124 research outputs found

    Erratum: Envisioning translational hyperscanning: how applied neuroscience might improve family-centered care (Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience (2022) (nsac061) DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsac061)

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    This is a correction to: Elisa Roberti, Elena Capelli, Livio Provenzi Envisioning translational hyperscanning: how applied neuroscience might improve family-centered care, Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 2022; nsac061, https://doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsac061 In the originally published version of this manuscript, the order of authors and the authors’ affiliations were incorrectly given as follows: Livio Provenzi,1,2 Elisa Roberti,2 and Elena Capelli2 1Department of Brain and Behavioral Sciences, University of Pavia, Pavia 27100, Italy 2Developmental Psychobiology Lab, IRCCS Mondino Foundation, Pavia 27100, Italy The Publisher apologizes for this error, which occurred during the production process. The author list and authors’ affiliations have now been corrected, as follows: Elisa Roberti,1 Elena Capelli,1 and Livio Provenzi2,1 1Developmental Psychobiology Lab, IRCCS Mondino Foundation, Pavia 27100, Italy 2Department of Brain and Behavioral Sciences, University of Pavia, Pavia 27100, Ital

    Secondary Acute Myeloid Leukemia: Pathogenesis and Treatment

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    Secondary acute myeloid leukemia includes acute myeloid leukemia that arises either from a previous myeloid hematologic disease such as myelodysplastic syndrome, chronic myeloproliferative syndrome, or myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative overlap syndromes or from a previous chemotherapy or radiotherapy performed for another disease. Secondary acute myeloid leukemia is characterized by a worse prognosis than its de novo counterparts, with a 5-year overall survival of <30% despite an advanced insight into pathogenesis and new available treatments. The best therapeutic strategy is to achieve complete remission with a negative minimal residual disease followed by hematopoietic stem cell transplantation; however, advanced age of patients at diagnosis, multiple comorbidities, and lower rate of complete remission makes these approaches available only for a small fraction of secondary acute myeloid leukemia patients. In this chapter, we discuss the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and prognostic factors of secondary acute myeloid leukemia. Also, we discuss the main treatments currently available for eligible patients (fit patients) and non-eligible patients (unfit patients) for intensive chemotherapy and future treatment perspectives. Copyright: The Authors.; The authors confirm that the materials included in this chapter do not violate copyright laws. Where relevant, appropriate permissions have been obtained from the original copyright holder(s), and all original sources have been appropriately acknowledged or referenced

    Il processo di Parigi del 1240 contro il Talmud: verso un’edizione critica del testo ebraico

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    The article summarizes the main events of the trial held at Paris in 1240 under Louis IX against the Babylonian Talmud; the trial resulted in the first burning of the Talmud in European history (1242 or 1244). The author deals with the textual history of the Hebrew statement of the trial, which has still not received a proper critical edition. Four extant manuscripts of this work are held in the National Libraries at Paris, Hamburg and Moscow and in the Bodleian Libary at Oxford; besides, the Hebrew text provided by J.Chr. Wagenseil in his Tela Ignea Satanae (1681) dwelt on a Strassburg manuscript nowadays lost

    The Time Has Come for Targeted Therapies for AML: Lights and Shadows

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    Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a complex disease characterized by genetic and clinical heterogeneity and high mortality. After 40 years during which the standard of care for patients evolved very little, the therapeutic landscape has recently seen rapid changes, with the approval of eight new drugs by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) within the last 2 years, providing new opportunities, as well as new challenges, for treating clinicians. These therapies include FLT3 inhibitors midostaurin and gilteritinib, CPX-351 (liposomal cytarabine and daunorubicin), gemtuzumab ozogamicin (GO, anti-CD33 monoclonal antibody conjugated with calicheamicin), IDH1/IDH2 inhibitors ivosidenib and enasidenib, Hedgehog inhibitor glasdegib, and BCL-2 inhibitor venetoclax. In this review, we summarize currently available data on these new drugs and discuss the rapidly evolving therapeutic armamentarium for AML, focusing on targeted therapies

    L'Equity based crowdfunding e la c.d. «dematerializzazione» delle quote di s.r.l.

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    Equity based crowdfunding and the “dematerializzazione” of private companies’ shares. The d.l. 24 January 2015, n. 3 (so-called Investment Compact) has introduced a new share transfer system in private companies (Italian s.r.l.) which have the qualification of “start-up innovative” or the qualification of “PMI innovative”. This new system is based on the financial intermediaries’ activity, under the control of Consob, and allows the private companies with these qualifications to easily transfer their shares during an operation of equity based crowdfunding. This system is projected as an alternative to the ordinary rules related to the transfer of private companies’ shares, as it permits the transfer of shares without the typical legal obligations in regard to the “Registro delle Imprese” (the Italian Commerce register). The new rules aim to simplify business bureaucracy and to create better conditions for the growth of a secondary market of the shares. In this analysis the author will weigh up the multifaceted problems in the coordination between the new rules and the general system of the Italian private companies (s.r.l.) and scrutinize the effectiveness of the new rules, specifically the possibility that a sensible secondary market will be created due to the new alternative system

    L’amministrazione delle società di persone tra continuità e rinnovamento: questioni aperte e prospettive evolutive

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    Il contributo offre una dettagliata analisi della disciplina dell’amministrazione nelle società di persone, ponendola in relazione con le trasformazioni che hanno interessato il diritto dell’impresa, tra la tradizionale flessibilità propria delle società di persone e le esigenze connesse all’adeguatezza degli assetti organizzativi. Dopo aver ricostruito l’evoluzione sto-rica della figura dell’amministratore, l’A. si sofferma sulle tensioni interpretative emerse in seguito ai mutamenti del contesto economico-sociale e all’introduzione di norme soprav-venute al codice civile. Punto di partenza dell’indagine è il rapporto problematico tra la tradizionale agilità strutturale delle società di persone e la crescente centralità dei profili organizzativi, che impongono di dotare la società di un “assetto strutturato e coerente”, funzionale al raggiungimento di quegli standard di “serietà imprenditoriale e correttezza” già evocati dai progetti di riforma Di Sabato e Rovelli. L’esame si articola attorno a diversi profili, tra cui il riparto di competenze tra soci e amministratori, i limiti al potere di rappre-sentanza derivanti dall’oggetto sociale, i doveri di informazione e l’emersione di tratti pro-pri delle società di capitali. Tali ambiti sono accomunati da incertezze applicative e tensio-ni ermeneutiche che richiedono una rielaborazione sistematica aggiornata e coerente. In questo quadro si inserisce anche il tema, tanto discusso quanto attuale, dell’ammissibilità della figura dell’amministratore non socio: una possibilità oggi teoricamente sostenibile al-la luce dell’evoluzione normativa e comparatistica, ma che richiede, de iure condendo, una disciplina organica e puntuale. Tale disciplina dovrebbe riguardare, in particolare, i profili connessi alla revoca degli amministratori e alla loro responsabilità verso i creditori sociali, in un equilibrio rinnovato che valorizzi al contempo la storica flessibilità del modello per-sonalistico e la sempre più marcata rilevanza dei profili relativi all’organizzazione interna.This article provides an in-depth analysis of the rules governing management in partner-ships, framing it within the broader transformations that have affected business law. It highlights the tension between the original flexibility characteristic of partnership and the increasingly pressing regulatory requirements aimed at ensuring adequate organizational structures. After tracing the historical evolution of the role of the directors, the author fo-cuses on the interpretive tensions that have emerged in the wake of changes in the socio-economic context and the introduction of provisions adopted after the civil Code. The in-quiry begins with the problematic relationship between the traditional structural agility of partnerships and the growing centrality of organizational elements. This shift demands that firms be equipped with a “structured and coherent” framework designed to meet those standards of “entrepreneurial seriousness and propriety” already evoked by the Di Sabato and Rovelli reform proposals. The discussion addresses several key issues, including the allocation of powers between partners and directors, the limits on representational author-ity imposed by the company’s purpose, duties of disclosure, and the emergence of traits characteristic of corporations. All these areas are marked by uncertainties in application and interpretative tensions that call for a coherent and up-to-date systematic reconsidera-tion. Against this backdrop, the article also examines the much-debated and timely ques-tion of whether a non-partner can serve as a director–a possibility that is now theoretically tenable considering legislative and comparative developments, but one that, de iure condendo, still requires a comprehensive and precise regulatory framework. Such a framework should address issues relating to the removal of directors and their liability to-wards the partnership’s creditors, within a renewed balance that gives due weight to both the model’s historic flexibility and the increasingly marked importance of organizational arrangements

    Prise d’espace ? Patriarcat, féminisme et transgression autour de Con il vento nei capelli de Salwa Salem

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    This article is aimed on the analysis of Con il vento nei capelli (“With the wind in one’s head”), an autobiography of Salwa Salem that is among the first works of migrant literature in Italy. The interesting point of this autobiography is the space of autonomy and of identity, as it is perceived by the novel’s author. This search for private space is placed, as we’ll try to proof, in between the tradition and modernity, patriarchal living and feminism, the choice that the author has to make between staying at home and migrating elsewher

    Low-dose Gemtuzumab-Ozogamicin as post-consolidation therapy in elderly patients with acute myeloid leukaemia: a pilot study.

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    The incidence of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) increases with advancing age, and in older patients the chance of cure has not substantially improved recently. In the elderly the incidence of secondary AML is high, and is often associated with both high- risk cytogenetic abnormalities and expression of the multidrug resistance protein (MDR1) and p-glycoprotein (p-gp), both of which are associated with poor outcomes (Appelbaum et al, 2006). Gemtuzumab-Ozogamicin (GO) is a humanized anti-CD33 monoclonal antibody conjugated to Calicheamicin that is rapidly internalized after binding to CD33. GO seems to be more selective than conventional chemotherapy, as CD33 is expressed on AML cells but not in normal haematopoietic stem cells (SCs) or in non-haematopoietic tissues (Sievers et al, 2001). In a series of phase II studies including 142 patients with AML in first relapse, GO monotherapy was associated with a 30% overall complete remission (CR) rate, including a 26% rate in patients over 60 years of age (Sievers et al, 2001; Larson et al, 2002). These results led to US Food and Drug Administration approval of GO for the treatment of patients over 60 years with relapsed AML (Bross et al, 2001). As a consequence of these results, there is interest in extending the use of GO to a frontline treatment for AML in combination with conventional chemotherapy. Little is known about the usefulness of GO as consolidation and/or maintenance therapy, and no data on the topic have been published to date. In particular, there are no data concerning the safety and efficacy of GO in the setting of post-consolidation therapy in AML patients except for a short report concerning the effects after autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) (Cascavilla et al, 2008). GO mono- therapy has typically been administered as a 2-h infusion at a dose of 9 mg/m2 on days 1 and 15 of treatment, but the administration of fractionated doses has recently been reported to have a better safety profile (Taksin et al, 2007). We evaluated the efficacy of low-dose GO as late consolidation therapy after CR in a subset of fit elderly patients who were enrolled in a prospective study. From June 1999 to December 2007, 125 patients of 60 years of age or older with morphologically-confirmed AML and non-acute promyelocytic leukaemia were observed in our institution. The preliminary results from 42 patients were reported in 2007 (Olivieri et al, 2007). Fit patients, selected according to previously published inclusion criteria (Olivieri et al, 2007), were treated with intensive chemotherapy, followed by SC mobilization and ASCT (Olivieri et al, 2007). Patients who successfully mobilized SCs underwent ASCT, while poor mobilisers received a further consolidation including standard chemotherapy or investigational immunotherapy with GO. Among the initial 125 patients, 79 fulfilled the inclusion criteria; of those, 56 (72Æ1%) achieved CR, and 52 received the first intensive consolidation course followed by G-CSF to collect SC for ASCT. In cases of mobilisation failure, patients were allowed to chose between an experimental approach B J H 8 1 6 8 B Dispatch: 8.3.10 Journal: BJH CE: Varun Kumar Journal Name Manuscript No. Author Received: No. of pages: 3 PE: Subhashree Table I. Clinical and biological characteristics of the three groups of patients receiving consolidation with GO (A), ASCT (B), Chemo- therapy (CHT) (C) and Allogeneic Transplantation (D). A (%) B (%) C (%) D (%) P Gender Male 8 (62) 8 (42Æ1) 3 (50) 3 (60) N.S. Female 5 (38) 11 (57Æ9) 3 (50) 2 (40) Age (years) Median = 70 (range, 61–76) £70 7 (54) 10 (52Æ6) 5 (83Æ3) 4 (80) N.S. >70 6 (46) 9 (47Æ4) 1 (16Æ7) 1 (20) FAB subtype M0 0 5 (26Æ5) 0 0 N.S. M1 3 (23) 4 (21) 2 (33Æ3) 2 (40) M2 3 (23) 8 (42) 4 (66Æ7) 2 (40) M4 3 (23) 2 (10Æ5) 0 1 (20) M5 3 (23) 0 0 0 M6 1 (8) 0 0 0 M7 0 0 0 0 Leucocytosis (·109/l) WBC <10 8 (61Æ5) 9 (47Æ4) 4 (66Æ7) 4 (80) N.S. WBC 10–50 5 (38Æ5) 6 (31Æ6) 1 (16Æ7) 1 (20) WBC >50 0 4 (21) 1 (16Æ7) 0 Karyotype Poor 2 (15Æ4) 7(36Æ8) 1 (16Æ7) 4 (80) N.S. Intermediate 6 (46Æ2) 8 (42Æ1) 4 (66Æ7) 0 Favourable 2 (15Æ4) 0 1 (16Æ7) 1 (20) NE 3 (15Æ4) 4 (21Æ1) 0 0 Secondary disease* Yes 3 (23) 8 (42) 2 (33Æ3) 1 (20) N.S. No 10 (77) 11 (58) 4 (66Æ7) 4 (80) FAB, French-American-British classification; NE, not evaluated; WBC, white blood cell. *To chemotherapy or Myelodysplastic Syndrome. correspondence a 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd, British Journal of Haematology doi:10.1111/j.1365-2141.2010.08168.x 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 including low-dose GO or a further conventional consolidation course. GO was administered on a compassionate basis, and the costs were charged to our department. Among the 52 patients who received intensive consolidation, two died and seven relapsed; thus, 43 patients were evaluable for post-remission treatment after the SC mobilization attempt. Of those, 19 patients (44%) successfully mobilized SC and received ASCT. Of the 24 that did not mobilise SC, 13 received GO, six patients refused GO and received a second consolidation with chemo- therapy, and five patients received reduced intensity conditioning allogeneic transplant from sibling donors. The current analysis did not include all patients receiving allogeneic transplant because of the poor prognosis of the disease. The disease characteristics of the remaining patients were equally distributed in the three groups, and the data are shown in Table I. All the patients received GO at a dose of 3 mg/m2 three times monthly on an outpatient basis and received common antimicrobial prophylaxis. No patients needed hospitalisation for infections or other major toxicities; the median duration of neutropenia (PMN <0Æ5 · 109/l) after GO was 12 d (range 0–33 d). The main toxicities (World Health Organization grade III–IV) were myelosuppression (n = 9), hypertransam- inasaemia (n = 1) and anaphylaxis (n = 3); no major unex- pected adverse events were observed. With a median follow up of 58 months (range 19–89), a total of 15 patients were alive and in CR: five received ASCT (median follow-up 77 months, range 45-89), nine received GO (median follow-up 38 months, range: 19–75 months), and one, who received chemotherapy, has been followed for 72 months. Two patients receiving GO relapsed and eventually died after 13 and 19 months from CR after the first consolidation. Two more patients relapsed after 15 and 32 months after a second CR after salvage chemother- apy, followed by three doses of GO 3 mg/m2 administered as consolidation therapy. In conclusion, nine of the 13 patients who received GO as late consolidation therapy were alive and in continuous CR (including two patients with secondary AML and two with a complex karyotype). The Landmark survival analysis showed better overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) (P = 0Æ017 and 0Æ01 respectively) in the 13 patients that received GO (5-year OS, 60%; 5-year DFS, 67%) compared with patients that received either ASCT (5-year OS and DFS: 26%) or chemotherapy (5-year OS and DFS: 17%) (Fig 1). Our preliminary data support a potential role for low-dose GO in consolidation therapy in elderly patients with AML who are able to achieve CR after intensive induction. Late consolidation with low-dose GO seems to be safe and easily manageable; the myelosuppression was relevant, but generally short. All patients received the 3 GO infusions on an outpatient basis without further readmissions and without fatal events. These preliminary data encourage the use of low-dose GO as late consolidation therapy to eliminate the minimal residual disease (MRD) in older patients with AML. Larger studies are needed for confirmation, possibly including monitoring of MRD during treatment. It also remains to be established if SC collection failure after CR represents an independent favour- able prognostic factor in AML patients, as suggested by some retrospective data (Keating et al, 2003). Antonella Poloni1 Debora Capelli1 Silvia Trappolini1 Benedetta Costantini1 Mauro Montanari1 Guido Gini1 Ilaria Scortechini1 Giorgia Mancini1 Giancarlo Discepoli2 Pietro Leoni1 Attilio Olivieri3 1Dipartimento di Scienze Mediche e Chirurgiche, Sezione di Ematologia, Universita` Politecnica delle Marche and Azienda Ospedaliera Ospedali Riuniti, 2Laboratorio di Citogenetica e Genetica Molecolare, Clinica di Pediatria, Ospedali Riuniti, Ancona, and 3Azienda Ospedaliera San Carlo, Potenza, Italy. E-mail: [email protected] 0 20 40 60 80 100 0 12 24 36 48 60 72 84 96 Cumulative probability (%) Months OS GO ASCT CHT 0 20 40 60 80 100 0 12 24 36 48 60 72 84 96 Cumulative probability (%) Months DFS Fig 1. Comparison of the outcome (OS and DFS) of patients receiving late consolidation with Gemtuzumab-Ozogamicin (GO), autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) or chemotherapy (CHT) (log rank test). Correspondence 2 a 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd, British Journal of Haematology 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 References Appelbaum, F.R., Gundacker, H., Head, D.R., Slovak, M.L., Willman, C.L., Godwin, J.E., Anderson, J.E. & Petersdorf, S.H. (2006) Age and acute myeloid leukaemia. Blood, 107, 3481–3485. Bross, P.F., Beitz, J., Chen, G., Chen, X.H., Duffy, E., Kieffer, L., Roy, S., Sridhara, R., Rahman, A., Williams, G. & Pazdur, R. (2001) Approval summary: gemtuzumab ozogamicin in relapsed acute myeloid leukemia. Clinical Cancer Research, 7, 1490–1496. Cascavilla, N., D’Arena, G., Greco, M.M., Melillo, L., Merla, E. & Carella, A.M. (2008) Gemtuzumab-Ozogamicin as maintenance therapy after Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation in elderly patients with Acute Myeloid Leukaemia. British Journal of Haematology , 142, 852–853. Keating, S., Suciu, S., de Witte, T., Zittoun, R., Mandelli, F., Belhabri, A., Amadori, S., Fibbe, W., Gallo, E., Fillet, G., Varet, B., Meloni, G., Hagemeijer, A., Fazi, P., Solbu, G., Willemze, R., EORTC Leukemia Group & GIMEMA Leukemia Group. (2003) The stem cell mobilizing capacity of patients with acute myeloid leukemia in complete remission correlates with relapse risk: results of EORTC- GIMEMA AML 10 trial. Leukemia, 17, 60–67. Larson, R.A., Boogaerts, M., Estey, E., Karanes, C., Stadtmauer, E.A., Sievers, E.L., Mineur, P., Bennett, J.M., Berger, M.S., Eten, C.B., Munteanu, M., Loken, M.R., Van Dongen, J.J., Bernstein, I.D., Appelbaum, F.R. & Mylotarg Study Group. (2002) Antibody- targeted chemotherapy of older patients with acute myeloid leukemia in first relapse using Mylotarg (gemtuzumab ozogamicin). Leukemia, 16, 1627–1636. Olivieri, A., Capelli, D., Troiani, D., Poloni, A., Montanari, M., Offidani, M., Discepoli, G. & Leoni, P. (2007) A new intensive induction schedule, including high-dose Idarubicin, high-dose Aracytin and Amifostine, in older AML patients: feasibility and long-term results in 42 patients. Experimental Hematology, 35, 1074–1082. Sievers, E.L., Larson, R.A., Stadtmauer, E.A., Estey, E., Lo ̈wenberg, B., Dombret, H., Karanes, C., Theobald, M., Bennett, J.M., Sherman, M.L., Berger, M.S., Eten, C.B., Loken, M.R., Van Dongen, J.J., Bernstein, I.D., Appelbaum, F.R. & Mylotarg Study Group. (2001) Efficacy and safety of gemtuzumab ozogamicin in patients with CD33-positive acute myeloid leukemia in first relapse. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 19, 3244–3254. Taksin, A.L., Legand, O., Raffoux, E., de Revel, T., Thomas, X., Con- tenin, N., Bouabdallah, R., Pautas, C., Turlure, P., Reman, O., Gardin, C., Varet, B., de Botton, S., Pousset, F., Farhat, H., Chevret, S., Dombret, H. & Castaigne, S. (2007) High efficacy and safety profile of fractionated doses of Mylotarg as induction therapy in patients with relapsed acute myeloblastic leukemia: a prospective study of the alfa group. Leukemia, 21, 66–71. Keywords: AML, chemotherapy,

    Feasibility and Outcome of a Phase II Study of Intensive Induction Chemotherapy in 91 Elderly Patients with AML Evaluated Using a Simplified Multidimensional Geriatric Assessment

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    Introduction: We prospectively tested in a phase II study high-dose aracytin and idarubicin plus amifostine as induction regimen in 149 patients with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) aged ≥ 60 years, evaluated by a simplified multidimensional geriatric assessment (MGA). Methods: Ninety-one fully or partially fit patients (61%) were allocated to intensive chemotherapy and 58 (39%) frail patients to best supportive care (BSC). Intensively treated patients, showing early death and complete response (CR) rate respectively of 5.5% and 73.6%, received 61 consolidations, followed by autologous transplant (ASCT), stem cell transplantation (SCT) or gemtuzumab ozogamicin, depending on mobilization outcome and donor availability. Results: The 8-year overall survival (OS) of these patients was 20.4%, with median duration of 11.4 months significantly superior to the 1.5 months of BSC arm (p < 0.001). Hyperleukocytosis and cytogenetics were predictors of survival with a relative risk of 1.8 in patients with poor karyotype without hyperleukocytosis (p = 0.02) and 3 in those with hyperleukocytosis (≥ 50,000/μl) (p = 0.002). Conclusion: MGA allowed tailored post-consolidation in 53.8% of patients after high-dose aracytin induction, with long-term survival doubling that reported in the literature after standard-dose cytarabine regimens
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