9 results on '"Fenu, M. L."'
Search Results
2. A comparison of two blood culture procedures for the isolation of staphylococci in a paediatric intensive care unit
- Author
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Belli, M. L., Ugolotti, E., Fenu, M. L., Mantero, E., and Ceccarelli, R.
- Published
- 2005
3. Changing patterns of clinical events in perinatally HIV-1-infected children during the era of HAART. The Italian Register for HIV Infection in Children
- Author
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WRITING COMMITTEE CHIAPPINI, E, Galli, L, Tovo, Pa, Gabiano, C, Lisi, C, Gattinara, Gc, Esposito, S, Viganò, A, Giaquinto, C, Rosso, R, Guarino, A, Osimani, DE MARTINO M. MEMBERS OF THE ITALIAN REGISTER FOR HIV INFECTION IN CHILDREN P., Cordiali, R., DE MATTIA, D., Manzionna, M., DI BARI, C., Ruggeri, M., Masi, M., Miniaci, A., Specchia, F., Ciccia, M., Lanari, M., Baldi, F., Battisti, L., Schumacher, R., Duse, M., Sinelli, M., Bennato, V., Dessì, C., Dedoni, M., Fenu, M. L., Cavallini, R., Anastasio, E., Zicchinella, D., Sticca, M., Pomero, G., Contiero, R., Fiumana, E., Gervaso, P., Gabrielli, G., Braccesi, G., Becherucci, S., DE GAUDIO, M., Innocenti, L., Cecchi, M. T., Ginocchio, F., Nicolini, L. A., Ciravegna, B. W., Cosso, D., Timitilli, A., Stronati, M., Plebani, A., Bojanin, J., Porta, A., Principi, N., Giacomet, V., Bianchi, R., Zuccotti, G. V., Giovannini, M., Ferraris, G., Lipreri, R., MORETTI MILANO, C., Cellini, M., Cano, M. C., Palazzi, G., Bruzzese, E., Giannattazio, A., Tarallo, L., Tancredi, F., D'Elia, R., Rampon, O., DALLE NOGARE, E. R., Sanfilippo, A., Romano, A., Saitta, M., Dodi, I., Barone, A., Consolini, Rita, Legitimo, Annalisa, Magnani, C., Falconieri, P., Fundarò, C., Salvucci, P. VALENTINI S., Casadei, A. M., Bernardi, S., Palma, P., Anzidei, M., Cerilli, S., Ajassa, C., Ganau, A., Cristiano, L., Mazza, A., Gentilini, L., Mignone, F., Versace, A., Antonielli, E., Sovatzis, S., Scolfaro, C., Palomba, E., Portelli, V., Rabusin, M., Pellegatta, A., and Fortunati, P.
- Published
- 2007
4. Cancer rates after year 2000 significantly decrease in children with perinatal HIV infection: A study by the Italian Register for HIV Infection in Children
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Chiappini, E, Galli, L, Tovo, Pa, Gabiano, C, Lisi, C, Giaquinto, C, Rampon, O, Gattinara, Gc, De Marco, G, Osimani, P, Manzionna, M, Miniaci, A, Pintor, C, Rosso, R, Esposito, S, Viganò, A, Dodi, I, Maccabruni, A, Fundarò, C, de Martino, M, Osimani, P., Cordiali, R., De Mattia, D., Manzionna, M., Di Bari, C., Ruggeri, M., Masi, M., Miniaci, A., Specchia, F., Ciccia, M., Lanari, M., Baldi, F., Battisti, L., Fiorino, C., Dessı`, C., Pintor, C., Dedoni, M., Fenu, M. L., Cavallini, R., Anastasio, E., Merolla, F., Sticca, M., Pomero, G., Bezzi, Teresa Maria, Fiumana, Elisa, Bonsignori, F., Gervaso, P., Seini, E., Cecchi, M. T., Cosso, D., Timitilli, A., Stronati, M., Plebani, A., Pinzani, R., Bongianin, I., Vigano`, A., Giacomet, V., Erba, P., Salvini, F., Zuccotti, G. V., Giovannini, M., Ferraris, G., Lipreri, R., Moretti, C., Cellini, M., Cano, M. C., Paolucci, P., Bruzzese, E., De Marco, G., Tarallo, L., Tancredi, F., Pennazzato, M., Rampon, O., Dalle Nogare, E. R., Sanfilippo, A., Romano, A., Saitta, M., Dodi, I., Barone, A., Maccabruni, A., Consolini, R., Legitimo, A., Magnani, C., Falconieri, P., Fundaro`, C., Genovese, O., Panzanella, A., Casadei, A. M., Martino, A., Concato, C., Anzidei, G., Bove, G., Cerilli, S., Catania, S., Ajassa, C., Ganau, A., Cristiano, L., Mazza, A., Di Palma, A., Mignone, F., Riva, C., Scorfaro, C., Portelli, V., Rabusin, M., Pellegatta, A., Molesini, M., Chiappini, Elena, Galli, Luisa, Tovo, Pier-Angelo, Gabiano, Clara, Lisi, Catiuscia, Giaquinto, Carlo, Rampon, Osvalda, Gattinara, Guido Castelli, De Marco, Giulio, Osimani, Patrizia, Manzionna, Mariano, Miniaci, Angela, Pintor, Carlo, Rosso, Raffaella, Esposito, Susanna, Viganò, Alessandra, Dodi, Icilio, Maccabruni, Anna, Fundarò, Carlo, De Martino, Maurizio, Italian Register for HIV Infection in, Children, and Lanari, M.
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Registrie ,Pediatrics ,Cancer Research ,Time Factors ,HIV Infections ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,Neoplasms ,HIV Infection ,Registries ,Sida ,Child ,biology ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Medicine (all) ,Incidence ,Child, Preschool ,Disease Progression ,Humans ,Infant ,Infant, Newborn ,Italy ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,symbols ,Population study ,Viral disease ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,cancer rates ,HIV infection ,children ,Time Factor ,Antiretroviral Therapy ,symbols.namesake ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,medicine ,cancer ,Highly Active ,Poisson regression ,Preschool ,Settore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale e Specialistica ,Perinatal HIV infection ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Newborn ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Italian Register for HIV infection in children ,El Niño ,Neoplasm ,business - Abstract
Purpose To evaluate the impact of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) on cancer incidence in HIV-infected children throughout a 20-year period. Patients and Methods An observational population study was conducted on 1,190 perinatally HIV-infected children enrolled onto the Italian Register for HIV Infection in Children from 1985 to 2004 and never lost to follow-up (total observation time, 10,037.66 years). Cancer rates were calculated in the pre-HAART (1985 to 1995), early HAART (1996 to 1999), and late HAART (2000 to 2004) periods and compared using Poisson regression adjusted for age. The proportion of HAART-treated children increased from 4.1% in 1996 to 60.4% in 1999 and to 81.5% in 2004. In the same time frame, the proportion of children receiving HAART for at least 2 years increased from 3.1% to 77.0%. Results Overall, 35 cancers occurred. Cancer rates were 4.49 (95% CI, 2.37 to 6.64), 4.09 (95% CI, 1.68 to 6.50), and 0.76 (95% CI, 0.00 to 1.80) per 1,000 children per year in 1985 to 1995, 1996 to 1999, and 2000 to 2004, respectively. Notably, there was no significant difference comparing the periods from 1985 to 1995 and 1996 to 1999 (P = .081). By contrast, cancer rates were significantly lower in the period from 2000 to 2004 than in 1996 to 1999 (P < .0001). Results were confirmed by separately analyzing data from children observed from birth (P = .418 for 1985 to 1995 v 1996 to 1999; P = .001 for 1996 to 1999 v 2000 to 2004). Conclusion Dramatically reduced cancer rates were observed only in the late HAART period in parallel to the increasing proportion of children receiving HAART therapy.
- Published
- 2007
5. Virologic, immunologic, and clinical benefits from early combined antiretroviral therapy in infants with perinatal HIV-1 infection
- Author
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Chiappini, E., Galli, L., Atovo, P. i. e. r., Gabiano, C., Castelli Gattinara, G., Guarino, A., Baddato, R., Giaquinto, C., Lisi, C., de Martino, M., Osimani, P., Cordiali, R., De Mattia, D., Manzionna, M., Di Bari, C., Ruggeri, M., Masi, M., Miniaci, A., Specchia, F., Ciccia, M., Lanari, M., Baldi, F., Battisti, L., Fiorino, C., Dessı`, C., Pintor, C., Dedoni, M., Fenu, M. L., Cavallini, R., Anastasio, E., Merolla, F., Sticca, M., Pomero, G., Bezzi, Teresa Maria, Fiumana, Elisa, Bonsignori, F., Gervaso, P., Seini, E., Cecchi, M. T., Cosso, D., Timitilli, A., Stronati, M., Plebani, A., Pinzani, R., Bongianin, I., Vigano`, A., Giacomet, V., Erba, P., Salvini, F., Zuccotti, G. V., Giovannini, M., Ferraris, G., Lipreri, R., Moretti, C., Cellini, M., Cano, M. C., Paolucci, P., Bruzzese, E., De Marco, G., Tarallo, L., Tancredi, F., Pennazzato, M., Rampon, O., Dalle Nogare, E. R., Sanfilippo, A., Romano, A., Saitta, M., Dodi, I., Barone, A., Maccabruni, A., Consolini, R., Legitimo, A., Magnani, C., Falconieri, P., Fundaro`, C., Genovese, O., Panzanella, A., Casadei, A. M., Martino, A., Concato, C., Anzidei, G., Bove, G., Cerilli, S., Catania, S., Ajassa, C., Ganau, A., Cristiano, L., Mazza, A., Di Palma, A., Mignone, F., Riva, C., Scorfaro, C., Portelli, V., Rabusin, M., Pellegatta, A., Molesini, M., Chiappini, E, Galli, L, Tovo, Pa, Gabiano, C, Gattinara, Gc, Guarino, Alfredo, Baddato, R, Giaquinto, C, Lisi, C, and DE MARTINO, M.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Anti-HIV Agents ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,combined antiretroviral therapy ,CD4-CD8 Ratio ,HIV Infections ,HIV-1 infection ,Asymptomatic ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Immunopathology ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,Medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Sida ,ART ,infants ,Chemotherapy ,biology ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Infant ,Viral Load ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical ,Surgery ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Infectious Diseases ,Treatment Outcome ,Child, Preschool ,Lentivirus ,Disease Progression ,HIV-1 ,Viral disease ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Epidemiologic Methods ,Viral load - Abstract
Objective: To investigate the impact of early versus deferred combined antiretroviral treatment (ART) in asymptomatic or moderately symptomatic [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) category N, A or B] infants with perinatal HIV-1 infection. Methods: A multi-centre nationwide case-control study was conducted. Data from 30 infants treated with combined ART with three or more drugs before 6 months of age were compared with data from 103 infants starting ART with three or more drugs after 6 months of age. The median follow-up time was 4.1 years (range, 1.0-6.5 years). Results: No difference was evident in the first available viral load and CD4 T-lymphocyte percentage between the two groups of children. Early-treated infants showed significantly lower viral loads than infants receiving deferred treatment at all the follow-up periods. A higher proportion of early-treated infants than infants receiving deferred treatment (73.3% versus 30.1%; P < 0.0001) reached an undetectable viral load. Higher CD4 T-lymphocyte percentages were found in early-treated infants at 13-24 (P < 0.0001), 25-36 (P < 0.0001), and 37-48 (P = 0.003) months of age. No early-treated infant versus 20 of 103 (19.4%) infants receiving deferred ART (P=0.02) showed a CD4 T-lymphocyte percentage of less than 15% at one time point during follow-up. No CDC category A, B or C clinical event occurred in early-treated infants over the follow-up period while 44 of 103 (42.7%) infants receiving deferred treatment presented a decline in the CDC category. Kaplan-Meier analyses revealed significant differences in CDC category A (P = 0.0002), B (P = 0.0003), and C (P = 0.0018) event-free survivals. Conclusion: The data suggest virologic, immunologic, and clinical benefits from early administration of ART.
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- 2006
6. Early triple therapy vs mono or dual therapy for children with perinatal HIV infection
- Author
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Chiappini, E, Galli, L, Gabiano, C, Tovo, Pa, de Martino, M, Osimani, P., Cordiali, R., De Mattia, D., Manzionna, M., Di Bari, C., Ruggeri, M., Masi, M., Miniaci, A., Specchia, F., Ciccia, M., Lanari, M., Baldi, F., Battisti, L., Fiorino, C., Dessı`, C., Pintor, C., Dedoni, M., Fenu, M. L., Cavallini, R., Anastasio, E., Merolla, F., Sticca, M., Pomero, G., Bezzi, Teresa Maria, Fiumana, Elisa, Bonsignori, F., Gervaso, P., Seini, E., Cecchi, M. T., Cosso, D., Timitilli, A., Stronati, M., Plebani, A., Pinzani, R., Bongianin, I., Vigano`, A., Giacomet, V., Erba, P., Salvini, F., Zuccotti, G. V., Giovannini, M., Ferraris, G., Lipreri, R., Moretti, C., Cellini, M., Cano, M. C., Paolucci, P., Bruzzese, E., De Marco, G., Tarallo, L., Tancredi, F., Pennazzato, M., Rampon, O., Dalle Nogare, E. R., Sanfilippo, A., Romano, A., Saitta, M., Dodi, I., Barone, A., Maccabruni, A., Consolini, R., Legitimo, A., Magnani, C., Falconieri, P., Fundaro`, C., Genovese, O., Panzanella, A., Casadei, A. M., Martino, A., Concato, C., Anzidei, G., Bove, G., Cerilli, S., Catania, S., Ajassa, C., Ganau, A., Cristiano, L., Mazza, A., Di Palma, A., Mignone, F., Riva, C., Scorfaro, C., Portelli, V., Rabusin, M., Pellegatta, A., Molesini, M., Chiappini E., Galli L., Gabiano C., Tovo P A., De Martino M., for the Italian Register for HIV Infection in Children: [.., Osimani P., Specchia F., Molesini M., and ]
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Perinatal HIV infection ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,HIV INFECTIONS ,business.industry ,Therapy ,General Medicine ,Virology ,Perinatal hiv ,medicine ,INFANT ,Dual therapy ,business ,MATERNAL-FETAL RELATIONS ,DISEASE TRANSMISSION ,ANTIHIV AGENTS - Abstract
The time at which antiretroviral therapy (ART) should be initiated in children with perinatal human immunodeficiencyvirus (HIV) infection remains controversial. In a cohort study, Berk et al1 reported clinical benefit from mono/dual ART started before 60 days of life in 10 children compared with treatment administered at 61 to 120 days of life in 16 children. The 23 children who received early triple ART were not investigated because none of them progressed to category C diagnosis by 3 years of age. We performed a similar analysis in a cohort study of a larger data set of children with a longer follow-up to evaluate the outcomes of early and very early triple ART.
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- 2006
7. Lower mother-to-child HIV-1 transmission in boys is independent of type of delivery and antiretroviral prophylaxis. The Italian register for HIV intection in children
- Author
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Galli, L., Puliti, D., Chiappini, E., Gabiano, C., Tovo, P. A., Pezzotti, P., de Martino, M., Osimani, P., Cordiali, R., De Mattia, D., Manzionna, M., Di Bari, C., Ruggeri, M., Masi, M., Miniaci, A., Specchia, F., Ciccia, M., Lanari, M., Baldi, F., Battisti, L., Fiorino, C., Dessı`, C., Pintor, C., Dedoni, M., Fenu, M. L., Cavallini, R., Anastasio, E., Merolla, F., Sticca, M., Pomero, G., Bezzi, Teresa Maria, Fiumana, Elisa, Bonsignori, F., Gervaso, P., Seini, E., Cecchi, M. T., Cosso, D., Timitilli, A., Stronati, M., Plebani, A., Pinzani, R., Bongianin, I., Vigano`, A., Giacomet, V., Erba, P., Salvini, F., Zuccotti, G. V., Giovannini, M., Ferraris, G., Lipreri, R., Moretti, C., Cellini, M., Cano, M. C., Paolucci, P., Bruzzese, E., De Marco, G., Tarallo, L., Tancredi, F., Pennazzato, M., Rampon, O., Dalle Nogare, E. R., Sanfilippo, A., Romano, A., Saitta, M., Dodi, I., Barone, A., Maccabruni, A., Consolini, R., Legitimo, A., Magnani, C., Falconieri, P., Fundaro`, C., Genovese, O., Panzanella, A., Casadei, A. M., Martino, A., Concato, C., Anzidei, G., Bove, G., Cerilli, S., Catania, S., Ajassa, C., Ganau, A., Cristiano, L., Mazza, A., Di Palma, A., Mignone, F., Riva, C., Scorfaro, C., Portelli, V., Rabusin, M., Pellegatta, A., and Molesini, M.
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infant's gender ,vertical transmission ,antiretroviral prophylaxis - Published
- 2005
8. Persistently high IgA serum levels are a marker of immunological or virological failure of combined antiretroviral therapy in children with perinatal HIV-1 infection
- Author
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Chiappini, E., Galli, L., Tovo, P. A., Gabiano, C., de Martino, M., Osimani, P., Cordiali, R., De Mattia, D., Manzionna, M., Di Bari, C., Ruggeri, M., Masi, M., Miniaci, A., Specchia, F., Ciccia, M., Lanari, M., Baldi, F., Battisti, L., Fiorino, C., Dessı`, C., Pintor, C., Dedoni, M., Fenu, M. L., Cavallini, R., Anastasio, E., Merolla, F., Sticca, M., Pomero, G., Bezzi, Teresa Maria, Fiumana, Elisa, Bonsignori, F., Gervaso, P., Seini, E., Cecchi, M. T., Cosso, D., Timitilli, A., Stronati, M., Plebani, A., Pinzani, R., Bongianin, I., Vigano`, A., Giacomet, V., Erba, P., Salvini, F., Zuccotti, G. V., Giovannini, M., Ferraris, G., Lipreri, R., Moretti, C., Cellini, M., Cano, M. C., Paolucci, P., Bruzzese, E., De Marco, G., Tarallo, L., Tancredi, F., Pennazzato, M., Rampon, O., Dalle Nogare, E. R., Sanfilippo, A., Romano, A., Saitta, M., Dodi, I., Barone, A., Maccabruni, A., Consolini, R., Legitimo, A., Magnani, C., Falconieri, P., Fundaro`, C., Genovese, O., Panzanella, A., Casadei, A. M., Martino, A., Concato, C., Anzidei, G., Bove, G., Cerilli, S., Catania, S., Ajassa, C., Ganau, A., Cristiano, L., Mazza, A., Di Palma, A., Mignone, F., Riva, C., Scorfaro, C., Portelli, V., Rabusin, M., Pellegatta, A., Molesini, M., Chiappini E., Galli L., Tovo PA., Gabiano C., de Martino M., Osimani P, Masi M., Specchia F., Molesini M., and The Italian Register for HIV Infection in Children
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Adolescent ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Immunology ,HIV Infections ,HIV-1 infection ,Perinatal hiv ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,Clinical Studies ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Humans ,Treatment Failure ,Child ,viremia ,business.industry ,combinedantiretroviral therapy ,hyper-IgA ,Infant, Newborn ,Normal population ,Infant ,Viral Load ,Antiretroviral therapy ,Virological failure ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Immunoglobulin A ,Child, Preschool ,HIV-1 ,Drug Monitoring ,business ,Viral load ,Biomarkers ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Summary Non-expensive and low-complexity surrogate markers for monitoring the response to combined antiretroviral therapy (combined-ART) are needed in poor-resource settings where routine assessment of CD4+ T-lymphocyte count and viral load can not be afforded. We longitudinally evaluated Ig serum levels in 234 HIV-1 infected children receiving combined-ART with ≥ 3 drugs. Since Ig levels physiologically vary with age, differences at different age periods were evaluated as differences in z-scores calculated using the mean and standard deviation of the normal population for each age period. Data from 17 (7·3%) children with immunological failure and from 54 (23·1%) children with virological failure of combined-ART were compared with data from not-failed children. At baseline children with immunological failure showed higher IgM z-scores (P = 0·042) than children without. After 3–12 months of therapy immunologically failed children displayed higher viral loads (P < 0·0001) and IgA (P = 0·043) z-scores than not-failed children. Similarly, at the same follow-up time, children with virological failure showed lower CD4+ T-lymphocyte percentages (P = 0·005) and higher IgA z-scores (P < 0·0001) than not-failed children. No difference in IgG or IgM z-scores was evidenced between failed and not-failed children after 3–12 months of therapy. In conclusion, IgA serum level is a cheap and low-complexity marker of immunological or virological failure of combined-ART which might be adopted in poor-resource settings.
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- 2005
9. A distal renal tubular acidosis showing hyperammonemia and hyperlactacidemia.
- Author
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Ripoli C, Pinna A, Marras S, Fenu ML, and Nurchi AM
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- Acidosis, Renal Tubular blood, Acidosis, Renal Tubular complications, Acidosis, Renal Tubular genetics, Acidosis, Renal Tubular therapy, Growth Disorders etiology, Humans, Hyperammonemia blood, Hyperammonemia diagnosis, Hyperammonemia genetics, Infant, Male, Mutation, Phenotype, Potassium Citrate administration & dosage, Sodium Bicarbonate administration & dosage, Treatment Outcome, Vomiting etiology, Acidosis, Renal Tubular diagnosis, Hyperammonemia etiology, Lactates blood
- Abstract
Introduction: distal renal tubular acidosis (dRTA) presents itself with variable clinical manifestations and often with late expressions that impact on prognosis., Case Report: A 45-day-old male infant was admitted with stopping growth, difficult feeding and vomiting after meals. Clinical tests and labs revealed a type 1 renal tubular acidosis, even if the first blood tests showed ammonium and lactate increase. We had to exclude metabolic diseases before having a certain diagnosis., Conclusions: blood and urine investigations and genetic tests are fundamental to formulate dRTA diagnosis and to plan follow-up, according to possible phenotypic expressions of recessive and dominant autosomal forms in patients with dRTA.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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