Papers by Giovanni Cazzaniga
Blood, 2010
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European Journal of Medical Genetics, 2016
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The use of minimal residual disease (MRD) measurement as a surrogate marker of molecular response... more The use of minimal residual disease (MRD) measurement as a surrogate marker of molecular response to treatment can potentially improve the evaluation of treatment response and enable estimates of the residual leukemic cell burden during clinical remission, thereby improving the selection of therapeutic strategies and, possibly, long-term clinical outcome. The most specific and sensitive methods for MRD monitoring currently available are polymerase chain reaction amplification of rearranged immunoglobulin and antigen-receptor genes, and flow cytometric detection of aberrant immunophenotypes. Several retrospective studies have demonstrated the strong association between MRD and risk of relapse in childhood acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL), irrespective of the methodology used. The promising results on the predictivity of MRD evaluation at the end of induction treatment has challenged the need for a new definition of remission. There is now urgent need to incorporate MRD data into clinical studies, properly designed to address treatment questions, in order to explore whether a better tailored treatment would result in further improvement in cure rates for children with ALL. However, several critical issues must be resolved before MRD determinations can be routinely considered in clinical decision making.
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The Ets variant gene 6 (ETV6/TEL) gene is rearranged in the majority of patients with 12p13 trans... more The Ets variant gene 6 (ETV6/TEL) gene is rearranged in the majority of patients with 12p13 translocations fused to a number of different partners. We present here a case of acute myeloid leukemia M4 with eosinophilia (AML-M4Eo) positive for the CBFb/MYH11 rearrangement ...
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The PAX5 gene, encoding the B-cell-specific activator protein, is a critical determinant of commi... more The PAX5 gene, encoding the B-cell-specific activator protein, is a critical determinant of commitment to the B-lymphocyte pathway. This gene, mapped at 9p13, is juxtaposed to the immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) gene as a result of the t(9;14)(p13;q32), a rare but recurring translocation found in a subset of B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma cases. In all of these, this translocation results in
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Haematologica, Jan 10, 2015
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Oncotarget, Jan 30, 2015
The PAX5 gene is altered in 30% of BCP-ALL patients and PAX5 chromosomal translocations account f... more The PAX5 gene is altered in 30% of BCP-ALL patients and PAX5 chromosomal translocations account for 2-3% of cases. Although PAX5 fusion genes significantly affect the transcription of PAX5 target genes, their role in sustaining leukemia cell survival is poorly understood. In an in vitro model of PAX5/ETV6 leukemia, we demonstrated that Lck hyper-activation, and down-regulation of its negative regulator Csk, lead to STAT5 hyper-activation and consequently to the up-regulation of the downstream effectors, cMyc and Ccnd2. More important, cells from PAX5 translocated patients show LCK up-regulation and over-activation, as well as STAT5 hyper-phosphorylation, compared to PAX5 wt and PAX5 deleted cases. As in BCR/ABL1 positive ALL, the hyper-activation of STAT5 pathway can represent a survival signal in PAX5 translocated cells, alternative to the pre-BCR, which is down-regulated. The LCK inhibitor BIBF1120 selectively reverts this phenomenon both in the murine model and in leukemic primar...
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Best practice & research. Clinical haematology, 2002
The study of minimal residual disease (MRD) as a 'surrogate' marker of molecular response... more The study of minimal residual disease (MRD) as a 'surrogate' marker of molecular response to treatment has drawn great interest because of the potential of tailoring treatment and the possibility of gaining insight into the nature of a cure. Polymerase chain reaction-based (PCR-based) detection of MRD by immunoglobulin (Ig) and T-cell receptor (TCR) gene rearrangements can be applied in more than 90-95% of cases of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). Accordingly, several retrospective studies of MRD in childhood ALL have used one of the different PCR approaches for the detection of antigen-receptor gene rearrangements. The promising results on the predictivity of MRD evaluation at the end of induction treatment has raised the need of a new definition of remission. Until now, most PCR-based MRD studies have used semiquantitative methods for the detection of Ig and TCR gene rearrangements. The introduction of real-time quantitative PCR (RQ-PCR) has resulted in the i...
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Oncotarget, Jan 30, 2015
Despite increasingly successful treatment of pediatric ALL, up to 20% of patients encounter relap... more Despite increasingly successful treatment of pediatric ALL, up to 20% of patients encounter relapse. By current biomarkers, the majority of relapse patients is initially not identified indicating the need for prognostic and therapeutic targets reflecting leukemia biology. We previously described that rapid engraftment of patient ALL cells transplanted onto NOD/SCID mice (short time to leukemia, TTLshort) is indicative of early patient relapse. Gene expression profiling identified genes coding for molecules involved in mTOR signaling to be associated with TTLshort/early relapse leukemia. Here, we now functionally address mTOR signaling activity in primograft ALL samples and evaluate mTOR pathway inhibition as novel treatment strategy for high-risk ALL ex vivo and in vivo. By analysis of S6-phosphorylation downstream of mTOR, increased mTOR activation was found in TTLshort/high-risk ALL, which was effectively abrogated by mTOR inhibitors resulting in decreased leukemia proliferation a...
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Blood, Jan 15, 2005
Nucleophosmin (NPM) is a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein involved in leukemia-associated chro... more Nucleophosmin (NPM) is a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein involved in leukemia-associated chromosomal translocations, and it regulates the alternate reading frame (ARF)-p53 tumor-suppressor pathway. Recently, it has been demonstrated that mutations of the NPM1 gene alter the protein at its C-terminal, causing its cytoplasmic localization. Cytoplasmic NPM was detected in 35% of adult patients with primary non-French-American-British (FAB) classification M3 acute myeloid leukemia (AML), associated mainly with normal karyotype. We evaluated the prevalence of the NPM1 gene mutation in non-M3 childhood AML patients enrolled in the ongoing Associazione Italiana di Ematologia e Oncologia Pediatrica (AIEOP-AML02) protocol in Italy. NPM1 mutations were found in 7 (6.5%) of 107 successfully analyzed patients. NPM1-mutated patients carried a normal karyotype (7/26, 27.1%) and were older in age. Thus, the NPM1 mutation is a frequent abnormality in AML patients without known genetic marker; t...
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Molecular Cancer Research, 2014
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British journal of haematology, 2002
Children with Philadelphia-chromosome-positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) represen... more Children with Philadelphia-chromosome-positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) represent a subgroup at very high risk for treatment failure, despite intensive chemotherapy. However, recent retrospective studies showed that Ph+ childhood ALL is a heterogeneous disease with regard to treatment response. We have prospectively monitored, by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) during follow-up, the presence of the BCR/ABL fusion transcript in Ph+ ALL children diagnosed in the Italian multicentre Associazione Italiana Ematologia Oncologia Pediatrica ALL-AIEOP-95 therapy protocol. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the evaluation of minimal residual disease (MRD) in childhood Ph+ ALL prospectively enrolled in an intensive, Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster (BFM)-type treatment protocol. Twenty-seven of 36 (75.0%) Ph+ patients consecutively enrolled into the high-risk group of the AIEOP-ALL protocol between May 1995 and October 1999 were successfully analyse...
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Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2014
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common pediatric cancer. Monitoring minimal residu... more Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common pediatric cancer. Monitoring minimal residual disease (MRD) by using real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RQ-PCR) provides information for patient stratification and individual risk-directed treatment. Cooperative studies have documented that measurement of blast clearance from the bone marrow during and after induction therapy identifies patient populations with different risk of relapse. We explored the possible contribution of measurements of MRD during the course of treatment. We used RQ-PCR to detect MRD in 110 unselected patients treated in Italy in the International Collaborative Treatment Protocol for Children and Adolescents With Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (AIEOP-BFM ALL 2000). The trial took place in AIEOP centers during postinduction chemotherapy. Results were categorized as negative, low positive (below the quantitative range [< 5 × 10(-4)]), or high positive (≥ 5 × 10(-4)). Patients with at least one low-positive or high-positive result were assigned to the corresponding subgroup. Patients who tested high positive, low positive, or negative had significantly different cumulative incidences of leukemia relapse: 83.3%, 34.8%, and 8.6%, respectively (P < .001). Two thirds of positive cases were identified within 4 months after induction-consolidation therapy, suggesting that this time frame may be most suitable for cost-effective MRD monitoring, particularly in patients who did not clear their disease at the end of consolidation. These findings provide further insights into the dynamic of MRD and the ongoing effort to define molecular relapse in childhood ALL.
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Blood Cancer Journal, 2012
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Blood, 2014
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Haematologica, 2014
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Cancer Immunology Immunotherapy, 2005
The therapeutic unconjugated anti-CD20 Mab rituximab is used for the treatment of B-non-Hodgkin’s... more The therapeutic unconjugated anti-CD20 Mab rituximab is used for the treatment of B-non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas. We have studied the direct biological effects, signalling and gene expression profiles induced by rituximab in two human B-lymphoma cell lines, DHL4 and BJAB, using microarray, quantitative PCR and gel shift analysis. Rituximab alone inhibited thymidine uptake and induced homotypic adhesion in DHL4 only, but not
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PLoS ONE, 2013
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PLoS ONE, 2013
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Papers by Giovanni Cazzaniga