Yes, I looked at the paper and it indeed shows symmetric LHP and RHP zeros in the frequency response. According to the paper, though, those zeros are at higher frequency compared to the complex non-dominant poles. Also, they are symmetric which means they don't affect the phase response but peak the magnitude response - this, if it happens to your circuit, should not bring problems with stability, if the zeros are after the non-dominant poles. You mentioned that your zeros are before the non-dominant pole, though. There is also one more difference between your circuit and the circuits shown in the paper. Yours is fully differential. The circuits in the paper have a current mirror load for the 1st stage which will affect the dynamics of the amplifier by at least introducing an extra zero coming from the delay of the signal current through that extra path. I'm not sure if the formulas in the paper capture that effect, probably they do. In your case, the load is current sources and is thus not in the signal path. But you still have the effect of the nmos casode transistors through which the Cc current goes. If at frequencies lower than the non-dominant pole the path trough Cc has lower impedance compared to the 1/gm of the cascode devices then you'll have a feed-forward path through the Cc and a RHP zero because of that. Of course I can't know if this is the case with your circuit.