paolo, Serra, Caterina, Gaggioli, Andrea, Fiore, Lucia, Ruggeri, F, Bonomo, P, Ianiro, G, Battistone, A, Delogu, R, Germinario, C, Chironna, M, Triassi, M, Campagnuolo, R, Cicala, A, Giammanco, G, Castiglia, P, Serra, C, Gaggioli, A, and Fiore, L
- Subjects
Diarrhea ,Rotavirus ,Settore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia Clinica ,Acute diarrhea ,Genotype ,viruses ,Population ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Sewage ,Biology ,Rotavirus, genotypes, sewage treatment plants, Italy ,medicine.disease_cause ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Asymptomatic ,Rotavirus Infections ,Feces ,fluids and secretions ,medicine ,Humans ,Cities ,education ,Child ,Antigens, Viral ,Rotavirus Infection ,education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Public and Environmental Health Microbiology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,virus diseases ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Rotaviru ,Capsid Protein ,Virology ,Citie ,Italy ,RNA, Viral ,Fece ,Capsid Proteins ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Human ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Although the molecular surveillance network RotaNet-Italy provides useful nationwide data on rotaviruses causing severe acute gastroenteritis in children in Italy, scarce information is available on rotavirus circulation in the general Italian population, including adults with mild or asymptomatic infection. We investigated the genotypes of rotaviruses present in urban wastewaters and compared them with those of viral strains from clinical pediatric cases. During 2010 and 2011, 285 sewage samples from 4 Italian cities were tested by reverse transcription-PCRs (RT-PCRs) specific for rotavirus VP7 and VP4 genes. Rotavirus was detected in 172 (60.4%) samples, 26 of which contained multiple rotavirus G (VP7 gene) genotypes, for a total of 198 G types. Thirty-two samples also contained multiple P (VP4 gene) genotypes, yielding 204 P types in 172 samples. Genotype G1 accounted for 65.6% of rotaviruses typed, followed by genotypes G2 (20.2%), G9 (7.6%), G4 (4.6%), G6 (1.0%), G3 (0.5%), and G26 (0.5%). VP4 genotype P[8] accounted for 75.0% of strains, genotype P[4] accounted for 23.0% of strains, and the uncommon genotypes P[6], P[9], P[14], and P[19] accounted for 2.0% of strains altogether. These rotavirus genotypes were also found in pediatric patients hospitalized in the same areas and years but in different proportions. Specifically, genotypes G2, G9, and P[4] were more prevalent in sewage samples than among samples from patients, which suggests either a larger circulation of the latter strains through the general population not requiring medical care or their greater survival in wastewaters. A high level of nucleotide identity in the G1, G2, and G6 VP7 sequences was observed between strains from the environment and those from patients.
- Published
- 2014
46. A cost study of prenatal telemedicine
- Author
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Andrea Di Lieto, Adelaide Ippolito, Maria Triassi, Marianna De Falco, Triassi, Maria, Ippolito, A, DE FALCO, M, and DI LIETO, A.
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Telemedicine ,prenatal ,Cardiotocography ,Total cost ,Health Informatics ,Bed days ,Prenatal care ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,Medicine ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Prenatal Care ,Retrospective cohort study ,University hospital ,medicine.disease ,Hospitalization ,Italy ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Female ,business ,Cost study - Abstract
We calculated the cost of using a telemedicine system for the cardiotocographic (CTG) recording of fetal heart rate. In a one-year study in the Campania region of Italy, 162 patients were monitored. The total cost of the telemedicine system was €344,796. A control group was retrospectively drawn from all deliveries at the university hospital in Naples during the year 2000. Patients were retrospectively assigned to a category of high or low risk, and the hospital costs of the high-risk patients were compared. In the intervention group, 11 of the 87 high-risk patients (13%) were admitted to hospital prematurely, and stayed on average 12 days. In the control group, 203 of the 813 women in the high-risk group (25%) were admitted to hospital prematurely, and stayed on average 20 days. If the women in the control group had been monitored, there would have been a notional saving, through avoided bed days, amounting to 358,280, which was similar to the cost of the telemedicine system. The study suggests that the use of telemedicine in CTG monitoring improves the quality of prenatal care.
- Published
- 2003
47. Molecular epidemiology of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a university hospital
- Author
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Maria Triassi, M. C. Boccia, Maria Bagattini, Paolo Villari, M. Crispino, Raffaele Zarrilli, Crispino, M, Boccia, Mc, Bagattini, M, Villari, M, Triassi, Maria, Zarrilli, R., Crispino, M., Boccia, M., Bagattini, M., Villari, P., and Zarrilli, Raffaele
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Stenotrophomonas maltophilia ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Microbiology ,Hospitals, University ,Antibiotic resistance ,Genotype ,Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis ,Humans ,Medicine ,antimicrobial resistance ,Typing ,Antibacterial agent ,Cross Infection ,Molecular Epidemiology ,Molecular epidemiology ,biology ,pfge typing ,business.industry ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,biology.organism_classification ,Electrophoresis, Gel, Pulsed-Field ,molecular epidemiology ,stenotrophomonas maltophilia ,Intensive Care Units ,Infectious Diseases ,Italy ,Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections ,business - Abstract
The aim of this investigation was to study the molecular epidemiology of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia in a university hospital in Italy. Sixty-one clinical isolates were collected from 43 patients during a two-year period. The majority of specimens were from the respiratory tract (41 of 43) of patients in the adult intensive care unit (ICU) (19 of 43) or cystic fibrosis (CF) patients (13 of 43). Genotypic analysis by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of clinical isolates identified 31 different PFGE patterns. Although most patients were infected or colonized by different S. maltophilia clones, clones with identical genotype were isolated in patients from ICU, where two separate outbreaks were identified. Antimicrobial susceptibility identified a multi-resistant phenotype in all S. maltophilia PFGE clones. The majority of PFGE clones identified (six of seven clones from patients in the ICU) were susceptible to fluoroquinolones. Mechanical ventilation was associated with S. maltophilia acquisition in the ICU.
- Published
- 2002
48. The current spectrum and prevalence of intestinal parasitosis in Campania (region of southern Italy) and their relationship with migration from endemic countries
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Cristiana Palumbo, Gennaro Lettieri, Riccardo Smeraglia, Chiara Dell’Isola, Alberta Belli, P. Amoroso, Maria Triassi, Enea Spada, Maria Grazia Coppola, Luciana Petrullo, Belli, Alberta, Coppola, Maria Grazia, Petrullo, Luciana, Lettieri, Gennaro, Palumbo, Cristiana, Dell'Isola, Chiara, Smeraglia, Riccardo, Triassi, Maria, Spada, Enea, and Amoroso, Pietro
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,Study groups ,Endemic Diseases ,Chronic bowel disease ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Population ,Endemic Disease ,Infectious Disease ,Intestinal parasitosi ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Immigrants ,Helminths ,Helminth ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Medicine ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Protozoa ,Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic ,education ,Inverse correlation ,media_common ,Chronic bowel diseases ,Current spectrum ,education.field_of_study ,Travel ,Intestinal parasitosis ,Traditional medicine ,business.industry ,Risk of infection ,Medicine (all) ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Emigration and Immigration ,Infectious Diseases ,Italy ,Female ,business ,Demography ,Immigrant ,Human - Abstract
Summary Background In Italy, the current clinical–epidemiological features of intestinal parasitosis and the impact of recent massive migration flows from endemic areas on their distribution are not very well known. Methods An analysis was carried out involving 1766 patients (720 natives and 1046 immigrants) observed during the period 2009–2010 (the ‘current group') and 771 native patients observed during the period 1996–1997 (the ‘historical group'), a time at which immigration in the area was minimal. Patients were analyzed for intestinal parasitosis at four healthcare centres in Campania. Results A wide variety of intestinal parasites was detected in the study subjects. Immigrants had a significantly higher prevalence of parasitosis and multiple simultaneous infections than natives in both groups. In both study groups of natives, the detection of at least one parasite was significantly associated with a history of travel to endemic areas. Among immigrants, we found an inverse correlation between the frequency of parasite detection and the amount of time spent in Italy. No circulation of parasites was found among contacts of parasitized patients. Conclusions Intestinal parasites are still a cause of intestinal infection in Campania. Although immigrants have a significantly higher prevalence of parasitosis than natives, this does not increase the risk of infection for that population. This is likely due to the lack of suitable biological conditions in our area.
- Published
- 2014
49. Sporadic Isolation of Sabin-Like Polioviruses and High-Level Detection of Non-Polio Enteroviruses during Sewage Surveillance in Seven Italian Cities, after Several Years of Inactivated Poliovirus Vaccination
- Author
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Anna Maria Patti, Stefano Fiore, Paola Affanni, Maria Luisa Tanzi, Francesca Pennino, Antonella Cicala, Paolo Bonomo, Andrea Battistone, Concetta Amato, Maria Triassi, Paolo Castiglia, Pietro Mercurio, A. Vulcano, Laura Pellegrinelli, Gabriele Buttinelli, Sandro Binda, Maria Barbi, Lucia Fiore, Cinzia Germinario, A., Battistone, G., Buttinelli, S., Fiore, C., Amato, P., Bonomo, A. M., Patti, A., Vulcano, M., Barbi, S., Binda, L., Pellegrinelli, M. L., Tanzi, P., Affanni, P., Castiglia, C., Germinario, P., Mercurio, A., Cicala, Triassi, Maria, Pennino, Francesca, and L., Fiore
- Subjects
Serotype ,Echovirus ,Molecular approach ,viruses ,Mutation rate ,Population ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Enzyme linked immunosorbent assay ,Biology ,Coxsackievirus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,complex mixtures ,Non-coding region ,Microbiology ,Viral Proteins ,medicine ,Enterovirus Infections ,Humans ,Sequence identity ,Typing ,Cities ,education ,Phylogeny ,Enterovirus ,education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,Sewage ,Public and Environmental Health Microbiology ,Poliovirus ,Vaccination ,Clinical strain ,virus diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Potential risk ,Virology ,Poliomyelitis ,Poliovirus Vaccine, Inactivated ,Italy ,Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral ,Environmental strain ,Sentinel Surveillance ,Food Science ,Biotechnology ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Sewage surveillance in seven Italian cities between 2005 and 2008, after the introduction of inactivated poliovirus vaccination (IPV) in 2002, showed rare polioviruses, none that were wild-type or circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus (cVDPV), and many other enteroviruses among 1,392 samples analyzed. Two of five polioviruses (PV) detected were Sabin-like PV2 and three PV3, based on enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and PCR results. Neurovirulence-related mutations were found in the 5′ noncoding region (5′NCR) of all strains and, for a PV2, also in VP1 region 143 (Ile > Thr). Intertypic recombination in the 3D region was detected in a second PV2 (Sabin 2/Sabin 1) and a PV3 (Sabin 3/Sabin 2). The low mutation rate in VP1 for all PVs suggests limited interhuman virus passages, consistent with efficient polio immunization in Italy. Nonetheless, these findings highlight the risk of wild or Sabin poliovirus reintroduction from abroad. Non-polio enteroviruses (NPEVs) were detected, 448 of which were coxsackievirus B (CVB) and 294 of which were echoviruses (Echo). Fifty-six NPEVs failing serological typing were characterized by sequencing the VP1 region (nucleotides [nt] 2628 to 2976). A total of 448 CVB and 294 Echo strains were identified; among those strains, CVB2, CVB5, and Echo 11 predominated. Environmental CVB5 and CVB2 strains from this study showed high sequence identity with GenBank global strains. The high similarity between environmental NPEVs and clinical strains from the same areas of Italy and the same periods indicates that environmental strains reflect the viruses circulating in the population and highlights the potential risk of inefficient wastewater treatments. This study confirmed that sewage surveillance can be more sensitive than acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) surveillance in monitoring silent poliovirus circulation in the population as well as the suitability of molecular approaches to enterovirus typing.
- Published
- 2014
50. Detection of Enteroviruses in Influent and Effluent Flow Samples from Wastewater Treatment Plants in Italy
- Author
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Francesca Pennino, Lucia Fiore, Josef Simeoni, Andrea Battistone, Concetta Amato, Pietro Mercurio, Paolo Bonomo, Stefano Fiore, Adelheid Foppa, Maria Triassi, Gabriele Buttinelli, Antonella Cicala, Andrea, Battistone, Gabriele, Buttinelli, Paolo, Bonomo, Stefano, Fiore, Concetta, Amato, Pietro, Mercurio, Antonella, Cicala, Josef, Simeoni, Adelheid, Foppa, Triassi, Maria, Pennino, Francesca, and Lucia, Fiore
- Subjects
Serotype ,Veterinary medicine ,Echovirus ,Epidemiology ,Wastewater treatment plant ,viruses ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Sewage ,Coxsackievirus ,Wastewater ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Water Purification ,Virology ,medicine ,Water quality indicators ,Effluent ,Phylogeny ,Enteroviru ,Enterovirus ,biology ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,Italy ,cardiovascular system ,Sewage treatment ,Water treatment ,business ,Environmental surveillance ,Food Science - Abstract
This study evaluated the presence and seasonal distribution of polio and other enteroviruses in four wastewater treatment plants in three cities in Italy, using different treatment systems. Detection of enteroviruses was carried out by virus isolation in cell cultures after concentration of water samples collected at both inlet and outlet of the treatment plants, following the methods described in the WHO guidelines. Viral serotypes isolated before and after water treatment were compared. Forty-eight non-polio enteroviruses were isolated from 312 samples collected at the inlet of the four wastewater treatment plants, 35 of which were Coxsackievirus type B (72.9 %) and 13 Echovirus (27.1 %). After treatment, 2 CVB3, 1 CVB5, and 1 Echo 6 were isolated. CVB3 and Echo 6 serotypes were also detected in samples collected at the inlet of the TP, in the same month and year. The high rate of detection of infectious enteroviruses in inlet sewage samples (30.1 %) indicates wide diffusion of these viruses in the populations linked to the collectors. The incomplete removal of infectious viruses following sewage treatment highlights possible risks for public health relate to treated waters discharge into the environment.
- Published
- 2014
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