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Institution

Chiesi Farmaceutici S.p.A.

CompanyCourbevoie, France
About: Chiesi Farmaceutici S.p.A. is a company organization based out in Courbevoie, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Formoterol & Beclometasone dipropionate. The organization has 780 authors who have published 1013 publications receiving 22860 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Aducanumab, a potent monoclonal antibody specifically directed against Aβ oligomers, produced encouraging preliminary results in patients with prodromal or mild AD, suggesting that oligomeric Aβ species may represent a valid biological target.
Abstract: Brain accumulation of the amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide is believed to be the initial event in the Alzheimer disease (AD) process. Aβ accumulation begins 15–20 years before clinical symptoms occur, mainly owing to defective brain clearance of the peptide. Over the past 20 years, we have seen intensive efforts to decrease the levels of Aβ monomers, oligomers, aggregates and plaques using compounds that decrease production, antagonize aggregation or increase brain clearance of Aβ. Unfortunately, these approaches have failed to show clinical benefit in large clinical trials involving patients with mild to moderate AD. Clinical trials in patients at earlier stages of the disease are ongoing, but the initial results have not been clinically impressive. Efforts are now being directed against Aβ oligomers, the most neurotoxic molecular species, and monoclonal antibodies directed against these oligomers are producing encouraging results. However, Aβ oligomers are in equilibrium with both monomeric and aggregated species; thus, previous drugs that efficiently removed monomeric Aβ or Aβ plaques should have produced clinical benefits. In patients with sporadic AD, Aβ accumulation could be a reactive compensatory response to neuronal damage of unknown cause, and alternative strategies, including interference with modifiable risk factors, might be needed to defeat this devastating disease. Potential disease-modifying therapies for Alzheimer disease have mostly targeted brain accumulation of amyloid-β, but this approach has yet to provide substantial clinical benefits. The authors consider the reasons for this failure and suggest alternative strategies, including modification of risk factors.

563 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the prevalence and incidence of depression in individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), the possible impact of depressive symptoms on incident MCI, or its progression to dementia and the possible mechanisms behind the observed associations.
Abstract: Clinical and epidemiologic research has focused on the identification of risk factors that may be modified in predementia syndromes, at a preclinical and early clinical stage of dementing disorders, with specific attention to the role of depression. Our goal was to provide an overview of these studies and more specifically to describe the prevalence and incidence of depression in individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), the possible impact of depressive symptoms on incident MCI, or its progression to dementia and the possible mechanisms behind the observed associations. Prevalence and incidence of depressive symptoms or syndromes in MCI vary as a result of different diagnostic criteria and different sampling and assessment procedures. The prevalence of depression in individuals with MCI was higher in hospital-based studies (median: 44.3%, range: 9%–83%) than in population-based studies (median: 15.7%, range: 3%–63%), reflecting different referral patterns and selection criteria. Incidence of depressive symptoms varied from 11.7 to 26.6/100 person-years in hospital-based and population-based studies. For depressed normal subjects and depressed patients with MCI, the findings on increased risk of incident MCI or its progression to dementia were conflicting. These contrasting findings suggested that the length of the follow-up period, the study design, the sample population, and methodological differences may be central for detecting an association between baseline depression and subsequent development of MCI or its progression to dementia. Assuming that MCI may be the earliest identifiable clinical stage of dementia, depressive symptoms may be an early manifestation rather than a risk factor for dementia and Alzheimer disease, arguing that the underlying neuropathological condition that causes MCI or dementia also causes depressive symptoms. In this scenario, at least in certain subsets of elderly patients, late-life depression, MCI, and dementia could represent a possible clinical continuum.

539 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In patients with symptomatic COPD, severe or very severe airflow limitation, and an exacerbation history despite maintenance therapy, extrafine BDP/FF/G significantly reduced the rate of moderate-to-severe exacerbations compared with IND/GLY, without increasing the risk of pneumonia.

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of aldehydes and aqueous extract (CSE), crotonaldehyde, and acrolein on CS-induced airway inflammatory responses were investigated.
Abstract: Cigarette smoke (CS) inhalation causes an early inflammatory response in rodent airways by stimulating capsaicin-sensitive sensory neurons that express transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily V, member 1 (TRPV1) through an unknown mechanism that does not involve TRPV1. We hypothesized that 2 alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehydes present in CS, crotonaldehyde and acrolein, induce neurogenic inflammation by stimulating TRPA1, an excitatory ion channel coexpressed with TRPV1 on capsaicin-sensitive nociceptors. We found that CS aqueous extract (CSE), crotonaldehyde, and acrolein mobilized Ca2+ in cultured guinea pig jugular ganglia neurons and promoted contraction of isolated guinea pig bronchi. These responses were abolished by a TRPA1-selective antagonist and by the aldehyde scavenger glutathione but not by the TRPV1 antagonist capsazepine or by ROS scavengers. Treatment with CSE or aldehydes increased Ca2+ influx in TRPA1-transfected cells, but not in control HEK293 cells, and promoted neuropeptide release from isolated guinea pig airway tissue. Furthermore, the effect of CSE and aldehydes on Ca2+ influx in dorsal root ganglion neurons was abolished in TRPA1-deficient mice. These data identify alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehydes as the main causative agents in CS that via TRPA1 stimulation mediate airway neurogenic inflammation and suggest a role for TRPA1 in the pathogenesis of CS-induced diseases.

378 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A randomised, parallel group, double-blind, active-controlled study to assess efficacy of single-inhaler combination of an extra fine formulation of beclometasone dipropionate, formoterol fumarate, and glycopyrronium bromide in COPD compared with BDP/FF/GB treatment.

336 citations


Authors

Showing all 780 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Emilio Hirsch7632220914
Stefano Fiorucci7434418939
Jan Johansson7344719658
Antonio Morelli6021512132
Riccardo Patacchini5822010514
Bruno P. Imbimbo521827882
Paolo Colombo5135810315
Marco Mor5024411291
Mario Cottone4923613343
Simone Ottonello431515568
Angelo Sala431625660
Bengt Robertson421375627
Claudio Borghi415337886
Andrea Mele392705703
Ettore Ambrosioni3922928394
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202164
202065
201966
201858
201763
201642