312 results on '"Paolo D. Pigatto"'
Search Results
2. Prevalence and risk factors for multiple chemical sensitivity in Australia
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Paolo D. Pigatto and Gianpaolo Guzzi
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Medicine - Abstract
The author found that the prevalence of diagnosed multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) in Australia was 6.5%. No mention is made about the role of exposure to metals. Exposure to metallic elements has been associated with MCS. Metals are a well-known primary risk factor for idiopathic environmental intolerance. It is important that the medical approach designed to reduce the risk factors for MCS includes preventive strategies of metal exposure. Keywords: Adults, Frequency, Hyperosmia, Idiopathic environmental intolerance, Metal allergens, Metallic elements, Metals, Metals toxicity, Toxicants
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. T Cell Subpopulations in the Physiopathology of Fibromyalgia: Evidence and Perspectives
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Giuseppe Banfi, Marco Diani, Paolo D. Pigatto, and Eva Reali
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environmental sensitivity illnesses ,immune responses ,neuroimmunology ,inflammation ,pain ,musculoskeletal diseases ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Fibromyalgia is one of the most important “rheumatic” disorders, after osteoarthritis. The etiology of the disease is still not clear. At the moment, the most defined pathological mechanism is the alteration of central pain pathways, and emotional conditions can trigger or worsen symptoms. Increasing evidence supports the role of mast cells in maintaining pain conditions such as musculoskeletal pain and central sensitization. Importantly, mast cells can mediate microglia activation through the production of proinflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β, IL-6, and TNFα. In addition, levels of chemokines and proinflammatory cytokines are enhanced in serum and could contribute to inflammation at systemic level. Despite the well-characterized relationship between the nervous system and inflammation, the mechanism that links the different pathological features of fibromyalgia, including stress-related manifestations, central sensitization, and dysregulation of the innate and adaptive immune responses is largely unknown. This review aims to provide an overview of the current understanding of the role of adaptive immune cells, in particular T cells, in the physiopathology of fibromyalgia. It also aims at linking the latest advances emerging from basic science to envisage new perspectives to explain the role of T cells in interconnecting the psychological, neurological, and inflammatory symptoms of fibromyalgia.
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- 2020
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4. T Cell Hierarchy in the Pathogenesis of Psoriasis and Associated Cardiovascular Comorbidities
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Fabio Casciano, Paolo D. Pigatto, Paola Secchiero, Roberto Gambari, and Eva Reali
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psoriasis ,skin ,inflammation ,psoriatic arthritis ,TCR repertoire ,comorbidities ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
The key role of T cells in the pathogenesis of cutaneous psoriasis has been well described in the last decade and the knowledge of the relative role of the different subsets of T cells in psoriasis pathogenesis has considerably evolved. Now, it is clear that IL-17A-producing T cells, including Th17/Tc17, have a central role in the pathogenesis of cutaneous psoriasis and therapies blocking the IL-17A pathway show high clinical efficacy. By contrast, the contribution of IFNγ-producing T cells has progressively become less clear because of the lack of efficacy of anti-IFNγ antibodies in clinical studies. In parallel, the role of CD8+ T cells specific for self-antigens has been revived and increasing evidence now indicates that in psoriatic skin the majority CD8+ T cells are present in the form of epidermal tissue-resident memory T cells. In the last years it also emerged the possibility of a contribution of T cell recirculation in the pathogenesis of psoriasis and its systemic manifestations. The aim of this review is to define a hierarchy for the different subsets of T cells in the T cell-mediated inflammatory cascade in psoriatic skin. This analysis will possibly help to distinguish the subsets that initiate the disease, those involved in the establishment of the self-sustaining amplification loop that leads to the cutaneous clinical manifestations and finally the subsets that act as downstream players in established lesions. Specific T cell subpopulations finally will be considered for their possible role in propagating inflammation at distant sites and for representing a link with systemic inflammation and cardiovascular comorbidities.
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Exposure to metallic mercury and contact dermatitis Exposição ao mercúrio metálico e dermatite de contato
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Paolo D. Pigatto, Chiara Marsili, and Gianpaolo Guzzi
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Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Facial atopic dermatitis may be exacerbated by masks: insights from a multicenter, teledermatology, prospective study during COVID-19 pandemic
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Giovanni, Damiani, Renata, Finelli, Khalaf, Kridin, Alessia, Pacifico, Nicola L, Bragazzi, Piergiorgio, Malagoli, Gabriella, Fabbrocini, Marica, Annunziata, Ayman, Grada, Pierachille, Santus, Paola, Savoia, Laura C, Gironi, Alessandra, Buja, Dennis, Linder, and Paolo D, Pigatto
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Infectious Diseases ,Dermatology - Abstract
Patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) display a defective skin barrier, consequently they may experience inflammatory flares with different exposures, including masks. Actually, beside scattering case reports, no study focused on the possible AD flaring due to masks.In this multicenter prospective study AD patients with facial manifestation were followed with teledermatology and evaluated by two board-certified dermatologists at the baseline (T0) and after 1 month (T1) in which patients started to wear masks6 hours per day. Demographics and clinical parameters, included and not limited to Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) and Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI), were carefully collected and analyzed.We enrolled 57 AD patients (M/F 28/29, 33.91 ± 12.26 yoa) that wore surgical masks (38 (66.7%)), community masks (11 (19.3%) and N95 (8 (14.0%)). Both DLQI and EASI increase during the time period (p0.0001). DLQI variation was not influenced by age, BMI, and gender, mask type used and AD therapy (p=0.99), whilst EASI variation was significantly influenced by BMI, gender, and therapy (p=0.004).Mask wearing may prove detrimental to patients with atopic eczema and the same may not necessarily be the case for asthma patients.
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- 2023
7. Masks trigger facial seborrheic dermatitis and psoriasis: evidence from a multicenter, case-control study during COVID-19 pandemic
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Giovanni, Damiani, Renata, Finelli, Khalaf, Kridin, Alessia, Pacifico, Alessandra, Buja, Nicola L, Bragazzi, Piergiorgio, Malagoli, Paola, Savoia, Laura C, Gironi, Ayman, Grada, Rosalynn R, Conic, Dennis, Linder, Giuseppe, Micali, and Paolo D, Pigatto
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Adult ,Male ,Infectious Diseases ,Case-Control Studies ,Masks ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Psoriasis ,Female ,Dermatology ,Middle Aged ,Pandemics ,Dermatitis, Seborrheic - Abstract
Wearing masks is an optimal preventive strategy during COVID-19 pandemic, but it may increase facial sebum production. However, few case reports have described seborrheic dermatitis (SeBD) and psoriasis (PsO) flares due to masks. Hence, we conducted a multicenter study to clarify the possibility of increased SeBD and PsO flares in association with mask wearing during the COVID-19 pandemic.This multicenter study enrolled patients with a diagnosis of facial SeBD and PsO. All dermatological consultations were conducted in teledermatology at baseline (T0) and after 1 month (T1) Of6 hours/day wearing mask. PsO patients were assessed using PsO Area and Severity Index (PASI) and self-administered PASI (SAPASI), whilst SeBD patients with symptom scale of seborrheic dermatitis' (SSSD) and seborrheic dermatitis area and severity index (SEDASI).A total of 33 (20 males, 13 females, average age 43.61±9.86) patients with PsO and 33 (20 males, 13 females, average age 44.00±8.58) with SeBD were enrolled. After 1 month, PsO patients displayed higher values of both PASI and SAPASI (P0.0001), while SeBD patients experienced a flare, as testified by the increment of both SSSD and SEDASI (P0.0001). Mask type did not seem to influence the flare severity.Masks remain an optimal preventive strategy during COVID-19 pandemic, but patients with PsO and SeBD may experience facial flares. Thus, therapeutic approach should be more aggressive in these groups of patients to counteract the triggering effect of masks.
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- 2022
8. COVID-19 first lockdown and outpatient hospital setting: a single center, real life study focusing on pattern changes in patients' ethnicities and treated dermatoses
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Laura C. GIRONI, Elia ESPOSTO, Roberto GIORGIONE, Elisa ZAVATTARO, Pamela FARINELLI, Mara GIORDANO, Simona MELLONE, Alessandra BUJA, Paolo D. PIGATTO, Giovanni DAMIANI, and Paola SAVOIA
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Infectious Diseases ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Communicable Disease Control ,Outpatients ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Dermatology ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Pandemics ,Skin Diseases ,Hospitals ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
During the first Italian lockdown period, the imponent amount of hospital COVID-19 patients forced the healthcare system to re-organize visits but no information are available on outpatient ethnical patterns. Here we evaluated healthcare management changes on dermatological outpatient non-surgical settings visits during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.In this retrospective study we collected data of scheduled, performed and not-performed visits, together with patients' characteristics (i.e., age, gender) with a particular attention for ethnicities among the outpatients accessing during the first Italian lockdown (March 5-April 30, 2020). Then, we compared these data with the corresponding ones in 2019 (before COVID-19 pandemic).During the Italian lockdown the dermatological department registered a great decrement (-83.5%, P0.001) in visits compared to the corresponding time period in 2019. Performed and scheduled visits to non-oncological stable patients together with emergency accesses to dermatology decreased. Non-Italian patients decreased accesses, especially the South East Asians (-70.4%) and North Africans (-90.0%).Hospitals policy and mass media deeply condition the public opinion, and this aspect may explain a different access to the hospital among non-Italian patients. Telemedicine should be promoted especially among non-Italian communities in Italy to overgo patients' skepticism and incentivize prevention and early treatment in dermatological conditions.
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- 2022
9. Comorbidities and treatment patterns in adult patients with atopic dermatitis: results from a nationwide multicenter study
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Tommaso Bianchelli, Ketty Peris, Nevena Skroza, R. Gallo, Viviana Piras, Caterina Foti, Maria Esposito, Franco Rongioletti, M C Fargnoli, Giuseppe Argenziano, Mark S. Talamonti, Silvia Ferrucci, Paolo D. Pigatto, N. Gori, L. Bolzano, A. Campitello, Paolo Amerio, Giulia Tonini, Annalisa Patrizi, Nicola Pimpinelli, S.P. Cannavò, Giuseppe Micali, Luca Bianchi, G. Malara, Monica Corazza, Ersilia Tolino, Anna Campanati, A. M. Offidani, Katharina Hansel, Aurora Parodi, Maria Concetta Potenza, Gabriella Fabbrocini, A. Borghi, Camilla Loi, F. Prigano, Luca Stingeni, Francesco Cusano, Marco Romanelli, Maria Letizia Musumeci, Paolo Romita, Giulia Calabrese, Simona Tavecchio, Giovanni Pellacani, L. Di Costanzo, Rosaria Gesuita, Campanati, A., Bianchelli, T., Gesuita, R., Foti, C., Malara, G., Micali, G., Amerio, P., Rongioletti, F., Corazza, M., Patrizi, A., Peris, K., Pimpinelli, N., Parodi, A., Fargnoli, M. C., Cannavo, S. P., Pigatto, P., Pellacani, G., Ferrucci, S. M., Argenziano, G., Cusano, F., Fabbrocini, G., Stingeni, L., Potenza, M. C., Romanelli, M., Bianchi, L., Offidani, A., Romita, P., Musumeci, M. L., Piras, V., Borghi, A., Loi, C., Gori, N., Prigano, F., Gallo, R., Esposito, M., Campitello, A., Bolzano, L., Tavecchio, S., Calabrese, G., Di Costanzo, L., Hansel, K., Skroza, N., Tolino, E., Tonini, G., and Talamonti, M.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Biologic ,Epidemiology ,Comorbidity ,Dermatology ,Biologics ,Severity of Illness Index ,NO ,Dermatitis, Atopic ,Adult atopic dermatitis, Biologics, Comorbidity, Epidemiology, Immunosuppressants, Treatment ,Young Adult ,Adrenal Cortex Hormones ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Young adult ,Retrospective Studies ,Immunosuppressant ,Adult atopic dermatitis ,Asthma ,Sleep disorder ,business.industry ,Adult atopic dermatiti ,Medical record ,General Medicine ,Atopic dermatitis ,Immunosuppressants ,Treatment ,medicine.disease ,body regions ,Settore MED/35 - MALATTIE CUTANEE E VENEREE ,business ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,Cohort study - Abstract
Adult atopic dermatitis (adult AD) is a systemic inflammatory disorder, whose relationship with immune-allergic and metabolic comorbidities is not well established yet. Moreover, treatment of mild-to-moderate and severe atopic dermatitis needs standardization among clinicians. The aim of this study was to evaluate the distribution of comorbidities, including metabolic abnormalities, rhinitis, conjunctivitis, asthma, alopecia and sleep disturbance, according to severity of adult AD, and describe treatments most commonly used by Italian dermatologists. Retrospective, observational, nationwide study of adult patients over a 2-year period was performed. Clinical and laboratory data were obtained through review of medical records of patients aged ≥ 18 years, followed in 23 Italian National reference centres for atopic dermatitis between September 2016 and September 2018. The main measurements evaluated were disease severity, atopic and metabolic comorbidities, treatment type and duration. Six-hundred and eighty-four adult patients with AD were included into the study. Atopic, but not metabolic conditions, except for hypertension, were significantly associated with having moderate-to-severe AD in young adult patients. Disease duration was significantly associated with disease severity. Oral corticosteroids and cyclosporine were the most widely used immunosuppressant. Our study seems confirm the close relationship between adult AD and other atopic conditions, further long-term cohort studies on patients affected by adult AD need to be performed to evaluate the complex relationship between adult AD disease severity and metabolic comorbidities.
- Published
- 2021
10. Ribes nigrum in atopic dermatitis: a pilot study
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Paolo D. PIGATTO and Anna CAMMISA
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Dermatology - Published
- 2022
11. The international EAACI/GA²LEN/EuroGuiDerm/APAAACI guideline for the definition, classification, diagnosis, and management of urticaria
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Corinna Dressler, Paulo Ricardo Criado, Christian Vestergaard, Alexander Kapp, Alexander Nast, Luca Stingeni, Martine Grosber, R. Y. Meshkova, Barbara Ballmer-Weber, Bettina Wedi, Aharon Kessel, Paolo D. Pigatto, Frank Siebenhaar, Jonathan A. Bernstein, Clive Grattan, Angèle Soria, Torsten Zuberbier, Andrea Szegedi, Riccardo Asero, Petra Staubach-Renz, Désirée Larenas-Linnemann, Knut Brockow, Allen P. Kaplan, Charlotte G. Mortz, Mohamed Abuzakouk, Michihiro Hide, Daniel Micallef, Margarida Gonçalo, S. Aquilina, María Isabel Rojo Gutiérrez, Herberto José Chong Neto, Gordon Sussman, Tabi A. Leslie, Aslı Gelincik, Peter Schmid-Grendelmeier, Zahava Vadasz, Amir Hamzah Abdul Latiff, Hanna Siiskonen, Markus Magerl, Simon Francis Thomsen, Eckard Hamelmann, Sarbjit S. Saini, A. Giménez-Arnau, Luis Felipe Ensina, Bulent Enis Sekerel, Hanneke Oude-Elberink, I V Danilycheva, Zenon Brzoza, Hector Ratti Sisa, Michael Makris, Kiran Godse, Jacques Hébert, Antti Lauerma, Moshe Ben-Shoshan, Luz Fonacier, Emek Kocatürk, Zuotao Zhao, Kanokvalai Kulthanan, Matthew Gaskins, Carsten Bindslev-Jensen, Diane Baker, Krisztián Gáspár, Martin K. Church, Marcus Maurer, Ruby Pawankar, Martin Metz, Christine Bangert, Groningen Research Institute for Asthma and COPD (GRIAC), Publica, Gerontology, Surgical clinical sciences, Skin function and permeability, and Dermatology
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Evidence-based practice ,hives ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immunology ,education ,Dermatology ,Angioedema/diagnosis ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,urticaria ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Excellence ,immune system diseases ,evidence-based ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Immunology and Allergy ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Humans ,itch ,European union ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,wheal ,Asthma ,media_common ,Angioedema ,business.industry ,angioedema ,Consensus conference ,GUIDELINES ,consensus ,evidence2̆010based ,mast cell ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,ddc ,030228 respiratory system ,Family medicine ,Chronic Disease ,Quality of Life ,Urticaria/diagnosis ,medicine.symptom ,business ,600 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften::610 Medizin und Gesundheit::610 Medizin und Gesundheit - Abstract
This update and revision of the international guideline for urticaria was developed following the methods recommended by Cochrane and the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) working group. It is a joint initiative of the Dermatology Section of the European Academy of Allergology and Clinical Immunology (EAACI), the Global Allergy and Asthma European Network (GALEN) and its Urticaria and Angioedema Centers of Reference and Excellence (UCAREs and ACAREs), the European Dermatology Forum (EDF; EuroGuiDerm), and the Asia Pacific Association of Allergy, Asthma and Clinical Immunology with the participation of 64 delegates of 50 national and international societies and from 31 countries. The consensus conference was held on 3 December 2020. This guideline was acknowledged and accepted by the European Union of Medical Specialists (UEMS). Urticaria is a frequent, mast-cell-driven disease that presents with wheals, angioedema, or both. The lifetime prevalence for acute urticaria is approximately 20%. Chronic urticaria, i.e. chronic spontaneous urticaria and chronic inducible urticaria, is disabling, impairs quality of life, and affects performance at work and school. This updated version of the international guideline for urticaria covers the definition and classification of urticaria and outlines expert-guided and evidence-based diagnostic and therapeutic approaches for the different subtypes of urticaria. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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- 2022
12. Antihistamines-refractory chronic pruritus in psoriatic patients undergoing biologics: aprepitant vs antihistamine double dosage, a real-world data
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Marco Fiore, Paolo D. Pigatto, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Alessia Pacifico, Rosalynn R.Z. Conic, Renata Finelli, Fabio Silvio Taccone, Khalaf Kridin, Lorenzo Peluso, Piergiorgio Malagoli, and Giovanni Damiani
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Sleepiness ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Rupatadine ,Histamine Antagonists ,Dermatology ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psoriatic arthritis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Refractory ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Aprepitant ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,Biological Products ,business.industry ,Pruritus ,Epworth Sleepiness Scale ,Arthritis, Psoriatic ,medicine.disease ,Histamine H1 Antagonists ,Quality of Life ,Antihistamine ,business ,Real world data ,medicine.drug ,Chronic pruritus - Abstract
Background Psoriasis-related pruritus (PRP) in patients under systemic treatment is challenging. The risk to switch anti-psoriatic drugs and to lose response to previous therapy is high, thus dermatologists prefer to add an anti-pruritic agent. Objectives To evaluate the effect of anti-histamines and aprepitant in treating PPR of psoriatic patients undergoing systemic anti-psoriatic therapies. Methods A pilot observational open-label study was performed on responsive psoriatic patients with PPR under treatment. Initial therapy included oral rupatadine (10 mg/day for 30 days). In case of the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) was above 14, patients were switched to aprepitant (80 mg/day for 7 days), otherwise, rupatadine dosage was increased (20 mg/day for 7 days). Clinical evaluation was performed at the baseline (T0) and after 7 days (T7). Results We enrolled 40 patients with PPR, 20 in each group. Age, gender, Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and the itch - VAS, were matched. At T7, aprepitant displayed higher improvements than rupatadine (itch - VAS = 4 [3-5] vs 8.5 [8-9], p Conclusions Aprepitant may be a valid alternative in PPR patients with ESS >14 under antihistamines.
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- 2020
13. Gut microbiota and nutrient interactions with skin in psoriasis: A comprehensive review of animal and human studies
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Alessia Pacifico, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Giovanni Damiani, Aniello Alfieri, Danica Tiodorovic, Sveva Di Franco, Thomas S. McCormick, Paolo D. Pigatto, Sebastiano Leone, and Marco Fiore
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Exposome ,Review ,Gut flora ,digestive system ,03 medical and health sciences ,fluids and secretions ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nutrient ,Psoriasis ,Medicine ,Gut ,integumentary system ,biology ,Human studies ,business.industry ,Microbiota ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Endotypes ,Nutrients ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,stomatognathic diseases ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business - Abstract
The intestinal tract (i.e., the gut), is where the body’s nutrients are absorbed, and is simultaneously inhabited by numerous microbes. An increasing body of literature suggests a crucial role for the gut microbiome in modulating systemic inflammatory disease. Psoriasis is a chronic systemic inflammatory disease and its pathogenesis is related to the interaction between genetic susceptibility, immune response and environmental triggers. The omics era has allowed physicians to assess different aspects of psoriasis pathogenesis such as the microbiome, infectome, and autoinfectome. Furthermore, diet appears to play an important role in modulating disease activity, perhaps by influencing gut microbes. Given these observations, we aimed to summarize the current knowledge regarding skin-microbiome-gut-nutrients and psoriasis.
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- 2020
14. Therapeutic management of chronic spontaneous urticaria in clinical practice: results from a pilot survey
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Silvia Ferrucci, Paolo D. Pigatto, Antonio Cristaudo, Eustachio Nettis, Patrizia Pepe, Angelo V. Marzano, Maria Teresa Fierro, Riccardo Asero, Annalisa Patrizi, Luca Stingeni, Ornella De Pità, Gino A. Vena, Giampiero Girolomoni, Nunzio Crimi, Giovanni Genovese, Annamaria Offidani, Caterina Foti, Nicoletta Cassano, and Paolo Dapavo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Urticaria ,Pilot survey ,MEDLINE ,Dermatology ,Omalizumab ,Histamines antagonists ,Group B ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Health care ,Chronic urticaria, Physicians’ practice patterns, Histamines antagonists, Adrenal cortex hormones, Omalizumab, Cyclosporine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Medical prescription ,business.industry ,Adrenal cortex hormones ,Cyclosporine ,Chronic urticaria ,Clinical Practice ,Infectious Diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Family medicine ,Chronic Disease ,Physicians’ practice patterns ,business - Abstract
Background The therapeutic approaches to patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) differ among health care professionals and may be influenced by many factors. Objectives This cross-sectional survey was aimed at evaluating physicians' attitudes regarding therapeutic management of CSU on clinical practice. Methods A study-specific questionnaire was administered to a group of physicians (n=21) with a specialist interest in CSU from different areas of Italy (Group A) and also to other physicians (n=25) who manage CSU only occasionally in their clinical activity (Group B). Results In case of ineffectiveness of second-generation antihistamines at standard doses, higher doses of the same drug were always or frequently prescribed by most physicians in both groups, and 64% in group B and one third in group A usually increased the dose up to twice. Old-generation antihistamines were never used in clinical practice by 14% of survey participants in group A and 24% in group B, with the remaining physicians reporting rare or occasional uses. The prescription of systemic corticosteroids appeared to be more common among physicians in group B. The question concerning the use of alternative drugs in refractory CSU produced different answers between the two groups. Costs and access to specialist reference centers were indicated as the most important barriers to the use of medications different from antihistamines. Conclusions These preliminary results suggest that therapeutic approaches to CSU seem to be heterogeneous in clinical practice and could be at least in part conditioned by the different medical settings where physicians usually work.
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- 2022
15. Nanotechnology meets atopic dermatitis: Current solutions, challenges and future prospects. Insights and implications from a systematic review of the literature
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Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Paolo D. Pigatto, Giovanni Damiani, and Roberto Eggenhöffner
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Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0206 medical engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Article ,Biomaterials ,Nanodermatology ,medicine ,lcsh:TA401-492 ,Nanobiotechnologies ,Available drugs ,Intensive care medicine ,Adverse effect ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,media_common ,Atopic dermatitis ,business.industry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,medicine.disease ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Clinical trial ,Safety profile ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Exudative eczema ,lcsh:Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Atopic dermatitis is a chronic, relapsing, non-contiguous, exudative eczema/dermatitis, which represents a complex, multi-factorial disorder, due to an impairment of the stratum corneum barrier. Currently available drugs have a low skin bioavailability and may give rise to severe adverse events. Nanotechnologies, including nano-particles, liposomes, nano-gels, nano-mixtures, nano-emulsions and other nano-carriers, offer unprecedented solutions to these issues, enabling: i) the management of different clinical forms of atopic dermatitis, especially the recalcitrant ones, i) a better bio-availability and trans-dermal drug targeted delivery at the inflammation site, ii) dose control, iii) significant improvements both in clinical symptoms and immune responses, iv) with less adverse events being reported and a better safety profile. However, some nano-sized structures could amplify and even worsen symptoms in particularly susceptible individuals. Furthermore, most studies included in the present systematic review have been conducted in-vitro or in-vivo, with few randomized controlled clinical trials (RCTs). Future investigations should adopt this design in order to enable scholars achieving robust findings and evidence. Therefore, given the above-mentioned shortcomings, further research in the field is urgently warranted., Graphical abstract The effects of nanobiotechnologies-based pharmaceutics in atopic dermatitis.Image 1, Highlights • Atopic dermatitis is a chronic, relapsing eczema/dermatitis, due to an impairment of the stratum corneum barrier. • Currently available drugs have a low skin bioavailability and may give rise to severe adverse events. • Nanotechnologies offer unprecedented solutions, enabling the management of different clinical forms of atopic dermatitis.
- Published
- 2019
16. Diagnosis and management of moderate to severe atopic dermatitis in adolescents. A Consensus by the Italian Society of Dermatology and Venereology (SIDeMaST), the Italian Association of Hospital Dermatologists and Public Health (ADOI), the Italian Association of Hospital and Territorial Allergists and Immunologists (AAIITO), the Italian Society of Allergy, Asthma and Clinical Immunology (SIAAIC), the Italian Society of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology (SIAIP), the Italian Society of Allergological, Occupational and Environmental Dermatology (SIDAPA), and the Italian Society of Pediatric Dermatology (SIDerP)
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Calzavara-Pinton, Piergiacomo, Belloni Fortina, Anna, Bonamonte, Domenico, Marseglia, Gian Luigi, Miraglia Del Giudice, Michele, Musarra, Antonino, Nettis, Eustachio, Neri, Iria, Patruno, Cataldo, Stingeni, Luca, Peris, Ketty, Giuseppe Argenziano, Anna G Burroni, Antonio Costanzo, Antonio Cristaudo, Francesco Cusano, May El Hachem, Gabriella Fabbrocini, Silvia M Ferrucci, Cesare Filippeschi, Caterina Foti, Elena Galli, Giampiero Girolomoni, Amelia Licari, Giovanna Malara, Giuseppe Micali, Luigi Naldi, Annamaria Offidani, Michela Ortoncelli, Michele Panzone, Aurora Parodi, Annalisa Patrizi, Giovanni Pellacani, Diego G Peroni, Paolo D Pigatto, Marco Romanelli, Franco Rongioletti, Gianenrico Senna, Calzavara-Pinton, Piergiacomo, Belloni Fortina, Anna, Bonamonte, Domenico, Marseglia, Gian Luigi, Miraglia Del Giudice, Michele, Musarra, Antonino, Nettis, Eustachio, Neri, Iria, Patruno, Cataldo, Stingeni, Luca, Peris, Ketty, Giuseppe, Argenziano, Anna, G Burroni, Antonio, Costanzo, Antonio, Cristaudo, Francesco, Cusano, May El Hachem, Fabbrocini, Gabriella, Silvia, M Ferrucci, Cesare, Filippeschi, Caterina, Foti, Elena, Galli, Giampiero, Girolomoni, Amelia, Licari, Giovanna, Malara, Giuseppe, Micali, Luigi, Naldi, Annamaria, Offidani, Michela, Ortoncelli, Michele, Panzone, Aurora, Parodi, Annalisa, Patrizi, Giovanni, Pellacani, Diego, G Peroni, Paolo, D Pigatto, Marco, Romanelli, Franco, Rongioletti, and Gianenrico, Senna
- Abstract
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic inflammatory disease with increasing global incidence, which has a multifactorial pathogenesis and a variable expressivity. Clinical features of AD are different in adults compared to children, but it is well recognized the substantial impact of the disease on patients' quality of life at any age. Indeed, little is known about AD in adolescence, a period of life generally associated with high psychological burden and vulnerability to depression. Guidelines for the management of AD are available for both children and adults but specific guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of AD in adolescents are lacking. Seven Italian scientific societies of dermatologists, allergists, and pediatric allergists joined in a specific meeting to provide practical guidance for the diagnosis and management of moderate-to-severe adolescent AD suitable for the Italian clinical practice. Through a modified Delphi procedure, consensus was reached by 59 Italian experts in the management of AD on 20 statements covering five areas of interest about adolescent AD, including disease complexity, burden and social impact, diagnosis and definition of severity, current treatments, and new biologic therapies. This paper reports recommendations for the diagnosis and management of AD specifically in adolescents, pointing out some peculiar clinical features and focusing on the choice of medications. Dupilumab, the first biologic approved for the treatment of adolescents with AD, represents a useful treatment option due to its efficacy and reassuring safety profile.
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- 2020
17. Switching infliximab in psoriatic patients during COVID‐19 pandemics: A real‐life retrospective study comparing intra‐versus interclass switching strategies
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Paolo D. Pigatto, G. Odorici, Giovanni Pellacani, Francesca Farnetani, Giovanni Damiani, Andrea Conti, and Roberta Ruggeri
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Short Report ,COVID-19 pandemic ,Dermatology ,Dermatological referral ,biologics ,infliximab ,interclass switching ,intraclass switching ,psoriasis ,switching ,teledermatology ,Psoriasis ,Internal medicine ,Pandemic ,Adalimumab ,medicine ,Humans ,Contraindication ,Pandemics ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,Retrospective cohort study ,COVID‐19 pandemic ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Infliximab ,humanities ,Treatment Outcome ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
During this pandemic, dermatological infusion centers were partially unavailable, suspended or even reconverted to guest COVID‐19 patients, consequently infliximab (IFX) infusions became challenging for their both logistic arrangement and also for patients' COVID‐19 phobia. This 48 weeks follow‐up retrospective observational study included 37 PsO patients that underwent IFX SB2 during pandemic in two primary dermatological referral centers. In 23 (62.1%) we had to switch from IFX to other biologics, not motivated by adverse reactions, contraindication or even loss of response but only to pandemic related conditions. Nine patients underwent interclass switching and 15 underwent intraclass switching; interestingly 2 patients that underwent adalimumab SB‐5 switched back to IFX. Interclass switching was privileged in elder patients and smokers. All patients at week 48 achieved PASI 100. Intra‐ and interclass switchings are both safe and effective strategies in psoriatic patients with COVID‐19 phobia and/or difficulties to undergo infliximab infusions.
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- 2021
18. Diet-Related Phototoxic Reactions in Psoriatic Patients Undergoing Phototherapy: Results from a Multicenter Prospective Study
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Paolo D. Pigatto, Egeria Scoditti, Antonio Cristaudo, Rosalynn R Z Conic, Giovanni Damiani, Aldo Morrone, Steven R. Feldman, Khalaf Kridin, Paolo Iacovelli, Alessia Pacifico, Marco Ardigò, Sergio Garbarino, Sara di Gregorio, and Ayman Grada
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Adult ,Male ,Diet, Vegan ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Erythema ,Skin type ,precision medicine ,efficacy ,exposome ,exposures ,Gastroenterology ,Article ,Internal medicine ,Psoriasis ,Humans ,NB-UVB ,Medicine ,TX341-641 ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Photosensitizing Agents ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,Diet, Vegetarian ,vegans ,Potential effect ,vegetarians ,Phytophotodermatitis ,omnivores ,Ultraviolet b ,psoriasis ,medicine.disease ,Italy ,inflammation ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,diet ,Dermatitis, Phototoxic ,Food Science ,Phototoxic reactions ,phototherapy - Abstract
Vegans and vegetarians often consume foods containing photosensitizers capable of triggering phytophotodermatitis. The potential effect of vegan and vegetarian diets on the response of psoriatic patients undergoing phototherapy is not well characterized. We assessed clinical outcomes of vegan, vegetarian and omnivore adult psoriatic patients undergoing band ultraviolet B phototherapy (NB-UVB). In this multicenter prospective observational study, we enrolled 119 adult, psoriatic patients, of whom 40 were omnivores, 41 were vegetarians and 38 were vegans, with phototherapy indication. After determining the minimum erythemal dose (MED), we performed NB-UVB sessions for 8 weeks. The first irradiation dosage was 70.00% of the MED, then increased by 20.00% (no erythema) or by 10.00% (presence of erythema) until a maximum single dose of 3 J/cm2 was reached and constantly maintained. All the enrolled patients completed the 8 weeks of therapy. Severe erythema was present in 16 (42.11%) vegans, 7 (17.07%) vegetarians and 4 (10.00%) omnivores (p <, 0.01). MED was lowest among vegans (21.18 ± 4.85 J/m2), followed by vegetarians (28.90 ± 6.66 J/m2) and omnivores (33.63 ± 4.53 J/m2, p <, 0.01). Patients with severe erythema were more likely to have a high furocumarin intake (OR 5.67, 95% CI 3.74–8.61, p <, 0.01). Vegans consumed the highest amount of furocumarin-rich foods. A model examining erythema, adjusted for gender, age, skin type, MED, phototherapy type, number of phototherapies and furocumarin intake, confirmed that vegans had a lower number of treatments. Vegans had more frequent severe erythema from NB-UVB, even after adjustment of the phototherapy protocol for their lower MED. Assessing diet information and adapting the protocol for vegan patients may be prudent.
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- 2021
19. Bilateral Optic Disc Edema in a Patient with Lead Poisoning
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Gianpaolo Guzzi and Paolo D. Pigatto
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Ophthalmology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Letter to the editor ,business.industry ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,medicine ,RE1-994 ,medicine.disease ,business ,Letter to Editor ,Optic Disc Edema ,Lead poisoning - Abstract
This is a Letter to the Editor and does not have an abstract. Please download the PDF or view the article HTML.
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- 2021
20. COVID‐19 vaccines do not trigger psoriasis flares in patients with psoriasis treated with apremilast
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Giovanni Damiani, P Malagoli, Paolo D. Pigatto, A d'Arino, and Alessia Pacifico
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2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Dermatology ,medicine.disease ,Vaccination ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Psoriasis ,Correspondence ,medicine ,Apremilast ,business ,Letter to the Editor ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Although COVID-19 vaccination is warmly suggested for psoriatic patients by several dermatological societies worldwide, only a recently published Italian case-series has sustained a safe and effective role of the vaccine in this patients' subset. Remarkably, vaccines information highlights that limited data are present for immunosuppressed patients and the vaccination should be performed in agreement with the vaccinator.
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- 2021
21. Psoriatic and psoriatic arthritis patients with and without jet-lag: does it matter for disease severity scores? Insights and implications from a pilot, prospective study
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Piergiorgio Malagoli, Mohammad Adawi, Rosalynn R.Z. Conic, Abdulla Watad, Colin M. Shapiro, Alessia Pacifico, Paolo D. Pigatto, Sergio Garbarino, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Giovanni Damiani, Vijay Kumar Chattu, and Danica Tiodorovic
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Visual analogue scale ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psoriatic arthritis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Disease severity ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Psoriasis ,Linear regression ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective cohort study ,Jet Lag Syndrome ,business.industry ,Arthritis, Psoriatic ,Dermatology Life Quality Index ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Circadian Rhythm ,Female ,Observational study ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Jet-lag may affect air-travelers crossing at least 2 time-zones and has several healthcare implications. It occurs when the human biological rhythms are out of synch with respect to the day-night cycle at the country destination. Its effect in psoriasis is missing. We aimed to evaluate the effect of Jet-lag in psoriatic patients’ management. METHODS: This is a prospective observational study that enrolled psoriatic patients that underwent a flight: patients who experienced jet-lag were compared to patients who did not experience jet-lag. Before the flight, a dermatologist recorded clinical and demographical data with particular attention to Psoriasis Area Severity Index (PASI) and Disease Activity in PSoriatic Arthritis (DAPSA). Patients performed Self-Administered Psoriasis Area Severity Index (SAPASI), the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) and the pruritus Visual Analog Scale (VAS) scores. After the flight, patients completed the SAPASI, DLQI and pruritus-VAS scores. RESULTS: The sample recruited comprised of 70 psoriatic patients aged 42.4 ± 9.7 years (median 42.5 years). Thirty (42.9%) were males, mean BMI was 25.5 ± 2.2 kg/m(2). Average disease duration was 15.2 ±7.1 years, and 20 (28.6%) subjects had developed PsA. Average hours of flight were 5.4 ±3.5 (median 3.5 hours), with 34 (48.6%) subjects reporting jet-lag. At the multivariate regression analysis, the change in the SAPASI score resulted correlated with jet-lag (regression coefficient 1.63, p = 0.0092), as well the change in the DLQI score (regression coefficient = 1.73, p = 0.0009), but no change on the pruritus VAS scale was found. CONCLUSIONS: The present study suggests that jet-lag may influence disease severity and DLQI scores, but not itch in psoriatic patients.
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- 2019
22. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease prevalence in an Italian cohort of patients with hidradenitis suppurativa: A multi-center retrospective analysis
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Rosalynn R.Z. Conic, Kristen Fajgenbaum, Paolo D. Pigatto, Sebastiano Leone, Emilio Berti, Alessia Pacifico, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Maria Caterina Pace, Vincenzo Bettoli, P. P. Poli, Carlo Maiorana, Giovanni Damiani, Piergiorgio Malagoli, Marco Fiore, Damiani, G., Leone, S., Fajgenbaum, K., Bragazzi, N. L., Pacifico, A., Conic, R. R. Z., Pigatto, P. D. M., Maiorana, C., Poli, P., Berti, E., Pace, M. C., Malagoli, P., Bettoli, V., and Fiore, M.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,End stage liver disease ,Observational Study ,digestive system ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Non-alcoholic fatty liver ,Internal medicine ,Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease ,medicine ,Retrospective analysis ,Hidradenitis suppurativa ,Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,humanities ,body regions ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cohort ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Non-alcoholic steatohepatiti - Abstract
BACKGROUND Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) includes two distinct conditions, with different histologic features and prognosis: non-alcoholic fatty liver (NAFL) and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). Furthermore, NASH is the more aggressive necro-inflammatory form, which may accumulate fibrosis and result in End stage liver disease (ESLD). NAFLD is also linked to systemic inflammatory conditions such as psoriasis. NAFLD is currently the most common cause of ESLD in Western countries, becoming a serious public health concern. Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a systemic inflammatory/autoinflammatory disease of the terminal follicular epithelium of the apocrine gland with a prevalence of 0.05% to 4.10%. Due to its systemic inflammatory behavior several comorbidities were recently associated, however liver ones were scarcely assessed. AIM To evaluate the prevalence and characteristics of NASH/NAFL in HS patients. METHODS This retrospective study is a sub-analysis of a larger study carried out in 4 Italian dermatological centers. In this cohort, there were 83 patients: 51 patients with HS only, 20 patients with HS/NAFL and 12 with HS/NASH. RESULTS Inflammatory comorbidities were present in 3.9% of HS only patients, 25% of HS/NAFL patients and 58.3% of HS/NASH patients (P < 0.001). Similarly, mean Autoinflammatory Disease Damage Index (ADDI) was significantly higher among patients with HS/NASH (5.3 ± 2.2, P < 0.001) compared to patients with HS/NAFL or HS only (2.8 ± 1.6 and 2.6 ± 1.4 respectively). Furthermore, ADDI correlates with IHS4 in HS, HS/NAFL and HS/NASH. Diabetic patients have higher Hurley score than not diabetic ones. Ultrasound examination was significantly different in the three groups. CONCLUSION HS patients displayed a high prevalence of NASH/NAFLD and ultrasound examination should be particularly addressed to patients that display high ADDI scores.
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- 2019
23. Immunogenicity, safety and tolerability of anti-pneumococcal vaccination in systemic lupus erythematosus patients: An evidence-informed and PRISMA compliant systematic review and meta-analysis
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Giovanni Damiani, Naim Mahroum, Mohammad Adawi, Abdulla Watad, Luca Giacomelli, Mahmud Mahamid, Roberto Eggenhöffner, Dennis McGonagle, Rosalynn R.Z. Conic, Hussein Mahagna, Charlie Bridgewood, Samaa Watad, Howard Amital, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, and Paolo D. Pigatto
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Systematic review and meta-analysis ,Immunology ,Anti-pneumococcal vaccination ,PRISMA guidelines ,Systemic lupus erythematosus ,Humans ,Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic ,Pneumococcal Vaccines ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Adverse effect ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,Lupus Erythematosus ,business.industry ,Immunogenicity ,Systemic ,medicine.disease ,Belimumab ,Vaccination ,030104 developmental biology ,Pneumococcal vaccine ,Tolerability ,Meta-analysis ,Pneumococcal pneumonia ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The immunological perturbations associated with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) put many patients at a higher risk of infections, including pneumococcal pneumonia. However, the uptake and utility of anti-pneumococcal vaccines in SLE patient is both controversial and not completely agreed upon. Indeed, several epidemiological studies of anti-pneumococcal vaccine safety and efficacy in SLE have reported short-term immunogenicity with elevated anti-pneumococcal antibody titres but inconsistent long-term findings, with some studies finding poor responses, mainly for long-term immune protection. Moreover, the safety and efficacy of the pneumococcal vaccine in SLE patients remains controversial due to the different types of anti-pneumococcal vaccines, and the heterogeneity of SLE patients. Several reviews addressing anti-pneumococcal vaccination in SLE patients exist, however, to the best of our knowledge, the present is the first systematic review and meta-analysis. To better understand the efficacy and safety of pneumococcal vaccination in SLE, a comprehensive literature search was performed identifying 18 studies, which have been included in the present systematic review and meta-analysis. All studies were designed as longitudinal investigations, 2, in particular, were of high quality, being randomized, double-blind trials (RCTs). Four studies had control groups. Total sample size included 601 participants. Vaccine immunogenicity in terms of subjects with protective antibody titers ranged from 36% to 97.6%. According to our systematic review and metanalysis, high erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), older age, earlier SLE onset, high disease activity, and immunosuppressive therapy were predictors of poor immunogenicity, although belimumab was found to have no significant impact. With regard to safety, no serious adverse events were found, with up to one third of cases reporting mild/low-grade complaints. In conclusion, due to the high risk of pneumococcal infection in SLE patients and given the safety and, at least partial, effectiveness, according to our systematic review and meta-analysis, in such patients, preventive strategies mainly by immunization, are required in all age groups and, in those needing immunosuppressive therapy, immunization should be given prior the initiation of the treatment. PROSPERO registration code CRD42018103605.
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- 2019
24. Patch testing of budesonide in Italy: The SIDAPA baseline series experience, 2018-2019
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Paolo D. Pigatto, Katharina Hansel, Rossella Marietti, Leonardo Bianchi, Cataldo Patruno, Viviana Piras, Luca Stingeni, Caterina Foti, Andrea G. Faraci, Silvia Mariel Ferrucci, Fabrizio Guarneri, Nicola Milanesi, Emanuela Martina, Maddalena Napolitano, Maria Letizia Musumeci, Rosella Gallo, Monica Corazza, Francesca Bruni, Marta Tramontana, Paolo Romita, and Donatella Schena
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Budesonide ,SIDAPA baseline series ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,budesonide ,corticosteroids ,patch test ,skin tests ,Population ,Socio-culturale ,Dermatology ,Negative association ,Cross Reactions ,Patch testing ,Dermatitis, Atopic ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Age Distribution ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Sex Distribution ,education ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,education.field_of_study ,Series (stratigraphy) ,business.industry ,Patch test ,Atopic dermatitis ,Middle Aged ,Patch Tests ,medicine.disease ,Dermatitis, Occupational ,Italy ,Dermatitis, Allergic Contact ,Corticosteroid ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Budesonide was included in the European Baseline Series in 2000 as the most suitable marker forcorticosteroid hypersensitivity. In the last two decades, a decreasing trend of budesonide allergy has been observed. Objectives To estimate the prevalence of positive patch test reactions to budesonide in a large, Italian patch test population, characterizing patients according to MOAHLFA index and evaluating the benefit with extended readings of budesonide patch test. Methods Retrospective analysis of patient demographics and patch test results over a 2-year period (2018-2019) was performed at 14 patch test clinics in Italy. Results Ninety out of 14 544 (0.6%) patients reacted to budesonide 0.01% pet.. Positive reactions were mild in 54.4% and late readings at day 7 showed new positive reactions in 37.8% of patients. The MOAHLFA index showed a significant positive association with male gender, atopic dermatitis, and age >40 years and a significant negative association with hand and face dermatitis. Conclusions We documented a low prevalence of budesonide allergy in Italy, confirming its decreasing trend recently reported in the literature. Nevertheless, budesonide needs to be maintained in the baseline series for its good ability to detect corticosteroid sensitization.
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- 2021
25. Can intermittent, <scp>time‐restricted</scp> circadian fasting modulate cutaneous severity of dermatological disorders? Insights from a multicenter, observational, prospective study
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Khalaf Kridin, Hamdi Chtourou, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Achraf Ammar, Hristina Kocic, Rosalynn R.Z. Conic, Khaled Trabelsi, Giovanni Damiani, Alessia Pacifico, Piergiorgio Malagoli, Sergio Garbarino, and Paolo D. Pigatto
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biological clock ,Dermatology ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Weight loss ,Internal medicine ,Intermittent fasting ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Circadian rhythm ,Dermatological disorders ,Prospective cohort study ,Skin ,business.industry ,Weight change ,Fasting ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Circadian Rhythm ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Observational study ,medicine.symptom ,business ,human activities - Abstract
The impact of intermittent circadian fasting (ICF) on skin disorders is far to be plenty deciphered. However, the circadian rhythm seems to exert a modulation on dermatoses severity, drug-response, and drug-related side effects. We aimed to evaluate ICF effect in the daily management of dermatological diseases. In this multicenter, prospective observational study we enrolled patients willing to undergo the 2018 ICF (from May 16 to June 14). Dermatoses severity were evaluated at the beginning of ICF (T0) and at the end of ICF (T1) by two independent board-certified dermatologists. Seventy-two patients suffering from different dermatoses volunteered to take part into the study. They displayed a mean age of 40.38 ± 12.46 years (median 41.0 years), 25 subjects were males (34.7% of the entire sample). The median weight change was 0 kg. The overall ICF effect size was -0.58 ([95% CI -0.83 to -0.33], P < .0001, medium effect size). Since in the present investigation no weight loss occurred, we could speculate that the impact of fasting in terms of improvements in the clinical symptoms could be rather due to the perturbation of the human biological clock. Despite our data remain preliminary, a chronobiological approach should be incorporated in the dermatological armamentarium.
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- 2021
26. COVID‐19 related masks increase severity of both acne (maskne) and rosacea (mask rosacea): Multi‐center, real‐life, telemedical, and observational prospective study
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Paola Savoia, Paolo D. Pigatto, Alessandra Buja, Renata Finelli, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Khalaf Kridin, Giovanni Damiani, Ayman Grada, and Laura Cristina Gironi
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,maskne ,Dermatology ,pandemics ,Imcas: Original Article ,rosacea due to masks ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,COVID‐19 ,Acne Vulgaris ,medicine ,Humans ,Imcas: Original Articles ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Acne ,SARS-CoV-2 ,mask rosacea ,business.industry ,Masks ,COVID-19 ,acne due to masks ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Rosacea ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Communicable Disease Control ,Quality of Life ,Facial Dermatosis ,Observational study ,business ,Grading scale - Abstract
Masks are essential for COVID‐19 prevention, but recently they were suggested to modify cutaneous facial microenvironment and trigger facial dermatoses. To evaluate mask‐related rosacea and acne (maskne) in untreated patients during lockdown. In this multi‐center, real‐life, observational prospective study, we enrolled stable, untreated acne and rosacea patients that wore masks during lockdown at least 6 h/day. They underwent two teledermatological consultations, at the baseline and after 6 weeks. Clinical, pharmacological, and psychological data were recorded. A total 66 patients, 30 (median age: 34.0 [30.25‐29.75] yoa) with acne and 36 patients (median age: 48 [43‐54] years) with rosacea, were enrolled in this study. After 6 weeks of mask and quarantine, patients with acne displayed an increased Global Acne Grading Scale (GAGS) score in mask‐related areas (P
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- 2021
27. Mask-induced Koebner phenomenon and its clinical phenotypes: A multicenter, real-life study focusing on 873 dermatological consultations during COVID-19 pandemics
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Magdalena Spałkowska, Khalaf Kridin, Alessia Pacifico, Alessandra Buja, Pierachille Santus, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Laura Cristina Gironi, Giovanni Damiani, Paola Savoia, and Paolo D. Pigatto
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Impetigo ,Population ,Koebner phenomenon ,Dermatology ,Vitiligo ,surgical masks ,Imcas: Original Article ,facial dermatoses ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,COVID‐19 ,Psoriasis ,medicine ,Koebner clinical phenotypes ,Humans ,COVID-19 ,Koebner mask induced ,personal protective equipment ,psoriasis ,telemedicine ,Prospective Studies ,Imcas: Original Articles ,education ,Pandemics ,Referral and Consultation ,education.field_of_study ,Molluscum contagiosum ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Masks ,General Medicine ,Atopic dermatitis ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,Italy ,Rosacea ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business - Abstract
During COVID‐19 pandemic, wearing masks for prevention became mandatory but evidence suggest that is also detrimental for skin. Although facial dermatoses due to masks increase in both healthcare workers and general population, a pathogenetic hypothesis remains still elusive. We aimed to evaluate the prevalence of dermatological consultations due to Koebner triggered dermatoses In this prospective, multicenter, real life study carried out in Italy from March 11th to December 11th 2020 during COVID‐19 pandemics, dermatological consultations (in‐person and telemedicine) to study the prevalence of Koebner (KB) phenomenon due to masks were evaluated. Boyd and Nelder classification was adopted for Koebner phenomenon and Bizzozero's for KB intensity. A total of 229/873 (26.2%) dermatological consultations were KB triggered dermatoses and lesions were located in mask‐covered ear area (76 [33.2%]), malar area (73 [31.8%]), perioral area (53 [23.1%]), and nose (27 [11.8%]). The first KB category grouped 142 patients (psoriasis, vitiligo, maskne, and mask rosacea), the second one 24 (warts, molluscum contagiosum, and impetigo), the third one 46 (atopic dermatitis), and the fourth one 17 (eczema). Among previously KB negative psoriatic patients that became KB positive, 9/13 (69.2%) had discontinued or modified the prescribed antipsoriatic treatment. Mask‐related Koebner phenomenon is an important clinical sign to orient clinician's therapeutic protocols during COVID‐19 pandemic, especially in patients with psoriasis.
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- 2021
28. It is never too late to treat chronic spontaneous urticaria with omalizumab: Real-life data from a multicenter observational study focusing on elderly patients
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Giovanni Damiani, Emanuela Martina, Paolo D. Pigatto, Teresa Grieco, Annamaria Offidani, and Caterina Foti
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urticaria ,Dermatology ,Omalizumab ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Anti-Allergic Agents ,Medicine ,Humans ,Chronic Urticaria ,Adverse effect ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Regimen ,Treatment Outcome ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Chronic Disease ,Quality of Life ,Observational study ,Metabolic syndrome ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic spontaneous urticaria might affect elderly patients, causing a serious impairment of their quality of life. The therapeutic management of the elderly patient is challenging; in fact, the first-line recommended therapy for symptom control are antihistamines, that may have interactions or increased risk of side effects in patients with comorbidities and poly-pharmacological regimen. Omalizumab is the first biological drug approved for chronic spontaneous urticaria resistant to antihistamines. Real-life data focusing on patients > 65 years old (yoa) treated with omalizumab are rare. METHODS: In our retrospective study, we evaluated the efficacy and safety of this biologic therapy in patients over 65yoa. We performed Urticaria Activity Score-7 (UAS-7) in order to evaluate the efficacy of omalizumab and the time of remission. We collected any adverse event related to the treatment. Moreover, we investigated the presence of comorbidities and their impact on the efficacy of omalizumab. RESULTS: 63 patients, with a mean age of 72.3 ± 5.6 years, range: 65-89) were enrolled. Of 63 subjects, 23 (36.5%) had an "early complete response" profile, which means the achievement of a UAS7 score of "0" within the first 7 days of therapy. The most frequent comorbidity was hypertension, which affected 26/63 (41.3%) patients; no adverse events were reported. No significant correlations were found between treatment effectiveness and comorbidities. CONCLUSIONS: omalizumab is a safe and effective therapy also in elderly patients with multiple comorbidities. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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- 2021
29. Chronic spontaneous urticaria in clinical practice: a pilot survey about attitudes and perceptions on assessment, diagnostic work-up and dietary management
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Antonio Cristaudo, Annamaria Offidani, Giovanni Genovese, Paolo Dapavo, Silvia Ferrucci, Eustachio Nettis, Annalisa Patrizi, Paolo D. Pigatto, Patrizia Pepe, Maria Teresa Fierro, Riccardo Asero, Ornella De Pità, Caterina Foti, Angelo V. Marzano, Nicoletta Cassano, Nunzio Crimi, Gino A. Vena, Luca Stingeni, and Giampiero Girolomoni
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Urticaria ,MEDLINE ,Pilot survey ,Dermatology ,Assessment ,Clinical practice ,Guidelines ,Quality of life ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Laboratory examinations ,medicine ,Humans ,Chronic Urticaria ,Medical prescription ,Disease severity ,business.industry ,Dietary management ,Chronic spontaneous urticaria ,Anti-thyroid autoantibodies ,Work-up ,Diet ,Clinical Practice ,Infectious Diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Attitude ,Family medicine ,Chronic Disease ,Quality of Life ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND Chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) is a heterogeneous condition whose management can be complex and challenging. The 0bjectives is to evaluate physicians' attitudes regarding practical aspects of CSU management, including adherence to international guidelines, criteria and instruments for CSU assessment, prescription of laboratory investigations and role of dietary measures. METHODS A cross-sectional survey was conducted using a study-specific questionnaire. It was administered to a group of physicians with a specialist interest in CSU from different areas of Italy definable as "CSU experts" (Group A; n=21) and subsequently to other physicians who managed CSU only occasionally in their clinical activity (Group B; n=25). RESULTS The EAACI/GA²LEN/EDF/WAO guidelines were considered very or moderately useful by the majority of participants. Significantly more physicians in group A reported that such guidelines were always followed in clinical practice (P=0.0008). Instruments for the assessment of CSU severity/activity and quality of life were used in clinical practice significantly more often by CSU experts as compared to group B. Dietary measures were frequently suggested for CSU patients by nearly three quarters of group B members and by only 5% of CSU experts (P
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- 2021
30. Platelet-Rich Plasma for Wound Healing
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Rosalynn R.Z. Conic, Massimo Del Fabbro, Silvio Taschieri, Giovanni Damiani, Sourav Panda, and Paolo D. Pigatto
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Regeneration (biology) ,Surgery ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,Private practice ,law ,Platelet-rich plasma ,medicine ,Long term outcomes ,Platelet ,Prospective cohort study ,business ,Wound healing - Abstract
Wound healing is a multistep regeneration process that requires immunological and microenvironmental conditions occurring simultaneously. Since platelets and their granules play a pivotal role in wound healing, their use as medication is extensively been evaluated in several fields, spacing from chronic wounds to aesthetics. In this chapter, we focused on wound healing and specifically on the contribution exerted by platelet-rich plasma (PRP) in different wounds. We performed a comprehensive literature review, including randomized clinical trials, prospective studies, case--control, and case series, to investigate clinical long-term outcomes (>12 months) of topical PRP. Our results suggest that PRP improves healing, sustaining a faster tissue regeneration, reducing scar formation, improving neo-vascularization, and decreasing recurrences. Remarkably, patients display lower pain and discomfort resulting in an increased satisfaction. Since this effective technique is ideal to be performed in hospital as well as in private practice, authors encourage the use of PRP in all patients with wounds, both chronic and acute.
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- 2021
31. Patch testing with textile dye mix in Italy: A 2-year multicenter SIDAPA study
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Leonardo Bianchi, Maddalena Napolitano, Marta Tramontana, Vittorio Bini, Cataldo Patruno, Silvia Mariel Ferrucci, Monica Corazza, Caterina Foti, Paolo Romita, Myriam Zucca, Fabrizio Guarneri, Emanuela Martina, Luca Stingeni, Rossella Marietti, Katharina Hansel, Donatella Schena, and Paolo D. Pigatto
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,SIDAPA baseline series ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population research ,textile dye mix ,Socio-culturale ,Dermatology ,Textile dye ,medicine.disease_cause ,skin tests ,Patch testing ,Allergen ,Prevalence ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Humans ,Coloring Agents ,azo-dyes ,patch test ,business.industry ,Textiles ,Patch test ,Atopic dermatitis ,Patch Tests ,medicine.disease ,Italy ,Dermatitis, Allergic Contact ,Female ,Occupational exposure ,business - Published
- 2021
32. DECISA Project (DErmatology Clinics in Italy: Survey on Alitretinoin): A real-life retrospective cohort multicenter study on 438 subjects with chronic hand eczema
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Cataldo Patruno, Viviana Piras, Massimo Gola, Caterina Foti, Leonardo Bianchi, Paola Persichini, Alan Azzolini, Giuseppe Micali, Antonio Cristaudo, Myriam Zucca, Silvia Ferrucci, Rosella Gallo, Maria Letizia Musumeci, Fabrizio Guarneri, Ilaria Scandagli, Donatella Schena, Paolo Romita, A. Legori, Luca Stingeni, Ilaria Trave, Maddalena Napolitano, Monica Corazza, Elisabetta D'Agata, Pierantonia Zedde, Paolo D. Pigatto, and Serafinella P. Cannavò
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,retrospective study ,Eczema ,Socio-culturale ,Tretinoin ,Dermatology ,Hand Dermatoses ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Alitretinoin ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical prescription ,Adverse effect ,Allergic contact dermatitis ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,alitretinoin ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Atopic dermatitis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,chronic hand eczema ,real-life study ,Treatment Outcome ,Tolerability ,Italy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Chronic Disease ,Irritant contact dermatitis ,Female ,Dermatologic Agents ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Alitretinoin is the only systemic agent approved to treat moderate-severe chronic hand eczema (CHE) unresponsive to potent topical corticosteroids. No nationwide Italian data regarding real-life efficacy, safety, and tolerability of treatment are available. The DECISA project (DErmatology Clinics in Italy: Survey on Alitretinoin) retrospectively examined data from a registry including 15 Dermatology Clinics authorized to prescription of alitretinoin for CHE patients. Disease severity was assessed at baseline, and after 3 and 6 months of treatment, using the 5-point Physician Global Assessment (PGA) and the modified Total Lesion-Symptoms-Severity (mTLSS) scores. Between November 2010 and July 2018, data of 248 male and 190 female patients (mean age 49.71 ± 13.20 years) treated with alitretinoin were collected. Of them, 43.2% had irritant contact dermatitis, 22.2% allergic contact dermatitis, 18.0% atopic dermatitis, 16.7% mixed (irritant/allergic) type of eczema. At 3 months, the 420 re-evaluated patients showed significantly reduced mTLSS and PGA (P
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- 2021
33. COVID-19. important updates and developments edited by franco rongioletti, MD, and leonard hoenig, MD Impact of COVID-19 on patients with atopic dermatitis
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Giorgia Carnicelli, Camilla Chello, Alvise Sernicola, Simone Michelini, Teresa Grieco, Giovanni Paolino, R. Muharremi, and Paolo D. Pigatto
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medicine.medical_specialty ,atopic dermatitis ,Covid19 ,SarsCov2 ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Eczema ,COVID-19 ,Context (language use) ,Dermatology ,Disease ,Atopic dermatitis ,medicine.disease ,Dupilumab ,Article ,Type 2 immune response ,Dermatitis, Atopic ,Clinical research ,Tolerability ,medicine ,Humans ,business ,Intensive care medicine ,Cytokine Release Syndrome ,Asthma - Abstract
It is Leonard F. Hoenig, MD Data on the tolerability and response to biologic therapies for type 2 immune disorders in the context of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are currently lacking. Our survey aimed at assessing the adherence of patients to dupilumab therapy and the risk of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. A total of 80 patients with atopic dermatitis treated with dupilumab completed a web-based survey. Of the 80 patients, 7 discontinued dupilumab owing to concerns and difficulties related to COVID-19. Our sample was highly susceptible to viral infection owing to the frequency of risk factors including living in high SARS-CoV-2 burden areas, such as in Northern Italy; having comorbidities, such as asthma, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease; and being of advanced age. Older patients in our sample are particularly exposed to the risk of COVID-19–related cytokine storm, triggered by excessive interleukin-4 production and type 2 immune response. One patient contracted SARS-CoV-2 infection without the progression of COVID-19 despite continuing scheduled dupilumab treatment. Because evidence on the appropriate management of biologic therapy in the setting of COVID-19 is lacking, the collection of clinical data from patients in treatment with dupilumab is a valuable addition to current clinical practice. Our survey provides a contribution to the understanding of the tolerability and response to dupilumab during COVID-19 and suggests a feasible and effective approach to patients being treated with biologics even when social distancing is required.
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- 2021
34. Correction to: Comorbidities and treatment patterns in adult patients with atopic dermatitis: results from a nationwide multicenter study
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Marco Romanelli, Giuseppe Argenziano, Rosaria Gesuita, Maria Concetta Potenza, Monica Corazza, Tommaso Bianchelli, S.P. Cannavò, Franco Rongioletti, Paolo Amerio, Giuseppe Micali, G. Malara, Luca Stingeni, Ketty Peris, Luca Bianchi, Anna Campanati, Gabriella Fabbrocini, M C Fargnoli, Annalisa Patrizi, Francesco Cusano, Caterina Foti, Giovanni Pellacani, Andrea Parodi, Silvia Ferrucci, Nicola Pimpinelli, A. M. Offidani, Paolo D. Pigatto, Campanati, A, Bianchelli, T, Gesuita, R, Foti, C, Malara, G, Micali, G, Amerio, P, Rongioletti, F, Corazza, M, Patrizi, A, Peris, K, Pimpinelli, N, Parodi, A, Fargnoli, M C, Cannavo, S P, Pigatto, P, Pellacani, G, Ferrucci, S M, Argenziano, G, Cusano, F, Fabbrocini, G, Stingeni, L, Potenza, M C, Romanelli, M, Bianchi, L, and Offidani, A
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Multicenter study ,Adult patients ,business.industry ,medicine ,MEDLINE ,Dermatology ,General Medicine ,Atopic dermatitis ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2021
35. MAsks use and facial dermatitis during COVID-19 outbreak: Is there a difference between CEand non-CEapproved masks? Multi-center, real-life data from a large Italian cohort
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Pierachille Santus, Antonio Cristaudo, Piergiorgio Malagoli, Paola Savoia, Alessia Pacifico, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Paolo D. Pigatto, Alessandra Buja, Dennis Linder, Laura Cristina Gironi, Francesca Allocco, and Giovanni Damiani
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Sars-cov-2 ,Dermatitis ,Dermatology ,Facial dermatoses ,law.invention ,Disease Outbreaks ,law ,Personal protective equipment ,Quarantine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Masks ,Outbreak ,COVID-19 ,medicine.disease ,Occupational ,Infectious Diseases ,Dermatitis, Occupational ,Italy ,Cohort ,Irritant contact dermatitis ,Covid-19 ,Facial Dermatoses ,Personal Protective Equipment ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: During the recent COVID-19 outbreak, masks became mandatory and shortages frequent, therefore the prevalence of non-CE (European Conformity Mark) approved masks increased in the general population. We aimed to quantify the prevalence of mask-related cutaneous side effects and the differences between CE and non-CE approved masks. METHODS: In this multicenter prospective observational study conducted from March 20, 2020 to May 12, 2020(during and after quarantine), patients attending emergency departments for a dermatological consult were clinically assessed and their masks were inspected to detect CE marks and UNI (Italian National Unification Entity) norms. Patients with history of facial dermatoses or under current treatment for facial dermatoses were excluded. RESULTS: We enrolled 412 patients (318 during quarantine and 94 after quarantine). CE-approved masks were observed 52.8% vs. 24.5%, whilst subsets of non-CE approved masks were 9.7% vs. 14.9% (Personal protective equipment (PPE)-masks), 16.4% vs. 12.8% (surgical masks [SM]), and 21.1% vs. 47.9%(non-PPE) and (non-SM masks), respectively during and after quarantine. Remarkably, non-CE-approved masks resulted in patients displaying a statistically significant higher incidence of facial dermatoses and irritant contact dermatitis compared to CE-approved masks, and these differences were mainly driven by non-PPE non-SM masks. Comparing quarantine and after quarantine periods, no statistically significant differences were found for CE-approved masks, whilst differences were detected in non-CE-approved masks regarding incidence of facial dermatoses (P
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- 2021
36. Italian expert-based recommendations on the use of photo(chemo)therapy in the management of mycosis fungoides: Results of an e-Delphi consensus
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Karl P. Lawrence, Piergiacomo Calzavara-Pinton, Emanuele Cozzani, Paolo D. Pigatto, Roberta Piccinno, Emanuele Trovato, Antonello Baldo, Martina Burlando, Maria Concetta Fargnoli, Valeria Brazzelli, Giuseppe Monfrecola, Nicola Pimpinelli, Serena Rupoli, Elisa Molinelli, Vieri Grandi, Carlo Cota, Michele Pellegrino, Paola Savoia, Alberico Motolese, Marco Simonacci, Paolo Iacovelli, Silvia Alberti-Violetti, Emilio Berti, Daniele Gambini, Mauro Alaibac, Aurora Parodi, Marina Venturini, Alessia Pacifico, Pietro Quaglino, Caterina Longo, Giorgio Mozzicafreddo, Pier Luigi Bruni, Paolo Amerio, Alessandro Pileri, Annamaria Offidani, Grandi V., Baldo A., Berti E., Quaglino P., Rupoli S., Alaibac M., Alberti-Violetti S., Amerio P., Brazzelli V., Bruni P.L., Calzavara-Pinton P., Parodi A., Cozzani E., Burlando M., Fargnoli M.C., Gambini D., Iacovelli P., Pacifico A., Longo C., Monfrecola G., Motolese A., Mozzicafreddo G., Cota C., Pigatto P., Pileri A., Savoia P., Simonacci M., Venturini M., Offidani A., Molinelli E., Pellegrino M., Trovato E., Piccinno R., Lawrence K., and Pimpinelli N.
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mycosis fungoide ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,Skin Neoplasms ,Delphi Technique ,Immunology ,Delphi method ,Dermatology ,delphi study ,evidence-based medicine ,guideline ,mycosis fungoides ,phototherapy ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mycosis Fungoides ,Cronbach's alpha ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Medical physics ,PUVA Therapy ,computer.programming_language ,Mycosis fungoides ,business.industry ,Advanced stage ,General Medicine ,Evidence-based medicine ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Chemo therapy ,business ,computer ,Delphi - Abstract
Background Phototherapy is a mainstay for the treatment of MF. However, there is scarce evidence for its use, mostly due to the lack of a unified schedule. Aims The primary aim of this study was to establish the first structured, expert-based consensus regarding the indications and technical schedules of NB-UVB and PUVA for MF. The secondary aim was to determine the consensus level for each specific item. Materials & methods E-delphi study. Item-specific expert consensus was defined as the number of "Totally Agree" results to ≥80% of the panelists. Cronbach alpha index ≥0.7 was used as a measure of homogeneity in the responses among questions related to the same topic. Results Overall, there was a high homogeneity among responders (0.78). On specific topics, the highest grade was observed for technical items (0.8) followed by indications for early (0.73) and advanced stages (0.7). Conclusions Items related to the most canonical indications of phototherapy and to treatment schedules showed the highest agreements rates. There is consensus about the use of standardized treatment schedules for the induction and consolidation phases for NB-UVB and PUVA in MF.
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- 2021
37. Italian expert consensus on clinical and therapeutic management of multiple chemical sensitivity (Mcs)
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Daniela Caccamo, Andrea Cormano, Marco Alessandrini, Andrea Mazzatenta, Paolo D. Pigatto, Ottaviano Tapparo, Giovanni Damiani, Alessandro Micarelli, Alba Piroli, Gianpaolo Guzzi, Margherita Bianca, and Alberto Migliore
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Neurological signs ,medicine.medical_specialty ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Consensus ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Population ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Article ,Settore MED/06 ,Age and gender ,Chemical intolerance ,Threshold limit value ,Multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) ,Health care ,Neurogenic inflammation ,medicine ,Hypersensitivity ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,chemical intolerance ,environmental exposure ,multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) ,neurogenic inflammation ,threshold limit value ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Expert consensus ,Environmental exposure ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Italy ,Solvents ,Medicine ,Multiple Chemical Sensitivity ,business ,Multiple chemical sensitivity - Abstract
Multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) is a multisystem, recurrent, environmental disorder that flares in response to different exposures (i.e., pesticides, solvents, toxic metals and molds) under the threshold limit value (TLV) calculated for age and gender in the general population. MCS is a syndrome characterized by cutaneous, allergic, gastrointestinal, rheumatological, endocrinological, cardiological and neurological signs and symptoms. We performed a systematic review of the literature to summarize the current clinical and therapeutic evidence and then oriented an eDelphi consensus. Four main research domains were identified (diagnosis, treatment, hospitalization and emergency) and discussed by 10 experts and an MCS patient. Thus, the first Italian MCS consensus had the double aim: (a) to improve MCS knowledge among healthcare workers and patients by standardizing the clinical and therapeutic management to MCS patients, and (b) to improve and shed light on MCS misconceptions not supported by evidence-based medicine (EBM).
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- 2021
38. Predicting Secukinumab Fast-Responder Profile in Psoriatic Patients: Advanced Application of Artificial-Neural-Networks (ANNs)
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Angelo Cattaneo, C. Carrera, Dennis Linder, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, C. Franchi, Giovanni Damiani, Paolo D. Pigatto, Piergiorgio Malagoli, Enzo Grossi, Rosalynn R.Z. Conic, and Radhakrishna Uppala
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Injections, Subcutaneous ,Drug Resistance ,Physical examination ,Induction Phase ,Pilot Projects ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Severity of Illness Index ,Efficacy ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Deep Learning ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,Psoriasis ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Biological Products ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Artificial neural network ,business.industry ,Deep learning ,Models, Immunological ,Complete blood count ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Treatment Outcome ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Secukinumab ,Female ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Background Drug resistance to biologics in psoriasis therapy can occur n it may be acquired during a treatment or else present itself from the beginning. To date, no biomarkers are known that may reliably guide clinicians in predicting responsiveness to biologics. Biologics may pose a substantial economic burden. Secukinumab efficiently targets IL-17 in the treatment of psoriasis. Objective To assess the lfast responderr patient profile, predicting it from the preliminary complete blood count (CBC) and clinical examination. Materials and methods From November 2016 to May 2017 we performed a multicenter prospective open label pilot study in three Italian reference centers enrolling bio-naive plaque psoriasis patients, undergoing the initiation phase secukinumab treatment (300mg subcutaneous at week 0,1,2,3,4). We define fast responders as patients having achieved at least PASI 75 at the end of secukinumab induction phase. Clinical and CBC data at week 0 and at week 4 were analyzed with linear statistics, principal component analysis, and artificial neural networks (ANNs), also known as deep learning. Two different ANNs were employed: Auto Contractive Map (Auto-CM), an unsupervised ANNs, to study how this variables cluster and a supervised ANNs, Training with Input Selection and Testing (TWIST), to build the predictive model. Results We enrolled 23 plaque psoriasis patients: 19 patients were responders and 4 were non-responders. 30 attributes were examined by Auto-CM, creating a semantic map for three main profiles: responders, non-responders and an intermediate profile. The algorithm yielded 5 of the 30 attributes to describe the 3 profiles. This allowed us to set up the predictive model. It displayed after training testing protocol an overall accuracy of 91.88% (90% for responders and 93,75% for non-responders). Conclusions The present study is possibly the first approach employing ANNs to predict drug efficacy in dermatology; a wider use of ANNs may be conducive to useful both theoretical and clinical insight. J Drugs Dermatol. 2020;19(12) doi:10.36849/JDD.2020.5006.
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- 2020
39. Management of patients with atopic dermatitis undergoing systemic therapy during COVID-19 pandemic in Italy: data from the DA-COVID-19 registry
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Caterina Foti, Luca Bianchi, Nicola Milanesi, Luca Stingeni, Giuseppe Micali, Ketty Peris, Annamaria Offidani, Riccardo Balestri, Gabriella Fabbrocini, Angelo V. Marzano, Maurizio Lombardo, Teresa Grieco, Maria Rita Bongiorno, Annalisa Patrizi, Niccolò Gori, Andrea Carugno, Iris Zalaudek, Fabrizio Guarneri, Paolo D. Pigatto, Clara De Simone, Giampiero Girolomoni, Cataldo Patruno, Franco Rongioletti, Maria Concetta Fargnoli, Maria Teresa Fierro, Marco Galluzzo, Claudio Feliciani, Concetta Potenza, Giovanni Pellacani, Marco Romanelli, Antonio Cristaudo, Paolo Amerio, Paola Savoia, Alberico Motolese, Maria Teresa Rossi, Sergio Di Nuzzo, Andrea Chiricozzi, Marina Talamonti, Giovanni Argenziano, Anna Belloni Fortina, and Pietro Rubegni
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Teledermatology ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Atopic dermatitis ,medicine.disease ,Systemic therapy ,Dupilumab ,Disease control ,Internal medicine ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background: Few and small studies have described the management of immunomodulant/immunosuppressive therapies or phototherapy in atopic dermatitis (AD) patients during coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Methods: A national registry, named DA-COVID-19 and involving 35 Italian dermatology units, was established in order to evaluate the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the management of adult AD patients treated with systemic immunomodulant/immunosuppressive medications or phototherapy. Demographic and clinical data were obtained at different timepoints by teledermatology during COVID-19 pandemic, when regular visits were not allowed due to sanitary restrictions. Disease severity was assessed by both physician- and patient-reported assessment scores evaluating itch intensity, sleep disturbances, and AD severity. Results: A total of 1831 patients were included, with 1580/1831 (86.3%) continuing therapy during pandemic. Most patients were treated with dupilumab (86.1%, 1576/1831) that was interrupted in only 9.9% (156/1576) of cases, while systemic immunosuppressive compounds were more frequently withdrawn. Treatment interruption was due to decision of the patient, general practitioner or dermatologist in 39.9% (114/286), 5.6% (16/286), and 30.1% (86/286) of cases, respectively. Fear of increased susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2 infection (24.8%, 71/286) was one of the main causes of interruption. Sixteen patients (0.9%) resulted positive to SARS-CoV-2 infection, 3 of them (0.2%) were hospitalized but no cases of COVID-related death occurred. Conclusions: Most AD patients continued systemic treatments during COVID pandemic and lockdown period, without high impact on disease control, particularly dupilumab-treated patients.
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- 2020
40. COVID ‐19 knowledge prevents biologics discontinuation: Data from an Italian multicenter survey during RED‐ZONE declaration
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Alessia Pacifico, Khalaf Kridin, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, Piergiorgio Malagoli, Matteo Riccò, Giovanni Damiani, and Paolo D. Pigatto
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Adult ,Male ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Health literacy ,Comorbidity ,Disease ,Dermatology ,Logistic regression ,Skin Diseases ,SARS‐CoV‐2 ,Short Papers ,Betacoronavirus ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,COVID‐19 ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Internal medicine ,Psoriasis ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Short Paper ,biologics ,Hidradenitis suppurativa ,Pandemics ,Retrospective Studies ,Biological Products ,atopic dermatitis ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID‐19 questionnaire ,business.industry ,hidradenitis suppurativa ,COVID-19 ,psoriasis ,Atopic dermatitis ,General Medicine ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Discontinuation ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Italy ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Coronavirus Infections ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
SARS‐CoV‐2 become pandemics and there is still a dearth of data about its the potentially among dermatological patients under biologics. We aimed to assess health literacy, disease knowledge, treatment dissatisfaction and biologics attitudes toward COVID‐19. We performed a cross‐sectional, questionnaire‐based survey on 98/105 consecutive dermatological patients treated with biologics—51 suffering from plaque psoriasis, 22 from atopic dermatitis, and 25 from hidradenitis suppurativa. An ad hoc, validated questionnaire has 44 items investigating the following domains: knowledge of COVID‐19 related to (a) epidemiology, (b) pathogenesis, (c) clinical symptoms, (d) preventive measures, and (e) attitudes. Patients data and questionnaires were collected. Despite only 8.1% thought that biologics may increase the risk of COVID‐19, 18.4% and 21.4% of the patients were evaluating the possibility to discontinue or modify the dosage of the current biologic therapy, respectively. Globally, male patients (P = .001) with higher scholarity level (P = .005) displayed higher knowledge of COVID‐19. Patients with lower DLQI (P = .006), longer disease duration (P = .051) and lower scholarity (P = .007) have thought to discontinue/modify autonomously their biologic therapy. At the multivariate logistic regression, only the knowledge of epidemiology and preventive measures resulted independent predictors of continuation vs discontinuation and modification vs no modification, respectively. Dermatologists should promote COVID‐19 knowledge to prevent biologics disruption.
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- 2020
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41. Urticaria: recommendations from the Italian Society of Allergology, Asthma and Clinical Immunology and the Italian Society of Allergological, Occupational and Environmental Dermatology
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Ornella De Pità, Antonio Cristaudo, Cristina Quecchia, Monica Corazza, Ilaria Baiardini, Cataldo Patruno, Eustachio Nettis, Katharina Hansel, Giorgio Walter Canonica, Maddalena Napolitano, Massimo Triggiani, Marco Casciaro, Anna Radice, Giselda Colombo, Cristoforo Incorvaia, Enrico Heffler, Paolo D. Pigatto, Leonardo Bianchi, Luca Stingeni, Giulia De Feo, Giuseppe A. Ramirez, Alessandro Borghi, Sebastiano Gangemi, Mario Di Gioacchino, Silvia Peveri, Franco Rongioletti, Alessia Gatta, Enrico Maggi, Elisabetta Di Leo, Eleonora Savi, Marina Ambrifi, Caterina Foti, Oliviero Rossi, Paolo Romita, Myriam Zucca, Gianenrico Senna, Laura Colli, Filippo Fassio, Marco Caminati, Nettis, E., Foti, C., Ambrifi, M., Baiardini, I., Bianchi, L., Borghi, A., Caminati, M., Canonica, G. W., Casciaro, M., Colli, L., Colombo, G., Corazza, M., Cristaudo, A., De Feo, G., De Pita', O., Di Gioacchino, M., Di Leo, E., Fassio, F., Gangemi, S., Gatta, A., Hansel, K., Heffler, E., Incorvaia, C., Napolitano, M., Patruno, C., Peveri, S., Pigatto, P. D., Quecchia, C., Radice, A., Ramirez, G. A., Romita, P., Rongioletti, F., Rossi, O., Savi, E., Senna, G., Triggiani, M., Zucca, M., Maggi, E., and Stingeni, L.
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lcsh:Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Allergy ,Immunology ,Population ,Review ,Omalizumab ,Guidelines ,NO ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,immune system diseases ,parasitic diseases ,Epidemiology ,Acute urticaria, Omalizumab, Guidelines, Corticosteroids, Chronic urticaria, Antihistamines, Angioedema ,Acute urticaria ,medicine ,Corticosteroids ,Immunology and Allergy ,Angioedema ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,education ,Molecular Biology ,Asthma ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Chronic urticaria ,medicine.disease ,Dermatology ,030228 respiratory system ,Antihistamines ,medicine.symptom ,lcsh:RC581-607 ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Urticaria is a disorder affecting skin and mucosal tissues characterized by the occurrence of wheals, angioedema or both, the latter defining the urticaria-angioedema syndrome. It is estimated that 12–22% of the general population has suffered at least one subtype of urticaria during life, but only a small percentage (estimated at 7.6–16%) has acute urticaria, because it is usually self-limited and resolves spontaneously without requiring medical attention. This makes likely that its incidence is underestimated. The epidemiological data currently available on chronic urticaria in many cases are deeply discordant and not univocal, but a recent Italian study, based on the consultation of a national registry, reports a prevalence of chronic spontaneous urticaria of 0.02% to 0.4% and an incidence of 0.1–1.5 cases/1000 inhabitants/year. Methods We reviewed the recent international guidelines about urticaria and we described a methodologic approach based on classification, pathophysiology, impact on quality of life, diagnosis and prognosis, differential diagnosis and management of all the types of urticaria. Conclusions The aim of the present document from the Italian Society of Allergology, Asthma and Clinical Immunology (SIAAIC) and the Italian Society of Allergological, Occupational and Environmental Dermatology (SIDAPA) is to provide updated information to all physicians involved in diagnosis and management of urticaria and angioedema.
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- 2020
42. T Cell Subpopulations in the Physiopathology of Fibromyalgia: Evidence and Perspectives
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Eva Reali, Paolo D. Pigatto, Giuseppe Banfi, Marco Diani, Banfi, G., Diani, M., Pigatto, P. D., and Reali, E.
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Fibromyalgia ,T cell ,T-Lymphocytes ,Neuroimmunology ,Pain ,Inflammation ,Immune responses ,Review ,neuroimmunology ,Adaptive Immunity ,environmental sensitivity illnesses ,Catalysis ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,lcsh:Chemistry ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Immune system ,Environmental sensitivity illnesses ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,pain ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Molecular Biology ,Spectroscopy ,Immunity, Cellular ,Microglia ,business.industry ,Musculoskeletal diseases ,Organic Chemistry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,immune responses ,Computer Science Applications ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,musculoskeletal diseases ,Immunology ,Cytokines ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Fibromyalgia is one of the most important “rheumatic” disorders, after osteoarthritis. The etiology of the disease is still not clear. At the moment, the most defined pathological mechanism is the alteration of central pain pathways, and emotional conditions can trigger or worsen symptoms. Increasing evidence supports the role of mast cells in maintaining pain conditions such as musculoskeletal pain and central sensitization. Importantly, mast cells can mediate microglia activation through the production of proinflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β, IL-6, and TNFα. In addition, levels of chemokines and proinflammatory cytokines are enhanced in serum and could contribute to inflammation at systemic level. Despite the well-characterized relationship between the nervous system and inflammation, the mechanism that links the different pathological features of fibromyalgia, including stress-related manifestations, central sensitization, and dysregulation of the innate and adaptive immune responses is largely unknown. This review aims to provide an overview of the current understanding of the role of adaptive immune cells, in particular T cells, in the physiopathology of fibromyalgia. It also aims at linking the latest advances emerging from basic science to envisage new perspectives to explain the role of T cells in interconnecting the psychological, neurological, and inflammatory symptoms of fibromyalgia.
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- 2020
43. Varicella-like exanthem as a specific COVID-19–associated skin manifestation: Multicenter case series of 22 patients
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Giovanni Genovese, Valentina Caputo, Bianca Maria Piraccini, Pietro Rubegni, Piergiacomo Calzavara-Pinton, Angelo V. Marzano, Paolo D. Pigatto, Emilio Berti, Stefano Veraldi, Marco Cusini, Franco Rongioletti, Gabriella Fabbrocini, Giuseppe Monfrecola, Marzano, A. V., Genovese, G., Fabbrocini, G., Pigatto, P., Monfrecola, G., Piraccini, B. M., Veraldi, S., Rubegni, P., Cusini, M., Caputo, V., Rongioletti, F., Berti, E., Calzavara-Pinton, P., and Marzano AV, Genovese G, Fabbrocini G, Pigatto P, Monfrecola G, Piraccini BM, Veraldi S, Rubegni P, Cusini M, Caputo V, Rongioletti F, Berti E, Calzavara-Pinton P.
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2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Erythema ,viruses ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Coronavirus infections ,Dermatology ,Dengue ,Betacoronavirus ,Chickenpox ,medicine ,Humans ,Viral ,Pandemics ,Exanthem ,Coronavirus Infections ,Exanthema ,Varicella,COVID-19 ,integumentary system ,Betacoronaviru ,Pandemic ,business.industry ,Coronavirus Infection ,SARS-CoV-2 ,virus diseases ,COVID-19 ,Common cold ,Pneumonia ,medicine.disease ,Rash ,medicine.symptom ,business ,viral ,Human - Abstract
Varicella-like exanthem as a specific COVID-19-associated skin manifestation: Multicenter case series of 22 patients
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- 2020
44. Contact allergy to 3-dimethylaminopropylamine in 5140 consecutive Italian patients: A one-year retrospective multicenter SIDAPA study
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Fabrizio Guarneri, Antonio Cristaudo, Monica Corazza, Luca Stingeni, Nicola Milanesi, Cataldo Patruno, Donatella Schena, Rosella Gallo, Maddalena Napolitano, F. Massari, Eustacchio Nettis, Caterina Foti, Katharina Hansel, Paolo D. Pigatto, and Paolo Romita
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Adult ,Male ,SIDAPA baseline series ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,baseline series ,MEDLINE ,3-dimethylaminopropylamine ,allergic contact dermatitis ,cosmetic products ,patch test ,personal care products ,Dermatology ,Diamines ,NO ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Child ,Allergic contact dermatitis ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Patch test ,Middle Aged ,Patch Tests ,medicine.disease ,Italy ,Contact allergy ,Child, Preschool ,Dermatitis, Allergic Contact ,Female ,3-Dimethylaminopropylamine ,business - Published
- 2020
45. Skin tests in the diagnosis of adverse drug reactions
- Author
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Paolo D. Pigatto, Leonardo Bianchi, Cataldo Patruno, Gabriella Fabbrocini, Giuseppe Micali, Caterina Foti, Marta Tramontana, Paolo Romita, Luca Stingeni, Katharina Hansel, Maddalena Napolitano, Monica Corazza, Stingeni, L., Bianchi, L., Tramontana, M., Pigatto, P. D., Patruno, C., Corazza, M., Foti, C., Fabbrocini, G., Micali, G., Romita, P., Napolitano, M., and Hansel, K.
- Subjects
Drug ,Allergy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Intradermal tests ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Provocation test ,Contrast Media ,Dermatology ,Drug-related side effects and adverse reactions, Skin tests, Review, Intradermal tests, Patch tests ,Review ,Patch test ,Culprit ,Drug-related side effects and adverse reactions ,Patch tests ,Skin tests ,NO ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Adrenal Cortex Hormones ,medicine ,Humans ,Drug reaction ,media_common ,Drug-related side effects and adverse reaction ,Anamnesis ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Intradermal test ,Drug Eruptions ,business - Abstract
Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are common and influence negatively the patient's therapeutic options. They recognize multiple pathogenic mechanisms, some of immunological origin, and the clinical manifestations involve several organs and systems, including skin and/or mucous membranes in 25-30% of patients. The identification of the trigger drug remains a medical challenge, mainly in poly-medicated patients. Anamnesis and clinical approach are crucial, but allergy work-up is the essential tool to confirm or exclude the causative role of the culprit drug. Besides in-vitro tests and drug provocation test, skin tests (ST) represent the cornerstone: patch test in delayed ADR, prick test in immediate ADR, and intradermal test in both. Nevertheless, ST are in continuous evolution and characterized by technical difficulties (concentration and vehicle) that can influence their value and specificity. In this article we review the indications and the rules in performing patch test, prick test, and intradermal test with the most commonly used drugs in Italy to determine the cause of a cutaneous and/or mucous ADR, precise the involved pathogenic mechanism, and provide a valid therapeutic alternative to the patient.
- Published
- 2020
46. The burden of atopic dermatitis in adults in Italy
- Author
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Francesco Saverio Mennini, Paolo D. Pigatto, Giampiero Girolomoni, Anna D'ausilio, Piergiacomo Calzavara-Pinton, Annalisa Patrizi, Giovanni Pellacani, EP Lanati, Paolo Sciattella, Ketty Peris, Sciattella P., Pellacani G., Pigatto P.D., Patrizi A., Peris K., Calzavara-Pinton P., Girolomoni G., Lanati E.P., D'ausilio A., and Mennini F.S.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Settore SECS-P/05 ,Settore SECS-P/06 ,Dermatitis ,Dermatology ,Eczema Area and Severity Index ,Severity of Illness Index ,Atopic ,Dermatitis, Atopic ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Indirect costs ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cost of Illness ,Environmental health ,Dermatitis atopic ,Health care ,adults ,Medicine ,Humans ,Case report form ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Descriptive statistics ,business.industry ,Health services research ,Atopic dermatitis ,Health Care Costs ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Caregivers ,Italy ,Settore MED/42 ,Observational study ,Female ,business ,Settore MED/35 - MALATTIE CUTANEE E VENEREE - Abstract
Background: Moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis (AD) generates a considerable consumption of healthcare resources and significant economic consequences for the patients and their families, healthcare systems (NHS) and society. Several studies on the burden of AD in paediatric patients are available in literature, while data in adults is scant. The purpose of this study was to estimate the direct and indirect costs of moderate to severe AD in adult patients in Italy. Methods: Patients with Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI) Score >20 were included in a multicentre, observational study conducted in six outpatient dermatology clinics throughout the national territory. Data were retrospectively gathered through a case report form investigating healthcare resources consumption, out-of-pocket expenses and patients' and caregivers' productivity loss. Descriptive statistics was used to illustrate data. Univariate generalized linear model with gamma distribution and identity function link was used to describe association between costs and disease severity. Results: A total of 50 patients with a diagnosis of moderate-to-severe DA (EASI Score ≥20), equal to 89% of the total, were included in the analysis. The total annual burden of the disease, direct and indirect costs, amounted to € 4284 per patient; 19.3% accounted for direct medical costs, 19.9% for direct non-medical and 60.8% for indirect costs due to productivity loss. Conclusions: Moderate-to-severe AD in adults represents an important cost for the society imposing a high financial burden for the NHS, but even more for patients and caregivers. Results from this study may support identification of potential factors impacting on the choice of new therapeutic options to improve the clinical and economic management of this devastating disease.
- Published
- 2020
47. A 48-week update of a multicentre real-life experience of dupilumab in adult patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis
- Author
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P. Betto, Marco Romanelli, Luca Stingeni, Giovanni Pellacani, Serena Lembo, A. Offidani, Antonio Cristaudo, Concetta Potenza, Paolo D. Pigatto, S.P. Cannavò, M Pettinato, Giampiero Girolomoni, Francesco Cusano, Paolo Amerio, Ketty Peris, C. Caruso, Giuseppe Argenziano, Maria Laura Flori, Teresa Grieco, R. Mozzillo, Cataldo Patruno, Richard L. Gallo, Annalisa Patrizi, M C Fargnoli, Rossana Tiberio, C. Peccianti, Severino Persechino, Iris Zalaudek, Alberico Motolese, Maria Esposito, Luca Bianchi, S. Pucci, Franco Rongioletti, Giuseppe Micali, G. Malara, V. Boccaletti, Giuseppe Stinco, Silvia Ferrucci, Antonio Costanzo, Fargnoli, M. C., Esposito, M., Ferrucci, S., Girolomoni, G., Offidani, A., Patrizi, A., Peris, K., Costanzo, A., Malara, G., Pellacani, G., Romanelli, M., Amerio, P., Cristaudo, A., Flori, M. L., Motolese, A., Betto, P., Patruno, C., Pigatto, P., Peccianti, C., Stinco, G., Zalaudek, I., Bianchi, L., Boccaletti, V., Cannavo, S. P., Cusano, F., Lembo, S., Mozzillo, R., Gallo, R., Potenza, C., Rongioletti, F., Tiberio, R., Grieco, T., Micali, G., Persechino, S., Pettinato, M., Pucci, S., Stingeni, L., Caruso, C., Argenziano, G., Fargnoli, M C, Esposito, M, Ferrucci, S, Girolomoni, G, Offidani, A, Patrizi, A, Peris, K, Costanzo, A, Malara, G, Pellacani, G, Romanelli, M, Amerio, P, Cristaudo, A, Flori, M L, Motolese, A, Betto, P, Patruno, C, Pigatto, P, Peccianti, C, Stinco, G, Zalaudek, I, Bianchi, L, Boccaletti, V, Cannavo, S P, Cusano, F, Lembo, S, Mozzillo, R, Gallo, R, Potenza, C, Rongioletti, F, Tiberio, R, Grieco, T, Micali, G, Persechino, S, Pettinato, M, Pucci, S, Stingeni, L, Caruso, C, and Argenziano, G
- Subjects
atopic dermatiti ,Adult ,Moderate to severe ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Eczema ,MEDLINE ,Dermatitis ,Dermatology ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Severity of Illness Index ,Antibodies ,Atopic ,Dermatitis, Atopic ,Settore MED/35 ,dupilumab ,Monoclonal ,medicine ,Humans ,real-life ,Humanized ,long-term ,Adult patients ,atopic dermatitis ,business.industry ,Atopic dermatitis ,medicine.disease ,Dupilumab ,humanities ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,Settore MED/35 - MALATTIE CUTANEE E VENEREE ,business - Abstract
The long-term efficacy and safety of dupilumab has been demonstrated in clinical trials and only in few real-world studies. We conducted an extension analysis from a previous 16-week study on 109 adult patients affected by moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis treated with dupilumab. Eczema-Area-and-Severity-Index (EASI), itch numerical-rating-score (itch-NRS), Dermatology-Life-Quality-Index (DLQI) scores, drug survival rate and occurrence of adverse events after 24 and 48 weeks of dupilumab treatment were retrospectively collected. Dupilumab demonstrated sustained improvement of disease severity, pruritus, and quality of life in our series with an increasing percentage of patients gaining EASI75 and EASI90 response during the study period. Few patients interrupted treatment resulting in a very high drug survival rate. We also confirmed the favorable safety profile of the drug with absence of serious adverse events and serious infections throughout the 48-week period. The prevalence of conjunctivitis was low and mainly occurred in the mid-term with resolution of the majority of cases at 48 weeks.
- Published
- 2020
48. Alopecia Areata and Toxic Metals
- Author
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Paolo D. Pigatto, Silvia Mariel Ferrucci, Lucia Brambilla, and Gianpaolo Guzzi
- Subjects
inorganic chemicals ,Cadmium ,medicine.medical_specialty ,integumentary system ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Dermatology ,Alopecia areata ,medicine.disease ,Mercury (element) ,body regions ,Clinical Investigations − Letter ,chemistry ,Alopecia universalis ,medicine ,Thallium ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Arsenic ,Selenium - Abstract
Toxic metals are not so rare but are often neglected causes of alopecia areata in men and women. Thallium, arsenic, selenium, and mercury are the most common cause of metals-related alopecia, which is what Vicky Yu and colleagues’ found. Other than the presence of thallium, arsenic, mercury, and selenium, cadmium, bismuth, lithium, and copper should also be taken into account when dermatologists are considering toxic metals as a potential cause of alopecia areata in humans.
- Published
- 2019
49. Beneficial Effects of Antioxidant Furfuryl Palmitate in Non-pharmacologic Treatments (Prescription Emollient Devices, PEDs) for Atopic Dermatitis and Related Skin Disorders
- Author
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Marco Diani and Paolo D. Pigatto
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Antioxidant ,Erythema ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Eczema ,Dermatitis ,Review ,Dermatology ,Furfuryl palmitate ,Antioxidants ,Prescription emollient devices ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Topical treatments ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Cutaneous inflammatory pathologies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,Allergic contact dermatitis ,Atopic dermatitis ,business.industry ,Furfuryl derivatives ,medicine.disease ,Symptomatic relief ,Tolerability ,Moisturizer ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Introduction Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a common chronic inflammatory skin disease; it requires long-term treatments focused on symptomatic relief. Current first-line treatments include moisturizers and topical corticosteroids. Recently, topical antioxidants have been added to moisturizer formulations to alleviate mild-to-moderate AD. The aim of this review was to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of furfuryl palmitate, a new antioxidant molecule, and furfuryl derivatives. Methods A PubMed/Google Scholar search was conducted using the term “furfuryl palmitate” (and its derivatives, including AR-GG27®) combined with “skin,” “atopic dermatitis,” and “atopic eczema.” Existing trials including adult and pediatric patients with AD and related skin disorders were evaluated. The treatment indication(s), number of subjects, treatment protocols, results, and side effects were recorded. Results Effective treatments with furfuryl palmitate and furfuryl derivatives have been reported for the following conditions: atopic, seborrheic, irritative, and allergic contact dermatitis, eczema, xerosis, and cutaneous inflammatory pathologies. All the products tested showed a good tolerability profile. Conclusion Studies performed up to now showed that furfuryl derivatives can efficaciously contrast signs and symptoms of mild-to-moderate AD, erythema, and widespread diffuse cutaneous pathologies in both adult and pediatric patients, representing a real alternative to steroids and a valid aid in the treatment of skin disorders, with no side effects and without requiring precautions in use. Funding Relife S.r.l. - Menarini Group. Plain Language Summary Plain language summary available for this article.
- Published
- 2018
50. Patch test with sorbitan sesquioleate in Italian consecutive patients: A 1‐year multicenter SIDAPA study
- Author
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Rosella Gallo, Antonio Cristaudo, Cataldo Patruno, Eustachio Nettis, Donatella Schena, Fabrizio Guarneri, Nicola Milanesi, Leonardo Bianchi, Monica Corazza, Paolo D. Pigatto, Marta Tramontana, Paolo Romita, Katharina Hansel, Luca Stingeni, and Caterina Foti
- Subjects
Male ,SIDAPA baseline series ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Socio-culturale ,Dermatology ,Surface-Active Agents ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,fragrance mix, patch test, SIDAPA baseline series, sorbitan sesquioleate ,fragrance mix ,patch test ,sorbitan sesquioleate ,Hexoses ,business.industry ,Patch test ,Allergens ,Middle Aged ,Patch Tests ,Italy ,Dermatitis, Allergic Contact ,Sorbitan Sesquioleate ,Female ,business - Published
- 2019
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