Luisa Toffolatti

Luisa Toffolatti
Azienda ULSS numero 9 Treviso | ULSS Treviso · Pathology

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66
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Publications

Publications (66)
Article
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Papke et al. recently reported a series of twenty-three soft tissue lesions chiefly arising in older adults featuring distinct morphological and genetic characteristics. Pseudoendocrine sarcoma (PS) is the somewhat descriptive and provisional term adopted for the newly reported mesenchymal neoplasm. Since the publication of the original paper publi...
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Full-text available
Objective: To report the exceptional occurrence of ossifying fibromyxoid tumour (OFMT) as a primary bone lesion. OFMT is a rare soft tissue tumour of uncertain differentiation and variable malignant potential, that occurs in adults with a slight male predominance. It is typically located in the subcutis or in the skeletal muscles of the extremitie...
Article
Malignant gastrointestinal neuroectodermal tumor (M-GNET) and clear cell sarcoma (CCS) of soft tissue represent closely related, extremely rare, malignant mesenchymal neoplasm of uncertain differentiation. Both entities are characterized genetically by the same molecular alterations represented by the presence of EWSR1-ATF1 and, more rarely, EWSR1-...
Article
Full-text available
Medulloblastoma is an embryonal neuroepithelial tumor that affects mainly childhood and more rarely adults. Medulloblastoma occurring as multiple nodules at diagnosis is a rare and tricky presentation. Here, we describe the case of a previously healthy 47-year-old woman with multiple posterior fossa cerebellar tumors. Histological, immunohistochemi...
Article
Background: Interferon gamma (IFNγ) and tumor necrosis factor-related weak inducer of apoptosis (TWEAK) molecules seem to have a potential effect on angiogenic factors such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). The aim of this study was to assess a possible interplay between IFNγ and TWEAK cytokines and VEGF machinery in the different step...
Article
Full-text available
To date, a plenty of techniques for the detection of JAK2V617F is used over different laboratories, with substantial differences in specificity and sensitivity. Therefore, to provide reliable and comparable results, the standardization of molecular techniques is mandatory. A network of 19 centers was established to 1) evaluate the inter- and intra-...
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Colorectal cancer incidence in patients undergoing screening protocols is decreasing because of the higher rate of discovered preneoplastic colonic lesions; however, adenomatous polyps may not always be removable endoscopically and surgery may still be necessary. The aim of this study was to assess the vascular endothelial growth factor expression...
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Aim: The BRAF mutation is a rare pathogenetic alternative to KIT/PDGFRA mutation in GIST and causes Imatinib resistance. A recent description of KIT and BRAF mutations co-occurring in an untreated GIST has challenged the concept of their being mutually exclusive and may account for ab initio resistance to Imatinib, even in the presence of Imatinib...
Article
The mutation status of KIT or PDGFRA notoriously affects the response of advanced gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) to tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Conversely, it is currently still unclear whether mutation status impinges on the prognosis of localized, untreated GISTs. Hence, at present, this variable is not included in decision making for ad...
Article
The O 6-methylguanine-DNA-methyltransferase (MGMT) gene encodes for a DNA repairing enzyme of which silencing by promoter methylation is involved in brain tumorigenesis. MGMT promoter methylation represents a favorable prognostic factor and has been associated with a better response to alkylating agents in glioma and systemic lymphoma. Primary cent...
Article
Extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma (EMC) is a rare soft tissue sarcoma, marked by NR4A3 rearrangement. Herein we report on the activity of sunitinib in a series of 10 patients, strengthening what initially observed in two cases. From July 2011, 10 patients with progressive metastatic translocated EMC have been consecutively treated with sunitinib...
Article
Sarcomas are rare, heterogenous, and often difficult to classify. A large proportion of sarcomas are associated with specific molecular genetic lesions such as translocations, mutations, and amplifications, which are helpful in the diagnosis of individual cases. However, the exact impact of molecular genetics on the final diagnosis of sarcomas is u...
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Purpose Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are mesenchymal tumors of the gastrointestinal tract. Most (80 %) contain activating mutations in the KIT receptor tyrosine kinase, roughly 10 % in platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha (PDGFRA). In a small subset, BRAF mutations are an alternative molecular pathway. GISTs respond well to imat...
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Sarcomas represent a heterogeneous group of tumors. Accurate determination of histological diagnosis and prognostic factors is critical for the delineation of treatment strategies. The contribution of second opinion (SO) to improve diagnostic accuracy has been suggested for sarcoma but has never been established in population-based studies. Histolo...
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Gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) natural history per se has not been extensively investigated yet, with most data being drawn from large studies with a relevant referral bias. Hence, the estimation of prognosis still remains a critical issue. We retrospectively evaluated 929 GISTs resected between 1980 and 2000 in 35 Italian institutions. A to...
Article
Although Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) affect about 0.0014% of the population, GISTs smaller than 1 cm (microGISTs) are detectable in about 20% to 30% of elderly individuals. This suggests that microGISTs likely represent premalignant precursors that evolve only in a minute fraction of cases toward overt GISTs. We sought histopathologic a...
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The histopathological diagnosis of gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GIST) is typically made based on a combination of clinical and morphological features supported by immunohistochemistry studies. The aim of this study was to examine the staining quality, sensitivity, specificity and utility of antibodies used commonly in GIST diagnosis. Immunohis...
Article
Nonsyndromic sensorineural hearing impairment is inherited in a predominantly autosomal recessive manner in up to 70% of cases. The gene more often involved is GJB2, encoding the gap junction protein Connexin 26. We report here a novel missense mutation in the GJB2 gene found in a Tunisian family. A homozygous change C/G at nucleotide 263 was detec...
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In order to identify indirect molecular biomarkers of anabolic treatments in veal calves, an animal experiment was performed using two combinations of growth promoters (consisting of boldenone undecylenate and estradiol benzoate, and of testosterone enantate and estradiol benzoate). We selected a set of 12 genes that are known to be androgen respon...
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Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of cytokeratin-19 (CK-19) has been widely used to detect small numbers of circulating malignant epithelial cells in the bone marrow or the peripheral blood of patients with breast cancer. However, a high percentage of false positive results has been recorded and conflicting reports question t...
Article
Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of cytokeratin-19 (CK-19) has been widely used to detect small numbers of circulating malignant epithelial cells in the bone marrow or the peripheral blood of patients with breast cancer. However, a high percentage of false positive results has been recorded and conflicting reports question t...
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Full-text available
The enlargement of the genome size and the decrease in genome compactness with increase in the number and size of introns is a general pattern during the evolution of eukaryotes. Among the possible mechanisms for modifying intron size, it has been suggested that the insertion of transposable elements might have an important role in driving intron e...
Article
We characterised a dystrophin gene rearrangement in a previously described family with X-linked dilated cardiomyopathy and we demonstrated that it represents an 11 kb deletion occurring within intron 11. This unique deletion joined two physiologically distant intronic regions and brought adjacent two cryptic splice sites, generating a 159 bp sequen...
Article
L1P_MA2 is a primate-specific subfamily of L1 retrotransposons. The consensus sequence of this element differs from the canonical L1 consensus by the presence of a 3800-bp region in 5' (L1M1_5). Part of this region has been proposed to be involved in a dystrophin mutation affecting the correct splicing of the gene and causing an X-linked dilated ca...
Article
Full-text available
The region of the dystrophin gene containing introns 45-50 is characterized by a high rate of recombination events that give rise to large deletions causing dystrophinopathy. The nucleotide sequence of this intronic region has recently been released in GenBank. With the aim of further understanding the mechanism favoring the occurrence of these del...
Article
Over 60% of Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies are caused by deletions spanning tens or hundreds of kilobases in the dystrophin gene. The molecular mechanisms underlying the loss of DNA at this genomic locus are not yet understood. By studying the distribution of deletion breakpoints at the genomic level, we have previously shown that intron...
Article
The MYCN oncogene encodes a phosphoprotein that acts as a transcription factor and is involved in the regulation of cell proliferation and differentiation in normal as well as in cancer cells.MYCN amplification and expression have been reported in various tumours, including neuroblastoma and lung cancer, but little is known about its expression in...
Article
Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (ARMS) is associated with the specific chromosomal translocation (2;13)(q35;q14) or its rarer variant t(1;13)(p36;q14), which produces the fusion gene PAX7-FKHR. Here we describe the human cell line RC2, derived from an ARMS, which harbors a cryptic t(1;13)(p36;q14) and concomitantly shows amplification of the PAX7-FKHR fu...
Article
PAX3, a member of the PAX-gene family, encodes a nuclear transcription factor that is transiently expressed in the neural tube and in muscle progenitor cells and regulates embryonal development in the mouse. Together with the FKHR gene it is involved in the t(2;13)(q35;q14), a specific translocation associated with alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (ARMS)....
Article
Ewing's sarcomas (ESs), primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNETs), and neuroblastomas (NBs) are closely related neoplasms supposedly derived from the neural crest and belonging to the family of the small blue round cell tumors of infancy and childhood. We investigated the expression of the neuroendocrine and neuroectodermal markers chromogranin A (C...
Article
A new and simple method for detecting point mutations is presented. The method, based on Double-Strand Conformation Analysis (DSCA) of PCR amplification products in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, was applied to 78 unrelated subjects affected with Duchenne or Becker muscular dystrophy and to 9 subjects suspected to be affected with an atypical...

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