Investigator

Antonio De Leo

University of Bologna, Department of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine, University of Bologna-Molecular Diagnostic Unit, Azienda USL di Bologna

ADLAntonio De Leo
Papers(8)
Interobserver Agreeme…Spatial Cancer-Immune…An Analysis of Clinic…Immunophenotypical as…Adult granulosa cell …Endometrial carcinoma…Analysis of HNF1β exp…<scp>miRNA</scp> leve…
Collaborators(10)
Muhammad T IdreesDario de BiaseCamelia Alexandra Coa…Costantino RicciAnna Myriam PerroneMichelangelo Fiorenti…Pierandrea De IacoClaudio CeccarelliGloria RavegniniAnkur R Sangoi
Institutions(6)
University Of BolognaIndiana University Sc…IRCCS Azienda Ospedli…University of BolognaAias BolognaSanford Medical Center

Papers

Interobserver Agreement in Immunohistochemical Evaluation of Folate Receptor Alpha (FRα) in Ovarian Cancer: A Multicentre Study

Folate receptor alpha (FRα) is a high-affinity folate transporter overexpressed in various epithelial malignancies, particularly high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma. Given its restricted expression in normal tissues and accessibility in tumors, FRα is an emerging therapeutic target. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) is the standard method for FRα assessment; however, interpretation is semi-quantitative and prone to interobserver variability. This study aimed to evaluate interobserver agreement among 12 pathologists in the IHC assessment of FRα in ovarian cancer, focusing on internal control adequacy, staining intensity, and the percentage of FRα-positive tumor cells. Thirty-seven high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma cases were stained using the VENTANA FOLR1 (FOLR1-2.1) RxDx Assay. A reference panel of four expert pathologists established consensus diagnoses. Twelve pathologists independently assessed the slides, recording internal control adequacy, staining intensity (positive vs. negative), and percentage of FRα-positive tumor cells. Interobserver agreement was measured using Fleiss’ kappa and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Agreement on internal control adequacy was almost perfect (κ = 0.84). Substantial agreement was observed for staining intensity (κ = 0.76), while percentage estimation showed almost perfect concordance (ICC = 0.89). Discrepancies were primarily confined to borderline cases (65–85% positivity) and tumors with intermediate staining, reflecting interpretive challenges near clinical decision thresholds. Pathologists demonstrated high reproducibility in FRα IHC assessment, particularly in estimating percentage positivity and control adequacy. These findings support the clinical utility of FRα IHC but underscore the need for standardized scoring criteria and potential integration of digital tools to enhance consistency, especially in borderline cases.

Spatial Cancer-Immune Phenotypes Predict Shorter Recurrence-Free Survival in the No Specific Molecular Profile Molecular Subtype of Endometrial Carcinoma

Compartmentation of the immune response into 3 main spatial cancer-immune phenotypes (SCIs) - inflamed, excluded, and desert - has been proposed as the main predictor of response to immune checkpoint inhibitors in solid tumors. The objective of the study was to define and characterize the SCI in a consecutive series of 213 endometrial carcinomas (ECs) by correlating it with molecular subtypes, clinicopathologic features, and prognosis. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) and next-generation sequencing were used to assign surrogate molecular EC subtypes: POLE mutant (POLE), mismatch repair deficient (MMRd), TP53 mutant (p53abn), and no specific molecular profile (NSMP). Immune cell markers (CD20, CD3, CD8, CD68, PD-L1) were assessed by IHC on whole sections and quantified by digital image analysis to define the 3 SCIs. ECs were stratified into 4 molecular subtypes: 17 (8.0%) POLE, 68 (31.9%) MMRd, 42 (19.7%) p53abn, and 86 (40.4%) NSMP. SCI determination showed 105 (49.3%) inflamed, 62 (29.1%) desert, and 46 (25.6%) excluded tumors. The inflamed phenotype was more prevalent in MMRd (64.7%) and POLE (76.5%) subtypes compared with NSMP (45.3%) and p53abn (21.4%). SCI revealed a strong correlation with disease-free survival in NSMP tumors: inflamed 96.2%, desert 83.2%, and excluded 40.5%. The SCI prognostic impact was also maintained in NSMP cases treated with adjuvant therapy resulting in a significant difference in recurrence between the inflamed and excluded phenotypes. To simplify SCI determination, a subset of immune cell markers was selected as appropriate to define the 3 SCI patterns: high intraepithelial CD8 for the inflamed phenotype; CD68, CD20, and PD-L1 to discriminate between desert and excluded tumors. The integration of SCI into molecular classification could be a promising opportunity to improve the prognostic risk stratification of patients and may guide the therapeutic approach, particularly in the NSMP subtype. Thus, the different patterns of immune response are a new prognostic parameter in the NSMP subtype.

Adult granulosa cell tumours of the testis analogous to ovarian counterparts are exceptionally rare: analysis of a multicentric series and review of the literature

Aims Testicular adult granulosa cell tumours (AGCTs) are rare and show several clinical–pathological differences with their ovarian counterparts. In a limited number of prior studies, FOXL2 p.Cys134Trp, the hallmark molecular alteration of ovarian AGCT, appeared to be infrequent in testicular AGCTs. However, the number of cases analysed to date is relatively small. Methods and results Twenty testicular AGCTs were analysed de novo using two different next‐generation sequencing ( NGS ) panels that cover sex cord‐stromal tumour ( SCST )–relevant genes, including FOXL2 , CTNNB1 , FH and DICER1 . Among 12 tumours (12/20; 60%) that were sequenced successfully, none harboured FOXL2 mutations. Eight tumours (8/12, 66.7%) showed a wild‐type ( WT ) status for all genes assessed with the panels. Three tumours harboured pathogenic or likely pathogenic CTNNB1 alterations. One of these exhibited predominant spindle cell morphology, while the other two showed focal tubular architecture. Immunohistochemistry performed in one of these tumours with available material showed β‐catenin expression in ~70% of tumor cell nuclei. The remaining AGCTs showed variants of uncertain significance (likely benign) in KIT and MED12 . Considering the tumors asseseed in this study and those previously reported in the literature, only 2 of 29 neoplasms classified as testicular AGCTs have shown a FOXL2 p. Cys134Trp mutation to date. Conclusions The present study confirms that SCSTs classified as AGCTs differ from their ovarian counterparts in that they largely lack FOXL2 mutations.

Endometrial carcinoma and immune escape: prognostic relevance of HLA class I loss in NSMP subtype

Aims This study aims to define and characterize human leukocyte antigen class I (HLA‐I) expression in a consecutive series of molecularly classified endometrial carcinomas (ECs), and to evaluate its association with clinicopathologic features, spatial cancer–immune phenotypes and patient prognosis, with a focus on the NSMP (no specific molecular profile) subtype. Methods and results HLA‐I expression was assessed by immunohistochemistry on whole tissue sections from 208 ECs, classified into POLE ‐mutated, MMR‐deficient (MMRd), p53‐abnormal (p53abn) and NSMP subtypes. Loss of HLA‐I was identified in 31% of cases and was associated with adverse features including high‐grade, aggressive histotypes, deep myometrial invasion, substantial lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI), extensive tumour necrosis and an ‘excluded’ immune phenotype. While HLA‐I loss showed no significant prognostic impact in POLE , MMRd or p53abn tumours, it significantly correlated with worse disease‐free survival in NSMP tumours ( P  &lt; 0.001). Multivariate analysis confirmed HLA‐I loss as an independent prognostic factor in early‐stage NSMP ECs, in addition to substantial LVSI, presence of lymph node metastases and spatial cancer–immune phenotypes. Integration of HLA‐I status improved the performance of predictive models over time. Conclusions HLA‐I loss defines a biologically aggressive subgroup within NSMP ECs and is associated with adverse clinicopathologic and immune features. Assessment of HLA‐I expression could refine risk stratification in NSMP ECs, a group traditionally lacking robust prognostic markers and may help identify patients who could benefit from intensified clinical surveillance and future immunomodulatory treatment strategies.

miRNA levels are associated with body mass index in endometrial cancer and may have implications for therapy

AbstractEndometrial cancer (EC) is the most prevalent gynecological cancer in high‐income countries. Its incidence is skyrocketing due to the increase in risk factors such as obesity, which represents a true pandemic. This study aimed to evaluate microRNA (miRNA) expression in obesity‐related EC to identify potential associations between this specific cancer type and obesity. miRNA levels were analyzed in 84 EC patients stratified based on body mass index (BMI; ≥30 or &lt;30) and nine noncancer women with obesity. The data were further tested in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) cohort, including 384 EC patients, 235 with BMI ≥30 and 149 with BMI &lt;30. Prediction of miRNA targets and analysis of their expression were also performed to identify the potential epigenetic networks involved in obesity modulation. In the EC cohort, BMI ≥30 was significantly associated with 11 deregulated miRNAs. The topmost deregulated miRNAs were first analyzed in 84 EC samples by single miRNA assay and then tested in the TCGA dataset. This independent validation provided further confirmation about the significant difference of three miRNAs (miR‐199a‐5p, miR‐449a, miR‐449b‐5p) in normal‐weight EC patients versus EC patients with obesity, resulting significantly higher expressed in the latter. Moreover, the three miRNAs were significantly correlated with grade, histological type, and overall survival. Analysis of their target genes revealed that these miRNAs may regulate obesity‐related pathways. In conclusion, we identified specific miRNAs associated with BMI that are potentially involved in modulating obesity‐related pathways and that may provide novel implications for the clinical management of obese EC patients.

158Works
8Papers
59Collaborators
Biomarkers, TumorOvarian NeoplasmsProstatic NeoplasmsEndometrial NeoplasmsThyroid NeoplasmsCell Line, TumorTesticular NeoplasmsPrognosis

Positions

2020–

Researcher

University of Bologna · Department of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine, University of Bologna-Molecular Diagnostic Unit, Azienda USL di Bologna

Education

2011

M.D:

Università degli Studi di Bologna Scuola di Medicina e Chirurgia

Country

IT

Links & IDs
0000-0002-3761-5135

Scopus: 55920551800

Researcher Id: ADG-3906-2022