103 results on '"Franck N"'
Search Results
2. Métacognition et théorie de l’esprit
- Author
-
Franck, N., primary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Introduction
- Author
-
Franck, N., primary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Programme GAÏA
- Author
-
Gaudelus, B., primary and Franck, N., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Remédiation de la cognition sociale dans la schizophrénie (RC2S+)
- Author
-
Peyroux, E., primary and Franck, N., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Le centre d’accueil d’évaluation et d’orientation en psychiatrie et en santé mentale
- Author
-
Franck, N., primary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Narrative enhancement and cognitive therapy (NECT) to improve social functioning in people with serious mental illness: study protocol for a stepped-wedge cluster randomized controlled trial
- Author
-
Dubreucq, J., Faraldo, M., Abbes, M., Ycart, B., Richard-Lepouriel, H., Favre, S., Jermann, F., Attal, J., Bakri, M., Cohen, T., Cervello, C., Chereau, I., Cognard, C., De Clercq, M., Douasbin, A., Giordana, J. Y., Giraud-Baro, E., Guillard-Bouhet, N., Legros-Lafarge, E., Polosan, M., Pouchon, A., Rolland, M., Rainteau, N., Roussel, C., Wangermez, C., Yanos, P. T., Lysaker, P. H., and Franck, N.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Development of ELIP to Assess Physical Literacy for Emerging Adults: A Methodological and Epistemological Challenge
- Author
-
Gandrieau, Joseph, Schnitzler, Christophe, Cairney, John, Keegan, Richard, Roberts, Will, Barnett, Lisa, Bentsen, Peter, Dudley, Dean, Sum, Raymond, Venetsanou, Fotini, Button, Chris, Turcotte, Sylvain, Berrigan, Felix, Cloes, Marc, Rudd, James, Riga, Vassiliki, Mouton, Alexandre, Vasickova, Jana, Blanchard, Joël, Mekkaoui, Léa, Derigny, Thibaut, Franck, N, Repond, Rose-Marie, Markovic, M, Scheuer, Claude, Potdevin, François, Gandrieau, Joseph, Schnitzler, Christophe, Cairney, John, Keegan, Richard, Roberts, Will, Barnett, Lisa, Bentsen, Peter, Dudley, Dean, Sum, Raymond, Venetsanou, Fotini, Button, Chris, Turcotte, Sylvain, Berrigan, Felix, Cloes, Marc, Rudd, James, Riga, Vassiliki, Mouton, Alexandre, Vasickova, Jana, Blanchard, Joël, Mekkaoui, Léa, Derigny, Thibaut, Franck, N, Repond, Rose-Marie, Markovic, M, Scheuer, Claude, and Potdevin, François
- Abstract
Purpose: Following increased interest in physical literacy (PL), development of appropriate tools for assessment has become an important next step for its operationalization. To forward the development of such tools, the objective of this study was to build the foundations of the Évaluation de la Littératie Physique (ELIP), designed to help reduce existing tensions in approaches to PL assessment that may be resulting in a low uptake into applied settings. Methods: We followed two steps: (1) the development of the first version of ELIP by deploying a Delphi method (n = 30); and (2) the modification of items through cognitive interviews with emerging adults (n = 32). Results: The expert consensus highlighted four dimensions of PL to be assessed—physical; affective; cognitive; and social—with new perspectives, including a preference for broad motor tests over fitness. Conclusion: Results offer new insights into the assessment of emerging adults’ PL, but ELIP still requires further work concerning validity, reliability, and sensitivity.
- Published
- 2023
9. Development of ELIP to Assess Physical Literacy for Emerging Adults: A Methodological and Epistemological Challenge
- Author
-
Gandrieau, J., primary, Schnitzler, C., additional, Cairney, J., additional, Keegan, R., additional, Roberts, W. M., additional, Barnett, L. M., additional, Bentsen, P., additional, Dudley, D. A., additional, Raymond Sum, K. W., additional, Venetsanou, F., additional, Button, C., additional, Turcotte, S., additional, Berrigan, F., additional, Cloes, M., additional, Rudd, J.R., additional, Riga, V., additional, Mouton, A., additional, Vašíčková, J., additional, Blanchard, J., additional, Mekkaoui, L., additional, Derigny, T., additional, Franck, N., additional, Repond, R-M., additional, Markovič, M., additional, Scheuer, C., additional, and Potdevin, F., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Amélioration de la survie globale en cas de toxicité immuno-médiée au cours du traitement par ipilimumab et nivolumab dans le mélanome métastatique en vie réelle
- Author
-
Garcia, L., primary, Bettuzzi, T., additional, Charvet, E., additional, Darbord, D., additional, Klejtman, T., additional, Franck, N., additional, Nassar, D., additional, Chanal, J., additional, Dupin, N., additional, Aractingi, S., additional, Guégan, S., additional, Coralie, L., additional, Kramkimel, N., additional, and Bénédicte, O., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Intérêt du suivi de l’ADN tumoral circulant dans le mélanome avancé
- Author
-
Okroglic, L., primary, Oules, B., additional, Kramkimel, N., additional, Darbord, D., additional, Lheure, C., additional, Franck, N., additional, Leroy, K., additional, Pasmant, E., additional, Burin Des Roziers, C., additional, Dupin, N., additional, Aractingi, S., additional, Nassar, D., additional, and Guégan, S., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Survie globale et prise en charge du syndrome de Sézary : étude rétrospective multicentrique de 402 cas
- Author
-
Bozonnat, A., primary, Beylot-Barry, M., additional, Dereure, O., additional, D’Incan, M., additional, Quéreux, G., additional, Guenova, E., additional, Grange, F., additional, Viguier, M., additional, Ram-Wolff, C., additional, Boulinguez, S., additional, Troin, L., additional, Montaudié, H., additional, Feldmeyer, L., additional, Beltraminelli, H., additional, Bonnet, N., additional, Maubec, E., additional, Franck, N., additional, Machet, L., additional, Chasset, F., additional, Saiag, P., additional, Hainault, E., additional, Brunet Possenti, F., additional, Michel, C., additional, Bens, G., additional, Adamski, H., additional, Aubin, F., additional, Faiz, S., additional, Mortier, L., additional, Joly, P., additional, Tedbirt, B., additional, Templier, I., additional, Bouaziz, J.D., additional, Battistella, M., additional, Oro, S., additional, Bagot, M., additional, Serret-Larmande, A., additional, Montlahuc, C., additional, and de Masson, A., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Description clinique et histologique d’acnés induites par l’association d’ivacaftor/tezacaftor/elexacaftor (Kaftrio®) chez des patients atteints de mucoviscidose
- Author
-
Okroglic, L., primary, Sohier, P., additional, Lheure, C., additional, Franck, N., additional, Martin, C., additional, Honoré, I., additional, Kanaan, R., additional, Burgel, P.R., additional, Carlotti, A., additional, Dupin, N., additional, and Oules, B., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Retour d’expérience après la mise en place d’un service de téléexpertise dermatologique dans un CHU parisien : pièges, obstacles et réalité
- Author
-
Lheure, C., primary, Franck, N., additional, Darbord, D., additional, Calas, A., additional, Regnier, E., additional, Aractingi, S., additional, Guégan, S., additional, Oules, B., additional, and Dupin, N., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Profil des patients longs répondeurs à la thérapie ciblée dans le mélanome métastatique
- Author
-
Le Clainche, A., primary, Oules, B., additional, Darbord, D., additional, Lheure, C., additional, Franck, N., additional, Nassar, D., additional, Chanal, J., additional, Dupin, N., additional, Aractingi, S., additional, Guégan, S., additional, and Kramkimel, N., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Fibrinolyse aiguë primitive immuno-médiée après traitement par nivolumab et ipilimumab
- Author
-
Le Clainche, A., primary, Ouedraogo, E., additional, Darbord, D., additional, Nassar, D., additional, Dupin, N., additional, Aractingi, S., additional, Guégan, S., additional, Lambotte, O., additional, Kramkimel, N., additional, Franck, N., additional, and Lheure, C., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Impact on student mental health is not related to the intensity of lockdown measures but to their recurrence
- Author
-
Franck, N., primary and Zante, E., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Chapitre 15 - Métacognition et théorie de l’esprit
- Author
-
Franck, N.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Chapitre 17 - Programme GAÏA
- Author
-
Gaudelus, B. and Franck, N.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Chapitre 18 - Remédiation de la cognition sociale dans la schizophrénie (RC2S+)
- Author
-
Peyroux, E. and Franck, N.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Chapitre 1 - Introduction
- Author
-
Franck, N.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. “Setting up and Tailoring Early Intervention Teams in a Already Established Healthcare System: the Experience of the Greater Lyon”
- Author
-
Haesebaert, F., primary, Franck, N., additional, and Haesebaert, J., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Allogreffe dans les lymphomes T cutanés avancés (CUTALLO) : une étude prospective contrôlée multicentrique, appariée par score de propension
- Author
-
De Masson, A., Beylot-Barry, M., Ram-Wolff, C., Méar, J.B., Dalle, S., D’incan, M., Oro, S., Orvain, C., Abraham, J., Dereure, O., Charbonnier, A., Cornillon, J., Longvert, C., Barete, S., Boulinguez, S., Wierzbicka-Hainaut, E., Aubin, F., Rubio, M.T., Bernard, M., Schmidt-Tanguy, A., Houot, R., Pham-Ledard, A., Michonneau, D., Brice, P., Labussière-Wallet, H., Bouaziz, J.D., Grange, F., Moins-Teisserenc, H., Jondeau, K., Michel, L., Mourah, S., Battistella, M., Daguindau, E., Loschi, M., Picard, A., Franck, N., Maillard, N., Huynh, A., Nguyen, S., Marcais, A., Chaby, G., Ceballos, P., Le Corre, Y., Maury, S., Bay, J.O., Adamski, H., Bachy, E., Forcade, E., Socié, G., Bagot, M., Chevret, S., and Peffault De Latour, R.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. KIR3DL2 est le seul transcrit de la famille des KIRs exprimé de façon récurrente dans le syndrome de Sézary et le mycosis fongoïde, et son expression est corrélée au stade cutané et sanguin
- Author
-
Parinet, V., Oro, S., Le Gouvello, S., Dalle, S., Beylot-Barry, M., Franck, N., Maubec, E., Saiag, P., Dalac, S., Chaby, G., Aubin, F., Dincan, M., Templier, I., Dereure, O., Setiao, J., Natella, P., Bagot, M., and Ortonne, N.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Granulomes osseux induits par le mogamulizumab
- Author
-
Amatore, F., Darbord, D., Franck, N., Carlotti, A., Gillet, B., Haffner, A., Coze, S., Delaporte, E., Carrasquilla, A., Dalle, S., and Dereure, O.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Comparative development of human filariae Loa loa, Onchocerca volvulus and Mansonella perstans in immunocompromised mouse strains
- Author
-
Valerine C. Chunda, Fanny Fri Fombad, Chi Anizette Kien, Rene Ebai, Frederick Esofi, Anna Ning Ntuh, Emmanuel Ouam, Narcisse Victor Tchamatchoua Gandjui, Relindis Ekanya, Franck Nietcho, Lucy Cho Nchang, Chefor Magha, Abdel Jelil Njouendou, Peter Enyong, Achim Hoerauf, Samuel Wanji, and Manuel Ritter
- Subjects
Mansonella perstans ,Loa loa ,Onchocerca volvulus ,murine models of human filariasis ,immunocompromised mice ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 - Abstract
IntroductionMouse models of human filarial infections are not only urgently needed to investigate the biology of the nematodes and their modulation of the host’s immunity, but will also provide a platform to screen and test novel anti-filarial drugs. Recently, murine Loa loa infection models have been stablished using immunocompromised mouse strains, whereas murine Mansonella perstans infections have not been implemented until now.MethodsTherefore, we aim to establish experimental M. perstans infections using the immunocompromised mouse strains RAG2IL-2Rγ-/- (lack B, T and natural killer cells), IL-4Rα/IL-5-/- (impaired IL-4/5 signalling and eosinophil activation) and NOD.Cg-PrkdcscidIl2rgtm1Wj l/SzJ (NOD scid gamma, NSG) BALB/c mice (lack mature lymphocytes) through subcutaneous (s.c.) or intraperitoneal (i.p.) inoculation of infective stage 3 larvae (L3) isolated from engorged vectors.ResultsIn total, 145 immunocompromised mice have been inoculated with 3,250 M. perstans, 3,337 O. volvulus, and 2,720 Loa loa L3 to comparatively analyse which immunocompromised mouse strain is susceptible to human filarial infections. Whereas, no M. perstans and O. volvulus L3 could be recovered upon 2-63 days post-inoculation, a 62-66% Loa loa L3 recovery rate could be achieved in the different mouse strains. Gender of mice, type of inoculation (s.c. or i.p.) or time point of analysis (2-63 days post inoculation) did not interfere with the success of L3 recovery. In addition, administration of the immune suppressants hydrocortisone, prednisolone and cyclophosphamide did not restore M. perstans L3 recovery rates.DiscussionThese findings show that RAG2IL-2Rg-/-BALB/c and C57BL/6, IL-4Rα/IL-5-/- BALB/c and NSG mice were not susceptible to M. perstans and O. volvulus L3 inoculation using the applied methods, whereas Loa loa infection could be maintained. Further studies should investigate if humanized immunocompromised mice might be susceptible to M. perstans. and O. volvulus.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Rare cutaneous adverse effects of COVID‐19 vaccines: a case series and review of the literature.
- Author
-
Annabi, E., Dupin, N., Sohier, P., Garel, B., Franck, N., Aractingi, S., Guégan, S., and Oulès, B.
- Subjects
VACCINATION complications ,COVID-19 pandemic ,THYROIDITIS ,DRUG eruptions ,COVID-19 ,LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
In one case, skin biopsy displayed a superficial and deep perivascular and perieccrine lymphocytic infiltrate similar to those of chilblains or chilblain-like lesions. Relapse or new skin manifestations occurred in 2 patients following the second dose without worsening of symptoms. Patient 2 presented with 2 erythematous nodules 4 days after the first dose and chilblains 5 days after the second dose without nodules relapse. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Culicoides Species of the Rain Forest Belt of the Littoral Region of Cameroon: Their Incrimination in the Transmission of Mansonella perstans
- Author
-
Rene Ebai, Chi Anizette Kien, Fanny Fri Fombad, Frederick Esofi, Emmanuel Ouam, Anna Ning Ntuh, Glory Ngongeh Amambo, Victor Narcisse Tchamatchoua Gandjui, Valerine Chawa Chunda, Franck Nietcho, Lucy Cho Nchang, Chefor Magha, Jerome Fru Cho, Mathias Eyong Esum, Peter Ivo Enyong, Kenneth Pfarr, Achim Hoerauf, Manuel Ritter, and Samuel Wanji
- Subjects
Culicoides species ,relative abundance ,midges ,biting cycle ,Culicoides milnei ,Mansonella perstans ,Medicine - Abstract
Biting midges belonging to the genus Culicoides are tiny stout-shaped hematophagous insects and are thought to transmit the filarial nematode Mansonella perstans. Little is known about the Culicoides fauna in the rain forest belt of the Littoral Region of Cameroon. This study was designed to investigate the diversity, abundance and distribution of Culicoides spp. and their role as the purported vector(s) of M. perstans. Overnight light trap collections and human landing catches (HLCs) revealed eight species of Culicoides with C. grahamii being the most abundant species followed by C. milnei. Four anthropophilic species (C. inornatipennis, C. grahamii, C. fulvithorax and C. milnei) were determined by the HLCs with a higher abundance in the 4–6 p.m. collections. The drop trap technique and Mp419 LAMP assay confirmed C. milnei to be the most efficient vector in enabling the development of the microfilarial stage to the infective larval form of M. perstans. The LAMP assay also revealed that natural transmission of this nematode is fostered by C. milnei and C. grahamii in the wild. In conclusion, C. milnei was shown to be the main vector of M. perstans in the rain forest belt of the Littoral Region of Cameroon.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Retrospective analysis of arterial occlusive events in the PACE trial by an independent adjudication committee
- Author
-
James L. Januzzi, Joseph M. Garasic, Scott E. Kasner, Vickie McDonald, Mark C. Petrie, Jonathan Seltzer, Michael Mauro, Kevin Croce, Ellin Berman, Michael Deininger, Andreas Hochhaus, Javier Pinilla-Ibarz, Franck Nicolini, Dong-Wook Kim, Daniel J. DeAngelo, Hagop Kantarjian, Jing Xu, Tracey Hall, Shouryadeep Srivastava, Daniel Naranjo, and Jorge Cortes
- Subjects
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia ,Chronic myeloid leukemia ,Safety ,Tyrosine kinase inhibitor ,Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The phase 2 PACE (Ponatinib Ph+ ALL and CML Evaluation) trial of ponatinib showed robust long-term benefit in relapsed Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) leukemia; arterial occlusive events (AOEs) occurred in ≥ 25% of patients based on investigator reporting. However, AOE rates vary depending on the definitions and reporting approach used. Methods To better understand clinically relevant AOEs with ponatinib, an independent cardiovascular adjudication committee reviewed 5-year AOE data from the PACE trial according to a charter-defined process and standardized event definitions. Results A total of 449 patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) or Ph+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) received ponatinib (median age 59 y; 47% female; 93% ≥ 2 prior tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs); median follow-up, 37.3 months). The adjudicated AOE rate (17%) was lower than the non-adjudicated rate (i.e., rate before adjudication; 25%). The only adjudicated AOE in > 2% of patients was peripheral arterial occlusive disease (4%). Exposure-adjusted incidence of newly occurring adjudicated AOEs decreased over time. Patients with multiple baseline cardiovascular risk factors had higher adjudicated AOE rates than those without risk factors. Conclusions This independent adjudication study identified lower AOE rates than previously reported, suggesting earlier overestimation that may inaccurately reflect AOE risk with ponatinib. This trial was registered under ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT01207440 on September 23, 2010 ( https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01207440 ).
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Critical evaluation of kinetic schemes for coagulation.
- Author
-
Alexandre Ranc, Salome Bru, Simon Mendez, Muriel Giansily-Blaizot, Franck Nicoud, and Rodrigo Méndez Rojano
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Two well-established numerical representations of the coagulation cascade either initiated by the intrinsic system (Chatterjee et al., PLOS Computational Biology 2010) or the extrinsic system (Butenas et al., Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2004) were compared with thrombin generation assays under realistic pathological conditions. Biochemical modifications such as the omission of reactions not relevant to the case studied, the modification of reactions related to factor XI activation and auto-activation, the adaptation of initial conditions to the thrombin assay system, and the adjustment of some of the model parameters were necessary to align in vitro and in silico data. The modified models are able to reproduce thrombin generation for a range of factor XII, XI, and VIII deficiencies, with the coagulation cascade initiated either extrinsically or intrinsically. The results emphasize that when existing models are extrapolated to experimental parameters for which they have not been calibrated, careful adjustments are required.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. When Molecular Dimerization Induces Magnetic Bi‐Stability at the Metal–Organic Interface
- Author
-
Rouzhaji Tuerhong, Franck Ngassam, Mebarek Alouani, and Jean‐Pierre Bucher
- Subjects
Kondo resonance ,LT‐UHV STM ,manganese–organic complex ,reversible magnetic switching ,single‐molecule magnet ,spintronics ,Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
Abstract 2D metal–organic frameworks have been recently proposed as a flexible platform for realizing new functional materials including quantum phases. Here, we present a method to create metal‐organic dimer complexes by on‐surface assembly on a metal substrate using low‐temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and spectroscopy (STS). We demonstrate that a dimer of Mn‐Phthalocyanine (MnPc)2 on a Ag(111) surface can be switched between two stable configurations upon a small conformational change controlled by STM manipulation. By means of density‐functional theory calculations, it is found that the two conformations correspond to an antiferromagnetic (AFM) and a ferromagnetic (FM) state respectively. Directly coordinated Mn atoms of the dimer lead to an AFM‐coupling whereas indirectly coordinated (shifted) Mn atoms lead to a FM‐coupling. Rarely seen in a molecular‐dimers with transition‐metal atoms, the FM‐AFM‐FM transition is thus readily on‐surface accessible. Furthermore, the two configurations of the switch are easily identified by their Kondo states, opening interesting routes in terms of both, writing (FM versus AFM states) and reading. These results pave the experimental route toward dimer‐based materials with complex magnetic structures of potential interest for application in spintronics, logics and computing.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Red blood cell rheology during a complete blood count: A proof of concept.
- Author
-
Pierre Taraconat, Jean-Philippe Gineys, Damien Isebe, Franck Nicoud, and Simon Mendez
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Counting and sizing blood cells in hematological analyzers is achieved using the Coulter principle. The cells flow in a micro-aperture in which a strong electrical field is imposed, so that an electrical perturbation, called pulse, is measured each time a cell crosses the orifice. The pulses are expected to contain information on the shape and deformability of Red Blood Cells (RBCs), since recent studies state that RBCs rotate and deform in the micro-orifice. By implementing a dedicated numerical model, the present study sheds light on a variety of cells dynamics, which leads to different associated pulse signatures. Furthermore, simulations provide new insights on how RBCs shapes and mechanical properties affect the measured signals. Those numerical observations are confirmed by experimental assays. Finally, specific features are introduced for assessing the most relevant characteristics from the various pulse signatures and shown to highlight RBCs alterations induced by drugs. In summary, this study paves the way to a characterization of RBC rheology by routine hematological instruments.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Multimodal data augmentation for digital twining assisted by artificial intelligence in mechanics of materials
- Author
-
Axel Aublet, Franck N’Guyen, Henry Proudhon, and David Ryckelynck
- Subjects
high-dimensional data ,model order-reduction ,data pruning ,oversampling ,computational mechanics ,lifetime prediction ,Technology - Abstract
Digital twins in the mechanics of materials usually involve multimodal data in the sense that an instance of a mechanical component has both experimental and simulated data. These simulations aim not only to replicate experimental observations but also to extend the data. Whether spatially, temporally, or functionally, augmentation is needed for various possible uses of the components to improve the predictions of mechanical behavior. Related multimodal data are scarce, high-dimensional and a physics-based causality relation exists between observational and simulated data. We propose a data augmentation scheme coupled with data pruning, in order to limit memory requirements for high-dimensional augmented data. This augmentation is desirable for digital twining assisted by artificial intelligence when performing nonlinear model reduction. Here, data augmentation aims at preserving similarities in terms of the validity domain of reduced digital twins. In this article, we consider a specimen subjected to a mechanical test at high temperature, where the as-manufactured geometry may impact the lifetime of the component. Hence, an instance is represented by a digital twin that includes 3D X-Ray tomography data of the specimen, the related finite element mesh, and the finite element predictions of thermo-mechanical variables at several time steps. There is, thus, for each specimen, geometrical and mechanical information. Multimodal data, which couple different representation modalities together, are hard to collect, and annotating them requires a significant effort. Thus, the analysis of multimodal data generally suffers from the problem of data scarcity. The proposed data augmentation scheme aims at training a recommending system that recognizes a category of data available in a training set that has already been fully analyzed by using high-fidelity models. Such a recommending system enables the use of a ROM-net for fast lifetime assessment via local reduced-order models.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Comparative countries’ tourism technical efficiency assessment: A stochastic output distance function approach
- Author
-
Alastaire Sèna Alinsato, Nassibou Bassongui, and Franck Nkeudjoua Wondeu
- Subjects
L83 ,D24 ,C23 ,Science - Abstract
This study aims at analysing the technical efficiency of the tourism industry worldwide. Using a sample of 111 countries worldwide from 2008 to 2016, we estimated the tourism industry technical efficiency score to measure of the industry performance from a translog output distance function modelling. Our results showed that high-income countries are more efficient because of higher qualified labour, and higher productivity of natural and cultural resources. Besides, our results support that African and Asian countries are less efficient than those from Europe and America. For international comparison purposes, our findings suggested that the level of income and the location of destinations should be incorporated as determinants and inputs of the tourism production function to the technical efficiency. In the political view, policymakers are encouraged to be aware of the income level of their citizens to improve the performance of their tourism sector.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Imatinib Optimized Therapy Improves Major Molecular Response Rates in Patients with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia
- Author
-
Hyacinthe Johnson-Ansah, Benjamin Maneglier, Françoise Huguet, Laurence Legros, Martine Escoffre-Barbe, Martine Gardembas, Pascale Cony-Makhoul, Valérie Coiteux, Laurent Sutton, Wajed Abarah, Camille Pouaty, Jean-Michel Pignon, Bachra Choufi, Sorin Visanica, Bénédicte Deau, Laure Morisset, Emilie Cayssials, Mathieu Molimard, Stéphane Bouchet, François-Xavier Mahon, Franck Nicolini, Philippe Aegerter, Jean-Michel Cayuela, Marc Delord, Heriberto Bruzzoni-Giovanelli, and Philippe Rousselot
- Subjects
imatinib ,therapeutic drug monitoring ,chronic myelogenous leukemia ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
The registered dose for imatinib is 400 mg/d, despite high inter-patient variability in imatinib plasmatic exposure. Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) is routinely used to maximize a drug’s efficacy or tolerance. We decided to conduct a prospective randomized trial (OPTIM-imatinib trial) to assess the value of TDM in patients with chronic phase chronic myelogenous treated with imatinib as first-line therapy (NCT02896842). Eligible patients started imatinib at 400 mg daily, followed by imatinib [C]min assessment. Patients considered underdosed ([C]min < 1000 ng/mL) were randomized in a dose-increase strategy aiming to reach the threshold of 1000 ng/mL (TDM arm) versus standard imatinib management (control arm). Patients with [C]min levels ≥ 1000 ng/mL were treated following current European Leukemia Net recommendations (observational arm). The primary endpoint was the rate of major molecular response (MMR, BCR::ABL1IS ≤ 0.1%) at 12 months. Out of 133 evaluable patients on imatinib 400 mg daily, 86 patients had a [C]min < 1000 ng/mL and were randomized. The TDM strategy resulted in a significant increase in [C]min values with a mean imatinib daily dose of 603 mg daily. Patients included in the TDM arm had a 12-month MMR rate of 67% (95% CI, 51–81) compared to 39% (95% CI, 24–55) for the control arm (p = 0.017). This early advantage persisted over the 3-year study period, in which we considered imatinib cessation as a censoring event. Imatinib TDM was feasible and significantly improved the 12-month MMR rate. This early advantage may be beneficial for patients without easy access to second-line TKIs.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Acute Pulmonary Embolism in COVID-19: A Potential Connection between Venous Congestion and Thrombus Distribution
- Author
-
Franck Nevesny, David C. Rotzinger, Alexander W. Sauter, Laura I. Loebelenz, Lena Schmuelling, Hatem Alkadhi, Lukas Ebner, Andreas Christe, Alexandra Platon, Pierre-Alexandre Poletti, and Salah D. Qanadli
- Subjects
CT ,CT-angiography ,infection ,lung ,pulmonary embolism ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Background: Vascular abnormalities, including venous congestion (VC) and pulmonary embolism (PE), have been recognized as frequent COVID-19 imaging patterns and proposed as severity markers. However, the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms remain unclear. In this study, we aimed to characterize the relationship between VC, PE distribution, and alveolar opacities (AO). Methods: This multicenter observational registry (clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT04824313) included 268 patients diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 infection and subjected to contrast-enhanced CT between March and June 2020. Acute PE was diagnosed in 61 (22.8%) patients, including 17 females (27.9%), at a mean age of 61.7 ± 14.2 years. Demographic, laboratory, and outcome data were retrieved. We analyzed CT images at the segmental level regarding VC (qualitatively and quantitatively [diameter]), AO (semi-quantitatively as absent, 50% involvement), clot location, and distribution related to VC and AO. Segments with vs. without PE were compared. Results: Out of 411 emboli, 82 (20%) were lobar or more proximal and 329 (80%) were segmental or subsegmental. Venous diameters were significantly higher in segments with AO (p = 0.031), unlike arteries (p = 0.138). At the segmental level, 77% of emboli were associated with VC. Overall, PE occurred in 28.2% of segments with AO vs. 21.8% without (p = 0.047). In the absence of VC, however, AO did not affect PE rates (p = 0.94). Conclusions: Vascular changes predominantly affected veins, and most PEs were located in segments with VC. In the absence of VC, AOs were not associated with the PE rate. VC might result from increased flow supported by the hypothesis of pulmonary arteriovenous anastomosis dysregulation as a relevant contributing factor.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Correction: Retrospective analysis of arterial occlusive events in the PACE trial by an independent adjudication committee
- Author
-
James L. Januzzi, Joseph M. Garasic, Scott E. Kasner, Vickie McDonald, Mark C. Petrie, Jonathan Seltzer, Michael Mauro, Kevin Croce, Ellin Berman, Michael Deininger, Andreas Hochhaus, Javier Pinilla-Ibarz, Franck Nicolini, Dong-Wook Kim, Daniel J. DeAngelo, Hagop Kantarjian, Jing Xu, Tracey Hall, Shouryadeep Srivastava, Daniel Naranjo, and Jorge Cortes
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Organisations & fonctions du comportement verbal de type « backchannels » dans l’interaction clinique avec la personne souffrant de schizophrénie
- Author
-
Lecomte Amandine, Buchel Samuel, Franck Nicolas, Demily Caroline, Amblard Maxime, and Musiol Michel
- Subjects
Social Sciences - Abstract
Dans cette étude de corpus, on aborde la question du comportement dialogique de soutien en entretien clinique avec le patient souffrant de schizophrénie. Nous partons de l’analyse des interactions langagières, en présupposant que le cadre spécifique de l’interaction verbale de type clinique est un lieu d’expression privilégié de “comportement dialogique de soutien”. Sur la base d’une exploration empirique, nous proposons l’élaboration d’un modèle interlocutoire dynamique de ce que l’on pourrait interpréter comme une forme d’écoute attentive, de soutien, en nous basant notamment sur des indicateurs lexicaux particuliers que sont les backchannels. Nous décrivons les différents types d’organisation discursive au sein desquelles les interlocuteurs adoptent un comportement de soutien manifeste. Nous extrayons les propriétés des configurations discursives au sein desquelles le comportement de soutien de l’un des interlocuteurs (la psychologue, par exemple) a pour effet d’amener le locuteur (le patient, par exemple) à modifier sa stratégie argumentative. Les analyses empiriques portent sur la totalité du temps d'enregistrement de 10 entretiens réalisés avec des personnes souffrant de schizophrénie (recueillis en hôpital psychiatrique) et 10 entretiens réalisés avec des sujets témoins.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A-184 Primary cutaneous marginal zone Lymphoma or Lymphoproliferative disorder?Comparison of initial tumor, recurrence and outcome in 61 patients.
- Author
-
Beltzung, F., Beylot-Barry, M., Battistella, M., Wolff, C. Ram, Masson, A. De, Balme, B., Donzel, M., Dalle, S., Grange, F., Lamant, L., Boulinguez, S., Aubriot-Lorton, M.-H., Jeudy, G., Ortonne, N., Ingen-Housz-Oro, S., Carlotti, A., Franck, N., Schneider, S., Pham-Ledard, A., and Bidet, A.
- Subjects
- *
CANCER relapse , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *CUTANEOUS T-cell lymphoma , *LYMPHOPROLIFERATIVE disorders - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Outcomes of liver resection for multinodular hepatocellular carcinoma in Sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
-
Jean, N. Konan, Ahue, K., N'Golo Adama, C., Franck, N. Yao, Clement, B., and Keli, E.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Paper-based isotachophoretic preconcentration technique for low-cost determination of glyphosate.
- Author
-
Franck N, Stopper P, Ude L, Urteaga R, Kler PA, and Huhn C
- Abstract
Electrophoretic microfluidic paper-based analytical devices (e-µPADs) are promising for low-cost and portable technologies, but quantitative detection remains challenging. In this study, we develop a paper-based isotachophoretic preconcentration and separation method for the herbicide glyphosate as a model analyte. The device, consisting of two electrode chambers filled with leading and terminating electrolytes and a nitrocellulose strip as the separation carrier, was illuminated by a flat light source and operated with a voltage supply of 400 V. Detection was accomplished using a simple camera. Colorimetric detection was optimized through competitive complexation between glyphosate, copper ions, and pyrocatechol violet as a dye. The buffer system was optimized using simulations, (i) ensuring the pH was optimal for the demetallation of the blue pyrocatechol violet-copper complex [PV] to the yellow free dye and (ii) ensuring the electrophoretic migration of glyphosate into the slower [PV] for the colorimetric reaction. A new data evaluation method is presented, analyzing the RGB channel intensities. The linear range was between 0.8 and 25 µM, with a LOD of approximately 0.8 µM. The ITP separation preconcentrated glyphosate by a factor of 820 in numerical simulations. The method may be applied to control glyphosate formulations, especially in developing countries where herbicide sales and applications are poorly regulated., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Real-life efficacy of immunotherapy for Sézary syndrome: a multicenter observational cohort study.
- Author
-
Bozonnat A, Beylot-Barry M, Dereure O, D'Incan M, Quereux G, Guenova E, Perier-Muzet M, Dalle S, Grange F, Viguier MA, Ram-Wolff C, Feldmeyer L, Beltraminelli H, Bonnet N, Amatore F, Maubec E, Franck N, Machet L, Chasset F, Brunet-Possenti F, Bouaziz JD, Battistella M, Donzel M, Pham-Ledard A, Bejar C, Moins-Teisserenc H, Mourah S, Saiag P, Hainaut E, Michel C, Bens G, Adamski H, Aubin F, Boulinguez S, Joly P, Tedbirt B, Templier I, Troin L, Montaudié H, Ingen-Housz-Oro S, Faiz S, Mortier L, Dobos G, Bagot M, Resche-Rigon M, Montlahuc C, Serret-Larmande A, and de Masson A
- Abstract
Background: Sézary syndrome is an extremely rare and fatal cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). Mogamulizumab, an anti-CCR4 monoclonal antibody, has recently been associated with increased progression-free survival in a randomized clinical trial in CTCL. We aimed to evaluate OS and prognostic factors in Sézary syndrome, including treatment with mogamulizumab, in a real-life setting., Methods: Data from patients with Sézary (ISCL/EORTC stage IV) and pre-Sézary (stage IIIB) syndrome diagnosed from 2000 to 2020 were obtained from 24 centers in Europe. Age, disease stage, plasma lactate dehydrogenases levels, blood eosinophilia at diagnosis, large-cell transformation and treatment received were analyzed in a multivariable Cox proportional hazard ratio model. This study has been registered in ClinicalTrials (SURPASSe01 study: NCT05206045)., Findings: Three hundred and thirty-nine patients were included (58% men, median age at diagnosis of 70 years, Q1-Q3, 61-79): 33 pre-Sézary (9.7% of 339), 296 Sézary syndrome (87.3%), of whom 10 (2.9%) had large-cell transformation. One hundred and ten patients received mogamulizumab. Median follow-up was 58 months (95% confidence interval [CI], 53-68). OS was 46.5% (95% CI, 40.6%-53.3%) at 5 years. Multivariable analysis showed that age ≥ 80 versus <50 (HR: 4.9, 95% CI, 2.1-11.2, p = 0.001), and large-cell transformation (HR: 2.8, 95% CI, 1.6-5.1, p = 0.001) were independent and significant factors associated with reduced OS. Mogamulizumab treatment was significantly associated with decreased mortality (HR: 0.34, 95% CI, 0.15-0.80, p = 0.013)., Interpretation: Treatment with mogamulizumab was significantly and independently associated with decreased mortality in Sézary syndrome., Funding: French Society of Dermatology, Swiss National Science Foundation (IZLIZ3_200253/1) and SKINTEGRITY.CH collaborative research program., Competing Interests: AdM declares nonfinancial support from Kyowa Kirin and Recordati Rare Diseases; fees from Takeda, Almirall and Recordati Rare Diseases, and research funding, outside the scope of this study, from Kyowa Kirin, Innate Pharma, Almirall and Takeda. MB declares consultant fees from Innate Pharma, Kyowa Kirin, Takeda, BMS, Sanofi, Quantum Genomics, and research funding from Kyowa Kirin and Takeda, outside the scope of this study. SM declares consultant fees outside the scope of this study, from Pierre Fabre, Sanofi, Novartis and Biocartis, and has received research funding from BMS, Novartis and Roche. NF declares having received nonfinancial support from Kyowa Kirin. PS received a research grant from Pierre Fabre, fees unrelated to this manuscript from Bristol-Myers Squibb, MSD, Merck-Serono, Pfizer, Roche-Genentech, Pierre Fabre, and Novartis; received nonfinancial support from Bristol-Myers Squibb, MSD, Roche-Genentech, Pierre Fabre, and Novartis outside of the scope of this study. MBB declares consultant fees from Kyowa Kirin, Takeda and Recordati and research funding from Kyowa Kirin and Almirall outside the scope of this study. HMT declares consultant fees outside from the scope of this study from Innate Pharma, and has received research funding, outside the scope of this study, from Kyowa Kirin. SIHO consultant fees outside the scope of this study from Takeda and Recordati. GD declares consultant fees outside of the scope of this study from Kyowa Kirin and Recordati. EG declares consultant fees and/or grant support from Mallinckrodt, Helsinn, Takeda, Novartis and Kyowa Kirin unrelated to this work. FG declares consultant fees from Recordati and Kyowa Kirin, outside from the scope of this study. GQ declares consultant fees from Takeda, Recordati and Kyowa Kirin, outside the scope of this study. CM declares nonfinancial support from MSD, Pfizer, Novartis, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Pierre Fabre, Leo Pharma, Sanofi Aventis, Jannsen Cilag outside of the scope of this study. SB declares having received nonfinancial support from Kyowa Kirin and Recordati. MBag declares consulting fees from Kyowa Kirin, Takeda, Recordati. HB declares consultant fees from Kyowa Kirin. EH declares consultant fees outside the scope of this study from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Sanofi, Jannsen Cilag, Blueprint Medicines, AbbVie and nonfinancial support from Kyowa Kirin, MSD, UCB Pharma, Novartis, Almirall, Pierre Fabre. The other authors declare that they have no conflict of interest., (© 2024 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Differential associations between insight and quality-of-life dimensions among individuals with schizophrenia.
- Author
-
Barbalat G, Maréchal L, Plasse J, Chéreau-Boudet I, Gouache B, Legros-Lafarge E, Massoubre C, Guillard-Bouhet N, Haesebaert F, Cohen RF, and Franck N
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, France, Awareness, Quality of Life psychology, Schizophrenia rehabilitation, Self Concept, Schizophrenic Psychology
- Abstract
Purpose/objective: In schizophrenia, insight, the recognition that one has a medical illness that requires treatment, has long been related to deteriorated quality of life. Yet, insight and quality of life are broad constructs that encompass several dimensions. Here, we investigated differential associations between insight and quality-of-life dimensions using a psychological network approach., Research Method/design: We extracted data from the French network of rehabilitation centers REHABase (January 2016 to December 2022, N = 1,056). Our psychological network analysis modeled insight and quality of life as a network of interacting dimensions: three insight dimensions (awareness of illness, reattribution of symptoms to the disease, and recognition of treatment need) and eight quality-of-life dimensions (autonomy, physical and psychosocial well-being, relationships with family, friends and romantic partners, resilience, and self-esteem)., Results: Insight was negatively associated with quality of life. Our psychological network analysis revealed a strong negative association between awareness of disease and self-esteem. Both dimensions were the strongest nodes in the overall network. Our network analysis also revealed a significant but positive connection between recognition of treatment needs and resilience., Conclusion/implications: While insight and quality of life are overall negatively associated, we found both negative and positive connections between insight and quality-of-life dimensions. The negative relationship between insight and quality of life may reflect the deleterious effects of diagnostic labeling on a patient's self-esteem. Yet, acknowledgment of treatment needs may have positive effects on quality of life and may promote recovery, perhaps because it emphasizes the need for support rather than labels and abnormalities. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Identification of factors associated with hospitalization in an outpatient population with mental health conditions: a case-control study.
- Author
-
Lebrat M, Megard R, Dananché C, Zimmer L, Plasse J, and Franck N
- Abstract
Introduction: Addressing relevant determinants for preserved person-centered rehabilitation in mental health is still a major challenge. Little research focuses on factors associated with psychiatric hospitalization in exclusive outpatient settings. Some variables have been identified, but evidence across studies is inconsistent. This study aimed to identify and confirm factors associated with hospitalization in a specific outpatient population., Methods: A retrospective monocentric case-control study with 617 adult outpatients (216 cases and 401 controls) from a French community-based care facility was conducted. Participants had an index outpatient consultation between June 2021 and February 2023. All cases, who were patients with a psychiatric hospitalization from the day after the index outpatient consultation and up to 1 year later, have been included. Controls have been randomly selected from the same facility and did not experience a psychiatric hospitalization in the 12 months following the index outpatient consultation. Data collection was performed from electronic medical records. Sociodemographic, psychiatric diagnosis, historical issues, lifestyle, and follow-up-related variables were collected retrospectively. Uni- and bivariate analyses were performed, followed by a multivariable logistic regression., Results: Visit to a psychiatric emergency within a year (adjusted odds ratio (aOR): 13.02, 95% confidence interval (CI): 7.32-23.97), drug treatment discontinuation within a year (aOR: 6.43, 95% CI: 3.52-12.03), history of mental healthcare without consent (aOR: 5.48, 95% CI: 3.10-10.06), medical follow-up discontinuation within a year (aOR: 3.17, 95% CI: 1.70-5.95), history of attempted suicide (aOR: 2.50, 95% CI: 1.48-4.30) and unskilled job (aOR: 0.26, 95% CI: 0.10-0.65) are the independent variables found associated with hospitalization for followed up outpatients., Conclusions: Public health policies and tools at the local and national levels should be adapted to target the identified individual determinants in order to prevent outpatients from being hospitalized., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Lebrat, Megard, Dananché, Zimmer, Plasse and Franck.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A simple method for the assessment of electrophoretic mobility in porous media.
- Author
-
Franck N, Vera Candioti L, Gerlero GS, Urteaga R, and Kler PA
- Subjects
- Porosity, Paper, Equipment Design, Coloring Agents chemistry, Coloring Agents analysis, Computer Simulation, Electrophoresis methods, Electrophoresis instrumentation, Models, Chemical, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Electrophoresis, Capillary methods
- Abstract
Developing paper-based electrophoretic methods involve dealing with significant uncertainty levels when compared to their capillary counterparts. Critical information for developing these kinds of methods are the electrophoretic mobility of background electrolytes and samples. This work presents the design and characterization of a device for measuring the electrophoretic mobilities of dyes in porous media. The device was developed with the aim of validating a previously presented model and also proposing a protocol for the straightforward determination of electrophoretic mobilities in porous media when open-channel values are already known. Whatman #1 paper was used as a model substrate as far as it is the most common porous medium substrate for paper-based electrophoresis. The device was designed using a numerical simulation-assisted approach, utilizing OpenFOAM® and specific solvers for capillary transport and electromigration, namely porousMicroTransport and electroMicroTransport, respectively. The electrophoretic mobilities of five dyes were analyzed experimentally with the proposed device. To establish appropriate comparative values at different pHs, experiments in fused silica capillaries were also performed. An effective parameter model for describing the electrophoretic behavior of dyes in porous media, that is, the constriction factor, was found consistent with previous reports for the Whatman #1 paper. This consistency was found after considering (via direct measurements) the chromatographic effect of the medium over each dye. Consequently, the recorded values hold significant worth due to their potential for direct application in designing new experiments or devices in Whatman #1 paper. With the validation of the model through the experiments with the proposed device, those researchers interested on developing electrophoretic methods in porous substrates can make use of the open-channel electrophoretic mobilities reported in the literature, or in the well-known software databases, and correct them for the media of interest just by performing two simple characterization steps., (© 2023 Wiley‐VCH GmbH.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Navigating Social Cognitive Impairments in Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders: Protocol for a Pilot Pre-Post Quasi-Experimental Study for Remote Avatar-Assisted Cognitive Remediation Therapy.
- Author
-
Thibaudeau E, Peyroux E, Franck N, Carling H, and Lepage M
- Abstract
Background: Social cognitive impairments are prevalent in schizophrenia spectrum disorder (SSD) and have detrimental effects on functioning. Cognitive remediation (CR) has shown its efficacy in improving social cognitive impairments, although the transfer of these skills to daily life and the personalization of these interventions remain challenging. RC2S (Remédiation Cognitive de la Cognition Sociale dans la Schizophrénie; Cognitive remediation of social cognition in Schizophrenia) is a French CR that combines the learning of strategies and practice using paper-and-pencil exercises and digital relational simulations. This French program was designed as an in-person intervention., Objective: This project aims to culturally adapt the RC2S program, in French-Canadian and North American English and to assess the feasibility, acceptability, safety, and implementation of a remote version in people with SSD. An exploratory objective is to assess the preliminary effect of remote RC2S on goal attainment, social cognition, and psychosocial outcomes., Methods: We will use a pre-post quasi-experimental design. First, the translation and cultural adaptation in North American English and French-Canadian of RC2S is presented. Then, 20 participants aged ≥18 years with a diagnosis of SSD, presenting with a subjective or an objective impairment in social cognition, will be included to receive RC2S. In addition, 5 therapists will be included as research participants to assess their perspective on RC2S. Participants with SSD will undergo a baseline remote assessment of their social cognition, clinical symptoms, and functioning. They will then start remote RC2S for 24 biweekly individual 1-hour sessions with a therapist. Following the case formulation and goal setting, participants will complete personalized paper-and-pencil exercises to develop strategies and integrative digital relational simulations, during which they will help an avatar navigate through a variety of social contexts and relationships. The last 2 sessions are dedicated to the transfer to daily life. All participants will complete in-session questionnaires assessing therapeutic alliance, motivation, acceptability, feasibility, and implementation. Following RC2S, the participants with SSD will repeat the same assessment as the baseline. Descriptive statistics will be used to summarize the data about acceptability, feasibility, safety, and implementation. To assess the preliminary effect of RC2S, an intention-to-treat approach will be used with linear mixed models for repeated measures with fixed effects of time., Results: So far, 45% (9/20) of participants with SSD (mean age 37.9, SD 9.3 years) have completed the project. They received a mean of 20.5 out of 24 (SD 3.5) sessions of RC2S. A total of 5 therapists also completed the project., Conclusions: Improving social cognitive impairments is an important target in SSD to promote functional recovery. Using digital technologies to address these impairments and deliver the intervention is a promising approach to increase the ecological validity of CR and access to the intervention., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05017532; https://classic.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05017532., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): DERR1-10.2196/54251., (©Elisabeth Thibaudeau, Elodie Peyroux, Nicolas Franck, Hannah Carling, Martin Lepage. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (https://www.researchprotocols.org), 13.03.2024.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. [The psychosocial rehabilitation in addiction medicine].
- Author
-
Peyron E, Franck N, Labaume L, and Rolland B
- Subjects
- Humans, Quality of Life, Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Addiction Medicine, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Behavior, Addictive
- Abstract
Objectives: Addictive behaviors constitute complex behaviors that are usually related to social habits, such as substance use, gambling or gaming activities, or sexual or physical activity. They progressively overrun and stifle the routine habits of the concerned individuals, for example within their occupational or family spheres of life, as well as in their hobbies or in their main physiological functions, such as sleep or eating cycles. The rehabilitation approach of care integrates the objective of restoring the altered habits and functional rhythms, to optimize the clinical outcomes and improve quality of life of the concerned persons., Methods: Using a focused and narrative literature review, we aimed to explain what psychosocial rehabilitation consists in, and why this approach is particularly relevant for the addiction care, although to date it has remained insufficiently developed in the routine practice of many facilities., Results: The "rehab" approach, is first based on a structured and comprehensive assessment of the clinical and functional aspects of the patient, which secondarily allows to frame an individualized project of care that is closely built together with the patient. This project of care can integrate classical pharmacotherapeutic and psychotherapeutic tools, but it also emphasizes wider approaches for restoring some basic social and physiological functions of the concerned person, such as sleep, eating, social functioning, physical activity, or spiritual needs. Priorities among these different dimensions have to be defined by the concerned person., Conclusions: The "rehab" approach is particularly relevant in addiction medicine. It represents a more global conception of care that conceives the recovery of social and physiological functioning as a core treatment objective for the concerned persons. The consequences for care organization are that many additional professionals should be integrated into the treatment schemes for addiction, including peer counselors, occupational therapists, physical activity coaches, or dieticians., (Copyright © 2023 L'Encéphale, Paris. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Functioning, clinical severity, education and sex moderate the inverse relationship between insight and quality of life in patients with schizophrenia.
- Author
-
Barbalat G, Maréchal L, Plasse J, Chéreau-Boudet I, Gouache B, Legros-Lafarge E, Massoubre C, Guillard-Bouhet N, Haesebaert F, and Franck N
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Quality of Life psychology, Educational Status, Self Concept, Schizophrenia drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: In schizophrenia, insight, the recognition that one has a medical illness that requires treatment, has long been related to deteriorated quality of life, a phenomenon that has been described as the "insight paradox". Here, we aimed to determine whether certain socio-demographic and clinical characteristics strengthen or weaken this negative relationship., Methods: We used data from the French network of rehabilitation centers REHABase (N = 769). We explored mean differences in quality-of-life scores between patients with good insight vs. poor insight. We also explored modifying effects of socio-demographic and clinical characteristics (sex, education, age, functioning, clinical severity, duration of illness)., Results: Patients with good insight had a decreased quality-of-life total score. Similar effects were found for the following sub-dimensions of quality of life: autonomy, physical and psychological well-being, and self-esteem. The negative effect of insight on quality of life was attenuated for people who had >12 years of education and for people with a higher level of functioning. By contrast, the negative effect of insight on quality of life was accentuated in people with greater clinical severity. Functioning and clinical severity showed similar modifying effects for other quality-of-life dimensions: autonomy, physical and psychological well-being, and self-esteem. Finally, males demonstrated an increased negative association between insight and self-esteem., Conclusions: The relationship between insight and quality of life is moderated by socio-demographic and clinical circumstances. Future inquiries may utilize our findings by integrating socio-demographic and clinical factors in treatment programs designs to conjointly improve insight and quality of life., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Contribution of socio-demographic and clinical characteristics to predict initial referrals to psychosocial interventions in patients with serious mental illness.
- Author
-
Barbalat G, Plasse J, Chéreau-Boudet I, Gouache B, Legros-Lafarge E, Massoubre C, Guillard-Bouhet N, Haesebaert F, and Franck N
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Adult, Male, Artificial Intelligence, Psychosocial Intervention, Demography, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Schizophrenia therapy, Schizophrenia rehabilitation
- Abstract
Aims: Psychosocial rehabilitation (PSR) is at the core of psychiatric recovery. There is a paucity of evidence regarding how the needs and characteristics of patients guide clinical decisions to refer to PSR interventions. Here, we used explainable machine learning methods to determine how socio-demographic and clinical characteristics contribute to initial referrals to PSR interventions in patients with serious mental illness., Methods: Data were extracted from the French network of rehabilitation centres, REHABase, collected between years 2016 and 2022 and analysed between February and September 2022. Participants presented with serious mental illnesses, including schizophrenia spectrum disorders, bipolar disorders, autism spectrum disorders, depressive disorders, anxiety disorders and personality disorders. Information from 37 socio-demographic and clinical variables was extracted at baseline and used as potential predictors. Several machine learning models were tested to predict initial referrals to four PSR interventions: cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), cognitive remediation (CR), psychoeducation (PE) and vocational training (VT). Explanatory power of predictors was determined using the artificial intelligence-based SHAP (SHapley Additive exPlanations) method from the best performing algorithm., Results: Data from a total of 1146 patients were included (mean age, 33.2 years [range, 16-72 years]; 366 [39.2%] women). A random forest algorithm demonstrated the best predictive performance, with a moderate or average predictive accuracy [micro-averaged area under the receiver operating curve from 'external' cross-validation: 0.672]. SHAP dependence plots demonstrated insightful associations between socio-demographic and clinical predictors and referrals to PSR programmes. For instance, patients with psychotic disorders were more likely to be referred to PE and CR, while those with non-psychotic disorders were more likely to be referred to CBT and VT. Likewise, patients with social dysfunctions and lack of educational attainment were more likely to be referred to CR and VT, while those with better functioning and education were more likely to be referred to CBT and PE., Conclusions: A combination of socio-demographic and clinical features was not sufficient to accurately predict initial referrals to four PSR programmes among a French network of rehabilitation centres. Referrals to PSR interventions may also involve service- and clinician-level factors. Considering socio-demographic and clinical predictors revealed disparities in referrals with respect to diagnoses, current clinical and psychological issues, functioning and education.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. [The psychiatric and mental health assessment and referral center].
- Author
-
Franck N
- Subjects
- Humans, Referral and Consultation, Mental Health, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders therapy
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.