465 results on '"Gini R"'
Search Results
2. Monitoring medicine prescriptions before, during and after pregnancy in Italy
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Fortinguerra, F, Belleudi, V, Poggi, F, Perna, S, Bortolus, R, Donati, S, D'Aloja, P, Da Cas, R, Clavenna, A, Locatelli, A, Addis, A, Davoli, M, Trotta, F, Rezza, G, Lombardozzi, L, Fortino, I, Mazzone, A, Schiatti, S, Zanforlini, M, Deambrosis, P, Manea, S, Salmaso, L, Scroccaro, G, Marata, A, Puccini, A, Solfrini, V, Attanasio, F, Gini, R, De Giorgi, M, Fran-Chini, D, Rossi, M, Stella, V, Carta, P, Garau, D, Ledda, S, Serra, E, Fortinguerra F., Belleudi V., Poggi F. R., Perna S., Bortolus R., Donati S., D'Aloja P., Da Cas R., Clavenna A., Locatelli A., Addis A., Davoli M., Trotta F., Rezza G., Lombardozzi L., Fortino I., Mazzone A., Schiatti S., Zanforlini M., Deambrosis P., Manea S., Salmaso L., Scroccaro G., Marata A. M., Puccini A., Solfrini V., Attanasio F., Gini R., De Giorgi M., Fran-Chini D., Rossi M., Stella V. M. P., Carta P., Garau D., Ledda S., Serra E., Fortinguerra, F, Belleudi, V, Poggi, F, Perna, S, Bortolus, R, Donati, S, D'Aloja, P, Da Cas, R, Clavenna, A, Locatelli, A, Addis, A, Davoli, M, Trotta, F, Rezza, G, Lombardozzi, L, Fortino, I, Mazzone, A, Schiatti, S, Zanforlini, M, Deambrosis, P, Manea, S, Salmaso, L, Scroccaro, G, Marata, A, Puccini, A, Solfrini, V, Attanasio, F, Gini, R, De Giorgi, M, Fran-Chini, D, Rossi, M, Stella, V, Carta, P, Garau, D, Ledda, S, Serra, E, Fortinguerra F., Belleudi V., Poggi F. R., Perna S., Bortolus R., Donati S., D'Aloja P., Da Cas R., Clavenna A., Locatelli A., Addis A., Davoli M., Trotta F., Rezza G., Lombardozzi L., Fortino I., Mazzone A., Schiatti S., Zanforlini M., Deambrosis P., Manea S., Salmaso L., Scroccaro G., Marata A. M., Puccini A., Solfrini V., Attanasio F., Gini R., De Giorgi M., Fran-Chini D., Rossi M., Stella V. M. P., Carta P., Garau D., Ledda S., and Serra E.
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Background The use of medications during pregnancy is a common event worldwide. Monitoring medicine prescriptions in clinical practice is a necessary step in assessing the impact of therapeutic choices in pregnant women as well as the adherence to clinical guidelines. The aim of this study was to provide prevalence data on medication use before, during and after pregnancy in the Italian population. Methods A retrospective prevalence study using administrative healthcare databases was conducted. A cohort of 449,012 pregnant women (15-49 years) residing in eight Italian regions (59% of national population), who delivered in 2016-2018, were enrolled. The prevalence of medication use was estimated as the proportion (%) of pregnant women with any prescription. Results About 73.1% of enrolled women received at least one drug prescription during pregnancy, 57.1% in pre-pregnancy and 59.3% in postpartum period. The prevalence of drug prescriptions increased with maternal age, especially during the 1st trimester of pregnancy. The most prescribed medicine was folic acid (34.6%), followed by progesterone (19%), both concentrated in 1st trimester of pregnancy (29.2% and 14.8%, respectively). Eight of the top 30 most prescribed medications were antibiotics, whose prevalence was higher during 2nd trimester of pregnancy in women ≥ 40 years (21.6%). An increase in prescriptions of antihypertensives, antidiabetics, thyroid hormone and heparin preparations was observed during pregnancy; on the contrary, a decrease was found for chronic therapies, such as antiepileptics or lipid-modifying agents. Conclusions This study represents the largest and most representative population-based study illustrating the medication prescription patterns before, during and after pregnancy in Italy. The observed prescriptive trends were comparable to those reported in other European countries. Given the limited information on medication use in Italian pregnant women, the performed analyses provide an up
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- 2023
3. NAVIGATOR: an Italian regional imaging biobank to promote precision medicine for oncologic patients
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Borgheresi, R, Barucci, A, Colantonio, S, Aghakhanyan, G, Assante, M, Bertelli, E, Carlini, E, Carpi, R, Caudai, C, Cavallero, D, Cioni, D, Cirillo, R, Colcelli, V, Dell'Amico, A, Di Gangi, D, Erba, P, Faggioni, L, Falaschi, Z, Gabelloni, M, Gini, R, Lelii, L, Lio, P, Lorito, A, Lucarini, S, Manghi, P, Mangiacrapa, F, Marzi, C, Mazzei, M, Mercatelli, L, Mirabile, A, Mungai, F, Miele, V, Olmastroni, M, Pagano, P, Paiar, F, Panichi, G, Pascali, M, Pasquinelli, F, Shortrede, J, Tumminello, L, Volterrani, L, Neri, E, Borgheresi R., Barucci A., Colantonio S., Aghakhanyan G., Assante M., Bertelli E., Carlini E., Carpi R., Caudai C., Cavallero D., Cioni D., Cirillo R., Colcelli V., Dell'Amico A., Di Gangi D., Erba P. A., Faggioni L., Falaschi Z., Gabelloni M., Gini R., Lelii L., Lio P., Lorito A., Lucarini S., Manghi P., Mangiacrapa F., Marzi C., Mazzei M. A., Mercatelli L., Mirabile A., Mungai F., Miele V., Olmastroni M., Pagano P., Paiar F., Panichi G., Pascali M. A., Pasquinelli F., Shortrede J. E., Tumminello L., Volterrani L., Neri E., Borgheresi, R, Barucci, A, Colantonio, S, Aghakhanyan, G, Assante, M, Bertelli, E, Carlini, E, Carpi, R, Caudai, C, Cavallero, D, Cioni, D, Cirillo, R, Colcelli, V, Dell'Amico, A, Di Gangi, D, Erba, P, Faggioni, L, Falaschi, Z, Gabelloni, M, Gini, R, Lelii, L, Lio, P, Lorito, A, Lucarini, S, Manghi, P, Mangiacrapa, F, Marzi, C, Mazzei, M, Mercatelli, L, Mirabile, A, Mungai, F, Miele, V, Olmastroni, M, Pagano, P, Paiar, F, Panichi, G, Pascali, M, Pasquinelli, F, Shortrede, J, Tumminello, L, Volterrani, L, Neri, E, Borgheresi R., Barucci A., Colantonio S., Aghakhanyan G., Assante M., Bertelli E., Carlini E., Carpi R., Caudai C., Cavallero D., Cioni D., Cirillo R., Colcelli V., Dell'Amico A., Di Gangi D., Erba P. A., Faggioni L., Falaschi Z., Gabelloni M., Gini R., Lelii L., Lio P., Lorito A., Lucarini S., Manghi P., Mangiacrapa F., Marzi C., Mazzei M. A., Mercatelli L., Mirabile A., Mungai F., Miele V., Olmastroni M., Pagano P., Paiar F., Panichi G., Pascali M. A., Pasquinelli F., Shortrede J. E., Tumminello L., Volterrani L., and Neri E.
- Abstract
NAVIGATOR is an Italian regional project boosting precision medicine in oncology with the aim of making it more predictive, preventive, and personalised by advancing translational research based on quantitative imaging and integrative omics analyses. The project’s goal is to develop an open imaging biobank for the collection and preservation of a large amount of standardised imaging multimodal datasets, including computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography data, together with the corresponding patient-related and omics-related relevant information extracted from regional healthcare services using an adapted privacy-preserving model. The project is based on an open-source imaging biobank and an open-science oriented virtual research environment (VRE). Available integrative omics and multi-imaging data of three use cases (prostate cancer, rectal cancer, and gastric cancer) will be collected. All data confined in NAVIGATOR (i.e., standard and novel imaging biomarkers, non-imaging data, health agency data) will be used to create a digital patient model, to support the reliable prediction of the disease phenotype and risk stratification. The VRE that relies on a well-established infrastructure, called D4Science.org, will further provide a multiset infrastructure for processing the integrative omics data, extracting specific radiomic signatures, and for identification and testing of novel imaging biomarkers through big data analytics and artificial intelligence.
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- 2022
4. Overview of the European post-authorisation study register post-authorization studies performed in Europe from September 2010 to December 2018
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Sultana, J, Crisafulli, S, Almas, M, Antonazzo, I, Baan, E, Bartolini, C, Bertuccio, M, Bonifazi, F, Capuano, A, Didio, A, Ehrenstein, V, Felisi, M, Ferrajolo, C, Fontana, A, Francisca, R, Fourrier-Reglat, A, Fortuny, J, Gini, R, Hyeraci, G, Hoeve, C, Kontogiorgis, C, Isgro, V, Lalagkas, P, L'Abbate, L, Layton, D, Landi, A, Narduzzi, S, Roque Pereira, L, Poulentzas, G, Rafaniello, C, Roberto, G, Scondotto, G, Sportiello, L, Toma, M, Toussi, M, Verhamme, K, Volpe, E, Trifiro, G, Sultana J., Crisafulli S., Almas M., Antonazzo I. C., Baan E., Bartolini C., Bertuccio M. P., Bonifazi F., Capuano A., Didio A., Ehrenstein V., Felisi M., Ferrajolo C., Fontana A., Francisca R., Fourrier-Reglat A., Fortuny J., Gini R., Hyeraci G., Hoeve C., Kontogiorgis C., Isgro V., Lalagkas P. -N., L'Abbate L., Layton D., Landi A., Narduzzi S., Roque Pereira L., Poulentzas G., Rafaniello C., Roberto G., Scondotto G., Sportiello L., Toma M., Toussi M., Verhamme K., Volpe E., Trifiro G., Sultana, J, Crisafulli, S, Almas, M, Antonazzo, I, Baan, E, Bartolini, C, Bertuccio, M, Bonifazi, F, Capuano, A, Didio, A, Ehrenstein, V, Felisi, M, Ferrajolo, C, Fontana, A, Francisca, R, Fourrier-Reglat, A, Fortuny, J, Gini, R, Hyeraci, G, Hoeve, C, Kontogiorgis, C, Isgro, V, Lalagkas, P, L'Abbate, L, Layton, D, Landi, A, Narduzzi, S, Roque Pereira, L, Poulentzas, G, Rafaniello, C, Roberto, G, Scondotto, G, Sportiello, L, Toma, M, Toussi, M, Verhamme, K, Volpe, E, Trifiro, G, Sultana J., Crisafulli S., Almas M., Antonazzo I. C., Baan E., Bartolini C., Bertuccio M. P., Bonifazi F., Capuano A., Didio A., Ehrenstein V., Felisi M., Ferrajolo C., Fontana A., Francisca R., Fourrier-Reglat A., Fortuny J., Gini R., Hyeraci G., Hoeve C., Kontogiorgis C., Isgro V., Lalagkas P. -N., L'Abbate L., Layton D., Landi A., Narduzzi S., Roque Pereira L., Poulentzas G., Rafaniello C., Roberto G., Scondotto G., Sportiello L., Toma M., Toussi M., Verhamme K., Volpe E., and Trifiro G.
- Abstract
Background: The European post-authorisation study (EU PAS) register is a repository launched in 2010 by the European Medicines Agency (EMA). All EMA-requested PAS, commonly observational studies, must be recorded in this register. Multi-database studies (MDS) leveraging secondary data have become an important strategy to conduct PAS in recent years, as reflected by the type of studies registered in the EU PAS register. Objectives: To analyse and describe PAS in the EU PAS register, with focus on MDS. Methods: Studies in the EU PAS register from inception to 31st December 2018 were described concerning transparency, regulatory obligations, scope, study type (e.g., observational study, clinical trial, survey, systematic review/meta-analysis), study design, type of data collection and target population. MDS were defined as studies conducted through secondary use of >1 data source not linked at patient-level. Data extraction was carried out independently by 14 centres with expertise in pharmacoepidemiology, using publicly available information in the EU PAS register including study protocol, whenever available, using a standardised data collection form. For validation purposes, a second revision of key fields for a 15% random sample of studies was carried out by a different centre. The inter-rater reliability (IRR) was then calculated. Finally, to identify predictors of primary data collection-based studies/versus those based on secondary use of healthcare databases) or MDS (vs. non-MDS), odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated fitting univariate logistic regression models. Results: Overall, 1426 studies were identified. Clinical trials (N = 30; 2%), systematic reviews/meta-analyses (N = 16; 1%) and miscellaneous study designs (N = 46; 3%) were much less common than observational studies (N = 1227; 86%). The protocol was available for 63% (N = 360) of 572 observational studies requested by a competent authority. Overall, 36% (N = 446) of ob
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- 2022
5. Increased Risk of Stroke Due to Non-adherence and Non-persistence with Direct Oral Anticoagulants (DOACs): Real-World Analyses Using a Nested Case-Control Study from The Netherlands, Italy and Germany
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Holthuis, E, Smits, E, Spentzouris, G, Beier, D, Enders, D, Gini, R, Bartolini, C, Mazzaglia, G, Penning-van Beest, F, Herings, R, Holthuis E, Smits E, Spentzouris G, Beier D, Enders D, Gini R, Bartolini C, Mazzaglia G, Penning-van Beest F, Herings R, Holthuis, E, Smits, E, Spentzouris, G, Beier, D, Enders, D, Gini, R, Bartolini, C, Mazzaglia, G, Penning-van Beest, F, Herings, R, Holthuis E, Smits E, Spentzouris G, Beier D, Enders D, Gini R, Bartolini C, Mazzaglia G, Penning-van Beest F, and Herings R
- Abstract
Background: A high degree of adherence to direct oral anticoagulants is essential for reducing the risk of ischaemic stroke and systemic embolism in patients with atrial fibrillation, owing to the rapid decline in anticoagulation activity when doses are omitted (i.e. rebound effect). Objective: We aimed to assess the relationship between non-adherence and non-persistence with direct oral anticoagulants and the incidence of ischaemic stroke in patients with atrial fibrillation. Methods: A nested case–control study was conducted in the Netherlands, Italy and Germany among patients with atrial fibrillation starting direct oral anticoagulants between the drug approval date and the end of database availability. Patients with an ischaemic stroke during the follow-up were selected as cases and compared with matched controls (matched on age ± 5 years, sex, year of cohort entry date and CHA2DS2-VASc-score at cohort entry date). The cohort entry date was the first dispensing date. Study patients were those aged ≥ 45 years, with ≥ 1 year database history, ≥ 1 year follow-up and at least two direct oral anticoagulant dispensings after the cohort entry date. Adherence and persistence to direct oral anticoagulant treatment were defined as the proportion of days covered ≥ 80% or direct oral anticoagulant continuous use between the cohort entry date and the index date (i.e. date of ischaemic stroke), respectively. Results: In The Netherlands, Italy and Germany, 105 cases and 395 controls, 1580 cases and 6248 controls, and 900 cases and 3570 controls were included, respectively. Odds ratios (ORs) for stroke among current users who were non-adherent compared to adherent users were 0.43 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.09–1.96) in The Netherlands, 1.11 (95% CI 0.98–1.26) in Italy and 1.21 (95% CI 1.01–1.45) in Germany. The risk of stroke was significantly higher among non-persistent users compared with persistent users in all three databases [OR 1.56 (95% CI 1.00–2.44), OR 1.48 (1.32–1
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- 2022
6. Antidepressants Drug Use during COVID-19 Waves in the Tuscan General Population: An Interrupted Time-Series Analysis
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Antonazzo, I, Fornari, C, Maumus-Robert, S, Cei, E, Paoletti, O, Ferrara, P, Conti, S, Cortesi, P, Mantovani, L, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Antonazzo IC, Fornari C, Maumus-Robert S, Cei E, Paoletti O, Ferrara P, Conti S, Cortesi PA, Mantovani LG, Gini R, Mazzaglia G, Antonazzo, I, Fornari, C, Maumus-Robert, S, Cei, E, Paoletti, O, Ferrara, P, Conti, S, Cortesi, P, Mantovani, L, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Antonazzo IC, Fornari C, Maumus-Robert S, Cei E, Paoletti O, Ferrara P, Conti S, Cortesi PA, Mantovani LG, Gini R, and Mazzaglia G
- Abstract
In Italy, during the COVID-19 waves two lockdowns were implemented to prevent virus diffusion in the general population. Data on antidepressant (AD) use in these periods are still scarce. This study aimed at exploring the impact of COVID-19 lockdowns on prevalence and incidence of antidepressant drug use in the general population. A population-based study using the healthcare administrative database of Tuscany was performed. We selected a dynamic cohort of subjects with at least one ADs dispensing from 1 January 2018 to 27 December 2020. The weekly prevalence and incidence of drug use were estimated across different segments: pre-lockdown (1 January 2018–8 March 2020), first lockdown (9 March 2020–15 June 2020), post-first lockdown (16 June 2020–15 November 2020) and second lockdown (16 November 2020–27 December 2020). An interrupted time-series analysis was used to assess the effect of lockdowns on the observed outcomes. Compared to the pre-lockdown we observed an abrupt reduction of ADs incidence (Incidence-Ratio: 0.82; 95% Confidence-Intervals: 0.74–0.91) and a slight weekly decrease of prevalence (Prevalence-Ratio: 0.997; 0.996–0.999). During the post-first lockdown AD use increased, with higher incidence- and similar prevalence values compared with those expected in the absence of the outbreak. This pandemic has impacted AD drug use in the general population with potential rebound effects during the period between waves. This calls for future studies aimed at exploring the mid–long term effects of this phenomenon.
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- 2022
7. The limitations of some European healthcare databases for monitoring the effectiveness of pregnancy prevention programmes as risk minimisation measures
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Charlton, R. A., Bettoli, V., Bos, H. J., Engeland, A., Garne, E., Gini, R., Hansen, A. V., de Jong-van den berg, L. T. W., Jordan, S., Klungsøyr, K., Neville, A. J., Pierini, A., Puccini, A., Sinclair, M., Thayer, D., and Dolk, H.
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- 2017
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8. Background rates of 41 adverse events of special interest for COVID-19 vaccines in 10 European healthcare databases - an ACCESS cohort study
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Afd Pharmacoepi & Clinical Pharmacology, Pharmacoepidemiology and Clinical Pharmacology, Willame, C, Dodd, C, Durán, C E, Elbers, Rjhj, Gini, R, Bartolini, C, Paoletti, O, Wang, L, Ehrenstein, V, Kahlert, J, Haug, U, Schink, T, Diez-Domingo, J, Mira-Iglesias, A, Carreras, J J, Vergara-Hernández, C, Giaquinto, C, Barbieri, E, Stona, L, Huerta, C, Martín-Pérez, M, García-Poza, P, de Burgos, A, Martínez-González, M, Bryant, V, Villalobos, F, Pallejà-Millán, M, Aragón, M, Souverein, P, Thurin, N H, Weibel, D, Klungel, O H, Sturkenboom, McJm, Afd Pharmacoepi & Clinical Pharmacology, Pharmacoepidemiology and Clinical Pharmacology, Willame, C, Dodd, C, Durán, C E, Elbers, Rjhj, Gini, R, Bartolini, C, Paoletti, O, Wang, L, Ehrenstein, V, Kahlert, J, Haug, U, Schink, T, Diez-Domingo, J, Mira-Iglesias, A, Carreras, J J, Vergara-Hernández, C, Giaquinto, C, Barbieri, E, Stona, L, Huerta, C, Martín-Pérez, M, García-Poza, P, de Burgos, A, Martínez-González, M, Bryant, V, Villalobos, F, Pallejà-Millán, M, Aragón, M, Souverein, P, Thurin, N H, Weibel, D, Klungel, O H, and Sturkenboom, McJm
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- 2023
9. Background rates of 41 adverse events of special interest for COVID-19 vaccines in 10 European healthcare databases - an ACCESS cohort study
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RWE/Causal inference, Epi Infectieziekten Team 2, Global Health, Circulatory Health, JC onderzoeksprogramma Methodology, Data Science & Biostatistiek, Child Health, Willame, C., Dodd, C., Durán, C. E., Elbers, R.J.H.J., Gini, R., Bartolini, C., Paoletti, O., Wang, L., Ehrenstein, V., Kahlert, J., Haug, U., Schink, T., Diez-Domingo, J., Mira-Iglesias, A., Carreras, J. J., Vergara-Hernández, C., Giaquinto, C., Barbieri, E., Stona, L., Huerta, C., Martín-Pérez, M., García-Poza, P., de Burgos, A., Martínez-González, M., Bryant, V., Villalobos, F., Pallejà-Millán, M., Aragón, M., Souverein, P., Thurin, N. H., Weibel, D., Klungel, O. H., Sturkenboom, M. C.J.M., RWE/Causal inference, Epi Infectieziekten Team 2, Global Health, Circulatory Health, JC onderzoeksprogramma Methodology, Data Science & Biostatistiek, Child Health, Willame, C., Dodd, C., Durán, C. E., Elbers, R.J.H.J., Gini, R., Bartolini, C., Paoletti, O., Wang, L., Ehrenstein, V., Kahlert, J., Haug, U., Schink, T., Diez-Domingo, J., Mira-Iglesias, A., Carreras, J. J., Vergara-Hernández, C., Giaquinto, C., Barbieri, E., Stona, L., Huerta, C., Martín-Pérez, M., García-Poza, P., de Burgos, A., Martínez-González, M., Bryant, V., Villalobos, F., Pallejà-Millán, M., Aragón, M., Souverein, P., Thurin, N. H., Weibel, D., Klungel, O. H., and Sturkenboom, M. C.J.M.
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- 2023
10. Large-Scale Postmarketing Surveillance of Biological Drugs for Immune-Mediated Inflammatory Diseases Through an Italian Distributed Multi-Database Healthcare Network: The VALORE Project
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Trifiro, G., Isgro, V., Ingrasciotta, Y., Ientile, V., L'Abbate, L., Foti, S. S., Belleudi, V., Poggi, F., Fontana, A., Moretti, U., Lora, R., Sabaini, A., Senesi, I., Sorrentino, C., Puzo, M. R., Padula, A., Fusco, M., Giordana, R., Solfrini, V., Puccini, A., Rossi, P., Del Zotto, S., Leoni, O., Zanforlini, M., Ancona, D., Bavaro, V., Garau, D., Ledda, S., Scondotto, S., Allotta, A., Tuccori, M., Gini, R., Bucaneve, G., Franchini, D., Cavazzana, A., Biasi, V., Spila Alegiani, S., Massari, M., Andretta, I., Tanaglia, M., Carriero, A., Sassano, S., De Sarro, G., Mirarchi, S., Palleria, C., Sarro, C., Balestrieri, M., Rostan, S., Capuano, A., Bernardi, F. F., Trama, U., Russo, A., Fumo, M. G., Addis, A., Musicco, F., Sapigni, E., Mazzetti, I., Podetti, D., Potenza, A. M., Nikitina, V., Ricciardelli, R., Mogheiseh, N., Croce, S., Pettinelli, A., Ejlli, L., Fortino, I., Ercolanoni, M., Mazzone, A., Nisic, A., Schiatti, S., Ludergnani, M., Mancini, M., Patregnani, L., Fabbietti, P., Antonicelli, E., Mangano, A., Campomori, A., Urru, S. A., Costa, G., Guarrera, G. M., Stella, P., Serra, E., Carta, P., Vannacci, A., Lucenteforte, E., Parrilli, M., Convertino, I., De Giorgi, M., Rocchi, R. E., Rossi, M., Scroccaro, G., Deambrosis, P., Grindelli, G., Ferroni, E., Trifiro, G., Isgro, V., Ingrasciotta, Y., Ientile, V., L'Abbate, L., Foti, S. S., Belleudi, V., Poggi, F., Fontana, A., Moretti, U., Lora, R., Sabaini, A., Senesi, I., Sorrentino, C., Puzo, M. R., Padula, A., Fusco, M., Giordana, R., Solfrini, V., Puccini, A., Rossi, P., Del Zotto, S., Leoni, O., Zanforlini, M., Ancona, D., Bavaro, V., Garau, D., Ledda, S., Scondotto, S., Allotta, A., Tuccori, M., Gini, R., Bucaneve, G., Franchini, D., Cavazzana, A., Biasi, V., Spila Alegiani, S., Massari, M., Andretta, I., Tanaglia, M., Carriero, A., Sassano, S., De Sarro, G., Mirarchi, S., Palleria, C., Sarro, C., Balestrieri, M., Rostan, S., Capuano, A., Bernardi, F. F., Trama, U., Russo, A., Fumo, M. G., Addis, A., Musicco, F., Sapigni, E., Mazzetti, I., Podetti, D., Potenza, A. M., Nikitina, V., Ricciardelli, R., Mogheiseh, N., Croce, S., Pettinelli, A., Ejlli, L., Fortino, I., Ercolanoni, M., Mazzone, A., Nisic, A., Schiatti, S., Ludergnani, M., Mancini, M., Patregnani, L., Fabbietti, P., Antonicelli, E., Mangano, A., Campomori, A., Urru, S. A., Costa, G., Guarrera, G. M., Stella, P., Serra, E., Carta, P., Vannacci, A., Lucenteforte, E., Parrilli, M., Convertino, I., De Giorgi, M., Rocchi, R. E., Rossi, M., Scroccaro, G., Deambrosis, P., Grindelli, G., and Ferroni, E.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Postmarketing surveillance ,Rate ratio ,REGISTRIES ,Retrospective Studie ,Internal medicine ,BIOSIMILARS ,medicine ,Adalimumab ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Original Research Article ,education ,Adverse effect ,ANTI-TNF THERAPY, RHEUMATOID-ARTHRITIS, RISK, PHARMACOVIGILANCE, BIOSIMILARS, EXPERIENCE, REGISTRIES, PSORIASIS, MEDICINES, ACCESS ,Biosimilar Pharmaceuticals ,Retrospective Studies ,RISK ,Delivery of Health Care ,Female ,Infliximab ,Italy ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,Pharmacology ,education.field_of_study ,PSORIASIS ,business.industry ,Biosimilar ,ANTI-TNF THERAPY ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,RHEUMATOID-ARTHRITIS ,PHARMACOVIGILANCE ,MEDICINES ,EXPERIENCE ,Immune-mediated inflammatory diseases ,ACCESS ,business ,Human ,Biosimilar Pharmaceutical ,Biotechnology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Biological drugs have improved the management of immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs) despite being associated with important safety issues such as immunogenicity, infections, and malignancies in real-world settings. Objective The aim of this study was to explore the potential of a large Italian multi-database distributed network for use in the postmarketing surveillance of biological drugs, including biosimilars, in patients with IMID. Methods A retrospective cohort study was conducted using 13 Italian regional claims databases during 2010–2019. A tailor-made R-based tool developed for distributed analysis of claims data using a study-specific common data model was customized for this study. We measured the yearly prevalence of biological drug users and the frequency of switches between originator and biosimilars for infliximab, etanercept, and adalimumab separately and stratified them by calendar year and region. We then calculated the cumulative number of users and person-years (PYs) of exposure to individual biological drugs approved for IMIDs. For a number of safety outcomes (e.g., severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 [SARS-COV-2] infection), we conducted a sample power calculation to estimate the PYs of exposure required to investigate their association with individual biological drugs approved for IMIDs, considering different strengths of association. Results From a total underlying population of almost 50 million inhabitants from 13 Italian regions, we identified 143,602 (0.3%) biological drug users, with a cumulative exposure of 507,745 PYs during the entire follow-up. The mean age ± standard deviation of biological drug users was 49.3 ± 16.3, with a female-to-male ratio of 1.2. The age-adjusted yearly prevalence of biological drug users increased threefold from 0.7 per 1000 in 2010 to 2.1 per 1000 in 2019. Overall, we identified 40,996 users of biosimilars of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α inhibitors (i.e., etanercept, adalimumab, and infliximab) in the years 2015–2019. Of these, 46% (N = 18,845) switched at any time between originator and biosimilars or vice versa. To investigate a moderate association (incidence rate ratio 2) between biological drugs approved for IMIDs and safety events of interest, such as optic neuritis (lowest background incidence rate 10.4/100,000 PYs) or severe infection (highest background incidence rate 4312/100,000 PYs), a total of 43,311 PYs and 104 PYs of exposure to individual biological drugs, respectively, would be required. As such, using this network, of 15 individual biological drugs approved for IMIDs, the association with those adverse events could be investigated for four (27%) and 14 (93%), respectively. Conclusion The VALORE project multi-database network has access to data on more than 140,000 biological drug users (and > 0.5 million PYs) from 13 Italian regions during the years 2010–2019, which will be further expanded with the inclusion of data from other regions and more recent calendar years. Overall, the cumulated amount of person-time of exposure to biological drugs approved for IMIDs provides enough statistical power to investigate weak/moderate associations of almost all individual compounds and the most relevant safety outcomes. Moreover, this network may offer the opportunity to investigate the interchangeability of originator and biosimilars of several TNFα inhibitors in different therapeutic areas in real-world settings. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40259-021-00498-3.
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- 2021
11. Association between SARS-CoV-2 Vaccines and Myo- and Pericarditis; a Large Observational Study Using Electronic Healthcare Data from Four European Countries
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Riera-Arnau, J., Bots, S., Belitser, S., Messina, D., Schultze, A., Douglas, I., Duran, C., Poza, P. G., Gini, R., Herings, R. M. C., Sisay, M. M., Martin, I., Villalobos, F., Klungel, O. H., Sturkenboom, M., Gastroenterology and hepatology, Epidemiology and Data Science, Clinical pharmacology and pharmacy, APH - Quality of Care, and APH - Methodology
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- 2022
12. Impact of covid-19 lockdown, during the two waves, on drug use and emergency department access in people with epilepsy: An interrupted time-series analysis
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Antonazzo, I, Fornari, C, Maumus-Robert, S, Cei, E, Paoletti, O, Conti, S, Cortesi, P, Mantovani, L, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Antonazzo I. C., Fornari C., Maumus-Robert S., Cei E., Paoletti O., Conti S., Cortesi P. A., Mantovani L. G., Gini R., Mazzaglia G., Antonazzo, I, Fornari, C, Maumus-Robert, S, Cei, E, Paoletti, O, Conti, S, Cortesi, P, Mantovani, L, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Antonazzo I. C., Fornari C., Maumus-Robert S., Cei E., Paoletti O., Conti S., Cortesi P. A., Mantovani L. G., Gini R., and Mazzaglia G.
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Background: In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Italy implemented two national lockdowns aimed at reducing virus transmission. We assessed whether these lockdowns affected anti-seizure medication (ASM) use and epilepsy-related access to emergency departments (ED) in the general population. Methods: We performed a population-based study using the healthcare administrative database of Tuscany. We defined the weekly time series of prevalence and incidence of ASM, along with the incidence of epilepsy-related ED access from 1 January 2018 to 27 December 2020 in the general population. An interrupted time-series analysis was used to assess the effect of lockdowns on the observed outcomes. Results: Compared to pre-lockdown, we observed a relevant reduction of ASM incidence (0.65; 95% Confidence Intervals: 0.59–0.72) and ED access (0.72; 0.64–0.82), and a slight decrease of ASM prevalence (0.95; 0.94–0.96). During the post-lockdown the ASM incidence reported higher values compared to pre-lockdown, whereas ASM prevalence and ED access remained lower. Results also indicate a lower impact of the second lockdown for both ASM prevalence (0.97; 0.96–0.98) and incidence (0.89; 0.80–0.99). Conclusion: The lockdowns implemented during the COVID-19 outbreaks significantly affected ASM use and epilepsy-related ED access. The potential consequences of these phenomenon are still unknown, although an increased incidence of epilepsy-related symptoms after the first lockdown has been observed. These findings emphasize the need of ensuring continuous care of epileptic patients in stressful conditions such as the COVID-19 pandemic.
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- 2021
13. COVID-19 outbreak impact on anticoagulants utilization: an interrupted time-series analysis using healthcare administrative databases
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Antonazzo, I, Fornari, C, Paoletti, O, Bartolini, C, Conti, S, Cortesi, P, Mantovani, L, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Antonazzo IC, Fornari C, Paoletti O, Bartolini C, Conti S, Cortesi PA, Mantovani LG, Gini R, Mazzaglia G, Antonazzo, I, Fornari, C, Paoletti, O, Bartolini, C, Conti, S, Cortesi, P, Mantovani, L, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Antonazzo IC, Fornari C, Paoletti O, Bartolini C, Conti S, Cortesi PA, Mantovani LG, Gini R, and Mazzaglia G
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- 2021
14. Cohort monitoring of Adverse Events of Special Interest and COVID-19 diagnoses prior to and after COVID-19 vaccination
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Sturkenboom, MCJM, Messina, D, Paoletti, O, de Burgos, A, Garcia, P, Huerta Álvarez Consuelo, Llorente, A, Klungel, O, Martin, M, Martinez, M, Martin, I, Overbeek, J, Souverein, P, Swart, K, and Gini, R
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COVID-19 vaccine, monitoring, safety, AESI, electronic health records, VAC4EU - Abstract
This is a final study report with the following objectives Primary objectives To monitor and estimate the incidence rates of adverse events of special interest (AESI) in vaccinated and non-vaccinated persons by data source over the period January 1st 2020-October 31st 2021 by brand and dose of vaccine and age of the population. To monitor and estimate the incidence rates of diagnosed COVID-19 in vaccinated and non-vaccinated persons by data source over the period January 1st 2020-October 31st 2021 by brand and dose of vaccine as well as age. To monitor exposure and coverage to COVID-19 vaccines by brand and dose of vaccine as well as age. Secondary objectives To compare the incidence rates of AESIs in the risk window of 28 days after vaccination with dose 1 and/or dose 2 with the incidence rates of AESIs in 2020. To monitor and estimate vaccine exposure, incidence rates of adverse events of special interest. (AESI) and of COVID-19 in vaccinated and non-vaccinated persons over the period January 1st 2020-October 31st 2021 in the at-risk population for developing severe COVID-19 by data source, brand and dose of vaccine as well as age. Methods We used a retrospective cohort design, in 4 electronic health care databases, with periodic updates of the data during the study period (January 2020 -September 2021). Persons entered the cohort on 1/1/2020 and exit upon latest data extraction, death, moving out or the specific events of interest. Person-time after cohort entry was divided in non-exposed person-time, and person-time following vaccination by specific brands, labelled by dose and distance since last vaccination (-1, -2, -3 weeks etc). The source population included all individuals observed in one of the participating data sources for at least one day during the study period (01 January 2020 - last data availability) and who have at least 1 year of data availability before cohort entry, except for individuals with data available since birth. Per event, for calculation of incidence, individuals were followed from cohort entry and contribute to person-time in month (prior to vaccination) and in weeks after vaccination plus specific vaccine exposure (brand & dose) category. Follow-up was censored upon the earliest of date of the event (except for recurrent events), death, exiting the data source, or last data draw-down. For comparison of post-vaccination rates follow-up ended 28 days after each of the vaccine doses, if they had a 2nd dose the intervals post-dose stopped at the date of vaccination with the second. Incidence rates were calculated for 2020 (non-exposed), and after vaccination by vaccine brand, dose and data source. Incidence rates were standardised directly to the Eurostat population and standardised rate differences were calculated using R. Following results of the interim analysis in July 2021, Poisson regression was added to the amended protocol to adjust for measured covariates that were related to the chance of exposure to certain vaccines (age, sex, risk factors for severe covid and prior covid-19). We did not design to adjust for covariates related to the specific outcomes and this study was not designed for causal inference but for monitoring safety. This means that residual confounding may remain, which is why we pre-stated that we classify an association as ‘disproportional’ if the IRR was above 2. Results This study comprised a total of 25,720,158 subjects. We count only the largest population for BIFAP for the total, as the regions with hospital linkage are a subset of the primary care populations. The largest population included was from CPRD with more than 14 million participants. Data locks differed per site: June 30, 2021 in Tuscany, August 31st for BIFAP, August 1st 2021 for PHARMO and May 2021 for CPRD Aurum. At the start of the study 1/1/2020, 34% of the Tuscany population had one or more risk factors for severe COVID-19 disease, and this was around 25% in each of the other data sources (table 2). Median age was highest in Tuscany region (49) and BIFAP-HOSP regions (49). Overall, 12,117,458 persons received a first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine (47.1%) (excluding unknown vaccines manufacturers). Percentage was highest in BIFAP (68.7%). In BIFAP the majority of persons also had received a second dose for each of the vaccine brands. Percentage of full primary regimen of 2-dose primary regimens were lower in other data sources, in particular for AstraZeneca in CPRD, as this vaccine also had the highest distance between dose 1 and 2 in each data source. mRNA vaccines had a short distance between dose 1 and 2 in all sites except for CPRD, where Pfizer also had a mean of 76 days between dose 1 and 2, but only 28 days for Moderna vaccine. In this data instance heterologous schedules were very rare. Vaccination coverage data reflected well the regional/national data for ARS and BIFAP, but were lower for CPRD and PHARMO, probably due to delays in automated feedback on vaccination from immunization registers. We studied the 2020 rates of different AESI. Most AESI were very rare, only the coagulation disorders were more common. We monitored the occurrence of AESI using cumulative weekly rates, and by censoring at 28-day intervals after each dose. The latter was used to compare against background, which was done using age standardized incidence rate differences, and subsequent Poisson analysis adjusting (where possible for age, sex, prior covid-19 and any risk factors for COVID). The table below shows the key results. For most AESI no excess risk was observed following vaccination, 30 event/vaccine/dose combinations showed excess age standardized rate differences and associations in the Poisson analyses (see table below), however after adjustment for factors associated with vaccine roll out, only 10 significant associations of pooled incidence rate ratios remained based on dose 1 and 2 combined. These comprised anaphylaxis after AstraZeneca, TTS after both AstraZeneca and Janssen vaccine, erythema multiforme after Moderna, GBS after Janssen vaccine, SOCV after Janssen vaccine, thrombocytopenia after Janssen and Moderna vaccine and venous thromboembolism after Moderna and Pfizer vaccines. The risk was more than two-fold increased for TTS, SOCV and thrombocytopenia. Conclusions This study has provided many lessons It showed that we could monitor a large number of AESI and COVID-19 across 4 data sources in four countries based on the ConcePTION common data model, and common analytics pipeline, and that semantic harmonization was possible across the different disease terminologies Monitoring could start very early in the vaccination campaign, and repeated updates were possible The same population and data sources were used both to compute background rates, and to retrieve observed events after vaccination. This design avoids a limitation of using, on the one hand, real-world data to assess background rates, and, on the other, spontaneous reporting to assess observed cases: underestimation, if any, is more likely to affect the two periods is a uniform way, thus improving the validity of comparison. Underestimation of an AESI can be discussed, based on the characteristics of the data source in relation with the AESI. For example, ICPC codes do not allow for studying the majority for rare AESI, which affected the ability of PHARMO of monitoring such AESI; or, events that do not require hospitalisation or access to emergency room cannot be studied in the ARS data source. COVID-19 vaccines had very different user patterns across the countries in terms of type, distance between dose 1 and 2 and the populations targeted. We observed strong channelling of the different vaccines that differed across countries AESI incidence rates were mostly very low, especially for neurological, immunological and haematological events. Coagulations disorders and cardiac disorders were more frequent, at the same time such events were those with stronger confounding For several AESI we observed disproportionalities between post-vaccination observed and expected rates. Most of these events had been the topic of regulatory discussions, based on public records such as the haematological events, neurological events and erythema multiforme. In spite of the large numbers of vaccinees, power is limited for the events that are very rare, The research leading to these results was conducted as part of the activities of the EU PE&PV (Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacovigilance) Research Network (led by Utrecht University) with collaboration from the Vaccine Monitoring Collaboration for Europe network (VAC4EU). Scientific work for this project was coordinated by the University Medical Center Utrecht. The project has received support from the European Medicines Agency under the Framework service contract nr EMA/2018/28/PE. This document expresses the opinion of the authors, and may not be understood or quoted as being made on behalf of or reflecting the position of the European Medicines Agency or one of its committees or working parties. The authors from BIFAP would like to acknowledge the excellent collaboration of the primary care practitioners and pediatricians, and also the support of the regional authorities participating in the database.
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- 2022
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15. Risk of cardiac valvulopathy with use of bisphosphonates: a population-based, multi-country case-control study
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Coloma, P. M., de Ridder, M., Bezemer, I., Herings, R. M. C., Gini, R., Pecchioli, S., Scotti, L., Rijnbeek, P., Mosseveld, M., van der Lei, J., Trifirò, G., Sturkenboom, M., and on behalf of the EU-ADR Consortium
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- 2016
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16. What can real world evidence contribute to regulatory science in pre and post marketing setting?
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Martini, N, Sultana, J, Addis, ., Braga, M, Corrao, G, Campomori, A, Capuano, A, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Patarnello, F, Petrini, C, Pierini, A, Pippo, L, Popoli, P, Russo, P, Scondotto, G, Trifirò, G, Martini, N., Sultana, J., Braga, M., Corrao, G., Campomori, A., Capuano, A., Gini, R., Mazzaglia, G., Patarnello, F., Petrini, C., Pierini, A., Pippo, L., Popoli, P., Russo, P., Scondotto, G., Trifirò, G., Martini, N, Sultana, J, Addis, ., Braga, M, Corrao, G, Campomori, A, Capuano, A, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Patarnello, F, Petrini, C, Pierini, A, Pippo, L, Popoli, P, Russo, P, Scondotto, G, Trifirò, G, Martini, N., Sultana, J., Braga, M., Corrao, G., Campomori, A., Capuano, A., Gini, R., Mazzaglia, G., Patarnello, F., Petrini, C., Pierini, A., Pippo, L., Popoli, P., Russo, P., Scondotto, G., and Trifirò, G.
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- 2020
17. PCSK9 Inhibitors’ New Users: Analysis of Prescription Patterns and Patients’ Characteristics from an Italian Real-world Study
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Piccinni, C, Antonazzo, I, Maggioni, A, Pedrini, A, Calabria, S, Ronconi, G, Dondi, L, Martini, N, Roberto, G, Sampietro, T, Sbrana, F, Pino, B, Bigazzi, F, Surdo, G, Volpi, E, Biagini, S, Gini, R, Piccinni C, Antonazzo IC, Maggioni AP, Pedrini A, Calabria S, Ronconi G, Dondi L, Martini N, Roberto G, Sampietro T, Sbrana F, Pino BD, Bigazzi F, Surdo GL, Volpi E, Biagini S, Gini R, Piccinni, C, Antonazzo, I, Maggioni, A, Pedrini, A, Calabria, S, Ronconi, G, Dondi, L, Martini, N, Roberto, G, Sampietro, T, Sbrana, F, Pino, B, Bigazzi, F, Surdo, G, Volpi, E, Biagini, S, Gini, R, Piccinni C, Antonazzo IC, Maggioni AP, Pedrini A, Calabria S, Ronconi G, Dondi L, Martini N, Roberto G, Sampietro T, Sbrana F, Pino BD, Bigazzi F, Surdo GL, Volpi E, Biagini S, and Gini R
- Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Cardiovascular (CV) diseases represent a major cause of death and severe medical condition worldwide. Different therapeutic options are available to control low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level in order to prevent CV events. In recent years, two new drugs were approved for patients who are unable to reduce circulating LDL-C with the current therapies: evolocumab and alirocumab (proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type nine [PCSK9] inhibitors). This study was aimed to characterise patients who started treatment with PCSK9 inhibitors in the Tuscany region of Italy during the first year of public healthcare service reimbursement and to describe the pattern of PCSK9 inhibitor use in the first 6 months of treatment. METHODS: Patients on PCSK9 inhibitor treatment in Tuscany (3.7 million inhabitants) from 07/2017 to 06/2018 were selected from regional healthcare administrative databases. Concomitant use of lipid-lowering therapies (LLTs), adherence and persistence during the 6 months preceding the first PCSK9 inhibitor dispensing, as well as comorbidities since 1996, were described. In the first 6 months of PCSK9 inhibitor treatment, adherence, persistence and concomitant LLTs were assessed. RESULTS: There were 269 (176 evolocumab, 93 alirocumab) new users of PCSK9 inhibitors. Patients (mean age of 59.1 years) were mainly male (71.0%) in secondary prevention (70.2%) and affected by familial hypercholesterolaemia (53.5%). Sixty-six patients (24.5%) had diabetes mellitus and 12 (4.5%) chronic renal failure. In the 6 months prior to the first PCSK9 inhibitor administration, 61.3% of patients received at least one prescription of ezetimibe or high-intensity statins and 45.7% were persistent to these drugs. During follow-up, 79.9% of patients were adherent to PCSK9 inhibitor and 73.3% were persistent. CONCLUSIONS: During the first year of availability, the rate of prescription of PCSK9 inhibitors appears below expectations. Patients wer
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- 2020
18. All-cause mortality and antipsychotic use among elderly persons with high baseline cardiovascular and cerebrovascular risk: a multi-center retrospective cohort study in Italy
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Sultana J., Giorgianni F., REA, FEDERICO, Lucenteforte E., Lombardi N., Mugelli A., Vannacci A., Liperoti R., Kirchmayer U., Vitale C., Chinellato A., Roberto G., Corrao G., Trifiro G., Agabiti N., Bartolini C., Bernabei R., Bettiol A., Bonassi S., Caputi A. P., Cascini S., Cipriani F., Davoli M., Fini M., Gini R., Lapi F., Onder G., Sorge C., Tari M., Vetrano D. L., Sultana, J, Giorgianni, F, Rea, F, Lucenteforte, E, Lombardi, N, Mugelli, A, Vannacci, A, Liperoti, R, Kirchmayer, U, Vitale, C, Chinellato, A, Roberto, G, Corrao, G, Trifiro, G, Agabiti, N, Bartolini, C, Bernabei, R, Bettiol, A, Bonassi, S, Caputi, A, Cascini, S, Cipriani, F, Davoli, M, Fini, M, Gini, R, Lapi, F, Onder, G, Sorge, C, Tari, M, and Vetrano, D
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Toxicology ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Cohort Studies ,Antipsychotic ,0302 clinical medicine ,Retrospective Studie ,Risk Factors ,Cardiovascular Disease ,80 and over ,Antipsychotics ,Medicine ,Drug Interactions ,Aged, 80 and over ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,General Medicine ,Italy ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cerebrovascular Disorder ,Female ,cohort study ,drug interactions ,elderly ,mortality ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Human ,Cohort study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,03 medical and health sciences ,Elderly persons ,Humans ,Cerebrovascular risk ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged ,Pharmacology ,drug interaction ,urogenital system ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Settore MED/09 - MEDICINA INTERNA ,Retrospective cohort study ,equipment and supplies ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Antipsychotic Agent ,Proportional Hazards Model ,Cohort Studie ,business ,All cause mortality - Abstract
Background: Little is known about the comparative risk of death with atypical or conventional antipsychotics (APs) among persons with cardiovascular or cerebrovascular disease (CCD). Research design and methods: A cohort study was conducted using five Italian claims databases. New atypical AP users with CCD aged ≥65 (reference) were matched to new conventional AP users. Mortality per 100 person-years (PYs) and hazard ratios (HR), estimated using Cox models, were reported. Incidence and risk of death were estimated for persons having drug–drug interactions. Outcome occurrence was evaluated 180 days after AP initiation. Results: Overall 24,711 and 27,051 elderly new conventional and atypical AP users were identified. The mortality rate was 51.3 and 38.5 deaths per 100 PYs for conventional and atypical AP users. Mortality risk was 1.33 (95%CI: 1.27–1.39) for conventional APs. There was no increased mortality risk with single drug–drug interactions (DDIs) vs. no DDI. AP users with ≥1 DDI had a 29% higher mortality risk compared to no DDI in the first 90 days of treatment (HR: 1.29 (95% CI: 1.00–1.67)). Conclusions: Conventional APs had a higher risk of death than atypical APs among elderly persons with CCD. Having ≥1 DDI was associated with an increased risk of death.
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- 2019
19. Score vs. Winrate in Score-Based Games: which Reward for Reinforcement Learning?
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Pasqualini L., Parton M., Morandin F., Amato G., Gini R., Metta C., Fantozzi M., and Marchetti A.
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Artificial Intelligence (cs.AI) ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,I.2.6 ,AlphaZero-like algorithms ,Score-based games ,Reinforcement learning - Abstract
In the last years, the DeepMind algorithm AlphaZero has become the state of the art to efficiently tackle perfect information two-player zero-sum games with a win/lose outcome. However, when the win/lose outcome is decided by a final score difference, AlphaZero may play score-suboptimal moves because all winning final positions are equivalent from the win/lose outcome perspective. This can be an issue, for instance when used for teaching, or when trying to understand whether there is a better move. Moreover, there is the theoretical quest for the perfect game. A naive approach would be training an AlphaZero-like agent to predict score differences instead of win/lose outcomes. Since the game of Go is deterministic, this should as well produce an outcome-optimal play. However, it is a folklore belief that "this does not work". In this paper, we first provide empirical evidence for this belief. We then give a theoretical interpretation of this suboptimality in general perfect information two-player zero-sum game where the complexity of a game like Go is replaced by the randomness of the environment. We show that an outcome-optimal policy has a different preference for uncertainty when it is winning or losing. In particular, when in a losing state, an outcome-optimal agent chooses actions leading to a higher score variance. We then posit that when approximation is involved, a deterministic game behaves like a nondeterministic game, where the score variance is modeled by how uncertain the position is. We validate this hypothesis in AlphaZero-like software with a human expert., Comment: Published at 2022 21st IEEE International Conference on Machine Learning and Applications (ICMLA). This version (v2) is a major revision and superseeds version v1
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- 2022
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20. A Systematic Review of Case-Identification Algorithms for 18 Conditions Based on Italian Healthcare Administrative Databases: A Study Protocol
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Canova, C, Simonato, L, Barbiellini Amidei, C, Baldi, I, Dalla Zuanna, T, Gregori, D, Danieli, S, Buja, A, Lorenzoni, G, Pitter, G, Costa, G, Gnavi, R, Corrao, G, Rea, F, Gini, R, Hyeraci, G, Roberto, G, Spini, A, Lucenteforte, E, Agabiti, N, Davoli, M, Di Domenicantonio, R, Cappai, G, Canova C., Simonato L., Barbiellini Amidei C., Baldi I., Dalla Zuanna T., Gregori D., Danieli S., Buja A., Lorenzoni G., Pitter G., Costa G., Gnavi R., Corrao G., Rea F., Gini R., Hyeraci G., Roberto G., Spini A., Lucenteforte E., Agabiti N., Davoli M., Di Domenicantonio R., Cappai G., Canova, C, Simonato, L, Barbiellini Amidei, C, Baldi, I, Dalla Zuanna, T, Gregori, D, Danieli, S, Buja, A, Lorenzoni, G, Pitter, G, Costa, G, Gnavi, R, Corrao, G, Rea, F, Gini, R, Hyeraci, G, Roberto, G, Spini, A, Lucenteforte, E, Agabiti, N, Davoli, M, Di Domenicantonio, R, Cappai, G, Canova C., Simonato L., Barbiellini Amidei C., Baldi I., Dalla Zuanna T., Gregori D., Danieli S., Buja A., Lorenzoni G., Pitter G., Costa G., Gnavi R., Corrao G., Rea F., Gini R., Hyeraci G., Roberto G., Spini A., Lucenteforte E., Agabiti N., Davoli M., Di Domenicantonio R., and Cappai G.
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BACKGROUND: there has been a long-standing, consistent use worldwide of Healthcare Administrative Databases (HADs) for epidemiological purposes, especially to identify acute and chronic health conditions. These databases are able to reflect health-related conditions at a population level through disease-specific case-identification algorithms that combine information coded in multiple HADs. In Italy, in the past 10 years, HAD-based case-identification algorithms have experienced a constant increase, with a significant extension of the spectrum of identifiable diseases. Besides estimating incidence and/or prevalence of diseases, these algorithms have been used to enroll cohorts, monitor quality of care, assess the effect of environmental exposure, and identify health outcomes in analytic studies. Despite the rapid increase in the use of case-identification algorithms, information on their accuracy and misclassification rate is currently unavailable for most conditions. OBJECTIVES: to define a protocol to systematically review algorithms used in Italy in the past 10 years for the identification of several chronic and acute diseases, providing an accessible overview to future users in the Italian and international context. METHODS: PubMed will be searched for original research articles, published between 2007 and 2017, in Italian or English. The search string consists of a combination of free text and MeSH terms with a common part on HADs and a disease-specific part. All identified papers will be screened for eligibility by two independent reviewers. All articles that used/defined an algorithm for the identification of each disease of interest using Italian HADs will be included. Algorithms with exclusive use of death certificates, pathology register, general practitioner or pediatrician data will be excluded. Pertinent papers will be classified according to the objective for which the algorithm was used, and only articles that used algorithms with "primary objectives"
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- 2019
21. All-cause mortality and antipsychotic use among elderly persons with high baseline cardiovascular and cerebrovascular risk: a multi-center retrospective cohort study in Italy
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Sultana, J, Giorgianni, F, Rea, F, Lucenteforte, E, Lombardi, N, Mugelli, A, Vannacci, A, Liperoti, R, Kirchmayer, U, Vitale, C, Chinellato, A, Roberto, G, Corrao, G, Trifiro, G, Agabiti, N, Bartolini, C, Bernabei, R, Bettiol, A, Bonassi, S, Caputi, A, Cascini, S, Cipriani, F, Davoli, M, Fini, M, Gini, R, Lapi, F, Onder, G, Sorge, C, Tari, M, Vetrano, D, Sultana J., Giorgianni F., REA, FEDERICO, Lucenteforte E., Lombardi N., Mugelli A., Vannacci A., Liperoti R., Kirchmayer U., Vitale C., Chinellato A., Roberto G., Corrao G., Trifiro G., Agabiti N., Bartolini C., Bernabei R., Bettiol A., Bonassi S., Caputi A. P., Cascini S., Cipriani F., Davoli M., Fini M., Gini R., Lapi F., Onder G., Sorge C., Tari M., Vetrano D. L., Sultana, J, Giorgianni, F, Rea, F, Lucenteforte, E, Lombardi, N, Mugelli, A, Vannacci, A, Liperoti, R, Kirchmayer, U, Vitale, C, Chinellato, A, Roberto, G, Corrao, G, Trifiro, G, Agabiti, N, Bartolini, C, Bernabei, R, Bettiol, A, Bonassi, S, Caputi, A, Cascini, S, Cipriani, F, Davoli, M, Fini, M, Gini, R, Lapi, F, Onder, G, Sorge, C, Tari, M, Vetrano, D, Sultana J., Giorgianni F., REA, FEDERICO, Lucenteforte E., Lombardi N., Mugelli A., Vannacci A., Liperoti R., Kirchmayer U., Vitale C., Chinellato A., Roberto G., Corrao G., Trifiro G., Agabiti N., Bartolini C., Bernabei R., Bettiol A., Bonassi S., Caputi A. P., Cascini S., Cipriani F., Davoli M., Fini M., Gini R., Lapi F., Onder G., Sorge C., Tari M., and Vetrano D. L.
- Abstract
Background: Little is known about the comparative risk of death with atypical or conventional antipsychotics (APs) among persons with cardiovascular or cerebrovascular disease (CCD). Research design and methods: A cohort study was conducted using five Italian claims databases. New atypical AP users with CCD aged ≥65 (reference) were matched to new conventional AP users. Mortality per 100 person-years (PYs) and hazard ratios (HR), estimated using Cox models, were reported. Incidence and risk of death were estimated for persons having drug–drug interactions. Outcome occurrence was evaluated 180 days after AP initiation. Results: Overall 24,711 and 27,051 elderly new conventional and atypical AP users were identified. The mortality rate was 51.3 and 38.5 deaths per 100 PYs for conventional and atypical AP users. Mortality risk was 1.33 (95%CI: 1.27–1.39) for conventional APs. There was no increased mortality risk with single drug–drug interactions (DDIs) vs. no DDI. AP users with ≥1 DDI had a 29% higher mortality risk compared to no DDI in the first 90 days of treatment (HR: 1.29 (95% CI: 1.00–1.67)). Conclusions: Conventional APs had a higher risk of death than atypical APs among elderly persons with CCD. Having ≥1 DDI was associated with an increased risk of death.
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- 2019
22. Background rates of Adverse Events of Special Interest for monitoring COVID-19 vaccines
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Willame, C, Dodd, C, Gini, R, Durán, CE, Thomsen, RM, Wang, L, Gedebjerg, A, Kahlert, J, Ehrenstein, V, Bartolini, C, Droz, C, Moore, N, Haug, U, Schink, T, Diez-Domingo, J, Mira-Iglesias, A, Vergara-Hernández, C, Carreras, JJ, Villalobos, F, Pallejà, M, Aragón, M, Perez-Gutthann, S, Arana, A, Giaquinto, C, Barbieri, E, Stona, L, Huerta, C, García Poza, P, de Burgos, A, Martínez-González, M, Souverein, P, Gardarsdottir, H, Siiskonen, SJ, Weibel, D, Mahy, P, Klungel, O, and Sturkenboom, MCJM
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background rates, AESI, Covid-19 vaccine, incidence - Abstract
Rationale and background: The global rapid spread of COVID-19 caused by the SARS-CoV-2 triggered the need for developing vaccines to control for this pandemic. This study aimed to generate background incidence rates of adverse events of special interest (AESI) that may be used to monitor benefit-risk profile of COVID-19 vaccines. Data sources: This study included 10 data sources from 7 European countries (Denmark, Germany, France, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, United Kingdom). Data sources contain health insurance data (GePaRD, SNDS), hospitalisation record linkage data (PHARMO, Danish registries (DCE-AU), SIDIAP, ARS) or data from general practitioners (CPRD, PEDIANET, BIFAP, FISABIO). For this final report data from 9 data sources were included. Study size: The study population for the total study comprised approximately 141.6 million individuals. In this final report, a total number of 45 million individuals were included. An update including French data is expected later this year Results This report comprises background rate data on AESI from 6 countries (UK, ES, IT, DK, NL, DE) and 9 data sources(BIFAP, Pedianet (children only), CPRD, ARS, Danish registries, FISABIO, SIDIAP, PHARMO, GeParD). Data from France (SNDS) could not be generated in a timely manner due to administrative constraints in data release. Data sources included different subpopulations based on the availability of numerator data of the observed persontime (Hosp= hospital based, PC= primary care, HOSP-PC= overlap between hospitalization and primary care). This entry also includes the results in excel format and also the links to the codes and event definitions, This protocol has been accepted by EMA as a deliverable of the framework contract No EMA/2018/28/PE. The protocol expresses the expertise of the authors and the ACCESS consortium as well as feedback received from EMA. It may not be understood or quoted as being made on beh behalf, or reflecting the position of the European Medicines Agency or one of its Committees or Working Parties. For questions please contact: m.c.j.sturkenboom@umcutrecht.nl
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- 2021
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23. Use of antidepressants during COVID19 outbreak: a real-world drug-utilization study
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Fornari, C, primary, Antonazzo, IC, additional, Paoletti, O, additional, Cei, E, additional, Bartolini, C, additional, Conti, S, additional, Ferrara, P, additional, Mantovani, LG, additional, Gini, R, additional, and Mazzaglia, G, additional
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- 2021
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24. AF.64 TRAJECTORIES OF ORAL BUDESONIDE USE IN CROHN’S DISEASE COHORT OF TUSCAN PATIENTS
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Bertani, L., primary, Ferraro, S., additional, Bartolini, C., additional, Convertino, I., additional, Giometto, S., additional, Cappello, E., additional, Valdiserra, G., additional, Tillati, S., additional, Blandizzi, C., additional, Lucenteforte, E., additional, Gini, R., additional, Tuccori, M., additional, and Costa, F., additional
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- 2021
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25. AF.55 ADHERENCE TO MESALAZINE AND IDENTIFICATION OF PATIENTS WITH ULCERATIVE COLITIS IN HEALTHCARE ADMINISTRATIVE DATABASES OF TUSCANY (ITALY)
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Bertani, L., primary, Bartolini, C., additional, Ferraro, S., additional, Convertino, I., additional, Giometto, S., additional, Tillati, S., additional, Valdiserra, G., additional, Cappello, E., additional, Blandizzi, C., additional, Lucenteforte, E., additional, Gini, R., additional, Tuccori, M., additional, and Costa, F., additional
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- 2021
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26. AF.58 DIAGNOSTIC DELAY, EFFECTIVENESS AND SAFETY OUTCOMES IN A REAL-WORLD COHORT OF PATIENTS WITH CROHN’S DISEASE: DATA FROM ADMINISTRATIVE DATABASES IN TUSCANY, ITALY
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Bertani, L., primary, Ferraro, S., additional, Bartolini, C., additional, Convertino, I., additional, Giometto, S., additional, Cappello, E., additional, Valdiserra, G., additional, Tillati, S., additional, Blandizzi, C., additional, Lucenteforte, E., additional, Gini, R., additional, Tuccori, M., additional, and Costa, F., additional
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- 2021
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27. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor prescribing before, during and after pregnancy: a population-based study in six European regions
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Charlton, R A, Jordan, S, Pierini, A, Garne, E, Neville, A J, Hansen, A V, Gini, R, Thayer, D, Tingay, K, Puccini, A, Bos, H J, Nybo Andersen, A M, Sinclair, M, Dolk, H, and de Jong-van den Berg, L TW
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- 2015
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28. Incidence Rates of Autoimmune Diseases in European Healthcare Databases: A Contribution of the ADVANCE Project
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Willame, C. (Corinne), Dodd, C.N. (Caitlin), van der Aa, L. (Lieke), Picelli, G. (Gino), Emborg, H.-D. (Hanne-Dorthe), Kahlert, J. (Johnny), Gini, R. (Rosa), Huerta, C. (Consuelo), Martín-Merino, E. (Elisa), McGee, C. (Chris), Lusignan, S. (Simon) de, Roberto, G. (Giuseppe), Villa, M. (Marco), Weibel, D.M. (Daniel), Titievsky, L. (Lina), Sturkenboom, M.C.J.M. (Miriam), Willame, C. (Corinne), Dodd, C.N. (Caitlin), van der Aa, L. (Lieke), Picelli, G. (Gino), Emborg, H.-D. (Hanne-Dorthe), Kahlert, J. (Johnny), Gini, R. (Rosa), Huerta, C. (Consuelo), Martín-Merino, E. (Elisa), McGee, C. (Chris), Lusignan, S. (Simon) de, Roberto, G. (Giuseppe), Villa, M. (Marco), Weibel, D.M. (Daniel), Titievsky, L. (Lina), and Sturkenboom, M.C.J.M. (Miriam)
- Abstract
Introduction: The public–private ADVANCE collaboration developed and tested a system to generate evidence on vaccine benefits and risks using European electronic healthcare databases. In the safety of vaccines, background incidence rates are key to allow proper monitoring and assessment. The goals of this study were to compute age-, sex-, and calendar-year stratified incidence rates of nine autoimmune diseases in seven European healthcare databases from four countries and to assess validity by comparing with published data. Methods: Event rates were calculated for the following outcomes: acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, Bell’s palsy, Guillain–Barré syndrome, immune thrombocytopenia purpura, Kawasaki disease, optic neuritis, narcolepsy, systemic lupus erythematosus, and transverse myelitis. Cases were identified by diagnosis codes. Participating organizations/databases originated from Denmark, Italy, Spain, and the UK. The source population comprised all persons registered, with at least 1 year of data prior to the study start, or follow-up from birth. Stratified incidence rates were computed per database over the period 2003 to 2014. Results: Between 2003 and 2014, 148,947 incident cases of nine autoimmune diseases were identified. Crude incidence rates were highest for Bell’s palsy [23.8/100,000 person-years (PYs), 95% confidence interval (CI) 23.6–24.1] and lowest for Kawasaki disease (0.7/100,000 PYs, 95% CI 0.6–0.7). Specific patterns were observed by sex, age, calendar time, and data sources. Rates were comparable with published estimates. Conclusion: A range of autoimmune events could be identified in the ADVANCE system. Estimation of rates indicated consistency across selected European healthcare databases, as well as consistency with US published data.
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- 2021
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29. Use of antidepressants during COVID19 outbreak: a real-world drug-utilization study
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Fornari, C, Antonazzo, I, Paoletti, O, Cei, E, Bartolini, C, Conti, S, Ferrara, P, Mantovani, L, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Antonazzo, IC, Mantovani, LG, Fornari, C, Antonazzo, I, Paoletti, O, Cei, E, Bartolini, C, Conti, S, Ferrara, P, Mantovani, L, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Antonazzo, IC, and Mantovani, LG
- Published
- 2021
30. Impatto dell’epidemia SARS-COV2 sulla gestione dei pazienti affetti da epilessia: un’analisi delle serie storiche interrotte sull’uso degli antiepilettici e l’accesso in pronto soccorso durante le due ondate COVID-19
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Antonazzo, I, Fornari, C, Maumus-robert, S, Cei, E, Paoletti, O, Conti, S, Cortesi, P, Mantovani, L, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Antonazzo, IC, Fornari C, Mantovani, LG, Antonazzo, I, Fornari, C, Maumus-robert, S, Cei, E, Paoletti, O, Conti, S, Cortesi, P, Mantovani, L, Gini, R, Mazzaglia, G, Antonazzo, IC, Fornari C, and Mantovani, LG
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- 2021
31. Incidence Rates of Autoimmune Diseases in European Healthcare Databases: A Contribution of the ADVANCE Project
- Author
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Willame, C, Dodd, C, van der Aa, L, Picelli, G, Emborg, HD, Kahlert, J, Gini, R, Huerta, C, Martin-Merino, E, McGee, C, de Lusignan, S, Roberto, G, Villa, M, Weibel, Daniel, Titievsky, L, Sturkenboom, M, Willame, C, Dodd, C, van der Aa, L, Picelli, G, Emborg, HD, Kahlert, J, Gini, R, Huerta, C, Martin-Merino, E, McGee, C, de Lusignan, S, Roberto, G, Villa, M, Weibel, Daniel, Titievsky, L, and Sturkenboom, M
- Abstract
Introduction: The public–private ADVANCE collaboration developed and tested a system to generate evidence on vaccine benefits and risks using European electronic healthcare databases. In the safety of vaccines, background incidence rates are key to allow proper monitoring and assessment. The goals of this study were to compute age-, sex-, and calendar-year stratified incidence rates of nine autoimmune diseases in seven European healthcare databases from four countries and to assess validity by comparing with published data. Methods: Event rates were calculated for the following outcomes: acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, Bell’s palsy, Guillain–Barré syndrome, immune thrombocytopenia purpura, Kawasaki disease, optic neuritis, narcolepsy, systemic lupus erythematosus, and transverse myelitis. Cases were identified by diagnosis codes. Participating organizations/databases originated from Denmark, Italy, Spain, and the UK. The source population comprised all persons registered, with at least 1 year of data prior to the study start, or follow-up from birth. Stratified incidence rates were computed per database over the period 2003 to 2014. Results: Between 2003 and 2014, 148,947 incident cases of nine autoimmune diseases were identified. Crude incidence rates were highest for Bell’s palsy [23.8/100,000 person-years (PYs), 95% confidence interval (CI) 23.6–24.1] and lowest for Kawasaki disease (0.7/100,000 PYs, 95% CI 0.6–0.7). Specific patterns were observed by sex, age, calendar time, and data sources. Rates were comparable with published estimates. Conclusion: A range of autoimmune events could be identified in the ADVANCE system. Estimation of rates indicated consistency across selected European healthcare databases, as well as consistency with US published data.
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- 2021
32. The Role of European Healthcare Databases for Post-Marketing Drug Effectiveness, Safety and Value Evaluation: Where Does Italy Stand?
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Trifirò, G, Gini, R, Barone-Adesi, F, Beghi, E, Cantarutti, A, Capuano, A, Carnovale, C, Clavenna, A, Dellagiovanna, M, Ferrajolo, C, Franchi, M, Ingrasciotta, Y, Kirchmayer, U, Lapi, F, Leone, R, Leoni, O, Lucenteforte, E, Moretti, U, Mugelli, A, Naldi, L, Poluzzi, E, Rafaniello, C, Rea, F, Sultana, J, Tettamanti, M, Traversa, G20, Vannacci, A, Mantovani, L, Corrao, G, Trifirò, Gianluca, Trifiro G., Gini R., Barone-Adesi F., Beghi E., Cantarutti A., Capuano A., Carnovale C., Clavenna A., Dellagiovanna M., Ferrajolo C., Franchi M., Ingrasciotta Y., Kirchmayer U., Lapi F., Leone R., Leoni O., Lucenteforte E., Moretti U., Mugelli A., Naldi L., Poluzzi E., Rafaniello C., Rea F., Sultana J., Tettamanti M., Traversa G., Vannacci A., Mantovani L., Corrao G., Trifirò, Gianluca, Gini, Rosa, Barone-Adesi, Francesco, Beghi, Ettore, Cantarutti, Anna, Capuano, Annalisa, Carnovale, Carla, Clavenna, Antonio, Dellagiovanna, Mirosa, Ferrajolo, Carmen, Franchi, Matteo, Ingrasciotta, Ylenia, Kirchmayer, Ursula, Lapi, Francesco, Leone, Roberto, Leoni, Olivia, Lucenteforte, Ersilia, Moretti, Ugo, Mugelli, Alessandro, Naldi, Luigi, Poluzzi, Elisabetta, Rafaniello, Concita, Rea, Federico, Sultana, Janet, Tettamanti, Mauro, Traversa, Giuseppe, Vannacci, Alfredo, Mantovani, Lorenzo, Corrao, Giovanni, Trifirò, G, Gini, R, Barone-Adesi, F, Beghi, E, Cantarutti, A, Capuano, A, Carnovale, C, Clavenna, A, Dellagiovanna, M, Ferrajolo, C, Franchi, M, Ingrasciotta, Y, Kirchmayer, U, Lapi, F, Leone, R, Leoni, O, Lucenteforte, E, Moretti, U, Mugelli, A, Naldi, L, Poluzzi, E, Rafaniello, C, Rea, F, Sultana, J, Tettamanti, M, Traversa, G, Vannacci, A, Mantovani, L, and Corrao, G
- Subjects
Drug ,Value (ethics) ,Pharmacovigilance, Drug Toxicity, spontaneous reporting ,Databases, Factual ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,National Health Programs ,media_common.quotation_subject ,National Health Program ,MEDLINE ,spontaneous reporting ,Information Storage and Retrieval ,Disease ,Toxicology ,computer.software_genre ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Pharmacovigilance ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pharmacology ,Pharmacology (medical) ,0302 clinical medicine ,Drug Utilization Review ,Drug Toxicity ,Health care ,Product Surveillance, Postmarketing ,Medicine ,Electronic Health Records ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,Database ,business.industry ,Health technology ,Italy ,Observational study ,Electronic Health Record ,business ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reaction ,computer - Abstract
Enormous progress has been made globally in the use of evidence derived from patients’ clinical information as they access their routine medical care. The value of real-world data lies in their complementary nature compared with data from randomised controlled trials: less detailed information on drug efficacy but longer observational periods and larger, more heterogeneous study populations reflecting clinical practice because individuals are included who would not usually be recruited in trials. Real-world data can be collected in various types of electronic sources, such as electronic health records, claims databases and drug or disease registries. These data sources vary in nature from country to country, according to national healthcare system structures and national policies. In Italy, a growing number of healthcare databases have been used to evaluate post-marketing drug utilisation and safety in the last two decades. The aim of this narrative review is to describe the available Italian sources of real-world data and their contribution to generating post-marketing evidence on drug use and safety. We also discuss the strengths and limitations of the most commonly used Italian healthcare databases in addressing various research questions concerning drug utilisation, comparative effectiveness and safety studies, as well as health technology assessment and other areas.
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- 2018
33. A systematic review of case-identification algorithms based on italian healthcare administrative databases for three relevant diseases of the cardiovascular system: Acute myocardial infarction, ischemic heart disease, and stroke
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Hyeraci, G., Spini, A., Roberto, G., Gini, R., Bartolini, C., Lucenteforte, E., Corrao, G., Rea, F., Hyeraci, G, Spini, A, Roberto, G, Gini, R, Bartolini, C, Lucenteforte, E, Corrao, G, and Rea, F
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Databases, Factual ,Healthcare administrative databases ,Ischemic heart disease ,Myocardial Infarction ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Ischemic Hearth DIsease ,Algorithm ,Stroke ,Italy ,Healthcare administrative database ,Ischemic heart diseases ,Acute Myocardial Infarction ,Humans ,Acute myocardial infarction ,Algorithms ,Health Services Administration - Abstract
BACKGROUND: acute myocardial infarction (AMI), ischemic heart diseases (IHDs) and stroke are serious cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) which may lead to hospitalizations, require periodical medical monitoring and life-long drugs use, thus having a high impact on public health and Healthcare Service expenditure. In this contest, Italian Healthcare Administrative Databases (HADs), which routinely collect patient-level information on healthcare services reimbursed by the National Healthcare service, are increasingly used for identification of these CVDs. ObjectiveS: to identify and describe all AMI, IHDs and stroke case-identification algorithms by means of Italian HADs, through the review of papers published in the past 10 years. Methods: this study is part of a project that systematically reviewed case-identification algorithms for 18 acute and chronic conditions by means of HADs in Italy. PubMed was searched for original articles, published between 2007 and 2017, in Italian or English. The search string consisted of a combination of free text and MeSH terms with a common part that focused on HADs and a disease-specific part. All identified papers were screened by two independent reviewers. Pertinent papers were classified according to the objective for which the algorithm had been used, and only articles that used algorithms for primary objectives (I disease occurrence; II population/cohort selection; III outcome identification) were considered for algorithm extraction. The HADs used (hospital discharge records, drug prescriptions, etc.), ICD-9 and ICD-10 codes, ATC classification of drugs, follow-back periods, and age ranges applied by the algorithms have been reported. Further information on specific objective(s), accuracy measures, sensitivity analyses and the contribution of each HAD, have also been recorded. Results: the search strategy has led to the identification of 611 papers for AMI,801 for IHDs and 791 for stroke. Among these,45,12 and 31 papers for AMI, IHDs and stroke respectively, were considered pertinent for inclusion in the systematic review. The majority of the works was published during 2014-2017. The setting of the studies was mainly regional for AMI and stroke, while the majority of IHD’s papers was based on a national multicenter context. By screening full texts, a total of 17,5 and 28 original algorithms for AMI, IHDs and stroke respectively, intended for the above-mentioned objectives, were found. Moreover, 3 original algorithms for STEMI, 3 for NSTEMI, 8 for ischemic stroke and 3 for hemorrhagic stroke were identified. The hospital discharge diagnosis database (HDD) was used in all algorithms. In only a few cases the co-payment exemption registry, drug prescription database, and mortality registry database were used as additional algorithm components. For the same event, there was always a difference of >1 code. External validation was performed in only one case for AMI and stroke identification. Conclusion: a remarkable heterogeneity, in terms of both data sources and codes used, was observed for algorithms aimed to identify AMI, IHDs and stroke in HADs. This was likely due to the paucity of validation studies. Administrative data sources other than HDD remain underutilized.
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- 2019
34. A Systematic Review of Case-Identification Algorithms for 18 Conditions Based on Italian Healthcare Administrative Databases: A Study Protocol
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Canova C., Simonato L., Barbiellini Amidei C., Baldi I., Dalla Zuanna T., Gregori D., Danieli S., Buja A., Lorenzoni G., Pitter G., Costa G., Gnavi R., Corrao G., Rea F., Gini R., Hyeraci G., Roberto G., Spini A., Lucenteforte E., Agabiti N., Davoli M., Di Domenicantonio R., Cappai G., Canova, C, Simonato, L, Barbiellini Amidei, C, Baldi, I, Dalla Zuanna, T, Gregori, D, Danieli, S, Buja, A, Lorenzoni, G, Pitter, G, Costa, G, Gnavi, R, Corrao, G, Rea, F, Gini, R, Hyeraci, G, Roberto, G, Spini, A, Lucenteforte, E, Agabiti, N, Davoli, M, Di Domenicantonio, R, and Cappai, G
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Databases, Factual ,Italy ,Research Design ,Acute Disease ,Chronic Disease ,Humans ,Algorithms, Healthcare administrative database ,Algorithms ,Health Services Administration ,Systematic Reviews as Topic - Abstract
BACKGROUND: there has been a long-standing, consistent use worldwide of Healthcare Administrative Databases (HADs) for epidemiological purposes, especially to identify acute and chronic health conditions. These databases are able to reflect health-related conditions at a population level through disease-specific case-identification algorithms that combine information coded in multiple HADs. In Italy, in the past 10 years, HAD-based case-identification algorithms have experienced a constant increase, with a significant extension of the spectrum of identifiable diseases. Besides estimating incidence and/or prevalence of diseases, these algorithms have been used to enroll cohorts, monitor quality of care, assess the effect of environmental exposure, and identify health outcomes in analytic studies. Despite the rapid increase in the use of case-identification algorithms, information on their accuracy and misclassification rate is currently unavailable for most conditions. OBJECTIVES: to define a protocol to systematically review algorithms used in Italy in the past 10 years for the identification of several chronic and acute diseases, providing an accessible overview to future users in the Italian and international context. METHODS: PubMed will be searched for original research articles, published between 2007 and 2017, in Italian or English. The search string consists of a combination of free text and MeSH terms with a common part on HADs and a disease-specific part. All identified papers will be screened for eligibility by two independent reviewers. All articles that used/defined an algorithm for the identification of each disease of interest using Italian HADs will be included. Algorithms with exclusive use of death certificates, pathology register, general practitioner or pediatrician data will be excluded. Pertinent papers will be classified according to the objective for which the algorithm was used, and only articles that used algorithms with "primary objectives" (I disease occurrence; II population/cohort selection; III outcome identification) will be considered for algorithm extraction. The HADs used (hospital discharge records, drug prescriptions, etc.), ICD-9 and ICD-10 codes, ATC classification of drugs, follow-back periods, and age ranges applied by the algorithms will be collected. Further information on specific accuracy measures from external validations, sensitivity analyses, and the contribution of each source will be recorded. This protocol will be applied for 16 different systematic reviews concerning eighteen diseases (Hypothyroidism, Hyperthyroidism, Diabetes mellitus, Type 1 diabetes mellitus, Acute myocardial infarction, Ischemic heart disease, Stroke, Hypertension, Heart failure, Congenital heart anomalies, Parkinson's disease, Multiple sclerosis, Epilepsy, Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, Asthma, Inflammatory bowel disease, Celiac disease, Chronic kidney failure). CONCLUSION: this protocol defines a standardized approach to extensively examine and compare all experiences of case identification algorithms in Italy, on the 18 abovementioned diseases. The methodology proposed may be applied to other systematic reviews concerning diseases not included in this project, as well as other settings, including international ones. Considering the increasing availability of healthcare data, developing standard criteria to describe and update characteristics of published algorithms would be of great use to enhance awareness in the choice of algorithms and provide a greater comparability of results.
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- 2019
35. P651 Diagnostic delay, effectiveness and safety outcomes in a real-world cohort of patients with Crohn’s disease: data from administrative databases in Tuscany, Italy
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Bertani, L, primary, Ferraro, S, additional, Bartolini, C, additional, Convertino, I, additional, Giometto, S, additional, Cappello, E, additional, Valdiserra, G, additional, Tillati, S, additional, Blandizzi, C, additional, Lucenteforte, E, additional, Gini, R, additional, Tuccori, M, additional, and Costa, F, additional
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- 2021
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36. P634 Trajectories of oral budesonide use in Crohn’s disease cohort of Tuscan patients
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Bertani, L, primary, Ferraro, S, additional, Bartolini, C, additional, Convertino, I, additional, Giometto, S, additional, Cappello, E, additional, Valdiserra, G, additional, Tillati, S, additional, Blandizzi, C, additional, Lucenteforte, E, additional, Gini, R, additional, Tuccori, M, additional, and Costa, F, additional
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- 2021
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37. P664 Adherence to mesalazine and identification of patients with ulcerative colitis in healthcare administrative databases of Tuscany (Italy)
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Bertani, L, primary, Bartolini, C, additional, Ferraro, S, additional, Convertino, I, additional, Giometto, S, additional, Tillati, S, additional, Valdiserra, G, additional, Cappello, E, additional, Blandizzi, C, additional, Lucenteforte, E, additional, Gini, R, additional, Tuccori, M, additional, and Costa, F, additional
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- 2021
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38. Validazione degli algoritmi di selezione dei pazienti reumatologici nei database amministrativi toscani e traiettorie di aderenza ai farmaci biologici modificanti la malattia nell’artrite reumatoide
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Fornili, M., Blandizzi, C., Lucenteforte, E., Gini, R., Mosca, M., Cazzato, M., Filippi, M., Cristofano, M., Turchetti, G., Trieste, L., and Lorenzoni, V.
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- 2020
39. Valutazione dei pazienti affetti da artrite reumatoide utilizzatori di JAK inibitori in Toscana con riferimento all’accesso ai servizi sanitari e ai costi associati: lo studio LEONARDO
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Giometto, S., Lucenteforte, E., Convertino, I., Ferraro, S., Cappello, E., Valdiserra, G., Blandizzi, C., Tuccori, M., Lorenzoni, V., Turchetti, G., Gini, R., Bartolini, C., and Paoletti, O.
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- 2020
40. Age-specific vaccination coverage estimates for influenza, human papillomavirus and measles containing vaccines from seven population-based healthcare databases from four EU countries – The ADVANCE project
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Braeye, T. (Toon), Emborg, H.-D. (Hanne-Dorthe), Llorente-García, A. (Ana), Huerta, C. (Consuelo), Martín-Merino, E. (Elisa), Duarte-Salles, T. (Talita), Danieli, G. (Giorgia), Tramontan, L. (Lara), Weibel, D.M. (Daniel), McGee, C. (Chris), Villa, M. (Marco), Gini, R. (Rosa), Lehtinen, M. (Matti), Titievsky, L. (Lina), Sturkenboom, M.C.J.M. (Miriam), Braeye, T. (Toon), Emborg, H.-D. (Hanne-Dorthe), Llorente-García, A. (Ana), Huerta, C. (Consuelo), Martín-Merino, E. (Elisa), Duarte-Salles, T. (Talita), Danieli, G. (Giorgia), Tramontan, L. (Lara), Weibel, D.M. (Daniel), McGee, C. (Chris), Villa, M. (Marco), Gini, R. (Rosa), Lehtinen, M. (Matti), Titievsky, L. (Lina), and Sturkenboom, M.C.J.M. (Miriam)
- Abstract
Background: The Accelerated Development of VAccine beNefit-risk Collaboration in Europe (ADVANCE) is a public–private collaboration aiming to develop and test a system for rapid benefit-risk monitoring of vaccines using existing healthcare databases in Europe. We estimated vaccine coverage from electronic healthcare databases as part of a fit-for-purpose assessment for vaccine benefit-risk studies. Methods: A retrospective dynamic cohort study was conducted through a distributed network approach. Coverage with measles-vaccine for birth year 2006, human papillomavirus (HPV)-vaccine for birth years 1990–2000 and influenza-vaccine for birth years 1920–1950 was estimated using period-prevalence and inverse probability weighting methods. Seven databases from four countries participated: Italy (Pedianet, Val Padana), Spain (BIFAP, SIDIAP), UK (RCGP-RSC, THIN), Denmark (SSI/AUH). Database access providers extracted the data, transformed it into a common structure and ran an R-script locally. The created output tables were shared and pooled at a central server. Results: The total study population comprised 274,616 persons for measles-vaccine, 2,011,666 persons for HPV-vaccine and 14,904,033 persons for influenza-vaccine. Measles-vaccine coverage varied from 84.3% (Denmark) to 96.5% (Italy, Val Padana) for the first dose and from 82.8% (Italy, Val Padana) to 90.9% (UK) for the second dose at the age of 7 years. The HPV-vaccine coverage, aggregated over birth years 1997–2000, ranged from 60% (UK) to 88.3% (Denmark) at the age of 15 years. The influenza-vaccine coverage for the influenza seasons from 2009 to 2015 for persons aged 65 years and more was roughly stable around 43% in Denmark and around 68% in the UK while a decrease from 58 to 50% was observed in Catalonia (Spain). Conclusions: We obtained detailed, age-specific coverage estimates though a common procedure. We discussed between database comparability and comparability to published national estimates.
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- 2020
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41. ADVANCE database characterisation and fit for purpose assessment for multi-country studies on the coverage, benefits and risks of pertussis vaccinations
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Sturkenboom, M. (Miriam), Braeye, T. (Toon), van der Aa, L. (Lieke), Danieli, G. (Giorgia), Dodd, C.N. (Caitlin), Duarte-Salles, T. (Talita), Emborg, H.-D. (Hanne- Dorthe), Gheorghe, M. (Marius), Kahlert, J. (Johnny), Gini, R. (Rosa), huerta, C. (Consuelo), Martín-merino, E. (Elisa), McGee, C. (Chris), Lusignan, S. (Simon) de, Picelli, G. (Gino), Roberto, G. (Giuseppe), Tramontan, L. (Lara), Villa, M. (Marco), Weibel, D.M. (Daniel), Titievsky, L. (Lina), Sturkenboom, M. (Miriam), Braeye, T. (Toon), van der Aa, L. (Lieke), Danieli, G. (Giorgia), Dodd, C.N. (Caitlin), Duarte-Salles, T. (Talita), Emborg, H.-D. (Hanne- Dorthe), Gheorghe, M. (Marius), Kahlert, J. (Johnny), Gini, R. (Rosa), huerta, C. (Consuelo), Martín-merino, E. (Elisa), McGee, C. (Chris), Lusignan, S. (Simon) de, Picelli, G. (Gino), Roberto, G. (Giuseppe), Tramontan, L. (Lara), Villa, M. (Marco), Weibel, D.M. (Daniel), and Titievsky, L. (Lina)
- Abstract
Introduction: The public-private ADVANCE consortium (Accelerated development of vaccine benefit-risk collaboration in Europe) aimed to assess if electronic healthcare databases can provide fit-for purpose data for collaborative, distributed studies and monitoring of vaccine coverage, benefits and risks of vaccines. Objective: To evaluate if European healthcare databases can be used to estimate vaccine coverage, benefit and/or risk using pertussis-containing vaccines as an example. Methods: Characterisation was conducted using open-source Java-based (Jerboa) software and R scripts. We obtained: (i) The general characteristics of the database and data source (meta-data) and (ii) a detailed description of the database population (size, representatively of age/sex of national population, rounding of birth dates, delay between birth and database entry), vaccinations (number of vaccine doses, recording of doses, pattern of doses by age and coverage) and events of interest (diagnosis codes, incidence rates). A total of nine databases (primary care, regional/national record linkage) provided data on events (pertussis, pneumonia, death, fever, convulsions, injection site reactions, hypotonic hypo-responsive episode, persistent crying) and vaccines (acellular pertussis and whole cell pertussis) related to the pertussis proof of concept studies. Results: The databases contained data for a total population of 44 million individuals. Seven databases had recorded doses of vaccines. The pertussis coverage estimates were similar to those reported by the World Health Organisation (WHO). Incidence rates of eve
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- 2020
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42. Disease misclassification in electronic healthcare database studies: Deriving validity indices-A contribution from the ADVANCE project
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Bollaerts, K, Rekkas, Alexandros, De Smedt, T, Dodd, Caitlin, Andrews, N, Gini, R, Bollaerts, K, Rekkas, Alexandros, De Smedt, T, Dodd, Caitlin, Andrews, N, and Gini, R
- Published
- 2020
43. Age-specific vaccination coverage estimates for influenza, human papillomavirus and measles containing vaccines from seven population-based healthcare databases from four EU countries - The ADVANCE project
- Author
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Braeye, T, Emborg, HD, Llorente-Garcia, A, Huerta, C, Martin-Merino, E, Duarte-Salles, T, Danieli, G, Tramontan, L, Weibel, Daniel, McGee, C, Villa, M, Gini, R, Lehtinen, M, Titievsky, L, Sturkenboom, M, Braeye, T, Emborg, HD, Llorente-Garcia, A, Huerta, C, Martin-Merino, E, Duarte-Salles, T, Danieli, G, Tramontan, L, Weibel, Daniel, McGee, C, Villa, M, Gini, R, Lehtinen, M, Titievsky, L, and Sturkenboom, M
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- 2020
44. Patterns and trends of idarucizumab use in an Italian region: A probabilistic record-linkage approach in a real-life setting
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Lombardi, N, Brilli, V, Crescioli, G, Bettiol, A, Antonazzo, I, Mazzaglia, G, Fumagalli, S, Mannaioni, G, Vannacci, A, Gini, R, Antonazzo, IC, Lombardi, N, Brilli, V, Crescioli, G, Bettiol, A, Antonazzo, I, Mazzaglia, G, Fumagalli, S, Mannaioni, G, Vannacci, A, Gini, R, and Antonazzo, IC
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- 2020
45. ADVANCE database characterisation and fit for purpose assessment for multi-country studies on the coverage, benefits and risks of pertussis vaccinations
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Sturkenboom, M, Braeye, T, van der Aa, L, Danieli, G, Dodd, Caitlin, Duarte-Salles, T, Emborg, HD, Gheorghe, M, Kahlert, J, Gini, R, Huerta-Alvarez, C, Martín-Merino, E, McGee, C, de Lusignan, S, Picelli, G, Roberto, G, Tramontan, L, Villa, M, Weibel, Daniel, Titievsky, L, Sturkenboom, M, Braeye, T, van der Aa, L, Danieli, G, Dodd, Caitlin, Duarte-Salles, T, Emborg, HD, Gheorghe, M, Kahlert, J, Gini, R, Huerta-Alvarez, C, Martín-Merino, E, McGee, C, de Lusignan, S, Picelli, G, Roberto, G, Tramontan, L, Villa, M, Weibel, Daniel, and Titievsky, L
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- 2020
46. A Multidatabase study of trajectories of antidepressant use in Italy
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Antonazzo, I, Paoletti, O, Bartolini, C, Roberto, G, Ricca, V, Castellini, G, Menchetti, M, Poluzzi, E, Sangiorgi, E, Mazzaglia, G, Gini, R, Antonazzo, IC, Antonazzo, I, Paoletti, O, Bartolini, C, Roberto, G, Ricca, V, Castellini, G, Menchetti, M, Poluzzi, E, Sangiorgi, E, Mazzaglia, G, Gini, R, and Antonazzo, IC
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- 2020
47. The Graded Cobordism Group of Codimension-One Immersions
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Funar, L. and Gini, R.
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- 2002
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48. Patterns and trends of idarucizumab use in an Italian region: a probabilistic record-linkage approach in a real-life setting
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Lombardi, N, primary, Brilli, V, additional, Crescioli, G, additional, Bettiol, A, additional, Ippazio, C.A, additional, Mazzaglia, G, additional, Fumagalli, S, additional, Mannaioni, G, additional, Vannacci, A, additional, and Gini, R, additional
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- 2020
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49. What can real world evidence contribute to regulatory science in pre and post marketing setting?
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Martini, N., primary, Sultana, J., additional, Addis, ., additional, Braga, M., additional, Corrao, G., additional, Campomori, A., additional, Capuano, A., additional, Gini, R., additional, Mazzaglia, G., additional, Patarnello, F., additional, Petrini, C., additional, Pierini, A., additional, Pippo, L., additional, Popoli, P., additional, Russo, P., additional, Scondotto, G., additional, and Trifirò, G., additional
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- 2020
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50. 5PSQ-101 Drug–drug interactions and potentially related adverse clinical events in patients with cardiovascular diseases
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Lo Surdo, G, primary, Volpi, E, additional, Zizevskikh, M, additional, Tonazzini, S, additional, Gini, R, additional, Roberto, G, additional, Antonazzo, IC, additional, Maffei, S, additional, Baroni, M, additional, and Biagini, S, additional
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- 2020
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