14 results on '"Conde-García MC"'
Search Results
2. 5PSQ-022 Analysis of infections associated with central venous catheters used for administration of parenteral nutrition in a third level hospital
- Author
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Conde García, MC, primary, Alañón Pardo, MM, additional, Gómez Lluch, MT, additional, Pérez Facila, A, additional, Notario Dongil, C, additional, and Valenzuela Gámez, JC, additional
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- 2020
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3. 4CPS-154 Potentially inappropriate medication for elderly hospitalised patients in a trauma and orthopaedic surgery department
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Alañon Pardo, MM, primary, Gómez Lluch, MT, additional, Conde García, MC, additional, Proy Vega, B, additional, Moreno Perulero, ML, additional, and Valenzuela Gámez, JC, additional
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- 2020
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4. 4CPS-045 Value of the clinical pharmacist in the pharmacokinetic monitoring of antimicrobials: health outcomes
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Alañon Pardo, MM, primary, Conde García, MC, additional, Notario Dongil, C, additional, Marcos de la Torre, A, additional, Fraga Fuentes, D, additional, and Andrés Navarro, N, additional
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- 2019
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5. DI-069 Review of off-label applications in order to improve the use
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Gómez Lluch, T, primary, Nieto-Sandoval Martín de la Sierra, P, additional, Zamora Ferrer, E, additional, Fraga Fuentes, MD, additional, Sánchez Casanueva, T, additional, Valenzuela Gámez, JC, additional, and Conde García, MC, additional
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- 2015
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6. PS-078 Review of clostridium difficile isolates in a general hospital
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Conde García, MC, primary, Araque Arroyo, P, additional, Fraga Fuentes, MD, additional, Valenzuela Gámez, JC, additional, Carranza González, R, additional, Gómez Lluch, T, additional, and Sánchez Casanueva, T, additional
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- 2015
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7. Central venous catheters-related infections in patients with parenteral nutrition.
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Seisdedos Elcuaz R, Conde García MC, Castellanos Monedero JJ, García-Manzanares Vázquez-de Agredos A, Valenzuela Gámez JC, and Fraga Fuentes MD
- Abstract
Introduction: Infections related to central venous catheters (CVC) are complications with a high prevalence and possible serious consequences. Administration of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is a risk factor, although the information available for these patients and conventional inpatient units is scarce. Objective: To determine the rate of catheter-related bacteremia (CRB) in patients with TPN and to identify possible relationships with administration route or place of insertion, to determinate the current situation and identify possible preventive measures. Method: Prospective-observational study of 13 months. All adult patients who received TPN were included. Infection rate used was the CRB per 1,000 days of CVC. Results: 176 CVC were registered in 159 patients. In 47% of CVC, vein access was jugular vein, despite being a location of greatest risk of infection. In critically ill patients, which followed a zero bacteremia project, there was no cases of infection. In other patients, bacteremia rate was 13.10 per 1,000 days of CVC. The average time elapsed between catheter insertion and infection was 11 days (range: 4-22) and the most frequent species were S. epidermidis (38%) and S. hominis (19%). Discussion: In our environment there is a high rate of BRC in non-critical patients, with a high proportion of CVC in locations with higher risk of infection, despite not having found in the sample a higher rate of infection depending on the access route. Place of insertion, operating room face ward, is related to a lower rate of BRC. Measures to standardize clinical practice may reduce its incidence. The zero bacteremia project is confirmed as a highly effective method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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8. Association between antibiotic pressure and the risk of colonization/infection by multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii complex: a time series analysis.
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Huertas Vaquero M, Asencio Egea MA, Carranza González R, Padilla Serrano A, Conde García MC, Tenias Burillo JM, and Redondo González O
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- Anti-Bacterial Agents adverse effects, Case-Control Studies, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Risk Factors, Acinetobacter Infections drug therapy, Acinetobacter Infections epidemiology, Acinetobacter baumannii, Cross Infection drug therapy, Cross Infection epidemiology
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Objective: To analyze the association between antibiotic pressure and the risk of colonization/infection by Acinetobacter baumannii complex (AB), evaluating both the individual and general prescriptions of antibiotics., Methods: This is an analytical, observational, case-control study on patients admitted to an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) during an AB outbreak (14 months). A five-year time series was constructed with the monthly incidence of cases of infection/colonization with strains of AB resistant to each antibiotic administered and with the monthly consumption of these antibiotics in the ICU., Results: We identified 40 patients either infected (23) or colonized (17) by AB and 73 controls. We found an epidemic multidrug-resistant clone of AB in 75% of cases. Risk factors associated with the development of AB infection/colonization were: greater use of medical instruments, the presence of a tracheostomy, cutaneous ulcers, surgical lesions and prior antibiotic therapies. The regression analysis of individual use of antibiotics showed that prior treatment with ceftazidime, ceftriaxone, amoxicillin/clavulanate, imipenem, levofloxacin, linezolid, and vancomycin was a risk factor for acquiring AB. ARIMA models showed that the relationship were greatest and statistically significant when the treatment occurred between 6 months (ceftazidime) and 9 months (imipenem and levofloxacin) prior., Conclusions: The dynamic and aggregate relationship between the incidence of infection/colonization by multidrug-resistant strains of AB and prior antibiotic treatment was statistically significant for intervals of 6 to 9 months., (©The Author 2021. Published by Sociedad Española de Quimioterapia. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).)
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- 2021
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9. [Monoclonal spread of multi-drug resistant CTX-M-15-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae. Impact of measures to control the outbreak].
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Asencio Egea MA, Huertas Vaquero M, Muñoz-Cuevas C, Gaitán Pitera J, Herráez Carrera O, Alcázar Carmona P, Patiño Ortega HD, Franco Huerta M, Román Ortiz C, Conde García MC, Carranza González R, Barberá JR, and Bautista Sánchez V
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Child, Community-Acquired Infections microbiology, Cross Infection microbiology, Disease Outbreaks, Female, Humans, Incidence, Klebsiella Infections epidemiology, Klebsiella Infections microbiology, Klebsiella pneumoniae enzymology, Male, Middle Aged, Phenotype, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, beta-Lactamases genetics, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial genetics, Klebsiella Infections drug therapy, Klebsiella pneumoniae drug effects, beta-Lactamases metabolism
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Objective: To describe an outbreak of multi-drug resistant extended-spectrum β-lactamases-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae (MDR-ESBL-KPN) and the impact of measures for its control., Methods: We reviewed the patients´ clinical records with MDR-ESBL-KPN isolation during 2013-2016 with resistance to fluoroquinolones, aminoglycosides, fosfomycin, and nitrofurantoin; susceptible to imipenem, meropenem, colistin, and tigecycline and variable to ertapenem and cotrimoxazole (Vitek-2). The genetic relationship between 35 isolates was established by PFGE and MLST. Control measures were put in place in January 2016., Results: We detected 269 patients colonized and/or infected by KPN-ESBL-MDR with a common resistance phenotype; the strains studied carried the blaCTX-M-15 gene and formed a single cluster belonging to ST11. The outbreak was detected at the end of 2015, although it began in 2013 in an elderly center. The acquisition source of the strains was: 6% community-acquired, 37% hospital-acquired (76% in internal medicine) and 57% related to long health care facilities (78% of hospitalizations in the last year). Ninety-four percent of patients had at least one underlying disease, 90% received antibiotics previously and 49% had some invasive devices. After the introduction of control measures, the incidence of cases in the quarter was reduced from 29 to 15., Conclusions: We detected a monoclonal outbreak of MDR-CTX-M-15-KPN in 2015, with predominance of health-care associated cases. The success in the rapid spread of the outbreak was due to the delay in its detection and to the fact that most of the patients had previously received antibiotics. The control measures reduced the number of isolates by 50%., (©The Author 2018. Published by Sociedad Española de Quimioterapia. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).)
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- 2018
10. [Results of the implementation of an Antimicrobial Stewardship Program in the "Gerencia de Atención Integrada" of Alcazar de San Juan (Castilla La Mancha)].
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Asencio Egea MA, Herráez Carrera O, Huertas Vaquero M, Patiño Ortega HD, Franco Huerta M, Alcázar Carmona P, Conde García MC, Muñoz-Cuevas C, Román Ortiz C, Gaitán Pitera J, Carranza González R, and Barberá JR
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- Anti-Bacterial Agents adverse effects, Antimicrobial Stewardship standards, Bacterial Infections drug therapy, Bacterial Infections microbiology, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Drug Utilization, Hospitals, Humans, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Quality Improvement, Quality of Life, Spain, Treatment Failure, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Antimicrobial Stewardship organization & administration
- Abstract
Objective: Our aim was to evaluate the efficiency of an ASP after its implementation in 2016 in a Spanish hospital quality system., Methods: Efficiency of the ASP was measured by process and outcome indicators at the level of the patient's quality of life, antimicrobial consumption and percentage of resistance to them during the 2016-2017 period. In 2017, the failures mode and effects analysis (FMEA) methodology was applied. An annual satisfaction survey was conducted., Results: The clinical indicators were within the threshold of acceptability, as well as the empirical prescription of antimicrobials, the consumption of antibiotics (reduction of 77 DDD in the first semester of 2016 to 26 in the second semester of 2017) and the renal (gentamicin) and neurological (carbapenems) toxicity. The FMEA identified as a main risk the lack of adequacy of the empirical treatment once the antibiogram was obtained; thus, a corrective action was taken in 2017. Regarding the microbiological indicators, the incidence of multi-drug resistant and carbapenemase-producing enterobacteria, and that of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, were reduced. Eighty-three percent of the counselling activities carried out were accepted. The surveys revealed a good acceptance and spread of the program, the need for protocols and training in the use of antibiotics., Conclusions: The implementation of the ASP in the quality system was efficient. The consumption of antibiotics and the adverse effects derived from their use were reduced, improving the quality of life of patients, and reducing health costs., (©The Author 2018. Published by Sociedad Española de Quimioterapia. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).)
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- 2018
11. Nutrition-related risk indexes and long-term mortality in noncritically ill inpatients who receive total parenteral nutrition (prospective multicenter study).
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Tapia MJ, Ocón J, Cabrejas-Gómez C, Ballesteros-Pomar MD, Vidal-Casariego A, Arraiza-Irigoyen C, Olivares J, Conde-García MC, García-Manzanares Á, Botella-Romero F, Quílez-Toboso RP, Cabrerizo L, Rubio MA, Chicharro L, Burgos R, Pujante P, Ferrer M, Zugasti A, Petrina E, Manjón L, Diéguez M, Carrera MJ, Vila-Bundo A, Urgelés JR, Aragón-Valera C, Sánchez-Vilar O, Bretón I, García-Peris P, Muñoz-Garach A, Márquez E, del Olmo D, Pereira JL, Tous MC, and Olveira G
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- Adult, Aged, Blood Glucose metabolism, Body Mass Index, Body Weight, C-Reactive Protein metabolism, Comorbidity, Critical Illness, Energy Intake, Follow-Up Studies, Geriatric Assessment, Hospitalization, Humans, Inpatients, Length of Stay, Malnutrition diagnosis, Middle Aged, Nutrition Assessment, Nutritional Status, Proportional Hazards Models, Prospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Serum Albumin metabolism, Young Adult, Malnutrition epidemiology, Parenteral Nutrition, Total
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Background: Malnutrition in hospitalized patients is associated with an increased risk of death, in both the short and the long term., Aims: The purpose of this study was to determine which nutrition-related risk index predicts long-term mortality better (three years) in patients who receive total parenteral nutrition (TPN)., Methods: This prospective, multicenter study involved noncritically ill patients who were prescribed TPN during hospitalization. Data were collected on Subjective Global Assessment (SGA), Nutritional Risk Index (NRI), Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index (GNRI), body mass index, albumin and prealbumin, as well as long-term mortality., Results: Over the 1- and 3-year follow-up periods, 174 and 244 study subjects (28.8% and 40.3%) respectively, died. Based on the Cox proportional hazards survival model, the nutrition-related risk indexes most strongly associated with mortality were SGA and albumin (<2.5 g/dL) (after adjustment for age, gender, C-reactive protein levels, prior comorbidity, mean capillary blood glucose during TPN infusion, diabetes status prior to TPN, diagnosis, and infectious complications during hospitalization)., Conclusions: The SGA and very low albumin levels are simple tools that predict the risk of long-term mortality better than other tools in noncritically ill patients who receive TPN during hospitalization., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd and European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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12. Hypoglycemia in noncritically ill patients receiving total parenteral nutrition: a multicenter study. (Study group on the problem of hyperglycemia in parenteral nutrition; Nutrition area of the Spanish Society of Endocrinology and Nutrition).
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Olveira G, Tapia MJ, Ocón J, Cabrejas-Gómez C, Ballesteros-Pomar MD, Vidal-Casariego A, Arraiza-Irigoyen C, Olivares J, Conde-García MC, García-Manzanares Á, Botella-Romero F, Quílez-Toboso RP, Matía P, Rubio MÁ, Chicharro L, Burgos R, Pujante P, Ferrer M, Zugasti A, Petrina E, Manjón L, Diéguez M, Carrera MJ, Vila-Bundo A, Urgelés JR, Aragón-Valera C, Sánchez-Vilar O, Bretón I, García-Peris P, Muñoz-Garach A, Márquez E, Del Olmo D, Pereira JL, and Tous MC
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- Administration, Intravenous, Aged, Blood Glucose metabolism, Body Mass Index, Critical Illness, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Hypoglycemia etiology, Insulin administration & dosage, Insulin adverse effects, Length of Stay, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Nutritional Status, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Spain epidemiology, Hypoglycemia epidemiology, Parenteral Nutrition, Total adverse effects
- Abstract
Objective: Hypoglycemia is a common problem among hospitalized patients. Treatment of hyperglycemia with insulin is potentially associated with an increased risk for hypoglycemia. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence and predictors of hypoglycemia (capillary blood glucose <70 mg/dL) in hospitalized patients receiving total parenteral nutrition (TPN)., Methods: This prospective multicenter study involved 19 Spanish hospitals. Noncritically ill adults who were prescribed TPN were included, thus enabling us to collect data on capillary blood glucose and insulin dosage., Results: The study included 605 patients of whom 6.8% (n = 41) had at least one capillary blood glucose <70 mg/dL and 2.6% (n = 16) had symptomatic hypoglycemia. The total number of hypoglycemic episodes per 100 d of TPN was 0.82. In univariate analysis, hypoglycemia was significantly associated with the presence of diabetes, a lower body mass index (BMI), and treatment with intravenous (IV) insulin. Patients with hypoglycemia also had a significantly longer hospital length of stay, PN duration, higher blood glucose variability, and a higher insulin dose. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed that a lower BMI, high blood glucose variability, and TPN duration were risk factors for hypoglycemia. Use of IV insulin and blood glucose variability were predictors of symptomatic hypoglycemia., Conclusions: The occurrence of hypoglycemia in noncritically ill patients receiving PN is low. A lower BMI and a greater blood glucose variability and TPN duration are factors associated with the risk for hypoglycemia. IV insulin and glucose variability were predictors of symptomatic hypoglycemia., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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13. Prevalence of diabetes, prediabetes, and stress hyperglycemia: insulin therapy and metabolic control in patients on total parenteral nutrition (prospective multicenter study).
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Study Group Of Hyperglycemia In Parenteral Nutrition Nutrition Area Of The Spanish Society Of Endocrinology And Nutrition Seen, Olveira G, Tapia MJ, Ocón J, Cabrejas-Gómez C, Ballesteros-Pomar MD, Vidal-Casariego A, Arraiza-Irigoyen C, Olivares J, Conde-García MC, García-Manzanares Á, Botella-Romero F, Quílez-Toboso RP, Cabrerizo L, Matía P, Chicharro L, Burgos R, Pujante P, Ferrer M, Zugasti A, Petrina E, Manjón L, Diéguez M, Carrera MJ, Vila-Bundo A, Urgelés JR, Aragón-Valera C, Sánchez-Vilar O, Bretón I, García-Peris P, Muñoz-Garach A, Márquez E, del Olmo D, Pereira JL, and Tous MC
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- Adult, Aged, Blood Glucose analysis, Diabetes Mellitus metabolism, Female, Humans, Hyperglycemia metabolism, Male, Middle Aged, Prediabetic State metabolism, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Hyperglycemia epidemiology, Insulin therapeutic use, Parenteral Nutrition, Total adverse effects, Prediabetic State epidemiology
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Objective: The prevalence of carbohydrate metabolism disorders in patients who receive total parenteral nutrition (TPN) is not well known. These disorders can affect the treatment, metabolic control, and prognosis of affected patients. The aims of this study were to determine the prevalence in noncritically ill patients on TPN of diabetes, prediabetes, and stress hyperglycemia; the factors affecting hyperglycemia during TPN; and the insulin therapy provided and the metabolic control achieved., Methods: We undertook a prospective multicenter study involving 19 Spanish hospitals. Noncritically ill patients who were prescribed TPN were included, and data were collected on demographic, clinical, and laboratory variables (glycated hemoglobin, C-reactive protein [CRP], capillary blood glucose) as well as insulin treatment., Results: The study included 605 patients. Before initiation of TPN, the prevalence of known diabetes was 17.4%, unknown diabetes 4.3%, stress hyperglycemia 7.1%, and prediabetes 27.8%. During TPN therapy, 50.9% of patients had at least one capillary blood glucose of >180 mg/dL. Predisposing factors were age, levels of CRP and glycated hemoglobin, the presence of diabetes, infectious complications, the number of grams of carbohydrates infused, and the administration of glucose-elevating drugs. Most (71.6%) patients were treated with insulin. The mean capillary blood glucose levels during TPN were: known diabetes (178.6 ± 46.5 mg/dL), unknown diabetes (173.9 ± 51.9), prediabetes (136.0 ± 25.4), stress hyperglycemia (146.0 ± 29.3), and normal (123.2 ± 19.9) (P<.001)., Conclusion: The prevalence of carbohydrate metabolism disorders is very high in noncritically ill patients on TPN. These disorders affect insulin treatment and the degree of metabolic control achieved.
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- 2015
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14. [Study of rituximab efficacy, cost, safety, and compliance of its package leaflet in a tertiary hospital].
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Conde García MC, Fernández Feijoo MA, and Calleja Hernández MA
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- Antibodies, Monoclonal administration & dosage, Antibodies, Monoclonal adverse effects, Antibodies, Monoclonal economics, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Murine-Derived, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Drug Costs, Drug Utilization, Female, Guideline Adherence, Hospitals, Special, Hospitals, University, Humans, Lymphoma drug therapy, Male, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Purpura, Thrombocytopenic, Idiopathic drug therapy, Rituximab, Spain, Treatment Outcome, Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, Drug Labeling, Off-Label Use statistics & numerical data
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Introduction: The appearance of monoclonal antibodies, and specifically, rituximab, has provided a new approach to treating non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and rheumatoid arthritis. The purpose of this study is to analyse whether this drug is used according to its package leaflet in clinical practice, evaluate the treatment's efficacy and determine its cost., Methods: Ambispective, observational single-centre study of medication use set up as a prescription evaluation for the indication of rituximab in a tertiary hospital between March 2003 and 31 December 2007., Results: 82 of the 221 patients who were treated (37.1 %) received the drug for a condition that does not appear in the package leaflet. 51.1 % and 27.5 % of response and progression were registered for approved diagnoses and 34.9 % and 47 % for non-approved diagnoses; the death rate was 25.3 % and 41.5 % respectively. The mean cost per treatment episode was the highest for idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (11,683 euro), whilst the highest treatment cost per patient was associated with follicular lymphoma (15,940 euro)., Discussion: We found that the main cause of the high rate of non-compliance with the package leaflet is patient lack of response to standard treatments, together with clinical practice guides that support the use of rituximab for conditions other than those for which it is indicated. Nevertheless, most of the clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of rituximab for these unauthorized diagnostic profiles have poor methodology, are in phase II, are open studies, have low patient numbers, or in some cases, are not comparative.
- Published
- 2009
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