28 results on '"Georges, Damien"'
Search Results
2. Evidence-based impact projections of single-dose human papillomavirus vaccination in India: a modelling study
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Man, Irene, Georges, Damien, de Carvalho, Tiago M, Ray Saraswati, Lopamudra, Bhandari, Prince, Kataria, Ishu, Siddiqui, Mariam, Muwonge, Richard, Lucas, Eric, Berkhof, Johannes, Sankaranarayanan, Rengaswamy, Bogaards, Johannes A, Basu, Partha, and Baussano, Iacopo
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- 2022
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3. Worldwide prevalence of hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus among patients with cirrhosis at country, region, and global levels: a systematic review
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Alberts, Catharina J, Clifford, Gary M, Georges, Damien, Negro, Francesco, Lesi, Olufunmilayo A, Hutin, Yvan J-F, and de Martel, Catherine
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- 2022
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4. Causal attribution of human papillomavirus genotypes to invasive cervical cancer worldwide: a systematic analysis of the global literature.
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Wei, Feixue, Georges, Damien, Man, Irene, Baussano, Iacopo, and Clifford, Gary M
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HUMAN papillomavirus , *HUMAN papillomavirus vaccines , *CANCER invasiveness , *CERVICAL cancer , *LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Understanding the proportion of invasive cervical cancer (ICC) caused by different human papillomavirus (HPV) genotypes can inform primary (ie, vaccination) and secondary (ie, screening) prevention efforts that target specific HPV genotypes. However, using the global literature to estimate population attributable fractions (AFs) requires a methodological framework to address HPV genotype-specific causality from aggregated data. We aimed to estimate the proportion of ICC caused by different HPV genotypes at the global, regional, and national level. This systematic review identified studies reporting HPV genotype-specific prevalence in ICC or people with normal cervical cytology. We searched PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science up to Feb 29, 2024, using the search terms "cervix" and "HPV", with no language restrictions. Odds ratios (ORs) were estimated by comparing HPV genotype-specific prevalence between HPV-positive ICC and normal cervical cytology with logistic regression models, adjusting for region, year of paper publication, and HPV primer or test. HPV genotypes with a lower bound to the 95% CI of the OR greater than 1·0 were judged as causal to ICC. Corresponding regional genotype-specific AFs were calculated as regional HPV prevalence in ICC multiplied by (1 – [1 / OR]) and were proportionally adjusted to total 100%. Global AFs were calculated from regional AFs weighted by number of regional ICC cases in 2022 (GLOBOCAN). The systematic review identified 1174 studies with 111 902 cases of HPV-positive ICC and 2 755 734 of normal cervical cytology. 17 HPV genotypes were considered causal to ICC, with ORs ranging widely from 48·3 (95% CI 45·7–50·9) for HPV16 to 1·4 (1·2–1·7) for HPV51. HPV16 had the highest global AF (61·7%), followed by HPV18 (15·3%), HPV45 (4·8%), HPV33 (3·8%), HPV58 (3·5%), HPV31 (2·8%), and HPV52 (2·8%). Remaining causal genotypes (HPV35, 59, 39, 56, 51, 68, 73, 26, 69, and 82) had a combined global AF of 5·3%. AFs for HPV16 and 18 and HPV16, 18, 31, 33, 45, 52, and 58 combined were lowest in Africa (71·9% and 92·1%, respectively) and highest in central, western, and southern Asia (83·2% and 95·9%, respectively). HPV35 had a higher AF in Africa (3·6%) than other regions (0·6–1·6%). This study provides a comprehensive global picture of HPV genotype-specific AFs in ICC, before the influence of HPV vaccination. These data can inform HPV genotype-specific vaccination and screening strategies to reduce the burden of ICC. EU Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Global burden of cancer attributable to infections in 2018: a worldwide incidence analysis
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de Martel, Catherine, Georges, Damien, Bray, Freddie, Ferlay, Jacques, and Clifford, Gary M
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- 2020
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6. Extinction risk of North American seed plants elevated by climate and land-use change
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Zhang, Jian, Nielsen, Scott E., Chen, Youhua, Georges, Damien, Qin, Yuchu, Wang, Si-Shuo, Svenning, Jens-Christian, and Thuiller, Wilfried
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- 2017
7. Potential of satellite-derived ecosystem functional attributes to anticipate species range shifts
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Alcaraz-Segura, Domingo, Lomba, Angela, Sousa-Silva, Rita, Nieto-Lugilde, Diego, Alves, Paulo, Georges, Damien, Vicente, Joana R., and Honrado, João P.
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- 2017
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8. Accelerated increase in plant species richness on mountain summits is linked to warming
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Steinbauer, Manuel J., Grytnes, John-Arvid, Jurasinski, Gerald, Kulonen, Aino, Lenoir, Jonathan, Pauli, Harald, Rixen, Christian, Winkler, Manuela, Bardy-Durchhalter, Manfred, Barni, Elena, Bjorkman, Anne D., Breiner, Frank T., Burg, Sarah, Czortek, Patryk, Dawes, Melissa A., Delimat, Anna, Dullinger, Stefan, Erschbamer, Brigitta, Felde, Vivian A., Fernández-Arberas, Olatz, Fossheim, Kjetil F., Gómez-García, Daniel, Georges, Damien, Grindrud, Erlend T., Haider, Sylvia, Haugum, Siri V., Henriksen, Hanne, Herreros, María J., Jaroszewicz, Bogdan, Jaroszynska, Francesca, Kanka, Robert, Kapfer, Jutta, Klanderud, Kari, Kühn, Ingolf, Lamprecht, Andrea, Matteodo, Magali, di Cella, Umberto Morra, Normand, Signe, Odland, Arvid, Olsen, Siri L., Palacio, Sara, Petey, Martina, Piscová, Veronika, Sedlakova, Blazena, Steinbauer, Klaus, Stöckli, Veronika, Svenning, Jens-Christian, Teppa, Guido, Theurillat, Jean-Paul, Vittoz, Pascal, Woodin, Sarah J., Zimmermann, Niklaus E., and Wipf, Sonja
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- 2018
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9. Improving phylogenetic regression under complex evolutionary models
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Mazel, Florent, Davies, T. Jonathan, Georges, Damien, Lavergne, Sébastien, Thuiller, Wilfried, and Peres-Neto, Pedro R.
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- 2016
10. Human Papillomavirus-Associated Anal Cancer Incidence and Burden Among US Men, According to Sexual Orientation, Human Immunodeficiency Virus Status, and Age.
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Deshmukh, Ashish A, Damgacioglu, Haluk, Georges, Damien, Sonawane, Kalyani, and Clifford, Gary M
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PAPILLOMAVIRUSES ,SEXUAL orientation ,HUMAN sexuality ,HEALTH status indicators ,DISEASE incidence ,ANAL tumors ,SEX customs ,SEXUAL orientation identity ,RESEARCH funding ,MEN who have sex with men ,HIV ,SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Background Men who have sex with men (MSM) without HIV are known to be at elevated relative risk for Human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated anal cancer in comparison to men who have sex with women (MSW), but are poorly characterized in terms of anal cancer incidence due to absence of reporting of sexual behavior/identity at a population-level. Methods By combining age-specific statistics from multiple data sources (anal cancer incidence among all males; anal cancer incidence among MSM and MSW with HIV; population size of men with HIV by sexual orientation), we developed a mathematical model to estimate anal cancer incidence, annual number of cases, and proportion by (a) sexual orientation (MSM versus MSW), (b) HIV status, and (c) age (<30, 30–44, 45–59, and ≥60 years). Results Anal cancer incidence (per 100 000) among MSM without HIV was 1.4 (95% uncertainty interval [UI], 0.6 to 2.3), 17.6 (95% UI = 13.8–23.5), and 33.9 (95% UI = 28.3–42.3), at ages 30–44, 45–59 and ≥60 years, respectively. 19.1% of all male anal cancer occurred in MSM without HIV, increasing from 4% of anal cancer diagnosed at 30–44 years to 24% at ≥60 years; 54.3% occurred in MSW without HIV (increasing from 13% at age 30–44 to 67% at >60 years), and the remaining 26.6% in men (MSM and MSW combined) with HIV (decreasing from 83% at age 30–44 to 9% at >60 years). Conclusions These findings should inform anal cancer prevention recommendations in male risk groups, including, for the first time, for the important group of MSM without HIV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Accounting for tree line shifts, glacier retreat and primary succession in mountain plant distribution models
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Carlson, Bradley Z., Georges, Damien, Rabatel, Antoine, Randin, Christophe F., Renaud, Julien, Delestrade, Anne, Zimmermann, Niklaus E., Choler, Philippe, and Thuiller, Wilfried
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- 2014
12. Ensemble distribution models in conservation prioritization: from consensus predictions to consensus reserve networks
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Meller, Laura, Cabeza, Mar, Pironon, Samuel, Barbet-Massin, Morgane, Maiorano, Luigi, Georges, Damien, and Thuiller, Wilfried
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- 2014
13. Building resilient cervical cancer prevention through gender-neutral HPV vaccination.
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Man, Irene, Georges, Damien, Sankaranarayanan, Rengaswamy, Basu, Partha, and Baussano, Iacopo
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HUMAN papillomavirus vaccines , *CANCER prevention , *CERVICAL cancer , *VACCINATION coverage , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted HPV vaccination programmes worldwide. Using an agent-based model, EpiMetHeos, recently calibrated to Indian data, we illustrate how shifting from a girls-only (GO) to a gender-neutral (GN) vaccination strategy could improve the resilience of cervical cancer prevention against disruption of HPV vaccination. In the base case of 5-year disruption with no coverage, shifting from GO to GN strategy under 60% coverage (before disruption) would increase the resilience, in terms of cervical cancer cases still prevented in the disrupted birth cohorts per 100,000 girls born, by 2.8-fold from 107 to 302 cases, and by 2.2-fold from 209 to 464 cases under 90% coverage. Furthermore, shifting to GN vaccination helped in reaching the World Health Organization (WHO) elimination threshold. Under GO vaccination with 60% coverage, the age-standardised incidence rate of cervical cancer in India in the long term with vaccination decreased from 11.0 to 4.7 cases per 100,000 woman-years (above threshold), as compared to 2.8 cases (below threshold) under GN with 60% coverage and 2.4 cases (below threshold) under GN with 90% coverage. In conclusion, GN HPV vaccination is an effective strategy to improve the resilience to disruption of cancer prevention programmes and to enhance the progress towards cervical cancer elimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Approximating missing epidemiological data for cervical cancer through Footprinting: A case study in India.
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Man, Irene, Georges, Damien, Bonjour, Maxime, and Baussano, Iacopo
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CERVICAL cancer , *MISSING data (Statistics) , *HUMAN papillomavirus , *HUMAN sexuality , *CANCER prevention - Abstract
Local cervical cancer epidemiological data essential to project the context-specific impact of cervical cancer preventive measures are often missing. We developed a framework, hereafter named Footprinting, to approximate missing data on sexual behaviour, human papillomavirus (HPV) prevalence, or cervical cancer incidence, and applied it to an Indian case study. With our framework, we (1) identified clusters of Indian states with similar cervical cancer incidence patterns, (2) classified states without incidence data to the identified clusters based on similarity in sexual behaviour, (3) approximated missing cervical cancer incidence and HPV prevalence data based on available data within each cluster. Two main patterns of cervical cancer incidence, characterized by high and low incidence, were identified. Based on the patterns in the sexual behaviour data, all Indian states with missing data on cervical cancer incidence were classified to the low-incidence cluster. Finally, missing data on cervical cancer incidence and HPV prevalence were approximated based on the mean of the available data within each cluster. With the Footprinting framework, we approximated missing cervical cancer epidemiological data and made context-specific impact projections for cervical cancer preventive measures, to assist public health decisions on cervical cancer prevention in India and other countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Global burden of HPV‐attributable squamous cell carcinoma of the anus in 2020, according to sex and HIV status: A worldwide analysis.
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Deshmukh, Ashish A., Damgacioglu, Haluk, Georges, Damien, Sonawane, Kalyani, Ferlay, Jacques, Bray, Freddie, and Clifford, Gary M.
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SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,HIV status ,ANUS ,HUMAN Development Index ,GENITAL warts ,HUMAN papillomavirus vaccines ,ANAL cancer - Abstract
Squamous cell carcinoma of the anus (SCCA) is caused by HPV, and is elevated in persons living with HIV (PLWHIV). We aimed to estimate sex‐ and HIV‐stratified SCCA burden at a country, regional and global level. Using anal cancer incidence estimates from 185 countries available through GLOBOCAN 2020, and region/country‐specific proportions of SCCA vs non‐SCCA from the Cancer Incidence in Five Continents (CI5) Volume XI database, we estimated country‐ and sex‐specific SCCA incidence. Proportions of SCCA diagnosed in PLWHIV, and attributable to HIV, were calculated using estimates of HIV prevalence (UNAIDS 2019) and relative risk applied to SCCA incidence. Of 30 416 SCCA estimated globally in 2020, two‐thirds occurred in women (19 792) and one‐third among men (10 624). Fifty‐three percent of male SCCA and 65% of female SCCA occurred in countries with a very high Human Development Index (HDI). Twenty‐one percent of the global male SCCA burden occurred in PLWHIV (n = 2203), largely concentrated in North America, Europe and Africa. While, only 3% of global female SCCA burden (n = 561) occurred in PLWHIV, mainly in Africa. The global age‐standardized incidence rate of HIV‐negative SCCA was higher in women (0.55 cases per 100 000) than men (0.28), whereas HIV‐positive SCCA was higher in men (0.07) than women (0.02). HIV prevalence reached >40% in 22 countries for male SCCA and in 10 countries for female SCCA, mostly in Africa. Understanding global SCCA burden by HIV status can inform SCCA prevention programs (through HPV vaccination, screening and HIV control) and help raise awareness to combat the disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. A novel downscaling approach to predict plant invasions and improve local conservation actions
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Fernandes, Rui F., Vicente, Joana R., Georges, Damien, Alves, Paulo, Thuiller, Wilfried, and Honrado, João P.
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- 2014
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17. Are different facets of plant diversity well protected against climate and land cover changes? A test study in the French Alps
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Thuiller, Wilfried, Guéguen, Maya, Georges, Damien, Bonet, Richard, Chalmandrier, Loïc, Garraud, Luc, Renaud, Julien, Roquet, Cristina, Van Es, Jérémie, Zimmermann, Niklaus E., and Lavergne, Sébastien
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- 2014
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18. Anticipating the spatio-temporal response of plant diversity and vegetation structure to climate and land use change in a protected area
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Boulangeat, Isabelle, Georges, Damien, Dentant, Cédric, Bonet, Richard, Van Es, Jérémie, Abdulhak, Sylvain, Zimmermann, Niklaus E., and Thuiller, Wilfried
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- 2014
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19. Does probability of occurrence relate to population dynamics?
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Thuiller, Wilfried, Münkemüller, Tamara, Schiffers, Katja H., Georges, Damien, Dullinger, Stefan, Eckhart, Vincent M., Edwards, Thomas C., Jr, Gravel, Dominique, Kunstler, Georges, Merow, Cory, Moore, Kara, Piedallu, Christian, Vissault, Steve, Zimmermann, Niklaus E., Zurell, Damaris, and Schurr, Frank M.
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- 2014
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20. Predicting Cohort-Specific Cervical Cancer Incidence From Population-Based Surveys of Human Papilloma Virus Prevalence: A Worldwide Study.
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Schulte-Frohlinde, Rosa, Georges, Damien, Clifford, Gary M, and Baussano, Iacopo
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AGE distribution , *DISEASE incidence , *SURVEYS , *PAPILLOMAVIRUS diseases , *POPULATION-based case control , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PREDICTION models , *LONGITUDINAL method , *DISEASE risk factors ,CERVIX uteri tumors - Abstract
Predictions of cervical cancer burden and the impact of measures taken to control this cancer are usually data-demanding and based on complex assumptions. We propose a predictive method (called PANDORA) based on human papillomavirus (HPV) prevalence, measured 1993–2008, and cervical cancer incidence (CCI), measured 1993–2012, in the same birth cohorts from different worldwide locations, informed by data on age at detection of high-risk HPV and sexual debut. The model can predict CCI among high-risk HPV–positive women and predict CCI up to 14 years following high-risk HPV detection. We found CCI to increase during the 14 years following high-risk HPV detection in unscreened women aged <35 years but to remain mainly constant among women ≥35 years. Age at sexual debut was a significant modifier of CCI. Using our model, we accurately reproduced CCI among high-risk HPV–positive women as observed in cohort studies and in the general population of multiple countries. We also predicted the annual number of cervical cancer cases and CCI in locations with HPV prevalence data but no cancer registry. These findings could inform cervical cancer control programs in settings without cancer registries, as they can be used to predict future cervical cancer burden from population-based surveys of HPV prevalence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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21. A meta‐analysis of anal cancer incidence by risk group: Toward a unified anal cancer risk scale.
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Clifford, Gary M., Georges, Damien, Shiels, Meredith S., Engels, Eric A., Albuquerque, Andreia, Poynten, Isobel Mary, Pokomandy, Alexandra, Easson, Alexandra M., and Stier, Elizabeth A.
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ANAL cancer ,CROHN'S disease ,SYSTEMIC lupus erythematosus ,VULVAR cancer ,PRECANCEROUS conditions ,ULCERATIVE colitis - Abstract
Certain population groups are known to have higher than average anal cancer risk, namely persons living with HIV (PLHIV), men who have sex with men (MSM), women diagnosed with human papillomavirus (HPV)‐related gynecological precancerous lesions or cancer, solid organ transplant recipients (SOTRs) and patients with autoimmune diseases. Our aim was to provide robust and comparable estimates of anal cancer burden across these groups. Summary incidence rates (IRs), as cases per 100 000 person‐years (py), were calculated by fixed‐effects meta‐analysis. IRs were 85 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 82‐89) for HIV‐positive MSM (n = 7 studies; 2 229 234 py), 32 (95% CI = 30‐35) for non‐MSM male PLHIV (n = 5; 1626 448 py) and 22 (95% CI = 19‐24) for female PLHIV (n = 6; 1 472 123 py), with strong variation by age (eg, from 16.8 < 30 years to 107.5 ≥ 60 years for HIV‐positive MSM). IR was 19 (95% CI = 10‐36) in HIV‐negative MSM (n = 2; 48 135 py). Anal cancer IRs were much higher after diagnosis of vulvar (IR = 48 [95% CI = 38‐61]; n = 4; 145 147 py) than cervical (9 [95% CI = 8‐12]; n = 4; 779 098 py) or vaginal (IR = 10 [95% CI = 3‐30]; n = 4; 32 671) cancer, with equivalent disparity after respective precancerous lesions. IR was 13 (95% CI = 12‐15) in SOTRs (n = 5; 1 946 206 py), reaching 24.5 and 49.6 for males and females >10 years after transplant. Anal cancer IRs were 10 (95% CI = 5‐19), 6 (95% CI = 3‐11) and 3 (95% CI = 2‐4) for systemic lupus erythematosus, ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, respectively. In conclusion, a unifying anal cancer risk scale, based upon comprehensive meta‐analysis, can improve prioritization and standardization in anal cancer prevention/research initiatives, which are in their public health infancy. What's new? Anal cancer (AC) is quite rare in the general population. However, some groups are known to be at higher risk. In this meta‐analysis, the authors identified these groups (e.g., HIV‐positive status, other HPV‐related cancers, etc.), and were then able to develop an AC‐risk scale based on incidence estimates. Because there is currently no consensus regarding standardized screening for AC, this risk scale can help clinicians to prioritize and compare risk profiles for AC research and prevention initiatives. These can then be guided by similar principles of management for populations with similar absolute risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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22. Profiling global cancer incidence and mortality by socioeconomic development.
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Lortet‐Tieulent, Joannie, Georges, Damien, Bray, Freddie, and Vaccarella, Salvatore
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CANCER-related mortality ,HIGH-income countries ,LOW-income countries ,MIDDLE-income countries ,ENVIRONMENTAL exposure - Abstract
Economic and living conditions have improved over time in most countries, although often in association with detrimental lifestyle and environmental changes that are major determinants of cancer. In this ecological study, we assess the association between national socioeconomic levels and incidence and mortality rates for all cancers combined and 27 cancer types, in 175 countries. We obtained national level cancer incidence and mortality estimates for 2018 from GLOBOCAN and computed an index of socioeconomic development based on national education and income levels extracted from the United Nations Development Programme. Cancer incidence rates are strongly positively associated with the national socioeconomic level for all cancers combined and for a large number of cancer types, in both sexes. Conversely, the association between socioeconomic development and cancer mortality rates is less clear. The most common pattern for type‐specific cancers is an increasing incidence rate with a relatively stable mortality rate as socioeconomic development increases. Despite the high incidence rates for many cancer types, mortality rates are relatively low in high‐income countries, partly due to the availability of early detection and effective treatments. As socioeconomic development continues to rise, countries with currently low‐ and medium‐development levels may experience large increases in the incidence of several cancers. Given the limited resources and lack of infrastructure, increases in incidence rates in low‐income countries will likely be paralleled by increases in mortality rates. Efforts to plan, implement and evaluate prevention programs must therefore be considered as greater priorities in Low‐ and Middle‐income countries. What's new? Socioeconomic development is often associated with detrimental lifestyle changes and environmental exposures that are major determinants of cancer. Here, the authors assess for the first time the association between national socioeconomic level and incidence and mortality rates for all cancers combined and for 27 cancer types in 175 countries. As socioeconomic development continues to grow, low‐ and medium‐income countries may face high cancer incidence rates as already experienced by high‐income countries. However, higher cancer mortality rates are likely to ensue given the limited resources and lack of infrastructure. The findings advocate for efforts to plan healthcare resources and preventive measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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23. Hoping the best, expecting the worst: forecasting the potential impacts of climate and land-use change on Iberian plants of conservation concern.
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Alves, Cristiana, Sousa-Silva, Rita, Marcos, Bruno, Georges, Damien, and Lomba, Angela
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PLANT conservation ,CLIMATE change ,WILDLIFE conservation ,SPECIES distribution ,PLANT species ,PHYTOGEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Background: Worldwide, halting biodiversity loss is still a major challenge. Climate and land-use change (CLUC) are major drivers of species decline, and further expected to drive species' future ranges. Understanding how these changes may impact species in the future is thus of utmost importance in the context of conservation and monitoring. This is especially critical for species of conservation concern, known to be more prone to extinction under environmental change. Aims: Here we addressed how CLUC may affect future distributions of 64 plant species designated under conservation legislation for Portugal and Spain. Current and future species distributions were modelled and projected under three CLUC scenarios. Range changes were analysed for each species and IUCN category, considering climate versus land-use change models, and the trade-offs between them. Results: Overall, our results depict consistent trends in the distribution of the targeted species under CLUC. The results also highlight potential extinction for some of the targeted species under climate change. However, under land-use change, 10 species are likely to expand their suitable habitat. Conclusions: Our research advances existing knowledge on how climate and land-use change may impact species of conservation concern in the Iberian Peninsula. Such knowledge is essential if further losses of species of conservation concern are to be proactively anticipated. Ultimately, such information can be useful to support data-driven conservation programmes and decision-making in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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24. Plant functional trait change across a warming tundra biome.
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Bjorkman, Anne D., Myers-Smith, Isla H., Elmendorf, Sarah C., Normand, Signe, Rüger, Nadja, Beck, Pieter S. A., Blach-Overgaard, Anne, Blok, Daan, Cornelissen, J. Hans C., Forbes, Bruce C., Georges, Damien, Goetz, Scott J., Guay, Kevin C., Henry, Gregory H. R., HilleRisLambers, Janneke, Hollister, Robert D., Karger, Dirk N., Kattge, Jens, Manning, Peter, and Prevéy, Janet S.
- Abstract
The tundra is warming more rapidly than any other biome on Earth, and the potential ramifications are far-reaching because of global feedback effects between vegetation and climate. A better understanding of how environmental factors shape plant structure and function is crucial for predicting the consequences of environmental change for ecosystem functioning. Here we explore the biome-wide relationships between temperature, moisture and seven key plant functional traits both across space and over three decades of warming at 117 tundra locations. Spatial temperature-trait relationships were generally strong but soil moisture had a marked influence on the strength and direction of these relationships, highlighting the potentially important influence of changes in water availability on future trait shifts in tundra plant communities. Community height increased with warming across all sites over the past three decades, but other traits lagged far behind predicted rates of change. Our findings highlight the challenge of using space-for-time substitution to predict the functional consequences of future warming and suggest that functions that are tied closely to plant height will experience the most rapid change. They also reveal the strength with which environmental factors shape biotic communities at the coldest extremes of the planet and will help to improve projections of functional changes in tundra ecosystems with climate warming. Analyses of the relationships between temperature, moisture and seven key plant functional traits across the tundra and over time show that community height increased with warming across all sites, whereas other traits lagged behind predicted rates of change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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25. Simulating plant invasion dynamics in mountain ecosystems under global change scenarios.
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Carboni, Marta, Guéguen, Maya, Barros, Ceres, Georges, Damien, Boulangeat, Isabelle, Douzet, Rolland, Dullinger, Stefan, Klonner, Guenther, van Kleunen, Mark, Essl, Franz, Bossdorf, Oliver, Haeuser, Emily, Talluto, Matthew V., Moser, Dietmar, Block, Svenja, Conti, Luisa, Dullinger, Iwona, Münkemüller, Tamara, and Thuiller, Wilfried
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PLANT invasions ,BIOLOGICAL invasions ,INVASIVE plants ,CLIMATE change ,PLANT species - Abstract
Across the globe, invasive alien species cause severe environmental changes, altering species composition and ecosystem functions. So far, mountain areas have mostly been spared from large-scale invasions. However, climate change, land-use abandonment, the development of tourism and the increasing ornamental trade will weaken the barriers to invasions in these systems. Understanding how alien species will react and how native communities will influence their success is thus of prime importance in a management perspective. Here, we used a spatially and temporally explicit simulation model to forecast invasion risks in a protected mountain area in the French Alps under future conditions. We combined scenarios of climate change, land-use abandonment and tourism-linked increases in propagule pressure to test if the spread of alien species in the region will increase in the future. We modelled already naturalized alien species and new ornamental plants, accounting for interactions among global change components, and also competition with the native vegetation. Our results show that propagule pressure and climate change will interact to increase overall species richness of both naturalized aliens and new ornamentals, as well as their upper elevational limits and regional range-sizes. Under climate change, woody aliens are predicted to more than double in range-size and herbaceous species to occupy up to 20% of the park area. In contrast, land-use abandonment will open new invasion opportunities for woody aliens, but decrease invasion probability for naturalized and ornamental alien herbs as a consequence of colonization by native trees. This emphasizes the importance of interactions with the native vegetation either for facilitating or potentially for curbing invasions. Overall, our work highlights an additional and previously underestimated threat for the fragile mountain flora of the Alps already facing climate changes, land-use transformations and overexploitation by tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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26. N-dimensional hypervolumes to study stability of complex ecosystems.
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Barros, Ceres, Thuiller, Wilfried, Georges, Damien, Boulangeat, Isabelle, and Münkemüller, Tamara
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MOUNTAIN ecology ,BIODIVERSITY ,HABITATS ,CLIMATE change ,LAND use - Abstract
Although our knowledge on the stabilising role of biodiversity and on how it is affected by perturbations has greatly improved, we still lack a comprehensive view on ecosystem stability that is transversal to different habitats and perturbations. Hence, we propose a framework that takes advantage of the multiplicity of components of an ecosystem and their contribution to stability. Ecosystem components can range from species or functional groups, to different functional traits, or even the cover of different habitats in a landscape mosaic. We make use of n-dimensional hypervolumes to define ecosystem states and assess how much they shift after environmental changes have occurred. We demonstrate the value of this framework with a study case on the effects of environmental change on Alpine ecosystems. Our results highlight the importance of a multidimensional approach when studying ecosystem stability and show that our framework is flexible enough to be applied to different types of ecosystem components, which can have important implications for the study of ecosystem stability and transient dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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27. A dynamic eco-evolutionary model predicts slow response of alpine plants to climate warming.
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Cotto, Olivier, Wessely, Johannes, Georges, Damien, Klonner, Günther, Schmid, Max, Dullinger, Stefan, Thuiller, Wilfried, and Guillaume, Frédéric
- Abstract
Withstanding extinction while facing rapid climate change depends on a species' ability to track its ecological niche or to evolve a new one. Current methods that predict climate-driven species' range shifts use ecological modelling without eco-evolutionary dynamics. Here we present an eco-evolutionary forecasting framework that combines niche modelling with individual-based demographic and genetic simulations. Applying our approach to four endemic perennial plant species of the Austrian Alps, we show that accounting for eco-evolutionary dynamics when predicting species' responses to climate change is crucial. Perennial species persist in unsuitable habitats longer than predicted by niche modelling, causing delayed range losses; however, their evolutionary responses are constrained because long-lived adults produce increasingly maladapted offspring. Decreasing population size due to maladaptation occurs faster than the contraction of the species range, especially for the most abundant species. Monitoring of species' local abundance rather than their range may likely better inform on species' extinction risks under climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Global, regional and national burden of primary liver cancer by subtype.
- Author
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Rumgay, Harriet, Ferlay, Jacques, de Martel, Catherine, Georges, Damien, Ibrahim, Amal Samy, Zheng, Rongshou, Wei, Wenqiang, Lemmens, Valery E.P.P., and Soerjomataram, Isabelle
- Subjects
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HEALTH policy , *LIVER tumors , *GLOBAL burden of disease , *CHOLANGIOCARCINOMA , *WORLD health , *DISEASE incidence , *SEX distribution , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *HISTOLOGY , *HEPATOCELLULAR carcinoma - Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA) are the two main histological subtypes of primary liver cancer. Estimates of the burden of liver cancer by subtype are needed to facilitate development and evaluation of liver cancer control globally. We provide worldwide, regional and national estimates of HCC and iCCA incidence using high-quality data. We used population-based cancer registry data on liver cancer cases by histological subtype from 95 countries to compute the sex- and country-specific distributions of HCC, iCCA and other specified histology. Subtype distributions were applied to estimates of total liver cancer cases for 2018 from the Global Cancer Observatory. Age-standardised incidence rates (ASRs) were calculated. There were an estimated 826,000 cases of liver cancer globally in 2018: 661,000 HCC (ASR 7.3 cases per 100,000); 123,000 iCCA (ASR 1.4) and 42,000 other specified histology (ASR 0.5). HCC contributed 80% of the world total liver cancer burden followed by iCCA (14.9%) and other specified histology (5.1%). HCC rates were highest in Eastern Asia (ASR 14.8), Northern Africa (ASR 13.2) and South-Eastern Asia (ASR 9.5). Rates of iCCA were highest in South-Eastern Asia (ASR 2.9), Eastern Asia (ASR 2.0), Northern Europe, the Caribbean and Central America and Oceania (ASR all 1.8). We have shown the importance of uncovering the distinct patterns of the major subtypes of liver cancer. The use of these estimates is critical to further develop public health policy to reduce the burden of liver cancer and monitor progress in controlling HCC and iCCA globally. • Liver cancer is the third cause of cancer death worldwide and has two major subtypes. • Cancer registry data were used to estimate regional liver cancer subtype distribution. • Hepatocellular carcinoma contributed 80% of all liver cancer cases globally. • Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma contributed 15% of all liver cancer cases globally. • Considering histological subtypes is essential to assess global liver cancer burden. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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