Publications by authors named "Bertacca G"

Worldwide more than 550,000 new patients suffering from malignant tumors are associated with human papillomaviruses (HPV) infection. However, only a small portion of patients infected progress to cancer, suggesting that other factors other than HPV may play a role. Some studies have investigated HPV infection in colorectal cancer (CRC) with discordant results; moreover, the role of HPV in CRC development is still unknown.

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The use of antivirals, corticosteroids, and IL-6 inhibitors has been recommended by the WHO to treat COVID-19. CP has also been considered for severe and critical cases. Clinical trials on CP have shown contradictory results, but an increasing number of patients, including immunocompromised ones, have shown benefits from this treatment.

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Data suggest that adjuvant human papillomavirus (HPV)-vaccination in women treated for cervical HPV diseases reduces recurrent disease. This study investigates adjuvant HPV-vaccination and the rate of recurrence in women undergoing surgery for vulvar high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (HSIL). From January 2013 to April 2020, we enrolled 149 women in a prospective case-control study.

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The PI3K-Akt cascade is a key signaling pathway involved in cell proliferation, survival, and growth. Activating PIK3CA mutations have been reported in breast carcinoma (BC). The aim of this study was to characterize the PIK3CA mutations at exons 9 and 20 in a series of 176 sporadic and 22 hereditary BCs and to correlate the results with clinicopathologic parameters and survival.

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Background: Although most thyroid nodule fine-needle aspiration (FNA) diagnoses are definitive or nearly definitive, about 30% of them are not read as definitively benign or malignant, the so-called indeterminate or suspicious FNA diagnosis. The prevalence of malignancy in FNA samples with these diagnoses varies from 10% to 52%. The first aim of this study was to determine if BRAF V600E analysis of thyroid FNA cytological smears could be performed with a relatively simple protocol.

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Objectives: Pancreatic cancer still remains a challenge for its biological complexity and lack of effective therapeutic strategies. Establishing new pancreatic cancer cell lines is therefore of paramount importance to clarify its biology.

Methods: We established and characterized 4 new pancreatic cancer cell lines (PP78, PP109, PP117, and PP161) according to their genetic (K-Ras, TP53, CDKN2A, and MADH4; DNA fingerprinting; karyotype), cytostructural (cytokeratins 7, 8, 18, and 19 vimentin, and ezrin), and functional profiles (doubling time; migration assay).

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We evaluated the possibility of prolonged chimerism formation in fetus and lamb, following human cord blood-selected CD133+ hemopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation into the celomic cavity of ewes at a pre-immune fetal age (44-45 days of pregnancy). Nineteen ewes were injected with HSC and 5 controls with a saline solution. By PCR, HLA-DQ alpha 1 and 6 human microsatellites (CODIS) were used for HSC traceability.

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Objectives: The most frequent genomic abnormality in clear cell renal cell carcinoma (cc-RCC) is inactivation of Von Hippel-Lindau gene (VHL). pVHL19 is a ligase promoting proteosomal degradation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha); pVHL30 is associated with microtubules. VHL exert its oncogenetic action both directly and through HIF-1alpha activation.

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Background: Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) is a DNA virus belonging to the Papovavirus family. Genital HPV types have been subdivided into medium-low risk, and high-risk (HPV 16 and 18), frequently associated with cervical cancer. Three DNA-based piezoelectric biosensors were here developed for a quick detection and genotyping of HPV.

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The aim of the present study was to test the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) as a tool to identify human papillomavirus (HPV) in routine cytological samples scraped from the uterine cervix. Moreover, attention has been focused on the correlation between HPV types and early intraepithelial lesions. The study involved 586 women who had undergone conventional Pap test.

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Introduction: Breast papillary lesions represent a heterogeneous group of tumors ranging from benign to malignant, including several intermediate forms. Malignant papillary tumors are rare and their molecular characterization is still limited. A few studies pointed to the presence of specific genetic alterations that could be relevant both for diagnostic purposes and to elucidate tumour development and progression.

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Histological detection of axillary lymph node metastases is still the most valuable prognostic parameter for breast cancer, but about 30% of node-negative patients relapse within five years, suggesting that current methods are inadequate for identifying metastatic disease. More sensitive, PCR-based methods for the detection of metastatic cells are now available, enabling the amplification of cancer cell-specific mRNA messages by the RT-PCR assay. An ideal tumour marker, consistently expressed in tumour samples and not at all in normal lymph nodes, remains to be identified.

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The int-6 gene, originally identified as a common integration site for the mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) in mouse mammary tumors, encodes the p48 component of the eukaryotic translation initiation factor-3 (eIF3-p48). Int-6/eIF3-p48 is expressed in all adult tissues which have been tested and early in embryonic development. Int-6/eIF3-p48 has been highly conserved throughout evolution and the deduced amino acid sequence of the human gene product is identical to the mouse protein.

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DNA was analyzed from 57 sporadic gastrointestinal tumors (34 pancreatic cancers, 23 colon tumors) and cognate normal tissues to verify whether mutations at coding sequences were associated with microsatellite instability (MSI). Genomic instability was present in 41% (14/34) of pancreatic samples and in 26% (6/23) of colon cancers previously tested by six microsatellite markers. The tumors included 37 cases showing no MSI; 15 cases with MSI at only 1 locus and 5 cases with MSI at 2 or more loci.

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Tumours developed in non-smoking patients represent about 10% of all lung neoplasms and show peculiar morphologic and genetic features. In a previous study, we found a constant association between p53 gene alterations and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the FHIT locus in a subset of non-smoking tumours (7 cases out of 35 analyzed), so we hypothesized that a genomic instability associated with p53 mutations could be the cause of FHIT LOH in these neoplasms. To test this hypothesis, in the same panel of tumours, we investigated the presence of LOH at 7 other microsatellite loci located on different chromosomes.

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Patients with stage I non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are typically treated with surgical resection alone. However, about one-third of such patients develop disease recurrence and die within 5 years after complete resection. The ability to predict recurrence could represent an important contribution to treatment planning.

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Lung cancer is strictly associated with tobacco smoking. Tumours developed in non-smoking subjects account for less than 10% of all lung cancers and show peculiar histopathological features, being prevalently adenocarcinomas. A number of genetic data suggest that their biological behaviour may be different from that of lung tumours caused by smoking, however the number of cases investigated to date is too low to draw definitive conclusions.

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Bronchioloalveolar carcinoma (BAC) is a particular type of adenocarcinoma of the lung which accounts for up to 9 per cent of pulmonary malignancies. The aetiology and pathogenesis of this unique neoplastic disease are still unclear. Three histological subtypes of BAC have been recognized: mucinous, non-mucinous, and sclerosing.

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The FHIT gene, recently cloned and mapped on chromosome 3p14.2, has frequently been found to be abnormal in several established cancer cell lines and primary tumours. As alterations of chromosome 3p are common events in ovarian cancers with breakpoint sites at 3p14.

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Detection of gene mutations by sensitive polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based methods can allow to identify occult neoplastic cells in a great excess of nonmalignant cells. These molecular approaches have an enormous potential in terms of early diagnosis, detection of occult micrometastases of solid tumors, and minimal residual disease in patients with hematopoietic malignancies. Currently, the applications of such methods are limited, mainly because the high sensitivity required for the identification of rare mutated alleles can be achieved only in cases in which mutations occur in few specific codons of a gene or when the mutation is already known.

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The status of the P16 gene was investigated by Southern blot, polymerase chain reaction-single strand conformational polymorphism (PCR-SSCP), and DNA sequencing analyses in 30 primary resected non-small cell lung carcinomas (NSCLCs) with metastatic involvement of thoracic lymph nodes and 33 NSCLCs without node metastases. Direct sequencing of tumour DNA samples scored positive by PCR-SSCP showed five somatic mutations of the P16 gene: four nonsense and one frameshift. The Southern blot analysis revealed the presence of a homozygous deletion of the P16 locus in one tumour.

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Bronchioloalveolar carcinoma (BAC) is a form of peripheral lung adenocarcinoma growing as a single layer of malignant cells along the walls of terminal airways. The existence of BAC as a separate clinico-pathological entity has been a matter of controversy, mainly because its histogenesis is uncertain and it is not easily distinguishable from conventional lung adenocarcinoma (CLA). Three subtypes of BAC have been described using histological and cytological criteria: mucinous, non-mucinous, and sclerosing.

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p21, the product of the WAF1/CIP1/SDI1/mda-6 gene, is an inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinases. In cell cultures p21 is induced by p53-dependent and p53-independent pathways by DNA damage and induction of differentiation. We investigated p21 RNA and immunohistochemical expression in 43 non-small cell lung carcinomas and corresponding normal lung samples previously investigated for p53 and WAF1 gene status and p53 protein expression.

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