4 results on '"Gabrièle Breda"'
Search Results
2. From Research to Innovation, How to Create Value for an IT Consulting and Engineering Service Firm through its Internal Research Activities
- Author
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Angela Martin, Gabrièle Breda, Clément Bergantz, Valérie Chanal, Centre d'études et de recherches appliquées à la gestion (CERAG), Université Grenoble Alpes [2016-2019] (UGA [2016-2019]), Altran Research, and entreprise
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Strategic planning ,Knowledge management ,Information technology consulting ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,0502 economics and business ,[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration ,Perfect competition ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Organizational management ,business ,Competence (human resources) ,050203 business & management ,Strategic development - Abstract
International audience; IT consulting and engineering firms generally develop strategic knowledge for their clients based on their own competences in various business methods and processes. Knowledge and competences can be improved through collaborative research projects and further leveraged for their own strategic development. The aim of this paper is to build and experiment an organizational management tool within a consulting firm. The tool allows the creation of value and differentiation levers on the competitive market of research and innovation consultancy and illustrates how to benefit from internal research activities that can be viewed as intangible resources. In light of competence-based theory this work shows how strategic knowledge developed on an emerging field such as e-health can be rearranged into strategic processes in order to inspire a proactive strategic vision within a consulting firm.
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- 2017
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3. Improving FOLFIRINOX safety in pancreatic cancer patients through multidimensional remote monitoring and proactive care using a domomedecine mobile platform
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Ayhan Ulusakarya, Alban Duprès, Agnès Fritsch, Mohamed Bouchahda, Francis Lévi, Sandra Komarzynski, Amal Attari, René Adam, and Gabrièle Breda
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,Poor prognosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,FOLFIRINOX ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pancreatic cancer ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business ,030215 immunology - Abstract
TPS4673 Background: Pancreatic cancer is a poor prognosis and fast-growing cancer, whose five-year survival is 6% in Europe and the US. FOLFIRINOX has been established as the reference medical treatment for this disease worldwide, yet it also causes leuko-neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, diarrhea, anorexia, asthenia, weight loss, and peripheral sensory neuropathy. Its indication is usually limited to patients having a WHO performance status of 0 or 1. This treatment is often interrupted once Grade 3-4 clinical or hematological toxicities occur, resulting in poor patient performance status and quality of life. Presently, no prospective study monitor and evaluate the qualitative and quantitative effects of FOLFIRINOX on the daily life of pancreatic cancer patients in real-time. Such monitoring would provide early warning signals for the identification of any improvement or deterioration of the patient condition. Whenever necessary, proactive interventions would be triggered to avoid emergency hospitalization for severe adverse events and to enhance treatment compliance. Methods: Our study involves the use of the mobile e-Health platform PiCADo (JMIR 2018) to track and analyse circadian rhythms, symptoms, and body weight in real time in 45 advanced pancreatic cancer patients at 4 centres. The patients are continuously telemonitored for rest-activity, temperature and 3D-orientation via a BLE sensor during the six weeks following the first FOLFIRINOX course. Patients weigh themselves daily on a BLE scale and self-rate their symptoms using a touchscreen on GPRS tablet. Alerts are generated according to preset yet modifiable thresholds of automatically computed critical parameters. From these data, we will evaluate the rate of emergency hospital admissions and the admission-free survival, the rates of severe adverse events, patients’ symptoms dynamics, and their relations with the disruption of the patients’ circadian rhythm. Patient satisfaction and research experience will also be assessed, since engagement is at the core of the success of the approach. The results will guide a future randomized trial comparing standard pancreatic cancer patient care with a personalized FOLFIRINOX approach, including chronotherapy delivery. Support: Ramsay-Sante, Altran.
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- 2020
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4. Relevance of a Mobile Internet Platform for Capturing Inter- and Intrasubject Variabilities in Circadian Coordination During Daily Routine: Pilot Study
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Jacques Beau, Ayhan Ulusakarya, Mohamed Bouchahda, Alexandre Arbaud, Pasquale F. Innominato, Qi Huang, Francis Lévi, Gabrièle Breda, Monique Maurice, Sandra Komarzynski, Bärbel Finkenstädt, and Nicolas Beaumatin
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Period (gene) ,Circadian clock ,Pilot Projects ,Health Informatics ,Audiology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Temperature rhythm ,domomedicine ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rhythm ,circadian clock ,Activities of Daily Living ,Humans ,Medicine ,Circadian rhythm ,Daily routine ,Aged ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,Original Paper ,Internet ,Chronobiology ,business.industry ,Mobile internet ,biomarkers ,temperature rhythm ,Middle Aged ,QP ,R1 ,Circadian Rhythm ,time series analyses ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,eHealth ,Female ,rest-activity rhythm ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: \ud \ud Experimental and epidemiologic studies have shown that circadian clocks disruption can play an important role in the development of cancer and metabolic diseases. The cellular clocks outside the brain are effectively coordinated by the body temperature rhythm. We hypothesized that concurrent measurements of body temperature and rest-activity rhythms would assess circadian clocks coordination in individual patients, thus enabling the integration of biological rhythms into precision medicine. \ud \ud Objective\ud \ud The objective was to evaluate the circadian clocks’ coordination in healthy subjects and patients through simultaneous measurements of rest-activity and body temperature rhythms.\ud \ud Methods\ud \ud Non-invasive real-time measurements of rest-activity and chest temperature rhythms were recorded during the subject’s daily life, using a dedicated new mobile e-health platform (PiCADo). It involved a chest sensor that jointly measured accelerations, 3D-orientation and skin surface temperature every 1-5 min, and relayed them out to a mobile gateway via Bluetooth-Low-Energy. The gateway tele-transmitted all stored data to a server via GPRS every 24 h. The technical capabilities of PiCADo were validated in 55 healthy subjects and 12 cancer patients, whose rhythms were e-monitored during their daily routine for 3-30 days. Spectral analyses enabled to compute rhythm parameters values, with their 90% confidence limits, and their dynamics in each subject. \ud \ud Results \ud \ud All the individuals displayed a dominant circadian rhythm in activity with maxima occurring from 12:09 to 20:25. This was not the case for the dominant temperature period, which clustered around 24 h for 51 out of 67 subjects (76%), and around 12 h for 13 others (19%). Statistically significant sex- and age- related differences in circadian coordination were identified in the non-cancerous subjects, based upon the range of variations in temperature rhythm amplitudes, maxima (acrophases), and phase relations with rest-activity. The circadian acrophase of chest temperature was located at night for the majority of people, but it occurred at daytime for 26% (14/55) of the non-cancerous people and 33% (4/12) of the cancer patients, hence supporting important inter-subject differences in circadian coordination. Sex, age and cancer significantly impacted on the circadian coordination of both rhythms, based on their phase relationships. \ud \ud Conclusions \ud \ud Complementing rest-activity with chest temperature circadian e-monitoring revealed striking inter-subject differences regarding human circadian clocks coordination and timing during daily routine. To further delineate the clinical importance of such finding, the PiCADo platform is currently applied for both the assessment of health effects resulting from atypical work schedules, and the identification of the key determinants of circadian disruption in cancer patients. \ud
- Published
- 2018
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