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gaetano leto
Lab Exp Chemother
Dept Surg and Oncol
Policlinico Universitario P. Gaccone
90127 Palermo Italy
gleto@unipa.it

Journal articles

2007
 
PMID 
Lorena Incorvaia, Giuseppe Badalamenti, Giovambattista Rini, Carlo Arcara, Salvatore Fricano, Carmela Sferrazza, Danilo Di Trapani, Nicola Gebbia, Gaetano Leto (2007)  MMP-2, MMP-9 and activin A blood levels in patients with breast cancer or prostate cancer metastatic to the bone.   Anticancer Res 27: 3B. 1519-1525 May/Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The clinical significance of the circulating levels of activin A and matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) and -9 (MMP-9) was investigated in patients with breast cancer (BC) or prostate cancer (PC) with (M1) or without (M0) bone metastasis. PATIENTS AND METHODS: MMP-2, MMP-9 and activin A blood concentrations were measured by enzyme immunoassays in 79 cancer patients and in 57 healthy blood donors (HS) who served as a control group. The diagnostic accuracy of these molecules to discriminate between M0 and M1 patients was evaluated by the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC) and compared to that of tumor markers CA15.3 or prostate-specific antigen (PSA). RESULTS: Activin A and MMP-2 were significantly increased in BC and PC patients as compared to sex-matched HS while MMP-9 levels were more elevated only in the PC patients. Interestingly, in the PC patients, activin A levels were significantly higher than those measured in the BC patients. In this latter group, activin A and CA15.3 but not MMP-2 or MMP-9 were increased in the M1 patients as compared to M0 patients. Furthermore, a significant relationship was also highlighted between activin A concentration and the number of bone metastases and tumor grade, between MMP-9 and tumor grade, and between MMP-2 and CA15.3. ROC curve analysis showed a good diagnostic accuracy for activin A and CA15.3 but a poor accuracy for MMP-2 and MMP-9 in discriminating between M0 and M1 patients. However, CA15.3 retained the best diagnostic accuracy in this respect. In the PC group, only activin A and PSA levels were significantly increased in the M1 patients as compared to the M0 patients. A similar although not statistically significant trend was noted for MMP-9. Interestingly, a significant correlation was observed between PSA and activin A and MMP-9, and between Activin A and Gleason score and the number of skeletal metastases. ROC curve analysis showed a good diagnostic accuracy for activin A, MMP-9 and PSA and a poor diagnostic accuracy for MMP-2 in detecting M1 patients. However, PSA showed the highest diagnostic accuracy. CONCLUSION: Activin A, MMP-2 and MMP-9 may be regarded as possible therapeutic targets in the treatment of metastatic bone disease. However, their usefulness as additional markers of bone metastasis remains to be better defined.
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DOI   
PMID 
Tumminello, Flandina, Crescimanno, Leto (2007)  Circulating cathepsin K and cystatin C in patients with cancer related bone disease: Clinical and therapeutic implications.   Biomed Pharmacother Jul  
Abstract: The clinical significance of serum cathepsin K and cystatin C was assessed in patients with breast cancer (BCa) or prostate cancer (PCa) with confined disease (M0) or bone metastasis (BM). Cathepsin K and cystatin C circulating levels were determined by ELISAs in 63 cancer patients, in 35 patients with nonmalignant diseases and in 42 healthy blood donors (control group). In BCa patients, cathepsin K serum levels were significantly lower than in sex matched control group (HS; p=0.0008) or in patients with primary osteoporosis (OP; p=0.0009). On the contrary, cystatin C levels were significantly higher in BCa patients than in HS (p=0.0001) or OP (p=0.017). In PCa patients, cathepsin K concentrations did not significantly differ from those measured in sex matched HS or in patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Conversely, cystatin C was more elevated in cancer patients than in controls (p=0.0001) or BPH patients (p=0.0078). Furthermore, in PCa patients, a positive correlation was observed between cystatin C and cathepsin K (r(S)=0.34; p=0.047). No further relationship was highlighted between these molecules and the clinicobiological parameters of BCa or PCa progression including the number of bone lesions. Moreover, ROC curve analysis showed a poor diagnostic performance of cathepsin K and cystatin C in the detection of BM patients. Interestingly, the administration of zoledronic acid (ZA), a bisphosphonate derivative endowed with a potent antiosteoclastic activity, induced in BM patients a marked increase of cathepsin K and cystatin C serum levels compared to baseline values. However, this phenomenon was statistically significant only in the PCa group. In conclusion Cystatin C and cathepsin K may be regarded as possible markers to monitor the therapeutic response to bisphosphonate treatments. Nevertheless, their clinical value as specific gauges of skeletal metastasis remains questionable.
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2006
 
PMID 
Gaetano Leto, Giuseppe Badalamenti, Carlo Arcara, Marilena Crescimanno, Carla Flandina, Francesca Maria Tumminello, Lorena Incorvaia, Nicola Gebbia, Fabio Fulfaro (2006)  Effects of zoledronic acid on proteinase plasma levels in patients with bone metastases.   Anticancer Res 26: 1A. 23-26 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The effects of the bisphosphonate derivative zoledronic acid (ZA) on the circulating levels of matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2), matrix metallo-proteinases-9 (MMP-9), cathepsin B (Cath B) and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) in patients with bone metastasis (BMTS) and the possible correlation with the symptomatic response induced by this drug in these patients were evaluated. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Proteinase levels were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in the plasma of 30 patients with painful bone metastases from breast or prostate cancer undergoing multiple treatment with ZA (4 mg i.v., every 4 weeks). Healthy subjects (HS) of both genders (12 female and 30 male) served as the control group. The symptomatic response to ZA was assessed by the visual analog scale score (VAS). RESULTS: The median MMP-2 and MMP-9 pretreatment levels were more elevated in BMTS as compared to HS (p < or = 0.0001). Conversely, uPA levels were lower in BMTS p = 0.0033; no significant difference was observed for Cath B. ZA administration was associated with a symptomatic response (VAS score < or =4) in 25/30patients (83.3%) (p < 0.0001). This phenomenon paralleled a decrease of Cath B and MMP-2 plasma concentrations from baseline values on week 12 (p = 0.05). A similar trend, although not statistically significant, was also noted for MMP-9 and uPA. However, no direct relationship was observed between the analgesic effect induced by ZA and changes in the circulating levels of these enzymes. CONCLUSION: These data show that ZA administration may provide relief from bone pain in patients with diffuse skeletal metastases and confirm a possible implication of cysteine proteinases and matrix metalloproteinases in bone metastasis formation, but not in the pathogenesis of metastatic bone pain.
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DOI   
PMID 
Gaetano Leto, Lorena Incorvaia, Giuseppe Badalamenti, Francesca M Tumminello, Nicola Gebbia, Carla Flandina, Marilena Crescimanno, Giovambattista Rini (2006)  Activin A circulating levels in patients with bone metastasis from breast or prostate cancer.   Clin Exp Metastasis 23: 2. 117-122 07  
Abstract: Recent studies have highlighted that Activin A, a member of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) superfamily, may be involved in the regulation of osteoblastic activity and in osteoclast differentiation. Therefore, we have investigated the clinical significance of its circulating levels in patients with bone metastasis. Activin A serum concentrations were determined, by a commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kit, in 72 patients with breast cancer (BC) or prostatic cancer (PC) with (BM+) or without (BM-) bone metastases, in 15 female patients with age-related osteoporosis (OP), in 20 patients with benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH) and in 48 registered healthy blood donors (HS) of both sex (25 female and 23 male). Activin A serum concentrations were significantly increased in BC or PC patients as compared to OP (P < 0.0001) or BPH (P = 0.045), respectively, or to sex matched HS (P < 0.0001). Additionally, these levels resulted more elevated in PC patients as compared to BC patients (P = 0.032). Interestingly, Activin A was significantly higher in BM+ patients than in BM- patients (BC, P = 0.047; PC, P = 0.016). In BC patients, a significant correlation was observed only between Activin A and number of bone metastases (P = 0.0065) while, in PC patients, Activin A levels were strongly correlated with the Gleason score (P = 0.011) or PSA levels (P = 0.0001) and, to a lessen extent, with the number of bone metastases (P = 0.056). Receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC) analysis showed a fair diagnostic accuracy of Activin A to discriminate between BM+ and BM- patients (BC: AUC = 0.71 +/- 0.09, P = 0.03; PC: AUC = 0.73 +/- 0.081, P = 0.005). These findings indicate that Activin A may be implicated in the pathogenesis of bone metastasis. Therefore, this cytokine may be considered a novel potential target for a more selective therapeutic approach in the treatment of skeletal metastasis and may be also useful as additional biochemical marker of metastatic bone disease.
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2005
 
PMID 
F Fulfaro, G Leto, G Badalamenti, C Arcara, G Cicero, M R Valerio, G Di Fede, A Russo, A Vitale, G B Rini, A Casuccio, C Intrivici, N Gebbia (2005)  The use of zoledronic acid in patients with bone metastases from prostate carcinoma: effect on analgesic response and bone metabolism biomarkers.   J Chemother 17: 5. 555-559 Oct  
Abstract: Zoledronic acid is a bisphosphonate that is effective in the treatment of complications of metastatic bone disease. We have carried out a perspective study on 24 consecutive patients with prostate cancer metastatic to bone to verify the effect of zoledronic acid on analgesic response and a possible relationship with the levels of bone metabolism biomarkers. Eligibility for this study required prostate cancer patients with metastatic bone disease and pain not controlled by analgesics. Patients were excluded from the study if they were receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy or radiation therapy within three months. Eighteen patients (75%) were considered responder to acid zoledronic, only 6 patients did not respond. Before starting treatment (T0) mean Visual Analogue Scale was 7.8 (SE +/- 0.29), after 1 month therapy (T1) was 3.6 (SE +/- 0.3) and after three months (T2) was 3.1 (SE +/- 0.4) with a significant difference between T0 and T1 (p<0.0005) and between T0 and T2 (p<0.0005). Visual Analogue Scale improvement was positively correlated with decrease of C-telopeptide and bone phosphatase alkaline (p<0.05) serum levels.
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2004
 
PMID 
Gaetano Leto, Francesca M Tumminello, Marilena Crescimanno, Carla Flandina, Nicola Gebbia (2004)  Cathepsin D expression levels in nongynecological solid tumors: clinical and therapeutic implications.   Clin Exp Metastasis 21: 2. 91-106  
Abstract: Cathepsin D is a lysosomal acid proteinase which is involved in the malignant progression of breast cancer and other gynecological tumors. Clinical investigations have shown that in breast cancer patients cathepsin D overexpression was significantly correlated with a shorter free-time disease and overall survival, whereas in patients with ovarian or endometrial cancer this phenomenon was associated with tumor aggressiveness and a degree of chemoresistance to various antitumor drugs such as anthracyclines, cis-platinum and vinca alkaloids. Therefore, a lot of research has been undertaken to evaluate the role and the prognostic value of cathepsin D also in other solid neoplasms. However, conflicting results have been generated from these studies. The discrepancies in these results may, in part, be explained with the different methodological approaches used in order to determine the levels of expression of the enzyme in tumor tissues and body fluids. Further investigations using well-standardized techniques may better define the clinical significance of cathepsin D expression in solid tumors. Nevertheless, evidence emerging from these studied indicates that this proteinase seems to facilitate early phases of tumor progression such as cell proliferation and local dissemination. These findings support the concept that cathepsin D may be a useful marker for identifying patients with highly malignant tumor phenotypes who may need more aggressive clinical treatment; this enzyme may also be considered as a potential target for a novel therapeutic approach in the treatment of solid neoplasms.
Notes:
2003
 
PMID 
Maurizio Soresi, Carmela Magliarisi, Pietro Campagna, Gaetano Leto, Giulio Bonfissuto, Anna Riili, Antonio Carroccio, Roberta Sesti, Silvio Tripi, Giuseppe Montalto (2003)  Usefulness of alpha-fetoprotein in the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma.   Anticancer Res 23: 2C. 1747-1753 Mar/Apr  
Abstract: With the widespread use of ultrasonography (US) and computerized tomography (CT), the usefulness of alpha-fetoprotein assay in the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has decreased. The aim of our study was to evaluate the best cut-off value for serum alpha-fetoprotein to discriminate between liver cirrhosis (LC) and HCC and the factors influencing levels in a Sicilian population. Three hundred and seventy-two patients with LC and 197 with HCC-associated LC were studied. The etiology was: HCV in 288 cases (77.4%) of LC and 147 cases (75%) of HCC; HBV in 31 cases (8.3%) of LC and 15 cases (7.6%) of HCC; HCV/HBV in 21 cases (5.6%) of LC and 6 cases (3.0%) of HCC; non-viral in 32 cases (8.6%) of LC and 29 cases (15%) of HCC. Hepatic function was estimated by the Child-Pugh's score; the TNM classification was used in HCC. The area under the ROC curve was 0.81 +/- 0.02; the best discriminant cut-off value, calculated as the value of the maximized likelihood ratio, was 30 ng/ml. At this level sensitivity (SE) was 65%, specificity (SP) 89%, positive predictive value (PPV) 74% and negative predictive value (NPV) 79%. When the patients were divided at this cut-off point into two groups according to viral or non-viral etiology, PPV was 70% versus 94%, respectively (p < 0.05). In the non-viral diseases PPV reached 100% for AFP serum levels of 100 ng/ml, while in the viral diseases PPV was 100% when AFP was greater than 400 ng/ml. There were no significant differences in SE, SP or NPV between viral and non-viral liver diseases. Child's classes B and C were more frequent in HCC (chi 2 of MH 7.7, p < 0.0001). There was a correlation between AFP serum values and TNM classification (p < 0.02) and on multiple logistic regression AFP levels > 30 ng/ml correlated positively only with the TNM stage (p < 0.0001). In conclusion, the best cut-off value for serum AFP in our study population was 30 ng/ml, but at this level sensitivity was low. This cut-off value was more useful in detecting non-viral HCC, because PPV was significantly higher than in viral HCC; therefore, our data confirm that the usefulness of AFP in the diagnosis of HCC of viral etiology is limited, being more useful in HCC of non-viral etiology.
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2001
 
PMID 
G Leto, F M Tumminello, N Gebbia, V Bazan, R M Tomasino, G Dardanoni, A Russo (2001)  Differential expression levels of urokinase-type plasminogen activator and cathepsin D in locally advanced laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma: clinical implications.   Int J Biol Markers 16: 4. 245-249 Oct/Dec  
Abstract: The expression levels and the prognostic impact of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and cathepsin D (CD) were evaluated in patients with locally advanced laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC). uPA and CD protein levels were determined by immunoluminometric or immunoenzymatic assays in the cytosol of paired sets of tumor tissues and corresponding adjacent normal mucosa (NLM) from 57 patients with stage III/IV LSCC and were correlated with a number of clinicobiological parameters of this tumor including anatomical site, tumor grade, nodal status, clinical stage, DNA ploidy, proliferation rate, and patient outcome. Median uPA levels were significantly higher in LSCC than in NLM (1.8 ng/mg of protein vs 0.3 ng/mg; p<0.001) whereas median CD levels were not significantly increased in tumor tissue compared to NLM (24 pmol/mg vs 19 pmol/mg, p=0.063). No significant correlation was observed between uPA and CD concentrations in tumor tissues (r=-0.1; p=0.4). Furthermore, the distribution analysis of uPA and CD in tumors showed no correlation between expression levels of these proteinases and the parameters mentioned above including patient outcome. However, when data were matched according to each parameter examined it was observed that the differences in uPA content between LSCC and NLM, expressed as uPA tumor/normal tissue ratio (T/M), were more marked in clinically advanced and/or aggressive forms of LSCC (i.e., node positive, stage IV, poorly and moderately differentated, aneuploid multiclonal, low S-phase, subglottis tumors). These data suggest that in such tumors altered regulation of uPA may occur to a greater extent than in less aggressive and less advanced forms of LSCC. This phenomenon was not observed for CD. However, in tumors with a high proliferation rate, in stage IV tumors as well as in those located in the supraglottis, CD levels were significantly higher than those found in the corresponding NLM (p=0.008, p=0.02 and p=0.03, respectively). In conclusion, uPA is highly expressed in locally advanced LSCC and appears to be implicated in some key events of progression of this tumor such as local invasion and/or nodal involvement, whereas CD does not seem to have a role in promoting these processes. Nevetheless, neither of these proteinases seem to be prognostically useful in patients with stage III/IV tumors.
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2000
 
PMID 
A Russo, V Bazan, M Migliavacca, I Zanna, C Tubiolo, F M Tumminello, G Dardanoni, M Cajozzo, P Bazan, G Modica, M Latteri, R M Tomasino, G Colucci, N Gebbia, G Leto (2000)  Prognostic significance of DNA ploidy, S-phase fraction, and tissue levels of aspartic, cysteine, and serine proteases in operable gastric carcinoma.   Clin Cancer Res 6: 1. 178-184 Jan  
Abstract: A consecutive series of 63 untreated patients undergoing surgical resection for stage I-IV gastric adenocarcinomas (GCs) has been prospectively studied. Our purpose was to analyze the predictive relevance of DNA ploidy, S-phase fraction (SPF), and tissue levels of lysosomal proteinases cathepsin D (CD), cathepsin B (CB), cathepsin L (CL), and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and that of the intracellular cysteine proteinase inhibitor stefin A on clinical outcome. All of the patients taking part in this study were followed up for a median of 73 months. DNA aneuploidy was present in 71% of the cases (45/63), whereas 9% of these (4/45) showed multiclonality. Both DNA ploidy and SPF were associated with tumor-node-metastasis (TNM) stage and node status, whereas only DNA ploidy was related to depth of invasion. CB, CL, uPA, but not CD, levels were significantly higher in GC as compared to paired normal mucosa, whereas stefin A levels were lower in tumor tissues. CB levels were significantly associated with TNM stage, nodal status, histological grade, and DNA ploidy. At univariate analysis, only node involvement, advanced TNM stage, DNA aneuploidy, and high SPF proved to be significantly related to quicker relapse and to shorter overall survival, whereas depth of invasion was related only to survival. With multivariate analysis, only high SPF (>15.2%) was related to risk of relapse (RR = 8.50), whereas high SPF and DNA aneuploidy were independently related to risk of death (RR = 1.88 and 2.09, respectively). Our preliminary prospective study has identified SPF and DNA ploidy as important biological indicators for predicting the outcome of patients with GC.
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1997
 
PMID 
G Leto, F M Tumminello, G Pizzolanti, G Montalto, M Soresi, N Gebbia (1997)  Lysosomal cathepsins B and L and Stefin A blood levels in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and/or liver cirrhosis: potential clinical implications.   Oncology 54: 1. 79-83 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: The serum levels of lysosomal cathepsin B and L and Stefin A, an intracellular inhibitor of these proteolytic enzymes, were determined in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and/or liver cirrhosis (LC) and correlated with some clinical and biochemical parameters of these diseases. Cathepsin B serum levels were increased in HCC and in LC patients as compared to normal subjects (p < 0.001). However no difference was observed between HCC and LC groups. Interestingly, a significant relationship was evidenced between cathepsin B serum content and the grade of severity of cirrhosis (r = 0.41; p < 0.001). Cathepsin L was significantly elevated only in sera of cancer patients as compared to normal subjects or LC patients (p < 0.001) and significantly correlated with the number of malignant lesions (r = 0.49; p = 0.001). Stefin A serum levels were increased in HCC and LC patients as compared to healthy subjects (p < 0.02). However, these levels were significantly higher in the LC group as compared to the HCC group (p < 0.05). In cancer patients, a significant relationship was observed between Stefin A serum content and tumor size (r = 0.35; p < 0.05), number of neoplastic lesions (r = 0.556; p < 0.001) and serum alpha-fetoprotein (r = 0.38; p < 0.01). These data suggest that cathepsin B and L and Stefin A may be potentially useful as additional biochemical parameters to monitor the therapeutic response of these diseases to clinical treatments and to identify patients with cirrhosis developing precancerous lesions.
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1996
 
PMID 
R M Tomasino, V Bazan, E Daniele, R Nuara, V Morello, V Tralongo, G Leto, A Russo (1996)  Biological characterization of laryngeal squamous-cell carcinoma.   Anticancer Res 16: 4B. 2257-2267 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: The traditional prognostic factors, including stage of disease and tumour grade, have shown a limited prognostic significance and an inability to predict clinical response to specific treatment in patients with laryngeal squamous-cell carcinoma. More recent data suggest that cell kinetics indices, DNA-ploidy, lysosomal cysteine proteinase expression and genetic changes of both tumour suppressor genes and protooncogenes may be considered as reliable and reproducible indicators of biological aggressiveness in these patients. Moreover, the frequency of different genetic alterations suggests that several pathways are involved in the genesis of these neoplasias and, in particular, it is very probable that p-53 expression and PCNA indices (increased in normal mucosa and preinvasive lesions) may constitute more important biomarkers for the early steps of laryngeal carcinogenesis.
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PMID 
G Leto, F M Tumminello, G Pizzolanti, G Montalto, M Soresi, I Ruggeri, N Gebbia (1996)  Cathepsin D serum mass concentrations in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and/or liver cirrhosis.   Eur J Clin Chem Clin Biochem 34: 7. 555-560 Jul  
Abstract: Cathepsin D serum mass concentrations were determined by enzyme immunoassay in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (n = 51) and/or liver cirrhosis (n = 92) or benign steatosis (n = 16) and correlated with some biochemical and clinical properties of these diseases. Increased cathepsin D serum mass concentrations (P < 0.001) were observed in all these groups of patients as compared to normal subjects (n = 98). However, patients with steatosis had serum mass concentrations of this enzyme significantly lower (mean 2-3 fold) than those measured in cancer patients (P < 0.05) or cirrhotic patients (P < 0.001). Interestingly, significantly higher cathepsin D serum mass concentrations (mean + 62%) (P < 0.006) were determined in the cirrhosis group as compared to cancer patients. No correlation between cathepsin D and a number of clinical and biochemical properties examined, namely, alpha-foetoprotein, number of neoplastic lesions and tumour size in cancer patients or, Child-Pugh grade of severity of cirrhosis and other enzymes of liver function tests in the cirrhotic group was found. The present data and those from other studies which indicate that cathepsin D may be involved in carcinogenesis suggest that this enzyme may be potentially useful as an additional biochemical marker to identify cirrhotic patients who may develop precancerous hepatic nodules.
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PMID 
F M Tumminello, G Leto, G Pizzolanti, V Candiloro, M Crescimanno, L Crosta, C Flandina, G Montalto, M Soresi, A Carroccio, F Bascone, I Ruggeri, S Ippolito, N Gebbia (1996)  Cathepsin D, B and L circulating levels as prognostic markers of malignant progression.   Anticancer Res 16: 4B. 2315-2319 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: Growing evidence indicates that lysosomal Cathepsins D (CD), B (CB) and L (CL) may promote carcinogenesis and tumor progression. Therefore, we evaluated their potential value as biochemical parameters of malignant progression in patients with benign diseases which may undergo malignant transformation, such as liver cirrhosis (LC) and chronic pancreatitis (CHP) as well as in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and pancreatic cancer (DPC). CD, CB and CL serum levels were determined by immunoenzymatic assays in LC, CHP, HCC or DPC patients and correlated with a number of biochemical and clinical parameters of these diseases. CD serum levels were increased in LC, CHP and HCC, but not in the DPC group as compared to normal subjects (NS) (P < 0.01). Interestingly, higher levels of this enzyme were observed in LC patients compared to HCC patients ( P < 0.01). CB serum concentrations were increased in all patient groups (P < 0.01). However no difference was evidenced between benign and malignant diseases. CL serum levels were significantly increased only in DPC as compared to NS (P < 0.01) or CHP patients (P < 0.02) and in HCC as compared to NS (P < 0.01). The evaluation of CD, CB and CL serum pattern in LC, CHP, HCC and DPC patients may be useful as additional biochemical parameters in the differential diagnosis and therapeutic monitoring of these diseases. Prospective clinical investigations to assess the potential value of these enzymes as biochemical markers of malignant progression of LC or CHP are warranted by the present data.
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1995
 
PMID 
F M Tumminello, N Gebbia, G Pizzolanti, A Russo, V Bazan, G Leto (1995)  Cathepsin D content in colorectal cancer. Correlation with cathepsin D activity and other biological parameters: a preliminary report.   Oncology 52: 3. 237-242 May/Jun  
Abstract: Cathepsin D content and activity were determined in matched paired sets of colorectal tumor tissue and normal mucosa and correlated with a number of biological and clinical parameters. Significantly higher cathepsin D activity was measured in tumor cytosol compared to paired normal mucosa (p < 0.02), in Dukes' stage A tumors compared to Dukes' B and C (p < 0.05), in tumors < 5 cm compared to those > 5 cm, or in tumors with a low proliferation rate compared to those with a high proliferation rate (p < 0.05). Moreover, significant differences in enzyme activity between tumor tissue and paired normal mucosa were observed in node-positive and G2 tumors (p < 0.05). No significant correlation between cathepsin D activity and other biological parameters was found. Further, no differences in cathepsin D content between tumor tissue and paired normal mucosa were observed except in Dukes' stage A tumors (p < 0.02). A significantly increased cathepsin D content was also observed in tumors > 5 cm compared to tumors < 5 cm (p < 0.01). No relationship between tumor cathepsin D content and clinical stage was detected. However, a significant correlation (p < 0.05) was observed between the tumor-specific content of this enzyme and tumor grade. Finally, there was no relationship between tumor-specific cathepsin D activity and content (r = -0.27, p = 0.23). These data suggest that cathepsin D activity rather than content correlates with the malignant progression of colorectal cancer. This phenomenon should be taken into consideration when clinical studies are undertaken to assess the potential prognostic value of proteolytic enzymes involved in tumor progression.
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PMID 
A Russo, V Bazan, N Gebbia, G Pizzolanti, F M Tumminello, G Dardanoni, F Ingria, S Restivo, R M Tomasino, G Leto (1995)  Flow cytometric DNA analysis and lysosomal cathepsins B and L in locally advanced laryngeal cancer. Relationship with clinicopathologic parameters and prognostic significance.   Cancer 76: 10. 1757-1764 Nov  
Abstract: BACKGROUND. The traditional factors of locally advanced laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC) have limited predictive value for the identification of high risk patients. Therefore, it is extremely important to define prognostic factors that identify the more aggressive types. Reliable and reproducible prognostic indicators are being investigated to help clinicians identify high risk groups and address more rational treatment. METHODS. Flow cytometric DNA ploidy and S-phase fraction (SPF) measurements were performed on frozen tumor tissues from a consecutive series of 71 patients with Stage III and IV LSCC. Lysosomal cathepsin B and L activity levels were determined biochemically in matched paired sets of tumor tissue and normal mucosa samples. RESULTS. By univariate analysis, lymph node positivity, poor histologic differentiation, DNA aneuploidy, high SPF, and high tumor/mucosa ratio of cathepsin B activity were significantly related to risk of relapse, whereas only DNA aneuploidy and high SPF proved to be significantly related to risk of death. Multivariate analysis showed that high histologic grade and high SPF values (> 15.1%) were independent prognostic factors related to risk of relapse (relative risk [RR] = 3.54; 95% confidence limits [CL] = 1.05-12.0; and RR = 4.22; CL = 1.54-11.6, respectively), whereas only high SPF was related to risk of death (RR = 3.63; CL = 1.17-11.3). CONCLUSIONS. S-phase fraction is an independent predictor of relapse free and overall survival in patients with locally advanced LSCC. On the basis of these findings, SPF should be used in addition to other established prognostic factors to refine the prognostic assessment of these patients further. More studies are needed for a better evaluation of the prognostic significance of DNA ploidy and that of lysosomal cysteine proteinases in these tumors.
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1994
 
PMID 
G Leto, G Pizzolanti, F M Tumminello, N Gebbia (1994)  Effects of E-64 (cysteine-proteinase inhibitor) and pepstatin (aspartyl-proteinase inhibitor) on metastasis formation in mice with mammary and ovarian tumors.   In Vivo 8: 2. 231-236 Mar/Apr  
Abstract: The effects of E-64 (Cathepsin B and L inhibitor) and Pepstatin A (Cathepsin D inhibitor) on spontaneous and experimental metastasis formation were investigated in mice with MCa mammary carcinoma, M5076 ovarian sarcoma and L1210 leukemia. Pepstatin induced a marked decrease in the number of spontaneous metastasis in MCa or M5076 tumor bearing mice. This phenomenon was also noted with E-64 but only in M5076 tumor bearing mice. On the other hand, both these agents were unable to prevent the formation of experimental metastasis in mice injected i.v. with L1210, MCa or M5076 tumor cells or with tumor cells in which Cathepsin B, L and D activities were inhibited by a 24 hour continuous exposure to high non-cytotoxic concentrations of E-64 and/or Pepstatin. These data suggest that Cathepsin B, L and D seem to be involved in the early steps of the metastatic process rather than in the hematogenous spread of tumor cells. However, other pharmacological activities which may account for the discrepant effects of E-64 or Pepstatin on experimental and spontaneous metastasis cannot be ruled out.
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1993
1992
 
PMID 
G Leto, N Gebbia, L Rausa, F M Tumminello (1992)  Cathepsin D in the malignant progression of neoplastic diseases (review).   Anticancer Res 12: 1. 235-240 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: Recent studies suggest that aspartic proteinase Cathepsin D may be implicated in the process of tumor invasion and metastasis. In fact several in vitro observations showed that this proteinase may facilitate the spread of neoplastic cells through different mechanisms related to its proteolytic activity, by acting at different levels of the metastatic cascade. Cathepsin D may promote tumor cell proliferation by acting as an autocrine mitogen through the activation of latent forms of growth factors or by interacting with growth factor receptors. The enzyme was also shown to be able to degrade in vitro extracellular matrix and to activate latent precursors forms of other proteinases involved in the invasive steps of the metastatic process. Although unequivocal proof of its active role in promoting these processes also in vivo has not been obtained so far, recent clinical observations which showed a positive correlation between levels of expression of Cathepsin D activity and malignant progression of some human neoplasms further support this hypothesis. These findings warrant extensive experimental and clinical studies to better assess the pathophysiological role of this acid proteinase in the spread of neoplastic diseases and suggest new and more selective therapeutic approaches to the treatment of human neoplasms.
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1991
 
PMID 
A Mazzoni, F Trave, M Fabbri, G Leto, R Ghidoni (1991)  Membrane gangliosides and immuno-mediated cytolysis in drug sensitive and treatment-induced multidrug resistant human ovarian cancer cells.   Anticancer Res 11: 6. 2181-2185 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: The pattern of cytoplasmic membrane gangliosides and two cellular features which have been reported to be related to the expression of different membrane gangliosides, namely adhesion to solid substrates and susceptibility to the lytic activity of immune effector cells, have been investigated in drug sensitive A2780 human ovarian cancer cells and in two treatment-induced multidrug resistant sublines (A2780-DX1 and A2780-DX3). The total membrane gangliosides content of A2780 sensitive cells was comparable to that of the two multidrug resistant (MDR) sublines, but the acquisition of the MDR phenotype was characterized by an increased expression of the polysialylated gangliosides (particularly the disialoganglioside GDIa) and decreased expression of the monosialoganglioside GM2. The kinetics of cellular adhesion (both to plastic culture dishes and to extracellular matrix coated dishes) were similar in the three cell lines, indicating that the gangliosides profile seems not to be relevant for cell adhesivity to the above mentioned substrates. When human peripheral blood lymphocytes in toto (PBL) and two lymphokine activated (LAK) T cell subpopulations (CD3+4-8- and CD3-16+) were used as effector cells against A2780 (sensitive) and A2780-DX3 (highly resistant) cells, cytolysis of target cells was more efficient against the A2780-DX3 subline, suggesting a possible role of the ganglioside GD1a as a target structure for LAK immunotherapy.
Notes:
1990
 
PMID 
G Leto, F M Tumminello, N Gebbia, B Woynarowska, R J Bernacki (1990)  Antimetastatic activity of adriamycin in combinations with proteinase inhibitors in mice.   Anticancer Res 10: 1. 265-269 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: The antimetastatic activity of adriamycin in combination with proteinase inhibitors was investigated in mice bearing the metastatic tumors L1210 leukemia, Lewis lung carcinoma or M5076 sarcoma. Leupeptin, a cathepsin B inhibitor, when administered as a single agent was devoid of antimetastatic activity but some therapeutic activity was noted in mice with Lewis lung carcinoma when the agent was administered in combination with adriamycin. Pepstatin A, a cathepsin D inhibitor, had no effect as a single agent in mice with L1210 leukemia but displayed some antimetastatic activity in mice with Lewis lung carcinoma. In mice with M5076 sarcoma the combination of pepstatin A and adriamycin resulted in antimetastatic activity significantly greater than that observed with each agent alone. These results suggest that combinations of proteinase inhibitors with antitumor drugs such as adriamycin, might result in more effective antimetastatic treatment.
Notes:
1989
1988
 
PMID 
G Leto, F M Tumminello, N Gebbia, L Rausa (1988)  Kinetics of in vivo inhibition of tissue cathepsin D by pepstatin A.   Int J Biochem 20: 9. 917-920  
Abstract: 1. We have investigated the kinetics of inhibition of cathepsin D in heart, liver and skeletal muscle of CD-1 mice following administration of 25, 50, 100 and 200 mg/kg i.p. of pepstatin A, a specific inhibitor of this protease. 2. In the liver, a significant inhibition of cathepsin D occurred up to at least 15 days, whereas, in heart and skeletal muscle, this inhibition lasted for a much shorter period of time. 3. These results show that the recovery of enzyme activity to normal values is dose-dependent and that, at the same dose level, marked differences occur in the recovery of enzyme activity in these organ tissues, the liver being the most sensitive one.
Notes:
1987
 
PMID 
F M Tumminello, G Leto, N Gebbia, V Gebbia, A Russo, L Rausa (1987)  Acute myocardial effects of mitoxantrone in the rabbit.   Cancer Treat Rep 71: 5. 529-531 May  
Abstract: Some clinical studies that were performed for the purpose of assessing the potential cardiotoxicity of mitoxantrone (DHAD) have shown that repeated administrations of the drugs in some patients cause a mild impairment of cardiac functions and morphological changes in the myocardial cells qualitatively similar to those elicited by anthracyclines. Since doxorubicin has been reported to cause acute cardiac effects, probably related to its chronic cardiotoxicity, experiments were carried out on the rabbit heart to investigate whether DHAD is also able to induce acute cardiac effects. Our results show that this drug caused a reversible dose-related impairment of cardiac contractility on the isolated and perfused rabbit heart while it was not able to induce ECG alterations in normal rabbits. These findings demonstrate that in the rabbit DHAD induces an acute cardiac activity qualitatively similar to that of doxorubicin and suggest that this animal model could be a useful tool to study the cardiac actions and related pathogenetic mechanism(s) of this antitumor drug.
Notes:
 
PMID 
N Gebbia, C Flandina, G Leto, F M Tumminello, R Sanguedolce, V Candiloro, M Gagliano, L Rausa (1987)  The role of histamine in doxorubicin and teniposide-induced cardiotoxicity in dog and mouse.   Tumori 73: 3. 279-287 Jun  
Abstract: In previous studies we reported that teniposide (VM26) induced acute cardiac effects in dogs seem to be related to a release of histamine and that a prior treatment with chlorpheniramine, an H1 histamine blocker, prevents the onset of this phenomenon. Since histamine and other vasoactive substances also seem to be involved in doxorubicin (DXR)-induced acute cardiac effects, experiments were undertaken in the aim to prevent, as in the case of VM26, the onset of this phenomenon by administering chlorpheniramine. Since DXR-induced chronic cardiomyopathy also seems to be related to the same mechanisms involved in the onset of acute cardiac effects induced by this drug, additional studies were carried out to investigate whether a long-term treatment with VM26 could induce in mouse alterations of cardiac morphology similar to those of DXR. In addition, because the mouse is known to be extremely insensitive to histamine, further studies were performed to investigate whether DXR or VM26 administration could induce in this animal model a massive histamine release and whether a long-term treatment with high doses of histamine could elicit, similarly to DXR, alterations in cardiac morphology. The results of our experiments demonstrated that DXR (1.5 mg/kg i.v.) caused in the dog a massive histamine release and a marked impairment of cardiac inotropism. As previously described for VM26, prior treatments with chlorpheniramine completely prevented this phenomenon. Furthermore, DXR administration, at a dose level able to induce cardiac damage in the mouse (2.5 mg/kg i.v.), or that of VM26 (2 mg/kg i.v.) failed to induce a massive histamine release. In addition, long-term treatment with VM26 (2 mg/kg i.v.) or high doses of histamine (100 mg/kg i.v.), unlike DXR, did not elicit in this animal alterations of cardiac morphology. Finally, chlorpheniramine (0.15 or 0.45 mg/kg i.v.) did not prevent the onset of chronic cardiomyopathy induced by DXR in mouse. In conclusion, our results show that the role of histamine in the onset of DXR-induced chronic cardiomyopathy, at least in mouse, remains questionable and suggest that this animal, because of its high natural resistance to histamine, is not a suitable experimental model to investigate the cardiovascular pharmacology of drug-induced histamine release.
Notes:
1985
 
PMID 
N Gebbia, G Leto, M Gagliano, F M Tumminello, L Rausa (1985)  Lysosomal alterations in heart and liver of mice treated with doxorubicin.   Cancer Chemother Pharmacol 15: 1. 26-30  
Abstract: This study was carried out to evaluate the influence of long-term treatment with doxorubicin (DXR) (4 mg/kg IV for 5 weeks) on heart and liver lysosomes of mice. We evaluated the variations in both total and "sedimentable" enzyme activity of cathepsin D, which is the major endopeptidase of myocites and probably involved in physiologic and pathologic degradation of actomyosin and mitochondria, and that of acid phosphatase, which is more prominent in interstitial cells. Our results show that marked changes occur in both total and sedimentable enzyme activity of cathepsin D in the heart of treated animals and to a lesser extent in the liver. In contrast, no modification of either total or sedimentable acid phosphatase was seen in either organ. The effects we observed are much more marked for cardiac cathepsin D; this is in good agreement with the cardiac specificity of DXR-induced cardiotoxicity with long-term administration and suggests that lysosomes could play a role in the pathogenesis of this phenomenon.
Notes:
1983
 
PMID 
N D'Alessandro, N Gebbia, M Crescimanno, C Flandina, G Leto, F M Tumminello, L Messina (1983)  Effects of amsacrine (m-AMSA), a new aminoacridine antitumor drug, on the rabbit heart.   Cancer Treat Rep 67: 5. 467-474 May  
Abstract: There is emerging clinical evidence that amsacrine (m-AMSA) administration may be associated with cardiotoxic effects such as severe, even fatal, ventricular arrhythmias and impairment of the inotropic performance of the heart. Information on the cardiac effects of m-AMSA in animals is scanty. Studies on mice, dogs, and monkeys have not evidenced the cardiotoxicity of the compound. The data presented in this paper show that m-AMSA causes acute ECG alterations in normal rabbits and a dose-related negative inotropic effect on the isolated rabbit heart, suggesting that this species may be a useful model for the study of the cardiac actions of this antiblastic.
Notes:
1979
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