42 results on '"A. Jeruma"'
Search Results
2. Prevalence of hepatitis C virus antibodies and associated risks among residents in long-term assisted living facilities and shelters in Latvia
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Ieva Tolmane, Ieva Siksaliete, Inga Upmace, Inga Bulmistre, Agita Jeruma, Inga Azina, Baiba Rozentale, and Raimonds Sīmanis
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hepatitis c virus ,latvia ,anti-hcv prevalence ,assisted living facilities ,Medicine - Published
- 2024
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3. Achievements, priorities and strategies in pediatric nephrology in Europe: need for unifying approaches or acceptance of differences?
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Jochen Ehrich, Velibor Tasic, Vidar O. Edvardsson, Evgenia Preka, Larisa Prikhodina, Constantinos J. Stefanidis, Rezan Topaloglu, Diamant Shtiza, Ashot Sarkissian, Thomas Mueller-Sacherer, Rena Fataliyeva, Ina Kazyra, Elena Levtchenko, Danka Pokrajac, Dimitar Roussinov, Danko Milošević, Avraam Elia, Tomas Seeman, Mia Faerch, Inga Vainumae, Janne Kataja, Michel Tsimaratos, Irakli Rtskhiladze, Peter F. Hoyer, George Reusz, Atif Awan, Danny Lotan, Licia Peruzzi, Nazym Nigmatullina, Nasira Beishebaeva, Edite Jeruma, Augustina Jankauskiene, Olivier Niel, Valerie Said-Conti, Angela Ciuntu, Snežana Pavićević, Michiel Oosterveld, Anna Bjerre, Marcin Tkaczyk, Ana Teixeira, Adrian C. Lungu, Alexey Tsygin, Vesna Stojanović, Ludmila Podracka, Tanja Kersnik Levart, Mar Espino-Hernández, Per Brandström, Giuseppina Sparta, Harika Alpay, Dmytro Ivanov, Jan Dudley, Komiljon Khamzaev, and Dieter Haffner
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European child healthcare services ,nephrology ,achievements ,needs ,workforce ,prevention ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
BackgroundThere is a lack of information on the current healthcare systems for children with kidney diseases across Europe. The aim of this study was to explore the different national approaches to the organization and delivery of pediatric nephrology services within Europe.MethodsIn 2020, the European society for Paediatric Nephrology (ESPN) conducted a cross-sectional survey to identify the existing pediatric nephrology healthcare systems in 48 European countries covering a population of more than 200 million children.ResultsThe reported three most important priorities in the care of children with kidney diseases were better training of staff, more incentives for physicians to reduce staff shortages, and more hospital beds. Positive achievements in the field of pediatric nephrology included the establishment of new specialized pediatric nephrology centers, facilities for pediatric dialysis and transplant units in 18, 16, and 12 countries, respectively. The most common problems included no access to any type of dialysis (12), inadequate transplant programs for all ages of children (12), lack of well-trained physicians and dialysis nurses (12), inadequate reimbursement of hospitals for expensive therapies (10), and lack of multidisciplinary care by psychologists, dieticians, physiotherapists, social workers and vocational counsellors (6). Twenty-five of 48 countries (52%) expected to have a shortage of pediatric nephrologists in the year 2025, 63% of clinical nurses and 56% of dialysis nurses. All three groups of health care professionals were expected to be lacking in 38% of countries. Prenatal assessment and postnatal management of renal malformations by a multidisciplinary team including obstetricians, geneticists, pediatricians, and pediatric surgeons was available in one third of countries.ConclusionsOur study shows that there are still very marked differences in pediatric health care systems across the European countries and highlights the need need for appropriate services for children with kidney disease in all European countries.
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- 2024
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4. Diversity of kidney care referral pathways in national child health systems of 48 European countries
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Velibor Tasic, Vidar O. Edvardsson, Evgenia Preka, Larisa Prikhodina, Constantinos J. Stefanidis, Rezan Topaloglu, Diamant Shtiza, Ashot Sarkissian, Thomas Mueller-Sacherer, Rena Fataliyeva, Ina Kazyra, Elena Levtchenko, Danka Pokrajac, Dimitar Roussinov, Danko Milošević, Avraam Elia, Tomas Seeman, Mia Faerch, Inga Vainumae, Janne Kataja, Michel Tsimaratos, Irakli Rtskhiladze, Peter F. Hoyer, George Reusz, Atif Awan, Danny Lotan, Licia Peruzzi, Nazim Nigmatullina, Nasira Beishebaeva, Edite Jeruma, Augustina Jankauskiene, Olivier Niel, Valerie Said-Conti, Angela Ciuntu, Snežana Pavićević, Michiel Oosterveld, Anna Bjerre, Marcin Tkaczyk, Ana Teixeira, Adrian C. Lungu, Alexey Tsygin, Vesna Stojanović, Ludmila Podracka, Tanja Kersnik Levart, Mar Espino-Hernández, Per Brandström, Giuseppina Sparta, Harika Alpay, Dmytro Ivanov, Jan Dudley, Komiljon Khamzaev, Dieter Haffner, and Jochen Ehrich
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pediatric nephrology ,healthcare services ,referral clinical pathways ,urinary tract infections ,nephrotic syndrome ,acute kidney injury ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
BackgroundPrimary, secondary and tertiary healthcare services in Europe create complex networks covering pediatric subspecialties, sociology, economics and politics. Two surveys of the European Society for Paediatric Nephrology (ESPN) in 1998 and 2017 revealed substantial disparities of kidney care among European countries. The purpose of the third ESPN survey is to further identify national differences in the conceptualization and organization of European pediatric kidney health care pathways during and outside normal working hours.MethodsIn 2020, a questionnaire was sent to one leading pediatric nephrologist from 48 of 53 European countries as defined by the World Health Organization. In order to exemplify care pathways in pediatric primary care nephrology, urinary tract infection (UTI) was chosen. Steroid sensitive nephrotic syndrome (SSNS) was chosen for pediatric rare disease nephrology and acute kidney injury (AKI) was analyzed for pediatric emergency nephrology.ResultsThe care pathways for European children and young people with urinary tract infections were variable and differed during standard working hours and also during night-time and weekends. During daytime, UTI care pathways included six different types of care givers. There was a shift from primary care services outside standard working hours to general outpatient polyclinic and hospital services. Children with SNSS were followed up by pediatric nephrologists in hospitals in 69% of countries. Patients presenting with community acquired AKI were admitted during regular working hours to secondary or tertiary care hospitals. During nights and weekends, an immediate shift to University Children's Hospitals was observed where treatment was started by intensive care pediatricians and pediatric nephrologists.ConclusionGaps and fragmentation of pediatric health services may lead to the risk of delayed or inadequate referral of European children with kidney disease to pediatric nephrologists. The diversity of patient pathways outside of normal working hours was identified as one of the major weaknesses in the service chain.
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- 2024
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5. Global prevalence, cascade of care, and prophylaxis coverage of hepatitis B in 2022: a modelling study
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Razavi-Shearer, Devin, Gamkrelidze, Ivane, Pan, Calvin, Jia, Jidong, Berg, Thomas, Gray, Richard, Lim, Young-Suk, Chen, Chien-Jen, Ocama, Ponsiano, Desalegn, Hailemichael, Abbas, Zaigham, Abdallah, Ayat, Aghemo, Alessio, Ahmadbekova, Sabohat, Ahn, Sang Hoon, Aho, Inka, Akarca, Ulus, Al Masri, Nasser, Alalwan, Abduljaleel, Alavian, Seyed, Al-Busafi, Said, Aleman, Soo, Alfaleh, Faleh, Alghamdi, Abdullah, Al-Hamoudi, Waleed, Aljumah, Abdulrahman, Al-Naamani, Khalid, Al-Rifai, Ahmad, Alserkal, Yousif, Altraif, Ibrahim, Amarsanaa, Jazag, Anderson, Motswedi, Andersson, Monique, Armstrong, Paige, Asselah, Tarik, Athanasakis, Kostas, Baatarkhuu, Oidov, Ben-Ari, Ziv, Bensalem, Aicha, Bessone, Fernando, Biondi, Mia, Bizri, Abdul Rahman, Blach, Sarah, Braga, Wornei, Brandão-Mello, Carlos, Brosgart, Carol, Brown, Kimberly, Brown, Jr, Robert, Bruggmann, Philip, Brunetto, Maurizia, Buti, Maria, Cabezas, Joaquin, Casanovas, Teresa, Chae, Chungman, Chan, Henry Lik Yuen, Cheinquer, Hugo, Chen, Pei-Jer, Cheng, Kent Jason, Cheon, Myeong-Eun, Chien, Cheng-Hung, Choudhuri, Gourdas, Christensen, Peer Brehm, Chuang, Wan-Long, Chulanov, Vladimir, Cisneros, Laura, Coffin, Carla, Contreras, Fernando, Coppola, Nicola, Cornberg, Markus, Cowie, Benjamin, Cramp, Matthew, Craxi, Antonio, Crespo, Javier, Cui, Fuqiang, Cunningham, Chris, Dalgard, Olav, De Knegt, Robert, De Ledinghen, Victor, Dore, Gregory, Drazilova, Sylvia, Duberg, Ann-Sofi, Egeonu, Steve, Elbadri, Mohammed, El-Kassas, Mohamed, El-Sayed, Manal, Estes, Chris, Etzion, Ohad, Farag, Elmobashar, Ferradini, Laurent, Ferreira, Paulo, Flisiak, Robert, Forns, Xavier, Frankova, Sona, Fung, James, Gane, Edward, Garcia, Virginia, García-Samaniego, Javier, Gemilyan, Manik, Genov, Jordan, Gheorghe, Liliana, Gholam, Pierre, Gish, Robert, Goleij, Pouya, Gottfredsson, Magnus, Grebely, Jason, Gschwantler, Michael, Guingane, Nanelin Alice, Hajarizadeh, Behzad, Hamid, Saeed, Hamoudi, Waseem, Harris, Aaron, Hasan, Irsan, Hatzakis, Angelos, Hellard, Margaret, Hercun, Julian, Hernandez, Javier, Hockicková, Ivana, Hsu, Yao-Chun, Hu, Ching-Chih, Husa, Petr, Janicko, Martin, Janjua, Naveed, Jarcuska, Peter, Jaroszewicz, Jerzy, Jelev, Deian, Jeruma, Agita, Johannessen, Asgeir, Kåberg, Martin, Kaita, Kelly, Kaliaskarova, Kulpash, Kao, Jia-Horng, Kelly-Hanku, Angela, Khamis, Faryal, Khan, Aamir, Kheir, Omer, Khoudri, Ibtissam, Kondili, Loreta, Konysbekova, Aliya, Kristian, Pavol, Kwon, Jisoo, Lagging, Martin, Laleman, Wim, Lampertico, Pietro, Lavanchy, Daniel, Lázaro, Pablo, Lazarus, Jeffrey V, Lee, Alice, Lee, Mei-Hsuan, Liakina, Valentina, Lukšić, Boris, Malekzadeh, Reza, Malu, Abraham, Marinho, Rui, Mendes-Correa, Maria Cássia, Merat, Shahin, Meshesha, Berhane Redae, Midgard, Håvard, Mohamed, Rosmawati, Mokhbat, Jacques, Mooneyhan, Ellen, Moreno, Christophe, Mortgat, Laure, Müllhaupt, Beat, Musabaev, Erkin, Muyldermans, Gaëtan, Naveira, Marcelo, Negro, Francesco, Nersesov, Alexander, Nguyen, Van Thi Thuy, Ning, Qing, Njouom, Richard, Ntagirabiri, Rénovat, Nurmatov, Zuridin, Oguche, Stephen, Omuemu, Casimir, Ong, Janus, Opare-Sem, Ohene, Örmeci, Necati, Orrego, Mauricio, Osiowy, Carla, Papatheodoridis, George, Peck-Radosavljevic, Markus, Pessoa, Mário, Pham, Trang, Phillips, Richard, Pimenov, Nikolay, Pincay-Rodríguez, Loreley, Plaseska-Karanfilska, Dijana, Pop, Cora, Poustchi, Hossein, Prabdial-Sing, Nishi, Qureshi, Huma, Ramji, Alnoor, Rautiainen, Henna, Razavi-Shearer, Kathryn, Remak, William, Ribeiro, Sofia, Ridruejo, Ezequiel, Ríos-Hincapié, Cielo, Robalino, Marcia, Roberts, Lewis, Roberts, Stuart, Rodríguez, Manuel, Roulot, Dominique, Rwegasha, John, Ryder, Stephen, Sadirova, Shakhlo, Saeed, Umar, Safadi, Rifaat, Sagalova, Olga, Said, Sanaa, Salupere, Riina, Sanai, Faisal, Sanchez-Avila, Juan F, Saraswat, Vivek, Sargsyants, Narina, Sarrazin, Christoph, Sarybayeva, Gulya, Schréter, Ivan, Seguin-Devaux, Carole, Seto, Wai-Kay, Shah, Samir, Sharara, Ala, Sheikh, Mahdi, Shouval, Daniel, Sievert, William, Simojoki, Kaarlo, Simonova, Marieta, Sinn, Dong Hyun, Sonderup, Mark, Sonneveld, Milan, Spearman, C Wendy, Sperl, Jan, Stauber, Rudolf, Stedman, Catherine, Sypsa, Vana, Tacke, Frank, Tan, Soek-Siam, Tanaka, Junko, Tergast, Tammo, Terrault, Norah, Thompson, Alexander, Thompson, Peyton, Tolmane, Ieva, Tomasiewicz, Krzysztof, Tsang, Tak-Yin, Uzochukwu, Benjamin, Van Welzen, Berend, Vanwolleghem, Thomas, Vince, Adriana, Voeller, Alexis, Waheed, Yasir, Waked, Imam, Wallace, Jack, Wang, Cong, Weis, Nina, Wong, Grace, Wong, Vincent, Wu, Jaw-Ching, Yaghi, Cesar, Yesmembetov, Kakharman, Yip, Terry, Yosry, Ayman, Yu, Ming-Lung, Yuen, Man-Fung, Yurdaydin, Cihan, Zeuzem, Stefan, Zuckerman, Eli, and Razavi, Homie
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- 2023
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6. Global change in hepatitis C virus prevalence and cascade of care between 2015 and 2020: a modelling study
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Blach, Sarah, Terrault, Norah A, Tacke, Frank, Gamkrelidze, Ivane, Craxi, Antonio, Tanaka, Junko, Waked, Imam, Dore, Gregory J, Abbas, Zaigham, Abdallah, Ayat R, Abdulla, Maheeba, Aghemo, Alessio, Aho, Inka, Akarca, Ulus S, Alalwan, Abduljaleel M, Alanko Blomé, Marianne, Al-Busafi, Said A, Aleman, Soo, Alghamdi, Abdullah S, Al-Hamoudi, Waleed K, Aljumah, Abdulrahman A, Al-Naamani, Khalid, Al Serkal, Yousif M, Altraif, Ibrahim H, Anand, Anil C, Anderson, Motswedi, Andersson, Monique I, Athanasakis, Kostas, Baatarkhuu, Oidov, Bakieva, Shokhista R, Ben-Ari, Ziv, Bessone, Fernando, Biondi, Mia J, Bizri, Abdul Rahman N, Brandão-Mello, Carlos E, Brigida, Krestina, Brown, Kimberly A, Brown, Jr, Robert S, Bruggmann, Philip, Brunetto, Maurizia R, Busschots, Dana, Buti, Maria, Butsashvili, Maia, Cabezas, Joaquin, Chae, Chungman, Chaloska Ivanova, Viktorija, Chan, Henry Lik Yuen, Cheinquer, Hugo, Cheng, Kent Jason, Cheon, Myeong-Eun, Chien, Cheng-Hung, Chien, Rong-Nan, Choudhuri, Gourdas, Christensen, Peer Brehm, Chuang, Wan-Long, Chulanov, Vladimir, Cisneros, Laura E, Coco, Barbara, Contreras, Fernando A, Cornberg, Markus, Cramp, Matthew E, Crespo, Javier, Cui, Fuqiang, Cunningham, Chris W, Dagher Abou, Lucy, Dalgard, Olav, Dao, Doan Y, De Ledinghen, Victor, Derbala, Moutaz F, Deuba, Keshab, Dhindsa, Karan, Djauzi, Samsuridjal, Drazilova, Sylvia, Duberg, Ann-Sofi, Elbadri, Mohammed, El-Sayed, Manal H, Esmat, Gamal, Estes, Chris, Ezzat, Sameera, Färkkilä, Martti A, Ferradini, Laurent, Ferraz, Maria Lucia G, Ferreira, Paulo R A, Filipec Kanizaj, Tajana, Flisiak, Robert, Frankova, Sona, Fung, James, Gamkrelidze, Amiran, Gane, Edward, Garcia, Virginia, García-Samaniego, Javier, Gemilyan, Manik, Genov, Jordan, Gheorghe, Liliana S, Gholam, Pierre M, Goldis, Adrian, Gottfredsson, Magnus, Gray, Richard T, Grebely, Jason, Gschwantler, Michael, Hajarizadeh, Behzad, Hamid, Saeed S, Hamoudi, Waseem, Hatzakis, Angelos, Hellard, Margaret E, Himatt, Sayed, Hofer, Harald, Hrstic, Irena, Hunyady, Bela, Husa, Petr, Husic-Selimovic, Azra, Jafri, Wasim S M, Janicko, Martin, Janjua, Naveed, Jarcuska, Peter, Jaroszewicz, Jerzy, Jerkeman, Anna, Jeruma, Agita, Jia, Jidong, Jonasson, Jon G, Kåberg, Martin, Kaita, Kelly D E, Kaliaskarova, Kulpash S, Kao, Jia-Horng, Kasymov, Omor T, Kelly-Hanku, Angela, Khamis, Faryal, Khamis, Jawad, Khan, Aamir G, Khandu, Lekey, Khoudri, Ibtissam, Kielland, Knut B, Kim, Do Young, Kodjoh, Nicolas, Kondili, Loreta A, Krajden, Mel, Krarup, Henrik Bygum, Kristian, Pavol, Kwon, Jisoo A, Lagging, Martin, Laleman, Wim, Lao, Wai Cheung, Lavanchy, Daniel, Lázaro, Pablo, Lazarus, Jeffrey V, Lee, Alice U, Lee, Mei-Hsuan, Li, Michael K K, Liakina, Valentina, Lim, Young-Suk, Löve, Arthur, Lukšić, Boris, Machekera, Shepherd Mufudzi, Malu, Abraham O, Marinho, Rui T, Maticic, Mojca, Mekonnen, Hailemichael D, Mendes-Correa, Maria Cássia, Mendez-Sanchez, Nahum, Merat, Shahin, Meshesha, Berhane Redae, Midgard, Håvard, Mills, Mike, Mohamed, Rosmawati, Mooneyhan, Ellen, Moreno, Christophe, Muljono, David H, Müllhaupt, Beat, Musabaev, Erkin, Muyldermans, Gaëtan, Nartey, Yvonne Ayerki, Naveira, Marcelo C M, Negro, Francesco, Nersesov, Alexander V, Njouom, Richard, Ntagirabiri, Rénovat, Nurmatov, Zuridin S, Obekpa, Solomon A, Oguche, Stephen, Olafsson, Sigurdur, Ong, Janus P, Opare-Sem, Ohene K, Orrego, Mauricio, Øvrehus, Anne L, Pan, Calvin Q, Papatheodoridis, George V, Peck-Radosavljevic, Markus, Pessoa, Mário G, Phillips, Richard O, Pimenov, Nikolay, Plaseska-Karanfilska, Dijana, Prabdial-Sing, Nishi N, Puri, Pankaj, Qureshi, Huma, Rahman, Aninda, Ramji, Alnoor, Razavi-Shearer, Devin M, Razavi-Shearer, Kathryn, Ridruejo, Ezequiel, Ríos-Hincapié, Cielo Y, Rizvi, S M Shahriar, Robaeys, Geert K M M, Roberts, Lewis R, Roberts, Stuart K, Ryder, Stephen D, Sadirova, Shakhlo, Saeed, Umar, Safadi, Rifaat, Sagalova, Olga, Said, Sanaa S, Salupere, Riina, Sanai, Faisal M, Sanchez-Avila, Juan F, Saraswat, Vivek A, Sarrazin, Christoph, Sarybayeva, Gulya, Seguin-Devaux, Carole, Sharara, Ala I, Sheikh, Mahdi, Shewaye, Abate B, Sievert, William, Simojoki, Kaarlo, Simonova, Marieta Y, Sonderup, Mark W, Spearman, C Wendy, Sperl, Jan, Stauber, Rudolf E, Stedman, Catherine A M, Su, Tung-Hung, Suleiman, Anita, Sypsa, Vana, Tamayo Antabak, Natalia, Tan, Soek-Siam, Tergast, Tammo L, Thurairajah, Prem H, Tolmane, Ieva, Tomasiewicz, Krzysztof, Tsereteli, Maia, Uzochukwu, Benjamin S C, Van De Vijver, David A M C, Van Santen, Daniela K, Van Vlierberghe, Hans, Van Welzen, Berend, Vanwolleghem, Thomas, Vélez-Möller, Patricia, Villamil, Federico, Vince, Adriana, Waheed, Yasir, Weis, Nina, Wong, Vincent W-S, Yaghi, Cesar G, Yesmembetov, Kakharman, Yosry, Ayman, Yuen, Man-Fung, Yunihastuti, Evy, Zeuzem, Stefan, Zuckerman, Eli, and Razavi, Homie A
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- 2022
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7. Diversity of kidney care referral pathways in national child health systems of 48 European countries
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Tasic, Velibor, primary, Edvardsson, Vidar O., additional, Preka, Evgenia, additional, Prikhodina, Larisa, additional, Stefanidis, Constantinos J., additional, Topaloglu, Rezan, additional, Shtiza, Diamant, additional, Sarkissian, Ashot, additional, Mueller-Sacherer, Thomas, additional, Fataliyeva, Rena, additional, Kazyra, Ina, additional, Levtchenko, Elena, additional, Pokrajac, Danka, additional, Roussinov, Dimitar, additional, Milošević, Danko, additional, Elia, Avraam, additional, Seeman, Tomas, additional, Faerch, Mia, additional, Vainumae, Inga, additional, Kataja, Janne, additional, Tsimaratos, Michel, additional, Rtskhiladze, Irakli, additional, Hoyer, Peter F., additional, Reusz, George, additional, Awan, Atif, additional, Lotan, Danny, additional, Peruzzi, Licia, additional, Nigmatullina, Nazim, additional, Beishebaeva, Nasira, additional, Jeruma, Edite, additional, Jankauskiene, Augustina, additional, Niel, Olivier, additional, Said-Conti, Valerie, additional, Ciuntu, Angela, additional, Pavićević, Snežana, additional, Oosterveld, Michiel, additional, Bjerre, Anna, additional, Tkaczyk, Marcin, additional, Teixeira, Ana, additional, Lungu, Adrian C., additional, Tsygin, Alexey, additional, Stojanović, Vesna, additional, Podracka, Ludmila, additional, Kersnik Levart, Tanja, additional, Espino-Hernández, Mar, additional, Brandström, Per, additional, Sparta, Giuseppina, additional, Alpay, Harika, additional, Ivanov, Dmytro, additional, Dudley, Jan, additional, Khamzaev, Komiljon, additional, Haffner, Dieter, additional, and Ehrich, Jochen, additional
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- 2024
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8. Hepatitis C virus prevalence and level of intervention required to achieve the WHO targets for elimination in the European Union by 2030: a modelling study
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Razavi, Homie, Robbins, Sarah, Zeuzem, Stefan, Negro, Francesco, Buti, Maria, Duberg, Ann-Sofi, Roudot-Thoraval, Françoise, Craxi, Antonio, Manns, Michael, Marinho, Rui T, Hunyady, Bela, Colombo, Massimo, Aleman, Soo, Antonov, Krasimir, Arkkila, Perttu, Athanasakis, Kostas, Blach, Sarah, Blachier, Martin, Blasco, Antonio J, Calinas, Filipe, Calleja, Jose L, Christensen, Peer B, Cramp, Matthew E, Croes, Esther, de Knegt, Robert J, de Ledinghen, Victor, Delile, Jean-Michel, Estes, Chris, Falconer, Karolin, Färkkilä, Martti, Flisiak, Robert, Frankova, Sona, Gamkrelidze, Ivane, García-Samaniego, Javier, Genov, Jordan, Gerstoft, Jan, Gheorghe, Liana, Goldis, Adrian, Gountas, Ilias, Gregorčič, Sergeja, Gschwantler, Michael, Gunter, Jessie, Halota, Waldemar, Harcouet, Laura, Hézode, Christophe, Hoffmann, Patrick, Horvath, Gabor, Hrstic, Irena, Jarčuška, Peter, Jelev, Deian, Jeruma, Agita, Kåberg, Martin, Kieran, Jennifer, Kondili, Loreta A, Kotzev, Iskren, Krarup, Henrik, Kristian, Pavol, Lagging, Martin, Laleman, Wim, Lázaro, Pablo, Liakina, Valentina, Lukšić, Boris, Maimets, Matti, Makara, Mihály, Mateva, Lyudmila, Maticic, Mojca, Mennini, Francesco S, Mitova, Rumiana, Moreno, Christophe, Mossong, Joel, Murphy, Kimberly, Nde, Helen, Nemecek, Vratislav, Nonkovic, Dijana, Norris, Suzanne, Oltman, Marian, Øvrehus, Anne L H, Papatheodoridis, George, Pasini, Ken, Razavi-Shearer, Devin, Razavi-Shearer, Kathryn, Reesink, Henk W, Reic, Tatjana, Rozentale, Baiba, Ryder, Stephen D, Salupere, Riina, Sarmento-Castro, Rui, Sarrazin, Christoph, Schmelzer, Jonathan D, Schréter, Ivan, Seguin-Devaux, Carole, Simojoki, Kaarlo, Simonova, Marietta, Smit, Peter J, Souliotis, Kyriakos, Speiciene, Danute, Sperl, Jan, Stärkel, Peter, Struck, Daniel, Sypsa, Vana, Thornton, Lelia, Tolmane, Ieva, Tomasiewicz, Krzysztof, Valantinas, Jonas, Van Damme, Pierre, van de Vijver, David, van der Meer, Adriaan J, van Santen, Daniela, Van Vlierberghe, Hans, Vandijck, Dominique, Vella, Stefano, Videčnik-Zorman, Jerneja, Vogel, Wolfgang, Weis, Nina, and Hatzakis, Angelos
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- 2017
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9. Global prevalence and genotype distribution of hepatitis C virus infection in 2015: a modelling study
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Blach, Sarah, Zeuzem, Stefan, Manns, Michael, Altraif, Ibrahim, Duberg, Ann-Sofi, Muljono, David H, Waked, Imam, Alavian, Seyed M, Lee, Mei-Hsuan, Negro, Francesco, Abaalkhail, Faisal, Abdou, Ahmed, Abdulla, Maheeba, Rached, Antoine Abou, Aho, Inka, Akarca, Ulus, Al Ghazzawi, Imad, Al Kaabi, Saad, Al Lawati, Faryal, Al Namaani, Khalid, Al Serkal, Youssif, Al-Busafi, Said A, Al-Dabal, Layla, Aleman, Soo, Alghamdi, Abdullah S, Aljumah, Abdulrahman A, Al-Romaihi, Hamad E, Andersson, Monique I, Arendt, Vic, Arkkila, Perttu, Assiri, Abdullah M, Baatarkhuu, Oidov, Bane, Abate, Ben-Ari, Ziv, Bergin, Colm, Bessone, Fernando, Bihl, Florian, Bizri, Abdul R, Blachier, Martin, Blasco, Antonio J, Mello, Carlos E Brandão, Bruggmann, Philip, Brunton, Cheryl R, Calinas, Filipe, Chan, Henry L Y, Chaudhry, Asad, Cheinquer, Hugo, Chen, Chien-Jen, Chien, Rong-Nan, Choi, Moon Seok, Christensen, Peer B, Chuang, Wan-Long, Chulanov, Vladimir, Cisneros, Laura, Clausen, Mette R, Cramp, Matthew E, Craxi, Antonio, Croes, Esther A, Dalgard, Olav, Daruich, Jorge R, de Ledinghen, Victor, Dore, Gregory J, El-Sayed, Manal H, Ergör, Gul, Esmat, Gamal, Estes, Chris, Falconer, Karolin, Farag, Elmoubashar, Ferraz, Maria L G, Ferreira, Paulo R, Flisiak, Robert, Frankova, Sona, Gamkrelidze, Ivane, Gane, Ed, García-Samaniego, Javier, Khan, Amir Ghafoor, Gountas, Ilias, Goldis, Adrian, Gottfredsson, Magnús, Grebely, Jason, Gschwantler, Michael, Pessôa, Mário Guimarães, Gunter, Jessie, Hajarizadeh, Behzad, Hajelssedig, Omer, Hamid, Saeed, Hamoudi, Waseem, Hatzakis, Angelos, Himatt, Sayed M, Hofer, Harald, Hrstic, Irena, Hui, Yee-Tak, Hunyady, Bela, Idilman, Ramazan, Jafri, Wasim, Jahis, Rohani, Janjua, Naveed Z, Jarčuška, Peter, Jeruma, Agita, Jonasson, Jón G, Kamel, Yasser, Kao, Jia-Horng, Kaymakoglu, Sabahattin, Kershenobich, David, Khamis, Jawad, Kim, Young S, Kondili, Loreta, Koutoubi, Zaher, Krajden, Mel, Krarup, Henrik, Lai, Moon-sing, Laleman, Wim, Lao, Wai-cheung, Lavanchy, Daniel, Lázaro, Pablo, Leleu, Henri, Lesi, Olufunmilayo, Lesmana, Laurentius A, Li, Michael, Liakina, Valentina, Lim, Young-Suk, Luksic, Boris, Mahomed, Adam, Maimets, Matti, Makara, Mihály, Malu, Abraham O, Marinho, Rui T, Marotta, Paul, Mauss, Stefan, Memon, Muhammad S, Correa, Maria C Mendes, Mendez-Sanchez, Nahum, Merat, Shahin, Metwally, Ammal M, Mohamed, Rosmawati, Moreno, Christophe, Mourad, Fadi H, Müllhaupt, Beat, Murphy, Kimberly, Nde, Helen, Njouom, Richard, Nonkovic, Diana, Norris, Suzanne, Obekpa, Solomon, Oguche, Stephen, Olafsson, Sigurður, Oltman, Marian, Omede, Ogu, Omuemu, Casimir, Opare-Sem, Ohene, Øvrehus, Anne L H, Owusu-Ofori, Shirley, Oyunsuren, Tsendsuren S, Papatheodoridis, George, Pasini, Ken, Peltekian, Kevork M, Phillips, Richard O, Pimenov, Nikolay, Poustchi, Hossein, Prabdial-Sing, Nishi, Qureshi, Huma, Ramji, Alnoor, Razavi-Shearer, Devin, Razavi-Shearer, Kathryn, Redae, Berhane, Reesink, Henk W, Ridruejo, Ezequiel, Robbins, Sarah, Roberts, Lewis R, Roberts, Stuart K, Rosenberg, William M, Roudot-Thoraval, Françoise, Ryder, Stephen D, Safadi, Rifaat, Sagalova, Olga, Salupere, Riina, Sanai, Faisal M, Avila, Juan F Sanchez, Saraswat, Vivek, Sarmento-Castro, Rui, Sarrazin, Christoph, Schmelzer, Jonathan D, Schréter, Ivan, Seguin-Devaux, Carole, Shah, Samir R, Sharara, Ala I, Sharma, Manik, Shevaldin, Anatoly, Shiha, Gamal E, Sievert, William, Sonderup, Mark, Souliotis, Kyriakos, Speiciene, Danute, Sperl, Jan, Stärkel, Peter, Stauber, Rudolf E, Stedman, Catherine, Struck, Daniel, Su, Tung-Hung, Sypsa, Vana, Tan, Soek-Siam, Tanaka, Junko, Thompson, Alexander J, Tolmane, Ieva, Tomasiewicz, Krzysztof, Valantinas, Jonas, Van Damme, Pierre, van der Meer, Adriaan J, van Thiel, Ingo, Van Vlierberghe, Hans, Vince, Adriana, Vogel, Wolfgang, Wedemeyer, Heiner, Weis, Nina, Wong, Vincent WS, Yaghi, Cesar, Yosry, Ayman, Yuen, Man-fung, Yunihastuti, Evy, Yusuf, Aasim, Zuckerman, Eli, and Razavi, Homie
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- 2017
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10. Challenges of implementation of digital literacy through science and maths subjects in the context of new curriculum in Latvia
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Lāce-Jeruma, Līga, Bedi, Innocent Kwame, juhendaja, Tartu Ülikool. Sotsiaalteaduste valdkond, and Tartu Ülikool. Haridusteaduste instituut
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Läti ,digipädevus ,loodusteaduslik haridus ,magistritööd ,haridusuuendus - Abstract
https://www.ester.ee/record=b5512358*est
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- 2022
11. The present and future disease burden of hepatitis C virus infections with todayʼs treatment paradigm – volume 3
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Sibley, A., Han, K. H., Abourached, A., Lesmana, L. A., Makara, M., Jafri, W., Salupere, R., Assiri, A. M., Goldis, A., Abaalkhail, F., Abbas, Z., Abdou, A., Al Braiki, F., Al Hosani, F., Al Jaberi, K., Al Khatry, M., Al Mulla, M. A., Al Quraishi, H., Al Rifai, A., Al Serkal, Y., Alam, A., Alavian, S. M., Alashgar, H. I., Alawadhi, S., Al-Dabal, L., Aldins, P., Alfaleh, F. Z., Alghamdi, A. S., Al-Hakeem, R., Aljumah, A. A., Almessabi, A., Alqutub, A. N., Alswat, K. A., Altraif, I., Alzaabi, M., Andrea, N., Babatin, M. A., Baqir, A., Barakat, M. T., Bergmann, O. M., Bizri, A. R., Blach, S., Chaudhry, A., Choi, M. S., Diab, T., Djauzi, S., El Hassan, E. S., El Khoury, S., Estes, C., Fakhry, S., Farooqi, J. I., Fridjonsdottir, H., Gani, R. A., Ghafoor Khan, A., Gheorghe, L., Gottfredsson, M., Gregorcic, S., Gunter, J., Hajarizadeh, B., Hamid, S., Hasan, I., Hashim, A., Horvath, G., Hunyady, B., Husni, R., Jeruma, A., Jonasson, J. G., Karlsdottir, B., Kim, D. Y., Kim, Y. S., Koutoubi, Z., Liakina, V., Lim, Y. S., Löve, A., Maimets, M., Malekzadeh, R., Matičič, M., Memon, M. S., Merat, S., Mokhbat, J. E., Mourad, F. H., Muljono, D. H., Nawaz, A., Nugrahini, N., Olafsson, S., Priohutomo, S., Qureshi, H., Rassam, P., Razavi, H., Razavi-Shearer, D., Razavi-Shearer, K., Rozentale, B., Sadik, M., Saeed, K., Salamat, A., Sanai, F. M., Sanityoso Sulaiman, A., Sayegh, R. A., Sharara, A. I., Siddiq, M., Siddiqui, A. M., Sigmundsdottir, G., Sigurdardottir, B., Speiciene, D., Sulaiman, A., Sultan, M. A., Taha, M., Tanaka, J., Tarifi, H., Tayyab, G., Tolmane, I., Ud din, M., Umar, M., Valantinas, J., Videčnik-Zorman, J., Yaghi, C., Yunihastuti, E., Yusuf, M. A., Zuberi, B. F., and Schmelzer, J. D.
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- 2015
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12. Historical epidemiology of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in select countries – volume 3
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Liakina, V., Hamid, S., Tanaka, J., Olafsson, S., Sharara, A. I., Alavian, S. M., Gheorghe, L., El Hassan, E. S., Abaalkhail, F., Abbas, Z., Abdou, A., Abourached, A., Al Braiki, F., Al Hosani, F., Al Jaberi, K., Al Khatry, M., Al Mulla, M. A., Al Quraishi, H., Al Rifai, A., Al Serkal, Y., Alam, A., Alashgar, H. I., Alawadhi, S., Al-Dabal, L., Aldins, P., Alfaleh, F. Z., Alghamdi, A. S., Al-Hakeem, R., Aljumah, A. A., Almessabi, A., Alqutub, A. N., Alswat, K. A., Altraif, I., Alzaabi, M., Andrea, N., Assiri, A. M., Babatin, M. A., Baqir, A., Barakat, M. T., Bergmann, O. M., Bizri, A. R., Blach, S., Chaudhry, A., Choi, M. S., Diab, T., Djauzi, S., El Khoury, S., Estes, C., Fakhry, S., Farooqi, J. I., Fridjonsdottir, H., Gani, R. A., Ghafoor Khan, A., Goldis, A., Gottfredsson, M., Gregorcic, S., Hajarizadeh, B., Han, K. H., Hasan, I., Hashim, A., Horvath, G., Hunyady, B., Husni, R., Jafri, W., Jeruma, A., Jonasson, J. G., Karlsdottir, B., Kim, D. Y., Kim, Y. S., Koutoubi, Z., Lesmana, L. A., Lim, Y. S., Löve, A., Maimets, M., Makara, M., Malekzadeh, R., Matičič, M., Memon, M. S., Merat, S., Mokhbat, J. E., Mourad, F. H., Muljono, D. H., Nawaz, A., Nugrahini, N., Priohutomo, S., Qureshi, H., Rassam, P., Razavi, H., Razavi-Shearer, D., Razavi-Shearer, K., Rozentale, B., Sadik, M., Saeed, K., Salamat, A., Salupere, R., Sanai, F. M., Sanityoso Sulaiman, A., Sayegh, R. A., Schmelzer, J. D., Sibley, A., Siddiq, M., Siddiqui, A. M., Sigmundsdottir, G., Sigurdardottir, B., Speiciene, D., Sulaiman, A., Sultan, M. A., Taha, M., Tarifi, H., Tayyab, G., Tolmane, I., Ud din, M., Umar, M., Valantinas, J., Videčnik-Zorman, J., Yaghi, C., Yunihastuti, E., Yusuf, M. A., Zuberi, B. F., and Gunter, J.
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- 2015
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13. Strategies to manage hepatitis C virus infection disease burden – volume 3
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Alfaleh, F. Z., Nugrahini, N., Matičič, M., Tolmane, I., Alzaabi, M., Hajarizadeh, B., Valantinas, J., Kim, D. Y., Hunyady, B., Abaalkhail, F., Abbas, Z., Abdou, A., Abourached, A., Al Braiki, F., Al Hosani, F., Al Jaberi, K., Al Khatry, M., Al Mulla, M. A., Al Quraishi, H., Al Rifai, A., Al Serkal, Y., Alam, A., Alashgar, H. I., Alavian, S. M., Alawadhi, S., Al-Dabal, L., Aldins, P., Alghamdi, A. S., Al-Hakeem, R., Aljumah, A. A., Almessabi, A., Alqutub, A. N., Alswat, K. A., Altraif, I., Andrea, N., Assiri, A. M., Babatin, M. A., Baqir, A., Barakat, M. T., Bergmann, O. M., Bizri, A. R., Chaudhry, A., Choi, M. S., Diab, T., Djauzi, S., El Hassan, E. S., El Khoury, S., Estes, C., Fakhry, S., Farooqi, J. I., Fridjonsdottir, H., Gani, R. A., Ghafoor Khan, A., Gheorghe, L., Goldis, A., Gottfredsson, M., Gregorcic, S., Gunter, J., Hamid, S., Han, K. H., Hasan, I., Hashim, A., Horvath, G., Husni, R., Jafri, W., Jeruma, A., Jonasson, J. G., Karlsdottir, B., Kim, Y. S., Koutoubi, Z., Lesmana, L. A., Liakina, V., Lim, Y. S., Löve, A., Maimets, M., Makara, M., Malekzadeh, R., Memon, M. S., Merat, S., Mokhbat, J. E., Mourad, F. H., Muljono, D. H., Nawaz, A., Olafsson, S., Priohutomo, S., Qureshi, H., Rassam, P., Razavi, H., Razavi-Shearer, D., Razavi-Shearer, K., Rozentale, B., Sadik, M., Saeed, K., Salamat, A., Salupere, R., Sanai, F. M., Sanityoso Sulaiman, A., Sayegh, R. A., Schmelzer, J. D., Sharara, A. I., Sibley, A., Siddiq, M., Siddiqui, A. M., Sigmundsdottir, G., Sigurdardottir, B., Speiciene, D., Sulaiman, A., Sultan, M. A., Taha, M., Tanaka, J., Tarifi, H., Tayyab, G., Ud din, M., Umar, M., Videčnik-Zorman, J., Yaghi, C., Yunihastuti, E., Yusuf, M. A., Zuberi, B. F., and Blach, S.
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- 2015
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14. Verbālās agresijas un konflikta leksikas attēlojums skaidrojošās vārdnīcās
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Jeruma, Darja, Kurpniece, Rozanna, and Latvijas Universitāte. Humanitāro zinātņu fakultāte
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речевое действие ,экспрессивное высказывание ,толковый словарь ,Filoloģija ,изменение значения ,Лексикографическое портретирование - Abstract
Maģistra darbs ir veltīts konflikta un agresijas runas darbības īpatnību atklāšanai dažādu vēsturisko periodu leksikogrāfiskajos avotos. Ar leksikogrāfiskā attēlojuma palīdzību tiks aplūkotas divas vārdu grupas: darbības vārdi, kas raksturo runas darbību (возмутиться, возражать, насмехаться, оскорблять), un darbības vārdi, kas veido dažāda veida izteikumu ekspresivitāti (всыпать, выметаться, намылить, шляться). Par galvenajām pētījuma metodēm tika izvēlētas aprakstošā, salīdzinošā, semantiskā (ar komponenta elementu) un interpretācijas metode, kas ļāva noteikt izmaiņas divās leksisko elementu grupās. Pirmajā nodaļā ir veltīta teorētiskajiem jautājumiem, kas ļauj analizēt izvēlētās vārdu grupas leksikogrāfiskos portretus. Otrajā nodaļā sniegts leksikogrāfiskais portrets, analizējot "klasiskos", mūsdienu un citus leksikogrāfiskos avotus, sniedzot to vispārīgu un atsevišķu raksturojumu, kā arī veicot izvēlēto vārdu visaptverošu analīzi. Maģistra darbs būs interesants vārdnīcu sastādīšanas speciālistiem, filologiem, kas pēta vārda leksisko nozīmi un tās izmaiņu dinamiku laika paradigmā, psihologiem, kas pēta konfliktu un agresijas būtību, kā arī tiem, kurus interesē vārda leksiskās struktūras izmaiņu tendences laika perspektīvā., The master paper is devoted to detection the specific characteristic of the speech action of conflict and aggression in lexicographic sources from different historical periods. Two groups of words will be examined through lexicographic portrayal: verbs describing speech action (возмутиться, возражать, насмехаться, оскорблять) and verbs forming expressiveness of different types of statements (всыпать, выметаться, намылить, шляться). The descriptive, comparative, semantic (with element of component) and interpretation methods were chosen as the main research methods, which allowed to identify certain changes of two groups of lexical elements. The first chapter is devoted to the theoretical issues that enable the analysis of lexicographic portrayals of selected group of words. The second chapter provides a lexicographic portrayal by analysing "classical", contemporary and other lexicographic sources, giving their general and separate characteristics, and conducting a comprehensive analysis of the selected words. The master paper will be of interest to specialists in the compiling of dictionaries, philologists who study the lexical meaning of a word and its dynamics of change in the time paradigm, psychologists who study the nature of conflict and aggression, as well as those interested in the tendency to change the lexical structure of a word in a time perspective.
- Published
- 2021
15. Original Versus Generic Direct Acting Antivirals in Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis C Patients: Real Life Data From Latvia
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Baiba Rozentale, Raimonds Simanis, Agita Jeruma, Seda Arutjunana, Velga Kuse, and Ieva Tolmane
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Infectious Diseases ,Chronic hepatitis ,business.industry ,medicine ,Parasitology ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,DIRECT ACTING ANTIVIRALS ,Microbiology ,Real life data - Abstract
Background: Despite effective treatment available from 2016 in Latvia, there are restrictions - only patients with fibrosis (F, Metavir) stage 3 to 4 have access to reimbursed medicines. Some patients obtain generic drugs from India. Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of original and generic direct acting antiviral medications in Latvian patients. Materials and Methods: This is a retrospective study of 179 chronic virologic hepatitis C patients. Data were obtained from patients’ medical records. Mean age 49.2 years (SD 10.2, range 24-71), 88 female patients (49%), 91 male patients (51%). Genotype 1b was detected in 157 patients (87.7%). Patients were divided into two groups - patients who received original direct acting antivirals ombitasvir, paritaprevir, ritonavir, dasabuvir + ribavirin (n=144, F3-4, Child-Pugh A) and those who received generic medicines from India (n=35, F0-2) sofosbuvir, ledipasvir (n=7) or sofosbuvir, daclatasvir + ribavirin (n=28). Undetectable viral load 12 weeks after cessation of therapy (sustained virologic response 12 or SVR12) was measured in all patients. Therapy course completed 142 patients from original medicines group and all patients from generics group. Results: In the original medicines group - sustained viralogic response was achieved in 142 patients who completed treatment course (100%), while in generic medicines group in 32 patients (91.4%). Conclusion: Study results show high efficacy of both regimens using original and generic medicines - sustained virologic response was achieved in more than 90% of patients, with slight superiority in original medicines group.
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- 2018
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16. Noninvasive Alternatives to Liver Biopsy
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Viksna, Ludmila, primary, Sondore, Valentina, additional, Keiss, Jazeps, additional, Jeruma, Agita, additional, Prieditis, Peteris, additional, Strumfa, Ilze, additional, Sochnevs, Arturs, additional, and Rozentale, Baiba, additional
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- 2011
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17. Hepatitis C virus prevalence and level of intervention required to achieve the WHO targets for elimination in the European Union by 2030: a modelling study
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Wolfgang Vogel, M. Blachier, Lelia Thornton, Wim Laleman, Ieva Tolmane, Antonio Craxì, Mojca Matičič, Hans Van Vlierberghe, Christoph Sarrazin, Laura Harcouet, Joël Mossong, Ilias Gountas, Matthew E. Cramp, Devin Razavi-Shearer, Soo Aleman, Lyudmila Mateva, Ann-Sofi Duberg, Vratislav Nemecek, Jordan Genov, Michael Manns, Anne Øvrehus, Irena Hrstić, Kimberly Murphy, Stefano Vella, Krzysztof Tomasiewicz, Francesco Negro, Nina Weis, Antonio Javier Blasco, Agita Jeruma, Karolin Falconer, Danute Speiciene, Jonas Valantinas, Jose Luis Calleja, Jan Sperl, Gabor Horvath, Filipe Calinas, Peter Jarcuska, Jerneja Videčnik-Zorman, Ivan Schréter, Kathryn Razavi-Shearer, Christophe Moreno, Sergeja Gregorčič, Angelos Hatzakis, Pierre Van Damme, Riina Salupere, Massimo Colombo, Robert J. de Knegt, Peter J Smit, Dijana Nonkovic, Daniela K van Santen, Waldemar Halota, Rui Sarmento-Castro, Jean-Michel Delile, Suzanne Norris, Vana Sypsa, Robert Flisiak, Carole Seguin-Devaux, Martin Lagging, Liana Gheorghe, Mihály Makara, Javier García-Samaniego, Christophe Hézode, Jennifer Kieran, Marian Oltman, Peter Stärkel, Victor de Ledinghen, Pablo Lázaro, Stefan Zeuzem, E. A. Croes, Patrick Hoffmann, Matti Maimets, Francesco Saverio Mennini, Kostas Athanasakis, Chris Estes, Stephen D. Ryder, Sarah Robbins, Françoise Roudot-Thoraval, Martin Kåberg, Kaarlo Simojoki, Sona Frankova, Adrian Goldis, Marietta Simonova, Kyriakos Souliotis, Ken Pasini, Homie Razavi, Rui Tato Marinho, Sarah Blach, Pavol Kristian, Rumiana Mitova, Loreta A. Kondili, Maria Buti, Helen Nde, Boris Lukšić, Henrik Krarup, Dominique Vandijck, Henk W. Reesink, David A. M. C. van de Vijver, Iskren Kotzev, Jessie Gunter, Adriaan J. van der Meer, Martti Färkkilä, Baiba Rozentale, Perttu Arkkila, Krasimir Antonov, Jan Gerstoft, Béla Hunyady, Peer Brehm Christensen, Ivane Gamkrelidze, Valentina Liakina, Michael Gschwantler, Deian Jelev, Tatjana Reic, George V. Papatheodoridis, Jonathan Schmelzer, Daniel Struck, Gastroenterology & Hepatology, Razavi, Homie, Robbins, Sarah, Zeuzem, Stefan, Negro, Francesco, Buti, Maria, Duberg, Ann-Sofi, Roudot-Thoraval, Françoise, Craxi, Antonio, Manns, Michael, Marinho, Rui T, Hunyady, Bela, Colombo, Massimo, Aleman, Soo, Antonov, Krasimir, Arkkila, Perttu, Athanasakis, Kosta, Blach, Sarah, Blachier, Martin, Blasco, Antonio J, Calinas, Filipe, Calleja, Jose L, Christensen, Peer B, Cramp, Matthew E, Croes, Esther, de Knegt, Robert J, de Ledinghen, Victor, Delile, Jean-Michel, Estes, Chri, Falconer, Karolin, Färkkilä, Martti, Flisiak, Robert, Frankova, Sona, Gamkrelidze, Ivane, GarcÃa-Samaniego, Javier, Genov, Jordan, Gerstoft, Jan, Gheorghe, Liana, Goldis, Adrian, Gountas, Ilia, GregorÄ iÄ , Sergeja, Gschwantler, Michael, Gunter, Jessie, Halota, Waldemar, Harcouet, Laura, Hézode, Christophe, Hoffmann, Patrick, Horvath, Gabor, Hrstic, Irena, JarÄ uÅ¡ka, Peter, Jelev, Deian, Jeruma, Agita, KÃ¥berg, Martin, Kieran, Jennifer, Kondili, Loreta A, Kotzev, Iskren, Krarup, Henrik, Kristian, Pavol, Lagging, Martin, Laleman, Wim, Lázaro, Pablo, Liakina, Valentina, LukÅ¡iÄ , Bori, Maimets, Matti, Makara, Mihály, Mateva, Lyudmila, Maticic, Mojca, Mennini, Francesco S, Mitova, Rumiana, Moreno, Christophe, Mossong, Joel, Murphy, Kimberly, Nde, Helen, Nemecek, Vratislav, Nonkovic, Dijana, Norris, Suzanne, Oltman, Marian, à vrehus, Anne L H, Papatheodoridis, George, Pasini, Ken, Razavi-Shearer, Devin, Razavi-Shearer, Kathryn, Reesink, Henk W, Reic, Tatjana, Rozentale, Baiba, Ryder, Stephen D, Salupere, Riina, Sarmento-Castro, Rui, Sarrazin, Christoph, Schmelzer, Jonathan D, Schréter, Ivan, Seguin-Devaux, Carole, Simojoki, Kaarlo, Simonova, Marietta, Smit, Peter J, Souliotis, Kyriako, Speiciene, Danute, Sperl, Jan, Stärkel, Peter, Struck, Daniel, Sypsa, Vana, Thornton, Lelia, Tolmane, Ieva, Tomasiewicz, Krzysztof, Valantinas, Jona, Van Damme, Pierre, van de Vijver, David, van der Meer, Adriaan J, van Santen, Daniela, Van Vlierberghe, Han, Vandijck, Dominique, Vella, Stefano, VideÄ nik-Zorman, Jerneja, Vogel, Wolfgang, Weis, Nina, Hatzakis, Angelos, European Union HCV Collaborators, and Faculteit Medische Wetenschappen/UMCG
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Pediatrics ,ddc:616.07 ,medicine.disease_cause ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cost of Illness ,Epidemiology ,Prevalence ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Settore SECS-P/01 - Economia Politica ,CIRRHOSIS ,media_common ,ddc:616 ,Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use ,education.field_of_study ,INJECT DRUGS ,Gastroenterology ,HCV INFECTION ,virus diseases ,Hepatitis C ,Emigration and Immigration ,DISEASE BURDEN ,Markov Chains ,Emigration and Immigration/statistics & numerical data ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Viral hepatitis ,Modelling ,Eradication ,European Union ,prevalence ,COUNTRIES ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatitis C virus ,Population ,UNITED-STATES ,World Health Organization ,Antiviral Agents ,03 medical and health sciences ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,PEOPLE ,Internal medicine ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Journal Article ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Humans ,Viremia ,European union ,Disease Eradication ,education ,Hepatitis C/diagnosis/drug therapy/epidemiology/prevention & control ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Viremia/diagnosis/drug therapy/epidemiology/prevention & control ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,PREVENTION ,digestive system diseases ,Human medicine ,VIRAL-HEPATITIS ,business - Abstract
Background Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a leading cause of liver-related morbidity and mortality worldwide. In the European Union (EU), treatment and cure of HCV with direct-acting antiviral therapies began in 2014. WHO targets are to achieve a 65% reduction in liver-related deaths, a 90% reduction of new viral hepatitis infections, and 90% of patients with viral hepatitis infections being diagnosed by 2030. This study assessed the prevalence of HCV in the EU and the level of intervention required to achieve WHO targets for HCV elimination. Methods We populated country Markov models for the 28 EU countries through a literature search of PubMed and Embase between Jan 1, 2000, and March 31, 2016, and a Delphi process to gain expert consensus and validate inputs. We aggregated country models to create a regional EU model. We used the EU model to forecast HCV disease progression (considering the effect of immigration) and developed a strategy to acehive WHO targets. We used weighted average sustained viral response rates and fibrosis restrictions to model the effect of current therapeutic guidelines. We used the EU model to forecast HCV disease progression (considering the effect of immigration) under current screening and therapeutic guidelines. Additionally, we back-calculated the total number of patients needing to be screened and treated to achieve WHO targets. Findings We estimated the number of viraemic HCV infections in 2015 to be 3â238â000 (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 2â106â000â3â795â000) of a total population of 509â868â000 in the EU, equating to a prevalence of viraemic HCV of 0·64% (95% UI 0·41â0·74). We estimated that 1â180â000 (95% UI 1â003â000â1â357â000) people were diagnosed with viraemia (36·4%), 150â000 (12â000â180â000) were treated (4·6% of the total infected population or 12·7% of the diagnosed population), 133â000 (106â000â160â000) were cured (4·1%), and 57â900 (43â900â67â300) were newly infected (1·8%) in 2015. Additionally, 30â400 (26â600â42â500) HCV-positive immigrants entered the EU. To achieve WHO targets, unrestricted treatment needs to increase from 150â000 patients in 2015 to 187â000 patients in 2025 and diagnosis needs to increase from 88â800 new cases annually in 2015 to 180â000 in 2025. Interpretation Given its advanced health-care infrastructure, the EU is uniquely poised to eliminate HCV; however, expansion of screening programmes is essential to increase treatment to achieve the WHO targets. A united effort, grounded in sound epidemiological evidence, will also be necessary. Funding Gilead Sciences.
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- 2017
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18. The Improvement of Eco-school Students’ Environmental Awareness in the Context of Education for Sustainable Development
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Liga Lace-Jeruma and Rita Birzina
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business.industry ,Context (language use) ,Sociology ,Education for sustainable development ,Public relations ,business - Published
- 2019
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19. Pedagogu motivācijas veicināšana Ekoskolu programmā
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Lāce-Jeruma, Līga, Kalniņa, Daiga, and Latvijas Universitāte. Pedagoģijas, psiholoģijas un mākslas fakultāte
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Ekoskola ,Motivēšana ,Ekoskolas programma ,Pedagogu motivācija ,Izglītības vadība ,Metodiskais materiāls - Abstract
Pedagogu motivācijas veicināšana Ekoskolu programmā. Lāce – Jeruma L., darba vadītājs doc., dr. paed. Daiga Kalniņa. Maģistra darbs, 60 lappuses, 15 attēli, 10 tabulas, 32 literatūras avoti, 11 pielikumi. Latviešu valodā. Darba mērķis ir apzināt motivācijas būtību un izpētīt skolotāju motivācijas iesaistīties Ekoskolas programmā veicināšanas labās prakses piemērus, izstrādāt metodisko materiālu Ekoskolu vadītājiem skolotāju iesaistes Ekoskolu programmā veicināšanai. Veikta teorētiskās literatūras analīze par motivāciju, Ekoskolu rokasgrāmatu kontentanalīze. Autore ir anketējusi Latvijas Ekoskolu pedagogus par to motivējošajiem faktoriem iesaistīties Ekoskolu programmā. Apkopojot visas pētījumā gūtās atziņas, autore ir izveidojusi metodisko materiālu Ekoskolu vadītājiem., Promotion of teacher’s motivation in the Ecoschool program. Lāce – Jeruma L., supervisor doc., dr. paed. Daiga Kalniņa. Master thesis, 60 pages, 15 figures, 10 tables, 32 literature references, 11 attachments. In Latvian. The aim of the thesis is to identify the nature of motivation and to explore the motivation of teachers to engage in good practices in promoting the Eco-School Programme, to develop a methodological material for Eco-School leaders to promote teacher’s involvement in the Eco-School programme. An analysis of theoretical literature on motivation was carried out, an Eco-School programme manuals content analysis was carried out. Author has carried out survey on Latvian Eco-School’s teachers about motivational factors to participate in Eco-School programme. Summarizing all the conclusions of the study, author has created a methodological material for the Eco-School’s leaders.
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- 2019
20. Direct-acting antivirals ombitasvir/paritaprevir/rotonavir+dasabuvir with or without ribavirin in hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1-infected treatment-naive or treatment-experienced patients with or without cirrhosis: real-life experience in Lithuania and Latvia
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Katazyna Polubenko, Arvydas Ambrozaitis, Edita Kazenaite, Daiva Radzisauskiene, Evelina Mockiene, Jolita Jakutiene, Ieva Tolmane, Ligita Jancoriene, Agita Jeruma, and Arida Buivydiene
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Dasabuvir ,Cirrhosis ,Hepatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Ribavirin ,medicine.disease ,Ombitasvir ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Regimen ,0302 clinical medicine ,Infectious Diseases ,chemistry ,Paritaprevir ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Ritonavir ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Chronic hepatitis C ,genotype-1HCV ,ombitasvir ,paritaprevir ,dasabuvir ,cirrhosis ,liver transplant ,3D therapy ,Liver function tests ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: The current international multicentre open-label, uncontrolled, real-world retrospective study aimed at evaluating the effectiveness and safety of ombitasvir / paritaprevir / ritonavir + dasabuvir ± ribavirin (3D therapy) in treatment-naive and treatment-experienced hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1-infected (GT1) patients. Methods: Adult patients with chronic HCV GT1 infection, scheduled for 3D therapy according to therapeutic guidelines, were eligible. Demographic and clinical data were collected retrospectively by reviewing individuals health records. The primary effectiveness endpoint was the sustained virological response at 12 weeks following the end of treatment (SVR12). Results: The participants in the current study consisted of 134 patients with HCV GT1 infection, including 10 liver transplant recipients. SVR12 was achieved in 120 (96.8%) non-transplant and all liver transplant patients (100%). Significant improvement in liver function tests were observed. Among 4 treatment failures, 2 patients were non-responders and 2 patients relapsed. OBV/PTV/r + DSV ± RBV regimen was well tolerated in most patients with treatment discontinuation due to adverse events in 3 patients. The most frequent adverse events were asthenia (25.8%), fatigue (16.1%), skin pruritus (12.9%), and dyspepsia (11.3%). Conclusions: The current real-life study demonstrated the effectiveness and safety of OBV/PTV/r + DSV ± RBV in patients with HCV GT1, including patients with cirrhosis, a liver transplant recipient and the one who failed previous antiviral therapies.
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- 2018
21. Ekoskolas gada tēmas 'Atkritumi' integrēšana bioloģijas stundās
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Lāce-Jeruma, Līga, Birziņa, Rita, and Latvijas Universitāte. Ķīmijas fakultāte
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Ekoskola ,izglītība ilgtspējīgai attīstībai ,Pedagoģija ,Vides apziņa ,ilgtspējīgas attīstības pamatkompetences ,atkritumi - Abstract
Darba mērķis ir noskaidrot, kā tiek attīstīta skolēnu vides apziņa (zināšanas, attieksmes un izturēšanās), pamatojoties uz izglītības ilgtspējīgai attīstībai (IIA) pamatprincipiem. Apkopojot visas pētījumā gūtās atziņas, autore secina, ka Ekoskolas var būt veiksmīgas vides apziņas veicinātājas, ja skolotāji iesaistās vides problēmu integrācijā mācību saturā caur IIA pamatprincipiem un pamatkompetencēm., The aim of the thesis is to find out how the environmental awareness (knowledge, attitude and behavior) of pupils is developed, based on basic principles of Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). Summarizing all the findings of the study, the author concludes that Eco-Schools can be successful promoters of environmental awareness, if teachers engage in integration of environment problems into the content of the study through the basic principles and key competences of the ESD.
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- 2018
22. Original Versus Generic Direct Acting Antivirals in Treatment of Chronic Hepatitis C Patients: Real Life Data From Latvia
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Tolmane, Ieva, primary, Rozentale, Baiba, additional, Arutjunana, Seda, additional, Jeruma, Agita, additional, Kuse, Velga, additional, and Simanis, Raimonds, additional
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- 2018
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23. Global prevalence and genotype distribution of hepatitis C virus infection in 2015: A modelling study
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Blach, S. Zeuzem, S. Manns, M. Altraif, I. Duberg, A.-S. Muljono, D.H. Waked, I. Alavian, S.M. Lee, M.-H. Negro, F. Abaalkhail, F. Abdou, A. Abdulla, M. Abou Rached, A. Aho, I. Akarca, U. Al Ghazzawi, I. Al Kaabi, S. Al Lawati, F. Al Namaani, K. Al Serkal, Y. Al-Busafi, S.A. Al-Dabal, L. Aleman, S. Alghamdi, A.S. Aljumah, A.A. Al-Romaihi, H.E. Andersson, M.I. Arendt, V. Arkkila, P. Assiri, A.M. Baatarkhuu, O. Bane, A. Ben-Ari, Z. Bergin, C. Bessone, F. Bihl, F. Bizri, A.R. Blachier, M. Blasco, A.J. Brandao Mello, C.E. Bruggmann, P. Brunton, C.R. Calinas, F. Chan, H.L.Y. Chaudhry, A. Cheinquer, H. Chen, C.-J. Chien, R.-N. Choi, M.S. Christensen, P.B. Chuang, W.-L. Chulanov, V. Cisneros, L. Clausen, M.R. Cramp, M.E. Craxi, A. Croes, E.A. Dalgard, O. Daruich, J.R. De Ledinghen, V. Dore, G.J. El-Sayed, M.H. Ergor, G. Esmat, G. Estes, C. Falconer, K. Farag, E. Ferraz, M.L.G. Ferreira, P.R. Flisiak, R. Frankova, S. Gamkrelidze, I. Gane, E. Garcia-Samaniego, J. Khan, A.G. Gountas, I. Goldis, A. Gottfredsson, M. Grebely, J. Gschwantler, M. Guimaraes Pessoa, M. Gunter, J. Hajarizadeh, B. Hajelssedig, O. Hamid, S. Hamoudi, W. Hatzakis, A. Himatt, S.M. Hofer, H. Hrstic, I. Hui, Y.-T. Hunyady, B. Idilman, R. Jafri, W. Jahis, R. Janjua, N.Z. Jarčuška, P. Jeruma, A. Jonasson, J.G. Kamel, Y. Kao, J.-H. Kaymakoglu, S. Kershenobich, D. Khamis, J. Kim, Y.S. Kondili, L. Koutoubi, Z. Krajden, M. Krarup, H. Lai, M.-S. Laleman, W. Lao, W.-C. Lavanchy, D. Lazaro, P. Leleu, H. Lesi, O. Lesmana, L.A. Li, M. Liakina, V. Lim, Y.-S. Luksic, B. Mahomed, A. Maimets, M. Makara, M. Malu, A.O. Marinho, R.T. Marotta, P. Mauss, S. Memon, M.S. Mendes Correa, M.C. Mendez-Sanchez, N. Merat, S. Metwally, A.M. Mohamed, R. Moreno, C. Mourad, F.H. Mullhaupt, B. Murphy, K. Nde, H. Njouom, R. Nonkovic, D. Norris, S. Obekpa, S. Oguche, S. Olafsson, S. Oltman, M. Omede, O. Omuemu, C. Opare-Sem, O. Ovrehus, A.L.H. Owusu-Ofori, S. Oyunsuren, T.S. Papatheodoridis, G. Pasini, K. Peltekian, K.M. Phillips, R.O. Pimenov, N. Poustchi, H. Prabdial-Sing, N. Qureshi, H. Ramji, A. Razavi-Shearer, D. Razavi-Shearer, K. Redae, B. Reesink, H.W. Ridruejo, E. Robbins, S. Roberts, L.R. Roberts, S.K. Rosenberg, W.M. Roudot-Thoraval, F. Ryder, S.D. Safadi, R. Sagalova, O. Salupere, R. Sanai, F.M. Sanchez Avila, J.F. Saraswat, V. Sarmento-Castro, R. Sarrazin, C. Schmelzer, J.D. Schreter, I. Seguin-Devaux, C. Shah, S.R. Sharara, A.I. Sharma, M. Shevaldin, A. Shiha, G.E. Sievert, W. Sonderup, M. Souliotis, K. Speiciene, D. Sperl, J. Starkel, P. Stauber, R.E. Stedman, C. Struck, D. Su, T.-H. Sypsa, V. Tan, S.-S. Tanaka, J. Thompson, A.J. Tolmane, I. Tomasiewicz, K. Valantinas, J. Van Damme, P. Van Der Meer, A.J. Van Thiel, I. Van Vlierberghe, H. Vince, A. Vogel, W. Wedemeyer, H. Weis, N. Wong, V.W.S. Yaghi, C. Yosry, A. Yuen, M.-F. Yunihastuti, E. Yusuf, A. Zuckerman, E. Razavi, H. The Polaris Observatory HCV Collaborators
- Abstract
Background The 69th World Health Assembly approved the Global Health Sector Strategy to eliminate hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection by 2030, which can become a reality with the recent launch of direct acting antiviral therapies. Reliable disease burden estimates are required for national strategies. This analysis estimates the global prevalence of viraemic HCV at the end of 2015, an update of—and expansion on—the 2014 analysis, which reported 80 million (95% CI 64–103) viraemic infections in 2013. Methods We developed country-level disease burden models following a systematic review of HCV prevalence (number of studies, n=6754) and genotype (n=11 342) studies published after 2013. A Delphi process was used to gain country expert consensus and validate inputs. Published estimates alone were used for countries where expert panel meetings could not be scheduled. Global prevalence was estimated using regional averages for countries without data. Findings Models were built for 100 countries, 59 of which were approved by country experts, with the remaining 41 estimated using published data alone. The remaining countries had insufficient data to create a model. The global prevalence of viraemic HCV is estimated to be 1·0% (95% uncertainty interval 0·8–1·1) in 2015, corresponding to 71·1 million (62·5–79·4) viraemic infections. Genotypes 1 and 3 were the most common cause of infections (44% and 25%, respectively). Interpretation The global estimate of viraemic infections is lower than previous estimates, largely due to more recent (lower) prevalence estimates in Africa. Additionally, increased mortality due to liver-related causes and an ageing population may have contributed to a reduction in infections. Funding John C Martin Foundation. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
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- 2017
24. Hepatitis C virus prevalence and level of intervention required to achieve the WHO targets for elimination in the European Union by 2030: a modelling study
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Razavi, H. Robbins, S. Zeuzem, S. Negro, F. Buti, M. Duberg, A. Roudot-Thoraval, F. Craxi, A. Manns, M. Marinho, R.T. Hunyady, B. Colombo, M. Aleman, S. Antonov, K. Arkkila, P. Athanasakis, K. Blach, S. Blachier, M. Blasco, A.J. Calinas, F. Calleja, J.L. Christensen, P.B. Cramp, M.E. Croes, E. de Knegt, R.J. de Ledinghen, V. Delile, J.-M. Estes, C. Falconer, K. Färkkilä, M. Flisiak, R. Frankova, S. Gamkrelidze, I. García-Samaniego, J. Genov, J. Gerstoft, J. Gheorghe, L. Goldis, A. Gountas, I. Gregorčič, S. Gschwantler, M. Gunter, J. Halota, W. Harcouet, L. Hézode, C. Hoffmann, P. Horvath, G. Hrstic, I. Jarčuška, P. Jelev, D. Jeruma, A. Kåberg, M. Kieran, J. Kondili, L.A. Kotzev, I. Krarup, H. Kristian, P. Lagging, M. Laleman, W. Lázaro, P. Liakina, V. Lukšić, B. Maimets, M. Makara, M. Mateva, L. Maticic, M. Mennini, F.S. Mitova, R. Moreno, C. Mossong, J. Murphy, K. Nde, H. Nemecek, V. Nonkovic, D. Norris, S. Oltman, M. Øvrehus, A.L.H. Papatheodoridis, G. Pasini, K. Razavi-Shearer, D. Razavi-Shearer, K. Reesink, H.W. Reic, T. Rozentale, B. Ryder, S.D. Salupere, R. Sarmento-Castro, R. Sarrazin, C. Schmelzer, J.D. Schréter, I. Seguin-Devaux, C. Simojoki, K. Simonova, M. Smit, P.J. Souliotis, K. Speiciene, D. Sperl, J. Stärkel, P. Struck, D. Sypsa, V. Thornton, L. Tolmane, I. Tomasiewicz, K. Valantinas, J. Van Damme, P. van de Vijver, D. van der Meer, A.J. van Santen, D. Van Vlierberghe, H. Vandijck, D. Vella, S. Videčnik-Zorman, J. Vogel, W. Weis, N. Hatzakis, A. The European Union HCV Collaborators
- Abstract
Background Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a leading cause of liver-related morbidity and mortality worldwide. In the European Union (EU), treatment and cure of HCV with direct-acting antiviral therapies began in 2014. WHO targets are to achieve a 65% reduction in liver-related deaths, a 90% reduction of new viral hepatitis infections, and 90% of patients with viral hepatitis infections being diagnosed by 2030. This study assessed the prevalence of HCV in the EU and the level of intervention required to achieve WHO targets for HCV elimination. Methods We populated country Markov models for the 28 EU countries through a literature search of PubMed and Embase between Jan 1, 2000, and March 31, 2016, and a Delphi process to gain expert consensus and validate inputs. We aggregated country models to create a regional EU model. We used the EU model to forecast HCV disease progression (considering the effect of immigration) and developed a strategy to acehive WHO targets. We used weighted average sustained viral response rates and fibrosis restrictions to model the effect of current therapeutic guidelines. We used the EU model to forecast HCV disease progression (considering the effect of immigration) under current screening and therapeutic guidelines. Additionally, we back-calculated the total number of patients needing to be screened and treated to achieve WHO targets. Findings We estimated the number of viraemic HCV infections in 2015 to be 3 238 000 (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 2 106 000–3 795 000) of a total population of 509 868 000 in the EU, equating to a prevalence of viraemic HCV of 0·64% (95% UI 0·41–0·74). We estimated that 1 180 000 (95% UI 1 003 000–1 357 000) people were diagnosed with viraemia (36·4%), 150 000 (12 000–180 000) were treated (4·6% of the total infected population or 12·7% of the diagnosed population), 133 000 (106 000–160 000) were cured (4·1%), and 57 900 (43 900–67 300) were newly infected (1·8%) in 2015. Additionally, 30 400 (26 600–42 500) HCV-positive immigrants entered the EU. To achieve WHO targets, unrestricted treatment needs to increase from 150 000 patients in 2015 to 187 000 patients in 2025 and diagnosis needs to increase from 88 800 new cases annually in 2015 to 180 000 in 2025. Interpretation Given its advanced health-care infrastructure, the EU is uniquely poised to eliminate HCV; however, expansion of screening programmes is essential to increase treatment to achieve the WHO targets. A united effort, grounded in sound epidemiological evidence, will also be necessary. Funding Gilead Sciences. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
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- 2017
25. Direct-Acting Antivirals Ombitasvir / Paritaprevir / Ritonavir + Dasabuvir with or Without Ribavirin in Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Genotype 1-Infected Treatment-Naive or Treatment-Experienced Patients with or Without Cirrhosis: Real-Life Experience in Lithuania and Latvia
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Jancoriene, Ligita, primary, Polubenko, Katazyna, additional, Kazenaite, Edita, additional, Buivydiene, Arida, additional, Jakutiene, Jolita, additional, Tolmane, Ieva, additional, Jeruma, Agita, additional, Radzisauskiene, Daiva, additional, Mockiene, Evelina, additional, and Ambrozaitis, Arvydas, additional
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- 2018
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26. Historical epidemiology of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in select countries – volume 3
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V. Liakina, S. Hamid, J. Tanaka, S. Olafsson, A. I. Sharara, S. M. Alavian, L. Gheorghe, E. S. El Hassan, F. Abaalkhail, Z. Abbas, A. Abdou, A. Abourached, F. Al Braiki, F. Al Hosani, K. Al Jaberi, M. Al Khatry, M. A. Al Mulla, H. Al Quraishi, A. Al Rifai, Y. Al Serkal, A. Alam, H. I. Alashgar, S. Alawadhi, L. Al-Dabal, P. Aldins, F. Z. Alfaleh, A. S. Alghamdi, R. Al-Hakeem, A. A. Aljumah, A. Almessabi, A. N. Alqutub, K. A. Alswat, I. Altraif, M. Alzaabi, N. Andrea, A. M. Assiri, M. A. Babatin, A. Baqir, M. T. Barakat, O. M. Bergmann, A. R. Bizri, S. Blach, A. Chaudhry, M. S. Choi, T. Diab, S. Djauzi, S. El Khoury, C. Estes, S. Fakhry, J. I. Farooqi, H. Fridjonsdottir, R. A. Gani, A. Ghafoor Khan, A. Goldis, M. Gottfredsson, S. Gregorcic, B. Hajarizadeh, K. H. Han, I. Hasan, A. Hashim, G. Horvath, B. Hunyady, R. Husni, W. Jafri, A. Jeruma, J.G. Jonasson, B. Karlsdottir, D. Y. Kim, Y. S. Kim, Z. Koutoubi, L. A. Lesmana, Y. S. Lim, A. Löve, M. Maimets, M. Makara, R. Malekzadeh, M. Matičič, M. S. Memon, S. Merat, J. E. Mokhbat, F. H. Mourad, D. H. Muljono, A. Nawaz, N. Nugrahini, S. Priohutomo, H. Qureshi, P. Rassam, H. Razavi, D. Razavi-Shearer, K. Razavi-Shearer, B. Rozentale, M. Sadik, K. Saeed, A. Salamat, R. Salupere, F. M. Sanai, A. Sanityoso Sulaiman, R. A. Sayegh, J. D. Schmelzer, A. Sibley, M. Siddiq, A. M. Siddiqui, G. Sigmundsdottir, B. Sigurdardottir, D. Speiciene, A. Sulaiman, M. A. Sultan, M. Taha, H. Tarifi, G. Tayyab, I. Tolmane, M. Ud din, M. Umar, J. Valantinas, J. Videčnik-Zorman, C. Yaghi, E. Yunihastuti, M. A. Yusuf, B. F. Zuberi, and J. Gunter
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Genotype ,Population ,Hepacivirus ,Global Health ,Antiviral Agents ,Young Adult ,Virology ,Environmental health ,Epidemiology ,Prevalence ,Global health ,Humans ,Medicine ,Infection control ,Child ,education ,Disease burden ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Public health ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Hepatitis C ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Liver Transplantation ,Infectious Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Immunology ,Female ,business ,Viral hepatitis - Abstract
Detailed, country‐specific epidemiological data are needed to characterize the burden of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection around the world. With new treatment options available, policy makers and public health officials must reconsider national strategies for infection control. In this study of 15 countries, published and unpublished data on HCV prevalence, viraemia, genotype, age and gender distribution, liver transplants and diagnosis and treatment rates were gathered from the literature and validated by expert consensus in each country. Viraemic prevalence in this study ranged from 0.2% in Iran and Lebanon to 4.2% in Pakistan. The largest viraemic populations were in Pakistan (7001000 cases) and Indonesia (3187000 cases). Injection drug use (IDU) and a historically unsafe blood supply were major risk factors in most countries. Diagnosis, treatment and liver transplant rates varied widely between countries. However, comparison across countries was difficult as the number of cases changes over time. Access to reliable data on measures such as these is critical for the development of future strategies to manage the disease burden.
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- 2015
27. Strategies to manage hepatitis C virus infection disease burden - volume 3
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M. T. Barakat, N. Nugrahini, Andri Sanityoso Sulaiman, S. El Khoury, Béla Hunyady, Y. Al Serkal, Liana Gheorghe, E. S. El Hassan, K. Saeed, M. Siddiq, H. Tarifi, A. Abdou, Homie Razavi, Fadi H. Mourad, Abdul Rahman Bizri, Do Young Kim, Matti Maimets, Devin Razavi-Shearer, S. Gregorcic, Ibrahim Altraif, Chris Estes, A. Salamat, Hamad I. Al-Ashgar, Riina Salupere, Sarah Blach, R. Husni, A. Sibley, F. Al Hosani, P. Aldins, S. Alawadhi, A. Baqir, S. Priohutomo, Mihály Makara, A. Abourached, A. Löve, Ieva Tolmane, Saeed Hamid, B. Karlsdottir, Adrian Goldis, Abdulrahman Aljumah, Samsuridjal Djauzi, Almoutaz Hashim, Laurentius A. Lesmana, Khalid Alswat, Jon G. Jonasson, Danute Speiciene, Young-Suk Lim, Arif Nawaz, M. Taha, R. Al-Hakeem, Abdullah S. Alghamdi, Rino Alvani Gani, Young Seok Kim, Abdullah M. Assiri, J. Videčnik-Zorman, A. Al Rifai, A. Sanityoso Sulaiman, Muhammad S. Memon, H. Fridjonsdottir, M. A. Al Mulla, Faisal M. Sanai, Faisal Abaalkhail, L. Al-Dabal, R. A. Sayegh, A. M. Siddiqui, Gabor Horvath, Moon Suk Choi, Cesar Yaghi, M. Sadik, Irsan Hasan, A. Almessabi, S. Fakhry, Zaigham Abbas, Ala I. Sharara, Evy Yunihastuti, Jacques E Mokhbat, David H. Muljono, Jonas Valantinas, Asad Chaudhry, K. Al Jaberi, H. Al Quraishi, B. Sigurdardottir, Altaf Alam, Mohamed A. Babatin, N. Andrea, F. Al Braiki, Kathryn Razavi-Shearer, Reza Malekzadeh, H. Qureshi, G. Sigmundsdottir, Marwa Sultan, Jonathan Schmelzer, Javed Iqbal Farooqi, Mojca Matičič, Junko Tanaka, S. Olafsson, Behzad Hajarizadeh, Shahin Merat, M. Alzaabi, Valentina Liakina, Adel Alqutub, Seyed M Alavian, G. Tayyab, M. Al Khatry, T. Diab, M. Ud Din, Jessie Gunter, Kwang Hyub Han, Faleh Z. Al-Faleh, Bader Faiyaz Zuberi, Wasim Jafri, P. Rassam, Magnus Gottfredsson, Baiba Rozentale, Agita Jeruma, A. Ghafoor Khan, M. Umar, Ottar M. Bergmann, Z. Koutoubi, and M. A. Yusuf
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cure rate ,Pediatrics ,Asia ,Adolescent ,Hepatitis C virus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antiviral Agents ,Infection disease ,Middle East ,Young Adult ,Virology ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Child ,Disease burden ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Harm reduction ,Models, Statistical ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Diagnostic Tests, Routine ,Incidence ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,Treatment efficacy ,Drug Utilization ,Surgery ,Liver Transplantation ,Europe ,Infectious Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Communicable Disease Control ,Female ,Birth cohort ,business - Abstract
The hepatitis C virus (HCV) epidemic was forecasted through 2030 for 15 countries in Europe, the Middle East and Asia, and the relative impact of two scenarios was considered: increased treatment efficacy while holding the annual number of treated patients constant and increased treatment efficacy and an increased annual number of treated patients. Increasing levels of diagnosis and treatment, in combination with improved treatment efficacy, were critical for achieving substantial reductions in disease burden. A 90% reduction in total HCV infections within 15 years is feasible in most countries studied, but it required a coordinated effort to introduce harm reduction programmes to reduce new infections, screening to identify those already infected and treatment with high cure rate therapies. This suggests that increased capacity for screening and treatment will be critical in many countries. Birth cohort screening is a helpful tool for maximizing resources. Among European countries, the majority of patients were born between 1940 and 1985. A wider range of birth cohorts was seen in the Middle East and Asia (between 1925 and 1995).
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- 2015
28. The present and future disease burden of hepatitis C virus infections with today's treatment paradigm - volume 3
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A. Sibley, K. H. Han, A. Abourached, L. A. Lesmana, M. Makara, W. Jafri, R. Salupere, A. M. Assiri, A. Goldis, F. Abaalkhail, Z. Abbas, A. Abdou, F. Al Braiki, F. Al Hosani, K. Al Jaberi, M. Al Khatry, M. A. Al Mulla, H. Al Quraishi, A. Al Rifai, Y. Al Serkal, A. Alam, S. M. Alavian, H. I. Alashgar, S. Alawadhi, L. Al-Dabal, P. Aldins, F. Z. Alfaleh, A. S. Alghamdi, R. Al-Hakeem, A. A. Aljumah, A. Almessabi, A. N. Alqutub, K. A. Alswat, I. Altraif, M. Alzaabi, N. Andrea, M. A. Babatin, A. Baqir, M. T. Barakat, O. M. Bergmann, A. R. Bizri, S. Blach, A. Chaudhry, M. S. Choi, T. Diab, S. Djauzi, E. S. El Hassan, S. El Khoury, C. Estes, S. Fakhry, J. I. Farooqi, H. Fridjonsdottir, R. A. Gani, A. Ghafoor Khan, L. Gheorghe, M. Gottfredsson, S. Gregorcic, J. Gunter, B. Hajarizadeh, S. Hamid, I. Hasan, A. Hashim, G. Horvath, B. Hunyady, R. Husni, A. Jeruma, J. G. Jonasson, B. Karlsdottir, D. Y. Kim, Y. S. Kim, Z. Koutoubi, V. Liakina, Y. S. Lim, A. Löve, M. Maimets, R. Malekzadeh, M. Matičič, M. S. Memon, S. Merat, J. E. Mokhbat, F. H. Mourad, D. H. Muljono, A. Nawaz, N. Nugrahini, S. Olafsson, S. Priohutomo, H. Qureshi, P. Rassam, H. Razavi, D. Razavi-Shearer, K. Razavi-Shearer, B. Rozentale, M. Sadik, K. Saeed, A. Salamat, F. M. Sanai, A. Sanityoso Sulaiman, R. A. Sayegh, A. I. Sharara, M. Siddiq, A. M. Siddiqui, G. Sigmundsdottir, B. Sigurdardottir, D. Speiciene, A. Sulaiman, M. A. Sultan, M. Taha, J. Tanaka, H. Tarifi, G. Tayyab, I. Tolmane, M. Ud din, M. Umar, J. Valantinas, J. Videčnik-Zorman, C. Yaghi, E. Yunihastuti, M. A. Yusuf, B. F. Zuberi, and J. D. Schmelzer
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Models, Statistical ,Hepatology ,Adolescent ,Incidence ,Hepacivirus ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,Global Health ,Survival Analysis ,Young Adult ,Infectious Diseases ,Cost of Illness ,Virology ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Female ,Viremia ,Aged - Abstract
The total number, morbidity and mortality attributed to viraemic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections change over time making it difficult to compare reported estimates from different years. Models were developed for 15 countries to quantify and characterize the viraemic population and forecast the changes in the infected population and the corresponding disease burden from 2014 to 2030. With the exception of Iceland, Iran, Latvia and Pakistan, the total number of viraemic HCV infections is expected to decline from 2014 to 2030, but the associated morbidity and mortality are expected to increase in all countries except for Japan and South Korea. In the latter two countries, mortality due to an ageing population will drive down prevalence, morbidity and mortality. On the other hand, both countries have already experienced a rapid increase in HCV‐related mortality and morbidity. HCV‐related morbidity and mortality are projected to increase between 2014 and 2030 in all other countries as result of an ageing HCV‐infected population. Thus, although the total number of HCV countries is expected to decline in most countries studied, the associated disease burden is expected to increase. The current treatment paradigm is inadequate if large reductions in HCV‐related morbidity and mortality are to be achieved.
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- 2015
29. Global prevalence and genotype distribution of hepatitis C virus infection in 2015: A modelling study.
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Farag E., De Ledinghen V., Dore G.J., Papatheodoridis G., Pasini K., Peltekian K.M., Phillips R.O., Pimenov N., Poustchi H., Prabdial-Sing N., Qureshi H., Ramji A., Razavi-Shearer D., Razavi-Shearer K., Redae B., Reesink H.W., Ridruejo E., Robbins S., Roberts L.R., Roberts S.K., Rosenberg W.M., Roudot-Thoraval F., Ryder S.D., Safadi R., Sagalova O., Salupere R., Sanai F.M., Sanchez Avila J.F., Saraswat V., Sarmento-Castro R., Sarrazin C., Schmelzer J.D., Schreter I., Seguin-Devaux C., Shah S.R., Sharara A.I., Sharma M., Shevaldin A., Shiha G.E., Sonderup M., Souliotis K., Speiciene D., Sperl J., Starkel P., Stauber R.E., Stedman C., Struck D., Su T.-H., Sypsa V., Tan S.-S., Tanaka J., Thompson A.J., Tolmane I., Tomasiewicz K., Valantinas J., Van Damme P., Van Der Meer A.J., Van Thiel I., Van Vlierberghe H., Vince A., Vogel W., Wedemeyer H., Weis N., Wong V.W.S., Yaghi C., Yosry A., Yuen M.-F., Yunihastuti E., Yusuf A., Zuckerman E., Razavi H., Sievert W., Blach S., Zeuzem S., Manns M., Altraif I., Duberg A.-S., Muljono D.H., Waked I., Alavian S.M., Lee M.-H., Negro F., Abaalkhail F., Abdou A., Abdulla M., Abou Rached A., Aho I., Akarca U., Al Ghazzawi I., Al Kaabi S., Al Lawati F., Al Namaani K., Al Serkal Y., Al-Busafi S.A., Al-Dabal L., Aleman S., Alghamdi A.S., Aljumah A.A., Al-Romaihi H.E., Andersson M.I., Arendt V., Arkkila P., Assiri A.M., Baatarkhuu O., Bane A., Ben-Ari Z., Bergin C., Bessone F., Bihl F., Bizri A.R., Blachier M., Blasco A.J., Brandao Mello C.E., Bruggmann P., Brunton C.R., Calinas F., Chan H.L.Y., Chaudhry A., Cheinquer H., Chen C.-J., Chien R.-N., Choi M.S., Christensen P.B., Chuang W.-L., Chulanov V., Cisneros L., Clausen M.R., Cramp M.E., Craxi A., Croes E.A., Dalgard O., Daruich J.R., El-Sayed M.H., Ergor G., Esmat G., Estes C., Falconer K., Ferraz M.L.G., Ferreira P.R., Flisiak R., Frankova S., Gamkrelidze I., Gane E., Garcia-Samaniego J., Khan A.G., Gountas I., Goldis A., Gottfredsson M., Grebely J., Gschwantler M., Guimaraes Pessoa M., Gunter J., Hajarizadeh B., Hajelssedig O., Hamid S., Hamoudi W., Hatzakis A., Himatt S.M., Hofer H., Hrstic I., Hui Y.-T., Hunyady B., Idilman R., Jafri W., Jahis R., Janjua N.Z., Jarcuska P., Jeruma A., Jonasson J.G., Kamel Y., Kao J.-H., Kaymakoglu S., Kershenobich D., Khamis J., Kim Y.S., Kondili L., Koutoubi Z., Krajden M., Krarup H., Lai M.-S., Laleman W., Lao W.-C., Lavanchy D., Lazaro P., Leleu H., Lesi O., Lesmana L.A., Li M., Liakina V., Lim Y.-S., Luksic B., Mahomed A., Maimets M., Makara M., Malu A.O., Marinho R.T., Marotta P., Mauss S., Memon M.S., Mendes Correa M.C., Mendez-Sanchez N., Merat S., Metwally A.M., Mohamed R., Moreno C., Mourad F.H., Mullhaupt B., Murphy K., Nde H., Njouom R., Nonkovic D., Norris S., Obekpa S., Oguche S., Olafsson S., Oltman M., Omede O., Omuemu C., Opare-Sem O., Ovrehus A.L.H., Owusu-Ofori S., Oyunsuren T.S., Farag E., De Ledinghen V., Dore G.J., Papatheodoridis G., Pasini K., Peltekian K.M., Phillips R.O., Pimenov N., Poustchi H., Prabdial-Sing N., Qureshi H., Ramji A., Razavi-Shearer D., Razavi-Shearer K., Redae B., Reesink H.W., Ridruejo E., Robbins S., Roberts L.R., Roberts S.K., Rosenberg W.M., Roudot-Thoraval F., Ryder S.D., Safadi R., Sagalova O., Salupere R., Sanai F.M., Sanchez Avila J.F., Saraswat V., Sarmento-Castro R., Sarrazin C., Schmelzer J.D., Schreter I., Seguin-Devaux C., Shah S.R., Sharara A.I., Sharma M., Shevaldin A., Shiha G.E., Sonderup M., Souliotis K., Speiciene D., Sperl J., Starkel P., Stauber R.E., Stedman C., Struck D., Su T.-H., Sypsa V., Tan S.-S., Tanaka J., Thompson A.J., Tolmane I., Tomasiewicz K., Valantinas J., Van Damme P., Van Der Meer A.J., Van Thiel I., Van Vlierberghe H., Vince A., Vogel W., Wedemeyer H., Weis N., Wong V.W.S., Yaghi C., Yosry A., Yuen M.-F., Yunihastuti E., Yusuf A., Zuckerman E., Razavi H., Sievert W., Blach S., Zeuzem S., Manns M., Altraif I., Duberg A.-S., Muljono D.H., Waked I., Alavian S.M., Lee M.-H., Negro F., Abaalkhail F., Abdou A., Abdulla M., Abou Rached A., Aho I., Akarca U., Al Ghazzawi I., Al Kaabi S., Al Lawati F., Al Namaani K., Al Serkal Y., Al-Busafi S.A., Al-Dabal L., Aleman S., Alghamdi A.S., Aljumah A.A., Al-Romaihi H.E., Andersson M.I., Arendt V., Arkkila P., Assiri A.M., Baatarkhuu O., Bane A., Ben-Ari Z., Bergin C., Bessone F., Bihl F., Bizri A.R., Blachier M., Blasco A.J., Brandao Mello C.E., Bruggmann P., Brunton C.R., Calinas F., Chan H.L.Y., Chaudhry A., Cheinquer H., Chen C.-J., Chien R.-N., Choi M.S., Christensen P.B., Chuang W.-L., Chulanov V., Cisneros L., Clausen M.R., Cramp M.E., Craxi A., Croes E.A., Dalgard O., Daruich J.R., El-Sayed M.H., Ergor G., Esmat G., Estes C., Falconer K., Ferraz M.L.G., Ferreira P.R., Flisiak R., Frankova S., Gamkrelidze I., Gane E., Garcia-Samaniego J., Khan A.G., Gountas I., Goldis A., Gottfredsson M., Grebely J., Gschwantler M., Guimaraes Pessoa M., Gunter J., Hajarizadeh B., Hajelssedig O., Hamid S., Hamoudi W., Hatzakis A., Himatt S.M., Hofer H., Hrstic I., Hui Y.-T., Hunyady B., Idilman R., Jafri W., Jahis R., Janjua N.Z., Jarcuska P., Jeruma A., Jonasson J.G., Kamel Y., Kao J.-H., Kaymakoglu S., Kershenobich D., Khamis J., Kim Y.S., Kondili L., Koutoubi Z., Krajden M., Krarup H., Lai M.-S., Laleman W., Lao W.-C., Lavanchy D., Lazaro P., Leleu H., Lesi O., Lesmana L.A., Li M., Liakina V., Lim Y.-S., Luksic B., Mahomed A., Maimets M., Makara M., Malu A.O., Marinho R.T., Marotta P., Mauss S., Memon M.S., Mendes Correa M.C., Mendez-Sanchez N., Merat S., Metwally A.M., Mohamed R., Moreno C., Mourad F.H., Mullhaupt B., Murphy K., Nde H., Njouom R., Nonkovic D., Norris S., Obekpa S., Oguche S., Olafsson S., Oltman M., Omede O., Omuemu C., Opare-Sem O., Ovrehus A.L.H., Owusu-Ofori S., and Oyunsuren T.S.
- Abstract
Background The 69th World Health Assembly approved the Global Health Sector Strategy to eliminate hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection by 2030, which can become a reality with the recent launch of direct acting antiviral therapies. Reliable disease burden estimates are required for national strategies. This analysis estimates the global prevalence of viraemic HCV at the end of 2015, an update of-and expansion on-the 2014 analysis, which reported 80 million (95% CI 64-103) viraemic infections in 2013. Methods We developed country-level disease burden models following a systematic review of HCV prevalence (number of studies, n=6754) and genotype (n=11 342) studies published after 2013. A Delphi process was used to gain country expert consensus and validate inputs. Published estimates alone were used for countries where expert panel meetings could not be scheduled. Global prevalence was estimated using regional averages for countries without data. Findings Models were built for 100 countries, 59 of which were approved by country experts, with the remaining 41 estimated using published data alone. The remaining countries had insufficient data to create a model. The global prevalence of viraemic HCV is estimated to be 1.0% (95% uncertainty interval 0.8-1.1) in 2015, corresponding to 71.1 million (62.5-79.4) viraemic infections. Genotypes 1 and 3 were the most common cause of infections (44% and 25%, respectively). Interpretation The global estimate of viraemic infections is lower than previous estimates, largely due to more recent (lower) prevalence estimates in Africa. Additionally, increased mortality due to liver-related causes and an ageing population may have contributed to a reduction in infections. Funding John C Martin Foundation.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
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- 2017
30. Global prevalence and genotype distribution of hepatitis C virus infection in 2015: A modelling study
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Blach, S, Zeuzem, S, Manns, M, Altraif, I, Duberg, AS, Muljono, DH, Waked, I, Alavian, SM, Lee, MH, Negro, F, Abaalkhail, F, Abdou, A, Abdulla, M, Abou Rached, A, Aho, I, Akarca, U, Al Ghazzawi, I, Al Kaabi, S, Al Lawati, F, Al Namaani, K, Al Serkal, Y, Al-Busafi, SA, Al-Dabal, L, Aleman, S, Alghamdi, AS, Aljumah, AA, Al-Romaihi, HE, Andersson, MI, Arendt, V, Arkkila, P, Assiri, AM, Baatarkhuu, O, Bane, A, Ben-Ari, Z, Bergin, C, Bessone, F, Bihl, F, Bizri, AR, Blachier, M, Blasco, AJ, Brandao Mello, CE, Bruggmann, P, Brunton, CR, Calinas, F, Chan, HLY, Chaudhry, A, Cheinquer, H, Chen, CJ, Chien, RN, Choi, MS, Christensen, PB, Chuang, WL, Chulanov, V, Cisneros, L, Clausen, MR, Cramp, ME, Craxi, A, Croes, EA, Dalgard, O, Daruich, JR, De Ledinghen, V, Dore, GJ, El-Sayed, MH, Ergor, G, Esmat, G, Estes, C, Falconer, K, Farag, E, Ferraz, MLG, Ferreira, PR, Flisiak, R, Frankova, S, Gamkrelidze, I, Gane, E, Garcia-Samaniego, J, Khan, AG, Gountas, I, Goldis, A, Gottfredsson, M, Grebely, J, Gschwantler, M, Guimaraes Pessoa, M, Gunter, J, Hajarizadeh, B, Hajelssedig, O, Hamid, S, Hamoudi, W, Hatzakis, A, Himatt, SM, Hofer, H, Hrstic, I, Hui, YT, Hunyady, B, Idilman, R, Jafri, W, Jahis, R, Janjua, NZ, Jarčuška, P, Jeruma, A, Jonasson, JG, Blach, S, Zeuzem, S, Manns, M, Altraif, I, Duberg, AS, Muljono, DH, Waked, I, Alavian, SM, Lee, MH, Negro, F, Abaalkhail, F, Abdou, A, Abdulla, M, Abou Rached, A, Aho, I, Akarca, U, Al Ghazzawi, I, Al Kaabi, S, Al Lawati, F, Al Namaani, K, Al Serkal, Y, Al-Busafi, SA, Al-Dabal, L, Aleman, S, Alghamdi, AS, Aljumah, AA, Al-Romaihi, HE, Andersson, MI, Arendt, V, Arkkila, P, Assiri, AM, Baatarkhuu, O, Bane, A, Ben-Ari, Z, Bergin, C, Bessone, F, Bihl, F, Bizri, AR, Blachier, M, Blasco, AJ, Brandao Mello, CE, Bruggmann, P, Brunton, CR, Calinas, F, Chan, HLY, Chaudhry, A, Cheinquer, H, Chen, CJ, Chien, RN, Choi, MS, Christensen, PB, Chuang, WL, Chulanov, V, Cisneros, L, Clausen, MR, Cramp, ME, Craxi, A, Croes, EA, Dalgard, O, Daruich, JR, De Ledinghen, V, Dore, GJ, El-Sayed, MH, Ergor, G, Esmat, G, Estes, C, Falconer, K, Farag, E, Ferraz, MLG, Ferreira, PR, Flisiak, R, Frankova, S, Gamkrelidze, I, Gane, E, Garcia-Samaniego, J, Khan, AG, Gountas, I, Goldis, A, Gottfredsson, M, Grebely, J, Gschwantler, M, Guimaraes Pessoa, M, Gunter, J, Hajarizadeh, B, Hajelssedig, O, Hamid, S, Hamoudi, W, Hatzakis, A, Himatt, SM, Hofer, H, Hrstic, I, Hui, YT, Hunyady, B, Idilman, R, Jafri, W, Jahis, R, Janjua, NZ, Jarčuška, P, Jeruma, A, and Jonasson, JG
- Abstract
Background The 69th World Health Assembly approved the Global Health Sector Strategy to eliminate hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection by 2030, which can become a reality with the recent launch of direct acting antiviral therapies. Reliable disease burden estimates are required for national strategies. This analysis estimates the global prevalence of viraemic HCV at the end of 2015, an update of—and expansion on—the 2014 analysis, which reported 80 million (95% CI 64–103) viraemic infections in 2013. Methods We developed country-level disease burden models following a systematic review of HCV prevalence (number of studies, n=6754) and genotype (n=11 342) studies published after 2013. A Delphi process was used to gain country expert consensus and validate inputs. Published estimates alone were used for countries where expert panel meetings could not be scheduled. Global prevalence was estimated using regional averages for countries without data. Findings Models were built for 100 countries, 59 of which were approved by country experts, with the remaining 41 estimated using published data alone. The remaining countries had insufficient data to create a model. The global prevalence of viraemic HCV is estimated to be 1·0% (95% uncertainty interval 0·8–1·1) in 2015, corresponding to 71·1 million (62·5–79·4) viraemic infections. Genotypes 1 and 3 were the most common cause of infections (44% and 25%, respectively). Interpretation The global estimate of viraemic infections is lower than previous estimates, largely due to more recent (lower) prevalence estimates in Africa. Additionally, increased mortality due to liver-related causes and an ageing population may have contributed to a reduction in infections. Funding John C Martin Foundation.
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- 2017
31. Biochemical and Immunogenetic Diagnostic Markers Less Commonly Used for Predicting the Efficacy of Chronic Hepatitis C Etiotropic Therapy
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Eglite J, Ludmila Viksna, Agita Jeruma, Sondore, and Socnevs A
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education.field_of_study ,Combination therapy ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Population ,Diagnostic marker ,Class II gene ,Chronic hepatitis ,Immunology ,Medicine ,Allele ,education ,business ,Gene - Abstract
Introduction: 1,7% of the population of Latvia in 2008 was HCV RNA positive, thus approximately 38 thousands required the CHC antiviral therapy. The objective of the study was to evaluate some biochemical and immunogenetic parameters allowing predicting the efficacy of the etiotropic therapy for CHC patients. Material and methods: Medical records of 213 CHC patients were analyzed. HCV RNA, anti-HCV, concentration of HA, GGT activity were detected and immunogenetic investigations were performed. Results and discussion: Evaluation of GGT activity showed increase in 46,81% of non-responders and in only 21,57% responders. HA level in responders was significantly lower than in non-responders. Correlation between the incidence of HLA class II gene alleles in CHC patients and the type of CHC therapy was found. The results of the study confirmed the hypothesis that some biochemical and immunogenetic parameters characterizing the condition of the macro organism had an essential role in the efficacy of the CHC therapy. Conclusions: The non-efficacy of the CHC etiotropic therapy was associated with increased GGT and HA levels upon the start of the therapy. The efficacy of PEG IFN+RBV combination therapy in comparison with the efficacy of Realdiron therapy was associated with different MHC HLA class II gene alleles.
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- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The present and future disease burden of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection with today's treatment paradigm
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Altaf Alam, K. Saeed, N. Nugrahini, Fadi H. Mourad, Andri Sanityoso Sulaiman, Abdul Rahman Bizri, Jon G. Jonasson, Liana Gheorghe, S. Alawadhi, Ala I. Sharara, Sarah Blach, Rino Alvani Gani, Do Young Kim, M. Alzaabi, Young Seok Kim, Matti Maimets, S. Priohutomo, A. Löve, Saeed Hamid, Abdullah M. Assiri, H. Al Quraishi, Adel Alqutub, G. Tayyab, Junko Tanaka, H. Qureshi, A. Salamat, P. Aldins, M. S. Choi, M. T. Barakat, Reza Malekzadeh, M. Sadik, Kwang Hyub Han, Young-Suk Lim, J. Videčnik-Zorman, A. Abdou, Jacques E Mokhbat, Zaigham Abbas, Khalid Alswat, G. Sigmundsdottir, B. Karlsdottir, Marwa Sultan, K. Al Jaberi, Devin Razavi-Shearer, A. Al Rifai, Chris Estes, Abdullah S. Alghamdi, A. Sanityoso Sulaiman, Béla Hunyady, F. Al Braiki, B. Sigurdardottir, Ieva Tolmane, Kathryn Razavi-Shearer, S. El Khoury, Gabor Horvath, Y. Al Serkal, M. Taha, Hamad I. Al-Ashgar, Cesar Yaghi, Abdulrahman Aljumah, Danute Speiciene, Riina Salupere, Irsan Hasan, S. Fakhry, Homie Razavi, Evy Yunihastuti, F. Al Hosani, M. A. Al Mulla, Faisal M. Sanai, Mohamed A. Babatin, N. Andrea, L. Al-Dabal, S. Gregorcic, Arif Nawaz, R. Al-Hakeem, E. S. El Hassan, R. Husni, M. Siddiq, David H. Muljono, Adrian Goldis, A. Almessabi, Jonathan Schmelzer, Mojca Maticic, Laurentius A. Lesmana, A. Baqir, Ibrahim Altraif, Faisal Abaalkhail, Shahin Merat, Mihály Makara, A. Abourached, Jonas Valantinas, Asad Chaudhry, T. Diab, M. Ud Din, Muhammad S. Memon, Jessie Gunter, R. A. Sayegh, Seyed Moayed Alavian, A. M. Siddiqui, H. Fridjonsdottir, Bader Faiyaz Zuberi, M. Umar, Magnus Gottfredsson, Baiba Rozentale, Agita Jeruma, Samsuridjal Djauzi, Almoutaz Hashim, A. Ghafoor Khan, Ottar M. Bergmann, Z. Koutoubi, M. A. Yusuf, H. Tarifi, A. Sibley, Faleh Z. Al-Faleh, Wasim Jafri, P. Rassam, J. I. Farooqi, S. Olafsson, Behzad Hajarizadeh, Valentina Liakina, M. Al Khatry, Ctr Dis Anal, Natl Liver Inst, JW Goethe Univ Hosp, Univ Calgary, Ankara Univ, Hosp Santo Antonio Capuchos, Med Univ Innsbruck, Universidade de São Paulo (USP), Hop Henri Mondor, Adv Tech Hlth Serv Res TAISS, Ege Univ, Karolinska Inst, Karolinska Univ Hosp, Univ Leipzig, Osped Cantonale, Univ Montreal, Fed Univ State Rio de Janeiro, Arud Ctr Addict Med, Hosp Valle de Hebron, Hosp Puerta Hierro, Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Odense Univ Hosp, Reg Hosp Hovedstaden, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Univ Plymouth, Univ New S Wales, Cairo Univ, Orebro Univ Hosp, Univ Orebro, Ain Shams Univ, Dokuz Eylul Univ, Exigo Consultores, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP), Inst Clin & Expt Med, Hosp Carlos III, Univ Copenhagen, Direccao Geral Saude, Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP), Wilhelminenspital Stadt Wien, Med Univ Vienna, Masaryk Univ, Univ Manitoba, Hlth Sci Ctr, European Liver Patients Assoc, Istanbul Univ, Univ British Columbia, Aalborg Univ Hosp, Katholieke Univ Leuven, Hosp Santa Maria, Univ Western Ontario, Univ Dusseldorf, Univ Libre Brussels, Univ Hosp, Natl Inst Publ Hlth, Univ Southhampton, Dalhousie Univ & Hepatol Serv, Assembleia Republ, Alfred Hosp, Monash Univ, UCL, Nottingham Univ Hosp NHS Trust, Biomed Res Unit, Ctr Hosp Porto, Cantonal Hosp St Gallen, Univ Toronto, Egyptian Liver Res Inst & Hosp, Monash Hlth, Catholic Univ Louvain, Med Univ Graz, St Vincents Hosp, Univ Melbourne, Charles Univ Prague, Cent Mil Hosp, Univ Antwerp, Deutsch Leberhilfe eV, Ghent Univ Hosp, Univ Ghent, Hannover Med Sch, Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Univ Zurich Hosp, Bihl, Florian, Negro, Francesco, and Semela, David
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,diagnosis ,Cost effectiveness ,Hepatitis C virus ,prevalence ,ddc:616.07 ,medicine.disease_cause ,disease burden ,Liver disease ,Virology ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Disease burden ,ddc:616 ,treatment ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Hepatitis C ,medicine.disease ,mortality ,Infectious Diseases ,HCV ,Immunology ,incidence ,epidemiology ,Human medicine ,hepatitis C ,Viral hepatitis ,business - Abstract
Gilead Sciences The disease burden of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is expected to increase as the infected population ages. A modelling approach was used to estimate the total number of viremic infections, diagnosed, treated and new infections in 2013. in addition, the model was used to estimate the change in the total number of HCV infections, the disease progression and mortality in 2013-2030. Finally, expert panel consensus was used to capture current treatment practices in each country. Using today's treatment paradigm, the total number of HCV infections is projected to decline or remain flat in all countries studied. However, in the same time period, the number of individuals with late-stage liver disease is projected to increase. This study concluded that the current treatment rate and efficacy are not sufficient to manage the disease burden of HCV. Thus, alternative strategies are required to keep the number of HCV individuals with advanced liver disease and liver-related deaths from increasing. Ctr Dis Anal, Louisville, CO 80027 USA Natl Liver Inst, Menoufia, Egypt JW Goethe Univ Hosp, Frankfurt, Germany Univ Calgary, Liver Unit, Div Gastroenterol & Hepatol, Calgary, AB, Canada Ankara Univ, Dept Gastroenterol, Sch Med, TR-06100 Ankara, Turkey Hosp Santo Antonio Capuchos, Dept Gastroenterol, Ctr Hosp Lisboa Cent, Lisbon, Portugal Med Univ Innsbruck, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria Univ São Paulo, Sch Med, São Paulo, Brazil Hop Henri Mondor, Serv Hepatogastroenterol, F-94010 Creteil, France Adv Tech Hlth Serv Res TAISS, Madrid, Spain Ege Univ, Izmir, Turkey Karolinska Inst, Dept Med Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden Karolinska Univ Hosp, Dept Gastroenterol & Hepatol Infect Dis, Stockholm, Sweden Ankara Univ, TR-06100 Ankara, Turkey Univ Leipzig, D-04109 Leipzig, Germany Osped Cantonale, Dept Gastroenterol, Bellinzona, Switzerland Univ Montreal, Dept Med, Liver Unit, Montreal, PQ H3C 3J7, Canada Fed Univ State Rio de Janeiro, Dept Gastroenterol, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Arud Ctr Addict Med, Zurich, Switzerland Hosp Valle de Hebron, CIBERehd, Barcelona, Spain Hosp Puerta Hierro, Madrid, Spain Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Hosp Clin, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil Odense Univ Hosp, Dept Infect Dis, DK-5000 Odense, Denmark Reg Hosp Hovedstaden, Copenhagen, Denmark Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, Dept Clin Med, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Univ Plymouth, Peninsula Sch Med & Dent, Plymouth PL4 8AA, Devon, England Univ New S Wales, Kirby Inst, Sydney, NSW, Australia Cairo Univ, Cairo, Egypt Orebro Univ Hosp, Dept Infect Dis, Orebro, Sweden Univ Orebro, Sch Hlth & Med Sci, SE-70182 Orebro, Sweden Ain Shams Univ, Cairo, Egypt Dokuz Eylul Univ, Izmir, Turkey Karolinska Inst, Karolinska Univ Hosp, Dept Med Huddinge, Infect Dis Unit, Stockholm, Sweden Exigo Consultores, Alhos Vedros, Portugal Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Div Gastroenterol, São Paulo, Brazil Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Div Infect Dis, São Paulo, Brazil Inst Clin & Expt Med, Dept Hepatogastroenterol, Prague, Czech Republic Hosp Carlos III, CIBERehd, Madrid, Spain Univ Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark Direccao Geral Saude, Lisbon, Portugal Univ Estadual Campinas, Disciplina Doencas Infecciosas, Dept Clin Med, Grp Estudo Hepatites,Fac Ciencias Med,UNICAMP, São Paulo, Brazil Wilhelminenspital Stadt Wien, Dept Internal Med 4, Vienna, Austria Univ São Paulo, Sch Med, Div Gastroenterol & Hepatol, São Paulo, Brazil Med Univ Vienna, Div Gastroenterol & Hepatol, Dept Internal Med 3, Vienna, Austria Masaryk Univ, Univ Hosp Brno, Clin Infect Dis, Brno, Czech Republic Univ Manitoba, Dept Internal Med, Sect Hepatol, Winnipeg, MB, Canada Hlth Sci Ctr, Viral Hepatitis Invest Unit, Winnipeg, MB, Canada European Liver Patients Assoc, St Truiden, Belgium Istanbul Univ, Istanbul, Turkey Univ British Columbia, British Columbia Ctr Dis Control, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9, Canada Aalborg Univ Hosp, Dept Med Gastroenterol, Aalborg, Denmark Aalborg Univ Hosp, Sect Mol Diagnost, Aalborg, Denmark Katholieke Univ Leuven, Univ Hosp Leuven, Louvain, Belgium Hosp Santa Maria, Dept Gastroenterol, Ctr Hosp Lisboa Norte, Lisbon, Portugal Univ Western Ontario, Div Gastroenterol, London, ON, Canada Univ Dusseldorf, Dusseldorf, Germany Univ Libre Brussels, Erasme Univ Hosp, Brussels, Belgium Univ Hosp, Div Gastroenterol & Hepatol, Geneva, Switzerland Univ Hosp, Div Clin Pathol, Geneva, Switzerland Natl Inst Publ Hlth, Natl Reference Lab Hepatitis, Prague, Czech Republic Univ Southhampton, Southampton, England Dalhousie Univ & Hepatol Serv, Capital Dist Hlth Author, Queen Elizabeth II Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Med, Halifax, NS, Canada Dalhousie Univ & Hepatol Serv, Capital Dist Hlth Author, Queen Elizabeth II Hlth Sci Ctr, Dept Surg, Halifax, NS, Canada Univ British Columbia, Dept Gastroenterol, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9, Canada Assembleia Republ, Lisbon, Portugal Alfred Hosp, Melbourne, Vic, Australia Monash Univ, Melbourne, Vic 3004, Australia UCL, Div Med, UCL Inst Liver & Digest Hlth, London, England Hop Henri Mondor, Dept Sante Publ, F-94010 Creteil, France Nottingham Univ Hosp NHS Trust, Nottingham, England Biomed Res Unit, Nottingham, England Ctr Hosp Porto, Dept Infect Dis, Oporto, Portugal Cantonal Hosp St Gallen, Div Gastroenterol & Hepatol, St Gallen, Switzerland Univ Toronto, Toronto Gen Hosp, Univ Hlth Network, Toronto, ON M5G 1L7, Canada Egyptian Liver Res Inst & Hosp, Dakahliah, Egypt Monash Hlth, Melbourne, Vic, Australia Catholic Univ Louvain, Clin Univ St Luc, Brussels, Belgium Med Univ Graz, Div Gastroenterol & Hepatol, Dept Internal Med, Graz, Austria St Vincents Hosp, Dept Gastroenterol, Melbourne, Vic, Australia Univ Melbourne, Melbourne, Vic, Australia Charles Univ Prague, Dept Internal Med, Fac Med 1, Prague, Czech Republic Cent Mil Hosp, Prague, Czech Republic Univ Antwerp, B-2020 Antwerp, Belgium Deutsch Leberhilfe eV, Cologne, Germany Ghent Univ Hosp, Ghent, Belgium Univ Ghent, Belgium Hasselt Univ, Dept Hlth Econ & Patient Safety, Diepenbeek, Belgium Hannover Med Sch, Dept Gastroenterol Hepatol & Endocrinol, Hannover, Germany Copenhagen Univ Hosp, Hvidovre, Denmark Univ New S Wales, St George Hosp Clin Sch Med, Sydney, NSW, Australia Univ New S Wales, Sch Med Sci, Sydney, NSW, Australia Univ Zurich Hosp, Swiss HPB Hepatopancreatobiliary Ctr, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland Univ Zurich Hosp, Dept Gastroenterol & Hepatol, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Div Gastroenterol, São Paulo, Brazil Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Div Infect Dis, São Paulo, Brazil Web of Science
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- 2014
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33. Baltic Post-marketing Study of Pegilated Interferon α-2a 40 KD Efficacy and Safety in Patients with HBeAg–Positive and HBeAg– Negative Chronic Hepatitis B
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Ludmila Viksna, Valentina Sondore, Gunta Sture, Andrejs Ivanovs, Jazeps Keiss, Baiba Rozentale, and Agita Jeruma
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HBEAG POSITIVE ,business.industry ,viruses ,virus diseases ,Hepatitis A ,Hepatitis B ,Omics ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Chronic hepatitis ,Viral replication ,Interferon ,Immunology ,Medicine ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,business ,media_common ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Introduction: Pegilated interferon alpha-2a 40KD (Pegasys?) is registered in European Union, and is indicated for the treatment of HBeAg positive or HBeAg negative chronic hepatitis B in adult patients with compensated liver disease, evidence of viral replication and increased ALT. The aim of this study was to evaluate efficacy and safety of Pegasys? for Pegasys?
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- 2013
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34. Noninvasive Alternatives to Liver Biopsy
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Valentina Sondore, Jazeps Keiss, Ilze Strumfa, Baiba Rozentale, Agita Jeruma, Peteris Prieditis, Ludmila Viksna, and Arturs Sochnevs
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cirrhosis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Autoimmune hepatitis ,medicine.disease ,Cholestasis ,Liver biopsy ,Medicine ,Liver function ,Steatohepatitis ,business ,Viral hepatitis ,Liver function tests - Abstract
During the past 60 years the role and importance of liver biopsy have changed. In 1950s the introduction of liver puncture biopsy was absolute innovation, e.g. in Latvia, and had an invaluable significance. The possibility to compare and/or oppose alterations of liver structure and liver function was achieved and it caused the information explosion. The spectrum of morphological research included investigations of liver tissue damage on different levels that explained the mechanisms of biochemically detected cytolysis and cholestasis syndrome, fibrosis and liver cirrhosis development. Relatively, in least degree the morphological phenomena of apoptosis and its role in acute and chronic liver diseases were examined. Frequently conventional liver function tests are limited to quantifying hepatic function. Despite major progress in the diagnostics and therapy of liver diseases of different etiologies, the assessment of liver function continues to present a major clinical problem. Most of liver function tests are not sufficiently specific and do not accurately predict liver failure and outcome of it. Liver biopsy is an essential part of the diagnostics and follow-up of many liver diseases giving clinically important information as well as scientific data. At present, it is the most specific test to assess the nature and severity of liver damage (Bravo et al., 2001). However, the role of liver biopsy in the evolution of medical science is dynamic. It became possible with the development of methods able to bring sufficient amount of liver tissue as well as to ensure the safety of the procedure itself. The methods used to obtain liver tissue include transcutaneous needle biopsy and transvenous approach via jugular or femoral vein. Occasionally, liver can be biopsied during laparoscopy or open abdominal surgery. Aseptics and antiseptics are of importance. There is an obvious necessity to ensure the monitoring of the patient and control of possible albeit rare complications. It seems reasonable to expect further developments in the field of liver morphology that might include both in-depth studies of tissue (Dioguardi et al., 2008) as well as elaboration of novel, completely different diagnostic methods. The indications for liver biopsy include 1) the grading and staging of chronic viral hepatitis, alcohol-related liver damage, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis and autoimmune hepatitis; 2)
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- 2011
35. Natural clearance of hepatitis C virus in hemophilia patients
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Gunta Chernevska, Zhanna Kovalova, Arturs Sochnevs, Jelena Eglite, Velga Kuse, Sandra Lejniece, Raimonds Simanis, Dace Gardovska, Agita Jeruma, and Ludmila Viksna
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,hepatitis C virus ,Adolescent ,Genotype ,Hepatitis C virus ,Genes, MHC Class II ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Hepacivirus ,Human leukocyte antigen ,Hemophilia A ,medicine.disease_cause ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Virus ,law.invention ,HLA Antigens ,law ,human leukocyte antigen ,hemophilia ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Medicine ,Allele ,Child ,Allele frequency ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Chi-Square Distribution ,biology ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Healthy subjects ,virus diseases ,Lithuania ,General Medicine ,Hepatitis C ,Latvia ,United States ,digestive system diseases ,natural clearance ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,RNA, Viral ,Antibody ,business - Abstract
Objective. The objective of this study was to investigate the prevalence of HCV (hepatitis C virus) infection in hemophilia patients in Latvia and to analyze association between natural clearance of HCV and human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II genes. Material and methods. From 61 hemophilic patients participating in this study, 38 were adults and 23 were pediatric patients younger than 18 years. To analyze association between HLA class II alleles and natural clearance of HCV, the gene frequency was compared in hemophilia patients group and the control group of 60 healthy subjects, all men. Serum HCV RNA was qualitatively determined and HLA class II alleles were identified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method. Results. HCV infection is common among hemophilia patients in Latvia. Antibodies to HCV were found in 45 of 61 (74%) hemophilia patients. In 41% of hemophilia patients (18 of 44), HCV infection resolved spontaneously. Children cleared HCV more frequently than adults (7 of 11 comparing to 11 of 33, respectively, OR=3.50, P<, 0.05). The frequency difference was found to be statistically significant when comparing HLA alleles distribution in the sample of hemophilia patients who naturally cleared HCV (n=18) and in the control group (n=60) (corresponding frequency of HLA-DRB1*07 allele – 4 (11.11%) and 9 (1.67%), OR=7.38, 0.05). Conclusions. Natural clearance of HCV infection is frequently found in hemophilia patients in Latvia. Children are more likely to clear virus naturally than adults. There is an association between natural clearance of HCV and HLA allele DRB1*07 in hemophilia patients.
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- 2007
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36. Noninvasive Alternatives to Liver Biopsy
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Viksna, Ludmila, Sondore, Valentina, Keiss, Jāzeps, Jeruma, Agita, Prieditis, Pēteris, Strumfa, Ilze, Sochnevs , Arturs, Rozentale, Baiba, Viksna, Ludmila, Sondore, Valentina, Keiss, Jāzeps, Jeruma, Agita, Prieditis, Pēteris, Strumfa, Ilze, Sochnevs , Arturs, and Rozentale, Baiba
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- 2011
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37. Baltic Post-marketing Study of Pegilated Interferon α-2a 40 KD Efficacy and Safety in Patients with HBeAg–Positive and HBeAg– Negative Chronic Hepatitis B
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Viksna, Ludmila, primary, Jeruma, Agita, additional, Sture, Gunta, additional, and Rozentale, Baiba, additional
- Published
- 2013
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38. Natural clearance of hepatitis C virus in hemophilia patients
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Simanis, Raimonds, primary, Lejniece, Sandra, additional, Sochnevs, Arturs, additional, Eglite, Jelena, additional, Chernevska, Gunta, additional, Kovalova, Zhanna, additional, Gardovska, Dace, additional, Jeruma, Agita, additional, Kuse, Velga, additional, and Viksna, Ludmila, additional
- Published
- 2007
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39. The Gift is a Call
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Jeruma-Grinberga, Jana, primary
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- 2006
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40. The Gift is a Call
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Jana Jeruma-Grinberga
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Religious studies - Published
- 2006
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41. FRAILTY AND FAITHFULNESS: MINORITY CHURCHES AND ECUMENISM.
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Jeruma-Grinberga, Jana
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- *
PRIESTHOOD , *LUTHERAN Church , *SMALL churches , *UNIVERSALITY of the Church , *FRAGILITY (Psychology) , *ECUMENICAL movement - Abstract
The ecclesial nature of a church is not governed by its size: Minority Churches are equally part of the Body of Christ and members of the royal priesthood. The particular paradigm that these churches model is one of presence and faithfulness in weakness and vulnerability; but the ability to model this paradigm, especially in the ecumenical arena, is often limited by resources, financial, spiritual and pastoral. More effort needs to be made, both by Minority and Majority Churches, to enable the voices of the smaller churches to be heard. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
42. Natural clearance of hepatitis C virus in hemophilia patients.
- Author
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Simanis R, Lejniece S, Sochnevs A, Eglite J, Chernevska G, Kovalova Z, Gardovska D, Jeruma A, Kuse V, and Viksna L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Chi-Square Distribution, Child, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Genes, MHC Class II, Genotype, HLA Antigens immunology, Hemophilia A genetics, Hemophilia A immunology, Hemophilia A virology, Hepacivirus immunology, Hepacivirus isolation & purification, Hepatitis C immunology, Humans, Latvia epidemiology, Lithuania, Male, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Prevalence, RNA, Viral analysis, United States, Hemophilia A complications, Hepacivirus genetics, Hepatitis C epidemiology, Hepatitis C genetics
- Abstract
Objective: The objective of this study was to investigate the prevalence of HCV (hepatitis C virus) infection in hemophilia patients in Latvia and to analyze association between natural clearance of HCV and human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II genes., Material and Methods: From 61 hemophilic patients participating in this study, 38 were adults and 23 were pediatric patients younger than 18 years. To analyze association between HLA class II alleles and natural clearance of HCV, the gene frequency was compared in hemophilia patients group and the control group of 60 healthy subjects, all men. Serum HCV RNA was qualitatively determined and HLA class II alleles were identified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method., Results: HCV infection is common among hemophilia patients in Latvia. Antibodies to HCV were found in 45 of 61 (74%) hemophilia patients. In 41% of hemophilia patients (18 of 44), HCV infection resolved spontaneously. Children cleared HCV more frequently than adults (7 of 11 comparing to 11 of 33, respectively; OR=3.50; P<0.05). The frequency difference was found to be statistically significant when comparing HLA alleles distribution in the sample of hemophilia patients who naturally cleared HCV (n=18) and in the control group (n=60) (corresponding frequency of HLA-DRB1*07 allele - 4 (11.11%) and 9 (1.67%); OR=7.38; P<0.05)., Conclusions: Natural clearance of HCV infection is frequently found in hemophilia patients in Latvia. Children are more likely to clear virus naturally than adults. There is an association between natural clearance of HCV and HLA allele DRB1*07 in hemophilia patients.
- Published
- 2008
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