Giorgio Costagliola's research while affiliated with Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Pisana and other places

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Publications (45)


First-level approach to patients presenting with lymphoproliferation.
US findings in lymphadenopathies with different etiology.
US findings in splenomegaly with different etiology.
Overlaps in the pathogenesis of lymphoproliferation in IEI, infections, and malignancies.
Diagnostic algorithm for the identification of rare causes of lymphoproliferation.
The Etiologic Landscape of Lymphoproliferation in Childhood: Proposal for a Diagnostic Approach Exploring from Infections to Inborn Errors of Immunity and Metabolic Diseases
  • Literature Review
  • Full-text available

May 2024

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30 Reads

Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management

Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management

Giorgio Costagliola

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Emanuela De Marco

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Francesco Massei

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[...]

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Rita Consolini

Lymphoproliferation is defined by lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, or lymphocytic organ and tissue infiltration. The most common etiologies of lymphoproliferation are represented by infectious diseases and lymphoid malignancies. However, it is increasingly recognized that lymphoproliferative features can be the presenting sign of rare conditions, including inborn errors of immunity (IEI) and inborn errors of metabolism (IEM). Among IEI, lymphoproliferation is frequently observed in autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) and related disorders, common variable immunodeficiency (CVID), activated phosphoinositide 3-kinase δ syndrome, and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-related disorders. Gaucher disease and Niemann-Pick disease are the most common IEMs that can present with isolated lymphoproliferative features. Notably, other rare conditions, such as sarcoidosis, Castleman disease, systemic autoimmune diseases, and autoinflammatory disorders, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with persistent lymphoproliferation when infectious and malignant diseases have been reasonably ruled out. The clinical features of lymphoproliferative diseases, as well as the associated clinical findings and data deriving from imaging and first-level laboratory investigations, could significantly help in providing the correct diagnostic suspicion for the underlying etiology. This paper reviews the most relevant diseases associated with lymphoproliferation, including infectious diseases, hematological malignancies, IEI, and IEM. Moreover, some practical indications to orient the initial diagnostic process are provided, and two diagnostic algorithms are proposed for the first-level assessment and the approach to persistent lymphoproliferation, respectively.

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Typical urticarial rash in our patient.
Case Report: Efficacy, safety, and favorable long-term outcome of early treatment with IL-1 inhibitors in a patient with chronic infantile neurological cutaneous articular (CINCA) syndrome caused by NLRP3 mosaicism

April 2024

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45 Reads

Chronic infantile neurological cutaneous articular (CINCA) syndrome is an autoinflammatory disease encompassed in the group of cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS). Patients suffering from CINCA have an elevated risk of developing chronic sequelae, including deforming arthropathy, chronic meningitis, neurodevelopmental delay, and neurosensorial hearing loss. The diagnosis of CINCA presents several difficulties, as the clinical phenotype could be difficult to recognize, and almost half of the patients have negative genetic testing. In this paper, we describe the case of a patient presenting with the typical phenotype of neonatal-onset CINCA who resulted negative for NLRP3 mutations. Based on the clinical judgment, the patient underwent treatment with anti-interleukin-1 (IL-1) agents (anakinra and, later, canakinumab) resulting in a complete clinical and laboratory response that allowed confirmation of the diagnosis. Additional genetic investigations performed after the introduction of anti-IL-1 therapy revealed a pathogenic mosaicism in the NLRP3 gene. After a 12-year follow-up, the patient has not experienced chronic complications. Although genetics is rapidly progressing, this case highlights the importance of early diagnosis of CINCA patients when the clinical and laboratory picture is highly suggestive in order to start the appropriate anti-cytokine treatment even in the absence of a genetic confirmation.


Distinct Immunophenotypic Features in Patients Affected by 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome with Immune Dysregulation and Infectious Phenotype

December 2023

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41 Reads

The clinical expression of 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11.2 DS) is extremely variable, as patients can present with recurrent or severe infections, immune dysregulation, atopic diseases, or extra-immunological manifestations. The immunological background underlying the different disease manifestations is not completely elucidated. The aim of this study was to identify the immunophenotypic peculiarities of 22q11.2 DS patients presenting with different disease expressions. This study included 34 patients with 22q11.2 DS, divided into three groups according to the clinical phenotype: isolated extra-immunological manifestations (G1), infectious phenotype with increased/severe infections (G2), and immune dysregulation (G3). The patients underwent extended immunophenotyping of the T and B lymphocytes and analysis of the circulating dendritic cells (DCs). In patients with an infectious phenotype, a significant reduction in CD3+ and CD4+ cells and an expansion of CD8 naïve cells was evidenced. On the other hand, the immunophenotype of the patients with immune dysregulation showed a skewing toward memory T cell populations, and reduced levels of recent thymic emigrants (RTEs), while the highest levels of RTEs were detected in the patients with isolated extra-immunological manifestations. This study integrates the current literature, contributing to elucidating the variability in the immune status of patients with 22q11.2DS with different phenotypic expressions, particularly in those with infectious phenotype and immune dysregulation.


The dynamic role of neuroinflammation and seizure activity in the pathogenic process of status epilepticus.
Neuroinflammation and status epilepticus: a narrative review unraveling a complex interplay

November 2023

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85 Reads

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3 Citations

Frontiers in Pediatrics

Frontiers in Pediatrics

Status epilepticus (SE) is a medical emergency resulting from the failure of the mechanisms involved in seizure termination or from the initiation of pathways involved in abnormally prolonged seizures, potentially leading to long-term consequences, including neuronal death and impaired neuronal networks. It can eventually evolve to refractory status epilepticus (RSE), in which the administration of a benzodiazepine and another anti-seizure medications (ASMs) had been ineffective, and super-refractory status epilepticus (SRSE), which persists for more than 24 h after the administration of general anesthesia. Objective of the present review is to highlight the link between inflammation and SE. Several preclinical and clinical studies have shown that neuroinflammation can contribute to seizure onset and recurrence by increasing neuronal excitability. Notably, microglia and astrocytes can promote neuroinflammation and seizure susceptibility. In fact, inflammatory mediators released by glial cells might enhance neuronal excitation and cause drug resistance and seizure recurrence. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of neuroinflammation could be crucial for improving SE treatment, wich is currently mainly addressed with benzodiazepines and eventually phenytoin, valproic acid, or levetiracetam. IL-1β signal blockade with Anakinra has shown promising results in avoiding seizure recurrence and generalization in inflammatory refractory epilepsy. Inhibiting the IL-1β converting enzyme (ICE)/caspase-1 is also being investigated as a possible target for managing drug-resistant epilepsies. Targeting the ATP-P2X7R signal, which activates the NLRP3 inflammasome and triggers inflammatory molecule release, is another avenue of research. Interestingly, astaxanthin has shown promise in attenuating neuroinflammation in SE by inhibiting the ATP-P2X7R signal. Furthermore, IL-6 blockade using tocilizumab has been effective in RSE and in reducing seizures in patients with febrile infection-related epilepsy syndrome (FIRES). Other potential approaches include the ketogenic diet, which may modulate pro-inflammatory cytokine production, and the use of cannabidiol (CBD), which has demonstrated antiepileptic, neuroprotective, and anti-inflammatory properties, and targeting HMGB1-TLR4 axis. Clinical experience with anti-cytokine agents such as Anakinra and Tocilizumab in SE is currently limited, although promising. Nonetheless, Etanercept and Rituximab have shown efficacy only in specific etiologies of SE, such as autoimmune encephalitis. Overall, targeting inflammatory pathways and cytokines shows potential as an innovative therapeutic option for drug-resistant epilepsies and SE, providing the chance of directly addressing its underlying mechanisms, rather than solely focusing on symptom control.


Brain MRI features. Brain MRI features: (A,F) gray matter reduction; (B,E) enlargement of the lateral ventricles; (C,D) cerebellar atrophy.
Timeline from disease onset to definitive diagnosis.
Cont.
Ataxia Telangiectasia Arising as Immunodeficiency: The Intriguing Differential Diagnosis

September 2023

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30 Reads

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2 Citations

Journal of Clinical Medicine

Journal of Clinical Medicine

Ataxia telangiectasia (AT) is a rare disease characterized by the early onset and slow progression of neurodegenerative defects, mainly affecting the cerebellum, associated with immunodeficiency and teleangiectasias. Ataxia is the hallmark of the disease and usually its first manifestation. Overt cerebellar ataxia usually becomes evident between 16 and 18 months of age, after the onset of walking, and is characterized by frequent falls and an ataxic gait with an enlarged base. We report the case of a child who first presented with serious recurrent infectious, without exhibiting neurological symptoms. The patient was initially diagnosed with combined immunodeficiency (CID) of unknown etiology for nearly 3 years, before he was definitively diagnosed with ataxia telangiectasia.



(A) Diagnostic reclassification of 23 unPAD patients at 4 years of age and at last FU (mean 14 years, median 16 years). Persistent PIDs: persistent primary immunodeficiencies; unPAD: unclassified primary antibody deficiency; CVID: common variable immunodeficiency disorder; SIGAD: selective IgA deficiency; IgMD: IgM deficiency; THI: transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy; Final FU: final follow-up. (B) Time of normalization of 10 THI patients.
Clinical and immunological findings at diagnosis of patients with a final diagnosis of persistent PID vs. THI.
The Evolutionary Scenario of Pediatric Unclassified Primary Antibody Deficiency to Adulthood

June 2023

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72 Reads

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1 Citation

Journal of Clinical Medicine

Journal of Clinical Medicine

Background: Unclassified primary antibody deficiency (unPAD) is a relatively novel inborn error of immunity (IEI) condition that can vary with time to more defined entities. Since long-term follow-up (FU) studies are scarce, we aimed to provide insight into the evolutionary clinical and immunological scenario of unPAD children to adulthood and identification of biomarkers of primary immune deficiency (PID) persistence. Methods: A total of 23 pediatric unPAD patients underwent clinical and immunological FU for a mean time of 14 years (range 3-32 years, median 16 years). Results: UnPAD diagnosis may change over time. At the last FU, 10/23 (44%) children matched the diagnosis of transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy and 13/23 (56%) suffered from a persistent PID. In detail, an unPAD condition was confirmed in 7/23 (30%) patients, whereas 3/23 (13%), 2/23 (9%), and 1/23 (4%) were reclassified as common variable immunodeficiency, selective IgA deficiency, and isolated IgM deficiency, respectively. Low IgA, low specific antibody response to pneumococcus, and lower respiratory tract infections at diagnosis were independently associated with IEI persistence. Conclusions: Long-term monitoring of unPAD patients is required to define their outcome and possible evolution towards a definitive IEI diagnosis.


Study design and incidence of SUDEP in selected cohorts of patients with epilepsy
Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A critical view of the literature

May 2023

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195 Reads

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8 Citations

Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is a sudden, unexpected, witnessed or unwitnessed, non‐traumatic and non‐drowning death, occurring in benign circumstances, in an individual with epilepsy, with or without evidence for a seizure and excluding documented status epilepticus in which postmortem examination does not reveal other causes of death. Lower diagnostic levels are assigned when cases met most or all of these criteria, but data suggested more than one possible cause of death. The incidence of SUDEP ranged from 0.09 to 2.4 per 1000 person‐years. Differences can be attributed to the age of the study populations (with peaks in the 20–40‐year age group) and the severity of the disease. Young age, disease severity (in particular, a history of generalized TCS), having symptomatic epilepsy, and the response to antiseizure medications (ASMs) are possible independent predictors of SUDEP. The pathophysiological mechanisms are not fully known due to the limited data available and because SUDEP is not always witnessed and has been electrophysiologically monitored only in a few cases with simultaneous assessment of respiratory, cardiac, and brain activity. The pathophysiological basis of SUDEP may vary according to different circumstances that make that particular seizure, in that specific moment and in that patient, a fatal event. The main hypothesized mechanisms, which could contribute to a cascade of events, are cardiac dysfunction (included potential effects of ASMs, genetically determined channelopathies, acquired heart diseases), respiratory dysfunction (included postictal arousal deficit for the respiratory mechanism, acquired respiratory diseases), neuromodulator dysfunction, postictal EEG depression and genetic factors.



Neurovisual Manifestations in Children with Mild COVID-19: An Association to Remember

February 2023

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37 Reads

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1 Citation

Neuro-Ophthalmology

Neurovisual involvement has been reported in a number of patients with severe SARS-CoV-2 disease (COVID-19), mainly among adult patients. In children, such involvement has been reported in rare cases, often in those presenting with severe forms of COVID-19. The aim of this work is to explore the association between mild COVID-19 and neurovisual manifestations. We report the cases of three previously healthy children who developed neurovisual manifestations following mild acute COVID-19, analysing the clinical phenotype, the latency between the onset of acute COVID-19 and neurovisual involvement, and the kinetic of resolution. Our patients developed different clinical patterns, including visual impairment and ophthalmoplegia. In two cases, these clinical features occurred during acute COVID-19, while in the third patient their development was delayed after 10 days from disease onset. Furthermore, the dynamics of resolution were different, with one patient showing remission after 24 hours, the second after 30 days, and the third showing persistence of the strabismus after 2 months of follow-up. The spreading of COVID-19 among the paediatric population will probably lead to an increase of atypical disease forms, including those presenting with neurovisual involvement. Therefore, a better knowledge of the pathogenic and clinical features of these manifestations is warranted.


Citations (36)


... Additionally, alterations in proteins regulating neuronal excitability and synaptic plasticity, including neurotransmitter receptors and ion channels, further influence seizure susceptibility [91,95]. Moreover, neuroinflammation, characterized by the activation of microglia and the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines, can alter neuronal excitability and contribute to seizure progression [96]. Mitochondrial dysfunction, involving defects in energy metabolism and oxidative stress, also plays a role in epileptogenesis [97]. ...

Reference:

The Use of Compounds Derived from Cannabis sativa in the Treatment of Epilepsy, Painful Conditions, and Neuropsychiatric and Neurodegenerative Disorders
Neuroinflammation and status epilepticus: a narrative review unraveling a complex interplay
Frontiers in Pediatrics

Frontiers in Pediatrics

... One of the distinctive features prompting clinicians to diagnose AT is its characteristic cutaneous features, most notably the telangiectasias [99]. Telangiectasias are identified by the presence of smaller, vasodilated blood vessels on the skin, frequently associated with dilation or broken blood vessels located near the surface of the skin or mucous membranes [100]. In the progression of AT, telangiectasias are observed on the whites of the eyes and various areas on the skin, particularly the bulbar conjunctiva, ears, neck, and cubital fossa [101]. ...

Ataxia Telangiectasia Arising as Immunodeficiency: The Intriguing Differential Diagnosis
Journal of Clinical Medicine

Journal of Clinical Medicine

... Finally, the paper by Sgrulletti et al. [13] focuses on the clinical evolution of pediatric patients with unclassified primary antibody deficiencies, highlighting the need for an appropriate follow-up to promptly identify those who will progress to definite IEI. ...

The Evolutionary Scenario of Pediatric Unclassified Primary Antibody Deficiency to Adulthood
Journal of Clinical Medicine

Journal of Clinical Medicine

... 11 In all epilepsies, a history of TCS (including GTCS and focal to bilateral TCS [FBTCS]) and seizure refractoriness are consistently cited as major risk factors for premature death and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP). [12][13][14][15][16][17][18] SUDEP is a poorly understood-yet common-cause of death in patients with DEEs and epilepsy in general, 13 and it is also a leading fear of parents and caregivers. 4,19,20 As such, antiseizure medications (ASMs) that can reduce seizure burden, namely GTCS and TCS, may reduce the risk of death in patients with DEEs. ...

Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: A critical view of the literature
Epilepsia Open

Epilepsia Open

... 11 Formal diagnosis of IEI may have additional utility as IEI-related autoimmune cytopenias are less responsive to standard therapies and often associate with other immunopathologic manifestations such as immunemediated gastrointestinal disease in children. 8,12,13 Molecular diagnosis may also guide treatment given the mounting success of targeted therapies [14][15][16][17] ...

Refractory immune thrombocytopenia: Lessons from immune dysregulation disorders

... Also, lymphoproliferative features are frequently observed in diseases caused by an altered control of specific infections, as evidenced in EBV-related disorders. 2,3,43 CVID is associated with lymphoproliferation in more than 10% of the patients. The incidence is specifically higher in patients carrying definite genetic mutations, including NFKB1 and TACI. ...

Beyond Infections: New Warning Signs for Inborn Errors of Immunity in Children
Frontiers in Pediatrics

Frontiers in Pediatrics

... For example, Jain et al. [22] and Collignon et al. [23] reported cases with a short interval between vaccination and PIMS-TS symptoms, suggesting other factors at play. Similarly, cases reported by Consollini et al. [24], Salzman et al. [25], and DeJong et al. [26] involved prior SARS-CoV-2 exposure, complicating the causal link to vaccination. In another case, Lee et al. described a child who developed PIMS-TS MIS-C after being exposed to COVID-19 despite the vaccination [27]. ...

Case Report: MIS-C With Prominent Hepatic and Pancreatic Involvement in a Vaccinated Adolescent – A Critical Reasoning
Frontiers in Pediatrics

Frontiers in Pediatrics

... One of the most well-known PSMDs is Sydenham's chorea, also known as St. Vitus dance. Sydenham's chorea is characterized by rapid, uncoordinated, involuntary movements that primarily affect the face, hands, and feet [65]. These movements may be accompanied by muscle weakness, emotional lability, and cognitive changes. ...

Therapeutic aspects of Sydenham's Chorea: an update

... Another paper analyzing a rare and poorly recognized entity is the cohort study by Alberio et al. [8], in which the clinical and laboratory features of patients with the DiGeorgelike clinical phenotype in the absence of the classical 22q11.2 deletion are described. ...

Clinical, Immunological, and Genetic Findings in a Cohort of Patients with the DiGeorge Phenotype without 22q11.2 Deletion
Journal of Clinical Medicine

Journal of Clinical Medicine

... Importantly, patients suffering from drug-resistant epilepsy, defined as a "failure of adequate trials of two tolerated, appropriately chosen, and used ASM schedules (whether as monotherapy or in combination) to achieve sustained seizure freedom" [16], are at a greater risk of developing injury, psychosocial dysfunction, early death, and a lower standard of living [5]. Multiple pathological changes have been identified that potentially contribute to drug refractoriness in epilepsy (e.g., alterations of the GABA A and/or glutamate receptors, altered sensitivity of the Na + and/or Ca 2+ channels, the over-expression of multidrug transporter proteins at the level of the BBB, and the overexpression of efflux transporters in the peripheral organs, genetic variance, dysfunction of the BBB, structural alterations such as neurodegeneration and synaptic reorganisation, and gliosis and neuroinflammation [5,[17][18][19][20]), which implies that efficient epilepsy treatment most likely requires the targeting of multiple processes rather than single pathological mechanisms. Further complicating epilepsy treatment, ASMs have no apparent impact upon the underlying causes and may exacerbate comorbidities, with drug-induced adverse side-effects being of particular concern (e.g., neurological and cognitive disturbances, fatigue, irritability, dizziness) [21]. ...

Targeting Inflammatory Mediators in Epilepsy: A Systematic Review of Its Molecular Basis and Clinical Applications