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Showing papers by "Giovanni Barosi published in 2021"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe current biological and clinical knowledge on smoldering multiple myeloma, focusing on novel insights into its molecular pathogenesis, new prognostic scoring systems proposed to identify SMM patients at higher risk of early transformation, and updated results of completed or ongoing clinical trials.
Abstract: According to the updated International Myeloma Working Group criteria, smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM) is an asymptomatic plasma cell disorder characterized by an M-component >3 g/dL, bone marrow plasma cell infiltration >10% and <60%, and absence of any myeloma-defining event. Active multiple myeloma is preceded by SMM, with a median time to progression of approximately 5 years. Cases of SMM range from the extremes of “monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance-like”, in which patients never progress during their lifetimes, to “early multiple myeloma”, in which transformation into symptomatic disease, based on genomic evolution, may be rapid and devastating. Such a “split personality” makes the prognosis and management of individual patients challenging, particularly with regard to the identification and possible early treatment of high-risk SMM. Outside of clinical trials, the conventional approach to SMM generally remains close observation until progression to active multiple myeloma. However, two prospective, randomized trials have recently demonstrated a significant clinical benefit in terms of time to progression, and of overall survival in one of the two studies, for some patients with higher-risk SMM treated with lenalidomide ± dexamethasone, raising the question of whether such an approach should be considered a new standard of care. In this paper, experts from the European Myeloma Network describe current biological and clinical knowledge on SMM, focusing on novel insights into its molecular pathogenesis, new prognostic scoring systems proposed to identify SMM patients at higher risk of early transformation, and updated results of completed or ongoing clinical trials. Finally, some practical recommendations for the real-life management of these patients, based on Delphi consensus methodology, are provided.

20 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
22 May 2021-Cancers
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors determined the contribution of the rs1024611 SNP of CCL2-one of the most potent immunomodulatory chemokines-to the clinical and biological characteristics of the disease, demonstrating that male subjects carrying the homozygous genotype G/G had an increased risk of primary myelofibrosis and that, among PMF patients, the g/G genotype is an independent prognostic factor for reduced overall survival.
Abstract: Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) can modify the individual pro-inflammatory background and may therefore have relevant implications in the MPN setting, typified by aberrant cytokine production. In a cohort of 773 primary myelofibrosis (PMF), we determined the contribution of the rs1024611 SNP of CCL2-one of the most potent immunomodulatory chemokines-to the clinical and biological characteristics of the disease, demonstrating that male subjects carrying the homozygous genotype G/G had an increased risk of PMF and that, among PMF patients, the G/G genotype is an independent prognostic factor for reduced overall survival. Functional characterization of the SNP and the CCL2-CCR2 axis in PMF showed that i) homozygous PMF cells are the highest chemokine producers as compared to the other genotypes; ii) PMF CD34+ cells are a selective target of CCL2, since they uniquely express CCR2 (CCL2 receptor); iii) activation of the CCL2-CCR2 axis boosts pro-survival signals induced by driver mutations via Akt phosphorylation; iv) ruxolitinib effectively counteracts CCL2 production and down-regulates CCR2 expression in PMF cells. In conclusion, the identification of the role of the CCL2/CCR2 chemokine system in PMF adds a novel element to the pathophysiological picture of the disease, with clinical and therapeutic implications.

9 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 2021-Leukemia
TL;DR: CD34/CXCR4-se is a highly sensitive marker of disease activity and a new potential diagnostic and prognostic biomarker in PMF.
Abstract: The expression of the CXCR4 chemokine receptor on CD34-positive blood cells is reduced in persons with primary myelofibrosis (PMF). We analyzed the relevance of cytofluorimetric assessment of the percentage of CD34-positive blood cells that had a positive CXCR4 surface expression (CD34/CXCR4-se) in a large cohort of subjects with myeloproliferative neoplasms. Mean CD34/CXCR4-se was lower in subjects with PMF compared with those with essential thrombocythemia (ET) or polycythemia vera (PV). A cutoff value of 39% was associated with a diagnosis of pre-fibrotic PMF vs. ET with a positive predictive value of 97%. In PMF male sex, older age, and MPL mutation were independent correlates of reduced CD34/CXCR4-se and associated with a briefer interval to development of severe anemia, large splenomegaly, thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, elevated CD34-positive blood cells, blast transformation and death. We constructed a prognostic model including age >65 years, hemoglobin 50 × 106/L, and CD34/CXCR4-se <39% at diagnosis. The model identified three risk cohorts with greater accuracy compared with the International Prognostic Scoring System. In conclusion, CD34/CXCR4-se is a highly sensitive marker of disease activity and a new potential diagnostic and prognostic biomarker in PMF.

8 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Onima Chowdhury1, Jennifer O'Sullivan1, Nikolaos Barkas1, Guanlin Wang1, Gemma Buck1, Angela Hamblin1, Ayalew Tefferi2, Haifa K. Al-Ali3, Giovanni Barosi, Timothy Devos4, Heinz Gisslinger5, Qian Jiang6, Jean-Jacques Kiladjian7, Ruben A. Mesa, Francesco Passamonti8, Vincent Ribrag9, Gary J. Schiller10, Alessandro M. Vannucchi11, Daobin Zhou12, Mary Frances McMullin13, Jianhua Zhong14, Robert Peter Gale15, Adam J. Mead1, John Catalano16, William Stevenson17, Günther Gastl18, Werner Linkesch19, Jan Van Droogenbroeck, P. Mineur, Vikas Gupta20, Andrew Turner21, Thomas J. Nevill22, Jianyong Li23, Zhixiang Shen24, Ting Liu25, Dominique Bordessoule, Shanti Natarajan-Amé26, Christian Recher, Jean Loup Demory, Richard F. Schlenk27, Martin Griesshammer28, Mario Cazzola, Giuseppe Saglio, Giorgina Specchia, Alessandro Rambaldi, Fabrizio Pane, Sonja Zweegman, Peter A. W. te Boekhorst29, Reinier Raymakers30, Kudrat Abdulkadyrov, Manana Sokolova31, Galina Salogub, Andrey Zaritskiy, Francisco Cervantes32, Juan Carlos Hernandez Boluda33, Emilio Ojeda, Daniel Tesfa34, Lennart Nilsson35, Mark Drummond, John T. Reilly36, Claire N. Harrison37, Dragana Milojkovic15, Candido E. Rivera2, Emmanuel C. Besa38, H. Joachim Deeg39, John Mascarenhas40, Josef T. Prchal41, Ramon V. Tiu42, Moshe Talpaz43, Jen Chin Wang, Raajit K. Rampal44, Damiano Rondelli45, Kelly McCaul, Randall Brown46, Norio Komatsu47, Kazuma Ohyashiki48, Kiyoshi Ando49, Hiroshi Kawabata50, Katsuto Takenaka51, Tomoko Hata52, James W. Vardiman53 
01 Apr 2021-Leukemia
TL;DR: This year’s RESUME trialists include: Jennifer O’Sullivan, Nikolaos Barkas, John-Jacques Kiladjian, Qian Jiang, Robert Peter Gale, and Mary Frances McMullin.
Abstract: Onima Chowdhury ● Jennifer O’Sullivan ● Nikolaos Barkas ● Guanlin Wang ● Gemma Buck ● Angela Hamblin ● Ayalew Tefferi ● Haifa K. Al-Ali ● Giovanni Barosi 4 ● Timothy Devos ● Heinz Gisslinger ● Qian Jiang ● Jean-Jacques Kiladjian ● Ruben Mesa ● Francesco Passamonti ● Vincent Ribrag ● Gary Schiller ● Alessandro M. Vannucchi ● Daobin Zhou ● Mary Frances McMullin 15 ● Jianhua Zhong ● Robert Peter Gale ● Adam J. Mead 1 ● for the RESUME trialists

6 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a retrospective cohort study included consecutive subjects registered in the database of the Center for the Study of Myelofibrosis in Pavia, Italy, from 1998 to 2020 (June), and diagnosed with atypical myeloproliferative disorder according to their adjudicated criteria.
Abstract: Introduction In 1991, we reported 18 persons with a clinical-pathologic entity and termed atypical myeloproliferative disorder because they did not meet the contemporary diagnostic criteria for a myeloproliferative neoplasm. We sought to gain further knowledge on this disease entity. Methods This retrospective cohort study included consecutive subjects registered in the database of the Center for the Study of Myelofibrosis in Pavia, Italy, from 1998 to 2020 (June), and diagnosed with atypical myeloproliferative disorder according to our adjudicated criteria. We studied clinical, histological, cytogenetic, and molecular covariates and risks of thrombosis, disease progression, and death. Data were compared with those of concurrent subjects with prefibrotic myelofibrosis. Results Fifteen new subjects with atypical myeloproliferative disorder were identified. Seven were male. Median age was 50 years (IQR, 41-54 years). Thirteen were diagnosed with a synchronous symptomatic or incidentally detected thrombotic event. The bone marrow showed megakaryocyte hyperplasia with dysplasia. JAK2V617F was present in 10 subjects and CALR mutation in one. No other somatic mutations were identified in next generation sequencing. After a median follow-up of 101 months (IQR, 40-160 months), no subject had disease progression or blast transformation. Incidence of post-diagnosis or recurrent thrombosis was 3.9 events (95% confidence interval, 3.5-4.0) and 5.0 events (4.6-5.6) per 100 person-years. Features of subjects with atypical myeloproliferative disorder differed markedly from those of 546 subjects with prefibrotic myelofibrosis. Conclusion Our data indicate that these 15 persons have a distinct myeloproliferative neoplasm. We propose naming this new disorder clonal megakaryocyte dysplasia with normal blood values.

6 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared outcomes and cost-effectiveness of three post-transplant lenalidomide strategies in EU and US settings: (1) none; (2) until failure; and (3) 2-year fixed duration.
Abstract: Considerable data indicate post-transplant lenalidomide prolongs progression-free survival and probably survival after an autotransplant for multiple myeloma (MM). However, optimal therapy duration is unknown, controversial and differs in the EU and US. We compared outcomes and cost-effectiveness of 3 post-transplant lenalidomide strategies in EU and US settings: (1) none; (2) until failure; and (3) 2-year fixed duration. We used a Markov decision model, which included six health states and informed by published data. The model estimated the lenalidomide strategy given to failure achieved 1.06 quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) at costs per QALY gained of €29,232 in the EU and $133,401 in the US settings. Two-year fixed-duration lenalidomide averted €7,286 per QALY gained in the EU setting and saved 0.84 QALYs at $60,835 per QALY gained in the US setting. These highly divergent costs per QALY in the EU and US settings resulted from significant differences in post-transplant lenalidomide costs and 2nd-line therapies driven by whether post-transplant failure was on or off-lenalidomide. In Monte Carlo simulation analyses which allowed us to account for the variability of inputs, 2-year fixedduration lenalidomide remained the preferred strategy for improving healthcare sustainability in the EU and US settings.

6 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
23 Oct 2021-Cancers
TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes basic concepts of primary myelofibrosis pathogenesis, clinics, and therapy, focusing on classical prognostic scoring systems and new biological markers of the disease.
Abstract: Primary myelofibrosis (PMF) is a myeloproliferative neoplasm due to the clonal proliferation of a hematopoietic stem cell. The vast majority of patients harbor a somatic gain of function mutation either of JAK2 or MPL or CALR genes in their hematopoietic cells, resulting in the activation of the JAK/STAT pathway. Patients display variable clinical and laboratoristic features, including anemia, thrombocytopenia, splenomegaly, thrombotic complications, systemic symptoms, and curtailed survival due to infections, thrombo-hemorrhagic events, or progression to leukemic transformation. New drugs have been developed in the last decade for the treatment of PMF-associated symptoms; however, the only curative option is currently represented by allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation, which can only be offered to a small percentage of patients. Disease prognosis is based at diagnosis on the classical International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS) and Dynamic-IPSS (during disease course), which comprehend clinical parameters; recently, new prognostic scoring systems, including genetic and molecular parameters, have been proposed as meaningful tools for a better patient stratification. Moreover, new biological markers predicting clinical evolution and patient survival have been associated with the disease. This review summarizes basic concepts of PMF pathogenesis, clinics, and therapy, focusing on classical prognostic scoring systems and new biological markers of the disease.

5 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
20 Aug 2021-Genes
TL;DR: In this article, the association of VEGFA rs3025039 polymorphism with clinical co-variates and outcomes in 849 subjects with primary myelofibrosis (PMF) and 250 healthy controls was evaluated.
Abstract: We evaluated the association of VEGFA rs3025039 polymorphism with clinical co-variates and outcomes in 849 subjects with primary myelofibrosis (PMF) and 250 healthy controls. Minor T-allele frequency was higher in subjects with JAK2V617F compared with those without JAK2V617F (18% vs. 13%; p = 0.014). In subjects with JAK2V617F, the TT genotype was associated at diagnosis with lower platelet concentrations (p = 0.033), higher plasma LDH concentration (p = 0.005), higher blood CD34-positive cells (p = 0.027), lower plasma cholesterol concentration (p = 0.046), and higher concentration of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (p = 0.018). These associations were not found in subjects with PMF without JAK2V617F. In subjects with the TT genotype, risk of death was higher compared with subjects with CC/CT genotypes (HR = 2.12 [1.03, 4.35], p = 0.041). Finally, the TT genotype was associated with higher frequency of deep vein thrombosis in typical sites (12.5% vs. 2.5%; OR = 5.46 [1.51, 19.7], p = 0.009). In conclusion, in subjects with PMF, the VEGFA rs3025039 CT or TT genotypes are more common in those with JAK2V617F than in those without JAK2V67F mutation and are associated with disease severity, poor prognosis, and risk of deep vein thrombosis.

3 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recommendations on management issues in cutaneous T‐cell lymphomas of adults of adults are intended for use not only by expert centers but above all by "not experienced" dermatologists and hematologists as well as general practitioners.
Abstract: In this paper, we present a review of critical concepts, and produce recommendations on management issues in cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCLs) of adults. A panel of nine experts was selected for their expertise in research and clinical practice of CTCLs. During an initial meeting, the areas of major concern in the management of CTCLs were selected by generating and rank-ordering clinical key questions using the criterion of clinical relevance, through group discussion. Recommendations were achieved by multiple-step formalized procedures to reach a consensus after a comprehensive analysis of the scientific literature. The panel produced recommendations on how to facilitate the clinical suspicion of CTCL; indication of cutaneous biopsy; optimal histological diagnosis, immunohistochemistry and genetic markers; and staging pathway and up-to-date therapeutics (with particular focus on new treatments). The critical concept of integration of the different medical expertise in the management of the patients with CTCL was thoroughly examined. These recommendations are intended for use not only by expert centers but above all by "not experienced" dermatologists and hematologists as well as general practitioners.

3 citations