137 results on '"Brombin C"'
Search Results
2. Exonic knockout and knockin gene editing in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells rescues RAG1 immunodeficiency
- Author
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Castiello, M, Brandas, C, Ferrari, S, Porcellini, S, Sacchetti, N, Canarutto, D, Draghici, E, Merelli, I, Barcella, M, Pelosi, G, Vavassori, V, Varesi, A, Jacob, A, Scala, S, Basso Ricci, L, Paulis, M, Strina, D, Di Verniere, M, Sergi Sergi, L, Serafini, M, Holland, S, Bergerson, J, De Ravin, S, Malech, H, Pala, F, Bosticardo, M, Brombin, C, Cugnata, F, Calzoni, E, Crooks, G, Notarangelo, L, Genovese, P, Naldini, L, Villa, A, Castiello, Maria Carmina, Brandas, Chiara, Ferrari, Samuele, Porcellini, Simona, Sacchetti, Nicolò, Canarutto, Daniele, Draghici, Elena, Merelli, Ivan, Barcella, Matteo, Pelosi, Gabriele, Vavassori, Valentina, Varesi, Angelica, Jacob, Aurelien, Scala, Serena, Basso Ricci, Luca, Paulis, Marianna, Strina, Dario, Di Verniere, Martina, Sergi Sergi, Lucia, Serafini, Marta, Holland, Steven M., Bergerson, Jenna R. E., De Ravin, Suk See, Malech, Harry L., Pala, Francesca, Bosticardo, Marita, Brombin, Chiara, Cugnata, Federica, Calzoni, Enrica, Crooks, Gay M., Notarangelo, Luigi D., Genovese, Pietro, Naldini, Luigi, Villa, Anna, Castiello, M, Brandas, C, Ferrari, S, Porcellini, S, Sacchetti, N, Canarutto, D, Draghici, E, Merelli, I, Barcella, M, Pelosi, G, Vavassori, V, Varesi, A, Jacob, A, Scala, S, Basso Ricci, L, Paulis, M, Strina, D, Di Verniere, M, Sergi Sergi, L, Serafini, M, Holland, S, Bergerson, J, De Ravin, S, Malech, H, Pala, F, Bosticardo, M, Brombin, C, Cugnata, F, Calzoni, E, Crooks, G, Notarangelo, L, Genovese, P, Naldini, L, Villa, A, Castiello, Maria Carmina, Brandas, Chiara, Ferrari, Samuele, Porcellini, Simona, Sacchetti, Nicolò, Canarutto, Daniele, Draghici, Elena, Merelli, Ivan, Barcella, Matteo, Pelosi, Gabriele, Vavassori, Valentina, Varesi, Angelica, Jacob, Aurelien, Scala, Serena, Basso Ricci, Luca, Paulis, Marianna, Strina, Dario, Di Verniere, Martina, Sergi Sergi, Lucia, Serafini, Marta, Holland, Steven M., Bergerson, Jenna R. E., De Ravin, Suk See, Malech, Harry L., Pala, Francesca, Bosticardo, Marita, Brombin, Chiara, Cugnata, Federica, Calzoni, Enrica, Crooks, Gay M., Notarangelo, Luigi D., Genovese, Pietro, Naldini, Luigi, and Villa, Anna
- Abstract
Recombination activating genes (RAGs) are tightly regulated during lymphoid differentiation, and their mutations cause a spectrum of severe immunological disorders. Hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) transplantation is the treatment of choice but is limited by donor availability and toxicity. To overcome these issues, we developed gene editing strategies targeting a corrective sequence into the human RAG1 gene by homology-directed repair (HDR) and validated them by tailored two-dimensional, three-dimensional, and in vivo xenotransplant platforms to assess rescue of expression and function. Whereas integration into intron 1 of RAG1 achieved suboptimal correction, in-frame insertion into exon 2 drove physiologic human RAG1 expression and activity, allowing disruption of the dominant-negative effects of unrepaired hypomorphic alleles. Enhanced HDR-mediated gene editing enabled the correction of human RAG1 in HSPCs from patients with hypomorphic RAG1 mutations to overcome T and B cell differentiation blocks. Gene correction efficiency exceeded the minimal proportion of functional HSPCs required to rescue immunodeficiency in Rag1(-/- )mice, supporting the clinical translation of HSPC gene editing for the treatment of RAG1 deficiency.
- Published
- 2024
3. Analysis of healthcare workers’ mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic: Evidence from a Three-Wave Longitudinal Study
- Author
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Perego, G, Cugnata, F, Brombin, C, Milano, F, Mazzetti, M, Taranto, P, Preti, E, Di Pierro, R, De Panfilis, C, Madeddu, F, Di Mattei, V, Perego G., Cugnata F., Brombin C., Milano F., Mazzetti M., Taranto P., Preti E., Di Pierro R., De Panfilis C., Madeddu F., Di Mattei V. E., Perego, G, Cugnata, F, Brombin, C, Milano, F, Mazzetti, M, Taranto, P, Preti, E, Di Pierro, R, De Panfilis, C, Madeddu, F, Di Mattei, V, Perego G., Cugnata F., Brombin C., Milano F., Mazzetti M., Taranto P., Preti E., Di Pierro R., De Panfilis C., Madeddu F., and Di Mattei V. E.
- Abstract
The “Healthcare workers’ wellbeing [Benessere Operatori]” project is an exploratory longitudinal study assessing healthcare workers’ mental health at three different time points over a 14-month period during the COVID-19 pandemic. We collected socio-demographic and work-related information and assessed the perceived social support, coping strategies, and levels of depression, anxiety, insomnia, anger, burnout, and PTSD symptoms. In total, 325 Italian healthcare workers (i.e. physicians, nurses, other healthcare workers, and clerks) participated in the first initial survey and either the second or third subsequent survey. Participants reported subclinical levels of psychiatric symptoms that remained mostly unchanged across time, except for an increase in stress, depression, state anger, and emotional exhaustion symptoms. Despite subclinical levels, healthcare workers’ distress can adversely affect the quality of care, patient satisfaction, and medical error rates. Therefore, implementing interventions to improve healthcare workers’ wellbeing is required.
- Published
- 2023
4. Extended Nodal Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer Lymph-Nodal Relapse Guided with [11C]-Choline PET/CT: ten-year results in patients enrolled in a prospective trial
- Author
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Fodor, A., primary, Brombin, C., additional, Deantoni, C.L., additional, Giannini, L., additional, Villa, S.L., additional, Rancoita, P.M.V., additional, Mangili, P., additional, Torrisi, M., additional, Dell’Oca, I., additional, Broggi, S., additional, Cozzarini, C., additional, Mapelli, P., additional, Picchio, M., additional, Del Vecchio, A., additional, Fiorino, C., additional, Di Serio, M.C.S., additional, Chiti, A., additional, and Di Muzio, N., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. P213 The impact of chemotherapy on prepectoral breast reconstruction
- Author
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Palli, D., primary, Gardani, M., additional, Ambroggi, M., additional, Madaro, S., additional, Cucchi, M.C., additional, Zarabini, A., additional, Galluzzo, V., additional, Valieri, L., additional, Brombin, C., additional, Duodeci, S., additional, Mella, A., additional, and Maino, M., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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6. Immune signature in vaccinated versus non-vaccinated aged people with COVID-19 pneumonia
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Ruggiero Alessandra, Caldrer Sara, Pastori Claudia, Gianesini Natasha, Cugnata Federica, Brombin Chiara, Fantoni Tobia, Tais Stefano, Rizzi Eleonora, Matucci Andrea, Mayora-Neto Martin, Uberti-Foppa Caterina, Temperton Nigel, Di Serio Mariaclelia Stefania, Lopalco Lucia, and Piubelli Chiara
- Subjects
Elderly ,COVID-19 vaccine ,Non-vaccinated ,SARS-CoV-2 variants ,Immunological response ,Plasma cytokines ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background A definition of the immunological features of COVID-19 pneumonia is needed to support clinical management of aged patients. In this study, we characterized the humoral and cellular immune responses in presence or absence of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination, in aged patients admitted to the IRCCS San Raffaele Hospital (Italy) for COVID-19 pneumonia between November 2021 and March 2022. Methods The study was approved by local authorities. Disease severity was evaluated according to WHO guidelines. We tested: (A) anti-SARS-CoV-2 humoral response (anti-RBD-S IgG, anti-S IgM, anti-N IgG, neutralizing activity against Delta, BA1, BA4/5 variants); (B) Lymphocyte B, CD4 and CD8 T-cell phenotype; (C) plasma cytokines. The impact of vaccine administration and different variants on the immunological responses was evaluated using standard linear regression models and Tobit models for censored outcomes adjusted for age, vaccine doses and gender. Result We studied 47 aged patients (median age 78.41), 22 (47%) female, 33 (70%) older than 70 years (elderly). At hospital admission, 36% were unvaccinated (VACno), whilst 63% had received 2 (VAC2) or 3 doses (VAC3) of vaccine. During hospitalization, WHO score > 5 was higher in unvaccinated (14% in VAC3 vs. 43% in VAC2 and 44% VACno). Independently from vaccination doses and gender, elderly had overall reduced anti-SARS-CoV-2 humoral response (IgG-RBD-S, p = 0.0075). By linear regression, the anti-RBD-S (p = 0.0060), B (p = 0.0079), CD8 (p = 0.0043) and Th2 cell counts (p = 0.0131) were higher in VAC2 + 3 compared to VACno. Delta variant was the most representative in VAC2 (n = 13/18, 72%), detected in 41% of VACno, whereas undetected in VAC3, and anti-RBD-S production was higher in VAC2 vs. VACno (p = 0.0001), alongside neutralization against Delta (p = 0141), BA1 (p = 0.0255), BA4/5 (p = 0.0162). Infections with Delta also drove an increase of pro-inflammatory cytokines (IFN-α, p = 0.0463; IL-6, p = 0.0010). Conclusions Administration of 3 vaccination doses reduces the severe symptomatology in aged and elderly. Vaccination showed a strong association with anti-SARS-CoV-2 humoral response and an expansion of Th2 T-cells populations, independently of age. Delta variants and number of vaccine doses affected the magnitude of the humoral response against the original SARS-CoV-2 and emerging variants. A systematic surveillance of the emerging variants is paramount to define future vaccination strategies.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Efficient gene editing of human long-term hematopoietic stem cells validated by clonal tracking
- Author
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Ferrari, S, Jacob, A, Beretta, S, Unali, G, Albano, L, Vavassori, V, Cittaro, D, Lazarevic, D, Brombin, C, Cugnata, F, Kajaste-Rudnitski, A, Merelli, I, Genovese, P, Naldini, L, Ferrari S., Jacob A., Beretta S., Unali G., Albano L., Vavassori V., Cittaro D., Lazarevic D., Brombin C., Cugnata F., Kajaste-Rudnitski A., Merelli I., Genovese P., Naldini L., Ferrari, S, Jacob, A, Beretta, S, Unali, G, Albano, L, Vavassori, V, Cittaro, D, Lazarevic, D, Brombin, C, Cugnata, F, Kajaste-Rudnitski, A, Merelli, I, Genovese, P, Naldini, L, Ferrari S., Jacob A., Beretta S., Unali G., Albano L., Vavassori V., Cittaro D., Lazarevic D., Brombin C., Cugnata F., Kajaste-Rudnitski A., Merelli I., Genovese P., and Naldini L.
- Abstract
Targeted gene editing in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is a promising treatment for several diseases. However, the limited efficiency of homology-directed repair (HDR) in HSCs and the unknown impact of the procedure on clonal composition and dynamics of transplantation have hampered clinical translation. Here, we apply a barcoding strategy to clonal tracking of edited cells (BAR-Seq) and show that editing activates p53, which substantially shrinks the HSC clonal repertoire in hematochimeric mice, although engrafted edited clones preserve multilineage and self-renewing capacity. Transient p53 inhibition restored polyclonal graft composition. We increased HDR efficiency by forcing cell-cycle progression and upregulating components of the HDR machinery through transient expression of the adenovirus 5 E4orf6/7 protein, which recruits the cell-cycle controller E2F on its target genes. Combined E4orf6/7 expression and p53 inhibition resulted in HDR editing efficiencies of up to 50% in the long-term human graft, without perturbing repopulation and self-renewal of edited HSCs. This enhanced protocol should broaden applicability of HSC gene editing and pave its way to clinical translation.
- Published
- 2020
8. The “Healthcare Workers’ Wellbeing [Benessere Operatori]” Project: A Longitudinal Evaluation of Psychological Responses of Italian Healthcare Workers during the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Author
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Perego, G, Cugnata, F, Brombin, C, Milano, F, Preti, E, Di Pierro, R, De Panfilis, C, Madeddu, F, Di Mattei, V, Perego, Gaia, Cugnata, Federica, Brombin, Chiara, Milano, Francesca, Preti, Emanuele, Di Pierro, Rossella, De Panfilis, Chiara, Madeddu, Fabio, Di Mattei, Valentina Elisabetta, Perego, G, Cugnata, F, Brombin, C, Milano, F, Preti, E, Di Pierro, R, De Panfilis, C, Madeddu, F, Di Mattei, V, Perego, Gaia, Cugnata, Federica, Brombin, Chiara, Milano, Francesca, Preti, Emanuele, Di Pierro, Rossella, De Panfilis, Chiara, Madeddu, Fabio, and Di Mattei, Valentina Elisabetta
- Abstract
Background: COVID-19 forced healthcare workers to work in unprecedented and critical circumstances, exacerbating already-problematic and stressful working conditions. The “Healthcare workers’ wellbeing (Benessere Operatori)” project aimed at identifying psychological and personal factors, influencing individuals’ responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: 291 healthcare workers took part in the project by answering an online questionnaire twice (after the first wave of COVID-19 and during the second wave) and completing questions on socio-demographic and work-related information, the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale-21, the Insomnia Severity Index, the Impact of Event Scale-Revised, the State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-2, the Maslach Burnout Inventory, the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support, and the Brief Cope. Results: Higher levels of worry, worse working conditions, a previous history of psychiatric illness, being a nurse, older age, and avoidant and emotion-focused coping strategies seem to be risk factors for healthcare workers’ mental health. High levels of perceived social support, the attendance of emergency training, and problem-focused coping strategies play a protective role. Conclusions: An innovative, and more flexible, data mining statistical approach (i.e., a regression trees approach for repeated measures data) allowed us to identify risk factors and derive classification rules that could be helpful to implement targeted interventions for healthcare workers.
- Published
- 2022
9. Author Correction: Direct stimulation of ERBB2 highlights a novel cytostatic signaling pathway driven by the receptor Thr701 phosphorylation (Scientific Reports, (2020), 10, 1, (16906), 10.1038/s41598-020-73835-1)
- Author
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Gaviraghi M., Rabellino A., Andolfo A., Brand M., Brombin C., Bagnato P., De Feudis G., Raimondi A., Locatelli A., Tosoni D., Mazza D., Gianni L., Tonon G., Yarden Y., Tacchetti C., Daniele T., Gaviraghi, M., Rabellino, A., Andolfo, A., Brand, M., Brombin, C., Bagnato, P., De Feudis, G., Raimondi, A., Locatelli, A., Tosoni, D., Mazza, D., Gianni, L., Tonon, G., Yarden, Y., Tacchetti, C., and Daniele, T.
- Abstract
The original version of this Article contained an error in Affiliation 7, which was incorrectly given as ‘European Institute of Oncology, 20100, Milan, Italy’. The correct affiliation is listed below: Department of Experimental Oncology, IEO, European Institute of Oncology IRCCS, 20100, Milan, Italy. The original Article has been corrected.
- Published
- 2021
10. Characterising longitudinal trajectories of COVID-19 biomarkers within a latent class framework
- Author
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Cugnata F., Brombin C., Cippà P. E., Ceschi A., Ferrari P., Di Serio C., Porzio G. C., Rampichini C., Bocci C., Cugnata, F., Brombin, C., Cippà, P. E., Ceschi, A., Ferrari, P., and Di Serio, C.
- Published
- 2021
11. Exploring patients’ profile from COVID-19 case series data: beyond standard statistical approaches
- Author
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Brombin C., Cugnata F., Cippà P. E., Ceschi A., Ferrari P., Di Serio C., C. Perna, N. Salvati, F. Schirripa Spagnolo, Brombin, C., Cugnata, F., Cippà, P. E., Ceschi, A., Ferrari, P., and Di Serio, C.
- Published
- 2021
12. Precise Gene Editing Preserves Hematopoietic Stem Cell Function following Transient p53-Mediated DNA Damage Response
- Author
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Schiroli, G, Conti, A, Ferrari, S, della Volpe, L, Jacob, A, Albano, L, Beretta, S, Calabria, A, Vavassori, V, Gasparini, P, Salataj, E, Ndiaye-Lobry, D, Brombin, C, Chaumeil, J, Montini, E, Merelli, I, Genovese, P, Naldini, L, Di Micco, R, Schiroli G., Conti A., Ferrari S., della Volpe L., Jacob A., Albano L., Beretta S., Calabria A., Vavassori V., Gasparini P., Salataj E., Ndiaye-Lobry D., Brombin C., Chaumeil J., Montini E., Merelli I., Genovese P., Naldini L., Di Micco R., Schiroli, G, Conti, A, Ferrari, S, della Volpe, L, Jacob, A, Albano, L, Beretta, S, Calabria, A, Vavassori, V, Gasparini, P, Salataj, E, Ndiaye-Lobry, D, Brombin, C, Chaumeil, J, Montini, E, Merelli, I, Genovese, P, Naldini, L, Di Micco, R, Schiroli G., Conti A., Ferrari S., della Volpe L., Jacob A., Albano L., Beretta S., Calabria A., Vavassori V., Gasparini P., Salataj E., Ndiaye-Lobry D., Brombin C., Chaumeil J., Montini E., Merelli I., Genovese P., Naldini L., and Di Micco R.
- Abstract
Precise gene editing in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) holds promise for treating genetic diseases. However, responses triggered by programmable nucleases in HSPCs are poorly characterized and may negatively impact HSPC engraftment and long-term repopulation capacity. Here, we induced either one or several DNA double-stranded breaks (DSBs) with optimized zinc-finger and CRISPR/Cas9 nucleases and monitored DNA damage response (DDR) foci induction, cell-cycle progression, and transcriptional responses in HSPC subpopulations, with up to single-cell resolution. p53-mediated DDR pathway activation was the predominant response to even single-nuclease-induced DSBs across all HSPC subtypes analyzed. Excess DSB load and/or adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated delivery of DNA repair templates induced cumulative p53 pathway activation, constraining proliferation, yield, and engraftment of edited HSPCs. However, functional impairment was reversible when DDR burden was low and could be overcome by transient p53 inhibition. These findings provide molecular and functional evidence for feasible and seamless gene editing in HSPCs. Precise gene editing has the potential to treat immune and hematological diseases. Genovese, Naldini, Di Micco, and colleagues now show that gene-editing procedures are well tolerated by hematopoietic stem cells and provide molecular evidence of the feasibility of seamless gene editing, strengthening translation of such approaches to humans.
- Published
- 2019
13. Direct stimulation of ERBB2 highlights a novel cytostatic signaling pathway driven by the receptor Thr701 phosphorylation
- Author
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Gaviraghi, M and Rabellino, A, Andolfo, A, Brand, M, Brombin, C, Bagnato, P, De Feudis, G, Raimondi, A, Locatelli, A, Tosoni, D, Mazza, D, Gianni, L, Tonon, G, Yarden, Y, Tacchetti, C and Daniele, T, Gaviraghi, M and, Rabellino, A, Andolfo, A, Brand, M, Brombin, C, Bagnato, P, De Feudis, G, Raimondi, A, Locatelli, A, Tosoni, D, Mazza, D, Gianni, L, Tonon, G, Yarden, Y, Tacchetti, Carlo, C and, Daniele, and T
- Published
- 2020
14. PO-1131 Primary tumors observed in 1325 consecutive breast cancer patients treated with whole breast RT
- Author
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Fodor, A., primary, Brombin, C., additional, Mangili, P., additional, Tummineri, R., additional, Zerbetto, F., additional, Pasetti, M., additional, Longobardi, B., additional, Esposito, P.G., additional, Castriconi, R., additional, Dell’Oca, I., additional, Deantoni, C.L., additional, Broggi, S., additional, Deli, A.M., additional, Fiorino, C., additional, Del Vecchio, A., additional, Di Serio, M.S., additional, and Di Muzio, N.G., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. PO-1139 Skin toxicity in 1325 breast cancer patients treated with hypofractionated RT without boost
- Author
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Fodor, A., primary, Brombin, C., additional, Mangili, P., additional, Pasetti, M., additional, Tummineri, R., additional, Longobardi, B., additional, Zerbetto, F., additional, Castriconi, R., additional, Esposito, P.G., additional, Broggi, S., additional, Dell’Oca, I., additional, Deantoni, C.L., additional, Sanchez Galvan, A., additional, Perna, L., additional, Deli, A.M., additional, Chiara, A., additional, Rancoita, P.M.V., additional, Fiorino, C., additional, Del Vecchio, A., additional, Di Serio, M.S., additional, and Di Muzio, N.G., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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16. Psychological factors influencing emotional reactions to gestational trophoblastic disease: The role of coping mechanisms and illness perception
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Di Mattei, V, Mazzetti, M, Perego, G, Cugnata, F, Brombin, C, Bergamini, A, Cioffi, R, Vasta, F, Pella, F, Rabaiotti, E, Mangili, G, Candiani, M, Di Mattei, Valentina, Mazzetti, Martina, Perego, Gaia, Cugnata, Federica, Brombin, Chiara, Bergamini, Alice, Cioffi, Raffaella, Vasta, Francesca, Pella, Francesca, Rabaiotti, Emanuela, Mangili, Giorgia, Candiani, Massimo, Di Mattei, V, Mazzetti, M, Perego, G, Cugnata, F, Brombin, C, Bergamini, A, Cioffi, R, Vasta, F, Pella, F, Rabaiotti, E, Mangili, G, Candiani, M, Di Mattei, Valentina, Mazzetti, Martina, Perego, Gaia, Cugnata, Federica, Brombin, Chiara, Bergamini, Alice, Cioffi, Raffaella, Vasta, Francesca, Pella, Francesca, Rabaiotti, Emanuela, Mangili, Giorgia, and Candiani, Massimo
- Abstract
Objective: Referring to Leventhal's common-sense model, this observational cross-sectional study aimed at investigating the relationship between illness mental representations, coping mechanisms and psychological distress in a sample of women with gestational trophoblastic disease (GTD). Methods: Thirty-eight women diagnosed with GTD (18 with hydatidiform mole; 20 with gestational trophoblastic neoplasia) were asked to complete the Illness Perception Questionnaire—Revised, the Coping Orientation to the Problems Experienced, the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory—Form Y and the Beck Depression Inventory—Short Form. Demographic and clinical information was collected through a self-report questionnaire. Results: The sample did not report significant symptomatic distress in relation to GTD. Correlation analysis showed that the Emotional representations subscale of the Illness Perception Questionnaire—Revised was significantly associated with both state anxiety and depression; avoidant coping significantly and positively correlated with anxiety and depression, as well as with illness emotional representations. Mediation analysis revealed significant indirect effects of avoidant coping on both anxiety and depression through the mediation of emotional representations. Conclusion: Avoidant coping could lead women to develop emotional representations of illness characterised by negative affects, which in turn enhance distress levels. Results underline the importance to promote adaptive coping strategies, along with accurate illness perceptions, to foster better psychological adjustment to GTD.
- Published
- 2021
17. P126 - Extended Nodal Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer Lymph-Nodal Relapse Guided with [11C]-Choline PET/CT: ten-year results in patients enrolled in a prospective trial
- Author
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Fodor, A., Brombin, C., Deantoni, C.L., Giannini, L., Villa, S.L., Rancoita, P.M.V., Mangili, P., Torrisi, M., Dell’Oca, I., Broggi, S., Cozzarini, C., Mapelli, P., Picchio, M., Del Vecchio, A., Fiorino, C., Di Serio, M.C.S., Chiti, A., and Di Muzio, N.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A comparison between a mentalistic and a non-mentalistic training: Evaluation of theory of mind, cooperation and prosocial behaviour in school-aged children
- Author
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Caputi, M., Maglione, D., Decio, C., Locarini, I., Meroni, M., Rosi, E., Cugnata, F., Brombin, C., Caputi, M., Maglione, D., Decio, C., Locarini, I., Meroni, M., Rosi, E., Cugnata, F., and Brombin, C.
- Subjects
Cooperation ,Middle childhood ,Prosocial behaviour ,Theory of mind ,Training - Abstract
The current study, conducted on 9- and 10-year-old children, aimed at evaluating the effects of two trainings - one mentalistic and one non-mentalistic - on theory of mind, cooperation and prosociality. The two trainings were compared, randomizing the sample in two groups composed by 105 children each. Theory- of-mind abilities increased more in the group assigned to the theory-of-mind condition, levels of cooperation and prosocial behaviour increased in both groups and theory of mind emerged as a significant predictor of cooperation but not of prosocial behaviour.
- Published
- 2019
19. A data-driven approach to identify risk profiles and protective drugs in COVID-19
- Author
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Cippà, PE, Cugnata, F, Ferrari, P, Brombin, C, Ruinelli, L, Bianchi, G, Beria, N, Schulz, L, Bernasconi, E, Merlani, P, Ceschi, A, Di Serio, C, Cippà, PE, Cugnata, F, Ferrari, P, Brombin, C, Ruinelli, L, Bianchi, G, Beria, N, Schulz, L, Bernasconi, E, Merlani, P, Ceschi, A, and Di Serio, C
- Abstract
As the COVID-19 pandemic is spreading around the world, increasing evidence highlights the role of cardiometabolic risk factors in determining the susceptibility to the disease. The fragmented data collected during the initial emergency limited the possibility of investigating the effect of highly correlated covariates and of modeling the interplay between risk factors and medication. The present study is based on comprehensive monitoring of 576 COVID-19 patients. Different statistical approaches were applied to gain a comprehensive insight in terms of both the identification of risk factors and the analysis of dependency structure among clinical and demographic characteristics. The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virus enters host cells by binding to the angiotensinconverting enzyme 2 (ACE2), but whether or not renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors (RAASi) would be beneficial to COVID-19 cases remains controversial. The survival tree approach was applied to define a multilayer risk stratification and better profile patient survival with respect to drug regimens, showing a significant protective effect of RAASi with a reduced risk of in-hospital death. Bayesian networks were estimated, to uncover complex interrelationships and confounding effects. The results confirmed the role of RAASi in reducing the risk of death in COVID-19 patients. De novo treatment with RAASi in patients hospitalized with COVID-19 should be prospectively investigated in a randomized controlled trial to ascertain the extent of risk reduction for in-hospital death in COVID-19.
- Published
- 2020
20. PO-0955: Molecular subtypes and local control in 1054 breast cancer patients treated with de-escalated 3DCRT
- Author
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Fodor, A., primary, Mangili, P., additional, Brombin, C., additional, Zerbetto, F., additional, Longobardi, B., additional, Borroni, F., additional, Tummineri, R., additional, Pasetti, M., additional, Rancoita, P., additional, Perna, L., additional, Dell'Oca, I., additional, Deantoni, C.L., additional, Esposito, P.G., additional, Deli, A.M., additional, Rossi, E., additional, Chiara, A., additional, Broggi, S., additional, Slim, N., additional, Passoni, P., additional, Cattaneo, M., additional, Bolognesi, A., additional, Fiorino, C., additional, Di Serio, M.S., additional, and Di Muzio, N.G., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Valutazione degli effetti di un training conversazionale su teoria della mente e strategie di coping in età scolare
- Author
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Caputi M., Cugnata F., Brombin C., Caputi, M., Cugnata, F., and Brombin, C.
- Published
- 2017
22. Evaluating association between emotion recognition and Heart Rate Variability indices: some preliminary results
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Cugnata F., Martoni R. M., Ferrario M., Di Serio C., Brombin C., Pratesi M., Pena C., Cugnata, F., Martoni, R. M., Ferrario, M., Di Serio, C., and Brombin, C.
- Published
- 2016
23. Wellbeing and quality of life improvement in female cancer patients
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Di Mattei, V, Carnelli, L, Taranto, P, Carrara, L, Brombin, C, Cugnata, F, Mangili, G, Sarno, L, Candiani, M, Di Mattei, V, Carnelli, L, Taranto, P, Carrara, L, Brombin, C, Cugnata, F, Mangili, G, Sarno, L, and Candiani, M
- Published
- 2016
24. Coping mechanisms, psychological distress, and quality of life prior to cancer genetic counseling
- Author
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Di Mattei, V, Carnelli, L, Bernardi, M, Bienati, R, Brombin, C, Cugnata, F, Rabaiotti, E, Zambetti, M, Sarno, L, Candiani, M, Gentilini, O, Di Mattei, Valentina E., Carnelli, Letizia, Bernardi, Martina, Bienati, Rebecca, Brombin, Chiara, Cugnata, Federica, Rabaiotti, Emanuela, Zambetti, Milvia, Sarno, Lucio, Candiani, Massimo, Gentilini, Oreste, Di Mattei, V, Carnelli, L, Bernardi, M, Bienati, R, Brombin, C, Cugnata, F, Rabaiotti, E, Zambetti, M, Sarno, L, Candiani, M, Gentilini, O, Di Mattei, Valentina E., Carnelli, Letizia, Bernardi, Martina, Bienati, Rebecca, Brombin, Chiara, Cugnata, Federica, Rabaiotti, Emanuela, Zambetti, Milvia, Sarno, Lucio, Candiani, Massimo, and Gentilini, Oreste
- Abstract
Background: Breast Cancer susceptibility genes 1 and 2 are implicated in hereditary breast and ovarian cancer and women can test for the presence of these genes prior to developing cancer. The goal of this study is to examine psychological distress, quality of life, and active coping mechanisms in a sample of women during the pre-test stage of the genetic counseling process, considering that pre-test distress can be an indicator of post-test distress. We also wanted to identify if subgroups of women, defined based on their health status, were more vulnerable to developing distress during the genetic counseling process. Methods: This study included 181 female participants who accessed a Cancer Genetic Counseling Clinic. The participants were subdivided into three groups on the basis of the presence of a cancer diagnosis: Affected patients, Ex-patients, and Unaffected participants. Following a self-report questionnaire, a battery of tests was administered to examine psychological symptomatology, quality of life, and coping mechanisms. Results: The results confirm that the genetic counseling procedure is not a source of psychological distress. Certain participants were identified as being more vulnerable than others; in the pre-test phase, they reported on average higher levels of distress and lower quality of life. These participants were predominantly Ex-patients and Affected patients, who may be at risk of distress during the counseling process. Conclusions: These findings highlight that individuals who take part in the genetic counseling process are not all the same regarding pre-test psychological distress. Attention should be paid particularly to Ex-patients and Affected patients by the multidisciplinary treating team.
- Published
- 2018
25. EP-1593: Hypofractionated IGRT in high-intermediate and high/very-high risk prostate cancer patients
- Author
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Di Muzio, N.G., primary, Deantoni, C.L., additional, Brombin, C., additional, Cozzarini, C., additional, Broggi, S., additional, Mangili, P., additional, Di Serio, M.S., additional, Dell'Oca, I., additional, Chiara, A., additional, Calandrino, R., additional, Fiorino, C., additional, and Fodor, A., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Theory of mind in binge eating disorder: an exploratory study
- Author
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Legnani, A., primary, Martoni, R.M., additional, Brombin, C., additional, Cugnata, F., additional, Porta, R., additional, de Filippis, R., additional, Erzegovesi, S., additional, and Caputi, M., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The genotoxic potential of lentiviral vector integration is modulated by the interplay between vector design and mouse genotype
- Author
-
Cesana D., Ranzani M., Volpin M., Bartholomae C., Merella S., Benedicenti F., Sergi L. Sergi, SanVito F., Brombin C, Nonis A., Di Serio C., Doglioni C., VonKalle C., Schmidt M., Naldini L., Montini E., Cesana, D., Ranzani, M., Volpin, M., Bartholomae, C., Merella, S., Benedicenti, F., Sergi, Sergi L., Sanvito, F., Brombin, C, Nonis, A., Di Serio, C., Doglioni, C., Vonkalle, C., Schmidt, M., Naldini, L., and Montini, E.
- Published
- 2013
28. Putative Risk Factors in Developmental Dyslexia: A Case-Control Study of Italian Children
- Author
-
Mascheretti, S, Marino, C, Simone, D, Quadrelli, E, Riva, V, Cellino, M, Maziade, M, Brombin, C, Battaglia, M, QUADRELLI, ERMANNO, Cellino, MR, Battaglia, M., Mascheretti, S, Marino, C, Simone, D, Quadrelli, E, Riva, V, Cellino, M, Maziade, M, Brombin, C, Battaglia, M, QUADRELLI, ERMANNO, Cellino, MR, and Battaglia, M.
- Abstract
Although dyslexia runs in families, several putative risk factors that cannot be immediately identified as genetic predict reading disability. Published studies analyzed one or a few risk factors at a time, with relatively inconsistent results. To assess the contribution of several putative risk factors to the development of dyslexia, we conducted a case-control study of 403 Italian children, 155 with dyslexia, by implementing a stepwise logistic regression applied to the entire sample, and then to boys and girls separately. Younger parental age at child’s birth, lower parental education, and risk of miscarriage significantly increased the odds of belonging to the dyslexia group (19.5% of the variation). These associations were confirmed in the analyses conducted separately by sex, except for parental education, which significantly affected only males. These findings support reading disabilities as a multifactorial disorder and may bear some importance for the prevention and/or early detection of children at heightened risk for dyslexia.
- Published
- 2015
29. A review on combination-based tests for shape analysis
- Author
-
Brombin, C. and Salmaso, Luigi
- Subjects
Correlated data ,Permutation tests ,Nonparametric combination - Published
- 2013
30. Permutation Tests in Shape Analysis
- Author
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Brombin, C. and Salmaso, Luigi
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Hyper-functional coagulation factor IX improves the efficacy of gene therapy in hemophilic mice
- Author
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Cantore, Alessio, Nair, N., Della Valle, P., Di Matteo, Mario, Matrai, Janka, Sanvito, F., Brombin, C., Di Serio, C., D'angelo, A., Chuah, Marinee, Naldini, L., VandenDriessche, Thierry, Cell Biology and Histology, and Division of Gene Therapy & Regenerative Medicine
- Subjects
Gene Therapy ,Hemophilia - Abstract
Gene therapy may provide a cure for hemophilia and overcome the limitations of protein replacement therapy. Increasing the potency of gene transfer vectors may allow to improve their therapeutic index, as lower doses can be administered to achieve therapeutic benefit, reducing toxicity of in vivo administration. Here we generated codon-usage optimized and hyper-functional factor IX (FIX) transgenes carrying a R338L amino acid substitution, previously associated with clotting hyperactivity and thrombophilia. We delivered these transgenes to hemophilia B mice by hepatocyte-targeted integration-competent and -defective lentiviral vectors. The hyper-functional FIX transgenes increased FIX activity reconstituted in the plasma without detectable adverse effects, allowing correction of the disease phenotype at lower vector doses and resulting in improved hemostasis in vivo. The combined effect of codon optimization with the hyper-activating FIX-R338L mutation resulted in a robust 15-fold gain in potency and therefore provides a promising strategy to improve the efficacy, feasibility and safety of hemophilia gene therapy.
- Published
- 2012
32. Npc - A Newer Revolutionary Test For Evaluation of Clinical Series. Bladder Cancer
- Author
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Bassi, Pf, Racioppi, M., Salmaso, Luigi, Brombin, C, Volpe, A., D'Agostino, D., Bassi, M., Altieri, V, Bartoletti, R., Brausi, M., Casetta, G., Colombo, R., Gontero, P., Hurle, R., Maffezzini, M., Morgia, G., Serretta, V., Siracusano, S., P. F., Bassi, M., Racioppi, L., Salmaso, C., Brombin, A., Volpe, D., D'Agostino, M., Bassi, V., Altieri, R., Bartoletti, M., Brausi, G., Casetta, R., Colombo, P., Gontero, R., Hurle, M., Maffezzini, G., Morgia, V., Serretta, and Siracusano, Salvatore
- Subjects
Npc ,Bladder Cancer - Published
- 2010
33. B-cell development and functions and therapeutic options in adenosine deaminase-deficient patients
- Author
-
Brigida, I. (Immacolata), Sauer, A.V. (Aisha), Ferrua, F. (Francesca), Giannelli, S. (Stefania), Scaramuzza, S. (Samantha), Pistoia, V. (Valentina), Castiello, M.C. (Maria Carmina), Barendregt, B.H. (Barbara), Cicalese, M.P. (Maria Pia), Casiraghi, F. (Federica), Brombin, C. (Chiara), Puck, J. (Jennifer), Muller, K. (Karin), Notarangelo, L.D. (Luigi Daniele), Montin, D. (Davide), Montfrans, J.M. (Joris) van, Roncarolo, M.G. (Maria Grazia), Traggiai, E. (Elisabetta), Dongen, J.J.M. (Jacques) van, Burg, M. (Mirjam) van der, Aiuti, A. (Alessandro), Brigida, I. (Immacolata), Sauer, A.V. (Aisha), Ferrua, F. (Francesca), Giannelli, S. (Stefania), Scaramuzza, S. (Samantha), Pistoia, V. (Valentina), Castiello, M.C. (Maria Carmina), Barendregt, B.H. (Barbara), Cicalese, M.P. (Maria Pia), Casiraghi, F. (Federica), Brombin, C. (Chiara), Puck, J. (Jennifer), Muller, K. (Karin), Notarangelo, L.D. (Luigi Daniele), Montin, D. (Davide), Montfrans, J.M. (Joris) van, Roncarolo, M.G. (Maria Grazia), Traggiai, E. (Elisabetta), Dongen, J.J.M. (Jacques) van, Burg, M. (Mirjam) van der, and Aiuti, A. (Alessandro)
- Abstract
Background Adenosine deaminase (ADA) deficiency causes severe cellular and humoral immune defects and dysregulation because of metabolic toxicity. Alterations in B-cell development and function have been poorly studied. Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) and hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene therapy (GT) are therapeutic options for patients lacking a suitable bone marrow (BM) transplant donor. Objective We sought to study alterations in B-cell development in ADA-deficient patients and investigate the ability of ERT and HSC-GT to restore normal B-cell differentiation and function. Methods Flow cytometry was used to characterize B-cell development in BM and the periphery. The percentage of gene-corrected B cells was measured by using quantitative PCR. B cells were assessed for their capacity to proliferate and release IgM after stimulation. Results Despite the severe peripheral B-cell lymphopenia, patients with ADA-deficient severe combined immunodeficiency showed a partial block in central BM development. Treatment with ERT or HSC-GT reverted most BM alterations, but ERT led to immature B-cell expansion. In the periphery transitional B cells accumulated under ERT, and the defect in maturation persisted long-term. HSC-GT led to a progressive improvement in B-cell numbers and development, along with increased levels of gene correction. The strongest selective advantage for ADA-transduced cells occurred at the transition from immature to naive cells. B-cell proliferative responses and differentiation to immunoglobulin secreting IgM after B-cell receptor and Toll-like receptor triggering were severely impaired after ERT and improved significantly after HSC-GT. Conclusions ADA-deficient patients show specific defects in B-cell development and functions that are differently corrected after ERT and HSC-GT.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Multivariate permutation shape analysis with application to aortic valve morphology. Stereology and Image Analysis
- Author
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Brombin, C., Salmaso, Luigi, and Villanova, C.
- Published
- 2009
35. Finite sample consistency of permutation tests in shape analysis
- Author
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Brombin, C., Galzignato, P., Pesarin, F., and Salmaso, Luigi
- Published
- 2009
36. Adjusting p-values of a stepwise generalized linear model
- Author
-
Finos, Livio, Brombin, C., and Salmaso, L.
- Published
- 2007
37. The Clinical Use of Statistical Permutation Test Methodology: A Tool for Identifying Predictive Variables of Outcome
- Author
-
Racioppi, M., primary, Salmaso, L., additional, Brombin, C., additional, Arboretti, R., additional, D''Agostino, D., additional, Colombo, R., additional, Serretta, V., additional, Brausi, M., additional, Casetta, G., additional, Gontero, P., additional, Hurle, R., additional, Tenaglia, R., additional, Altieri, V., additional, Bartoletti, R., additional, Maffezzini, M., additional, Siracusano, S., additional, Morgia, G., additional, and Bassi, P.F., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. 473 Pathological nodal staging score for prostate cancer: A tool to address adequate nodal dissection in men treated with radical prostatectomy
- Author
-
Briganti, A., primary, Nonis, A., additional, Brombin, C., additional, Kluth, L.A., additional, Chun, F.K.H., additional, Shariat, S.F., additional, Capitanio, U., additional, Gallina, A., additional, Nini, A., additional, Bianchi, M., additional, Tutolo, M., additional, Freschi, M., additional, Doglioni, C., additional, Guazzoni, G., additional, Salonia, A., additional, Rigatti, P., additional, and Di Serio, C., additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A Landmark Analysis‐Based Approach to Age and Sex Classification of the Skull of the Mediterranean Monk Seal (Monachus monachus) (Hermann, 1779)
- Author
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Brombin, C., primary, Mo, G., additional, Zotti, A., additional, Giurisato, M., additional, Salmaso, L., additional, and Cozzi, B., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The early diagnosis improves survival in primary biliary cirrhosis: A 35-year follow-up in a single centre
- Author
-
Caroli, D., primary, Variola, A., additional, Ferrara, F., additional, Rosa Rizzotto, E., additional, Baldo, V., additional, Salmaso, L., additional, Chiaramonte, M., additional, Brombin, C., additional, and Floreani, A., additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The Clinical Use of Statistical Permutation Test Methodology: A Tool for Identifying Predictive Variables of Outcome.
- Author
-
Racioppi, M., Salmaso, L., Brombin, C., arboretti, R., D''agostino, D., Colombo, R., Serretta, V., Brausi, M., Casetta, G., Gontero, P., Hurle, R., Tenaglia, R., altieri, V., Bartoletti, R., Maffezzini, M., Siracusano, S., Morgia, G., and Bassi, P.F.
- Subjects
BLADDER cancer treatment ,CYSTECTOMY ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,ONCOLOGY ,HISTORY of medicine ,MEDICAL databases - Abstract
Objectives: To identify the predictive variables affecting the outcome after radical surgery for bladder cancer by a newer statistical methodology, i.e. nonparametric combination (NPC). Methods: A multicenter study enrolled 1,312 patients who had undergone radical cystectomy for bladder cancer in 11 Italian oncological centers from January 1982 to December 2002. A statistical analysisof their medical history and diagnostic, pathological and postoperative variables was performed using a NPC test. Thepatients were included in a comprehensive database with medical history and clinical and pathological data. Five-year survival was used as the dependent variable, and p values were corrected for multiplicity using a closed testing procedure. The newer nonparametric approach was used to evaluate the prognostic importance of the variables. All of the analyses were performed using routines developed in MATLAB© and the significance level was set at α = 0.05. Results: A significant prognostic predictive value (p < 0.01) for tumor clinical staging, hydronephrosis, tumor pathological staging, grading, presence of concomitant carcinoma in situ, regional lymph node involvement, corpora cavernosa invasion, microvascular invasion, lymphatic invasion and prostatic stroma involvement was found. Conclusions: The NPC test could handle any type of variable (categorical and quantitative) and take into account the multivariate relation among variables. This newer methodology offers a significant contribution in biomedical studies with several endpoints and is recommended in presence of non-normal data and missing values, as well as solving high-dimensional data and problems relating to small sample sizes. © 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Sleeve lobectomy an affidable lung sparing procedure
- Author
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Cavallesco, G., primary, Maniscalco, P., additional, Quarantotto, F., additional, Acerbis, F., additional, Santini, M., additional, Brombin, C., additional, Valieri, L., additional, and Azzena, G., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A clinical score to evaluate the survival and recurrence risk in patients undergoing ventricular tachycardia ablation
- Author
-
Pasquale Vergara, Nonis, A., Brombin, C., Baratto, F., Bisceglia, C., Sora, N., Barbaro, M., Mazzone, P., Maccabelli, G., Della Bella, P., Vergara, P., Nonis, A., Brombin, Chiara, Baratto, F., Bisceglia, C., Sora, N., Barbaro, M., Mazzone, P., Maccabelli, G., and Della Bella, P.
44. Efficient gene editing of human long-term hematopoietic stem cells validated by clonal tracking
- Author
-
Giulia Unali, Ivan Merelli, Stefano Beretta, Aurelien Jacob, Luisa Albano, Pietro Genovese, Samuele Ferrari, Anna Kajaste-Rudnitski, Davide Cittaro, Valentina Vavassori, Federica Cugnata, Luigi Naldini, Chiara Brombin, Dejan Lazarevic, Ferrari, S, Jacob, A, Beretta, S, Unali, G, Albano, L, Vavassori, V, Cittaro, D, Lazarevic, D, Brombin, C, Cugnata, F, Kajaste-Rudnitski, A, Merelli, I, Genovese, P, Naldini, L, Ferrari, S., Jacob, A., Beretta, S., Unali, G., Albano, L., Vavassori, V., Cittaro, D., Lazarevic, D., Brombin, C., Cugnata, F., Kajaste-Rudnitski, A., Merelli, I., Genovese, P., and Naldini, L.
- Subjects
G2 Phase ,Transcription, Genetic ,Genetic enhancement ,Transplantation, Heterologous ,Biomedical Engineering ,Bioengineering ,Biology ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Stem-cell biotechnology ,Article ,S Phase ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,Viral Proteins ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gene therapy ,Genome editing ,Animals ,Humans ,Cell Lineage ,Haematopoietic stem cell ,E2F ,030304 developmental biology ,Gene Editing ,0303 health sciences ,Base Sequence ,Targeted Gene Repair ,HEK 293 cells ,Recombinational DNA Repair ,Reproducibility of Results ,Dependovirus ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Cell biology ,Clone Cells ,Up-Regulation ,Transplantation ,Haematopoiesis ,Targeted gene repair ,HEK293 Cells ,Cell Tracking ,Molecular Medicine ,Stem cell ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Targeted gene editing in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is a promising treatment for several diseases. However, the limited efficiency of homology-directed repair (HDR) in HSCs and the unknown impact of the procedure on clonal composition and dynamics of transplantation have hampered clinical translation. Here, we apply a barcoding strategy to clonal tracking of edited cells (BAR-Seq) and show that editing activates p53, which substantially shrinks the HSC clonal repertoire in hematochimeric mice, although engrafted edited clones preserve multilineage and self-renewing capacity. Transient p53 inhibition restored polyclonal graft composition. We increased HDR efficiency by forcing cell-cycle progression and upregulating components of the HDR machinery through transient expression of the adenovirus 5 E4orf6/7 protein, which recruits the cell-cycle controller E2F on its target genes. Combined E4orf6/7 expression and p53 inhibition resulted in HDR editing efficiencies of up to 50% in the long-term human graft, without perturbing repopulation and self-renewal of edited HSCs. This enhanced protocol should broaden applicability of HSC gene editing and pave its way to clinical translation. Transient p53 inhibition and induced cell-cycle progression increase clonal engraftment and homology-directed repair in hematopoietic stem cells.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Analysis of healthcare workers’ mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic: Evidence from a Three-Wave Longitudinal Study
- Author
-
Gaia Perego, Federica Cugnata, Chiara Brombin, Francesca Milano, Martina Mazzetti, Paola Taranto, Emanuele Preti, Rossella Di Pierro, Chiara De Panfilis, Fabio Madeddu, Valentina E Di Mattei, Perego, G, Cugnata, F, Brombin, C, Milano, F, Mazzetti, M, Taranto, P, Preti, E, Di Pierro, R, De Panfilis, C, Madeddu, F, and Di Mattei, V
- Subjects
risk factor ,health psychology ,stre ,depression ,worry ,COVID-19 ,anxiety ,health care ,Applied Psychology ,psychological distre - Abstract
The “Healthcare workers’ wellbeing [Benessere Operatori]” project is an exploratory longitudinal study assessing healthcare workers’ mental health at three different time points over a 14-month period during the COVID-19 pandemic. We collected socio-demographic and work-related information and assessed the perceived social support, coping strategies, and levels of depression, anxiety, insomnia, anger, burnout, and PTSD symptoms. In total, 325 Italian healthcare workers (i.e. physicians, nurses, other healthcare workers, and clerks) participated in the first initial survey and either the second or third subsequent survey. Participants reported subclinical levels of psychiatric symptoms that remained mostly unchanged across time, except for an increase in stress, depression, state anger, and emotional exhaustion symptoms. Despite subclinical levels, healthcare workers’ distress can adversely affect the quality of care, patient satisfaction, and medical error rates. Therefore, implementing interventions to improve healthcare workers’ wellbeing is required.
- Published
- 2023
46. The role of genetic and environmental factors in covariation between anxiety and anger in childhood
- Author
-
Maria Antonietta Stazi, Giulio Centorame, Stella Sardella, Francesca Lissandrello, Simona Scaini, Corrado Fagnani, Marco Battaglia, Chiara Brombin, Scaini, S., Centorame, G., Lissandrello, F., Sardella, S., Stazi, M. A., Fagnani, C., Brombin, C., and Battaglia, M.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Dizygotic twin ,CBCL ,Anger ,Anxiety ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Child and adolescent psychiatry ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Twin study ,General Medicine ,Heritability ,medicine.disease ,Childhood ,Comorbidity ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Higher levels of anger expression, as well as lower levels of anger control, have been reported for adults with anxiety disorders compared to individuals without anxiety disorders. Different to the research on adults, very few studies examined the relationship between anxiety and anger in childhood. In our study, we investigated 398 Italian twin pairs (74 MZ male, 70 MZ female, 134 same-sex dizygotic-53 male, 81 female-, and 120 unlike-sex dizygotic twin pairs), aged 8–17 (mean 13.06 ± 2.59): (i) the heritability of a childhood anger phenotype; (ii) the association between five anxiety domains and anger; (iii) the role of possible common etiological factors in explaining the observed comorbidity and overlap in the risk between anxiety phenotypes and anger. The study demonstrated that anger, assessed by CBCL items, is heritable in children at a similar rate to prior studies (40%). Our research found low to moderate rate of correlation between anger and anxiety (from 0.10 to 0.19). Finally, the present study found that the majority of etiological influences on anxiety and anger are independent of each other. Data showed that shared environmental influences have some small effects on the phenotypic covariation between the anxiety phenotypes and anger (12%); whereas unique environmental influences have an almost negligible effect (1%). Our analyses did not reveal the effect of genetic effects in explaining the covariation between these phenotypes.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Profiling Antibody Response Patterns in COVID-19: Spike S1-Reactive IgA Signature in the Evolution of SARS-CoV-2 Infection
- Author
-
Gianni Saretto, Chiara Brombin, Caterina Uberti-Foppa, Denise Princi, Mauro S. Malnati, Nigel J. Temperton, Lucia Lopalco, Nicola Clementi, Maddalena Noviello, Diego Cantoni, Nicasio Mancini, Elena Tassi, Carla Bozzi, Norma Maugeri, Chiara Bonini, Gabriel Siracusano, Clelia Di Serio, Federica Cugnata, Claudia Pastori, Siracusano, G., Brombin, C., Pastori, C., Cugnata, F., Noviello, M., Tassi, E., Princi, D., Cantoni, D., Malnati, M. S., Maugeri, N., Bozzi, C., Saretto, G., Clementi, N., Mancini, N., Uberti-Foppa, C., Temperton, N., Bonini, C., Di Serio, C., and Lopalco, L.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Immunology ,clinical outcome ,Disease ,Antibodies, Viral ,Young Adult ,Antigen ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Humans ,neutralizing antibodies ,Original Research ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,QR355 ,biology ,Surrogate endpoint ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,VOC ,COVID-19 ,Middle Aged ,RC581-607 ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Immunoglobulin A ,Vaccination ,Hospitalization ,HEK293 Cells ,Immunoglobulin M ,Immunoglobulin G ,Cohort ,Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus ,biology.protein ,Female ,Antibody ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,business - Abstract
This contribution explores in a new statistical perspective the antibody responses to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in 141 coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients exhibiting a broad range of clinical manifestations. This cohort accurately reflects the characteristics of the first wave of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in Italy. We determined the IgM, IgA, and IgG levels towards SARS-CoV-2 S1, S2, and NP antigens, evaluating their neutralizing activity and relationship with clinical signatures. Moreover, we longitudinally followed 72 patients up to 9 months postsymptoms onset to study the persistence of the levels of antibodies. Our results showed that the majority of COVID-19 patients developed an early virus-specific antibody response. The magnitude and the neutralizing properties of the response were heterogeneous regardless of the severity of the disease. Antibody levels dropped over time, even though spike reactive IgG and IgA were still detectable up to 9 months. Early baseline antibody levels were key drivers of the subsequent antibody production and the long-lasting protection against SARS-CoV-2. Importantly, we identified anti-S1 IgA as a good surrogate marker to predict the clinical course of COVID-19. Characterizing the antibody response after SARS-CoV-2 infection is relevant for the early clinical management of patients as soon as they are diagnosed and for implementing the current vaccination strategies.
- Published
- 2021
48. A data-driven approach to identify risk profiles and protective drugs in COVID-19
- Author
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Pietro E. Cippà, Giorgia Bianchi, Paolo Ferrari, Chiara Brombin, Lorenzo Ruinelli, Nicola Beria, Federica Cugnata, Lukas Schulz, Clelia Di Serio, Paolo Merlani, Alessandro Ceschi, Enos Bernasconi, University of Zurich, Cippà, Pietro E, Di Serio, Clelia, Cippà, P. E., Cugnata, F., Ferrari, P., Brombin, C., Ruinelli, L., Bianchi, G., Beria, N., Schulz, L., Bernasconi, E., Merlani, P., Ceschi, A., and Di Serio, C.
- Subjects
Oncology ,Male ,Medical Sciences ,Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors ,Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,survival tree ,law.invention ,Renin-Angiotensin System ,0302 clinical medicine ,RAAS ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Risk Factors ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,Aged, 80 and over ,Multidisciplinary ,Confounding ,Statistics ,Biological Sciences ,Middle Aged ,Hospitalization ,Protective Agents ,Physical Sciences ,Female ,Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,610 Medicine & health ,Antiviral Agents ,Survival tree ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Covariate ,Humans ,Pandemics ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,1000 Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,Survival Analysis ,Bayesian network ,10199 Clinic for Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology ,business - Abstract
Significance The global outbreak of COVID-19 infections generated an unprecedented need to develop novel therapeutic strategies. The SARS-CoV-2 virus enters host cells after binding to the angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), but whether renin−angiotensin−aldosterone system inhibitors (RAASi) are beneficial remains controversial. Standard statistical approaches may fail in assessing medications effects, due to multiple sources of bias in COVID-19 case series collected on an emergency basis. We present a data-driven approach to tackle these challenges. Multilayer risk stratifications were derived for assessing drugs effect, while Bayesian networks were estimated, to analyze dependencies among risk factors’ and treatments’ impact on survival. We provide strong evidence for protectivity of RAASi on hospitalized patients that call for randomized controlled trials of RAASi as COVID-19 treatment option., As the COVID-19 pandemic is spreading around the world, increasing evidence highlights the role of cardiometabolic risk factors in determining the susceptibility to the disease. The fragmented data collected during the initial emergency limited the possibility of investigating the effect of highly correlated covariates and of modeling the interplay between risk factors and medication. The present study is based on comprehensive monitoring of 576 COVID-19 patients. Different statistical approaches were applied to gain a comprehensive insight in terms of both the identification of risk factors and the analysis of dependency structure among clinical and demographic characteristics. The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virus enters host cells by binding to the angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), but whether or not renin−angiotensin−aldosterone system inhibitors (RAASi) would be beneficial to COVID-19 cases remains controversial. The survival tree approach was applied to define a multilayer risk stratification and better profile patient survival with respect to drug regimens, showing a significant protective effect of RAASi with a reduced risk of in-hospital death. Bayesian networks were estimated, to uncover complex interrelationships and confounding effects. The results confirmed the role of RAASi in reducing the risk of death in COVID-19 patients. De novo treatment with RAASi in patients hospitalized with COVID-19 should be prospectively investigated in a randomized controlled trial to ascertain the extent of risk reduction for in-hospital death in COVID-19.
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- 2021
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49. Impact of molecular subtype on 1325 early-stage breast cancer patients homogeneously treated with hypofractionated radiotherapy without boost: Should the indications for radiotherapy be more personalized?
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Sara Broggi, Andrei Fodor, Claudio Fiorino, Pier Giorgio Esposito, Paolo Passoni, Italo Dell'Oca, R. Tummineri, Flavia Zerbetto, Najla Slim, Paola Mangili, Chiara Brombin, Oreste Gentilini, Marcella Pasetti, Chiara Lucrezia Deantoni, Stefano L. Villa, N. Di Muzio, Fulvio Borroni, Roberta Castriconi, Barbara Longobardi, Giampaolo Bianchini, Paola M.V. Rancoita, S. Baroni, Mariaclelia Stefania Di Serio, A.M. Deli, Anna Chiara, Lucia Perna, Antonella del Vecchio, Fodor, A., Brombin, C., Mangili, P., Borroni, F., Pasetti, M., Tummineri, R., Zerbetto, F., Longobardi, B., Perna, L., Dell'Oca, I., Deantoni, C. L., Deli, A. M., Chiara, A., Broggi, S., Castriconi, R., Esposito, P. G., Slim, N., Passoni, P., Baroni, S., Villa, S. L., Rancoita, P. M. V., Fiorino, C., Del Vecchio, A., Bianchini, G., Gentilini, O. D., Di Serio, C., and Di Muzio, N. G.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Receptor, ErbB-2 ,Tumor bed boost ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Breast cancer conservative treatment ,Hypofractionated whole breast radiotherapy ,Breast Neoplasms ,Mastectomy, Segmental ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Gastroenterology ,Disease-Free Survival ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,Interquartile range ,Median follow-up ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Stage (cooking) ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Early stage breast cancer ,Hormonal therapy ,Surgery ,Female ,Radiation Dose Hypofractionation ,Original Article ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,Breast cancer molecular subtypes - Abstract
Aim We report molecular subtype impact on 1325 early breast cancer (BCa) patients treated with whole breast hypofractionated (WBH) adjuvant forward-planned intensity modulated radiotherapy (F-IMRT) without boost. Methods and materials From 02/2009-05/2017 1325 patients with pTis-pT3, pNx-N1aM0 BCa who underwent breast conservation surgery were treated with WBHF-IMRT in our institute, to a total dose of 40 Gy/15 fractions, without boost. Median age: 62 (interquartile range-IQR-:51.14–70.53) years. Histology: 8% in situ carcinoma (ISC), 92% invasive tumors. Molecular subtypes (invasive tumors): 49.9% Luminal A, 33.1% Luminal B Her2 negative (−), 6.2% Luminal B Her2 positive (+), 3.6% Hormone Receptor (HR)- Her2+, 7.1% Triple negative (TNBC), and 0.2% HR+. Chemotherapy (CT) was prescribed in 28% of patients, hormonal therapy in 80.3%, monoclonal antibodies (MAb) in 86.8% of Luminal B Her2+ and 97.7% of HR- Her2+ patients. Results Median follow up was 72.43 (IQR: 44.63–104.13) months. The 5-year Kaplan-Meier estimates of local relapse-free survival (LRFS) was 97.8%, regional-(RRFS) 98.6%, loco-regional- (LRRFS) 96.9%, distant- (DRFS) 96.6%, disease-free survival (DFS) 94.8% and overall survival (OS) 95.5%. Considering molecular subtypes, 5-year LRFS was: 99.8% for Luminal A, 96.7% for Luminal B Her2-, 94.1% for Luminal B Her2+, 87.9% for HR- Her2+, 95.1% for TNBC and 99.1% for in situ carcinoma. Conclusion While the overall estimated probability of LR within 5 years after WBHF-IMRT without boost is good (2.2%), molecular subtypes have a strong impact, despite MAb therapy in Her2+ patients, and CT for TNBC patients, and could be used as a parameter in deciding the boost prescription., Highlights • Hypofractionated three-weeks radiotherapy ensures good local control whitout boost. • In 1325 early stage breast cancers 5-year local relapse without boost was 2.2%. • Molecular subtypes have a strong impact on estimated probability of local relapse. • 5-year local control (LC) was 99.8% for Luminal A vs 87.9% for HR- Her2+. • 5-year LC was 96.7% for Luminal B Her2-, 94.1% for Luminal B Her2+, 95.1% for TNBC.
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- 2021
50. The 'Healthcare Workers’ Wellbeing [Benessere Operatori]' Project: A Longitudinal Evaluation of Psychological Responses of Italian Healthcare Workers during the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Gaia Perego, Federica Cugnata, Chiara Brombin, Francesca Milano, Emanuele Preti, Rossella Di Pierro, Chiara De Panfilis, Fabio Madeddu, Valentina Elisabetta Di Mattei, Perego, Gaia, Cugnata, Federica, Brombin, Chiara, Milano, Francesca, Preti, Emanuele, Di Pierro, Rossella, De Panfilis, Chiara, Madeddu, Fabio, Di Mattei, Valentina Elisabetta, Perego, G, Cugnata, F, Brombin, C, Milano, F, Preti, E, Di Pierro, R, De Panfilis, C, Madeddu, F, and Di Mattei, V
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healthcare worker ,Random Effects/ Expectation Maximization (RE-EM) Tree ,mixed effects model ,COVID-19 ,healthcare workers ,mental health ,Random Effects/Expectation Maximization (RE-EM) Tree ,General Medicine - Abstract
Background: COVID-19 forced healthcare workers to work in unprecedented and critical circumstances, exacerbating already-problematic and stressful working conditions. The “Healthcare workers’ wellbeing (Benessere Operatori)” project aimed at identifying psychological and personal factors, influencing individuals’ responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: 291 healthcare workers took part in the project by answering an online questionnaire twice (after the first wave of COVID-19 and during the second wave) and completing questions on socio-demographic and work-related information, the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale-21, the Insomnia Severity Index, the Impact of Event Scale-Revised, the State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-2, the Maslach Burnout Inventory, the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support, and the Brief Cope. Results: Higher levels of worry, worse working conditions, a previous history of psychiatric illness, being a nurse, older age, and avoidant and emotion-focused coping strategies seem to be risk factors for healthcare workers’ mental health. High levels of perceived social support, the attendance of emergency training, and problem-focused coping strategies play a protective role. Conclusions: An innovative, and more flexible, data mining statistical approach (i.e., a regression trees approach for repeated measures data) allowed us to identify risk factors and derive classification rules that could be helpful to implement targeted interventions for healthcare workers.
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- 2022
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