38 results on '"Blandi, L."'
Search Results
2. Behavioural risk factors and psychophysical well-being among University students in Pavia Colleges
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Vigezzi, G P, primary, Blandi, L, additional, Cacitti, S, additional, Bertuccio, P, additional, Mosconi, G, additional, Casali, L, additional, Cena, H, additional, Politi, P, additional, Rigano, F, additional, and Odone, A, additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Training needs assessment of European healthcare workers on vaccinology and vaccine acceptance
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Paladini, A, primary, Lanza, TE, additional, Gianfredi, V, additional, Blandi, L, additional, Ricciardi, W, additional, Damiani, G, additional, Signorelli, C, additional, Odone, A, additional, and Cadeddu, C, additional
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- 2022
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4. Trends of hospital admissions and mortality of patients with dementia: descriptive study in Lombardy
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Blandi, L, primary, Amorosi, A, additional, Bertuccio, P, additional, and Odone, A, additional
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- 2022
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5. The synergies of University Education and Primary Health Care to meet populations health needs.
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Blandi, L. and Odone, A.
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PRIMARY health care ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL personnel ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
In the last decades, the World Health Organization has sensitized all countries to adopt a Primary Health Care approach in their health systems. It is also important to invest in education about primary health care. Indeed, we need to spread this comprehensive culture of health, starting from university education, and continuing during the whole work-life cycle. Due the current medical model, approaching patient by specific pathology or discipline, inefficiencies have been generated due to a lack of communication and integrated management of chronicity. Public Health can build dynamic models and mechanisms that pursue the health needs expressed by populations and education plays a crucial role in enhancing a country's resilience and protecting the health of its inhabitants. All the health workers should consider all the aspects of health, beyond the specific phases of diagnosis and treatment. Continuous education and training are key elements to focus on, to satisfy our population's health needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
6. Navigating the complexity of cross-cultural perspectives on assisted suicide in neurological diseases and mental disorders: from legal perspectives to public health research
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Blandi, L., Fidalgo, T.M., Davids, R., and Bolcato, V.
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- 2024
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7. The spread of covid-19 in six western metropolitan regions: A false myth on the excess of mortality in lombardy and the defense of the city of milan
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Signorelli C., Odone A., Gianfredi V., Bossi E., Bucci D., Oradini-Alacreu A., Frascella B., Capraro M., Chiappa F., Blandi L., Ciceri F., Signorelli, C., Odone, A., Gianfredi, V., Bossi, E., Bucci, D., Oradini-Alacreu, A., Frascella, B., Capraro, M., Chiappa, F., Blandi, L., and Ciceri, F.
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Betacoronavirus ,Italy ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Urban Health ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Hospital care system ,Mortality ,Cities ,Coronavirus Infections ,Pandemics ,Hospitals ,Metropolitan regions - Abstract
We analyzed the spread of the COVID-19 epidemic in 6 metropolitan regions with similar demographic characteristics, daytime commuting population and business activities: the New York metropolitan area, the Île-de-France region, the Greater London county, Bruxelles-Capital, the Community of Madrid and the Lombardy region. The highest mortality rates 30-days after the onset of the epidemic were recorded in New York (81.2 x 100,000) and Madrid (77.1 x 100,000). Lombardy mortality rate is below average (41.4 per 100,000), and it is the only situation in which the capital of the region (Milan) has not been heavily impacted by the epidemic wave. Our study analyzed the role played by containment measures and the positive contribution offered by the hospital care system. (www.actabiomedica.it).
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- 2020
8. COVID-19 mortality rate in nine high-income metropolitan regions
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Signorelli C., Odone A., Gianfredi V., Bossi E., Bucci D., Oradini-Alacreu A., Frascella B., Capraro M., Chiappa F., Blandi L., Ciceri F., Signorelli, C., Odone, A., Gianfredi, V., Bossi, E., Bucci, D., Oradini-Alacreu, A., Frascella, B., Capraro, M., Chiappa, F., Blandi, L., and Ciceri, F.
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Elderly population ,Pneumonia, Viral ,COVID-19 ,Middle Aged ,Betacoronavirus ,Age Distribution ,Humans ,Mortality ,Coronavirus Infections ,Pandemics ,Metropolitan regions ,Aged - Abstract
We analyzed the spread of the COVID-19 epidemic in 9 metropolitan regions of the world with similar socio-demographic characteristics, daytime commuting population and business activities: the New York State, Bruxelles-Capital, the Community of Madrid, Catalonia, the Île-de-France Region, the Greater London county, Stockholms län, Hovedstaden (Copenhagen) and the Lombardy Region. The Lombardy region reported the highest COVID-19 crude mortality rate (141.0 x 100,000) 70-days after the onset of the epidemic, followed by the Community of Madrid (132.8 x 100,000) New York State (120.7 x 100,000). The large variation in COVID-19 mortality and case-fatality rates for COVID-19 in different age strata suggested a more accurate analysis and interpretation of the epidemic dynamics after standardization of the rates by age. The share of elder populations (>70 years) over total population varies widely in the considered study settings, ranging from 6.9% in Catalonia to 17.0% in Lombardy. When taking age distribution into consideration the highest standardized mortality rate was observed in the State of New York (257.9 x 100,000); with figures in most of the European regions concentrated between 123.3 x 100,000 in Greater London and 177.7 x 100,000 in Bruxelles-Capital, lower in French and Danish regions. We also report and critical appraise, when available, COVID-19 mortality figures in capital cities, nursing homes, as well as excess mortality at country level. Our data raise awareness on the need for a more in-depth epidemiological analysis of the current COVID-19 public health emergency that further explores COVID-19 mortality determinants associated with health services delivery, community-level healthcare, testing approaches and characteristics of surveillance systems, including classification of COVID-19 deaths. (www.actabiomedica.it).
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- 2020
9. The spread of COVID-19 in six western metropolitan regions: a false myth on the excess of mortality in Lombardy and the defence of the city of Milan
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Signorelli C, Odone A, Gianfredi V, Bossi E, Bucci D, Oradini-Alacreu A, Frascella B, Capraro M, Chiappa F, Blandi L, Ciceri F.
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- 2020
- Full Text
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10. Tackling Sustainable Development Goals in Italian Regional Legislation: a Health in All Policies comparative analysis
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Stirparo, G, primary, Rallo, F, additional, Gori, D, additional, Blandi, L, additional, Seidenari, C, additional, Bizzarro, A, additional, Gaetti, G, additional, Rossi, D, additional, Odone, A, additional, and Signorelli, C, additional
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- 2020
- Full Text
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11. A multi-context based approximate reasoning
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Blandi, L and Sessa, Maria Immacolata
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- 2004
12. Heparin in COVID-19 patients is associated with reduced in-hospital mortality: the multicentre Italian CORIST Study
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Walter Ageno, Raffaele Pesavento, Marinella Astuto, Katleen de Gaetano Donati, Francesca Santilli, Filippo Aucella, Eleonora Taddei, Marianna Meschiari, Laura Scorzolini, Biagio Pinchera, Giustino Parruti, Licia Iacoviello, Andrea Vianello, Gabriella Guarnieri, Arturo Montineri, Crizia Colombo, Carlo Signorelli, Lorenzo Blandi, Raffaele De Caterina, Maria Musso, Francesco Petri, Stefano Maitan, Anna Odone, Lucia Caiano, Francesca Crosta, Lorenzo Marra, Giuseppe Patti, Emanuela Pasi, Jovana Milic, Marco Olivieri, Claudia Colomba, Francesco Maria Fusco, Claudia Ravaglia, Alexandra Virano, Carlo Torti, Samir Al Moghazi, Venerino Poletti, Riccardo Maragna, Carlo Sanrocco, Sandro Mancarella, Greta Barbieri, Arturo Ciccullo, Leonardo Grisafi, Paola Simeone, Lorenzo Menicanti, Antonella Palimodde, Gloria Maccagni, Alessandra Vergori, Daniela Niola, Marco G. Mennuni, Gianpiero D'Offizi, Claudia Marotta, Damiano D'Ardes, Vincenzo Sangiovanni, Paolo Bonfanti, Giovanni Larizza, Francesco Di Gennaro, Alessandro Mengozzi, Massimo Mapelli, Giuseppe Di Tano, Laura Carrozzi, Antonella Agodi, Francesco Menichetti, Marialaura Bonaccio, Andrea Antinori, Marco Vinceti, Armando Leone, Franco Mastroianni, Silvia Marongiu, Filippo Minutolo, Giulio Maresca, Beatrice Molena, Nausicaa Berselli, Francesco Cipollone, Massimo Fantoni, Antonella Cingolani, Giovanni Guaraldi, Raffaella Sgariglia, Piergiuseppe Agostoni, Antonio Cascio, Maria Mazzitelli, Roberta Parisi, Augusto Di Castelnuovo, Gian Battista Danzi, Luca Aiello, Roberto Vettor, Elvira Grandone, Laura Vocciante, Emauele Graziani, Cristina Mussini, Marianna Rossi, Marco Rossato, Roberto Cauda, Rosa Arboretti, Alessandro Bartoloni, Simona Costanzo, Francesco Gianfagna, Andrea Rognoni, Ferruccio Madaro, Rossella Marcucci, Pasquale Abete, Francesco Cacciatore, Ivan Gentile, Di Castelnuovo, A, Costanzo, S, Antinori, A, Berselli, N, Blandi, L, Bonaccio, M, Cauda, R, Guaraldi, G, Menicanti, L, Mennuni, M, Parruti, G, Patti, G, Santilli, F, Signorelli, C, Vergori, A, Abete, P, Ageno, W, Agodi, A, Agostoni, P, Aiello, L, Al Moghazi, S, Arboretti, R, Astuto, M, Aucella, F, Barbieri, G, Bartoloni, A, Bonfanti, P, Cacciatore, F, Caiano, L, Carrozzi, L, Cascio, A, Ciccullo, A, Cingolani, A, Cipollone, F, Colomba, C, Colombo, C, Crosta, F, Danzi, G, D'Ardes, D, de Gaetano Donati, K, Di Gennaro, F, Di Tano, G, D'Offizi, G, Fantoni, M, Fusco, F, Gentile, I, Gianfagna, F, Grandone, E, Graziani, E, Grisafi, L, Guarnieri, G, Larizza, G, Leone, A, Maccagni, G, Madaro, F, Maitan, S, Mancarella, S, Mapelli, M, Maragna, R, Marcucci, R, Maresca, G, Marongiu, S, Marotta, C, Marra, L, Mastroianni, F, Mazzitelli, M, Mengozzi, A, Menichetti, F, Meschiari, M, Milic, J, Minutolo, F, Molena, B, Montineri, A, Mussini, C, Musso, M, Niola, D, Odone, A, Olivieri, M, Palimodde, A, Parisi, R, Pasi, E, Pesavento, R, Petri, F, Pinchera, B, Poletti, V, Ravaglia, C, Rognoni, A, Rossato, M, Rossi, M, Sangiovanni, V, Sanrocco, C, Scorzolini, L, Sgariglia, R, Simeone, P, Taddei, E, Torti, C, Vettor, R, Vianello, A, Vinceti, M, Virano, A, Vocciante, L, De Caterina, R, Iacoviello, L, Danzi, G. B, De Gaetano Donati, K, Fusco, F. M, Simeone, P. G, Iacoviello, L., Di Castelnuovo, Augusto, Costanzo, Simona, Antinori, Andrea, Berselli, Nausicaa, Blandi, Lorenzo, Bonaccio, Marialaura, Cauda, Roberto, Guaraldi, Giovanni, Menicanti, Lorenzo, Mennuni, Marco, Parruti, Giustino, Patti, Giuseppe, Santilli, Francesca, Signorelli, Carlo, Vergori, Alessandra, Abete, Pasquale, Ageno, Walter, Agodi, Antonella, Agostoni, Piergiuseppe, Aiello, Luca, Al Moghazi, Samir, Arboretti, Rosa, Astuto, Marinella, Aucella, Filippo, Barbieri, Greta, Bartoloni, Alessandro, Bonfanti, Paolo, Cacciatore, Francesco, Caiano, Lucia, Carrozzi, Laura, Cascio, Antonio, Ciccullo, Arturo, Cingolani, Antonella, Cipollone, Francesco, Colomba, Claudia, Colombo, Crizia, Crosta, Francesca, Danzi, Gian Battista, D'Ardes, Damiano, de Gaetano Donati, Katleen, Di Gennaro, Francesco, Di Tano, Giuseppe, D'Offizi, Gianpiero, Fantoni, Massimo, Fusco, Francesco Maria, Gentile, Ivan, Gianfagna, Francesco, Grandone, Elvira, Graziani, Emauele, Grisafi, Leonardo, Guarnieri, Gabriella, Larizza, Giovanni, Leone, Armando, Maccagni, Gloria, Madaro, Ferruccio, Maitan, Stefano, Mancarella, Sandro, Mapelli, Massimo, Maragna, Riccardo, Marcucci, Rossella, Maresca, Giulio, Marongiu, Silvia, Marotta, Claudia, Marra, Lorenzo, Mastroianni, Franco, Mazzitelli, Maria, Mengozzi, Alessandro, Menichetti, Francesco, Meschiari, Marianna, Milic, Jovana, Minutolo, Filippo, Molena, Beatrice, Montineri, Arturo, Mussini, Cristina, Musso, Maria, Niola, Daniela, Odone, Anna, Olivieri, Marco, Palimodde, Antonella, Parisi, Roberta, Pasi, Emanuela, Pesavento, Raffaele, Petri, Francesco, Pinchera, Biagio, Poletti, Venerino, Ravaglia, Claudia, Rognoni, Andrea, Rossato, Marco, Rossi, Marianna, Sangiovanni, Vincenzo, Sanrocco, Carlo, Scorzolini, Laura, Sgariglia, Raffaella, Simeone, Paola Giustina, Taddei, Eleonora, Torti, Carlo, Vettor, Roberto, Vianello, Andrea, Vinceti, Marco, Virano, Alexandra, Vocciante, Laura, De Caterina, Raffaele, Iacoviello, Licia, Di Castelnuovo A., Costanzo S., Antinori A., Berselli N., Blandi L., Bonaccio M., Cauda R., Guaraldi G., Menicanti L., Mennuni M., Parruti G., Patti G., Santilli F., Signorelli C., Vergori A., Abete P., Ageno W., Agodi A., Agostoni P., Aiello L., Al Moghazi S., Arboretti R., Astuto M., Aucella F., Barbieri G., Bartoloni A., Bonfanti P., Cacciatore F., Caiano L., Carrozzi L., Cascio A., Ciccullo A., Cingolani A., Cipollone F., Colomba C., Colombo C., Crosta F., Danzi G.B., D'Ardes D., De Gaetano Donati K., Di Gennaro F., Di Tano G., D'Offizi G., Fantoni M., Fusco F.M., Gentile I., Gianfagna F., Grandone E., Graziani E., Grisafi L., Guarnieri G., Larizza G., Leone A., MacCagni G., Madaro F., Maitan S., Mancarella S., Mapelli M., Maragna R., Marcucci R., Maresca G., Marongiu S., Marotta C., Marra L., Mastroianni F., Mazzitelli M., Mengozzi A., Menichetti F., Meschiari M., Milic J., Minutolo F., Molena B., Montineri A., Mussini C., Musso M., Niola D., Odone A., Olivieri M., Palimodde A., Parisi R., Pasi E., Pesavento R., Petri F., Pinchera B., Poletti V., Ravaglia C., Rognoni A., Rossato M., Rossi M., Sangiovanni V., Sanrocco C., Scorzolini L., Sgariglia R., Simeone P.G., Taddei E., Torti C., Vettor R., Vianello A., Vinceti M., Virano A., Vocciante L., De Caterina R., and Iacoviello L.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Settore MED/17 - Malattie Infettive ,coronavirus ,heparin ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Lower risk ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,medicine ,Humans ,Thrombophilia ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Hospital Mortality ,Blood Coagulation ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,treatment ,business.industry ,Heparin ,Mortality rate ,COVID-19,mortality ,Low-Molecular-Weight ,Anticoagulants ,COVID-19 ,Retrospective cohort study ,Hematology ,Heparin, Low-Molecular-Weight ,Middle Aged ,mortality ,Survival Analysis ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment ,coagulation activation ,coronaviru ,Italy ,treatments ,Propensity score matching ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Introduction A hypercoagulable condition was described in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and proposed as a possible pathogenic mechanism contributing to disease progression and lethality. Aim We evaluated if in-hospital administration of heparin improved survival in a large cohort of Italian COVID-19 patients. Methods In a retrospective observational study, 2,574 unselected patients hospitalized in 30 clinical centers in Italy from February 19, 2020 to June 5, 2020 with laboratory-confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 infection were analyzed. The primary endpoint in a time-to event analysis was in-hospital death, comparing patients who received heparin (low-molecular-weight heparin [LMWH] or unfractionated heparin [UFH]) with patients who did not. We used multivariable Cox proportional-hazards regression models with inverse probability for treatment weighting by propensity scores. Results Out of 2,574 COVID-19 patients, 70.1% received heparin. LMWH was largely the most used formulation (99.5%). Death rates for patients receiving heparin or not were 7.4 and 14.0 per 1,000 person-days, respectively. After adjustment for propensity scores, we found a 40% lower risk of death in patients receiving heparin (hazard ratio = 0.60; 95% confidence interval: 0.49–0.74; E-value = 2.04). This association was particularly evident in patients with a higher severity of disease or strong coagulation activation. Conclusion In-hospital heparin treatment was associated with a lower mortality, particularly in severely ill COVID-19 patients and in those with strong coagulation activation. The results from randomized clinical trials are eagerly awaited to provide clear-cut recommendations.
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- 2021
13. Disentangling the Association of Hydroxychloroquine Treatment with Mortality in Covid-19 Hospitalized Patients through Hierarchical Clustering
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Anna Sabena, Gabriele Giuliano, Raffaele Bruno, Francesco Cacciatore, Carlo Torti, Silvia Marongiu, Gloria Maccagni, Claudia Marotta, Giovanni Larizza, Francesco Petri, Massimo Mapelli, Giulio Maresca, Giulia Righetti, Alessandra Vergori, Ilaria Rossi, Damiano D'Ardes, Nicola Schiano Moriello, Ivan Gentile, Enrica Tamburrini, Luca Aiello, Piergiuseppe Agostoni, Antonio Cascio, Jovana Milic, Carlo Andrea Pivato, Agostino Virdis, Stefano Maitan, Francesco Cannata, Simona Costanzo, Carlo Signorelli, Franco Mastroianni, Federica Magni, Crizia Colombo, Giulio G. Stefanini, Lucia Caiano, Francesca Crosta, Lorenzo Marra, Giuseppe Patti, Katleen de Gaetano Donati, Valerio Langella, Annalisa Crisetti, Filippo Aucella, Antonella Cingolani, Francesco Salinaro, Augusto Di Castelnuovo, Giacomo Castiglione, Alessandro Gialluisi, Anna Odone, Cristina Mussini, Samir Al Moghazi, Lorenzo Blandi, Maria Musso, Marialaura Bonaccio, Raffaele De Caterina, Marco Olivieri, Roberto Cauda, Emanuela Pasi, Arturo Ciccullo, Stefano Perlini, Claudia Colomba, Antonella Palimodde, Gianpiero D'Offizi, Marco G. Mennuni, Walter Ageno, Raffaele Pesavento, Rosa Manuele, Roberta Mussinelli, Vincenzo Sangiovanni, Paolo Bonfanti, Andrea Antinori, Francesco Gianfagna, Andrea Rognoni, Laura Scorzolini, Riccardo Maragna, Rossella Marcucci, Filippo Minutolo, Armando Leone, Giustino Parruti, Licia Iacoviello, Lorenzo Menicanti, Sandro Mancarella, Rosa Arboretti, Greta Barbieri, Carlo Gaudiosi, Marco Rossato, Claudia Ravaglia, Andrea Vianello, Marianna Rossi, Emauele Graziani, Martina Barchitta, Giovanni Guaraldi, Enrico Maria Trecarichi, Gian Battista Danzi, Francesco Cipollone, Carlo Sanrocco, Marco Vinceti, Francesca Santilli, Marianna Meschiari, Gabriella Guarnieri, Antonella Agodi, Roberto Vettor, Raffaella Sgariglia, Ilaria My, Francesco Di Gennaro, Alessandro Mengozzi, Giuseppe Di Tano, Laura Carrozzi, Michele Spinicci, Venerino Poletti, Paola Simeone, Nausicaa Berselli, Francesco Maria Fusco, Di Castelnuovo A., Gialluisi A., Antinori A., Berselli N., Blandi L., Bonaccio M., Bruno R., Cauda R., Costanzo S., Guaraldi G., Menicanti L., Mennuni M., My I., Parruti G., Patti G., Perlini S., Santilli F., Signorelli C., Stefanini G., Vergori A., Ageno W., Agodi A., Agostoni P., Aiello L., Moghazi S.A., Arboretti R., Aucella F., Barbieri G., Barchitta M., Bonfanti P., Cacciatore F., Caiano L., Cannata F., Carrozzi L., Cascio A., Castiglione G., Cicullo A., Cingolani A., Cipollone F., Colomba C., Colombo C., Crisetti A., Crosta F., Danzi G.B., D'Ardes D., de Gaetano Donati K., Di Gennaro F., Di Tano G., D'Offizi G., Fusco F.M., Gaudiosi C., Gentile I., Gianfagna F., Giuliano G., Graziani E., Guarnieri G., Langella V., Larizza G., Leone A., Maccagni G., Magni F., Maitan S., Mancarella S., Manuele R., Mapelli M., Maragna R., Marcucci R., Maresca G., Marongiu S., Marotta C., Marra L., Mastroianni F., Mengozzi A., Meschiari M., Milic J., Minutolo F., Mussinelli R., Mussini C., Musso M., Odone A., Olivieri M., Palimodde A., Pasi E., Pesavento R., Petri F., Pivato C.A., Poletti V., Ravaglia C., Righetti G., Rognoni A., Rossato M., Rossi I., Rossi M., Sabena A., Salinaro F., Sangiovanni V., Sanrocco C., Moriello N.S., Scorzolini L., Sgariglia R., Simeone P.G., Spinicci M., Tamburrini E., Torti C., Trecarichi E.M., Vettor R., Vianello A., Vinceti M., Virdis A., de Caterina R., Iacoviello L., Di Castelnuovo, A, Gialluisi, A, Antinori, A, Berselli, N, Blandi, L, Bonaccio, M, Bruno, R, Cauda, R, Costanzo, S, Guaraldi, G, Menicanti, L, Mennuni, M, My, I, Parruti, G, Patti, G, Perlini, S, Santilli, F, Signorelli, C, Stefanini, G, Vergori, A, Ageno, W, Agodi, A, Agostoni, P, Aiello, L, Al Moghazi, S, Arboretti, R, Aucella, F, Barbieri, G, Barchitta, M, Bonfanti, P, Cacciatore, F, Caiano, L, Cannata, F, Carrozzi, L, Cascio, A, Castiglione, G, Cicullo, A, Cingolani, A, Cipollone, F, Colomba, C, Colombo, C, Crisetti, A, Crosta, F, Danzi, G, D'Ardes, D, de Gaetano Donati, K, Di Gennaro, F, Di Tano, G, D'Offizi, G, Fusco, F, Gaudiosi, C, Gentile, I, Gianfagna1, F, Giuliano, G, Graziani, E, Guarnieri, G, Langella, V, Larizza, G, Leone, A, Maccagni, G, Magni, F, Maitan, S, Mancarella, S, Manuele, R, Mapelli, M, Maragna, R, Marcucci, R, Maresca, G, Marongiu, S, Marotta, C, Marra, L, Mastroianni, F, Mengozzi, A, Meschiari, M, Milic, J, Minutolo, F, Mussinelli, R, Mussini, C, Musso, M, Odone, A, Olivieri, M, Palimodde, A, Pasi, E, Pesavento, R, Petri, F, Pivato, C, Poletti, V, Ravaglia, C, Righetti, G, Rognoni, A, Rossato, M, Rossi, I, Rossi, M, Sabena, A, Salinaro, F, Sangiovanni, V, Sanrocco, C, Schiano Moriello, N, Scorzolini, L, Sgariglia, R, Simeone, P, Spinicci, M, Tamburrini, E, Torti, C, Trecarichi, E, Vettor, R, Vianello, A, Vinceti, M, Virdis, A, De Caterina, R, Iacoviello, L, Di Castelnuovo, A., Gialluisi, A., Antinori, A., Berselli, N., Blandi, L., Bonaccio, M., Bruno, R., Cauda, R., Costanzo, S., Guaraldi, G., Menicanti, L., Mennuni, M., My, I., Parruti, G., Patti, G., Perlini, S., Santilli, F., Signorelli, C., Stefanini, G., Vergori, A., Ageno, W., Agodi, A., Agostoni, P., Aiello, L., Moghazi, S. A., Arboretti, R., Aucella, F., Barbieri, G., Barchitta, M., Bonfanti, P., Cacciatore, F., Caiano, L., Cannata, F., Carrozzi, L., Cascio, A., Castiglione, G., Cicullo, A., Cingolani, A., Cipollone, F., Colomba, C., Colombo, C., Crisetti, A., Crosta, F., Danzi, G. B., D’Ardes, D., de Gaetano Donati, K., Di Gennaro, F., Di Tano, G., D’Offizi, G., Fusco, F. M., Gaudiosi, C., Gentile, I., Gianfagna, F., Giuliano, G., Graziani, E., Guarnieri, G., Langella, V., Larizza, G., Leone, A., Maccagni, G., Magni, F., Maitan, S., Mancarella, S., Manuele, R., Mapelli, M., Maragna, R., Marcucci, R., Maresca, G., Marongiu, S., Marotta, C., Marra, L., Mastroianni, F., Mengozzi, A., Meschiari, M., Milic, J., Minutolo, F., Mussinelli, R., Mussini, C., Musso, M., Odone, A., Olivieri, M., Palimodde, A., Pasi, E., Pesavento, R., Petri, F., Pivato, C. A., Poletti, V., Ravaglia, C., Righetti, G., Rognoni, A., Rossato, M., Rossi, I., Rossi, M., Sabena, A., Salinaro, F., Sangiovanni, V., Sanrocco, C., Moriello, N. S., Scorzolini, L., Sgariglia, R., Simeone, P. G., Spinicci, M., Tamburrini, E., Torti, C., Trecarichi, E. M., Vettor, R., Vianello, A., Vinceti, M., Virdis, A., de Caterina, R., and Iacoviello, L.
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Male ,Medicine (General) ,Antimalarial ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Hospital Mortality ,0302 clinical medicine ,Retrospective Studie ,80 and over ,Cluster Analysis ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Antimalarials ,COVID-19 ,Female ,Humans ,Hydroxychloroquine ,Italy ,Middle Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Treatment Outcome ,Biotechnology ,medicine.drug ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Article Subject ,Biomedical Engineering ,Renal function ,Health Informatics ,03 medical and health sciences ,R5-920 ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 ,Cluster Analysi ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment ,Surgery ,Observational study ,business - Abstract
The efficacy of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) in treating SARS-CoV-2 infection is harshly debated, with observational and experimental studies reporting contrasting results. To clarify the role of HCQ in Covid-19 patients, we carried out a retrospective observational study of 4,396 unselected patients hospitalized for Covid-19 in Italy (February–May 2020). Patients’ characteristics were collected at entry, including age, sex, obesity, smoking status, blood parameters, history of diabetes, cancer, cardiovascular and chronic pulmonary diseases, and medications in use. These were used to identify subtypes of patients with similar characteristics through hierarchical clustering based on Gower distance. Using multivariable Cox regressions, these clusters were then tested for association with mortality and modification of effect by treatment with HCQ. We identified two clusters, one of 3,913 younger patients with lower circulating inflammation levels and better renal function, and one of 483 generally older and more comorbid subjects, more prevalently men and smokers. The latter group was at increased death risk adjusted by HCQ (HR[CI95%] = 3.80[3.08-4.67]), while HCQ showed an independent inverse association (0.51[0.43-0.61]), as well as a significant influence of cluster∗HCQ interaction ( p < 0.001 ). This was driven by a differential association of HCQ with mortality between the high (0.89[0.65-1.22]) and the low risk cluster (0.46[0.39-0.54]). These effects survived adjustments for additional medications in use and were concordant with associations with disease severity and outcome. These findings suggest a particularly beneficial effect of HCQ within low risk Covid-19 patients and may contribute to clarifying the current controversy on HCQ efficacy in Covid-19 treatment.
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- 2021
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14. Lopinavir/ritonavir and darunavir/cobicistat in hospitalized covid-19 patients: Findings from the multicenter italian corist study
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Augusto Di Castelnuovo, Simona Costanzo, Andrea Antinori, Nausicaa Berselli, Lorenzo Blandi, Marialaura Bonaccio, Raffaele Bruno, Roberto Cauda, Alessandro Gialluisi, Giovanni Guaraldi, Lorenzo Menicanti, Marco Mennuni, Ilaria My, Agostino Parruti, Giuseppe Patti, Stefano Perlini, Francesca Santilli, Carlo Signorelli, Giulio G. Stefanini, Alessandra Vergori, Walter Ageno, Luca Aiello, Piergiuseppe Agostoni, Samir Al Moghazi, Rosa Arboretti, Filippo Aucella, Greta Barbieri, Martina Barchitta, Alessandro Bartoloni, Carolina Bologna, Paolo Bonfanti, Lucia Caiano, Laura Carrozzi, Antonio Cascio, Giacomo Castiglione, Mauro Chiarito, Arturo Ciccullo, Antonella Cingolani, Francesco Cipollone, Claudia Colomba, Crizia Colombo, Francesco Crosta, Giovanni Dalena, Chiara Dal Pra, Gian Battista Danzi, Damiano D'Ardes, Katleen de Gaetano Donati, Francesco Di Gennaro, Giuseppe Di Tano, Gianpiero D'Offizi, Tommaso Filippini, Francesco Maria Fusco, Carlo Gaudiosi, Ivan Gentile, Giancarlo Gini, Elvira Grandone, Gabriella Guarnieri, Gennaro L. F. Lamanna, Giovanni Larizza, Armando Leone, Veronica Lio, Angela Raffaella Losito, Gloria Maccagni, Stefano Maitan, Sandro Mancarella, Rosa Manuele, Massimo Mapelli, Riccardo Maragna, Lorenzo Marra, Giulio Maresca, Claudia Marotta, Franco Mastroianni, Maria Mazzitelli, Alessandro Mengozzi, Francesco Menichetti, Jovana Milic, Filippo Minutolo, Beatrice Molena, R. Mussinelli, Cristina Mussini, Maria Musso, Anna Odone, Marco Olivieri, Emanuela Pasi, Annalisa Perroni, Francesco Petri, Biagio Pinchera, Carlo A. Pivato, Venerino Poletti, Claudia Ravaglia, Marco Rossato, Marianna Rossi, Anna Sabena, Francesco Salinaro, Vincenzo Sangiovanni, Carlo Sanrocco, Laura Scorzolini, Raffaella Sgariglia, Paola Giustina Simeone, Michele Spinicci, Enrico Maria Trecarichi, Giovanni Veronesi, Roberto Vettor, Andrea Vianello, Marco Vinceti, Elena Visconti, Laura Vocciante, Raffaele De Caterina, Licia Iacoviello, The COVID-19 RISK and Treatments (CORIST) Collaboration, Di Castelnuovo, Augusto, Costanzo, Simona, Antinori, Andrea, Berselli, Nausicaa, Blandi, Lorenzo, Bonaccio, Marialaura, Bruno, Raffaele, Cauda, Roberto, Gialluisi, Alessandro, Guaraldi, Giovanni, Menicanti, Lorenzo, Mennuni, Marco, My, Ilaria, Parruti, Agostino, Patti, Giuseppe, Perlini, Stefano, Santilli, Francesca, Signorelli, Carlo, Stefanini, Giulio G, Vergori, Alessandra, Ageno, Walter, Aiello, Luca, Agostoni, Piergiuseppe, Al Moghazi, Samir, Arboretti, Rosa, Aucella, Filippo, Barbieri, Greta, Barchitta, Martina, Bartoloni, Alessandro, Bologna, Carolina, Bonfanti, Paolo, Caiano, Lucia, Carrozzi, Laura, Cascio, Antonio, Castiglione, Giacomo, Chiarito, Mauro, Ciccullo, Arturo, Cingolani, Antonella, Cipollone, Francesco, Colomba, Claudia, Colombo, Crizia, Crosta, Francesco, Dalena, Giovanni, Dal Pra, Chiara, Danzi, Gian Battista, D'Ardes, Damiano, de Gaetano Donati, Katleen, Di Gennaro, Francesco, Di Tano, Giuseppe, D'Offizi, Gianpiero, Filippini, Tommaso, Maria Fusco, Francesco, Gaudiosi, Carlo, Gentile, Ivan, Gini, Giancarlo, Grandone, Elvira, Guarnieri, Gabriella, Lamanna, Gennaro L F, Larizza, Giovanni, Leone, Armando, Lio, Veronica, Losito, Angela Raffaella, Maccagni, Gloria, Maitan, Stefano, Mancarella, Sandro, Manuele, Rosa, Mapelli, Massimo, Maragna, Riccardo, Marra, Lorenzo, Maresca, Giulio, Marotta, Claudia, Mastroianni, Franco, Mazzitelli, Maria, Mengozzi, Alessandro, Menichetti, Francesco, Milic, Jovana, Minutolo, Filippo, Molena, Beatrice, Mussinelli, R, Mussini, Cristina, Musso, Maria, Odone, Anna, Olivieri, Marco, Pasi, Emanuela, Perroni, Annalisa, Petri, Francesco, Pinchera, Biagio, Pivato, Carlo A, Poletti, Venerino, Ravaglia, Claudia, Rossato, Marco, Rossi, Marianna, Sabena, Anna, Salinaro, Francesco, Sangiovanni, Vincenzo, Sanrocco, Carlo, Scorzolini, Laura, Sgariglia, Raffaella, Simeone, Paola Giustina, Spinicci, Michele, Trecarichi, Enrico Maria, Veronesi, Giovanni, Vettor, Roberto, Vianello, Andrea, Vinceti, Marco, Visconti, Elena, Vocciante, Laura, De Caterina, Raffaele, Iacoviello, Licia, Di Castelnuovo, A, Costanzo, S, Antinori, A, Berselli, N, Blandi, L, Bonaccio, M, Bruno, R, Cauda, R, Gialluisi, A, Guaraldi, G, Menicanti, L, Mennuni, M, My, I, Parruti, A, Patti, G, Perlini, S, Santilli, F, Signorelli, C, Stefanini, G, Vergori, A, Ageno, W, Aiello, L, Agostoni, P, Al Moghazi, S, Arboretti, R, Aucella, F, Barbieri, G, Barchitta, M, Bartoloni, A, Bologna, C, Bonfanti, P, Caiano, L, Carrozzi, L, Cascio, A, Castiglione, G, Chiarito, M, Ciccullo, A, Cingolani, A, Cipollone, F, Colomba, C, Colombo, C, Crosta, F, Dalena, G, Dal Pra, C, Danzi, G, D'Ardes, D, de Gaetano Donati, K, Di Gennaro, F, Di Tano, G, D'Offizi, G, Filippini, T, Maria Fusco, F, Gaudiosi, C, Gentile, I, Gini, G, Grandone, E, Guarnieri, G, Lamanna, G, Larizza, G, Leone, A, Lio, V, Losito, A, Maccagni, G, Maitan, S, Mancarella, S, Manuele, R, Mapelli, M, Maragna, R, Marra, L, Maresca, G, Marotta, C, Mastroianni, F, Mazzitelli, M, Mengozzi, A, Menichetti, F, Milic, J, Minutolo, F, Molena, B, Mussini, C, Musso, M, Odone, A, Olivieri, M, Pasi, E, Perroni, A, Petri, F, Pinchera, B, Pivato, C, Poletti, V, Ravaglia, C, Rossato, M, Rossi, M, Sabena, A, Salinaro, F, Sangiovanni, V, Sanrocco, C, Scorzolini, L, Sgariglia, R, Simeone, P, Spinicci, M, Trecarichi, E, Veronesi, G, Vettor, R, Vianello, A, Vinceti, M, Visconti, E, Vocciante, L, De Caterina, R, Iacoviello, L, Di Castelnuovo, A., Costanzo, S., Antinori, A., Berselli, N., Blandi, L., Bonaccio, M., Bruno, R., Cauda, R., Gialluisi, A., Guaraldi, G., Menicanti, L., Mennuni, M., My, I., Parruti, A., Patti, G., Perlini, S., Santilli, F., Signorelli, C., Stefanini, G. G., Vergori, A., Ageno, W., Aiello, L., Agostoni, P., Moghazi, S. A., Arboretti, R., Aucella, F., Barbieri, G., Barchitta, M., Bartoloni, A., Bologna, C., Bonfanti, P., Caiano, L., Carrozzi, L., Cascio, A., Castiglione, G., Chiarito, M., Ciccullo, A., Cingolani, A., Cipollone, F., Colomba, C., Colombo, C., Crosta, F., Dalena, G., Dal Pra, C., Danzi, G. B., D'Ardes, D., Donati, K. G., Di Gennaro, F., Di Tano, G., D'Offizi, G., Filippini, T., Fusco, F. M., Gaudiosi, C., Gentile, I., Gini, G., Grandone, E., Guarnieri, G., Lamanna, G. L. F., Larizza, G., Leone, A., Lio, V., Losito, A. R., Maccagni, G., Maitan, S., Mancarella, S., Manuele, R., Mapelli, M., Maragna, R., Marra, L., Maresca, G., Marotta, C., Mastroianni, F., Mazzitelli, M., Mengozzi, A., Menichetti, F., Milic, J., Minutolo, F., Molena, B., Mussinelli, R., Mussini, C., Musso, M., Odone, A., Olivieri, M., Pasi, E., Perroni, A., Petri, F., Pinchera, B., Pivato, C. A., Poletti, V., Ravaglia, C., Rossato, M., Rossi, M., Sabena, A., Salinaro, F., Sangiovanni, V., Sanrocco, C., Scorzolini, L., Sgariglia, R., Simeone, P. G., Spinicci, M., Trecarichi, E. M., Veronesi, G., Vettor, R., Vianello, A., Vinceti, M., Visconti, E., Vocciante, L., Caterina, R. D., Iacoviello, L., Di Castelnuovo A., Costanzo S., Antinori A., Berselli N., Blandi L., Bonaccio M., Bruno R., Cauda R., Gialluisi A., Guaraldi G., Menicanti L., Mennuni M., My I., Parruti A., Patti G., Perlini S., Santilli F., Signorelli C., Stefanini G.G., Vergori A., Ageno W., Aiello L., Agostoni P., Moghazi S.A., Arboretti R., Aucella F., Barbieri G., Barchitta M., Bartoloni A., Bologna C., Bonfanti P., Caiano L., Carrozzi L., Cascio A., Castiglione G., Chiarito M., Ciccullo A., Cingolani A., Cipollone F., Colomba C., Colombo C., Crosta F., Dalena G., Dal Pra C., Danzi G.B., D'ardes D., Donati K.G., Di Gennaro F., Di Tano G., D'offizi G., Filippini T., Fusco F.M., Gaudiosi C., Gentile I., Gini G., Grandone E., Guarnieri G., Lamanna G.L.F., Larizza G., Leone A., Lio V., Losito A.R., Maccagni G., Maitan S., Mancarella S., Manuele R., Mapelli M., Maragna R., Marra L., Maresca G., Marotta C., Mastroianni F., Mazzitelli M., Mengozzi A., Menichetti F., Milic J., Minutolo F., Molena B., Mussinelli R., Mussini C., Musso M., Odone A., Olivieri M., Pasi E., Perroni A., Petri F., Pinchera B., Pivato C.A., Poletti V., Ravaglia C., Rossato M., Rossi M., Sabena A., Salinaro F., Sangiovanni V., Sanrocco C., Scorzolini L., Sgariglia R., Simeone P.G., Spinicci M., Trecarichi E.M., Veronesi G., Vettor R., Vianello A., Vinceti M., Visconti E., Vocciante L., Caterina R.D., and Iacoviello L.
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Medicine (General) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lopinavir/ritonavir ,Lopinavir ,R5-920 ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Darunavir ,Original Research ,COVID-19 ,In-hospital mortality ,SARS-CoV-2 ,darunavir ,in-hospital mortality ,lopinavir ,business.industry ,Cobicistat ,Mortality rate ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Propensity score matching ,Medicine ,Ritonavir ,business ,medicine.drug ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Background: Protease inhibitors have been considered as possible therapeutic agents for COVID-19 patients.Objectives: To describe the association between lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) or darunavir/cobicistat (DRV/c) use and in-hospital mortality in COVID-19 patients.Study Design: Multicenter observational study of COVID-19 patients admitted in 33 Italian hospitals. Medications, preexisting conditions, clinical measures, and outcomes were extracted from medical records. Patients were retrospectively divided in three groups, according to use of LPV/r, DRV/c or none of them. Primary outcome in a time-to event analysis was death. We used Cox proportional-hazards models with inverse probability of treatment weighting by multinomial propensity scores.Results: Out of 3,451 patients, 33.3% LPV/r and 13.9% received DRV/c. Patients receiving LPV/r or DRV/c were more likely younger, men, had higher C-reactive protein levels while less likely had hypertension, cardiovascular, pulmonary or kidney disease. After adjustment for propensity scores, LPV/r use was not associated with mortality (HR = 0.94, 95% CI 0.78 to 1.13), whereas treatment with DRV/c was associated with a higher death risk (HR = 1.89, 1.53 to 2.34, E-value = 2.43). This increased risk was more marked in women, in elderly, in patients with higher severity of COVID-19 and in patients receiving other COVID-19 drugs.Conclusions: In a large cohort of Italian patients hospitalized for COVID-19 in a real-life setting, the use of LPV/r treatment did not change death rate, while DRV/c was associated with increased mortality. Within the limits of an observational study, these data do not support the use of LPV/r or DRV/c in COVID-19 patients.
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- 2021
15. Common cardiovascular risk factors and in-hospital mortality in 3,894 patients with COVID-19: survival analysis and machine learning-based findings from the multicentre Italian CORIST Study
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Augusto Di Castelnuovo, Marialaura Bonaccio, Simona Costanzo, Alessandro Gialluisi, Andrea Antinori, Nausicaa Berselli, Lorenzo Blandi, Raffaele Bruno, Roberto Cauda, Giovanni Guaraldi, Ilaria My, Lorenzo Menicanti, Giustino Parruti, Giuseppe Patti, Stefano Perlini, Francesca Santilli, Carlo Signorelli, Giulio G. Stefanini, Alessandra Vergori, Amina Abdeddaim, Walter Ageno, Antonella Agodi, Piergiuseppe Agostoni, Luca Aiello, Samir Al Moghazi, Filippo Aucella, Greta Barbieri, Alessandro Bartoloni, Carolina Bologna, Paolo Bonfanti, Serena Brancati, Francesco Cacciatore, Lucia Caiano, Francesco Cannata, Laura Carrozzi, Antonio Cascio, Antonella Cingolani, Francesco Cipollone, Claudia Colomba, Annalisa Crisetti, Francesca Crosta, Gian B. Danzi, Damiano D'Ardes, Katleen de Gaetano Donati, Francesco Di Gennaro, Gisella Di Palma, Giuseppe Di Tano, Massimo Fantoni, Tommaso Filippini, Paola Fioretto, Francesco M. Fusco, Ivan Gentile, Leonardo Grisafi, Gabriella Guarnieri, Francesco Landi, Giovanni Larizza, Armando Leone, Gloria Maccagni, Sandro Maccarella, Massimo Mapelli, Riccardo Maragna, Rossella Marcucci, Giulio Maresca, Claudia Marotta, Lorenzo Marra, Franco Mastroianni, Alessandro Mengozzi, Francesco Menichetti, Jovana Milic, Rita Murri, Arturo Montineri, Roberta Mussinelli, Cristina Mussini, Maria Musso, Anna Odone, Marco Olivieri, Emanuela Pasi, Francesco Petri, Biagio Pinchera, Carlo A. Pivato, Roberto Pizzi, Venerino Poletti, Francesca Raffaelli, Claudia Ravaglia, Giulia Righetti, Andrea Rognoni, Marco Rossato, Marianna Rossi, Anna Sabena, Francesco Salinaro, Vincenzo Sangiovanni, Carlo Sanrocco, Antonio Scarafino, Laura Scorzolini, Raffaella Sgariglia, Paola G. Simeone, Enrico Spinoni, Carlo Torti, Enrico M. Trecarichi, Francesca Vezzani, Giovanni Veronesi, Roberto Vettor, Andrea Vianello, Marco Vinceti, Raffaele De Caterina, Licia Iacoviello, Di Castelnuovo, A., Bonaccio, M., Costanzo, S., Gialluisi, A., Antinori, A., Berselli, N., Blandi, L., Bruno, R., Cauda, R., Guaraldi, G., My, I., Menicanti, L., Parruti, G., Patti, G., Perlini, S., Santilli, F., Signorelli, C., Stefanini, G. G., Vergori, A., Abdeddaim, A., Ageno, W., Agodi, A., Agostoni, P., Aiello, L., Al Moghazi, S., Aucella, F., Barbieri, G., Bartoloni, A., Bologna, C., Bonfanti, P., Brancati, S., Cacciatore, F., Caiano, L., Cannata, F., Carrozzi, L., Cascio, A., Cingolani, A., Cipollone, F., Colomba, C., Crisetti, A., Crosta, F., Danzi, G. B., D'Ardes, D., de Gaetano Donati, K., Di Gennaro, F., Di Palma, G., Di Tano, G., Fantoni, M., Filippini, T., Fioretto, P., Fusco, F. M., Gentile, I., Grisafi, L., Guarnieri, G., Landi, F., Larizza, G., Leone, A., Maccagni, G., Maccarella, S., Mapelli, M., Maragna, R., Marcucci, R., Maresca, G., Marotta, C., Marra, L., Mastroianni, F., Mengozzi, A., Menichetti, F., Milic, J., Murri, R., Montineri, A., Mussinelli, R., Mussini, C., Musso, M., Odone, A., Olivieri, M., Pasi, E., Petri, F., Pinchera, B., Pivato, C. A., Pizzi, R., Poletti, V., Raffaelli, F., Ravaglia, C., Righetti, G., Rognoni, A., Rossato, M., Rossi, M., Sabena, A., Salinaro, F., Sangiovanni, V., Sanrocco, C., Scarafino, A., Scorzolini, L., Sgariglia, R., Simeone, P. G., Spinoni, E., Torti, C., Trecarichi, E. M., Vezzani, F., Veronesi, G., Vettor, R., Vianello, A., Vinceti, M., De Caterina, R., Iacoviello, L., Di Castelnuovo, Augusto, Bonaccio, Marialaura, Costanzo, Simona, Gialluisi, Alessandro, Antinori, Andrea, Berselli, Nausicaa, Blandi, Lorenzo, Bruno, Raffaele, Cauda, Roberto, Guaraldi, Giovanni, My, Ilaria, Menicanti, Lorenzo, Parruti, Giustino, Patti, Giuseppe, Perlini, Stefano, Santilli, Francesca, Signorelli, Carlo, Stefanini, Giulio G, Vergori, Alessandra, Abdeddaim, Amina, Ageno, Walter, Agodi, Antonella, Agostoni, Piergiuseppe, Aiello, Luca, Al Moghazi, Samir, Aucella, Filippo, Barbieri, Greta, Bartoloni, Alessandro, Bologna, Carolina, Bonfanti, Paolo, Brancati, Serena, Cacciatore, Francesco, Caiano, Lucia, Cannata, Francesco, Carrozzi, Laura, Cascio, Antonio, Cingolani, Antonella, Cipollone, Francesco, Colomba, Claudia, Crisetti, Annalisa, Crosta, Francesca, Danzi, Gian B, D'Ardes, Damiano, de Gaetano Donati, Katleen, Di Gennaro, Francesco, Di Palma, Gisella, Di Tano, Giuseppe, Fantoni, Massimo, Filippini, Tommaso, Fioretto, Paola, Fusco, Francesco M, Gentile, Ivan, Grisafi, Leonardo, Guarnieri, Gabriella, Landi, Francesco, Larizza, Giovanni, Leone, Armando, Maccagni, Gloria, Maccarella, Sandro, Mapelli, Massimo, Maragna, Riccardo, Marcucci, Rossella, Maresca, Giulio, Marotta, Claudia, Marra, Lorenzo, Mastroianni, Franco, Mengozzi, Alessandro, Menichetti, Francesco, Milic, Jovana, Murri, Rita, Montineri, Arturo, Mussinelli, Roberta, Mussini, Cristina, Musso, Maria, Odone, Anna, Olivieri, Marco, Pasi, Emanuela, Petri, Francesco, Pinchera, Biagio, Pivato, Carlo A, Pizzi, Roberto, Poletti, Venerino, Raffaelli, Francesca, Ravaglia, Claudia, Righetti, Giulia, Rognoni, Andrea, Rossato, Marco, Rossi, Marianna, Sabena, Anna, Salinaro, Francesco, Sangiovanni, Vincenzo, Sanrocco, Carlo, Scarafino, Antonio, Scorzolini, Laura, Sgariglia, Raffaella, Simeone, Paola G, Spinoni, Enrico, Torti, Carlo, Trecarichi, Enrico M, Vezzani, Francesca, Veronesi, Giovanni, Vettor, Roberto, Vianello, Andrea, Vinceti, Marco, De Caterina, Raffaele, Iacoviello, Licia, Di Castelnuovo, A, Bonaccio, M, Costanzo, S, Gialluisi, A, Antinori, A, Berselli, N, Blandi, L, Bruno, R, Cauda, R, Guaraldi, G, My, I, Menicanti, L, Parruti, A, Patti, G, Perlini, S, Santilli, F, Signorelli, C, Stefanini, G, Vergori, A, Abdeddaim, A, Ageno, W, Agodi, A, Agostoni, P, Aiello, L, Al Moghazi, S, Aucella, F, Barbieri, G, Bartoloni, A, Bologna, C, Bonfanti, P, Brancati, S, Cacciatore, F, Caiano, L, Cannata, F, Carrozzi, L, Cascio, A, Cingolani, A, Cipollone, F, Colomba, C, Crisetti, A, Crosta, F, Danzi, G, D'Ardes, D, de Gaetano Donati, K, Di Gennaro, F, Di Palma, G, Di Tano, G, Fantoni, M, Filippini, T, Fioretto, P, Fusco, F, Gentile, I, Grisafi, L, Guarnieri, G, Landi, F, Larizza, G, Leone, A, Maccagni, G, Maccarella, S, Mapelli, M, Maragna, R, Marcucci, R, Maresca, G, Marotta, C, Marra, L, Mastroianni, F, Mengozzi, A, Menichetti, F, Milic, J, Miurri, R, Montineri, A, Mussinelli, R, Mussini, C, Musso, M, Odone, A, Olivieri, M, Pasi, E, Petri, F, Pinchera, B, Pivato, C, Pizzi, R, Poletti, V, Raffaelli, F, Ravaglia, C, Righetti, G, Rognoni, A, Rossato, M, Rossi, M, Sabena, A, Salinaro, F, Sangiovanni, V, Sanrocco, C, Scarafino, A, Scorzolini, L, Sgariglia, R, Simeone, P, Spinoni, E, Torti, C, Trecarichi, E, Vezzani, F, Veronesi, G, Vettor, R, Vianello, A, Vinceti, M, De Caterina, R, and Iacoviello, L
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Male ,Epidemiology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,computer.software_genre ,Machine Learning ,0302 clinical medicine ,Retrospective Studie ,Risk Factors ,Cardiovascular Disease ,80 and over ,Medicine ,Age Factor ,Viral ,Hospital Mortality ,Betacoronavirus Hospital Mortality ,Young adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,COVID-19 ,In-hospital mortality ,Risk factors ,Mortality rate ,Hazard ratio ,Age Factors ,Middle Aged ,C-Reactive Protein ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Female ,Survival Analysi ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Coronavirus Infections ,Human ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Pneumonia, Viral ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Settore MED/17 - MALATTIE INFETTIVE ,Machine learning ,Aged ,Humans ,Pandemics ,Retrospective Studies ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Survival Analysis ,Young Adult ,Betacoronavirus ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Risk factor ,Survival analysis ,Pandemic ,Betacoronaviru ,business.industry ,Coronavirus Infection ,Risk Factor ,Retrospective cohort study ,Pneumonia ,Confidence interval ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer - Abstract
Background and aims There is poor knowledge on characteristics, comorbidities and laboratory measures associated with risk for adverse outcomes and in-hospital mortality in European Countries. We aimed at identifying baseline characteristics predisposing COVID-19 patients to in-hospital death. Methods and results Retrospective observational study on 3894 patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection hospitalized from February 19th to May 23rd, 2020 and recruited in 30 clinical centres distributed throughout Italy. Machine learning (random forest)-based and Cox survival analysis. 61.7% of participants were men (median age 67 years), followed up for a median of 13 days. In-hospital mortality exhibited a geographical gradient, Northern Italian regions featuring more than twofold higher death rates as compared to Central/Southern areas (15.6% vs 6.4%, respectively). Machine learning analysis revealed that the most important features in death classification were impaired renal function, elevated C reactive protein and advanced age. These findings were confirmed by multivariable Cox survival analysis (hazard ratio (HR): 8.2; 95% confidence interval (CI) 4.6–14.7 for age ≥85 vs 18–44 y); HR = 4.7; 2.9–7.7 for estimated glomerular filtration rate levels, Highlights • Impaired renal function, elevated C-reactive protein and advanced age were major indicators of death in COVID-19 patients. • These associations were substantially homogenous across all sub-groups analysed. • No relation was found with obesity, tobacco use, cardiovascular disease and related-comorbidities. • Death rates were higher in the Northern as opposed to Central-Southern Italian regions.
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- 2020
16. Use of hydroxychloroquine in hospitalised COVID-19 patients is associated with reduced mortality: Findings from the observational multicentre Italian CORIST study
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Venerino Poletti, Damiano D'Ardes, Paola Simeone, Cristina Mussini, Giustino Parruti, Sandro Maccarella, Licia Iacoviello, Giulio G. Stefanini, Roberta Mussinelli, Vincenzo Sangiovanni, Paolo Bonfanti, Roberto Vettor, Andrea Vianello, Arturo Montineri, Roberto Cauda, Elvira Grandone, Maria Mazzitelli, Claudia Ravaglia, Marialaura Bonaccio, Giulio Maresca, Francesco Di Gennaro, Alessandro Mengozzi, Anna Sabena, Gian Battista Danzi, Giuseppe Di Tano, Emanuela Pasi, Ilaria Rossi, Lucia Caiano, Laura Carrozzi, Francesco Landi, Francesca Crosta, Tommaso Filippini, Francesco Menichetti, Piergiuseppe Agostoni, Andrea Madaro, Antonio Cascio, Carlo Signorelli, Michele Spinicci, Carlo Sanrocco, Enrico Guido Spinoni, Maria Musso, Alessandra Vergori, Lorenzo Marra, Giuseppe Patti, Laura Vocciante, Marco Olivieri, Francesca Santilli, Stefano Perlini, Claudia Colomba, Francesco Salinaro, Marianna Meschiari, Gabriella Guarnieri, Giampiero D'Offizi, Riccardo Maragna, Paola Del Giacomo, Giancarlo Gini, Katleen de Gaetano Donati, Andrea Antinori, Filippo Aucella, Raffaele De Caterina, Lorenzo Menicanti, Gloria Maccagni, Amedeo Venezia, Chiara Dal Pra, Carlo Andrea Pivato, Walter Ageno, Antonella Agodi, Francesco Cannata, Francesco Petri, Luca Aiello, Biagio Pinchera, Marinella Astuto, Raffaella Sgariglia, Giovanni Guaraldi, Marco Vinceti, Laura Scorzolini, Samir Al Moghazi, Armando Leone, Giovanni Veronesi, Arturo Ciccullo, Leonardo Grisafi, Francesco Cipollone, Massimo Mapelli, Greta Barbieri, Silvia Lamonica, Raffaele Bruno, Filippo Minutolo, Antonella Cingolani, Alessandro Gialluisi, Marco Rossato, Andrea Rognoni, Marianna Rossi, Claudia Marotta, Franco Mastroianni, Ilaria My, Enrico Maria Trecarichi, Anna Odone, Alessandro Bartoloni, Simona Costanzo, Francesco Cacciatore, Ivan Gentile, Massimo Rinaldi, Nausicaa Berselli, Francesco Maria Fusco, Augusto Di Castelnuovo, Lorenzo Blandi, Castelnuovo A.D., Costanzo S., Antinori A., Berselli N., Blandi L., Bruno R., Cauda R., Guaraldi G., Menicanti L., My I., Parruti G., Patti G., Perlini S., Santilli F., Signorelli C., Spinoni E., Stefanini G.G., Vergori A., Ageno W., Agodi A., Aiello L., Agostoni P., Moghazi S.A., Astuto M., Aucella F., Barbieri G., Bartoloni A., Bonaccio M., Bonfanti P., Cacciatore F., Caiano L., Cannata F., Carrozzi L., Cascio A., Ciccullo A., Cingolani A., Cipollone F., Colomba C., Crosta F., Pra C.D., Danzi G.B., D'Ardes D., Donati K.D.G., Giacomo P.D., Gennaro F.D., Di Tano G., D'Offizi G., Filippini T., Fusco F.M., Gentile I., Gialluisi A., Gini G., Grandone E., Grisafi L., Guarnieri G., Lamonica S., Landi F., Leone A., Maccagni G., Maccarella S., Madaro A., Mapelli M., Maragna R., Marra L., Maresca G., Marotta C., Mastroianni F., Mazzitelli M., Mengozzi A., Menichetti F., Meschiari M., Minutolo F., Montineri A., Mussinelli R., Mussini C., Musso M., Odone A., Olivieri M., Pasi E., Petri F., Pinchera B., Pivato C.A., Poletti V., Ravaglia C., Rinaldi M., Rognoni A., Rossato M., Rossi I., Rossi M., Sabena A., Salinaro F., Sangiovanni V., Sanrocco C., Scorzolini L., Sgariglia R., Simeone P.G., Spinicci M., Trecarichi E.M., Venezia A., Veronesi G., Vettor R., Vianello A., Vinceti M., Vocciante L., De Caterina R., Iacoviello L., Castelnuovo, A. D., Costanzo, S., Antinori, A., Berselli, N., Blandi, L., Bruno, R., Cauda, R., Guaraldi, G., Menicanti, L., My, I., Parruti, G., Patti, G., Perlini, S., Santilli, F., Signorelli, C., Spinoni, E., Stefanini, G. G., Vergori, A., Ageno, W., Agodi, A., Aiello, L., Agostoni, P., Moghazi, S. A., Astuto, M., Aucella, F., Barbieri, G., Bartoloni, A., Bonaccio, M., Bonfanti, P., Cacciatore, F., Caiano, L., Cannata, F., Carrozzi, L., Cascio, A., Ciccullo, A., Cingolani, A., Cipollone, F., Colomba, C., Crosta, F., Pra, C. D., Danzi, G. B., D'Ardes, D., Donati, K. D. G., Giacomo, P. D., Gennaro, F. D., Di Tano, G., D'Offizi, G., Filippini, T., Fusco, F. M., Gentile, I., Gialluisi, A., Gini, G., Grandone, E., Grisafi, L., Guarnieri, G., Lamonica, S., Landi, F., Leone, A., Maccagni, G., Maccarella, S., Madaro, A., Mapelli, M., Maragna, R., Marra, L., Maresca, G., Marotta, C., Mastroianni, F., Mazzitelli, M., Mengozzi, A., Menichetti, F., Meschiari, M., Minutolo, F., Montineri, A., Mussinelli, R., Mussini, C., Musso, M., Odone, A., Olivieri, M., Pasi, E., Petri, F., Pinchera, B., Pivato, C. A., Poletti, V., Ravaglia, C., Rinaldi, M., Rognoni, A., Rossato, M., Rossi, I., Rossi, M., Sabena, A., Salinaro, F., Sangiovanni, V., Sanrocco, C., Scorzolini, L., Sgariglia, R., Simeone, P. G., Spinicci, M., Trecarichi, E. M., Venezia, A., Veronesi, G., Vettor, R., Vianello, A., Vinceti, M., Vocciante, L., De Caterina, R., Iacoviello, L., Castelnuovo, A, Costanzo, S, Antinori, A, Berselli, N, Blandi, L, Bruno, R, Cauda, R, Guaraldi, G, Menicanti, L, My, I, Parruti, G, Patti, G, Perlini, S, Santilli, F, Signorelli, C, Spinoni, E, Stefanini, G, Vergori, A, Ageno, W, Agodi, A, Aiello, L, Agostoni, P, Moghazi, S, Astuto, M, Aucella, F, Barbieri, G, Bartoloni, A, Bonaccio, M, Bonfanti, P, Cacciatore, F, Caiano, L, Cannata, F, Carrozzi, L, Cascio, A, Ciccullo, A, Cingolani, A, Cipollone, F, Colomba, C, Crosta, F, Pra, C, Danzi, G, D'Ardes, D, Donati, K, Giacomo, P, Gennaro, F, Tano, G, D'Offizi, G, Filippini, T, Fusco, F, Gentile, I, Gialluisi, A, Gini, G, Grandone, E, Grisafi, L, Guarnieri, G, Lamonica, S, Landi, F, Leone, A, Maccagni, G, Maccarella, S, Madaro, A, Mapelli, M, Maragna, R, Marra, L, Maresca, G, Marotta, C, Mastroianni, F, Mazzitelli, M, Mengozzi, A, Menichetti, F, Meschiari, M, Minutolo, F, Montineri, A, Mussinelli, R, Mussini, C, Musso, M, Odone, A, Olivieri, M, Pasi, E, Petri, F, Pinchera, B, Pivato, C, Poletti, V, Ravaglia, C, Rinaldi, M, Rognoni, A, Rossato, M, Rossi, I, Rossi, M, Sabena, A, Salinaro, F, Sangiovanni, V, Sanrocco, C, Scorzolini, L, Sgariglia, R, Simeone, P, Spinicci, M, Trecarichi, E, Venezia, A, Veronesi, G, Vettor, R, Vianello, A, Vinceti, M, Vocciante, L, De Caterina, R, and Iacoviello, L
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Lower risk ,law.invention ,COVID-19 ,Disease severity ,Hydroxychloroquine ,Inflammation ,Mortality ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Female ,Hospital Mortality ,Humans ,Italy ,Middle Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Treatment Outcome ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,Retrospective Studie ,law ,Internal medicine ,80 and over ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Risk factor ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Retrospective cohort study ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment ,Propensity score matching ,Commentary ,Observational study ,business ,Human ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) was proposed as potential treatment for COVID-19. Objective We set-up a multicenter Italian collaboration to investigate the relationship between HCQ therapy and COVID-19 in-hospital mortality. Methods In a retrospective observational study, 3,451 unselected patients hospitalized in 33 clinical centers in Italy, from February 19, 2020 to May 23, 2020, with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, were analyzed. The primary end-point in a time-to event analysis was in-hospital death, comparing patients who received HCQ with patients who did not. We used multivariable Cox proportional-hazards regression models with inverse probability for treatment weighting by propensity scores, with the addition of subgroup analyses. Results Out of 3,451 COVID-19 patients, 76.3% received HCQ. Death rates (per 1,000 person-days) for patients receiving or not HCQ were 8.9 and 15.7, respectively. After adjustment for propensity scores, we found 30% lower risk of death in patients receiving HCQ (HR=0.70; 95%CI: 0.59 to 0.84; E-value=1.67). Secondary analyses yielded similar results. The inverse association of HCQ with inpatient mortality was particularly evident in patients having elevated C-reactive protein at entry. Conclusions HCQ use was associated with a 30% lower risk of death in COVID-19 hospitalized patients. Within the limits of an observational study and awaiting results from randomized controlled trials, these data do not discourage the use of HCQ in inpatients with COVID-19.
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- 2020
17. RAAS inhibitors are not associated with mortality in COVID-19 patients: Findings from an observational multicenter study in Italy and a meta-analysis of 19 studies
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Francesca Santilli, Marianna Meschiari, Gabriella Guarnieri, Francesco Petri, Anna Sabena, Gloria Maccagni, Giovanni Larizza, Massimo Mapelli, Maria Mazzitelli, Gian Battista Danzi, Katleen de Gaetano Donati, Annalisa Crisetti, Jovana Milic, Raffaele Pesavento, Biagio Pinchera, Riccardo Maragna, Carlo Andrea Pivato, Lorenzo Menicanti, Francesco Maria Fusco, Luca Aiello, Sandro Mancarella, Carlo Sanrocco, Alessandra Vergori, Greta Barbieri, Filippo Aucella, Silvia Marongiu, Giulio Maresca, Marianna Rossi, Andrea Antinori, Venerino Poletti, Francesco Cacciatore, Giacomo Castiglione, Enrico Maria Trecarichi, Lucia Caiano, Francesca Crosta, Roberto Vettor, Francesco Menichetti, Maria Musso, Francesco Salinaro, Marco Olivieri, Stefano Perlini, Claudia Colomba, Crizia Colombo, Ottavia Cozzi, Stefano Maitan, Marialaura Bonaccio, Ilaria My, Alexandra Virano, Paola Simeone, Marco Vinceti, Antonella Cingolani, Gianpiero D'Offizi, Damiano D'Ardes, Claudia Marotta, M. B. Lucia, Carlo Signorelli, Lorenzo Marra, Giuseppe Patti, Raffaele De Caterina, Armando Leone, Veronica Lio, Beatrice Molena, Giustino Parruti, Giulio G. Stefanini, Licia Iacoviello, Laura Vocciante, Franco Mastroianni, Raffaella Sgariglia, Cristina Mussini, Francesco Cipollone, Marco Rossato, Lorenzo Blandi, Emanuela Pasi, Samir Al Moghazi, Andrea Vianello, Filippo Minutolo, Ivan Gentile, Giovanni Guaraldi, Rosa Manuele, Pasquale Abete, Arturo Ciccullo, Antonella Palimodde, Giancarlo Scoppettuolo, Walter Ageno, Marco G. Mennuni, Roberta Mussinelli, Vincenzo Sangiovanni, Roberto Cauda, Laura Scorzolini, Paolo Bonfanti, Alessandro Gialluisi, Stefania Cianfrone, Piergiuseppe Agostoni, Antonio Cascio, Simona Costanzo, Augusto Di Castelnuovo, Nausicaa Berselli, Rosa Arboretti, Emauele Graziani, Martina Barchitta, Anna Odone, Francesco Di Gennaro, Alessandro Mengozzi, Alessandro Bartoloni, Giuseppe Di Tano, Laura Carrozzi, Ferruccio Madaro, Rossella Marcucci, Claudia Ravaglia, Di Castelnuovo, Augusto, Costanzo, Simona, Antinori, Andrea, Berselli, Nausicaa, Blandi, Lorenzo, Bonaccio, Marialaura, Cauda, Roberto, Gialluisi, Alessandro, Guaraldi, Giovanni, Menicanti, Lorenzo, Mennuni, Marco, Mussinelli, Roberta, My, Ilaria, Parruti, Giustino, Patti, Giuseppe, Perlini, Stefano, Santilli, Francesca, Signorelli, Carlo, Stefanini, Giulio G., Vergori, Alessandra, Abete, Pasquale, Ageno, Walter, Agostoni, Piergiuseppe, Aiello, Luca, Al Moghazi, Samir, Arboretti, Rosa, Aucella, Filippo, Barbieri, Greta, Barchitta, Martina, Bartoloni, Alessandro, Bonfanti, Paolo, Cacciatore, Francesco, Caiano, Lucia, Carrozzi, Laura, Cascio, Antonio, Castiglione, Giacomo, Cianfrone, Stefania, Ciccullo, Arturo, Cingolani, Antonella, Cipollone, Francesco, Colomba, Claudia, Colombo, Crizia, Cozzi, Ottavia, Crisetti, Annalisa, Crosta, Francesca, Danzi, Gian Battista, D'Ardes, Damiano, de Gaetano Donati, Katleen, Di Gennaro, Francesco, Di Tano, Giuseppe, D'Offizi, Gianpiero, Fusco, Francesco Maria, Gentile, Ivan, Graziani, Emauele, Guarnieri, Gabriella, Larizza, Giovanni, Leone, Armando, Lio, Veronica, Lucia, Mothanje Barbara, Maccagni, Gloria, Madaro, Ferruccio, Maitan, Stefano, Mancarella, Sandro, Manuele, Rosa, Mapelli, Massimo, Maragna, Riccardo, Marcucci, Rossella, Maresca, Giulio, Marongiu, Silvia, Marotta, Claudia, Marra, Lorenzo, Mastroianni, Franco, Mazzitelli, Maria, Mengozzi, Alessandro, Menichetti, Francesco, Meschiari, Marianna, Milic, Jovana, Minutolo, Filippo, Molena, Beatrice, Mussini, Cristina, Musso, Maria, Odone, Anna, Olivieri, Marco, Palimodde, Antonella, Pasi, Emanuela, Pesavento, Raffaele, Petri, Francesco, Pinchera, Biagio, Pivato, Carlo A., Poletti, Venerino, Ravaglia, Claudia, Rossato, Marco, Rossi, Marianna, Sabena, Anna, Salinaro, Francesco, Sangiovanni, Vincenzo, Sanrocco, Carlo, Scoppettuolo, Giancarlo, Scorzolini, Laura, Sgariglia, Raffaella, Simeone, Paola Giustina, Trecarichi, Enrico Maria, Vettor, Roberto, Vianello, Andrea, Vinceti, Marco, Virano, Alexandra, Vocciante, Laura, De Caterina, Raffaele, Iacoviello, Licia, Di Castelnuovo, A., Costanzo, S., Antinori, A., Berselli, N., Bl, I, L., Bonaccio, M., Cauda, R., Gialluisi, A., Guaraldi, G., Menicanti, L., Mennuni, M., Mussinelli, R., My, I., Parruti, G., Patti, G., Perlini, S., Santilli, F., Signorelli, C., Stefanini, G. G., Vergori, A., Abete, P., Ageno, W., Agostoni, P., Aiello, L., Al Moghazi, S., Arboretti, R., Aucella, F., Barbieri, G., Barchitta, M., Bartoloni, A., Bonfanti, P., Cacciatore, F., Caiano, L., Carrozzi, L., Cascio, A., Castiglione, G., Cianfrone, S., Ciccullo, A., Cingolani, A., Cipollone, F., Colomba, C., Colombo, C., Cozzi, O., Crisetti, A., Crosta, F., Danzi, G. B., D'Ardes, D., de Gaetano Donati, K., Di Gennaro, F., Di Tano, G., D'Offizi, G., Fusco, F. M., Gentile, I., Graziani, E., Guarnieri, G., Larizza, G., Leone, A., Lio, V., Lucia, M. B., Maccagni, G., Madaro, F., Maitan, S., Mancarella, S., Manuele, R., Mapelli, M., Maragna, R., Marcucci, R., Maresca, G., Marongiu, S., Marotta, C., Marra, L., Mastroianni, F., Mazzitelli, M., Mengozzi, A., Menichetti, F., Meschiari, M., Milic, J., Minutolo, F., Molena, B., Mussini, C., Musso, M., Odone, A., Olivieri, M., Palimodde, A., Pasi, E., Pesavento, R., Petri, F., Pinchera, B., Pivato, C. A., Poletti, V., Ravaglia, C., Rossato, M., Rossi, M., Sabena, A., Salinaro, F., Sangiovanni, V., Sanrocco, C., Scoppettuolo, G., Scorzolini, L., Sgariglia, R., Simeone, P. G., Trecarichi, E. M., Vettor, R., Vianello, A., Vinceti, M., Virano, A., Vocciante, L., De Caterina, R., Iacoviello, L., Blandi, L., Di Castelnuovo, A, Costanzo, S, Antinori, A, Berselli, N, Blandi, L, Bonaccio, M, Cauda, R, Gialluisi, A, Guaraldi, G, Menicanti, L, Mennuni, M, Mussinelli, R, My, I, Parruti, G, Patti, G, Perlini, S, Santilli, F, Signorelli, C, Stefanini, G, Vergori, A, Abete, P, Ageno, W, Agostoni, P, Aiello, L, Al Moghazi, S, Arboretti, R, Aucella, F, Barbieri, G, Barchitta, M, Bartoloni, A, Bonfanti, P, Cacciatore, F, Caiano, L, Carrozzi, L, Cascio, A, Castiglione, G, Cianfrone, S, Ciccullo, A, Cingolani, A, Cipollone, F, Colomba, C, Colombo, C, Cozzi, O, Crisetti, A, Crosta, F, Danzi, G, D'Ardes, D, de Gaetano Donati, K, Di Gennaro, F, Di Tano, G, D'Offizi, G, Fusco, F, Gentile, I, Graziani, E, Guarnieri, G, Larizza, G, Leone, A, Lio, V, Lucia, M, Maccagni, G, Madaro, F, Maitan, S, Mancarella, S, Manuele, R, Mapelli, M, Maragna, R, Marcucci, R, Maresca, G, Marongiu, S, Marotta, C, Marra, L, Mastroianni, F, Mazzitelli, M, Mengozzi, A, Menichetti, F, Meschiari, M, Milic, J, Minutolo, F, Molena, B, Mussini, C, Musso, M, Odone, A, Olivieri, M, Palimodde, A, Pasi, E, Pesavento, R, Petri, F, Pinchera, B, Pivato, C, Poletti, V, Ravaglia, C, Rossato, M, Rossi, M, Sabena, A, Salinaro, F, Sangiovanni, V, Sanrocco, C, Scoppettuolo, G, Scorzolini, L, Sgariglia, R, Simeone, P, Trecarichi, E, Vettor, R, Vianello, A, Vinceti, M, Virano, A, Vocciante, L, Iacoviello, L, and De Caterina, R
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Physiology ,Middle Aged, Renin-Angiotensin System ,Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,ACE-I ,ARB ,COVID-19 ,angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors ,angiotensin receptor blockers ,mortality ,sartans ,Severity of Illness Index ,Renin-Angiotensin System ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,80 and over ,Medicine ,Hospital Mortality ,Sartan ,Aged, 80 and over ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Hazard ratio ,Angiotensin Receptor Antagonist ,Middle Aged ,Hospitalization ,Antihypertensive Agent ,Italy ,Meta-analysis ,Hypertension ,Sartans ,Molecular Medicine ,Female ,Risk assessment ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors ,Angiotensin receptor blockers ,Mortality ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Risk Assessment ,Article ,COVID−19 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Internal medicine ,Severity of illness ,Humans ,Angiotensin receptor blocker ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Aged ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Risk Factor ,Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitor ,Confidence interval ,030104 developmental biology ,COVID-19, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin receptor blockers, mortality, sartans ,Observational study ,Angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor ,business - Abstract
Objective The hypothesis that been set forward that use of Renin Angiotensin Aldosterone System (RAAS) inhibitors is associated with COVID−19 severity. We set-up a multicenter Italian collaboration (CORIST Project, ClinicalTrials.gov ID: NCT04318418 ) to retrospectively investigate the relationship between RAAS inhibitors and COVID−19 in-hospital mortality. We also carried out an updated meta-analysis on the relevant studies. Methods We analyzed 4069 unselected patients with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and hospitalized in 34 clinical centers in Italy from February 19, 2020 to May 23, 2020. The primary end-point in a time-to event analysis was in-hospital death, comparing patients who received angiotensin-converting–enzyme inhibitors (ACE I) or angiotensin-receptor blockers (ARB) with patients who did not. Articles for the meta-analysis were retrieved until July 13th, 2020 by searching in web-based libraries, and data were combined using the general variance-based method. Results Out of 4069 COVID−19 patients, 13.5% and 13.3% received ACE-I or ARB, respectively. Use of neither ACE-I nor ARB was associated with mortality (multivariable hazard ratio (HR) adjusted also for COVID−19 treatments: 0.96, 95% confidence interval 0.77–1.20 and HR = 0.89, 0.67–1.19 for ACE-I and ARB, respectively). Findings were similar restricting the analysis to hypertensive (N = 2057) patients (HR = 1.00, 0.78–1.26 and HR = 0.88, 0.65–1.20) or when ACE-I or ARB were considered as a single group. Results from the meta-analysis (19 studies, 29,057 COVID−19 adult patients, 9700 with hypertension) confirmed the absence of association. Conclusions In this observational study and meta-analysis of the literature, ACE-I or ARB use was not associated with severity or in-hospital mortality in COVID−19 patients.
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- 2020
18. Depression and Objectively Measured Physical Activity: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
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Stefano Cacitti, Mirko Minelli, Lorenzo Blandi, Vincenza Gianfredi, Anna Odone, Carlo Signorelli, Andrea Amerio, Gianfredi, V., Blandi, L., Cacitti, S., Minelli, M., Signorelli, C., Amerio, A., and Odone, A.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,SYMPTOMS ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,MEDLINE ,lcsh:Medicine ,Poison control ,Review ,PsycINFO ,Cochrane Library ,CANCER SURVIVORS ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,QUALITY-OF-LIFE ,Injury prevention ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Exercise ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,ASSOCIATIONS ,Depression ,Physical activity ,business.industry ,Accelerometer ,Depressive symptoms ,Meta-analysis ,Objectively measure ,lcsh:R ,SEDENTARY BEHAVIOR ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,ADULTS ,LIGHT ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Systematic review ,Physical therapy ,MODERATE ,Female ,business ,MENTAL-HEALTH ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Depression is a major contributor to the overall global burden of disease, with high prevalence and relapse rate. Several factors have been considered in order to reduce the depression burden. Among them, physical activity (PA) showed a potential protective role. However, evidence is contrasting probably because of the differences in PA measurement. The aim of this systematic review with meta-analysis is to assess the association between objectively measured PA and incident and prevalent depression. The systematic review was conducted according to methods recommended by the Cochrane Collaboration and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Relevant papers published through 31 August 2019 were identified searching through the electronic databases PubMed/MEDLINE, Excerpta Medica dataBASE (Embase), PsycINFO, Scopus, Web of Science (WoS), and the Cochrane Library. All analyses were conducted using ProMeta3. Finally, 42 studies met inclusion criteria. The overall Effect size (ES) of depression for the highest vs. the lowest level of PA was −1.16 [(95% CI = −1.41; −0.91), p-value < 0.001] based on 37,408 participants. The results of the meta-analysis showed a potential protective effect of PA on prevalent and incident depression.
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- 2020
19. Efficacy and Safety of Endovascular Fenestrated and Branched Grafts Versus Open Surgery in Thoracoabdominal Aortic Aneurysm Repair: An Updated Systematic Review, Meta-analysis, and Meta-regression.
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Vigezzi GP, Barbati C, Blandi L, Guddemi A, Melloni A, Salvati S, Bertoglio L, and Odone A
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- Humans, Blood Vessel Prosthesis, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation methods, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation adverse effects, Treatment Outcome, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracoabdominal, Endovascular Procedures methods, Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic surgery, Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic mortality
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Objective: To provide an updated systematic review and meta-analysis with meta-regression of efficacy and safety of fenestrated/branched endovascular repair of thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms (TAAAs) compared with open repair., Background: Endovascular repair of TAAAs may be a promising alternative to open surgery by reducing invasiveness and expanding the eligible population, but evidence remains limited., Methods: We applied "Prepared Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis" guidelines to retrieve, quantitatively pool, and critically evaluate the efficacy and safety (including 30-day mortality, reintervention, spinal cord injury [SCI], and renal injury) of both approaches. Original studies were retrieved from PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library until April 20, 2022, excluding papers reporting <10 patients. Pooled proportions and means were determined using a random-effect model. Heterogeneity between studies was evaluated with I2 statistics., Results: Sixty-four studies met the predefined inclusion criteria. Endovascular cohort patients were older and had higher rates of comorbidities. Endovascular repair was associated with similar proportions of mortality (0.07, 95% confidence intervals [CI]: 0.06-0.08) compared with open repair (0.09, 95% CI: 0.08-0.12; P = 0.22), higher proportions of reintervention (0.19, 95% CI: 0.13-0.26 vs 0.06, 95% CI: 0.04-0.10; P < 0.01), similar proportions of transient SCI (0.07, 95% CI: 0.05-0.09 vs 0.06, 95% CI: 0.05-0.08; P = 0.28), lower proportions of permanent SCI (0.04, 95% CI: 0.03-0.05 vs 0.06, 95% CI: 0.05-0.07; P < 0.01), and renal injury (0.08, 95% CI: 0.06-0.10 vs 0.13, 95% CI: 0.09-0.17; P = 0.02). Results were affected by high heterogeneity and potential publication bias., Conclusions: Despite these limitations and the lack of randomized trials, this meta-analysis suggests that endovascular TAAA repair could be a safer alternative to the open approach., Competing Interests: L.B. has received consulting fees and grants from Cook Medical, W. L. Gore, Artivion. The remaining authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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20. Healthcare-Associated-Infections: preliminary results from a real-time reporting system of an Italian neurologic research hospital.
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Blandi L, Bolcato V, Meloni A, Bosone D, and Odone A
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- Humans, Delivery of Health Care, Hospitalization, Italy epidemiology, Hospitals, Cross Infection epidemiology, Cross Infection prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Healthcare-Associated-Infections are a critical concern in healthcare settings, posing serious threats to patient safety and causing significant morbidity, mortality, and financial strain. This study aims to calculate healthcare-associated-infections trends in the hospital setting through an automatic reporting system., Study Design: The study is a descriptive analysis of automatically generated trends of an innovative digital tool based on existing hospital information flows., Methods: An algorithm was developed within a Clinical Information System to create a suite of quality indicators for monitoring healthcare-associated-infections trends. The algorithm used criteria related to admission, laboratory tests and antimicrobial administrations. A descriptive analysis was conducted for patients aged 18 or older, admitted to a neurological or to a neuro-rehabilitation department of a neurologic hospital from 2019 to 2022., Results: The results showed fluctuations in healthcare-associated-infections prevalence from 2.9% to 5.6% and hospital infec-tions prevalence from 4.5% to 10.9%, with notable increases in 2020 and 2021. The majority (70.3%) of healthcare associated infections identified by the tool were confirmed to be potentially hospital-acquired, according to the European Centre of Disease Prevention and Control's definition., Discussion and Conclusions: The study posits the algorithm as a vital tool for automatically monitoring hospital infections, providing valuable preliminary results for improving care quality and guiding the infections' prevention and control strategies, with plans to benchmark the algorithm against a gold standard in the future.
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- 2024
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21. Quality of hospital care and clinical outcomes: a comparison between the Lombardy Region and the Italian national data.
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Signorelli C, Pennisi F, Lunetti C, Blandi L, Pellissero G, and Fondazione Sanità Futura WG
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- Humans, COVID-19 epidemiology, Hospitals statistics & numerical data, Hospitals trends, Italy, Pandemics statistics & numerical data, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Hospitalization trends, Quality of Health Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Improving the quality and effectiveness of healthcare is a key priority in health policy. The emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic has exerted considerable pressure on hospital networks, requiring unprecedented reorganization and restructuring actions. This study analyzed data from the Italian National Outcomes Program to compare some volumes and outcomes of public and private accredited hospitals in the Lombardy Region with national data., Study Design: Observational study., Methods: A thorough examination of hospital outcomes between 2019 and 2021 was conducted, considering 45 volume indicators and 48 process and outcome indicators, comparing Lombardy with other Italian regions and public versus private accredited hospitals., Results: In 2020, Italy and Lombardy experienced a considerable reduction in overall hospital admissions, with Lombardy showing a deeper decline (21.3% compared with 16.0% in Italy). In 2021, both experienced a partial recovery, especially marked in the Lombardy region (+7.3%, compared with national data). Focusing specifically on the private sector in Lombardy, a recovery of +9.3% in hospitalization was observed. In the analysis of clinical outcomes, Lombardy outperformed the national average for 63% of the indicators in 2020 and 83.3% in 2021., Conclusions: The study shows the continuing decline in volumes compared to 2019 (pre-COVID), the excellent performance of hospitals in Lombardy and a relevant contribution for the volumes and the quality of outcomes of private accredited hospitals.
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- 2024
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22. Preventing Healthcare-Associated Infections: Hand Disinfection Monitoring Using an Automated System in an Italian Neurological Hospital.
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Bolcato V, Robustelli Della Cuna FS, Fassina G, Odone A, Gervasio L, Bosone D, and Blandi L
- Abstract
Hand hygiene plays a pivotal role in preventing Healthcare-Associated Infections (HAIs). Nevertheless, the quality of hand disinfection techniques remains suboptimal, and the reliability of assessment methodologies is notably lacking. This study aimed to evaluate hand disinfection techniques using an automated system in an Italian research hospital. Hospital employees underwent automated hand-disinfection technique assessment, according to the World Health Organization's six-step protocol, at a basal time and two further times. Detection was carried out with a scanner that evaluated the effective hand disinfectant coverage through a fluorescent dye present in the hydro-alcoholic gel rub. The hand-hygiene technique of 222 employees was analyzed by HandInScan
® . At the initial assessment of hand coverage with the hydro-alcoholic gel, the mean palm coverage was 82.2%, mean back coverage was 66.8%, and overall mean hand coverage was 74.5%. Then, two measurements were performed in June (t1) and December 2022 (t2). The third measurement showed an increase in hand coverage, with a mean palm coverage of 97.2%, a mean back coverage of 91.8%, and a mean hand coverage of 94.5% ( p < 0.05). Moreover, the mean coverage of the hand-back was lower than that of the hand-palm at all times ( p < 0.001). The automated scanner provided evidence supporting its effectiveness in enhancing hand hygiene among hospital employees. These findings have motivated researchers to conduct long-term studies, given the potential effects on HAI prevention-including their impact on HAI trends.- Published
- 2023
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23. The role of Mayors in protecting citizens' health: a brief report from Italy.
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Blandi L, Navobi Porrello V, Signorelli C, and Odone A
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- Humans, Italy, Group Processes, Health Facilities, Quality of Life, State Medicine
- Abstract
The World Health Organization has identified urbanization as one of the most important public health challenges of our century. Nowadays, about half of the world's population live in urban areas, thus municipal authorities can influence multiple determinants of health through Urban Health strategies. However, the health policies and welfare systems are usually managed by multi-level political governments. The aim of this report is to describe the legal and operational competences attributed to mayors and municipal councils with reference to health, taking Italy as case study. Our report summarises and analyses the national, regional, and local Italian legislations. Our results identified the mayors as the highest local health authorities. Indeed, the mayor can issue specific regulations for their local area or order contingent and urgent measures for preventing or delimiting serious health hazards for the safety of their citizens. Moreover, among their duties, municipalities play a crucial role in social care. Hence, municipalities are expected to cooperate with National Health Service at the regional level, to integrate their contributions in a single welfare system. In conclusion, mayors represent the institutional figures closest to the citizens. Municipalities and regional governments should coordinate and integrate their strategies and policies to meet health and social needs of citizens, providing easy access to shared pathways. Municipalities also regulate autonomously fundamental aspects related to the urban environment and can promote and protect health and improve the quality of life for citizens.
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- 2023
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24. Population Health Management: principles, models and areas of application in public health.
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Blandi L, Pegollo L, Gentile L, and Odone A
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- Humans, Precision Medicine, Public Health, Population Health
- Abstract
There is no single model for Population Health Management (PHM) and different definitions have been proposed. All PHM models and definitions share the overall aim of improving population health and reduce healthcare costs. To achieve these objectives, PHM makes use of conceptual tools such as the Chronic Care Model and predictive medicine, and technical tools such as information systems and computational and record-linkage techniques to collect and analyse data. Using these tools, it makes it feasible to articulate PHM approaches in the following steps: identification of a population, stratification of individuals according to risk levels, mapping of health needs and development of targeted interventions and models of care. PHM has been applied in a variety of national and regional settings, proving to have great potential. However, the success of PHM models depends on a number of factors. In particular, few key points have emerged that must be taken into consideration when planning and implementing PHM programs. They include PHM funding schemes, strategies to ensure people adherence, the equity dimension in its multiple aspects, and the privacy of personal data. In addition to these challenges, there is the need to act in a legislative context appropriate to the implementation of PHM.
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- 2023
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25. Compliance with recommended preventive behaviours and restrictions for Covid-19: an exploratory analysis of Italians' attitudes.
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Travaini G, Flutti E, Blandi L, Sala R, Songhorian S, Caruso P, and Mugellini G
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- Humans, Italy epidemiology, Attitude to Health ethnology, COVID-19 ethnology, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 psychology, Pandemics prevention & control, Patient Compliance ethnology, Patient Compliance psychology, European People psychology, Communicable Disease Control methods, Communicable Disease Control standards
- Abstract
Background and Aim: as a reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic, countries all over the world have undertaken wide-scale measures to prevent and limit the spread of the virus. Suggested preventative measures mainly included "lockdown", social distancing, wearing facemasks, and vaccinations. The success of these measures was widely dependent on the cooperation of citizens. However, people reacted differently to the several types of restrictions and recommendations. Even if the majority followed the rules, others ignored them. This study aims to investigate the reasons for the compliance or violation of the rules developed to fight against the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy., Methods: to answer the research question, the analysis of two different surveys conducted on a representative sample of Italians (N=2000) were conducted and analysed through descriptive statistics., Results: the data collection agreed with published literature. Compliance with rules during emergencies followed diligence and altruistic patterns. Fear of sanctions did not seem to work in relation to rules compliance during emergency situations. The lack of clarity of regulations in terms of complexity or constant changes led to non-compliance even intervening as a neutralization technique., Conclusions: government's fear-based interventions did not seem to work since Italians tended to adhere to the rules primarily out of respect for legitimate authority. Future research should focus more on the topic of trust in institutions in emergency situations with the aim of highlighting the key points for successful governance, also in terms of rules compliance.
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- 2023
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26. The potential of digital health records for public health research, policy, and practice: the case of the Lombardy Region Data Warehouse.
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Blandi L, Amorosi A, Leoni O, Clemens T, Brand H, and Odone A
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- Humans, Policy, Data Collection, Electronic Health Records, Data Warehousing, Public Health
- Abstract
Digital health records can provide advantages to healthcare practice, policy, and research. Several countries have established population-based digitalised data collection, integrated through data linkage techniques. In Lombardy (Italy), a regional population-based registry was established in the 2000s. It collects data from the social and health sector, anonymised immediately after their acquisition and restructured in a single repository. Data can be used for public health interest, planning, monitoring, services evaluation, and research. Indeed, data can also be provided to universities and other scientific institutes. The availability of such data enables to explore the epidemiology of infectious, chronic, and rare diseases. Thus, epidemiological research can support policymakers to tackle public health threats. However, analysis of electronic health records comes along with several challenges, including data inaccuracy, incompleteness, and biases. Researchers should take into consideration limits and barriers related to quality of data. Moreover, health data use must adhere to the national and European privacy legislation, at times limiting the potential of data integration. Therefore, even if big data drives innovation and scientific knowledge, ethical issues regarding privacy should be considered in public debate.
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- 2023
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27. Training needs assessment of European frontline health care workers on vaccinology and vaccine acceptance: a systematic review.
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Lanza TE, Paladini A, Marziali E, Gianfredi V, Blandi L, Signorelli C, Odone A, Ricciardi W, Damiani G, and Cadeddu C
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- Humans, Needs Assessment, Cross-Sectional Studies, Vaccination, Health Personnel, Vaccinology, Influenza Vaccines
- Abstract
Background: The issue of reluctance towards vaccination is becoming more worrisome. Health care workers (HCWs) are the primary point of contact with individuals who make decisions about vaccination. Therefore, it is crucial that HCWs receive sufficient training and periodic updates. The main objective of this systematic review is to evaluate the HCWs' training needs in vaccination and vaccine uptake., Methods: In February 2022, a search was conducted on MEDLINE, Scopus and Google Scholar databases. The search included papers written in English, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, French and Romanian, with a publication date ranging from 1 January 2011 to 24 February 2022 and conducted in Europe. To assess the methodological quality of the papers, the Appraisal tool for Cross-Sectional Studies was utilized., Results: The search of scientific literature yielded 640 outcomes on PubMed, 556 on Scopus and 15 on Google Scholar, for a total of 1211 records. After eliminating duplicates, screening titles and abstracts and evaluating the full text of the articles, only 25 of them were found suitable for inclusion. The studies' overall quality ranged from moderate to good. The majority of the research emphasized the need for improved knowledge of vaccine-preventable diseases, vaccine efficacy, immunization schedules and vaccine adverse effects., Conclusions: It is vital to prioritize educational programmes on vaccinology and vaccine hesitancy for HCWs, with the objective of improving their knowledge, awareness and attitudes. Addressing the diversity of educational backgrounds, roles and training requirements of HCWs involved in vaccination across Europe is a critical issue that must be tackled for future initiatives., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association.)
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- 2023
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28. The Effect of COVID-19 Pandemic on Overall and Cause-Specific Mortality in Pavia, Northern Italy: Updated Estimates for the Year 2021.
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Bertuccio P, Perotti P, Mosconi G, Dalle Carbonare S, Manzoni F, Boschetti L, Marguati S, Paraluppi P, Blandi L, Gentile L, Gaeta M, Cecconami L, and Odone A
- Subjects
- Male, Female, Humans, Cause of Death, Pandemics, Italy epidemiology, Mortality, COVID-19 epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Excess mortality estimates are considered relevant indicators of direct and indirect pandemic effects on the population. Scant data have been published on cause-specific excess mortality. Using individual-level administrative data covering the Pavia province of Italian northern Lombardy region, we provided all-cause and cause-specific raw (RMR) and age-standardized (ASMR) mortality rates in 2021 and 2015-2019, the rate ratio, and 95% confidence intervals, overall and by sex. We obtained the excess deaths in 2021 as the difference between the number of observed and expected deaths from all causes and the two leading causes of death (all neoplasms and circulatory system diseases) by fitting over-dispersed quasi-Poisson regression models, accounting for temporal, seasonal and demographic changes. The total ASMR in 2021 was 972.4/100,000 (6836 certified deaths), with the highest ASMRs for circulatory system diseases (272.6/100,000) and all neoplasms (270.3/100,000), followed by COVID-19 (94.8/100,000 and 662 deaths). Compared to the expected, we estimated a total of 6.2% excess deaths in 2021 (7.2% in males and 5.4% in females), with no excess deaths from all neoplasms and a 6.2% reduction from circulatory system diseases. COVID-19 continued to affect total mortality in 2021, albeit to a lesser extent than in 2020, consistently with national patterns.
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- 2023
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29. The synergies of University Education and Primary Health Care to meet populations health needs.
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Blandi L and Odone A
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- Humans, Universities, Educational Status, Primary Health Care, Public Health, Communication
- Abstract
Absract: In the last decades, the World Health Organization has sensitized all countries to adopt a Primary Health Care approach in their health systems. It is also important to invest in education about primary health care. Indeed, we need to spread this comprehensive culture of health, starting from university education, and continuing during the whole work-life cycle. Due the current medical model, approaching patient by specific pathology or discipline, inefficiencies have been generated due to a lack of communication and integrated management of chronicity. Public Health can build dynamic models and mechanisms that pursue the health needs expressed by populations and education plays a crucial role in enhancing a country's resilience and protecting the health of its inhabitants. All the health workers should consider all the aspects of health, beyond the specific phases of diagnosis and treatment. Continuous education and training are key elements to focus on, to satisfy our population's health needs.
- Published
- 2023
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30. Healthcare-acquired Sars-Cov-2 infection: A viable legal category?
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Bolcato V, Tronconi LP, Odone A, and Blandi L
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- Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Pandemics prevention & control, Health Facilities, Delivery of Health Care, COVID-19
- Abstract
In the context of the Sars-Cov-2 pandemic, according to the various periods of emergency and the rate of infections, hospitalized subjects also contracted the infection within the ward, sometimes with the development of disease (COVID-19) and sometimes with permanent damage. The authors wondered if Sars-Cov-2 infection should be considered on a par with other infections acquired in the healthcare setting. The non-diversified diffusion between the health and non-health sectors, the ubiquity of the virus and the high contagiousness, together with the factual inability to prevent it by the health structures, despite the adoption of entry control, practices of isolation of positive subjects, and staff surveillance, lead to consider COVID-19 in a different way, in order to otherwise burden health structures in the face of unmanageable risks, clearly also dependent on exogenous and uncontrollable factors. The guarantee of care safety must, in the pandemic, be able to compare with the real capacity for intervention according to the asset of the current health service, requesting State intervention with alternative instruments, such as una tantum compensation, for COVID-19 damage reparation occurred in the health sector.
- Published
- 2023
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31. Digital Information Approach through Social Media among Gen Z and Millennials: The Global Scenario during the COVID-19 Pandemic.
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Blandi L, Sabbatucci M, Dallagiacoma G, Alberti F, Bertuccio P, and Odone A
- Abstract
An infodemic represents a concern for public health, influencing the general population's perceptions of key health issues. Misinformation is rapidly spread by social media, particularly among young generations. We used data from the WHO "Social Media and COVID-19" study, which was conducted in 24 countries worldwide on over 23,000 subjects aged 18-40 years, to explore Generation Z and Millennials' models for health-information-seeking behaviors on social media. We summarized data on the most used sources of information, content of interest, and content sharing, as well as the sentiment toward the infodemic, through descriptive statistics and Chi-square test to verify the differences between groups. Among the survey respondents, 9475 (40.3%) were from high-income countries (HIC), 8000 (34.1%) from upper-middle-income countries (UMIC), and 6007 (25.6%) from lower-middle-income countries (LMIC). Social media were the most used sources of information to retrieve news on COVID-19 disease (about 79% in HIC, 87% in UMIC, and 90% in LIC) and the COVID-19 vaccine (about 78% in HIC and about 88% in UMIC and LIC). More than a half of the young respondents declared that they pay attention to scientific contents (about 51% in HIC, 59% in UMIC, and 55% in LMIC). Finally, most young participants reported feeling overwhelmed by the infodemic. However, this sentiment did not stop them from seeking information about COVID-19. Our findings highlight the importance of shaping public health interventions and campaigns on social media platforms and leveraging scientific contents. Public health authorities should work also on strategies to improve the digital literacy of the population as a driving force to empower them and achieve better health outcomes.
- Published
- 2022
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32. Heparin in COVID-19 Patients Is Associated with Reduced In-Hospital Mortality: The Multicenter Italian CORIST Study.
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Di Castelnuovo A, Costanzo S, Antinori A, Berselli N, Blandi L, Bonaccio M, Cauda R, Guaraldi G, Menicanti L, Mennuni M, Parruti G, Patti G, Santilli F, Signorelli C, Vergori A, Abete P, Ageno W, Agodi A, Agostoni P, Aiello L, Al Moghazi S, Arboretti R, Astuto M, Aucella F, Barbieri G, Bartoloni A, Bonfanti P, Cacciatore F, Caiano L, Carrozzi L, Cascio A, Ciccullo A, Cingolani A, Cipollone F, Colomba C, Colombo C, Crosta F, Danzi GB, D'Ardes D, de Gaetano Donati K, Di Gennaro F, Di Tano G, D'Offizi G, Fantoni M, Fusco FM, Gentile I, Gianfagna F, Grandone E, Graziani E, Grisafi L, Guarnieri G, Larizza G, Leone A, Maccagni G, Madaro F, Maitan S, Mancarella S, Mapelli M, Maragna R, Marcucci R, Maresca G, Marongiu S, Marotta C, Marra L, Mastroianni F, Mazzitelli M, Mengozzi A, Menichetti F, Meschiari M, Milic J, Minutolo F, Molena B, Montineri A, Mussini C, Musso M, Niola D, Odone A, Olivieri M, Palimodde A, Parisi R, Pasi E, Pesavento R, Petri F, Pinchera B, Poletti V, Ravaglia C, Rognoni A, Rossato M, Rossi M, Sangiovanni V, Sanrocco C, Scorzolini L, Sgariglia R, Simeone PG, Taddei E, Torti C, Vettor R, Vianello A, Vinceti M, Virano A, Vocciante L, De Caterina R, and Iacoviello L
- Subjects
- Aged, Blood Coagulation drug effects, COVID-19 blood, Female, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Survival Analysis, Thrombophilia blood, COVID-19 Drug Treatment, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, COVID-19 complications, Heparin therapeutic use, Heparin, Low-Molecular-Weight therapeutic use, Thrombophilia etiology, Thrombophilia prevention & control
- Abstract
Introduction: A hypercoagulable condition was described in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and proposed as a possible pathogenic mechanism contributing to disease progression and lethality., Aim: We evaluated if in-hospital administration of heparin improved survival in a large cohort of Italian COVID-19 patients., Methods: In a retrospective observational study, 2,574 unselected patients hospitalized in 30 clinical centers in Italy from February 19, 2020 to June 5, 2020 with laboratory-confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 infection were analyzed. The primary endpoint in a time-to event analysis was in-hospital death, comparing patients who received heparin (low-molecular-weight heparin [LMWH] or unfractionated heparin [UFH]) with patients who did not. We used multivariable Cox proportional-hazards regression models with inverse probability for treatment weighting by propensity scores., Results: Out of 2,574 COVID-19 patients, 70.1% received heparin. LMWH was largely the most used formulation (99.5%). Death rates for patients receiving heparin or not were 7.4 and 14.0 per 1,000 person-days, respectively. After adjustment for propensity scores, we found a 40% lower risk of death in patients receiving heparin (hazard ratio = 0.60; 95% confidence interval: 0.49-0.74; E-value = 2.04). This association was particularly evident in patients with a higher severity of disease or strong coagulation activation., Conclusion: In-hospital heparin treatment was associated with a lower mortality, particularly in severely ill COVID-19 patients and in those with strong coagulation activation. The results from randomized clinical trials are eagerly awaited to provide clear-cut recommendations., Competing Interests: None declared., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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33. Disentangling the Association of Hydroxychloroquine Treatment with Mortality in Covid-19 Hospitalized Patients through Hierarchical Clustering.
- Author
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Di Castelnuovo A, Gialluisi A, Antinori A, Berselli N, Blandi L, Bonaccio M, Bruno R, Cauda R, Costanzo S, Guaraldi G, Menicanti L, Mennuni M, My I, Parruti G, Patti G, Perlini S, Santilli F, Signorelli C, Stefanini G, Vergori A, Ageno W, Agodi A, Agostoni P, Aiello L, Al Moghazi S, Arboretti R, Aucella F, Barbieri G, Barchitta M, Bonfanti P, Cacciatore F, Caiano L, Cannata F, Carrozzi L, Cascio A, Castiglione G, Ciccullo A, Cingolani A, Cipollone F, Colomba C, Colombo C, Crisetti A, Crosta F, Danzi GB, D'Ardes D, de Gaetano Donati K, Di Gennaro F, Di Tano G, D'Offizi G, Fusco FM, Gaudiosi C, Gentile I, Gianfagna F, Giuliano G, Graziani E, Guarnieri G, Langella V, Larizza G, Leone A, Maccagni G, Magni F, Maitan S, Mancarella S, Manuele R, Mapelli M, Maragna R, Marcucci R, Maresca G, Marongiu S, Marotta C, Marra L, Mastroianni F, Mengozzi A, Meschiari M, Milic J, Minutolo F, Mussinelli R, Mussini C, Musso M, Odone A, Olivieri M, Palimodde A, Pasi E, Pesavento R, Petri F, Pivato CA, Poletti V, Ravaglia C, Righetti G, Rognoni A, Rossato M, Rossi I, Rossi M, Sabena A, Salinaro F, Sangiovanni V, Sanrocco C, Schiano Moriello N, Scorzolini L, Sgariglia R, Simeone PG, Spinicci M, Tamburrini E, Torti C, Trecarichi EM, Vettor R, Vianello A, Vinceti M, Virdis A, De Caterina R, and Iacoviello L
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, COVID-19 physiopathology, Cluster Analysis, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2 drug effects, Severity of Illness Index, Treatment Outcome, Antimalarials adverse effects, Antimalarials therapeutic use, COVID-19 mortality, Hospital Mortality, Hydroxychloroquine adverse effects, Hydroxychloroquine therapeutic use, COVID-19 Drug Treatment
- Abstract
The efficacy of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) in treating SARS-CoV-2 infection is harshly debated, with observational and experimental studies reporting contrasting results. To clarify the role of HCQ in Covid-19 patients, we carried out a retrospective observational study of 4,396 unselected patients hospitalized for Covid-19 in Italy (February-May 2020). Patients' characteristics were collected at entry, including age, sex, obesity, smoking status, blood parameters, history of diabetes, cancer, cardiovascular and chronic pulmonary diseases, and medications in use. These were used to identify subtypes of patients with similar characteristics through hierarchical clustering based on Gower distance. Using multivariable Cox regressions, these clusters were then tested for association with mortality and modification of effect by treatment with HCQ. We identified two clusters, one of 3,913 younger patients with lower circulating inflammation levels and better renal function, and one of 483 generally older and more comorbid subjects, more prevalently men and smokers. The latter group was at increased death risk adjusted by HCQ (HR[CI95%] = 3.80[3.08-4.67]), while HCQ showed an independent inverse association (0.51[0.43-0.61]), as well as a significant influence of cluster∗HCQ interaction ( p < 0.001). This was driven by a differential association of HCQ with mortality between the high (0.89[0.65-1.22]) and the low risk cluster (0.46[0.39-0.54]). These effects survived adjustments for additional medications in use and were concordant with associations with disease severity and outcome. These findings suggest a particularly beneficial effect of HCQ within low risk Covid-19 patients and may contribute to clarifying the current controversy on HCQ efficacy in Covid-19 treatment., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Augusto Di Castelnuovo et al.)
- Published
- 2021
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34. Lopinavir/Ritonavir and Darunavir/Cobicistat in Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients: Findings From the Multicenter Italian CORIST Study.
- Author
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Di Castelnuovo A, Costanzo S, Antinori A, Berselli N, Blandi L, Bonaccio M, Bruno R, Cauda R, Gialluisi A, Guaraldi G, Menicanti L, Mennuni M, My I, Parruti A, Patti G, Perlini S, Santilli F, Signorelli C, Stefanini GG, Vergori A, Ageno W, Aiello L, Agostoni P, Al Moghazi S, Arboretti R, Aucella F, Barbieri G, Barchitta M, Bartoloni A, Bologna C, Bonfanti P, Caiano L, Carrozzi L, Cascio A, Castiglione G, Chiarito M, Ciccullo A, Cingolani A, Cipollone F, Colomba C, Colombo C, Crosta F, Dalena G, Dal Pra C, Danzi GB, D'Ardes D, de Gaetano Donati K, Di Gennaro F, Di Tano G, D'Offizi G, Filippini T, Maria Fusco F, Gaudiosi C, Gentile I, Gini G, Grandone E, Guarnieri G, Lamanna GLF, Larizza G, Leone A, Lio V, Losito AR, Maccagni G, Maitan S, Mancarella S, Manuele R, Mapelli M, Maragna R, Marra L, Maresca G, Marotta C, Mastroianni F, Mazzitelli M, Mengozzi A, Menichetti F, Milic J, Minutolo F, Molena B, Mussinelli R, Mussini C, Musso M, Odone A, Olivieri M, Pasi E, Perroni A, Petri F, Pinchera B, Pivato CA, Poletti V, Ravaglia C, Rossato M, Rossi M, Sabena A, Salinaro F, Sangiovanni V, Sanrocco C, Scorzolini L, Sgariglia R, Simeone PG, Spinicci M, Trecarichi EM, Veronesi G, Vettor R, Vianello A, Vinceti M, Visconti E, Vocciante L, De Caterina R, and Iacoviello L
- Abstract
Background: Protease inhibitors have been considered as possible therapeutic agents for COVID-19 patients. Objectives: To describe the association between lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) or darunavir/cobicistat (DRV/c) use and in-hospital mortality in COVID-19 patients. Study Design: Multicenter observational study of COVID-19 patients admitted in 33 Italian hospitals. Medications, preexisting conditions, clinical measures, and outcomes were extracted from medical records. Patients were retrospectively divided in three groups, according to use of LPV/r, DRV/c or none of them. Primary outcome in a time-to event analysis was death. We used Cox proportional-hazards models with inverse probability of treatment weighting by multinomial propensity scores. Results: Out of 3,451 patients, 33.3% LPV/r and 13.9% received DRV/c. Patients receiving LPV/r or DRV/c were more likely younger, men, had higher C-reactive protein levels while less likely had hypertension, cardiovascular, pulmonary or kidney disease. After adjustment for propensity scores, LPV/r use was not associated with mortality (HR = 0.94, 95% CI 0.78 to 1.13), whereas treatment with DRV/c was associated with a higher death risk (HR = 1.89, 1.53 to 2.34, E-value = 2.43). This increased risk was more marked in women, in elderly, in patients with higher severity of COVID-19 and in patients receiving other COVID-19 drugs. Conclusions: In a large cohort of Italian patients hospitalized for COVID-19 in a real-life setting, the use of LPV/r treatment did not change death rate, while DRV/c was associated with increased mortality. Within the limits of an observational study, these data do not support the use of LPV/r or DRV/c in COVID-19 patients., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Di Castelnuovo, Costanzo, Antinori, Berselli, Blandi, Bonaccio, Bruno, Cauda, Gialluisi, Guaraldi, Menicanti, Mennuni, My, Parruti, Patti, Perlini, Santilli, Signorelli, Stefanini, Vergori, Ageno, Aiello, Agostoni, Al Moghazi, Arboretti, Aucella, Barbieri, Barchitta, Bartoloni, Bologna, Bonfanti, Caiano, Carrozzi, Cascio, Castiglione, Chiarito, Ciccullo, Cingolani, Cipollone, Colomba, Colombo, Crosta, Dalena, Dal Pra, Danzi, D'Ardes, de Gaetano Donati, Di Gennaro, Di Tano, D'Offizi, Filippini, Maria Fusco, Gaudiosi, Gentile, Gini, Grandone, Guarnieri, Lamanna, Larizza, Leone, Lio, Losito, Maccagni, Maitan, Mancarella, Manuele, Mapelli, Maragna, Marra, Maresca, Marotta, Mastroianni, Mazzitelli, Mengozzi, Menichetti, Milic, Minutolo, Molena, Mussinelli, Mussini, Musso, Odone, Olivieri, Pasi, Perroni, Petri, Pinchera, Pivato, Poletti, Ravaglia, Rossato, Rossi, Sabena, Salinaro, Sangiovanni, Sanrocco, Scorzolini, Sgariglia, Simeone, Spinicci, Trecarichi, Veronesi, Vettor, Vianello, Vinceti, Visconti, Vocciante, De Caterina, Iacoviello and The COVID-19 RISK and Treatments (CORIST) Collaboration.)
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- 2021
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35. Common cardiovascular risk factors and in-hospital mortality in 3,894 patients with COVID-19: survival analysis and machine learning-based findings from the multicentre Italian CORIST Study.
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Di Castelnuovo A, Bonaccio M, Costanzo S, Gialluisi A, Antinori A, Berselli N, Blandi L, Bruno R, Cauda R, Guaraldi G, My I, Menicanti L, Parruti G, Patti G, Perlini S, Santilli F, Signorelli C, Stefanini GG, Vergori A, Abdeddaim A, Ageno W, Agodi A, Agostoni P, Aiello L, Al Moghazi S, Aucella F, Barbieri G, Bartoloni A, Bologna C, Bonfanti P, Brancati S, Cacciatore F, Caiano L, Cannata F, Carrozzi L, Cascio A, Cingolani A, Cipollone F, Colomba C, Crisetti A, Crosta F, Danzi GB, D'Ardes D, de Gaetano Donati K, Di Gennaro F, Di Palma G, Di Tano G, Fantoni M, Filippini T, Fioretto P, Fusco FM, Gentile I, Grisafi L, Guarnieri G, Landi F, Larizza G, Leone A, Maccagni G, Maccarella S, Mapelli M, Maragna R, Marcucci R, Maresca G, Marotta C, Marra L, Mastroianni F, Mengozzi A, Menichetti F, Milic J, Murri R, Montineri A, Mussinelli R, Mussini C, Musso M, Odone A, Olivieri M, Pasi E, Petri F, Pinchera B, Pivato CA, Pizzi R, Poletti V, Raffaelli F, Ravaglia C, Righetti G, Rognoni A, Rossato M, Rossi M, Sabena A, Salinaro F, Sangiovanni V, Sanrocco C, Scarafino A, Scorzolini L, Sgariglia R, Simeone PG, Spinoni E, Torti C, Trecarichi EM, Vezzani F, Veronesi G, Vettor R, Vianello A, Vinceti M, De Caterina R, and Iacoviello L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, C-Reactive Protein analysis, COVID-19, Female, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, SARS-CoV-2, Survival Analysis, Young Adult, Betacoronavirus, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Coronavirus Infections mortality, Hospital Mortality, Machine Learning, Pneumonia, Viral mortality
- Abstract
Background and Aims: There is poor knowledge on characteristics, comorbidities and laboratory measures associated with risk for adverse outcomes and in-hospital mortality in European Countries. We aimed at identifying baseline characteristics predisposing COVID-19 patients to in-hospital death., Methods and Results: Retrospective observational study on 3894 patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection hospitalized from February 19th to May 23rd, 2020 and recruited in 30 clinical centres distributed throughout Italy. Machine learning (random forest)-based and Cox survival analysis. 61.7% of participants were men (median age 67 years), followed up for a median of 13 days. In-hospital mortality exhibited a geographical gradient, Northern Italian regions featuring more than twofold higher death rates as compared to Central/Southern areas (15.6% vs 6.4%, respectively). Machine learning analysis revealed that the most important features in death classification were impaired renal function, elevated C reactive protein and advanced age. These findings were confirmed by multivariable Cox survival analysis (hazard ratio (HR): 8.2; 95% confidence interval (CI) 4.6-14.7 for age ≥85 vs 18-44 y); HR = 4.7; 2.9-7.7 for estimated glomerular filtration rate levels <15 vs ≥ 90 mL/min/1.73 m
2 ; HR = 2.3; 1.5-3.6 for C-reactive protein levels ≥10 vs ≤ 3 mg/L). No relation was found with obesity, tobacco use, cardiovascular disease and related-comorbidities. The associations between these variables and mortality were substantially homogenous across all sub-groups analyses., Conclusions: Impaired renal function, elevated C-reactive protein and advanced age were major predictors of in-hospital death in a large cohort of unselected patients with COVID-19, admitted to 30 different clinical centres all over Italy., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest All Authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2020 The Italian Diabetes Society, the Italian Society for the Study of Atherosclerosis, the Italian Society of Human Nutrition and the Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, Federico II University. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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36. COVID-19 mortality rate in nine high-income metropolitan regions.
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Signorelli C, Odone A, Gianfredi V, Bossi E, Bucci D, Oradini-Alacreu A, Frascella B, Capraro M, Chiappa F, Blandi L, and Ciceri F
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- Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, COVID-19, Humans, Middle Aged, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirus Infections mortality, Pneumonia, Viral mortality
- Abstract
We analyzed the spread of the COVID-19 epidemic in 9 metropolitan regions of the world with similar socio-demographic characteristics, daytime commuting population and business activities: the New York State, Bruxelles-Capital, the Community of Madrid, Catalonia, the Île-de-France Region, the Greater London county, Stockholms län, Hovedstaden (Copenhagen) and the Lombardy Region. The Lombardy region reported the highest COVID-19 crude mortality rate (141.0 x 100,000) 70-days after the onset of the epidemic, followed by the Community of Madrid (132.8 x 100,000) New York State (120.7 x 100,000). The large variation in COVID-19 mortality and case-fatality rates for COVID-19 in different age strata suggested a more accurate analysis and interpretation of the epidemic dynamics after standardization of the rates by age. The share of elder populations (>70 years) over total population varies widely in the considered study settings, ranging from 6.9% in Catalonia to 17.0% in Lombardy. When taking age distribution into consideration the highest standardized mortality rate was observed in the State of New York (257.9 x 100,000); with figures in most of the European regions concentrated between 123.3 x 100,000 in Greater London and 177.7 x 100,000 in Bruxelles-Capital, lower in French and Danish regions. We also report and critical appraise, when available, COVID-19 mortality figures in capital cities, nursing homes, as well as excess mortality at country level. Our data raise awareness on the need for a more in-depth epidemiological analysis of the current COVID-19 public health emergency that further explores COVID-19 mortality determinants associated with health services delivery, community-level healthcare, testing approaches and characteristics of surveillance systems, including classification of COVID-19 deaths.
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- 2020
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37. Diagnostic Performance of Chest X-Ray for COVID-19 Pneumonia During the SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic in Lombardy, Italy.
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Schiaffino S, Tritella S, Cozzi A, Carriero S, Blandi L, Ferraris L, and Sardanelli F
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- Aged, COVID-19, Female, Humans, Italy, Lung diagnostic imaging, Male, Pandemics, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, Sensitivity and Specificity, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirus Infections diagnostic imaging, Pneumonia, Viral diagnostic imaging, Radiography, Thoracic methods, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Chest x-ray (CXR) can play a role in diagnosing patients with suspected severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection, but only few small-scale studies are available. We assessed the diagnostic performance of CXR in consecutive patients presenting at the emergency room at the Policlinico San Donato, Milan, Italy from February 24 to April 8, 2020 for suspected SARS-CoV-2 infection. The results of CXR were classified as positive or negative according to the original prospective radiologic reports. To overcome the limitations of reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) swab, especially oscillating sensitivity, we added the information obtained from phone calls to discharged patients with negative initial RT-PCR. Thus, we included 535 patients with concomitant CXR and RT-PCR on admission (aged 65±17 y; 340 males, 195 females), resulting in 408 RT-PCR positive and 127 negative patients at the composite reference standard. Original CXR reports showed an 89.0% sensitivity (95% confidence intervals [CI], 85.5%-91.8%), 60.6% specificity (95% CI, 51.6%-69.2%), 87.9% positive predictive value (95% CI, 84.4%-90.9%), and 63.1% negative predictive value (95% CI, 53.9%-71.7%). The adoption of CXR alongside RT-PCR to triage patients with suspected SARS-CoV-2 infection could foster a safe and efficient workflow, counteracting possible false negative RT-PCR results.
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- 2020
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38. Depression and Objectively Measured Physical Activity: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
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Gianfredi V, Blandi L, Cacitti S, Minelli M, Signorelli C, Amerio A, and Odone A
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- Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Depression epidemiology, Exercise
- Abstract
Depression is a major contributor to the overall global burden of disease, with high prevalence and relapse rate. Several factors have been considered in order to reduce the depression burden. Among them, physical activity (PA) showed a potential protective role. However, evidence is contrasting probably because of the differences in PA measurement. The aim of this systematic review with meta-analysis is to assess the association between objectively measured PA and incident and prevalent depression. The systematic review was conducted according to methods recommended by the Cochrane Collaboration and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Relevant papers published through 31 August 2019 were identified searching through the electronic databases PubMed/MEDLINE, Excerpta Medica dataBASE (Embase), PsycINFO, Scopus, Web of Science (WoS), and the Cochrane Library. All analyses were conducted using ProMeta3. Finally, 42 studies met inclusion criteria. The overall Effect size (ES) of depression for the highest vs. the lowest level of PA was -1.16 [(95% CI = -1.41; -0.91), p -value < 0.001] based on 37,408 participants. The results of the meta-analysis showed a potential protective effect of PA on prevalent and incident depression.
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- 2020
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