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Idanna Innocenti

Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore

ORCID: 0000-0001-7290-260X

Publishes on Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Research, Lymphoma Diagnosis and Treatment, Immunodeficiency and Autoimmune Disorders. 208 papers and 1.6k citations.

208Publications
1.6kTotal Citations

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BCR signaling inhibitors differ in their ability to overcome Mcl-1–mediated resistance of CLL B cells to ABT-199
Cited by 113Open Access

The Bcl-2 antagonist ABT-199 (venetoclax) has demonstrated promising clinical activity in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). ABT-199 is strongly cytotoxic against unstimulated peripheral blood CLL cells in vitro but is much less effective against CLL cells that have received survival signals from the microenvironment. In particular, stimulation of CLL cells with CD40L results in substantial resistance mediated by induction of the antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family proteins Bcl-xL and Bfl-1. In this study, we investigated whether resistance to ABT-199 can be conferred by B-cell receptor (BCR) stimulation, which is another important survival signal from the leukemic microenvironment. We show that sustained BCR stimulation results in significant ABT-199 resistance, which correlates with induction of the antiapoptotic protein Mcl-1 and less consistently with downregulation of proapoptotic Bmf, Hrk, and BimEL A major role for Mcl-1 in conferring ABT-199 resistance is additionally supported by knockdown and enforced expression experiments with primary CLL cells. We further show that SYK, BTK, and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase δ (PI3Kδ) inhibitors significantly downregulate Mcl-1, but with different efficacy. Complete Mcl-1 downregulation was consistently achieved only with SYK inhibitors R406 and GS-9973 (entospletinib), whereas the BTK inhibitor ibrutinib and the PI3Kδ inhibitor idelalisib in more than half of the cases had only a partial effect. The greater ability of SYK inhibitors to downregulate Mcl-1 correlated with their greater capacity to block BCR-mediated inactivation of GSK-3, a major negative regulator of Mcl-1. The finding that BCR signaling inhibitors differ in their ability to target Mcl-1 is relevant for the design of clinical trials combining these agents with ABT-199.

COVID-19 severity and mortality in patients with CLL: an update of the international ERIC and Campus CLL study
Cited by 94Open Access

Patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) may be more susceptible to Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) due to age, disease, and treatment-related immunosuppression. We aimed to assess risk factors of outcome and elucidate the impact of CLL-directed treatments on the course of COVID-19. We conducted a retrospective, international study, collectively including 941 patients with CLL and confirmed COVID-19. Data from the beginning of the pandemic until March 16, 2021, were collected from 91 centers. The risk factors of case fatality rate (CFR), disease severity, and overall survival (OS) were investigated. OS analysis was restricted to patients with severe COVID-19 (definition: hospitalization with need of oxygen or admission into an intensive care unit). CFR in patients with severe COVID-19 was 38.4%. OS was inferior for patients in all treatment categories compared to untreated (p < 0.001). Untreated patients had a lower risk of death (HR = 0.54, 95% CI:0.41-0.72). The risk of death was higher for older patients and those suffering from cardiac failure (HR = 1.03, 95% CI:1.02-1.04; HR = 1.79, 95% CI:1.04-3.07, respectively). Age, CLL-directed treatment, and cardiac failure were significant risk factors of OS. Untreated patients had a better chance of survival than those on treatment or recently treated.

B-cell receptor signaling and genetic lesions in TP53 and CDKN2A/CDKN2B cooperate in Richter transformation
Cited by 65Open Access

B-cell receptor (BCR) signals play a critical role in the pathogenesis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), but their role in regulating CLL cell proliferation has still not been firmly established. Unlike normal B cells, CLL cells do not proliferate in vitro upon engagement of the BCR, suggesting that CLL cell proliferation is regulated by other signals from the microenvironment, such as those provided by Toll-like receptors or T cells. Here, we report that BCR engagement of human and murine CLL cells induces several positive regulators of the cell cycle, but simultaneously induces the negative regulators CDKN1A, CDKN2A, and CDKN2B, which block cell-cycle progression. We further show that introduction of genetic lesions that downregulate these cell-cycle inhibitors, such as inactivating lesions in CDKN2A, CDKN2B, and the CDKN1A regulator TP53, leads to more aggressive disease in a murine in vivo CLL model and spontaneous proliferation in vitro that is BCR dependent but independent of costimulatory signals. Importantly, inactivating lesions in CDKN2A, CDKN2B, and TP53 frequently co-occur in Richter syndrome (RS), and BCR stimulation of human RS cells with such lesions is sufficient to induce proliferation. We also show that tumor cells with combined TP53 and CDKN2A/2B abnormalities remain sensitive to BCR-inhibitor treatment and are synergistically sensitive to the combination of a BCR and cyclin-dependent kinase 4 and 6 (CDK4/6) inhibitor both in vitro and in vivo. These data provide evidence that BCR signals are directly involved in driving CLL cell proliferation and reveal a novel mechanism of Richter transformation.

Validation of the CLL-IPI and comparison with the MDACC prognostic index in newly diagnosed patients
Cited by 63Open Access

Recently, an international collaboration collected information from ∼3500 chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients to develop a comprehensive tool for predicting overall survival (OS) (the international prognostic index for patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia [CLL-IPI]).1 This score built on TP53 deletion and/or mutation, IGHV mutational status, β2-microglobulin (β2-M), clinical stage, and age may represent a simple “globally applied” model applicable in daily clinical practice and able to improve risk stratification for all CLL patients. Although it was primarily developed to predict OS, this tool can also predict time-to-first treatment (TTFT) in newly diagnosed patients.2&#13;\n&#13;\nHerein, we evaluated the validity and reproducibility of the CLL-IPI in an independent cohort of newly diagnosed and nonreferred CLL patients collected from 5 Italian centers. We also evaluated whether CLL-IPI could predict TTFT. Finally, we compared this tool with the score proposed by the MD Anderson Cancer Center (MDACC) group3 in both the Italian cohort and in an additional cohort of newly diagnosed CLL patients from the Mayo Clinic (Rochester, MN). The study was approved by Institutional Review Boards with informed consent in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki.&#13;\n&#13;\nCLL databases from 5 Italian centers were established for research purposes (supplemental Appendix, supplemental Figure 1, available on the Blood Web site). A total of 858 newly diagnosed and previously untreated CLL patients were included in this analysis. The majority of patients were Binet stage A (79.7%); median age was 65.5 years (supplemental Table 2 lists baseline patient features). After a median follow-up of 5.8 years (range, 3 months to 27.5 years), 167 patients died and 304 were treated (130 patients received chemotherapy and 174 received chemo-immunotherapy).&#13;\n&#13;\nWe evaluated the relationship between CLL-IPI and OS. Due to missing data regarding TP53 mutations, del17p was used as the sole marker of TP53 status. All parameters showed an independent prognostic impact (supplemental Table 3).&#13;\n&#13;\nAccording to the CLL-IPI, 471 patients were classified as low risk, 214 as intermediate risk, 139 as high risk, and 34 as very high risk. Stratification of patients according to the CLL-IPI showed significant differences in terms of OS (Figure 1A). The median, 5-year, and 10-year OS rates by CLL-IPI category in our cohort are quite similar to those observed in the original study1 (supplemental Table 4), suggesting that the survival estimates provided by the index are reproducible. The C-statistic was 0.71 (P &lt; .0001) for predicting OS, exceeding the 0.70 threshold and underscoring the prognostic utility at the individual patient level.

CD49d promotes disease progression in chronic lymphocytic leukemia: new insights from CD49d bimodal expression
Cited by 61Open Access

CD49d is a remarkable prognostic biomarker of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The cutoff value for the extensively validated 30% of positive CLL cells is able to separate CLL patients into 2 subgroups with different prognoses, but it does not consider the pattern of CD49d expression. In the present study, we analyzed a cohort of 1630 CLL samples and identified the presence of ∼20% of CLL cases (n = 313) characterized by a bimodal expression of CD49d, that is, concomitant presence of a CD49d+ subpopulation and a CD49d- subpopulation. At variance with the highly stable CD49d expression observed in CLL patients with a homogeneous pattern of CD49d expression, CD49d bimodal CLL showed a higher level of variability in sequential samples, and an increase in the CD49d+ subpopulation over time after therapy. The CD49d+ subpopulation from CD49d bimodal CLL displayed higher levels of proliferation compared with the CD49d- cells; and was more highly represented in the bone marrow compared with peripheral blood (PB), and in PB CLL subsets expressing the CXCR4dim/CD5bright phenotype, known to be enriched in proliferative cells. From a clinical standpoint, CLL patients with CD49d bimodal expression, regardless of whether the CD49d+ subpopulation exceeded the 30% cutoff or not, experienced clinical behavior similar to CD49d+ CLL, both in chemoimmunotherapy (n = 1522) and in ibrutinib (n = 158) settings. Altogether, these results suggest that CD49d can drive disease progression in CLL, and that the pattern of CD49d expression should also be considered to improve the prognostic impact of this biomarker in CLL.