220 results on '"Giota Touloumi"'
Search Results
2. HCV Cascade of Care in HIV/HCV Co-Infected Individuals: Missed Opportunities for Micro-Elimination
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Christos Thomadakis, Dimitrios Basoulis, Olga Tsachouridou, Konstantinos Protopapas, Vasilios Paparizos, Myrto Astriti, Maria Chini, Georgios Chrysos, Markos Marangos, Periklis Panagopoulos, Diamantis Kofteridis, Helen Sambatakou, Elpida Mastrogianni, Nikos Panatzis, Evmorfia Pechlivanidou, Mina Psichοgiou, and Giota Touloumi
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HIV/HCV co-infection ,DAAs ,cascade of care (COC) ,HCV micro-elimination ,missed opportunities ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
People living with HIV-HCV co-infection comprise a target group for HCV-micro-elimination. We conducted an HCV cascade of care (CoC) for HIV-HCV co-infected individuals living in Greece and investigated factors associated with different HCV-CoC stages. We analyzed data from 1213 participants from the Athens Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study. A seven-stage CoC, overall and by subgroup (people who inject drugs (PWID), men having sex with men (MSM), men having sex with women (MSW), and migrants], was constructed, spanning from HCV diagnosis to sustained virologic response (SVR). Logistic/Cox regression models were employed to identify factors associated with passing through each CoC step. Among 1213 anti-HCV-positive individuals, 9.2% died before direct-acting antiviral (DAA) availability. PWID exhibited higher mortality rates than MSM. Of 1101 survivors, 72.2% remained in care and underwent HCV-RNA testing. Migrants and PWID showed the lowest retention rates. HCV-RNA was available for 79.2% of those in care, with 77.8% diagnosed with chronic HCV. Subsequently, 71% initiated DAAs, with individuals with very low CD4 counts (
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- 2024
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3. Twenty-first century epidemiology of dyslipidemia in Greece: EMENO national epidemiological study
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George S. Stergiou, Angeliki Ntineri, Ariadni Menti, Natasa Kalpourtzi, Charalambos Vlachopoulos, Evangelos N. Liberopoulos, Loukianos Rallidis, Dimitris Richter, Magda Gavana, Apostolos Vantarakis, Grigoris Chlouverakis, Christos Hajichristodoulou, Grigoris Trypsianis, Paraskevi V. Voulgari, Yannis Alamanos, Argiro Karakosta, and Giota Touloumi
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Epidemiology ,Dyslipidemia ,Lipid-lowering treatment ,National ,Survey ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background: Greece was recently reclassified from low- to medium-risk country in terms of cardiovascular disease, with 27% of cardiovascular deaths attributed to hypercholesterolemia. EMENO nationwide survey (2013-2016) assessed the epidemiology of dyslipidemia in the general population in Greece. Methods: A random sample of adults was drawn by multistage stratified random sampling based on 2011 census. Standardized questionnaires and blood tests for total cholesterol (TC), low-density (LDL-C), and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), and triglycerides were used. Hypercholesterolemia was defined as TC ≥ 240/200 mg/dL and/or the use of lipid-lowering drugs, hyper-LDL-cholesterolemia as LDL-C ≥160/130/100 mg/dL and/or the use of drugs, hypo-HDL-cholesterolemia as HDL-C
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- 2023
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4. Hepatitis B, C and human immunodeficiency virus knowledge among the general greek population: results from the Hprolipsis nationwide survey
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Sylvia Kaskafetou, Argiro Karakosta, Vana Sypsa, Natasa Kalpourtzi, Magda Gavana, Apostolos Vantarakis, George Rachiotis, Grigoris Chlouverakis, Grigoris Trypsianis, Paraskevi V. Voulgari, Yannis Alamanos, George Papatheodoridis, Giota Touloumi, and on behalf of the Hprolipsis study group
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HCV ,HBV ,HIV ,Knowledge ,Risk factors ,Health survey ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Although several studies on hepatitis B (HBV), C (HCV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection have been conducted in Greece, little is known on the knowledge level of the Greek population towards these three infections. Our aim was to assess the knowledge level of the adult Greek general population about the HBV, HCV and HIV. Methods Data were derived from the first general population health survey, Hprolipsis. The sample was selected by multistage stratified random sampling. A standardized questionnaire was administered by trained interviewers during home visits. A knowledge score was constructed based on responses to 17 per infection selected items and categorized in three levels; high (12–17 correct replies) medium (6–11) and low (0–5). Among 8,341 eligible individuals, 6,006 were recruited (response rate: 72%) and 5,878 adults (≥ 18 years) were included in the analysis. The statistical analysis accounted for the study design. Results Only 30.4%, 21.6%, and 29.6% of the participants had a high overall knowledge level of HBV, HCV and HIV, respectively. These low percentages were mainly attributed to the high levels of misconception about transmission modes (65.9%, 67.2%, and 67.9%, respectively). Results showed that increasing age and living out of the big metropolitan cities were associated with decreased odds of having higher knowledge. Female gender, higher education level, higher monthly family income, higher medical risk score, history of testing and being born in Greece or Cyprus, were associated with increased odds of having higher knowledge. Conclusions There are significant knowledge gaps in the Greek general population regarding modes of transmission, preventive measures and treatment availability for HBV, HCV and HIV. There is an urgent need for large scale but also localized awareness activities targeted to less privileged populations, to fill the gaps in knowledge and increase population engagement in preventive measures.
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- 2022
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5. CASCADE protocol: exploring current viral and host characteristics, measuring clinical and patient-reported outcomes, and understanding the lived experiences and needs of individuals with recently acquired HIV infection through a multicentre mixed-methods observational study in Europe and Canada
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Cristina Mussini, Fiona Burns, Shema Tariq, Fiona M Burns, Caroline Sabin, Udi Davidovich, Bruno Spire, John Gill, Marc van der Valk, Linda Wittkop, Laurence Meyer, Kholoud Porter, Inés Suárez-García, Giota Touloumi, Lars Eriksson, Sophie Grabar, Santiago Moreno, Emily Jay Nicholls, Christina Carlander, Elisa Ruiz-Burga, Alain Volny Anne, Inma Jarrin, Nikos Pantazis, Rafael Eduardo Campo, Harmony Garges, Barbara Pinto, Vani Vannappagari, Lital Young, Agnes Aisam, Diana Barger, Marie Dos Santos, Eli Fitzgerald, Argyro Karakosta, Hartmut Krentz, Nicoletta Policek, and Chris Sandford
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Despite the availability of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and antiretroviral therapy (ART), 21 793 people were newly diagnosed with HIV in Europe in 2019. The Concerted action on seroconversion to AIDS and death in Europe study aims to understand current drivers of the HIV epidemic; factors associated with access to, and uptake of prevention methods and ART initiation; and the experiences, needs and outcomes of people with recently acquired HIV.Methods and analysis This longitudinal observational study is recruiting participants aged ≥16 years with documented laboratory evidence of HIV seroconversion from clinics in Canada and six European countries. We will analyse data from medical records, self-administered questionnaires, semistructured interviews and participatory photography. We will assess temporal trends in transmitted drug resistance and viral subtype and examine outcomes following early ART initiation. We will investigate patient-reported outcomes, well-being, and experiences of, knowledge of, and attitudes to HIV preventions, including PrEP. We will analyse qualitative data thematically and triangulate quantitative and qualitative findings. As patient public involvement is central to this work, we have convened a community advisory board (CAB) comprising people living with HIV.Ethics and dissemination All respective research ethics committees have approval for data to contribute to international collaborations. Written informed consent is required to take part. A dissemination strategy will be developed in collaboration with CAB and the scientific committee. It will include peer-reviewed publications, conference presentations and accessible summaries of findings on the study’s website, social media and via community organisations.
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- 2023
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6. Low pre-ART CD4 count is associated with increased risk of clinical progression or death even after reaching 500 CD4 cells/μL on ART.
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Nikos Pantazis, Vasilios Paparizos, Vasilios Papastamopoulos, Simeon Metallidis, Anastasia Antoniadou, Georgios Adamis, Mina Psichgiou, Maria Chini, Helen Sambatakou, Georgios Chrysos, Nikolaos V Sipsas, Charalambos Gogos, Emmanouil Barbunakis, Periklis Panagopoulos, Olga Katsarou, Giota Touloumi, and Athens Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (AMACS)
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
IntroductionClinical disadvantages of initiating ART at low CD4 counts have been clearly demonstrated but whether any excess risk remains even after reaching relatively high/safe CD4 levels remains unclear. We explore whether individuals starting ART with MethodsData were derived from a multicenter cohort (AMACS). Adults, starting PI, NNRTI or INSTI based ART, in or after 2000 were eligible, provided they started ART with ≥500 ("High CD4") or started with CD4 ResultsThe study included 694 persons in the "High CD4" and 3,306 in the "Low CD4" group. Median (IQR) follow-up was 66 (36, 106) months. In total, 257 events (40 AIDS related, 217 SNAEs) were observed. Rates of progression did not differ significantly between the two groups but the subgroup of those initiating ART with ConclusionsIndividuals starting ART with
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- 2023
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7. Sustained virological response after treatment with direct antiviral agents in individuals with HIV and hepatitis C co‐infection
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Sara Lodi, Marina Klein, Andri Rauch, Rachel Epstein, Linda Wittkop, Roger Logan, Christopher T. Rentsch, Amy C. Justice, Giota Touloumi, Juan Berenguer, Inma Jarrin, Matthias Egger, Massimo Puoti, Antonella D'Arminio Monforte, John Gill, Dominique Salmon Ceron, Ard vanSighem, Benjamin Linas, Marc van derValk, Miguel A. Hernán, and HepCAUSAL Collaboration
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HIV and HCV co‐infection ,direct antiviral agents ,sustained virological response ,causal inference ,parametric g‐formula ,missing data ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Randomized trials and observational studies have consistently reported rates of sustained virological response (SVR), equivalent to hepatitis C virus (HCV) cure, as high as 95% following treatment with direct‐acting antiviral (DAA) treatment in individuals with HIV and HCV co‐infection. However, large studies assessing whether SVR rates differ according to demographic and clinical strata are lacking. Additionally, the SVR rates reported in the literature were typically computed in non‐random samples of individuals with available post‐DAA HCV‐RNA measures. Here, we aimed to estimate the probability of SVR after DAA treatment initiation in persons with HIV and HCV co‐infection overall and by demographic and clinical characteristics with and without adjustment for missing HCV‐RNA testing. Methods We included adults with HIV‐HCV co‐infection who received DAA treatment between 2014 and 2020 in HepCAUSAL, an international collaboration of cohorts from Europe and North America. We estimated the proportions of DAA recipients who had documented SVR (defined as an undetectable HCV‐RNA at least 12 weeks after the end of DAA treatment) overall and by strata defined by age, sex, presence of cirrhosis, calendar period, mode of HIV acquisition, CD4 cell count and HCV genotype at DAA treatment. We then compared these rates with those obtained using the parametric g‐formula to impute SVR status for individuals with no SVR assessment. Results and Discussion A total of 4527 individuals who initiated DAA treatment (88% males, median [IQR] age 56 [50, 62] years) were included. Of the total of 642 (14%) individuals had no HCV‐RNA test on or after 12 weeks after the end of treatment. The overall observed and g‐formula imputed SVR rates were 93% (95% CI 93, 94) and 94% (95% CI 92, 95), respectively. SVR estimates were similarly high across all strata. A substantial proportion of individuals who received DAA treatment were never assessed for SVR post‐DAA and strategies for more systematic routine HCV‐RNA testing should be considered. Conclusions Our estimates with and without adjustment for missing HCV‐RNA testing indicate SVR rates of approximately 95%, like those reported in clinical trials.
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- 2022
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8. HIV continuum of care: expanding scope beyond a cross-sectional view to include time analysis: a systematic review
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Georgia Vourli, Ioannis Katsarolis, Nikos Pantazis, and Giota Touloumi
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HIV ,Continuum of care ,Cross-sectional ,Time analysis ,Review ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction The continuum of care (CoC) model has been used to describe the main pillars of HIV care. This study aims to systematically review methods and elucidate gaps in the CoC analyses, especially in terms of the timing of the progression through steps, recognized nowadays as a critical parameter for an effective response to the epidemic. Methods A PubMed and EMBASE databases search up to December 2019 resulted in 1918 articles, of which 209 were included in this review; 84 studies presented in major HIV conferences were also included. Studies that did not provide explicit definitions, modelling studies and those reporting only on metrics for subpopulations or factors affecting a CoC stage were excluded. Included articles reported results on 1 to 6 CoC stages. Results Percentage treated and virally suppressed was reported in 78%, percentage diagnosed and retained in care in 58%, percentage linked to care in 54% and PLHIV in 36% of the articles. Information for all stages was provided in 23 studies. Only 6 articles use novel CoC estimates: One presents a dynamic CoC based on multistate analysis techniques, two base their time-to-next-stage estimates on a risk estimation method based on the cumulative incidence function, weighted for confounding and censoring and three studies estimated the HIV infection time based on mathematical modelling. Conclusion A limited number of studies provide elaborated time analyses of the CoC. Although time analyses lack the straightforward interpretation of the cross-sectional CoC, they provide valuable insights for the timely response to the HIV epidemic. A future goal would be to develop a model that retains the simplicity of the cross-sectional CoC but also incorporates timing between stages.
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- 2021
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9. Remdesivir: Effectiveness and Safety in Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19 (ReEs-COVID-19)—Analysis of Data from Daily Practice
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Nikos Pantazis, Evmorfia Pechlivanidou, Anastasia Antoniadou, Karolina Akinosoglou, Ioannis Kalomenidis, Garyfallia Poulakou, Haralampos Milionis, Periklis Panagopoulos, Markos Marangos, Ioannis Katsarolis, Pinelopi Kazakou, Vasiliki Dimakopoulou, Anna-Louiza Chaliasou, Vasiliki Rapti, Eirini Christaki, Angelos Liontos, Vasileios Petrakis, Georgios Schinas, Dimitrios Biros, Maria-Christina Rimpa, and Giota Touloumi
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COVID-19 ,remdesivir ,hospitalized patients ,effectiveness ,safety ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Remdesivir was the first antiviral approved for treating COVID-19. We investigated its patterns of use, effectiveness and safety in clinical practice in Greece. This is a retrospective observational study of hospitalized adults who received remdesivir for COVID-19 in September 2020–February 2021. The main endpoints were the time to recovery (hospital discharge within 30 days from admission) and safety. The “early” (remdesivir initiation within 24 h since hospitalization) and “deferred” (remdesivir initiation later on) groups were compared. One thousand and four patients (60.6% male, mean age 61 years, 74.3% with severe disease, 70.9% with ≥1 comorbidities) were included, and 75.9% of them were on a 5-day regimen, and 86.8% were in the early group. Among those with a baseline mild/moderate disease, the median (95% CI) time to recovery was 8 (7–9) and 12 (11–14) days for the early and deferred groups, respectively (p < 0.001). The corresponding estimates for those with a severe disease were 10 (9–10) and 13 (11–15) days, respectively (p = 0.028). After remdesivir initiation, increased serum transaminases and an acute kidney injury were observed in 6.9% and 2.1%, respectively. Nine (0.9%) patients discontinued the treatment due to adverse events. The effectiveness of remdesivir was increased when it was taken within 24 h since admission regardless of the disease severity. Remdesivir’s safety profile is similar to that described in clinical trials and other real-world cohorts.
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- 2023
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10. High prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors in adults living in Greece: the EMENO National Health Examination Survey
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Giota Touloumi, Argiro Karakosta, Natasa Kalpourtzi, Magda Gavana, Apostolos Vantarakis, Maria Kantzanou, Christos Hajichristodoulou, Grigoris Chlouverakis, Grigoris Trypsianis, Paraskevi V. Voulgari, Yannis Alamanos, Konstantinos Makrilakis, Stavros Liatis, Stylianos Chatzipanagiotou, George Stergiou, and on behalf of the EMENO study group
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Cardiovascular disease ,Hypertension ,Diabetes ,Obesity ,Hypercholesterolemia ,Health examination survey ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Nationwide data on cardiovascular risk factors prevalence is lacking in Greece. This work presents the findings of the national health examination survey EMENO (2013–2016) regarding the prevalence of hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, obesity and smoking. Methods A random sample of adults (≥18 years) was drawn by multistage stratified random sampling based on 2011 Census. All EMENO participants with ≥1 measurement of interest [blood pressure (BP), fasting glucose, HbA1c, total cholesterol (TC), Body Mass Index (BMI)] were included. Hypertension was defined as BP ≥ 140/90 mmHg and/or antihypertensive treatment; diabetes as fasting glucose≥126 mg/dL and/or HbA1c ≥ 6.5% or self-reported diabetes; hypercholesterolemia as TC ≥ 190 mg/dL. Sampling weights were applied to adjust for study design and post-stratification weights to match sample age and sex distribution to population one. Non-response was adjusted by inverse probability weighting. Results Of 6006 EMENO participants, 4822 were included (51.5% females, median age:47.9 years). The prevalence of hypertension was 39.2%, higher in men (42.4%) than in women (36.1%); of hypercholesterolemia 60.2%, similar in men (59.5%) and women (60.9%); of diabetes 11.6%, similar men (12.4%) and women (10.9%); of obesity 32.1%, higher in women (33.5% vs 30.2%), although in subjects aged 18–40 year it was higher in men; of current smoking 38.2%, higher in men (44.0%) than in women (32.7%). The prevalence of all risk factors increased substantially with age, except smoking, which followed an inverse U shape. Conclusions The burden of cardiovascular risk factors among Greek adults is alarming. There is considerable preventive potential and actions at health care and societal level are urgently needed.
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- 2020
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11. Thyroid dysfunction in Greece: Results from the national health examination survey EMENO
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Paraskevi V. Voulgari, Aliki I. Venetsanopoulou, Natasa Kalpourtzi, Magda Gavana, Apostolos Vantarakis, Christos Hadjichristodoulou, Grigoris Chlouverakis, Grigoris Trypsianis, Yannis Alamanos, Giota Touloumi, and on behalf of the EMENO study group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Background Nationwide data on thyroid disease prevalence in Greece is lacking. Using the national health examination survey EMENO data resources, we aimed to estimate the prevalence of hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism and associated risk factors in adults living in Greece. Methods A random sample of the adults (≥18 years) living in Greece was drawn by multi-stage stratified random sampling based on the 2011 census. During home visits, trained interviewers administered a standardized questionnaire to study participants. All participants answered questions concerning demographic parameters (e.g., age, sex, degree of urbanization, income) and questions concerning smoking habits, alcohol, dietary habits and psychological parameters such as anxiety and thyroid disease. Weighted logistic regression models were fitted to assess factors associated with thyroid disease. Results In total, 6006 individuals were recruited in the Greek Health Examination Survey EMENO (response rate 72%) of whom 5981 were eligible for this study. The prevalence of thyroid disease was 9%, where 0.4% was related to hyperthyroidism and 8.6% to hypothyroidism. The prevalence of thyroid disease was higher in women (14.9%) than men (2.7%) (pConclusion The prevalence of thyroid disease in Greece is higher in women. Age, habits, and characteristics of geographic areas determine the distribution of thyroidopathies in Greece.
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- 2022
12. Performance Analysis of the National Early Warning Score and Modified Early Warning Score in the Adaptive COVID-19 Treatment Trial Cohort
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Christopher J. Colombo, MD, MA, FACP, FCCM, Rhonda E. Colombo, MD, MHS, FACP, FIDSA, Ryan C. Maves, MD, FCCM, FCCP, FIDSA, Angela R. Branche, MD, Stuart H. Cohen, MD, Marie-Carmelle Elie, MD, Sarah L. George, MD, Hannah J. Jang, PhD, RN, CNL, PHN, Andre C. Kalil, MD, MPH, David A. Lindholm, MD, FACP, Richard A. Mularski, MD, MSHS, MCR, ATSF, FCCP, FACP, Justin R. Ortiz, MD, MS, FACP, FCCP, Victor Tapson, MD, C. Jason Liang, PhD, On behalf of the ACTT-1 Study Group, Aneesh K. Mehta, Nadine G. Rouphael, Jessica J. Traenkner, Valeria D Cantos, Ghina Alaaeddine, Barry S. Zingman, Robert Grossberg, Paul F. Riska, Elizabeth Hohmann, Mariam Torres-Soto, Nikolaus Jilg, Helen Y. Chu, Anna Wald, Margaret Green, Annie Luetkemeyer, Pierre-Cedric B. Crouch, Hannah Jang, Susan Kline, Joanne Billings, Brooke Noren, Diego Lopez de Castilla, Jason W. Van Winkle, Francis X. Riedo, Robert W. Finberg, Jennifer P. Wang, Mireya Wessolossky, Kerry Dierberg, Benjamin Eckhardt, Henry J Neumann, Victor Tapson, Jonathan Grein, Fayyaz Sutterwala, Lanny Hsieh, Alpesh N. Amin, Thomas F. Patterson, Heta Javeri, Trung Vu, Roger Paredes, Lourdes Mateu, Daniel A. Sweeney, Constance A. Benson, Farhana Ali, William R. Short, Pablo Tebas, Jessie Torgersen, Giota Touloumi, Vicky Gioukari, David Chien Lye, Sean WX Ong, Norio Ohmagari, Ayako Mikami, Gerd Fätkenheuer, Jakob J. Malin, Philipp Koehler, Andre C. Kalil, LuAnn Larson, Angela Hewlett, Mark G. Kortepeter, C. Buddy Creech, Isaac Thomsen, Todd W. Rice, Babafemi Taiwo, Karen Krueger, Stuart H. Cohen, George R. Thompson, 3rd, Cameron Wolfe, Emmanuel B. Walter, Maria Frank, Heather Young, Ann R. Falsey, Angela R. Branche, Paul Goepfert, Nathaniel Erdmann, Otto O. Yang, Jenny Ahn, Anna Goodman, Blair Merrick, Richard M. Novak, Andrea Wendrow, Henry Arguinchona, Christa Arguinchona, Sarah L. George, Janice Tennant, Robert L. Atmar, Hana M. El Sahly, Jennifer Whitaker, D. Ashley Price, Christopher J. A. Duncan, Simeon Metallidis, Theofilos Chrysanthidis, F. McLellan, Myoung-don Oh, Wan Beom Park, Eu Suk Kim, Jongtak Jung, Justin R. Ortiz, Karen L. Kotloff, Brian Angus, Jack David Germain Seymour, Noreen A. Hynes, Lauren M. Sauer, Neera Ahuja, Kari Nadeau, Patrick E. H. Jackson, Taison D. Bell, Anastasia Antoniadou, Konstantinos Protopapas, Richard T Davey, Jocelyn D. Voell, Jose Muñoz, Montserrat Roldan, Ioannis Kalomenidis, Spyros G. Zakynthinos, Catharine I. Paules, Fiona McGill, Jane Minton, Nikolaos Koulouris, Zafeiria Barmparessou, Edwin Swiatlo, Kyle Widmer, Nikhil Huprikar, Anuradha Ganesan, Guillermo M. Ruiz-Palacios, Alfredo Ponce de León, Sandra Rajme, Justino Regalado Pineda, José Arturo Martinez-Orozco, Mark Holodniy, Aarthi Chary, Timo Wolf, Christoph Stephan, Jan-Christian Wasmuth, Christoph Boesecke, Martin Llewelyn, Barbara Philips, Christopher J. Colombo, Rhonda E. Colombo, David A. Lindholm, Katrin Mende, Tida Lee, Tahaniyat Lalani, Ryan C. Maves, Gregory C. Utz, Jens Lundgren, Marie Helleberg, Jan Gerstoft, Thomas Benfield, Tomas Jensen, Birgitte Lindegaard, Lothar Weise, Lene Knudsen, Isik Johansen, Lone W Madsen, Lars Østergaard, Nina Stærke, Henrik Nielsen, Timothy H. Burgess, Michelle Green, Mat Makowski, Jennifer L. Ferreira, Michael R. Wierzbicki, Tyler Bonnett, Nikki Gettinger, Theresa Engel, Jing Wang, John H. Beigel, Kay M. Tomashek, Seema Nayak, Lori E. Dodd, Walla Dempsey, Effie Nomicos, Marina Lee, Peter Wolff, Rhonda PikaartTautges, Mohamed Elsafy, Robert Jurao, Hyung Koo, Michael Proschan, Dean Follmann, and H. Clifford Lane
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Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
OBJECTIVES:. We sought to validate prognostic scores in coronavirus disease 2019 including National Early Warning Score, Modified Early Warning Score, and age-based modifications, and define their performance characteristics. DESIGN:. We analyzed prospectively collected data from the Adaptive COVID-19 Treatment Trial. National Early Warning Score was collected daily during the trial, Modified Early Warning Score was calculated, and age applied to both scores. We assessed prognostic value for the end points of recovery, mechanical ventilation, and death for score at enrollment, average, and slope of score over the first 48 hours. SETTING:. A multisite international inpatient trial. PATIENTS:. A total of 1,062 adult nonpregnant inpatients with severe coronavirus disease 2019 pneumonia. INTERVENTIONS:. Adaptive COVID-19 Treatment Trial 1 randomized participants to receive remdesivir or placebo. The prognostic value of predictive scores was evaluated in both groups separately to assess for differential performance in the setting of remdesivir treatment. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:. For mortality, baseline National Early Warning Score and Modified Early Warning Score were weakly to moderately prognostic (c-index, 0.60–0.68), and improved with addition of age (c-index, 0.66–0.74). For recovery, baseline National Early Warning Score and Modified Early Warning Score demonstrated somewhat better prognostic ability (c-index, 0.65–0.69); however, National Early Warning Score+age and Modified Early Warning Score+age further improved performance (c-index, 0.68–0.71). For deterioration, baseline National Early Warning Score and Modified Early Warning Score were weakly to moderately prognostic (c-index, 0.59–0.69) and improved with addition of age (c-index, 0.63–0.70). All prognostic performance improvements due to addition of age were significant (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS:. In the Adaptive COVID-19 Treatment Trial 1 cohort, National Early Warning Score and Modified Early Warning Score demonstrated moderate prognostic performance in patients with severe coronavirus disease 2019, with improvement in predictive ability for National Early Warning Score+age and Modified Early Warning Score+age. Area under receiver operating curve for National Early Warning Score and Modified Early Warning Score improved in patients receiving remdesivir versus placebo early in the pandemic for recovery and mortality. Although these scores are simple and readily obtainable in myriad settings, in our data set, they were insufficiently predictive to completely replace clinical judgment in coronavirus disease 2019 and may serve best as an adjunct to triage, disposition, and resourcing decisions.
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- 2021
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13. HIV-1 molecular transmission clusters in nine European countries and Canada: association with demographic and clinical factors
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Dimitrios Paraskevis, Apostolos Beloukas, Kostantinos Stasinos, Nikos Pantazis, Carmen de Mendoza, Norbert Bannert, Laurence Meyer, Robert Zangerle, John Gill, Maria Prins, Antonella d’Arminio Montforte, Anne-Marte Bakken Kran, Kholoud Porter, Giota Touloumi, and on behalf of the CASCADE collaboration of EuroCoord
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Transmission networks ,Regional epidemics ,Phylogenies ,Clusters ,HIV epidemic ,HIV ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Knowledge of HIV-1 molecular transmission clusters (MTCs) is important, especially in large-scale datasets, for designing prevention programmes and public health intervention strategies. We used a large-scale HIV-1 sequence dataset from nine European HIV cohorts and one Canadian, to identify MTCs and investigate factors associated with the probability of belonging to MTCs. Methods To identify MTCs, we applied maximum likelihood inferences on partial pol sequences from 8955 HIV-positive individuals linked to demographic and clinical data. MTCs were defined using two different criteria: clusters with bootstrap support >75% (phylogenetic confidence criterion) and clusters consisting of sequences from a specific region at a proportion of >75% (geographic criterion) compared to the total number of sequences within the network. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to assess factors associated with MTC clustering. Results Although 3700 (41%) sequences belonged to MTCs, proportions differed substantially by country and subtype, ranging from 7% among UK subtype C sequences to 63% among German subtype B sequences. The probability of belonging to an MTC was independently less likely for women than men (OR = 0.66; P < 0.001), older individuals (OR = 0.79 per 10-year increase in age; P < 0.001) and people of non-white ethnicity (OR = 0.44; P < 0.001 and OR = 0.70; P = 0.002 for black and ‘other’ versus white, respectively). It was also more likely among men who have sex with men (MSM) than other risk groups (OR = 0.62; P < 0.001 and OR = 0.69; P = 0.002 for people who inject drugs, and sex between men and women, respectively), subtype B (ORs 0.36–0.70 for A, C, CRF01 and CRF02 versus B; all P < 0.05), having a well-estimated date of seroconversion (OR = 1.44; P < 0.001), a later calendar year of sampling (ORs 2.01–2.61 for all post-2002 periods versus pre-2002; all P < 0.01), and being naïve to antiretroviral therapy at sampling (OR = 1.19; P = 0.010). Conclusions A high proportion (>40%) of individuals belonged to MTCs. Notably, the HIV epidemic dispersal appears to be driven by subtype B viruses spread within MSM networks. Expansion of regional epidemics seems mainly associated with recent MTCs, rather than the growth of older, established ones. This information is important for designing prevention and public health intervention strategies.
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- 2019
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14. Changes in Body Mass Index after Initiation of Antiretroviral Treatment: Differences by Class of Core Drug
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Nikos Pantazis, Vasilios Papastamopoulos, Anastasia Antoniadou, Georgios Adamis, Vasilios Paparizos, Simeon Metallidis, Helen Sambatakou, Mina Psichogiou, Maria Chini, Georgios Chrysos, Periklis Panagopoulos, Nikolaos V. Sipsas, Emmanouil Barbunakis, Charalambos Gogos, and Giota Touloumi
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HIV ,antiretroviral therapy ,integrase strand transfer inhibitors ,body mass index ,weight ,obesity ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Recent research on antiretroviral treatment (ART) for HIV suggests that integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) cause faster weight gain compared to other drug classes. Here, we investigated changes in body mass index (BMI) and obesity prevalence after treatment initiation and corresponding differences between drug classes. Data were derived from a large collaborative cohort in Greece. Included individuals were adults who started ART, in or after 2010, while previously ART naïve and achieved virologic response within the first year of ART. Data were analysed using mixed fractional polynomial models. INSTI regimens led to the more pronounced BMI increases, followed by boosted PI and NNRTI based regimens. Individuals with normal initial BMI are expected to gain 6 kg with an INSTI regimen compared to 4 kg with a boosted PI and less than 3 kg with a NNRTI regimen after four years of treatment. Prevalence of obesity was 5.7% at ART initiation and 12.2%, 14.2% and 18.1% after four years of treatment with NNRTIs, PIs, and INSTIs, respectively. Dolutegravir or Raltegravir were associated with marginally faster BMI increase compared to Elvitegravir. INSTIs are associated with faster weight gain. INSTIs’ increased risk of treatment emergent obesity and, possibly, weight-related co-morbidities should be judged against their improved efficacy and tolerability but increased clinical attention is required.
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- 2022
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15. Could the 2010 HIV outbreak in Athens, Greece have been prevented? A mathematical modeling study.
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Ilias Gountas, Georgios Nikolopoulos, Giota Touloumi, Anastasios Fotiou, and Kyriakos Souliotis
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
IntroductionIn 2009 and 2010, Athens, Greece experienced a hepatitis C virus (HCV) and a Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) outbreak among People Who Inject Drugs (PWID), respectively. The HCV outbreak was not detected, while that of HIV was identified in 2011. The integrated HIV-interventions, launched in early 2012, managed to reduce directly the HIV incidence and indirectly the HCV incidence. This study aims to assess what would have been the course of the HIV outbreak and its associated economic consequences if the 2009 HCV outbreak had been detected and integrated interventions had been initiated 1- or 2-years earlier.MethodsThe model was calibrated to reproduce the observed HIV epidemiological and clinical parameters among PWID of Athens, Greece. We examined the effect of the 1- or 2-years earlier detection scenarios, the 1-year later detection, the non-detection scenario, and compared them to the status quo scenario.ResultsCumulative HIV cases, under the status-quo scenario during 2009-2019, were 1360 (90% Credible intervals: 290, 2470). If the HCV outbreak had been detected 1- or 2- years earlier, with immediate initiation of integrated interventions, 740 and 1110 HIV cases could be averted by 2019, respectively. Regarding the costs, if there was an efficient notification system to detect the HCV outbreak 1 or 2 years earlier, 35.2-53.2 million euros could be saved compared to the status quo by 2019.ConclusionsIf the HCV outbreak had been detected and promptly addressed, the HIV outbreak would have been prevented and 35.2-53.2 million euros could have been saved.
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- 2021
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16. Cardiovascular risk factors in HIV infected individuals: Comparison with general adult control population in Greece.
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Giota Touloumi, Natasa Kalpourtzi, Vasileios Papastamopoulos, Vasilios Paparizos, Georgios Adamis, Anastasia Antoniadou, Maria Chini, Argiro Karakosta, Konstantinos Makrilakis, Magda Gavana, Apostolos Vantarakis, Mina Psichogiou, Simeon Metallidis, Nikolaos V Sipsas, Helen Sambatakou, Christos Hadjichristodoulou, Paraskevi V Voulgari, George Chrysos, Charalambos Gogos, Grigoris Chlouverakis, Grigoris Tripsianis, Yannis Alamanos, George Stergiou, and AMACS and EMENO
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough combined antiretroviral therapy has substantially improved the prognosis of people living with HIV (PLHIV), mortality remains higher compared to the general population, mainly due to higher prevalence of non-HIV-related comorbidities, including cardiovascular diseases (CVD). We assessed the prevalence of CVD risk and its contributing factors in adult PLHIV versus general population controls in Greece.SettingsCross-sectional comparison of PLHIV (Athens-Multicenter-AIDS-Cohort-Study; AMACS) versus general population controls (National health examination survey; EMENO).MethodsAll HIV-infected adults with ≥1 measurement of interest (blood pressure, lipids, glucose, weight, height) between 2012-2014 and all EMENO participants (2014-2016) were included. Ten-year total CVD risk was estimated using the Framingham (FRS) or the Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation (SCORE) equations.Results5839 PLHIV (median age:41.6 years, 85.4% males) and 4820 controls (median age:48 years, 48.4% males) were included. Adjusting for age, sex and origin, PLHIV were more likely to be current smokers (adjusted OR:1.53 [95% CI:1.35-1.74]) and dyslipidemic (aOR:1.18; [1.04-1.34]), less likely to be obese (aOR:0.44 [0.38-0.52], with no differences in hypertension, diabetes or high (≥20%) FRS but with greater odds of high (≥5%) SCORE (aOR:1.55 [1.05-2.30]). Further adjustment for educational level, anti-HCV positivity and BMI showed higher prevalence of hypertension in PLHIV.ConclusionsDespite the relative absence of obesity, PLHIV have higher prevalence of traditional CVD risk factors and higher risk of fatal CVD compared to general population. Regular screening and early management of CVD risk factors in PLHIV should be of high priority for CVD prevention.
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- 2020
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17. Psychotic (delusional) depression and completed suicide: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Rossetos Gournellis, Kalliopi Tournikioti, Giota Touloumi, Christos Thomadakis, Panayiota G. Michalopoulou, Ioannis Michopoulos, Christos Christodoulou, Athanasia Papadopoulou, and Athanasios Douzenis
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Psychotic depression ,Unipolar depression ,Suicide ,Systematic review ,Meta-analysis ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background It remains unclear whether psychotic features increase the risk of completed suicides in unipolar depression. The present systematic review coupled with a meta-analysis attempts to elucidate whether unipolar psychotic major depression (PMD) compared to non-PMD presents higher rates of suicides. Methods A systematic search was conducted in Scopus, PubMed, and “gray literature” for all studies providing data on completed suicides in PMD compared to non-PMD, and the findings were then subjected to meta-analysis. All articles were independently extracted by two authors using predefined data fields. Results Nine studies with 33,873 patients, among them 828 suicides, met our inclusion criteria. PMD compared to non-PMD presented a higher lifetime risk of completed suicides with fixed-effect pooled OR 1.21 (95% CI 1.04–1.40). In a sub-analysis excluding a very large study (weight = 86.62%), and comparing 681 PMD to 2106 non-PMD patients, an even higher pooled OR was found [fixed-effect OR 1.69 (95% CI 1.16–2.45)]. Our meta-analysis may provide evidence that the presence of psychosis increases the risk of suicide in patients suffering from severe depression. The data are inconclusive on the contribution of age, mood congruence, comorbidity, and suicide method on PMD’s suicide risk. The lack of accurate diagnosis at the time of suicide, PMD’s diagnostic instability, and the use of ICD-10 criteria constitute the main study limitations. Conclusions The presence of psychosis in major depression should alert clinicians for the increased risk of completed suicide. Thus, the implementation of an effective treatment both for psychotic depression and patients’ suicidality constitutes a supreme priority.
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- 2018
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18. HIV cascade of care in Greece: Useful insights from additional stages.
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Georgia Vourli, Georgios Nikolopoulos, Vasilios Paparizos, Athanasios Skoutelis, Symeon Metallidis, Panagiotis Gargalianos, Antonios Papadopoulos, Maria Chini, Nikolaos V Sipsas, Mina Psychogiou, Georgios Chrysos, Helen Sambatakou, Charalambos Gogos, Olga Katsarou, Dimitra Paraskeva, Nikos Dedes, Giota Touloumi, and Greek HIV Prevention Group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Aiming to eliminate HIV infection, UNAIDS has set a global "90-90-90" target by 2020. We sought to construct a 6-stages HIV Cascade of Care (CoC) in Greece, overall and by risk group, to assess risk-group and stage-specific progress in achieving the UNAIDS target. PATIENTS AND METHODS:Combining data from the HIV/AIDS surveillance system and a population-based HIV cohort study, the CoC included: i) number of people living with HIV (PLHIV) by end of 2013; ii) proportion of PLHIV ever diagnosed; iii) proportion of diagnosed linked-to-care iv) proportion of linked-to-care ever initiating antiretroviral therapy (ART); v) proportion of treated who retained-in-care vi) proportion of those retained-in-care who were virally suppressed (≤200 copies/mL) at their last visit (01/07/2012-31/12/2013). RESULTS:In 2013, 14147 PLHIV were in Greece. Overall, proportions of each stage in the cascade were: 78.4% diagnosed; 86% linked-to-care; 78.5% initiated ART; 86.4% retained-in-care, and 87.1% virally suppressed. Totally, 42.6% of all PLHIV were virally suppressed. The percentage diagnosed was lower among heterosexual men and women (heterosexuals) than in MSM (men who have sex with men) or PWID (people who inject drugs). Most MSM were linked to care (97.2% of diagnosed) while a substantial proportion of PWID were not (80.8% of diagnosed). Once treated, PWID remained in care in similar proportions to MSM. Unlike PWID, a high proportion of the retained in care MSM and heterosexuals achieved viral suppression. CONCLUSIONS:At the end of 2013, we identified gaps in the HIV CoC in Greece, which differed across risk groups. Targeted interventions are critical in optimizing early diagnosis and timely linkage. A 6-stage CoC, stratified by risk group, can inform strategic public health planning in improving HIV treatment outcomes.
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- 2018
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19. The HIV patient profile in 2013 and 2003: Results from the Greek AMACS cohort.
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Nikos Pantazis, Maria Chini, Anastasia Antoniadou, Helen Sambatakou, Athanasios Skoutelis, Panagiotis Gargalianos, Sophia Kourkounti, Charalambos Gogos, George Chrysos, Mina Psichogiou, Nikolaos V Sipsas, Olga Katsarou, Periklis Panagopoulos, Simeon Metallidis, Giota Touloumi, and AMACS
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Combined Antiretroviral therapy (cART) has improved life-expectancy of people living with HIV (PLHIV) but as they age, prevalence of chronic non-AIDS related comorbidities may increase. We study the evolution of HIV-disease markers and comorbidities' prevalence in PLHIV in Greece. Two cross-sectional analyses (2003 and 2013) on data from the AMACS cohort were performed. Comparisons were based on population average models and were repeated for subjects under follow-up at both 2003 and 2013. 2,403 PLHIV were identified in 2003 and 4,910 in 2013 (1,730 contributing for both cross-sections). Individuals in 2013 were on average older, diagnosed/treated for HIV for longer, more likely to be on cART, virologically suppressed, and with higher CD4 counts. Chronic kidney disease, dyslipidemia and hypertension prevalence increased over time. There was an increase in prescription of lipid-lowering treatment (3.5% in 2003 vs. 7.7% 2013, p20%) increased from 18.2% to 22.2% (p = 0.002). Increase in the prevalence of comorbidities was more pronounced in the subset of patients who were followed in both 2003 and 2013. The increased availability and uptake of cART led to significant improvements in the immuno-virological status of PLHIV in Greece, but they aged alongside an increase in prevalence of non-AIDS related comorbidities. These results highlight the need for appropriate monitoring, optimal cART selection and long-term management and prevention strategies for such comorbidities.
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- 2018
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20. A randomized trial comparing concise and standard consent forms in the START trial.
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Christine Grady, Giota Touloumi, A Sarah Walker, Mary Smolskis, Shweta Sharma, Abdel G Babiker, Nikos Pantazis, Jorge Tavel, Eric Florence, Adriana Sanchez, Fleur Hudson, Antonios Papadopoulos, Ezekiel Emanuel, Megan Clewett, David Munroe, Eileen Denning, and INSIGHT START Informed Consent Substudy Group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundImproving the effectiveness and efficiency of research informed consent is a high priority. Some express concern about longer, more complex, written consent forms creating barriers to participant understanding. A recent meta-analysis concluded that randomized comparisons were needed.MethodsWe conducted a cluster-randomized non-inferiority comparison of a standard versus concise consent form within a multinational trial studying the timing of starting antiretroviral therapy in HIV+ adults (START). Interested sites were randomized to standard or concise consent forms for all individuals signing START consent. Participants completed a survey measuring comprehension of study information and satisfaction with the consent process. Site personnel reported usual site consent practices. The primary outcome was comprehension of the purpose of randomization (pre-specified 7.5% non-inferiority margin).Results77 sites (2429 participants) were randomly allocated to use standard consent and 77 sites (2000 participants) concise consent, for an evaluable cohort of 4229. Site and participant characteristics were similar for the two groups. The concise consent was non-inferior to the standard consent on comprehension of randomization (80.2% versus 82%, site adjusted difference: 0.75% (95% CI -3.8%, +5.2%)); and the two groups did not differ significantly on total comprehension score, satisfaction, or voluntariness (p>0.1). Certain independent factors, such as education, influenced comprehension and satisfaction but not differences between consent groups.ConclusionsAn easier to read, more concise consent form neither hindered nor improved comprehension of study information nor satisfaction with the consent process among a large number of participants. This supports continued efforts to make consent forms more efficient.Trial registrationInformed consent substudy was registered as part of START study in clinicaltrials.gov #NCT00867048, and EudraCT # 2008-006439-12.
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- 2017
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21. Virologic and immunologic response to cART by HIV-1 subtype in the CASCADE collaboration.
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Giota Touloumi, Nikos Pantazis, Marie-Laure Chaix, Heiner C Bucher, Robert Zangerle, Anne-Marte Bakken Kran, Rodolphe Thiebaut, Bernard Masquelier, Claudia Kucherer, Antonella d'Arminio Monforte, Laurence Meyer, Kholoud Porter, and for CASCADE Collaboration in EuroCoord
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
We aimed to compare rates of virologic response and CD4 changes after combination antiretroviral (cART) initiation in individuals infected with B and specific non-B HIV subtypes.Using CASCADE data we analyzed HIV-RNA and CD4 counts for persons infected ≥1996, ≥15 years of age. We used survival and longitudinal modeling to estimate probabilities of virologic response (confirmed HIV-RNA 500 c/ml at 6 months or ≥1000 c/ml following response) and CD4 increase after cART initiation.2003 (1706 B, 142 CRF02_AG, 55 A, 53 C, 47 CRF01_AE) seroconverters were included in analysis. There was no evidence of subtype effect overall for response or failure (p = 0.075 and 0.317, respectively) although there was a suggestion that those infected with subtypes CRF01_AE and A responded sooner than those with subtype B infection [HR (95% CI):1.37 (1.01-1.86) and 1.29 (0.96-1.72), respectively]. Rates of CD4 increase were similar in all subtypes except subtype A, which tended to have lower initial, but faster long-term, increases.Virologic and immunologic response to cART was similar across all studied subtypes but statistical power was limited by the rarity of some non-B subtypes. Current antiretroviral agents seem to have similar efficacy in subtype B and most widely encountered non-B infections in high-income countries.
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- 2013
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22. Sensitive assessment of the virologic outcomes of stopping and restarting non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-based antiretroviral therapy.
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Anna Maria Geretti, Zoe Fox, Jeffrey A Johnson, Clare Booth, Jonathan Lipscomb, Lieven J Stuyver, Gilda Tachedjian, John Baxter, Giota Touloumi, Clara Lehmann, Andrew Owen, Andrew Phillips, and INSIGHT Strategies for Management of Antiretroviral Therapy (SMART) Study Group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI)-resistant mutants have been shown to emerge after interruption of suppressive NNRTI-based antiretroviral therapy (ART) using routine testing. The aim of this study was to quantify the risk of resistance by sensitive testing and correlate the detection of resistance with NNRTI concentrations after treatment interruption and virologic responses after treatment resumption.Resistance-associated mutations (RAMs) and NNRTI concentrations were studied in plasma from 132 patients who interrupted suppressive ART within SMART. RAMs were detected by Sanger sequencing, allele-specific PCR, and ultra-deep sequencing. NNRTI concentrations were measured by sensitive high-performance liquid chromatography.Four weeks after NNRTI interruption, 19/31 (61.3%) and 34/39 (87.2%) patients showed measurable nevirapine (>0.25 ng/ml) or efavirenz (>5 ng/ml) concentrations, respectively. Median eight weeks after interruption, 22/131 (16.8%) patients showed ≥1 NNRTI-RAM, including eight patients with NNRTI-RAMs detected only by sensitive testing. The adjusted odds ratio (OR) of NNRTI-RAM detection was 7.62 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.52, 38.30; p = 0.01) with nevirapine or efavirenz concentrations above vs. below the median measured in the study population. Staggered interruption, whereby nucleos(t)ide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) were continued for median nine days after NNRTI interruption, did not prevent NNRTI-RAMs, but increased detection of NRTI-RAMs (OR 4.25; 95% CI 1.02, 17.77; p = 0.03). After restarting NNRTI-based ART (n = 90), virologic suppression rates
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- 2013
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23. Differences in HIV natural history among African and non-African seroconverters in Europe and seroconverters in sub-Saharan Africa.
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Nikos Pantazis, Charles Morrison, Pauli N Amornkul, Charlotte Lewden, Robert A Salata, Albert Minga, Tsungai Chipato, Harold Jaffe, Shabir Lakhi, Etienne Karita, Kholoud Porter, Laurence Meyer, Giota Touloumi, and CASCADE Collaboration in EuroCoord and ANRS 1220 Primo-CI Study Group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
It is unknown whether HIV treatment guidelines, based on resource-rich country cohorts, are applicable to African populations.We estimated CD4 cell loss in ART-naïve, AIDS-free individuals using mixed models allowing for random intercept and slope, and time from seroconversion to clinical AIDS, death and antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation by survival methods. Using CASCADE data from 20 European and 3 sub-Saharan African (SSA) cohorts of heterosexually-infected individuals, aged ≥15 years, infected ≥2000, we compared estimates between non-African Europeans, Africans in Europe, and Africans in SSA.Of 1,959 (913 non-Africans, 302 Europeans-African origin, 744 SSA), two-thirds were female; median age at seroconversion was 31 years. Individuals in SSA progressed faster to clinical AIDS but not to death or non-TB AIDS. They also initiated ART later than Europeans and at lower CD4 cell counts. In adjusted models, Africans (especially from Europe) had lower CD4 counts at seroconversion and slower CD4 decline than non-African Europeans. Median (95% CI) CD4 count at seroconversion for a 15-29 year old woman was 607 (588-627) (non-African European), 469 (442-497) (European-African origin) and 570 (551-589) (SSA) cells/µL with respective CD4 decline during the first 4 years of 259 (228-289), 155 (110-200), and 199 (174-224) cells/µL (p
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- 2012
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24. CASCADE protocol: exploring current viral and host characteristics, measuring clinical and patient-reported outcomes, and understanding the lived experiences and needs of individuals with recently acquired HIV infection through a multicentre mixed-methods observational study in Europe and Canada
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Elisa Ruiz-Burga, Shema Tariq, Giota Touloumi, John Gill, Emily Jay Nicholls, Caroline Sabin, Cristina Mussini, Laurence Meyer, Alain Volny Anne, Christina Carlander, Sophie Grabar, Inma Jarrin, Marc Van der Valk, Linda Wittkop, Bruno Spire, Nikos Pantazis, Fiona M Burns, Kholoud Porter, Infectious diseases, AII - Infectious diseases, APH - Digital Health, and APH - Personalized Medicine
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Primary Prevention ,EPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDIES ,HIV & AIDS ,INFECTIOUS DISEASES ,General Medicine - Abstract
IntroductionDespite the availability of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and antiretroviral therapy (ART), 21 793 people were newly diagnosed with HIV in Europe in 2019. The Concerted action on seroconversion to AIDS and death in Europe study aims to understand current drivers of the HIV epidemic; factors associated with access to, and uptake of prevention methods and ART initiation; and the experiences, needs and outcomes of people with recently acquired HIV.Methods and analysisThis longitudinal observational study is recruiting participants aged ≥16 years with documented laboratory evidence of HIV seroconversion from clinics in Canada and six European countries. We will analyse data from medical records, self-administered questionnaires, semistructured interviews and participatory photography. We will assess temporal trends in transmitted drug resistance and viral subtype and examine outcomes following early ART initiation. We will investigate patient-reported outcomes, well-being, and experiences of, knowledge of, and attitudes to HIV preventions, including PrEP. We will analyse qualitative data thematically and triangulate quantitative and qualitative findings. As patient public involvement is central to this work, we have convened a community advisory board (CAB) comprising people living with HIV.Ethics and disseminationAll respective research ethics committees have approval for data to contribute to international collaborations. Written informed consent is required to take part. A dissemination strategy will be developed in collaboration with CAB and the scientific committee. It will include peer-reviewed publications, conference presentations and accessible summaries of findings on the study’s website, social media and via community organisations.
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- 2023
25. Issues with the expected information matrix of linear mixed models provided by popular statistical packages under missingness at random dropout
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Christos Thomadakis, Nikos Pantazis, and Giota Touloumi
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Statistics and Probability ,Epidemiology - Published
- 2023
26. Hyperimmune immunoglobulin for hospitalised patients with COVID-19 (ITAC): a double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3, randomised trial
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Mark N. Polizzotto, Jacqueline Nordwall, Abdel G. Babiker, Andrew Phillips, David M. Vock, Nnakelu Eriobu, Vivian Kwaghe, Roger Paredes, Lourdes Mateu, Srikanth Ramachandruni, Rajeev Narang, Mamta K. Jain, Susana M. Lazarte, Jason V. Baker, Anne E.P. Frosch, Garyfallia Poulakou, Konstantinos N. Syrigos, Gretchen S. Arnoczy, Natalie A. McBride, Philip A. Robinson, Farjad Sarafian, Sanjay Bhagani, Hassan S. Taha, Thomas Benfield, Sean T.H. Liu, Anastasia Antoniadou, Jens Ulrik Stæhr Jensen, Ioannis Kalomenidis, Adityo Susilo, Prasetyo Hariadi, Tomas O. Jensen MD, Jose Luis Morales-Rull, Marie Helleberg, Sreenath Meegada, Isik S. Johansen, Daniel Canario, Eduardo Fernández-Cruz, Simeon Metallidis, Amish Shah, Aki Sakurai, Nikolaos G. Koulouris, Robin Trotman, Amy C. Weintrob, Daria Podlekareva, Usman Hadi, Kathryn M. Lloyd, Birgit Thorup Røge, Sho Saito, Kelly Sweerus, Jakob J. Malin, Christoph Lübbert, Jose Muñoz, Matthew J. Cummings, Marcelo H. Losso, Dan Turner, Kathryn Shaw-Saliba, Robin Dewar, Helene Highbarger, Perrine Lallemand, Tauseef Rehman, Norman Gerry, Dona Arlinda, Christina C. Chang, Birgit Grund, Michael R. Holbrook, Horace P. Holley, Fleur Hudson, Laura A. McNay, Daniel D. Murray, Sarah L. Pett, Megan Shaughnessy, Mary C. Smolskis, Giota Touloumi, Mary E. Wright, Mittie K. Doyle, Sharon Popik, Christine Hall, Roshan Ramanathan, Huyen Cao, Elsa Mondou, Todd Willis, Joseph V. Thakuria, Leman Yel, Elizabeth Higgs, Virginia L. Kan, Jens D. Lundgren, James D. Neaton, and H. Clifford Lane
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Male ,Inpatients ,Alanine ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,Internationality ,COVID-19 ,Articles ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Antiviral Agents ,Adenosine Monophosphate ,Hospitalization ,Treatment Outcome ,Double-Blind Method ,Vaccines, Inactivated ,Humans ,Female - Abstract
Background Passive immunotherapy using hyperimmune intravenous immunoglobulin (hIVIG) to SARS-CoV-2, derived from recovered donors, is a potential rapidly available, specific therapy for an outbreak infection such as SARS-CoV-2. Findings from randomised clinical trials of hIVIG for the treatment of COVID-19 are limited. Methods In this international randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, hospitalised patients with COVID-19 who had been symptomatic for up to 12 days and did not have acute end-organ failure were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either hIVIG or an equivalent volume of saline as placebo, in addition to remdesivir, when not contraindicated, and other standard clinical care. Randomisation was stratified by site pharmacy; schedules were prepared using a mass-weighted urn design. Infusions were prepared and masked by trial pharmacists; all other investigators, research staff, and trial participants were masked to group allocation. Follow-up was for 28 days. The primary outcome was measured at day 7 by a seven-category ordinal endpoint that considered pulmonary status and extrapulmonary complications and ranged from no limiting symptoms to death. Deaths and adverse events, including organ failure and serious infections, were used to define composite safety outcomes at days 7 and 28. Prespecified subgroup analyses were carried out for efficacy and safety outcomes by duration of symptoms, the presence of anti-spike neutralising antibodies, and other baseline factors. Analyses were done on a modified intention-to-treat (mITT) population, which included all randomly assigned participants who met eligibility criteria and received all or part of the assigned study product infusion. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04546581. Findings From Oct 8, 2020, to Feb 10, 2021, 593 participants (n=301 hIVIG, n=292 placebo) were enrolled at 63 sites in 11 countries; 579 patients were included in the mITT analysis. Compared with placebo, the hIVIG group did not have significantly greater odds of a more favourable outcome at day 7; the adjusted OR was 1·06 (95% CI 0·77–1·45; p=0·72). Infusions were well tolerated, although infusion reactions were more common in the hIVIG group (18·6% vs 9·5% for placebo; p=0·002). The percentage with the composite safety outcome at day 7 was similar for the hIVIG (24%) and placebo groups (25%; OR 0·98, 95% CI 0·66–1·46; p=0·91). The ORs for the day 7 ordinal outcome did not vary for subgroups considered, but there was evidence of heterogeneity of the treatment effect for the day 7 composite safety outcome: risk was greater for hIVIG compared with placebo for patients who were antibody positive (OR 2·21, 95% CI 1·14–4·29); for patients who were antibody negative, the OR was 0·51 (0·29–0·90; pinteraction=0·001). Interpretation When administered with standard of care including remdesivir, SARS-CoV-2 hIVIG did not demonstrate efficacy among patients hospitalised with COVID-19 without end-organ failure. The safety of hIVIG might vary by the presence of endogenous neutralising antibodies at entry. Funding US National Institutes of Health.
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- 2022
27. Remdesivir: Effectiveness and safety in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 (ReEs-COVID19) - Analysis of data from daily practice
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Nikos Pantazis, Evmorfia Pechlivanidou, Anastasia Antoniadou, Karolina Akinosoglou, Ioannis Kalomenidis, Garyfallia Poulakou, Haralampos Milionis, Periklis Panagopoulos, Ioannis Katsarolis, Pinelopi Kazakou, Vasiliki Dimakopoulou, Anna-Louiza Chaliasou, Vasiliki Rapti, Angelos Liontos, Vasileios Petrakis, Georgios Schinas, Dimitrios Biros, Maria-Christina Rimpa, and Giota Touloumi
- Abstract
Background Remdesivir was the first antiviral approved for COVID-19. We investigated its patterns of use, effectiveness and safety in clinical practice in Greece. Methods Retrospective observational study of hospitalized adults who received remdesivir for COVID-19 between 09/2020–02/2021. Main endpoints were time to recovery (hospital discharge within 30 days from admission) and safety. The “early” (remdesivir initiation within 2 days) and the “deferred” (remdesivir initiation > 2days after admission) groups were compared. Results 1004 patients (60.6% male, mean age 61 years, 74.3% with severe disease, 70.9% with ≥1 comorbidities) were included, 75.9% of them on a 5-days regimen and 86.8% in the early group. Among those with baseline mild/moderate disease, median (95% CI) time to recovery was 8 (7–9) and 12 (11–14) days for the early and deferred group respectively (p
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- 2023
28. HIV continuum of care: bridging cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses
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Maria Giovanna Chini, Helen Sambatakou, Nikos Pantazis, Christos Thomadakis, Vasilios Paparizos, Anastasia Antoniadou, Simeon Metallidis, Georgia Vourli, Georgios Adamis, Emmanouil Barbunakis, Vasileios Papastamopoulos, Georgios Chrysos, Giota Touloumi, Mina Psichogiou, and Amacs
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medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Art initiation ,Immunology ,Population ,Psychological intervention ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study ,medicine.disease_cause ,Infectious Diseases ,Internal medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Medical diagnosis ,Continuum of care ,business ,education ,Viral load - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To propose a unified continuum-of-care (CoC) analysis combining cross-sectional and longitudinal elements, incorporating time spent between stages. DESIGN The established 90-90-90 target follows a cross-sectional 4-stage CoC analysis, lacking information on timing of diagnosis, antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation and viral suppression (VS) durability. METHODS Data were derived from the Athens Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (AMACS). In the cross-sectional CoC, we added stratification of diagnosed people living with HIV (PLHIV) by estimated time from infection to diagnosis; of those who ever initiated ΑRT or achieved VS by corresponding current status (in 2018); and cumulative incidence function (CIF) of ART initiation and VS, treating loss-to-follow-up (LTFU) as competing event. VS was defined as viral load (VL)
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- 2021
29. Prevalence of tobacco smoking and association with other unhealthy lifestyle risk factors in the general population of Greece: Results from the EMENO study
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Argiro Karakosta, Natasa Kalpourtzi, Christos Hadjichristodoulou, Magda Gavana, Maria Gangadi, Gregory Trypsianis, Gregory Chlouverakis, Giota Touloumi, Apostolos Vantarakis, Paraskevi V. Voulgari, Anna Karakatsani, and Yannis Alamanos
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Mediterranean diet ,Epidemiology ,alcohol consumption ,Population ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) ,Odds ,BMI ,medicine ,Young adult ,education ,Socioeconomic status ,education.field_of_study ,Greece ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Former Smoker ,lifestyle risk factors ,Smoking initiation ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,business ,smoking prevalence ,Research Paper ,Demography - Abstract
INTRODUCTION The EMENO (National Morbidity and Risk Factors) survey is one of the first and most representative population-based surveys in Greece due to its study design and sampling procedure. We aimed to estimate the prevalence of smoking, secondhand smoking (SHS) and their potential associations with other socioeconomic and unhealthy lifestyle risk factors. METHODS EMENO is a cross-sectional health status survey conducted in Greece from May 2013 to June 2016. The survey was performed using face-to-face interviews and enrolled 6006 adults. Data were collected through questionnaires administered by trained interviewers. Current smoking (CS) and SHS were based on self-reporting. Analysis accounted for study design. RESULTS Information on smoking was available for 5862 individuals (97.6%). Overall, 37.8% were current and 16.1% former smokers. More males (44.3%) than females (31.6%) were current smokers. CS increased during adulthood and declined sharply in the elderly (p7 glasses/ week, OR=2.52; 95% CI: 1.97–3.23) and lower education level in men were positively associated with ever smoking. Moreover, women aged >35 years and respondents with low adherence to the Mediterranean diet (MD) (high/ low, OR= 0.35; 95% CI: 0.21–0.58) had higher odds to be current smokers than former smokers. Finally, the overall prevalence of exposure to SHS at work, home and public places was 38.8%, 30% and 44.6 %, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Unhealthy lifestyles of smokers, increased rates of CS in vulnerable groups, such as females and young adults, and early age of smoking initiation constitute alarming public health issues in Greece.
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- 2021
30. HIV continuum of care: expanding scope beyond a cross-sectional view to include time analysis: a systematic review
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Nikos Pantazis, Georgia Vourli, Giota Touloumi, and Ioannis Katsarolis
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Gerontology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,HIV Infections ,Review ,medicine.disease_cause ,Cross-sectional ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Continuum of care ,Humans ,Estimation ,Scope (project management) ,business.industry ,Research ,Confounding ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,HIV ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Censoring (clinical trials) ,Time analysis ,Biostatistics ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,business - Abstract
Introduction The continuum of care (CoC) model has been used to describe the main pillars of HIV care. This study aims to systematically review methods and elucidate gaps in the CoC analyses, especially in terms of the timing of the progression through steps, recognized nowadays as a critical parameter for an effective response to the epidemic. Methods A PubMed and EMBASE databases search up to December 2019 resulted in 1918 articles, of which 209 were included in this review; 84 studies presented in major HIV conferences were also included. Studies that did not provide explicit definitions, modelling studies and those reporting only on metrics for subpopulations or factors affecting a CoC stage were excluded. Included articles reported results on 1 to 6 CoC stages. Results Percentage treated and virally suppressed was reported in 78%, percentage diagnosed and retained in care in 58%, percentage linked to care in 54% and PLHIV in 36% of the articles. Information for all stages was provided in 23 studies. Only 6 articles use novel CoC estimates: One presents a dynamic CoC based on multistate analysis techniques, two base their time-to-next-stage estimates on a risk estimation method based on the cumulative incidence function, weighted for confounding and censoring and three studies estimated the HIV infection time based on mathematical modelling. Conclusion A limited number of studies provide elaborated time analyses of the CoC. Although time analyses lack the straightforward interpretation of the cross-sectional CoC, they provide valuable insights for the timely response to the HIV epidemic. A future goal would be to develop a model that retains the simplicity of the cross-sectional CoC but also incorporates timing between stages.
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- 2021
31. Individual risk prediction: Comparing random forests with Cox proportional‐hazards model by a simulation study
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Valia Baralou, Natasa Kalpourtzi, and Giota Touloumi
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Statistics and Probability ,General Medicine ,Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty - Abstract
With big data becoming widely available in healthcare, machine learning algorithms such as random forest (RF) that ignores time-to-event information and random survival forest (RSF) that handles right-censored data are used for individual risk prediction alternatively to the Cox proportional hazards (Cox-PH) model. We aimed to systematically compare RF and RSF with Cox-PH. RSF with three split criteria [log-rank (RSF-LR), log-rank score (RSF-LRS), maximally selected rank statistics (RSF-MSR)]; RF, Cox-PH, and Cox-PH with splines (Cox-S) were evaluated through a simulation study based on real data. One hundred eighty scenarios were investigated assuming different associations between the predictors and the outcome (linear/linear and interactions/nonlinear/nonlinear and interactions), training sample sizes (500/1000/5000), censoring rates (50%/75%/93%), hazard functions (increasing/decreasing/constant), and number of predictors (seven, 15 including noise variables). Methods' performance was evaluated with time-dependent area under curve and integrated Brier score. In all scenarios, RF had the worst performance. In scenarios with a low number of events (⩽70), Cox-PH was at least noninferior to RSF, whereas under linearity assumption it outperformed RSF. Under the presence of interactions, RSF performed better than Cox-PH as the number of events increased whereas Cox-S reached at least similar performance with RSF under nonlinear effects. RSF-LRS performed slightly worse than RSF-LR and RSF-MSR when including noise variables and interaction effects. When applied to real data, models incorporating survival time performed better. Although RSF algorithms are a promising alternative to conventional Cox-PH as data complexity increases, they require a higher number of events for training. In time-to-event analysis, algorithms that consider survival time should be used.
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- 2022
32. Efficacy and Safety of Ensovibep for Adults Hospitalized With COVID-19:A Randomized Controlled Trial
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Christina, Barkauskas, Eleftherios, Mylonakis, Garyfallia, Poulakou, Barnaby E, Young, David M, Vock, Lianne, Siegel, Nicole, Engen, Greg, Grandits, Nilima R, Mosaly, Andrew M, Vekstein, Ralph, Rogers, Fadi, Shehadeh, Matthew, Kaczynski, Evangelia K, Mylona, Konstantinos N, Syrigos, Vasiliki, Rapti, David C, Lye, Diong Shiau, Hui, Lindsay, Leither, Kirk U, Knowlton, Mamta K, Jain, Rubria, Marines-Price, Alice, Osuji, J Scott, Overcash, Ioannis, Kalomenidis, Zafeiria, Barmparessou, Michael, Waters, Karla, Zepeda, Peter, Chen, Sam, Torbati, Francis, Kiweewa, Nicholus, Sebudde, Eyad, Almasri, Alyssa, Hughes, Sanjay R, Bhagani, Alison, Rodger, Uriel, Sandkovsky, Robert L, Gottlieb, Eriobu, Nnakelu, Barbara, Trautner, Vidya, Menon, Joseph, Lutaakome, Michael, Matthay, Philip, Robinson, Konstantinos, Protopapas, Nikolaos, Koulouris, Ivan, Kimuli, Amiran, Baduashvili, Dominique L, Braun, Huldrych F, Günthard, Srikanth, Ramachandruni, Robert, Kidega, Kami, Kim, Timothy J, Hatlen, Andrew N, Phillips, Daniel D, Murray, Tomas O, Jensen, Maria L, Padilla, Evan X, Accardi, Katy, Shaw-Saliba, Robin L, Dewar, Marc, Teitelbaum, Ven, Natarajan, Sylvain, Laverdure, Helene C, Highbarger, M Tauseef, Rehman, Susan, Vogel, David, Vallée, Page, Crew, Negin, Atri, Adam J, Schechner, Sarah, Pett, Fleur, Hudson, Jonathan, Badrock, Giota, Touloumi, Samuel M, Brown, Wesley H, Self, Crystal M, North, Adit A, Ginde, Christina C, Chang, Anthony, Kelleher, Stephanie, Nagy-Agren, Shikha, Vasudeva, David, Looney, Hien H, Nguyen, Adriana, Sánchez, Amy C, Weintrob, Birgit, Grund, Shweta, Sharma, Cavan S, Reilly, Roger, Paredes, Agnieszka, Bednarska, Norman P, Gerry, Abdel G, Babiker, Victoria J, Davey, Annetine C, Gelijns, Elizabeth S, Higgs, Virginia, Kan, Gail, Matthews, B Taylor, Thompson, Philippe, Legenne, Richa, Chandra, H Clifford, Lane, James D, Neaton, and Richard, Williams
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Adult ,Treatment Outcome ,Double-Blind Method ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Designed Ankyrin Repeat Proteins ,General Medicine ,COVID-19/drug therapy ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ensovibep (MP0420) is a designed ankyrin repeat protein, a novel class of engineered proteins, under investigation as a treatment of SARS-CoV-2 infection. OBJECTIVE: To investigate if ensovibep, in addition to remdesivir and other standard care, improves clinical outcomes among patients hospitalized with COVID-19 compared with standard care alone. DESIGN: Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, clinical trial. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04501978). SETTING: Multinational, multicenter trial. PARTICIPANTS: Adults hospitalized with COVID-19. INTERVENTION: Intravenous ensovibep, 600 mg, or placebo. MEASUREMENTS: Ensovibep was assessed for early futility on the basis of pulmonary ordinal scores at day 5. The primary outcome was time to sustained recovery through day 90, defined as 14 consecutive days at home or place of usual residence after hospital discharge. A composite safety outcome that included death, serious adverse events, end-organ disease, and serious infections was assessed through day 90. RESULTS: An independent data and safety monitoring board recommended that enrollment be halted for early futility after 485 patients were randomly assigned and received an infusion of ensovibep (n = 247) or placebo (n = 238). The odds ratio (OR) for a more favorable pulmonary outcome in the ensovibep (vs. placebo) group at day 5 was 0.93 (95% CI, 0.67 to 1.30; P = 0.68; OR > 1 would favor ensovibep). The 90-day cumulative incidence of sustained recovery was 82% for ensovibep and 80% for placebo (subhazard ratio [sHR], 1.06 [CI, 0.88 to 1.28]; sHR > 1 would favor ensovibep). The primary composite safety outcome at day 90 occurred in 78 ensovibep participants (32%) and 70 placebo participants (29%) (HR, 1.07 [CI, 0.77 to 1.47]; HR
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- 2022
33. Opportunistic screening for hypertension: what does it say about the true epidemiology?
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Rigas Kalaitzidis, George S. Stergiou, Yannis Alamanos, Pantelis Sarafidis, Michael Doumas, Angeliki Ntineri, Maria E. Marketou, Paraskevi V. Voulgari, Grigoris Chlouverakis, Christos Hadjichristodoulou, Eugenia Gkaliagkousi, Dimitrios Papadopoulos, Pantelis Zebekakis, Michail Chatzopoulos, Natasa Kalpourtzi, G. Trypsianis, John A Papadakis, Xenophon Krokidis, Magda Gavana, Ariadni Menti, Efstathios Manios, Argiro Karakosta, Manolis S. Kallistratos, Giota Touloumi, Apostolos Vantarakis, and Vasiliki Katsi
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Blood Pressure ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Opportunistic screening ,Antihypertensive Agents ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Rate control ,Mean age ,Stratified sampling ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Blood pressure ,Hypertension ,Female ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
This study aimed to assess the reliability of opportunistic screening programs in estimating the prevalence, treatment, and control rate of hypertension in the general population. Two recent epidemiological surveys obtained data on hypertension in the adult general population in Greece. The EMENO (2013–2016) applied a multi-stage stratified random sampling method to collect nationwide data. The MMM (2019) collected data through opportunistic (voluntary) screening in five large cities. Hypertension was defined as blood pressure (BP) ≥ 140/90 mmHg (single occasion; average of 2nd–3rd measurement; electronic devices) and/or use of antihypertensive drugs. Data from a total of 10,426 adults were analyzed (EMENO 4,699; MMM 5,727). Mean age (SD) was 49.2 (18.6)/52.7 (16.6) years (EMENO/MMM, p
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- 2021
34. Impact of covariate omission and categorization from the Fine–Gray model in randomized-controlled trials
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Abdel Babiker, Giorgos Bakoyannis, Giota Touloumi, and Fang-I. Chu
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Statistics and Probability ,Context (language use) ,Competing risks ,Gray (unit) ,Statistical power ,law.invention ,Computational Theory and Mathematics ,Randomized controlled trial ,Categorization ,law ,Statistics ,Covariate ,Treatment effect ,Mathematics - Abstract
In this paper, we study the statistical issues related to the omission and categorization of important covariates in the context of the Fine–Gray model in randomized-controlled trials with competing risks. We show that the omission of an important covariate from the Fine–Gray model leads to attenuated estimates for treatment effect and loss of proportionality in general. Our simulation studies reveal substantial attenuation in the estimate for treatment effect and the loss of statistical power, while dichotomizing a continuous covariate leads to similar but less pronounced impact. Our results are illustrated using data from a randomized clinical trial of HIV-infected individuals. The relative merits of conducting an adjusted versus an unadjusted analysis of treatment effect in light of both statistical and practical considerations are discussed.
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- 2021
35. Efficacy and safety of two neutralising monoclonal antibody therapies, sotrovimab and BRII-196 plus BRII-198, for adults hospitalised with COVID-19 (TICO):a randomised controlled trial
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Wesley H. Self, Uriel Sandkovsky, Cavan S. Reilly, David M. Vock, Robert L. Gottlieb, Michael Mack, Kevin Golden, Emma Dishner, Andrew Vekstein, Emily R. Ko, Tatyana Der, John Franzone, Eyad Almasri, Mohamed Fayed, Michael R. Filbin, Kathryn A. Hibbert, Todd W. Rice, Jonathan D. Casey, J. Awori Hayanga, Vinay Badhwar, Bradley G. Leshnower, Milad Sharifpour, Kirk U. Knowlton, Ithan D. Peltan, Elizieta Bakowska, Justyna Kowalska, Michael E. Bowdish, Jeffrey M. Sturek, Angela J. Rogers, D. Clark Files, Jarrod M. Mosier, Michelle N. Gong, David J. Douin, R. Duncan Hite, Barbara W. Trautner, Mamta K. Jain, Edward M. Gardner, Akram Khan, Jens-Ulrik Jensen, Michael A. Matthay, Adit A. Ginde, Samuel M. Brown, Elizabeth S. Higgs, Sarah Pett, Amy C. Weintrob, Christina C. Chang, Daniel D. Murrary, Huldrych F. Günthard, Ellen Moquete, Greg Grandits, Nicole Engen, Birgit Grund, Shweta Sharma, Huyen Cao, Rajesh Gupta, Suzette Osei, David Margolis, Qing Zhu, Mark N. Polizzotto, Abdel G. Babiker, Victoria J. Davey, Virginia Kan, B. Taylor Thompson, Annetine C. Gelijns, James D. Neaton, H. Clifford Lane, Jens D. Jundgren, John Tierney, Kevin Barrett, Betsey R. Herpin, Mary C. Smolskis, Susan E. Voge, Laura A. McNay, Kelly Cahill, Page Crew, Matthew Kirchoff, Ratna Sardana, Sharon Segal Raim, Joseph Chiu, Lisa Hensley, Josua Lorenzo, Rebecca Mock, Katy Shaw-Saliba, Judith Zuckerman, Stacey J. Adam, Judy Currier, Sarah Read, Eric Hughes, Laura Amos, Amy Carlsen, Anita Carter, Bionca Davis, Eileen Denning, Alain DuChene, Merrie Harrison, Payton Kaiser, Joseph Koopmeiners, Sue Meger, Thomas Murray, Kien Quan, Siu Fun Quan, Greg Thompson, Jamie Walski, Deborah Wentworth, Alan J. Moskowitz, Emilia Bagiella, Karen O'Sullivan, Mary E. Marks, Evan Accardi, Emily Kinzel, Gabriela Bedoya, Lopa Gupta, Jessica R. Overbey, Maria L. Padillia, Milerva Santos, Marc A. Gillinov, Marissa A. Miller, Wendy C. Taddei-Peters, Kathleen Fenton, Mezgebe Berhe, Clinton Haley, Christopher Bettacchi, Erin Duhaime, Madison Ryan, Sarah Burris, Felecia Jones, Samantha Villa, Samantha Want, Raven Robert, Tanquinisha Coleman, Laura Clariday, Rebecca Baker, Marian Hurutado-Rodriguez, Nazia Iram, Michelle Fresnedo, Allyson Davis, Kiara Leonard, Noelia Ramierez, Jon Thammavong, Krizia Duque, Emma Turner, Tammy Fisher, Dianna Robinson, Desirae Ransom, Erica Lusk, Aaron Killian, Adriana Palacious, Edilia Solis, Janet Jerrow, Matthew Watts, Heather Whitacre, Elizabeth Cothran, Peter K. Smith, Christina E. Barkauskas, Grace R. Dreyer, Marie Witte, Nilima Mosaly, Ahmad Mourad, Thomas L. Holland, Kathleen Lane, Andrew Bouffler, Lauren M. McGowan, Marry Motta, Gregory Tipton, Ben Stallings, Gennifer Stout, Beth McLendon-Arvik, Beth A. Hollister, Dana M. Giangiacomo, Sunil Sharma, Brian Pappers, Paul McCarthy, Troy Krupica, Arif Sarwari, Rebecca Reece, Lisa Fornaresio, Chad Glaze, Raquel Evans, Katarina Preamble, Lisa Giblin Sutton, Sabrina Buterbaugh, Elizabeth Berry Bartolo, Roger Williams, Robin Bunner, William Bender, Jeffrey Miller, Kim T. Baio, Mary K. McBride, Michele Fielding, Sonya Mathewson, Kristina Porte, Missy Maton, Chari Ponder, Elizabeth Haley, Christine Spainhour, Susan Rogers, Derrick Tyler, Noah Wald-Dickler, Douglass Hutcheon, Amytis Towfighi, May M. Lee, Meghan R. Lewis, Brad Spellberg, Linda Sher, Aniket Sharma, Anna P. Olds, Chris Justino, Edward Lozano, Chris Romero, Janet Leong, Valentina Rodina, Tammie Possemato, Jose Escobar, Charlene Chiu, Kevin Weissman, Andrew Barros, Kyle B. Enfield, Alexandra Kadl, China J. Green, Rachel M. Simon, Ashley Fox, Kara Thornton, Patrick E. Parrino, Stephen Spindel, Aditya Bansal, Katherine Baumgarten, Jonathan Hand, Derek Vonderhaar, Bobby Nossaman, Sylvia Laudun, DeAnna Ames, Shane Broussard, Nilmo Hernandez, Geralyn Isaac, Huan Dinh, Yiling Zheng, Sonny Tran, Hunter McDaniel, Nicolle Crovetto, Leslie Miller, Beth Schelle, Sherry McLean, Howard R. Rothbaum, Michael S. Alvarez, Shivam P. Kalan, Heather H. Germann, Jennifer Hendershot, Karen Maroney, Karen Herring, Sharri Cook, Pam Paul, Ronson J. Madathil, Joseph Rabin, Andrea Levine, Kapil Saharia, Ali Tabatabai, Christine Lau, James S. Gammie, Maya-Loren Peguero, Kimberley McKernan, Matthew Audette, Emily Fleischmann, Freshta Akbari, Maia Lee, Myounghee Lee, Andrew Chi, Hanna Salehi, Alan Pariser, Phuong Tran Nguyen, Jessica Moore, Adrienne Gee, Shelika Vincent, Richard A. Zuckerman, Alexander Iribarne, Sara Metzler, Samantha Shipman, Taylor Caccia, Haley Johnson, Crystallee Newton, Doug Parr, Vicente Rodriguez, Gordon Bokhart, Sharon M. Eichman, Crystal North, Cathryn Oldmixon, Nancy Ringwood, Laura Fitzgerald, Haley D. Morin, Ariela Muzikansky, Richard Morse, Roy G. Brower, Lora A. Reineck, Neil R. Aggarwal, Karen Bienstock, Peter Hou, Jay Steingrub, Mark A. Tidswell, Lori-Ann Kozikowski, Cynthia Kardos, Leslie DeSouza, Sherell Thornton-Thompson, Daniel Talmor, Nathan Shapiro, Valerie Banner-Goodspeed, Katherine L. Boyle, Sharon Hayes, Alan E. Jones, James Galbraith, Utsav Nandi, Rebekah K. Peacock, Blair Alden Parry, Justin D. Margolin, Kelsey Brait, Caroline Beakes, Kirsten N. Kangelaris, Kimberly J. Yee, Kimia Ashktorab, Alejandra E. Jauregui, Hanjing Zhuo, Gregory Hendey, Kinsley A. Hubel, Alyssa R. Hughes, Rebekah L. Garcia, Jennifer G. Wilson, Rosemary Vojnik, Jonasel Roque, Cynthia Perez, George W. Lim, Steven Y. Chang, Rebecca Beutler, Trisha Agarwal, Julia Vargas, Marc Moss, Amiran Baduashvili, Lakshmi Chauhan, Lani L. Finck, Michelle Howell, Robert C. Hyzy, Pauline K. Park, Kristine Nelson, Jake I. McSparron, Ivan N. Co, Bonnie R. Wang, Shijing Jia, Barbara Sullins, Sinan Hanna, Norman Olbrich, Lynne D. Richardson, Rahul Nair, Obiageli Offor, Brenda Lopez, Omowunmi Amosu, Hiwet Tzehaie, Thomas E. Terndrup, Herbert P. Wiedemann, Abhijit Duggal, Nirosshan Thiruchelvam, Kiran Ashok, Alexander H. King, Omar Mehkri, Kristin Hudock, Simra Kiran, Harshada More, Tammy Roads, Jamie Martinkovic, Sarah Kennedy, Bryce H. Robinson, Catherine L. Hough, Olivia F. Krol, Mistry Kinjal, Emmanuel Mills, Madeline McDougal, Rupali Deshmukh, Peter Chen, Sam S. Torbati, Yuri Matusov, June Choe, Niree A. Hindoyan, Susan E. Jackman, Emad Bayoumi, Timothy Wynter, Antonina Caudill, Ethan Pascual, Gregg J. Clapham, Lisa Herrera, Cristabelle Ojukwu, Shaunt Mehdikhani, D. Shane O'Mahony, Sonam T. Nyatsatsang, David M. Wilson, Julie A. Wallick, Chadwick Miller, Keven W. Gibbs, Lori S. Flores, Mary E. LaRose, Leigha D. Landreth, Peter E. Morris, Jamie L. Sturgill, Evan P. Cassity, Sanjay Dhar, Ashley A. Montgomery-Yates, Sara N. Pasha, Kirby P. Mayer, Brittany Bissel, Joseph Bledsoe, Samuel Brown, Michael Lanspa, Lindsey Leither, Brent P. Armbruster, Quinn Montgomery, Darrin Applegate, Naresh Kumar, Melissa Fergus, Erna Serezlic, Karah Imel, Ghazal Palmer, Brandon Webb, Valerie T. Aston, Jakea Johnson, Christopher Gray, Margaret Hays, Megan Roth, Adriana Sánchez, Laura Popielski, Heather Rivasplata, Melissa Turner, Michael Vjecha, Tianna Petersen, Dena Kamel, Laura Hansen, Claudia Sanchez Lucas, Natalie DellaValle, Sonia Gonzales, James Scott, David Wyles, Ivor Douglas, Jason Haukoos, Kevin Kamis, Caitlin Robinson, Jason V. Baker, Anne Frosch, Rachael Goldsmith, Hodan Jibrell, Melanie Lo, Jonathan Klaphake, Shari Mackedanz, Linh Ngo, Kelly Garcia-Myers, Norman Markowitz, Erika Pastor, Mayur Ramesh, Indira Brar, Emanuel Rivers, Princy Kumar, Maximiliano Menna, Kousick Biswas, Cristin Harrington, Alex Delp, Lavannya Pandit, Casey Hines-Munson, John Van, Laura Dillon, Yiqun Want, Paola Lichtenberger, Gio Baracco, Carol Ramos, Lauren Bjork, Melyssa Sueiro, Phyllis Tien, Heather Freasier, Theresa Buck, Hafida Nekach, Stephanie Nagy-Agren, Shikha Vasudeva, Tracy Ochalek, Brentin Roller, Chinh Nguyen, Amani Mikail, Dorthe Raben, Tomas O. Jensen, Bitten Aagaard, Charlotte B. Nielsen, Katharina Krapp, Bente Rosdahl Nykjær, Katja Lisa Kanne, Anne Louise Grevsen, Zillah Maria Joensen, Tina Bruun, Ane Bojesen, Frederik Woldbye, Nick E. Normand, Frederik V.L. Esmann, Clara Lundetoft Clausen, Nichlas Hovmand, Karen Brorup Pedersen, Louise Thorlacius-Ussing, Michaela Tinggaard, Dorthe S. Høgsberg, Ema Rastoder, Thobias Kamstrup, Christina Marisa Bergsøe, Lars Østergaard, Nina Breinholt Stærke, Isik S. Johansen, Fredrikke C. Knudtzen, Lykke Larsen, Mathias A. Hertz, Thilde Fabricius, Marie Helleberg, Jan Gerstoft, Tomas Østergaard Jensen, Birgitte Lindegaard, Thomas Ingemann Pedersen, Birgit Thorup Røge, Sandra Valborg Løfberg, Thomas Michael Hansen, Ariella Denize Nielsen, Sebastian Leicht von Huth, Henrik Nielsen, Rikke Krog Thisted, Daria Podlekareva, Stine Johnsen, Helle Frost Andreassen, Lars Pedersen, Cecilia Ebba Clara Ellinor Lindnér, Lothar Wiese, Lene Surland Knudsen, Nikolaj Julian Skrøder Nytofte, Signe Ravn Havmøller, Roger Paredes, Maria Exposito, Eduardo Fernández-Cruz, José Muñoz, Jose R. Arribas, Vicente Estrada, Juan P. Horcajada, Joaquin Burgos, Jose Luis Morales-Rull, Dominique L. Braun, Emily West, Khadija M'Rabeth-Bensalah, Mareile L. Eichinger, Manuela Grüttner-Durmaz, Christina Grube, Veronika Zink, Andrzej Horban, Agnieszka Bednarska, Natalia Jurek, Gerd Fätkenheuer, Jakob J. Malinm, Gail Matthews, Anthony Kelleher, Gesalit Cabrera, Catherine Carey, Sally Hough, Sophie Virachit, Amy Zhong, Barnaby E. Young, Po Ying Chia, Tau Hong Lee, Ray J. Lin, David Lye, Sean Ong, Ser Hon Puah, Tsin Wen Yeo, Shiau Hui Diong, Juwinda Ongko, Fleur Hudson, Mahesh KB Parmar, Anna Goodman, Jonathan Badrock, Adam Gregory, Nicola Harris, Giota Touloumi, Nikos Pantaz, Vicky Gioukari, Joseph Lutaakome, Cissy M. Kityo, Henry Mugerwa, Francis Kiweewa, Anu Osinusi, Craig Tipple, Angela Willis, Amanda Peppercorn, Helen Watson, Elizabeth Alexander, Erik Mogalian, Leo Lin, Xiao Ding, Li Yan, Jean-Luc Girardet, Ji Ma, Zhi Hong, Amy Adams, Sara Albert, Abby Balde, Michelle Baracz, Beth Baseler, Nancy Becker, Mona Bielica, Shere Billouin-Frazier, Jennifer Cash, Jay Choudhary, Suzanne Dolney, Mary Dixon, Carolyn Eyler, Leanna Frye, Michael Galcik, Jensen Gertz, Lisa Giebeig, Neelam Gulati, Liz Hankinson, Debbie Hissey, Debi Hogarty, Matt Hohn, H Preston Holley, Lisa Hoopengardner, Lynda Huber, Shirley Jankelevich, Gary Krauss, Eileen Lake, Jessica Linton, Leah MacDonald, Meryan Manandhar, Mary Spinelli-Nadzam, Charles Oluremi, Calvin Proffitt, Erin Rudzinski, Jen Sandrus, Marylu Schaffhauser, Adam Schechner, Connie Suders, Norman P. Gerry, Kenneth Smith, Courtney Solomon, Amanda Kubernac, Marium Rashid, Bhakti Patel, Robert Kubernac, Joseph Murphy, Marie L. Hoover, Craig Brown, Nadine DuChateau, Adam Flosi, Les Johnson, Amy Treagus, and Christine Wenner
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Comment ,COVID-19 ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Articles ,Middle Aged ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,COVID-19/drug therapy ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment ,Hospitalization ,Infectious Diseases ,Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological ,Treatment Outcome ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized/therapeutic use ,Double-Blind Method ,Humans ,Female ,Aged - Abstract
BACKGROUND: We aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of two neutralising monoclonal antibody therapies (sotrovimab [Vir Biotechnology and GlaxoSmithKline] and BRII-196 plus BRII-198 [Brii Biosciences]) for adults admitted to hospital for COVID-19 (hereafter referred to as hospitalised) with COVID-19.METHODS: In this multinational, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, clinical trial (Therapeutics for Inpatients with COVID-19 [TICO]), adults (aged ≥18 years) hospitalised with COVID-19 at 43 hospitals in the USA, Denmark, Switzerland, and Poland were recruited. Patients were eligible if they had laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 symptoms for up to 12 days. Using a web-based application, participants were randomly assigned (2:1:2:1), stratified by trial site pharmacy, to sotrovimab 500 mg, matching placebo for sotrovimab, BRII-196 1000 mg plus BRII-198 1000 mg, or matching placebo for BRII-196 plus BRII-198, in addition to standard of care. Each study product was administered as a single dose given intravenously over 60 min. The concurrent placebo groups were pooled for analyses. The primary outcome was time to sustained clinical recovery, defined as discharge from the hospital to home and remaining at home for 14 consecutive days, up to day 90 after randomisation. Interim futility analyses were based on two seven-category ordinal outcome scales on day 5 that measured pulmonary status and extrapulmonary complications of COVID-19. The safety outcome was a composite of death, serious adverse events, incident organ failure, and serious coinfection up to day 90 after randomisation. Efficacy and safety outcomes were assessed in the modified intention-to-treat population, defined as all patients randomly assigned to treatment who started the study infusion. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04501978.FINDINGS: Between Dec 16, 2020, and March 1, 2021, 546 patients were enrolled and randomly assigned to sotrovimab (n=184), BRII-196 plus BRII-198 (n=183), or placebo (n=179), of whom 536 received part or all of their assigned study drug (sotrovimab n=182, BRII-196 plus BRII-198 n=176, or placebo n=178; median age of 60 years [IQR 50-72], 228 [43%] patients were female and 308 [57%] were male). At this point, enrolment was halted on the basis of the interim futility analysis. At day 5, neither the sotrovimab group nor the BRII-196 plus BRII-198 group had significantly higher odds of more favourable outcomes than the placebo group on either the pulmonary scale (adjusted odds ratio sotrovimab 1·07 [95% CI 0·74-1·56]; BRII-196 plus BRII-198 0·98 [95% CI 0·67-1·43]) or the pulmonary-plus complications scale (sotrovimab 1·08 [0·74-1·58]; BRII-196 plus BRII-198 1·00 [0·68-1·46]). By day 90, sustained clinical recovery was seen in 151 (85%) patients in the placebo group compared with 160 (88%) in the sotrovimab group (adjusted rate ratio 1·12 [95% CI 0·91-1·37]) and 155 (88%) in the BRII-196 plus BRII-198 group (1·08 [0·88-1·32]). The composite safety outcome up to day 90 was met by 48 (27%) patients in the placebo group, 42 (23%) in the sotrovimab group, and 45 (26%) in the BRII-196 plus BRII-198 group. 13 (7%) patients in the placebo group, 14 (8%) in the sotrovimab group, and 15 (9%) in the BRII-196 plus BRII-198 group died up to day 90.INTERPRETATION: Neither sotrovimab nor BRII-196 plus BRII-198 showed efficacy for improving clinical outcomes among adults hospitalised with COVID-19.FUNDING: US National Institutes of Health and Operation Warp Speed.
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- 2022
36. Tixagevimab-cilgavimab for treatment of patients hospitalised with COVID-19: a randomised, double-blind, phase 3 trial
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Thomas L. Holland, Adit A. Ginde, Roger Paredes, Thomas A. Murray, Nicole Engen, Greg Grandits, Andrew Vekstein, Noel Ivey, Ahmad Mourad, Uriel Sandkovsky, Robert L. Gottlieb, Mezgebe Berhe, Mamta K. Jain, Rubria Marines-Price, Barbine Tchamba Agbor Agbor, Lourdes Mateu, Sergio España-Cueto, Gemma Lladós, Eleftherios Mylonakis, Ralph Rogers, Fadi Shehadeh, Michael R. Filbin, Kathryn A. Hibbert, Kami Kim, Thanh Tran, Peter E. Morris, Evan P. Cassity, Barbara Trautner, Lavannya M. Pandit, Kirk U. Knowlton, Lindsay Leither, Michael A. Matthay, Angela J. Rogers, Wonder Drake, Beatrice Jones, Garyfallia Poulakou, Konstantinos N. Syrigos, Eduardo Fernández-Cruz, Marisa Di Natale, Eyad Almasri, Leire Balerdi-Sarasola, Sanjay R. Bhagani, Katherine L. Boyle, Jonathan D. Casey, Peter Chen, David J. Douin, D. Clark Files, Huldrych F. Günthard, R. Duncan Hite, Robert C. Hyzy, Akram Khan, Moses Kibirige, Robert Kidega, Ivan Kimuli, Francis Kiweewa, Jens-Ulrik Jensen, Bradley G. Leshnower, Joseph K. Lutaakome, Prasad Manian, Vidya Menon, Jose Luis Morales-Rull, D. Shane O'Mahony, J. Scott Overcash, Srikant Ramachandruni, Jay S. Steingrub, Hassan S. Taha, Michael Waters, Barnaby E. Young, Andrew N. Phillips, Daniel D. Murray, Tomas O. Jensen, Maria L. Padilla, David Sahner, Katy Shaw-Saliba, Robin L. Dewar, Marc Teitelbaum, Ven Natarajan, M. Tauseef Rehman, Sarah Pett, Fleur Hudson, Giota Touloumi, Samuel M. Brown, Wesley H. Self, Christina C. Chang, Adriana Sánchez, Amy C. Weintrob, Timothy Hatlen, Birgit Grund, Shweta Sharma, Cavan S. Reilly, Pedro Garbes, Mark T. Esser, Alison Templeton, Abdel G. Babiker, Victoria J. Davey, Annetine C. Gelijns, Elizabeth S. Higgs, Virginia Kan, Gail Matthews, B. Taylor Thompson, James D. Neaton, H. Clifford Lane, and Jens D. Lundgren
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Adult ,Treatment Outcome ,Double-Blind Method ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Humans ,COVID-19/drug therapy ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tixagevimab-cilgavimab is a neutralising monoclonal antibody combination hypothesised to improve outcomes for patients hospitalised with COVID-19. We aimed to compare tixagevimab-cilgavimab versus placebo, in patients receiving remdesivir and other standard care.METHODS: In a randomised, double-blind, phase 3, placebo-controlled trial, adults with symptoms for up to 12 days and hospitalised for COVID-19 at 81 sites in the USA, Europe, Uganda, and Singapore were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to receive intravenous tixagevimab 300 mg-cilgavimab 300 mg or placebo, in addition to remdesivir and other standard care. Patients were excluded if they had acute organ failure including receipt of invasive mechanical ventilation, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, vasopressor therapy, mechanical circulatory support, or new renal replacement therapy. The study drug was prepared by an unmasked pharmacist; study participants, site study staff, investigators, and clinical providers were masked to study assignment. The primary outcome was time to sustained recovery up to day 90, defined as 14 consecutive days at home after hospital discharge, with co-primary analyses for the full cohort and for participants who were neutralising antibody-negative at baseline. Efficacy and safety analyses were done in the modified intention-to-treat population, defined as participants who received a complete or partial infusion of tixagevimab-cilgavimab or placebo. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04501978 and the participant follow-up is ongoing.FINDINGS: From Feb 10 to Sept 30, 2021, 1455 patients were randomly assigned and 1417 in the primary modified intention-to-treat population were infused with tixagevimab-cilgavimab (n=710) or placebo (n=707). The estimated cumulative incidence of sustained recovery was 89% for tixagevimab-cilgavimab and 86% for placebo group participants at day 90 in the full cohort (recovery rate ratio [RRR] 1·08 [95% CI 0·97-1·20]; p=0·21). Results were similar in the seronegative subgroup (RRR 1·14 [0·97-1·34]; p=0·13). Mortality was lower in the tixagevimab-cilgavimab group (61 [9%]) versus placebo group (86 [12%]; hazard ratio [HR] 0·70 [95% CI 0·50-0·97]; p=0·032). The composite safety outcome occurred in 178 (25%) tixagevimab-cilgavimab and 212 (30%) placebo group participants (HR 0·83 [0·68-1·01]; p=0·059). Serious adverse events occurred in 34 (5%) participants in the tixagevimab-cilgavimab group and 38 (5%) in the placebo group.INTERPRETATION: Among patients hospitalised with COVID-19 receiving remdesivir and other standard care, tixagevimab-cilgavimab did not improve the primary outcome of time to sustained recovery but was safe and mortality was lower.FUNDING: US National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Operation Warp Speed.
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- 2022
37. Prevalence, awareness, treatment and control of hypertension in Greece: EMENO national epidemiological study
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Ariadni Menti, Christos Hajichristodoulou, G. Trypsianis, Natasa Kalpourtzi, Magda Gavana, Giota Touloumi, George S. Stergiou, Grigoris Chlouverakis, Apostolos Vantarakis, Paraskevi V. Voulgari, Yannis Alamanos, and Argiro Karakosta
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Cross-sectional study ,Population ,Blood Pressure ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Prevalence ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Antihypertensive Agents ,education.field_of_study ,Microlife ,Greece ,business.industry ,Inverse probability weighting ,Awareness ,Middle Aged ,Stratified sampling ,Epidemiologic Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Home visits ,Blood pressure ,Hypertension ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE The evidence on the epidemiology of hypertension in Greece is limited. The prevalence and control of hypertension was assessed in randomly selected adults of the general population in Greece within the nationwide epidemiological study EMENO. METHOD On the basis of 2011 census, EMENO applied a multistage stratified random sampling method involving 577 areas throughout Greece (2013-2016). Participants were assessed at home visits with standardized questionnaires, blood tests and triplicate seated blood pressure (BP) measurements (validated upper-arm automated oscillometric device Microlife BPA100 Plus). Hypertension was defined as BP at least 140/90 mmHg (average of second--third measurement) and/or use of antihypertensive drugs. Sampling weights were applied for study design and post-stratification weights to match the age/sex distribution to the general population in Greece. Nonresponse was adjusted by inverse probability weighting. RESULTS A total of 6006 individuals were recruited and 4699 with valid data were analysed [mean (SD) age 49.2 (18.6) years, men 48.6%, BMI 28.2 (5.7) kg/m2]. The prevalence of hypertension was 39.6% and was higher in men than women (42.7 vs. 36.5%, P
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- 2020
38. What do the changing patterns of comorbidity burden in people living with HIV mean for long‐term management? Perspectives from European HIV cohorts
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Nikos Pantazis, A d'Arminio Monforte, Annegret Pelchen-Matthews, Heiner C. Bucher, E Wolf, Giota Touloumi, Valérie Pourcher, Fabrice Bonnet, Bordeaux population health (BPH), and Université de Bordeaux (UB)-Institut de Santé Publique, d'Épidémiologie et de Développement (ISPED)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Gerontology ,Aging ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study ,HIV Infections ,Hiv management ,Comorbidity ,medicine.disease_cause ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Long term management ,Humans ,MORPH3Eus ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Practical implications ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Disease Management ,medicine.disease ,030112 virology ,3. Good health ,Europe ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Infectious Diseases ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,Cohort ,Female ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,Health Expenditures ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
Undoubtedly, comorbidities complicate long‐term HIV management and have significant cost implications for healthcare systems. A better understanding of these comorbidities and underlying causes would allow for a more considered and proactive approach to the long‐term management of HIV. This review examines cross‐sectional analyses of six European cohort studies (Athens Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study, Aquitaine Cohort, EuroSIDA Cohort study, French claims EGB, German InGef Cohort and the Italian Cohort of Individuals, Naïve for Antiretrovirals), which included individuals with HIV followed over a certain period of time. Based on these cohorts, we examined how comorbidities have changed over time; how they compromise HIV management; and how much of a financial burden they impart. These data also provided a framework to explore the major issues of ageing and HIV and the practical implications of managing such issues in real‐life practice.
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- 2020
39. Misspecifying the covariance structure in a linear mixed model under MAR drop‐out
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Nikos Pantazis, Giota Touloumi, Christos Thomadakis, and Loukia Meligkotsidou
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Statistics and Probability ,Mixed model ,Epidemiology ,Bayesian probability ,Population ,HIV Infections ,Bayesian inference ,01 natural sciences ,Generalized linear mixed model ,010104 statistics & probability ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Statistics ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,education ,Mathematics ,education.field_of_study ,Fractional Brownian motion ,Bayes Theorem ,Covariance ,Random effects model ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Linear Models - Abstract
Misspecification of the covariance structure in a linear mixed model (LMM) can lead to biased population parameters' estimates under MAR drop-out. In our motivating example of modeling CD4 cell counts during untreated HIV infection, random intercept and slope LMMs are frequently used. In this article, we evaluate the performance of LMMs with specific covariance structures, in terms of bias in the fixed effects estimates, under specific MAR drop-out mechanisms, and adopt a Bayesian model comparison criterion to discriminate between the examined approaches in real-data applications. We analytically show that using a random intercept and slope structure when the true one is more complex can lead to seriously biased estimates, with the degree of bias depending on the magnitude of the MAR drop-out. Under misspecified covariance structure, we compare in terms of induced bias the approach of adding a fractional Brownian motion (BM) process on top of random intercepts and slopes with the approach of using splines for the random effects. In general, the performance of both approaches was satisfactory, with the BM model leading to smaller bias in most cases. A simulation study is carried out to evaluate the performance of the proposed Bayesian criterion in identifying the model with the correct covariance structure. Overall, the proposed method performs better than the AIC and BIC criteria under our specific simulation setting. The models under consideration are applied to real data from the CASCADE study; the most plausible model is identified by all examined criteria.
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- 2020
40. In Vitro Gene Transcription of Listeria monocytogenes After Exposure to Human Gastric and Duodenal Aspirates
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Apostolia Patlaka, Agni Hadjilouka, Georgia Vourli, Giota Touloumi, Athena Grounta, Eleftherios H. Drosinos, Konstantinos Triantafyllou, Paraskevas Gkolfakis, and Spiros Paramithiotis
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Regulation of gene expression ,0303 health sciences ,030306 microbiology ,Human gastrointestinal tract ,Virulence ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Reverse transcriptase ,03 medical and health sciences ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Listeria monocytogenes ,medicine ,Pathogen ,030304 developmental biology ,Food Science - Abstract
The aim of the present study was to assess, for the first time to our knowledge, Listeria monocytogenes CFU changes, as well as to determine the transcription of key virulence genes, namely, sigB, prfA, hly, plcA, plcB, inlA, inlB, inlC, inlJ, inlP, and lmo2672 after in vitro exposure to human gastric and duodenal aspirates. Furthermore, investigations of the potential correlation between CFU changes and gene regulation with factors influencing gastric (proton pump inhibitor intake and presence of gastric atrophy) and duodenal pH were the secondary study aims. Gastric and duodenal fluids that were collected from 25 individuals undergoing upper gastrointestinal endoscopy were inoculated with L. monocytogenes serotype 4b strain LQC 15257 at 9 log CFU·mL-1 and incubated at 37°C for 100 min and 2 h, respectively, with the time corresponding to the actual exposure time to gastric and duodenal fluids in the human gastrointestinal tract. Sampling was performed upon gastric fluid inoculation, after incubation of the inoculated gastric fluids, upon pathogen resuspension in duodenal fluids and after incubation of the inoculated duodenal fluids. L. monocytogenes CFU changes were assessed by colony counting, as well as reverse transcription quantitative PCR by using inlB as a target. Gene transcription was assessed by reverse transcription quantitative PCR. In 56% of the cases, reduction of the pathogen CFU occurred immediately after exposure to gastric aspirate. Upregulation of hly and inlC was observed in 52 and 58% of the cases, respectively. On the contrary, no upregulation or downregulation was noticed regarding sigB, prfA, plcA, plcB, inlA, inlB, inlJ, inlP, and lmo2672. In addition, sigB and plcA transcription was positively and negatively associated, respectively, with an increase of the pH value, and inlA transcription was negatively associated with the presence of gastric atrophy. Finally, a positive correlation between the transcriptomic responses of plcB, inlA, inlB, inlC, inlJ, inlP, and lmo2672 was detected. This study revealed that the CFU of the pathogen was negatively affected after exposure to human gastroduodenal aspirates, as well as significant correlations between the characteristics of the aspirates with the virulence potential of the pathogen.
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- 2020
41. Hepatitis B, C and Humman Immunodeficiency Virus Knowledge Among the General Greek Population: Results From Τhe Hprolipsis Nationwide Survey
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Sylvia Kaskafetou, Argiro Karakosta, Vana Sypsa, Natasa Kalpourtzi, Magda Gavana, Apostolos Vantarakis, George Rachiotis, Grigoris Chlouverakis, Grigoris Trypsianis, Paraskevi V. Voulgari, Yannis Alamanos, George Papatheodoridis, and Giota Touloumi
- Abstract
Background: Although several studies on hepatitis B (HBV), C (HCV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection have been conducted in Greece, little is known on the knowledge level of the Greek population towards these three infections. Our aim was to assess the knowledge level of the adult Greek general population about the HBV, HCV and HIV.Methods: Data were derived from the first general population Health Survey, Hprolipsis. The sample was selected by multistage stratified random sampling. A standardized questionnaire was administered by trained interviewers during home visits. A knowledge score was constructed based on responses to 17 per infection selected items and categorized in three levels; high (12-17 correct replies) medium (6-11) and low (0-5). Among 8,341 eligible individuals, 6,006 were recruited (response rate:72%) and 5,878 adults (≥18 years) were included in the analysis. Results: Only 30.4%, 21.6%, and 29.6% of the participants had a high overall knowledge level of HBV, HCV and HIV, respectively. These low percentages were mainly attributed to the high levels of misconception about transmission modes (65.9%, 67.2%, and 67.9%, respectively). Results showed that increasing age and living out of the big metropolitan cities were associated with decreased odds of having higher knowledge. Female gender, higher education level, higher monthly family income, higher medical risk score, history of testing and being born in Greece or Cyprus, were associated with increased odds of having higher knowledge. Conclusions: There are significant knowledge gaps in the Greek general population regarding modes of transmission, preventive measures and treatment availability for HBV, HCV and HIV. There is an urgent need for large scale but also localized awareness activities targeted to less privileged populations, to fill the gaps in knowledge and increase population engagement in preventive measures.
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- 2022
42. Tixagevimab/Cilgavimab for Treatment of Hospitalised COVID-19 Patients: A Randomised, Double-Blind, Phase 3 Trial
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Thomas L. Holland, Adit A. Ginde, Roger Paredes, Thomas A. Murray, Nicole Engen, Greg Grandits, Andrew Vekstein, Noel Ivey, Ahmad Mourad, Uriel Sandkovsky, Robert L. Gottlieb, Mezgebe Berhe, Mamta Jain, Rubria Marines-Price, Barbine Tchamba Agbor Agbor, Lourdes Mateu, Sergio Espana-Cueto, Gemma Llados, Eleftherios Mylonakis, Ralph Rogers, Fadi Shehadeh, Michael R. Filbin, Kathryn A. Hibbert, Kami Kim, Thanh Tran, Peter E. Morris, Evan P. Cassity, Barbara Trautner, Lavannya M. Pandit, Kirk U. Knowlton, Lindsay Leither, Michael A. Matthay, Angela J. Rogers, Wonder Drake, Beatrice Jones, Garyfallia Poulakou, Konstantinos N. Syrigos, Eduardo Fernandez-Cruz, Marisa Di Natale, Eyad Almasri, Leire Balerdi-Sarasola, Sanjay R. Bhagani, Katherine L. Boyle, Jonathan D. Casey, Peter Chen, David J. Douin, D. Clark Files, Huldrych F. Günthard, R. Duncan Hite, Robert C. Hyzy, Akram Khan, Moses Kibirige, Robert Kidega, Ivan Kimuli, Francis Kiweewa, Jens Ulrik Stæhr Jensen, Bradley G. Leshnower, Joseph K. Lutaakome, Prasad Manian, Vidya Menon, Jose Luis Morales-Rull, Darragh O'Mahony, J. Scott Overcash, Srikant Ramachandruni, Jay S. Steingrub, Hassan S. Taha, Michael Waters, Barnaby E. Young, Andrew N. Phillips, Daniel D. Murray, Tomas O. Jensen, Maria L. Padilla, David Sahner, Katy Shaw-Saliba, Robin L. Dewar, Marc Teitelbaum, Ven Natarajan, M. Tauseef Rehman, Sarah Pett, Fleur Hudson, Giota Touloumi, Samuel M. Brown, Wesley H. Self, Christina C. Chang, Adriana Sanchez, Amy C. Weintrob, Timothy Hatlen, Birgit Grund, Shweta Sharma, Cavan S. Reilly, Pedro Garbes, Mark T. Esser, Alison Templeton, Abdel G. Babiker, Victoria J. Davey, Annetine C. Gelijns, Elizabeth S. Higgs, Virginia Kan, Gail Matthews, B. Taylor Thompson, James D. Neaton, H. Clifford Lane, and Jens Lundgren
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History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
43. Human Immunotypes Impose Selection on Viral Genotypes Through Viral Epitope Specificity
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Dan Turner, Huldrych F. Günthard, Mark N. Polizzotto, Rasmus L. Marvig, Sandra E. Safo, James D. Neaton, Migle Gabrielaite, Giota Touloumi, Daniel D Murray, Adrian G. Zucco, Christina Ekenberg, H. Clifford Lane, Alejandro Arenas-Pinto, Linos Vandekerckhove, Virginia L. Kan, Marc Bennedbæk, Jens D Lundgren, and University of Zurich
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0301 basic medicine ,10028 Institute of Medical Virology ,Adult ,Male ,viral genomics ,Genotype ,Context (language use) ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Genome-wide association study ,610 Medicine & health ,HIV Infections ,Human leukocyte antigen ,Genome, Viral ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Epitope ,10234 Clinic for Infectious Diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epitopes ,Major Articles and Brief Reports ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,GWAS ,Allele ,Genetics ,genome-to-genome analysis ,genome-wide association study ,Genome, Human ,HIV ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,Human genetics ,viral load ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV-1 ,Female ,Viral load ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,host genomics ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
BackgroundUnderstanding the genetic interplay between human hosts and infectious pathogens is crucial for how we interpret virulence factors. Here, we tested for associations between HIV and host genetics, and interactive genetic effects on viral load (VL) in HIV-positive antiretroviral treatment-naive clinical trial participants.MethodsHIV genomes were sequenced and the encoded amino acid (AA) variants were associated with VL, human single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), and imputed HLA alleles using generalized linear models with Bonferroni correction.ResultsHuman (388 501 SNPs) and HIV (3010 variants) genetic data were available for 2122 persons. Four HIV variants were associated with VL (P ConclusionsOur results show the importance of immunotype specificity on viral antigenic determinants, and the identified genetic interplay emphasizes that viral and human genetics should be studied in the context of each other.Clinical Trials Registration: NCT00867048.
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- 2021
44. Hepatitis B, C and human immunodeficiency virus knowledge among the general greek population: results from the Hprolipsis nationwide survey
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Sylvia, Kaskafetou, Argiro, Karakosta, Vana, Sypsa, Natasa, Kalpourtzi, Magda, Gavana, Apostolos, Vantarakis, George, Rachiotis, Grigoris, Chlouverakis, Grigoris, Trypsianis, Paraskevi V, Voulgari, Yannis, Alamanos, George, Papatheodoridis, Giota, Touloumi, and Maria, Kantzanou
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Adult ,Hepatitis B virus ,Greece ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Prevalence ,Humans ,HIV ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Hepatitis B ,Hepatitis C - Abstract
Although several studies on hepatitis B (HBV), C (HCV) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection have been conducted in Greece, little is known on the knowledge level of the Greek population towards these three infections. Our aim was to assess the knowledge level of the adult Greek general population about the HBV, HCV and HIV.Data were derived from the first general population health survey, Hprolipsis. The sample was selected by multistage stratified random sampling. A standardized questionnaire was administered by trained interviewers during home visits. A knowledge score was constructed based on responses to 17 per infection selected items and categorized in three levels; high (12-17 correct replies) medium (6-11) and low (0-5). Among 8,341 eligible individuals, 6,006 were recruited (response rate: 72%) and 5,878 adults (≥ 18 years) were included in the analysis. The statistical analysis accounted for the study design.Only 30.4%, 21.6%, and 29.6% of the participants had a high overall knowledge level of HBV, HCV and HIV, respectively. These low percentages were mainly attributed to the high levels of misconception about transmission modes (65.9%, 67.2%, and 67.9%, respectively). Results showed that increasing age and living out of the big metropolitan cities were associated with decreased odds of having higher knowledge. Female gender, higher education level, higher monthly family income, higher medical risk score, history of testing and being born in Greece or Cyprus, were associated with increased odds of having higher knowledge.There are significant knowledge gaps in the Greek general population regarding modes of transmission, preventive measures and treatment availability for HBV, HCV and HIV. There is an urgent need for large scale but also localized awareness activities targeted to less privileged populations, to fill the gaps in knowledge and increase population engagement in preventive measures.
- Published
- 2021
45. Joint modeling of longitudinal and competing-risk data using cumulative incidence functions for the failure submodels accounting for potential failure cause misclassification through double sampling
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Christos Thomadakis, Loukia Meligkotsidou, Constantin T Yiannoutsos, and Giota Touloumi
- Subjects
Statistics and Probability ,General Medicine ,Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty - Abstract
Summary Most of the literature on joint modeling of longitudinal and competing-risk data is based on cause-specific hazards, although modeling of the cumulative incidence function (CIF) is an easier and more direct approach to evaluate the prognosis of an event. We propose a flexible class of shared parameter models to jointly model a normally distributed marker over time and multiple causes of failure using CIFs for the survival submodels, with CIFs depending on the “true” marker value over time (i.e., removing the measurement error). The generalized odds rate transformation is applied, thus a proportional subdistribution hazards model is a special case. The requirement that the all-cause CIF should be bounded by 1 is formally considered. The proposed models are extended to account for potential failure cause misclassification, where the true failure causes are available in a small random sample of individuals. We also provide a multistate representation of the whole population by defining mutually exclusive states based on the marker values and the competing risks. Based solely on the assumed joint model, we derive fully Bayesian posterior samples for state occupation and transition probabilities. The proposed approach is evaluated in a simulation study and, as an illustration, it is fitted to real data from people with HIV.
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- 2021
46. SCREENING FOR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION WITH ROUTINE AUTOMATED BLOOD PRESSURE MEASUREMENT IN THE ELDERLY: THE NATIONAL HEALTH SURVEY EMENO IN GREECE
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George S. Stergiou, Ariadni Menti, Natasa Kalpourtzi, Magda Gavana, Apostolos Vantarakis, Gregory Chlouverakis, Christos Hadjichristodoulou, Gregory Trypsianis, Paraskevi Voulgari, Yannis Alamanos, Argiro Karakosta, and Giota Touloumi
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Physiology ,Internal Medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2022
47. Heterogeneous contributions of change in population distribution of body mass index to change in obesity and underweight
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Maryam Sharafkhah, Emanuel Zitt, Majid Ezzati, Luxia Zhang, Young-Ho Khang, Ellina Rakhimova, Kairit Mikkel, Tiina Vlasoff, Eruke E. Egbagbe, Sidsel Graff-Iversen, Ilona Nenko, Magdalena Klimek, Mathilde Savy, Sanjib Kumar Sharma, Alfonso Siani, Luís Lopes, Vanina Bongard, Gregor Jurak, Jacqueline F. Price, Christina-Paulina Lambrinou, Maria Lc Iurilli, Rainford J. Wilks, Bontha V. Babu, Fereidoun Azizi, Harunobu Nakamura, Marialaura Bonaccio, Angela Döring, Zhenyu Zhang, Naser Ahmadi, Jolanta Słowikowska-Hilczer, Ana Paula Carlos Cândido, Clive Osmond, Thirunavukkarasu Sathish, Robert J. Adams, Themistoklis Tzotzas, Reina Engle-Stone, Atul Trivedi, Shoichiro Tsugane, Niels Møller, Jorge Bezerra, Dénes Molnár, Muhammad Fadhli Mohd Yusoff, Badreya Al-Lahou, J. Jaime Miranda, Bahram Mohajer, Sigmund A. Anderssen, Lital Keinan Boker, Eero Kajantie, Martin Gulliford, Maties Torrent, Sumit Bharadwaj, Toshiharu Ninomiya, Zbigniew Gaciong, Nayu Ikeda, Li Juan Wu, Adrian Richter, Licia Iacoviello, Marc J. Gunter, Wenbin Wei, Norsyamlina Che Abdul Rahim, Eman Aly, Ambady Ramachandran, Nils Lehmann, Soile E. Puhakka, Giovanni Veronesi, Hongsheng Bi, Eiji Oda, Jia Li Duan, Per Tynelius, José María Huerta, Janne Schurmann Tolstrup, Rodrigo M. Carrillo-Larco, Rosangela Fernandes Lucena Batista, Victoria E Soto-Rojas, Hanno Ulmer, Shukri F. Mohamed, Anthony Kafatos, Suyeon Park, Mohsen Ibrahim, Hamed Pouraram, Bin Zhou, May Soe Aung, Lars Bo Andersen, Erfan Ghasemi, René Charles Sylva, Himanshu K. Chaturvedi, Luc Dauchet, Ahmad Ali Zainuddin, Angela Chetrit, Dan Zhu, Valérie Deschamps, Ko Ko Zaw, Peter Vollenweider, Tomas Vega, Yves Martin-Prével, Mahfuzar Rahman, Dorja Vočanec, Roman Topor-Madry, Vinay Nangia, Herculina S. Kruger, Asher Fawwad, Emily Sonestedt, Elena Pahomova, Aleksander Giwercman, Elżbieta Dziankowska-Zaborszczyk, Cecilia Björkelund, Tatjana Hejgaard, Maria Puiu, Maria Benedetta Donati, Andrew Wong, Carlos P. Boissonnet, Santosh K. Bhargava, Patrick Kolsteren, Dermot O'Reilly, Bahareh Kheiri, Wolfgang Kratzer, Susanne R. de Rooij, H. Bas Bueno-de-Mesquita, Günther Fink, José R. Banegas, Michele Monroy-Valle, Drude Molbo, Mahmudur Rahman, Hynek Pikhart, Rafael N. Pichardo, Massimo Salvetti, Hui Cai, Sarah Filippi, Georg Posch, Hung-Kwan So, Yonghua Hu, Katsuyasu Kouda, Joana Carvalho, Gailute Bernotiene, Hannu Uusitalo, Thein Thein Htay, Felix Kaducu, Maigeng Zhou, Lars Ängquist, Thi Tuyet-Hanh Tran, Charles Lunogelo, Michel Joffres, Sabina Zambon, Ronald D. Gregor, Vayia Rarra, Seyed Mohammad Hashemi-Shahri, Loreto Santa Marina, Galina Obreja, Rudolf Kaaks, Aya Mostafa, Maria do Carmo Franco, Beata Gurzkowska, Chien-Jen Chen, Marie Moitry, Nizal Sarrafzadegan, Xiangjun Wang, Diego Giulliano Destro Christofaro, Imperia Brajkovich, Fangfang Chen, Francesco Panza, Ling Yang, Holly E. Syddall, Cecily Kelleher, Michael Tornaritis, Ningli Wang, Lutgarde Thijs, Marjolein Visser, Angelika Schaffrath Rosario, María José Tormo, Jostein Steene-Johannessen, Norbert Amougou, Emmanuella Magriplis, Mar Alvarez-Pedrerol, Jingli Gao, Stig E. Bojesen, Giuseppe Grosso, Seongjun Ha, Lauren Lissner, Mikhail Benet, Anastasia Markaki, Sanjay Rampal, Antônio Augusto Moura da Silva, Maria Lorenza Muiesan, Angelique Chan, Yvonne T. van der Schouw, Annamari Lundqvist, Philippe Amouyel, Kristyna Zejglicova, Charalambos Hadjigeorgiou, João Breda, Jørgen Meisfjord, Fatima Zahra Laamiri, Carl Lachat, Kai-Uwe Saum, Vilma Irazola, Leng Huat Foo, Óscar Lopes, Dickman Gareta, Flavio Nervi, Imre Janszky, Ruzena Kubinova, Terho Lehtimäki, Mario V. Capanzana, Moyses Szklo, Ramfis Nieto-Martínez, Viswanathan Mohan, Shuohua Chen, Arvind Pandey, Luigi Palmieri, Roya Kelishadi, Srinivasan Kannan, Jie Mi, Robert Beaglehole, Liliana Dacica, Jyrki K. Virtanen, Mohan Deepa, Peter Ueda, Isti Ilmiati Fujiati, Hermann Pohlabeln, Morten Sodemann, Jytte Halkjær, Zbigniew Kułaga, Sophie Visvikis-Siest, Farshad Farzadfar, Mohsen Azimi-Nezhad, Henry Völzke, Karolina Milkowska, Zahra Mohammadi, Belgin Ünal, Magda Gasull, George S. Stergiou, Marshall K. Tulloch-Reid, Seppo Koskinen, James E. Bennett, Marcela González-Gross, Virginija Dulskiene, Idris Guessous, Assembekov Batyrbek, Kamarul Imran Musa, Jeannette Lee, Josep Redon, Bihungum Bista, Luisa M Macieira, Johan Sundström, Andres Metspalu, Lariane M Ono, Flora A. Ukoli, Salar Rahimikazerooni, Andrea Gualtieri, Trevor S. Ferguson, Félicité Tchibindat, Eliza Cinteza, Ha Tp Do, Tajana Zeljkovic Vrkic, Tuyen D Le, Alison J. Hayes, Abdul Basit, Chandini Nekkantti, Teresa Norat, Eunice Ugel, Gulmira Aitmurzaeva, Mariachiara Di Cesare, Abdul Hamid Zargar, Vincenzo Solfrizzi, Garry L. Jennings, Aline Meirhaeghe, Kaare Christensen, Päivi Mäki, Xu Lin, Ali Esmaeili, Joanna Baran, Aneta Grajda, Renata Cifkova, Alexandre C. Pereira, Martin Bobak, Iuliia A Rusakova, Keiu Nelis, Damian K Francis, Guansheng Ma, Axel C. Carlsson, Alejandro Diaz, Alireza Ansari-Moghaddam, N Capkova, Zumin Shi, Maria Turley, Imelda A. Agdeppa, Helena I. S. Nogueira, Marcia Scazufca, Katharina Maruszczak, Natascia Rinaldo, Paulo A. Lotufo, Nuno Lunet, Thor Aspelund, Caroline H.D. Fall, Antonio Cabrera de León, Ahmad Faudzi Yusoff, Holger Theobald, Beatriz D'Agord Schaan, Pedro Marques-Vidal, William A. Neal, Mihai Gafencu, Tandi E. Matsha, Ana B. Crujeiras, Ahmad Reza Dorosty, Alain Morejon, Weili Yan, Dominique Hange, Bekbolat Zholdin, Frédéric Gottrand, Jorge Mota, Jana Námešná, Stevo Popovic, Louise Eriksen, Line Lund Kårhus, Cihangir Erem, Juergen Breckenkamp, Mathilde Kersting, Yi Song, Martin McKee, Aleksandra Gomula, Rafaela Rosário, Enzo Manzato, S. Goya Wannamethee, Sounnia Mediene Benchekor, Azim Nejatizadeh, Krishna Kumar Aryal, Juan P. González-Rivas, Vedrana Sember, Stephen T. McGarvey, Jukka T. Salonen, Patrick Pasquet, Patricia Varona-Pérez, Amelia C. Crampin, Ramin Heshmat, Violeta Iotova, Juvenal Soares Dias-da-Costa, Oye Gureje, Aletta E. Schutte, João Luiz Bastos, Anelise Reis Gaya, Konrad Jamrozik, Dalia Luksiene, Amina Barkat, Maria Paula Santos, José Camolas, Azli Baharudin, Diego Vanuzzo, Doris Stöckl, Rosalynn Siantar, Jouko Saramies, Albertino Damasceno, Davood Khalili, Simona Bo, Martina Müller-Nurasyid, Dominique Cottel, Markku Peltonen, Fikru Tullu, Ana Isabel Rito, Angélica Ochoa-Avilés, Annette J. Dobson, Christopher T. Cowell, Charumathi Sabanayagam, Rildo de Souza Wanderley Júnior, Oanh T. H. Trinh, Farahnaz Joukar, Mostafa K. Mohamed, Mostafa Qorbani, Jeongseon Kim, Helmut Schröder, Machi Suka, Natasja M. van Schoor, Jussi Kauhanen, Teresa Haugsgjerd, Goodarz Danaei, M. Fernanda Lima-Costa, Yong Tao, Elisabetta L. Romeo, Grazyna Jasienska, Victor Guillermo Sequera, Kazem Mohammad, Yanina Zócalo, Fernanda Cunha Soares, Jianfeng Wu, Mohammad Esmaeel Motlagh, María Elena Díaz-Sánchez, Monika Zuziak, Eldridge Ferrer, Anette Varbo, Leila Beltrami Moreira, Jeremy M. Jacobs, Kenneth James, Elena Sacchini, Pascal Bovet, Mahboubeh Parsaeian, Tania Lopez, Ya Xing Wang, Wojciech Drygas, Jody C Miller, Svetlana A. Shalnova, Maria Elisa Zapata, Chung T Nguyen, Nimmathota Arlappa, Edwige Landais, Thorkild I. A. Sørensen, Jeannette Klimont, Amirabbas Momenan, Erik J. Timmermans, Mari-Liis Tammesoo, Jost B. Jonas, Stefania Toselli, Maria Teresa Anselmo Olinto, Bahman Cheraghian, Kouamelan Doua, Esteban Carmuega, Marjeta Mišigoj-Duraković, Bo Werner, M. Arfan Ikram, Breige A. McNulty, Christa Meisinger, Clara Homs, Namuna Shrestha, Alina Kerimkulova, Youcef Laid, Claes Ohlsson, Alicia Matijasevich, Alison J Price, Ala'a Alkerwi, Kristine H. Allin, Lorenza Pilotto, Mohannad Al Nsour, Ingunn Holden Bergh, Marianna Noale, Heba Fouad, Vilnis Dzerve, Novie O. Younger-Coleman, Peter Willeit, Andrea R. V. R. Horimoto, Freda Pitakaka, Habiba Ben Romdhane, Savvas C. Savva, Rajeev Gupta, Jennifer Servais, Cristina Padez, Sarah P. Garnett, Maria del Cristo Rodriguez-Perez, Michala Lustigová, Tien Yin Wong, Rosa Haghshenas, Jonathan Giovannelli, Christina Howitt, Marleen E. Hendriks, Fadia AlBuhairan, Huashuai Chen, Gretchen A Stevens, Luís B. Sardinha, David Goltzman, Jenny M. Kindblom, Karina Mary de Paiva, Yousef Khader, Eric Monterrubio-Flores, Rajendra Pradeepa, Yi-Ting Lin, Martin Neovius, Juan Francisco Miquel, Ellis Owusu-Dabo, Anil Poudyal, Marzieh Katibeh, Tanja Stocks, Veronica Mocanu, Ulla Roggenbuck, Robespierre Ribeiro, Gabriele Eiben, Mary Simon, Christine Cameron, Hamid Hakimi, Kamel Ajlouni, Jakub Stokwiszewski, Iulia Jurca Simina, Pietro Amedeo Modesti, Frederick C. W. Wu, Peter Kristensen, Charles Mondo, Felix Gutzwiller, Mariana Sbaraini, Martijn Huisman, Betina H. Thuesen, Queenie Chan, Antonisamy Belavendra, Artur Mazur, Ulf Ekelund, Laura A. Rodríguez-Villamizar, Marcos André Moura-dos-Santos, Jean Ferrières, Farhad Zamani, Shina Avi, Yves Kameli, Luis Paulo Gomes Mascarenhas, Aluísio J D Barros, Thomas Meinertz Dantoft, Hossein Poustchi, Farid Najafi, Giovanni de Gaetano, Azaliia M Tuliakova, Vera Lanska, Tint Swe Latt, Matthias Bopp, Abbas Rezaianzadeh, Rod Jackson, Johan Van der Heyden, Reecha Sofat, Koen Van Herck, Allan G. Hill, Con Burns, Emanuela Pettenuzzo, Ming-Dong Wang, Stela McLachlan, Ulrike Gehring, Ranko Stevanovic, Nagalla Balakrishna, Lekhraj Rampal, Marjolijn C. E. Bragt, Saeid Eslami, Napoleón Pérez-Farinós, G. K. 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Simons, Rachael McLean, Japhet Killewo, Ramón Suárez-Medina, Y Nikitin, Eng Joo Tan, Jean Claude Mbanya, Aroor Bhagyalaxmi, Renata Kuciene, Kairat Davletov, Jose Eugenio Lozano, Afshin Ostovar, Niloofar Peykari, Guy De Backer, Soheir H Ahmed, Nicholas J. Wareham, Sai Yin Ho, Constanta Huidumac Petrescu, Maria Hassapidou, Iris Pigeot, Myriam Galfo, Susana Cararo Confortin, Blanca Sandra Ruiz-Betancourt, W. M. Monique Verschuren, Catterina Ferreccio, Fabio Galvano, Leila Houti, Daniel Bia, Annika Rosengren, Marcin Rutkowski, Biruta Velika, Joana Araújo, Fernando Rigo, Angela Spinelli, Scott B. McLean, Shirin Djalalinia, Marie Kunešová, Boban Mugoša, Sania Nishtar, Mangesh S. Pednekar, Shahla AlDhukair, Helle-Mai Loit, Antonis Zampelas, Altan Onat, Maciej Banach, Shohreh Naderimagham, Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri, Maja Bæksgaard Jørgensen, Yin Guo, Ewelina Czenczek-Lewandowska, Parasmani Dasgupta, Elvis Oa Wambiya, Inge Huybrechts, Raimund Erbel, Jari Jokelainen, Ana P. Ortiz, Stefan Kiechl, Emmanuel Cohen, Caleb Ochimana, Shynar Abdrakhmanova, Laura Censi, Iqbal Bata, Geetha R Menon, Snehalatha Chamukuttan, Pedro Plans-Rubio, Domenico Palli, Ana Azevedo, Slawomir Koziel, Benoît Salanave, Parinaz Mehdipour, Shu Ti Chiou, Lela Sturua, Lubica Ticha, Felipe Vogt Cureau, Jin Soo Moon, Ming-Hui Zhao, Urho M. Kujala, Nathalie Michels, Ertugrul Celikcan, Jaakko Tuomilehto, Judith Benedics, Tobias F. Rinke de Wit, Agnès Le Port, Reza Homayounfar, Andrea Rodriguez-Martinez, Tai Hing Lam, Yn-Tz Sung, Jürgen König, Kodavanti Mallikharjuna Rao, Hazzaa M. Al-Hazzaa, Karen Morgan, Bogdan Wojtyniak, Cynthia M. Pérez, Ilse Khouw, Manoli Garcia-de-la-Hera, Dong Wook Shin, Genc Burazeri, Ausra Petrauskiene, Charles Sossa Jérome, Kenisha Russell Jonsson, José Boggia, Daniela Galeone, Alice Bonilla-Vargas, Han Cg Kemper, Rahman Shiri, Stefaan Demarest, Else Karin Grøholt, San-Lin You, Adelheid Weber, Juha Auvinen, Aida Pilav, Sibel Gogen, Suzanne N Morin, Wan Mohamad Wan Bebakar, Viviane Cunha Cardoso, Kavumpurathu Raman Thankappan, Hana Zamrazilová, Frank Claessens, Karien Stronks, Helen Gonçalves, Tahir Aris, Luis Revilla, Sérgio Viana Peixoto, Zhamilya Battakova, Jing Liu, Eliza Markidou Ioannidou, Leticia Hernandez Cadena, Priscilla Duboz, Sandjaja, Tiina Laatikainen, Rafel Ramos, Sareh Eghtesad, Judith Simons, Orn Olafsson, E. Shyong Tai, Louise A. Baur, Nihal Thomas, Aung Soe Htet, Bente Sparboe-Nilsen, Paul Elliott, Soon-Woo Park, Angel R. 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Eriksson, Margarita Samoutian, Andreia N. Pizarro, Mohammed Rasoul Tarawneh, Jean Woo, Kaspar Staub, Maria Teresa Menzano, Mojtaba Farjam, Adroaldo Cesar Araujo Gaya, Mohammad El-khateeb, Zulfiqar A Bhutta, Mukharram M. Bikbov, Hsien-Ho Lin, Oscar Noboa, Thomas Waldhör, Garry Brian, Simona Costanzo, Frank Tanser, Nor Azwany Yaacob, Michelle Cilia, Ivo Rakovac, Bill Stavreski, Ioannis Pagkalos, Ivan Pećin, Carlo M. Barbagallo, Abla M. Sibai, Yuna He, Matsuda Fumihiko, Bharathi Viswanathan, Ali Reza Safarpour, Wei Cheng Lo, Abdullatif Husseini, Jiang He, Liv Elin Torheim, Nipa Rojroongwasinkul, Aicha Soumare, Astrid Petersmann, Tomasz Grodzicki, Davide Noto, Panayiotis K. Yiallouros, Kelias P. Msyamboza, William R. 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Casajús, Guang Ning, Lutgart Braeckman, Dirk Vanderschueren, Jochanan Stessman, Ivana Radic, Yi Zeng, Hans Concin, Damaskini Valvi, Sari Hantunen, Catherine Kyobutungi, Diego Augusto Santos Silva, Wenhua Zhao, Sok King Ong, Anne W. Taylor, Iraj Nabipour, Justyna Godos, Cyrus Cooper, Mattias Johansson, Samuel C. Dumith, Magdalena Muc, Sabine Schipf, Idowu O Senbanjo, Jim Mann, Rajaa Al-Raddadi, Yih Chung Tham, Kay-Tee Khaw, Joseph Cacciottolo, Ana Henriques, Sahar Saeedi Moghaddam, Reza Mohammadpourhodki, Bernhard O. Boehm, Songhomitra Panda-Jonas, Iveta Pudule, Elisabete Ramos, Lacramioara Aurelia Brinduse, Paul H. Lee, Terence W O'Neill, Javad Aghazadeh-Attari, Margus Punab, Bojan Jelaković, Camilla T. Damsgaard, Takafumi Ishida, Ekaterina Chikova-Iscener, Mirjam M. Heinen, Tazeen H. Jafar, Semánová Csilla, Constance Schultsz, Santiago F. Gomez, Raija Korpelainen, Edward W. Gregg, Laura Gutierrez, Pierre Traissac, Victor M. Herrera, Aristides M. Machado-Rodrigues, Fatemeh Malekzadeh, Shouling Wu, Jennifer L. Baker, Clicerio González-Villalpando, Eleonora d'Orsi, Irene G. M. van Valkengoed, Anna Fijałkowska, Wen-Harn Pan, Gregor Starc, Meghnath Dhimal, Murat Topbaş, George Moschonis, Robert Eggertsen, Abdullah Alkandari, Quang Ngoc Nguyen, Janette Walton, Elnaz Faramarzi, Saeed Dastgiri, Lien Braeckevelt, Nasheeta Peer, Radka Taxová Braunerová, Mohamed M. Ali, Steiner Krokstad, Harald Geiger, Morteza Shamshirgaran, Lela Shengelia, María Ángeles Dal Re Saavedra, Silvana Donoso, Khem Bahadur Karki, Timothy J. Key, Maria G. Grammatikopoulou, Susana Vale, Felix K. Assah, Juan A Rivera, Peter H. Whincup, Oana-Florentina Gheorghe-Fronea, Cassiano Ricardo Rech, Paul Ferdinand M. Reganit, Rachakulla Hari Kumar, Jaakko Mursu, Luis A. Moreno, Glen Gironella, Jelena Kos, Tilema Cama, Haakon E. Meyer, Jun Ma, Raphael E. Arku, Ziad Abdeen, Dianna J. 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Ltd, Orebro University, University of London, Universitas Indonesia, Institute of Food and Nutrition Development of Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Children’s Hospital of Fudan University, University of Cyprus, Niigata University, International Medical University, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Center for Diabetes and Endocrine Care, Peking University First Hospital, Jiangsu Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Sun Yat-sen University, West Kazakhstan Medical University, Inner Mongolia Medical University, University of Ghana, Maria Lc Iurilli , Bin Zhou , James E Bennett , Rodrigo M Carrillo-Larco , Marisa K Sophiea , Andrea Rodriguez-Martinez , Honor Bixby , Bethlehem D Solomon , Cristina Taddei , Goodarz Danaei , Mariachiara Di Cesare , Gretchen A Stevens , Leanne M Riley , Stefan Savin , Melanie J Cowan , Pascal Bovet , Albertino Damasceno , Adela Chirita-Emandi , Alison J Hayes , Nayu Ikeda , Rod T Jackson , Young-Ho Khang , Avula Laxmaiah , Jing Liu , J Jaime Miranda , Olfa Saidi , Sylvain Sebert , Maroje Sorić , Gregor Starc , Edward W Gregg , Leandra Abarca-Gómez , Ziad A Abdeen , Shynar Abdrakhmanova , Suhaila Abdul Ghaffar , Hanan F Abdul Rahim , Niveen M Abu-Rmeileh , Jamila Abubakar Garba , Benjamin Acosta-Cazares , Robert J Adams , Wichai Aekplakorn , Kaosar Afsana , Shoaib Afzal , Imelda A Agdeppa , Javad Aghazadeh-Attari , Carlos A Aguilar-Salinas , Charles Agyemang , Mohamad Hasnan Ahmad , Noor Ani Ahmad , Ali Ahmadi , Naser Ahmadi , Soheir H Ahmed , Wolfgang Ahrens , Gulmira Aitmurzaeva , Kamel Ajlouni , Hazzaa M Al-Hazzaa , Badreya Al-Lahou , Rajaa Al-Raddadi , Monira Alarouj , Fadia AlBuhairan , Shahla AlDhukair , Mohamed M Ali , Abdullah Alkandari , Ala'a Alkerwi , Kristine Allin , Mar Alvarez-Pedrerol , Eman Aly , Deepak N Amarapurkar , Parisa Amiri , Norbert Amougou , Philippe Amouyel , Lars Bo Andersen , Sigmund A Anderssen , Lars Ängquist , Ranjit Mohan Anjana , Alireza Ansari-Moghaddam , Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri , Joana Araújo , Inger Ariansen , Tahir Aris , Raphael E Arku , Nimmathota Arlappa , Krishna K Aryal , Thor Aspelund , Felix K Assah , Maria Cecília F Assunção , May Soe Aung , Juha Auvinen , Mária Avdicová , Shina Avi , Ana Azevedo , Mohsen Azimi-Nezhad , Fereidoun Azizi , Mehrdad Azmin , Bontha V Babu , Maja Bæksgaard Jørgensen , Azli Baharudin , Suhad Bahijri , Jennifer L Baker , Nagalla Balakrishna , Mohamed Bamoshmoosh , Maciej Banach , Piotr Bandosz , José R Banegas , Joanna Baran , Barbagallo CM, Alberto Barceló , Amina Barkat , Aluisio Jd Barros , Mauro Virgílio Gomes Barros , Abdul Basit , Joao Luiz D Bastos , Iqbal Bata , Anwar M Batieha , Rosangela L Batista , Zhamilya Battakova , Assembekov Batyrbek , Louise A Baur , Robert Beaglehole , Silvia Bel-Serrat , Antonisamy Belavendra , Habiba Ben Romdhane , Judith Benedics , Mikhail Benet , Ingunn Holden Bergh , Salim Berkinbayev , Antonio Bernabe-Ortiz , Gailute Bernotiene , Heloísa Bettiol , Jorge Bezerra , Aroor Bhagyalaxmi , Sumit Bharadwaj , Santosh K Bhargava , Zulfiqar A Bhutta , Hongsheng Bi , Yufang Bi , Daniel Bia , Elysée Claude Bika Lele, Mukharram M Bikbov , Bihungum Bista , Dusko J Bjelica , Peter Bjerregaard , Espen Bjertness , Marius B Bjertness , Cecilia Björkelund , Katia V Bloch , Anneke Blokstra , Simona Bo , Martin Bobak , Lynne M Boddy , Bernhard O Boehm , Heiner Boeing , Jose G Boggia , Elena Bogova , Carlos P Boissonnet , Stig E Bojesen , Marialaura Bonaccio , Vanina Bongard , Alice Bonilla-Vargas , Matthias Bopp , Herman Borghs , Lien Braeckevelt , Lutgart Braeckman , Marjolijn Ce Bragt , Imperia Brajkovich , Francesco Branca , Juergen Breckenkamp , João Breda , Hermann Brenner , Lizzy M Brewster , Garry R Brian , Lacramioara Brinduse , Sinead Brophy , Graziella Bruno , H Bas Bueno-de-Mesquita , Anna Bugge , Marta Buoncristiano , Genc Burazeri , Con Burns , Antonio Cabrera de León , Joseph Cacciottolo , Hui Cai , Tilema Cama , Christine Cameron , José Camolas , Günay Can , Ana Paula C Cândido , Felicia Cañete , Mario V Capanzana , Nadežda Capková , Eduardo Capuano , Vincenzo Capuano , Marloes Cardol , Viviane C Cardoso , Axel C Carlsson , Esteban Carmuega , Joana Carvalho , José A Casajús , Felipe F Casanueva , Ertugrul Celikcan , Laura Censi , Marvin Cervantes-Loaiza , Juraci A Cesar , Snehalatha Chamukuttan , Angelique W Chan , Queenie Chan , Himanshu K Chaturvedi , Nish Chaturvedi , Norsyamlina Che Abdul Rahim , Miao Li Chee , Chien-Jen Chen , Fangfang Chen , Huashuai Chen , Shuohua Chen , Zhengming Chen , Ching-Yu Cheng , Bahman Cheraghian , Angela Chetrit , Ekaterina Chikova-Iscener , Arnaud Chiolero , Shu-Ti Chiou , María-Dolores Chirlaque , Belong Cho , Kaare Christensen , Diego G Christofaro , Jerzy Chudek , Renata Cifkova , Michelle Cilia , Eliza Cinteza , Frank Claessens , Janine Clarke , Els Clays , Emmanuel Cohen , Hans Concin , Susana C Confortin , Cyrus Cooper , Tara C Coppinger , Eva Corpeleijn , Simona Costanzo , Dominique Cottel , Chris Cowell , Cora L Craig , Amelia C Crampin , Ana B Crujeiras , Semánová Csilla , Alexandra M Cucu , Liufu Cui , Felipe V Cureau , Ewelina Czenczek-Lewandowska , Graziella D'Arrigo , Eleonora d'Orsi , Liliana Dacica , María Ángeles Dal Re Saavedra , Jean Dallongeville , Camilla T Damsgaard , Rachel Dankner , Thomas M Dantoft , Parasmani Dasgupta , Saeed Dastgiri , Luc Dauchet , Kairat Davletov , Guy De Backer , Dirk De Bacquer , Giovanni de Gaetano , Stefaan De Henauw , Paula Duarte de Oliveira , David De Ridder , Karin De Ridder , Susanne R de Rooij , Delphine De Smedt , Mohan Deepa , Alexander D Deev , Vincent Jr DeGennaro , Abbas Dehghan , Hélène Delisle , Francis Delpeuch , Stefaan Demarest , Elaine Dennison , Katarzyna Dereń , Valérie Deschamps , Meghnath Dhimal , Augusto F Di Castelnuovo , Juvenal Soares Dias-da-Costa , María Elena Díaz-Sánchez , Alejandro Diaz , Zivka Dika , Shirin Djalalinia , Visnja Djordjic , Ha Tp Do , Annette J Dobson , Maria Benedetta Donati , Chiara Donfrancesco , Silvana P Donoso , Angela Döring , Maria Dorobantu , Ahmad Reza Dorosty , Kouamelan Doua , Nico Dragano , Wojciech Drygas , Jia Li Duan , Charmaine A Duante , Priscilla Duboz , Rosemary B Duda , Vesselka Duleva , Virginija Dulskiene , Samuel C Dumith , Anar Dushpanova , Vilnis Dzerve , Elzbieta Dziankowska-Zaborszczyk , Ricky Eddie , Ebrahim Eftekhar , Eruke E Egbagbe , Robert Eggertsen , Sareh Eghtesad , Gabriele Eiben , Ulf Ekelund , Mohammad El-Khateeb , Jalila El Ati , Denise Eldemire-Shearer , Marie Eliasen , Paul Elliott , Reina Engle-Stone , Macia Enguerran , Rajiv T Erasmus , Raimund Erbel , Cihangir Erem , Louise Eriksen , Johan G Eriksson , Jorge Escobedo-de la Peña , Saeid Eslami , Ali Esmaeili , Alun Evans , David Faeh , Albina A Fakhretdinova , Caroline H Fall , Elnaz Faramarzi , Mojtaba Farjam , Victoria Farrugia Sant'Angelo , Farshad Farzadfar , Mohammad Reza Fattahi , Asher Fawwad , Francisco J Felix-Redondo , Trevor S Ferguson , Romulo A Fernandes , Daniel Fernández-Bergés , Daniel Ferrante , Thomas Ferrao , Marika Ferrari , Marco M Ferrario , Catterina Ferreccio , Eldridge Ferrer , Jean Ferrieres , Thamara Hubler Figueiró , Anna Fijalkowska , Günther Fink , Krista Fischer , Leng Huat Foo , Maria Forsner , Heba M Fouad , Damian K Francis , Maria do Carmo Franco , Ruth Frikke-Schmidt , Guillermo Frontera , Flavio D Fuchs , Sandra C Fuchs , Isti I Fujiati , Yuki Fujita , Matsuda Fumihiko , Takuro Furusawa , Zbigniew Gaciong , Mihai Gafencu , Andrzej Galbarczyk , Henrike Galenkamp , Daniela Galeone , Myriam Galfo , Fabio Galvano , Jingli Gao , Manoli Garcia-de-la-Hera , Marta García-Solano , Dickman Gareta , Sarah P Garnett , Jean-Michel Gaspoz , Magda Gasull , Adroaldo Cesar Araujo Gaya , Anelise Reis Gaya , Andrea Gazzinelli , Ulrike Gehring , Harald Geiger , Johanna M Geleijnse , Ali Ghanbari , Erfan Ghasemi , Oana-Florentina Gheorghe-Fronea , Simona Giampaoli , Francesco Gianfagna , Tiffany K Gill , Jonathan Giovannelli , Glen Gironella , Aleksander Giwercman , Konstantinos Gkiouras , Justyna Godos , Sibel Gogen , Marcel Goldberg , Rebecca A Goldsmith , David Goltzman , Santiago F Gómez , Aleksandra Gomula , Bruna Goncalves Cordeiro da Silva , Helen Gonçalves , David A Gonzalez-Chica , Marcela Gonzalez-Gross , Margot González-Leon , Juan P González-Rivas , Clicerio González-Villalpando , María-Elena González-Villalpando , Angel R Gonzalez , Frederic Gottrand , Antonio Pedro Graça , Sidsel Graff-Iversen , Dušan Grafnetter , Aneta Grajda , Maria G Grammatikopoulou , Ronald D Gregor , Tomasz Grodzicki , Else Karin Grøholt , Anders Grøntved , Giuseppe Grosso , Gabriella Gruden , Dongfeng Gu , Emanuela Gualdi-Russo , Pilar Guallar-Castillón , Andrea Gualtieri , Elias F Gudmundsson , Vilmundur Gudnason , Ramiro Guerrero , Idris Guessous , Andre L Guimaraes , Martin C Gulliford , Johanna Gunnlaugsdottir , Marc J Gunter , Xiu-Hua Guo , Yin Guo , Prakash C Gupta , Rajeev Gupta , Oye Gureje , Beata Gurzkowska , Enrique Gutiérrez-González , Laura Gutierrez , Felix Gutzwiller , Seongjun Ha , Farzad Hadaegh , Charalambos A Hadjigeorgiou , Rosa Haghshenas , Hamid Hakimi , Jytte Halkjær , Ian R Hambleton , Behrooz Hamzeh , Dominique Hange , Abu Am Hanif , Sari Hantunen , Jie Hao , Rachakulla Hari Kumar , Seyed Mohammad Hashemi-Shahri , Maria Hassapidou , Jun Hata , Teresa Haugsgjerd , Jiang He , Yuan He , Yuna He , Regina Heidinger-Felso , Mirjam Heinen , Tatjana Hejgaard , Marleen Elisabeth Hendriks , Rafael Dos Santos Henrique , Ana Henriques , Leticia Hernandez Cadena , Sauli Herrala , Victor M Herrera , Isabelle Herter-Aeberli , Ramin Heshmat , Allan G Hill , Sai Yin Ho , Suzanne C Ho , Michael Hobbs , Michelle Holdsworth , Reza Homayounfar , Clara Homs , Wilma M Hopman , Andrea Rvr Horimoto , Claudia M Hormiga , Bernardo L Horta , Leila Houti , Christina Howitt , Thein Thein Htay , Aung Soe Htet , Maung Maung Than Htike , Yonghua Hu , José María Huerta , Ilpo Tapani Huhtaniemi , Laetitia Huiart , Constanta Huidumac Petrescu , Martijn Huisman , Abdullatif Husseini , Chinh Nguyen Huu , Inge Huybrechts , Nahla Hwalla , Jolanda Hyska , Licia Iacoviello , Jesús M Ibarluzea , Mohsen M Ibrahim , Norazizah Ibrahim Wong , M Arfan Ikram , Violeta Iotova , Vilma E Irazola , Takafumi Ishida , Muhammad Islam , Sheikh Mohammed Shariful Islam , Masanori Iwasaki , Jeremy M Jacobs , Hashem Y Jaddou , Tazeen Jafar , Kenneth James , Kazi M Jamil , Konrad Jamrozik , Imre Janszky , Edward Janus , Juel Jarani , Marjo-Riitta Jarvelin , Grazyna Jasienska , Ana Jelakovic , Bojan Jelakovic , Garry Jennings , Anjani Kumar Jha , Chao Qiang Jiang , Ramon O Jimenez , Karl-Heinz Jöckel , Michel Joffres , Mattias Johansson , Jari J Jokelainen , Jost B Jonas , Jitendra Jonnagaddala , Torben Jørgensen , Pradeep Joshi , Farahnaz Joukar , Dragana P Jovic , Jacek J Jóźwiak , Anne Juolevi , Gregor Jurak , Iulia Jurca Simina , Vesna Juresa , Rudolf Kaaks , Felix O Kaducu , Anthony Kafatos , Eero O Kajantie , Zhanna Kalmatayeva , Ofra Kalter-Leibovici , Yves Kameli , Freja B Kampmann , Kodanda R Kanala , Srinivasan Kannan , Efthymios Kapantais , Argyro Karakosta , Line L Kårhus , Khem B Karki , Marzieh Katibeh , Joanne Katz , Peter T Katzmarzyk , Jussi Kauhanen , Prabhdeep Kaur , Maryam Kavousi , Gyulli M Kazakbaeva , Ulrich Keil , Lital Keinan Boker , Sirkka Keinänen-Kiukaanniemi , Roya Kelishadi , Cecily Kelleher , Han Cg Kemper , Andre P Kengne , Maryam Keramati , Alina Kerimkulova , Mathilde Kersting , Timothy Key , Yousef Saleh Khader , Davood Khalili , Kay-Tee Khaw , Bahareh Kheiri , Motahareh Kheradmand , Alireza Khosravi , Ilse Msl Khouw , Ursula Kiechl-Kohlendorfer , Stefan Kiechl , Japhet Killewo , Dong Wook Kim , Hyeon Chang Kim , Jeongseon Kim , Jenny M Kindblom , Heidi Klakk , Magdalena Klimek , Jeannette Klimont , Jurate Klumbiene , Michael Knoflach , Bhawesh Koirala , Elin Kolle , Patrick Kolsteren , Jürgen König , Raija Korpelainen , Paul Korrovits , Magdalena Korzycka , Jelena Kos , Seppo Koskinen , Katsuyasu Kouda , Viktoria A Kovacs , Sudhir Kowlessur , Slawomir Koziel , Jana Kratenova , Wolfgang Kratzer , Susi Kriemler , Peter Lund Kristensen , Steinar Krokstad , Daan Kromhout , Herculina S Kruger , Ruzena Kubinova , Renata Kuciene , Urho M Kujala , Enisa Kujundzic , Zbigniew Kulaga , R Krishna Kumar , Marie Kunešová , Pawel Kurjata , Yadlapalli S Kusuma , Kari Kuulasmaa , Catherine Kyobutungi , Quang Ngoc La , Fatima Zahra Laamiri , Tiina Laatikainen , Carl Lachat , Youcef Laid , Tai Hing Lam , Christina-Paulina Lambrinou , Edwige Landais , Vera Lanska , Georg Lappas , Bagher Larijani , Tint Swe Latt , Laura Lauria , Maria Lazo-Porras , Gwenaëlle Le Coroller , Khanh Le Nguyen Bao , Agnès Le Port , Tuyen D Le , Jeannette Lee , Jeonghee Lee , Paul H Lee , Nils Lehmann , Terho Lehtimäki , Daniel Lemogoum , Naomi S Levitt , Yanping Li , Merike Liivak , Christa L Lilly , Wei-Yen Lim , M Fernanda Lima-Costa , Hsien-Ho Lin , Xu Lin , Yi-Ting Lin , Lars Lind , Allan Linneberg , Lauren Lissner , Mieczyslaw Litwin , Lijuan Liu , Wei-Cheng Lo , Helle-Mai Loit , Khuong Quynh Long , Luis Lopes , Oscar Lopes , Esther Lopez-Garcia , Tania Lopez , Paulo A Lotufo , José Eugenio Lozano , Janice L Lukrafka , Dalia Luksiene , Annamari Lundqvist , Robert Lundqvist , Nuno Lunet , Charles Lunogelo , Michala Lustigová , Edyta Łuszczki , Guansheng Ma , Jun Ma , Xu Ma , George Ll Machado-Coelho , Aristides M Machado-Rodrigues , Luisa M Macieira , Ahmed A Madar , Stefania Maggi , Dianna J Magliano , Sara Magnacca , Emmanuella Magriplis , Gowri Mahasampath , Bernard Maire , Marjeta Majer , Marcia Makdisse , Päivi Mäki , Fatemeh Malekzadeh , Reza Malekzadeh , Rahul Malhotra , Kodavanti Mallikharjuna Rao , Sofia K Malyutina , Lynell V Maniego , Yannis Manios , Jim I Mann , Fariborz Mansour-Ghanaei , Enzo Manzato , Paula Margozzini , Anastasia Markaki , Oonagh Markey , Eliza Markidou Ioannidou , Pedro Marques-Vidal , Larissa Pruner Marques , Jaume Marrugat , Yves Martin-Prevel , Rosemarie Martin , Reynaldo Martorell , Eva Martos , Katharina Maruszczak , Stefano Marventano , Luis P Mascarenhas , Shariq R Masoodi , Ellisiv B Mathiesen , Prashant Mathur , Alicia Matijasevich , Tandi E Matsha , Christina Mavrogianni , Artur Mazur , Jean Claude N Mbanya , Shelly R McFarlane , Stephen T McGarvey , Martin McKee , Stela McLachlan , Rachael M McLean , Scott B McLean , Breige A McNulty , Sounnia Mediene Benchekor , Jurate Medzioniene , Parinaz Mehdipour , Kirsten Mehlig , Amir Houshang Mehrparvar , Aline Meirhaeghe , Jørgen Meisfjord , Christa Meisinger , Ana Maria B Menezes , Geetha R Menon , Gert Bm Mensink , Maria Teresa Menzano , Alibek Mereke , Indrapal I Meshram , Andres Metspalu , Haakon E Meyer , Jie Mi , Kim F Michaelsen , Nathalie Michels , Kairit Mikkel , Karolina Milkowska , Jody C Miller , Cláudia S Minderico , G K Mini , Juan Francisco Miquel , Mohammad Reza Mirjalili , Daphne Mirkopoulou , Erkin Mirrakhimov , Marjeta Mišigoj-Durakovic , Antonio Mistretta , Veronica Mocanu , Pietro A Modesti , Sahar Saeedi Moghaddam , Bahram Mohajer , Mostafa K Mohamed , Shukri F Mohamed , Kazem Mohammad , Zahra Mohammadi , Noushin Mohammadifard , Reza Mohammadpourhodki , Viswanathan Mohan , Salim Mohanna , Muhammad Fadhli Mohd Yusoff , Iraj Mohebbi , Farnam Mohebi , Marie Moitry , Drude Molbo , Line T Møllehave , Niels C Møller , Dénes Molnár , Amirabbas Momenan , Charles K Mondo , Michele Monroy-Valle , Eric Monterrubio-Flores , Kotsedi Daniel K Monyeki , Jin Soo Moon , Mahmood Moosazadeh , Leila B Moreira , Alain Morejon , Luis A Moreno , Karen Morgan , Suzanne N Morin , Erik Lykke Mortensen , George Moschonis , Malgorzata Mossakowska , Aya Mostafa , Anabela Mota-Pinto , Jorge Mota , Mohammad Esmaeel Motlagh , Jorge Motta , Marcos André Moura-Dos-Santos , Malay K Mridha , Kelias P Msyamboza , Thet Thet Mu , Magdalena Muc , Boban Mugoša , Maria L Muiesan , Parvina Mukhtorova , Martina Müller-Nurasyid , Neil Murphy , Jaakko Mursu , Elaine M Murtagh , Kamarul Imran Musa , Sanja Music Milanovic , Vera Musil , Norlaila Mustafa , Iraj Nabipour , Shohreh Naderimagham , Gabriele Nagel , Balkish M Naidu , Farid Najafi , Harunobu Nakamura , Jana Námešná , Ei Ei K Nang , Vinay B Nangia , Martin Nankap , Sameer Narake , Paola Nardone , Matthias Nauck , William A Neal , Azim Nejatizadeh , Chandini Nekkantti , Keiu Nelis , Liis Nelis , Ilona Nenko , Martin Neovius , Flavio Nervi , Chung T Nguyen , Nguyen D Nguyen , Quang Ngoc Nguyen , Ramfis E Nieto-Martínez , Yury P Nikitin , Guang Ning , Toshiharu Ninomiya , Sania Nishtar , Marianna Noale , Oscar A Noboa , Helena Nogueira , Teresa Norat , Maria Nordendahl , Børge G Nordestgaard , Davide Noto , Natalia Nowak-Szczepanska , Mohannad Al Nsour , Irfan Nuhoglu , Eha Nurk , Terence W O'Neill , Dermot O'Reilly , Galina Obreja , Caleb Ochimana , Angélica M Ochoa-Avilés , Eiji Oda , Kyungwon Oh , Kumiko Ohara , Claes Ohlsson , Ryutaro Ohtsuka , Örn Olafsson , Maria Teresa A Olinto , Isabel O Oliveira , Mohd Azahadi Omar , Altan Onat , Sok King Ong , Lariane M Ono , Pedro Ordunez , Rui Ornelas , Ana P Ortiz , Pedro J Ortiz , Merete Osler , Clive Osmond , Sergej M Ostojic , Afshin Ostovar , Johanna A Otero , Kim Overvad , Ellis Owusu-Dabo , Fred Michel Paccaud , Cristina Padez , Ioannis Pagkalos , Elena Pahomova , Karina Mary de Paiva , Andrzej Pajak , Domenico Palli , Alberto Palloni , Luigi Palmieri , Wen-Harn Pan , Songhomitra Panda-Jonas , Arvind Pandey , Francesco Panza , Dimitrios Papandreou , Soon-Woo Park , Suyeon Park , Winsome R Parnell , Mahboubeh Parsaeian , Ionela M Pascanu , Patrick Pasquet , Nikhil D Patel , Ivan Pecin , Mangesh S Pednekar , Nasheeta Peer , Gao Pei , Sergio Viana Peixoto , Markku Peltonen , Alexandre C Pereira , Marco A Peres , Napoleón Pérez-Farinós , Cynthia M Pérez , Valentina Peterkova , Annette Peters , Astrid Petersmann , Janina Petkeviciene , Ausra Petrauskiene , Emanuela Pettenuzzo , Niloofar Peykari , Son Thai Pham , Rafael N Pichardo , Daniela Pierannunzio , Iris Pigeot , Hynek Pikhart , Aida Pilav , Lorenza Pilotto , Francesco Pistelli , Freda Pitakaka , Aleksandra Piwonska , Andreia N Pizarro , Pedro Plans-Rubió , Bee Koon Poh , Hermann Pohlabeln , Raluca M Pop , Stevo R Popovic , Miquel Porta , Georg Posch , Anil Poudyal , Dimitrios Poulimeneas , Hamed Pouraram , Farhad Pourfarzi , Akram Pourshams , Hossein Poustchi , Rajendra Pradeepa , Alison J Price , Jacqueline F Price , Rui Providencia , Jardena J Puder , Iveta Pudule , Soile E Puhakka , Maria Puiu , Margus Punab , Radwan F Qasrawi , Mostafa Qorbani , Tran Quoc Bao , Ivana Radic , Ricardas Radisauskas , Salar Rahimikazerooni , Mahfuzar Rahman , Mahmudur Rahman , Olli Raitakari , Manu Raj , Ellina Rakhimova , Sherali Rakhmatulloev , Ivo Rakovac , Sudha Ramachandra Rao , Ambady Ramachandran , Jacqueline Ramke , Elisabete Ramos , Rafel Ramos , Lekhraj Rampal , Sanjay Rampal , Vayia Rarra , Ramon A Rascon-Pacheco , Mette Rasmussen , Cassiano Ricardo Rech , Josep Redon , Paul Ferdinand M Reganit , Valéria Regecová , Luis Revilla , Abbas Rezaianzadeh , Lourdes Ribas-Barba , Robespierre Ribeiro , Elio Riboli , Adrian Richter , Fernando Rigo , Natascia Rinaldo , Tobias F Rinke de Wit , Ana Rito , Raphael M Ritti-Dias , Juan A Rivera , Cynthia Robitaille , Romana Roccaldo , Daniela Rodrigues , Fernando Rodríguez-Artalejo , María Del Cristo Rodriguez-Perez , Laura A Rodríguez-Villamizar , Ulla Roggenbuck , Rosalba Rojas-Martinez , Nipa Rojroongwasinkul , Dora Romaguera , Elisabetta L Romeo , Rafaela V Rosario , Annika Rosengren , Ian Rouse , Joel Gr Roy , Adolfo Rubinstein , Frank J Rühli , Jean-Bernard Ruidavets , Blanca Sandra Ruiz-Betancourt , Maria Ruiz-Castell , Emma Ruiz Moreno , Iuliia A Rusakova , Kenisha Russell Jonsson , Paola Russo , Petra Rust , Marcin Rutkowski , Charumathi Sabanayagam , Elena Sacchini , Harshpal S Sachdev , Alireza Sadjadi , Ali Reza Safarpour , Saeid Safiri , Nader Saki , Benoit Salanave , Eduardo Salazar Martinez , Diego Salmerón , Veikko Salomaa , Jukka T Salonen , Massimo Salvetti , Margarita Samoutian , Jose Sánchez-Abanto , Sandjaja , Susana Sans , Loreto Santa Marina , Diana A Santos , Ina S Santos , Lèlita C Santos , Maria Paula Santos , Osvaldo Santos , Rute Santos , Sara Santos Sanz , Jouko L Saramies , Luis B Sardinha , Nizal Sarrafzadegan , Thirunavukkarasu Sathish , Kai-Uwe Saum , Savvas Savva , Mathilde Savy , Norie Sawada , Mariana Sbaraini , Marcia Scazufca , Beatriz D Schaan , Angelika Schaffrath Rosario , Herman Schargrodsky , Anja Schienkiewitz , Sabine Schipf , Carsten O Schmidt , Ida Maria Schmidt , Peter Schnohr , Ben Schöttker , Sara Schramm , Stine Schramm , Helmut Schröder , Constance Schultsz , Aletta E Schutte , Aye Aye Sein , Rusidah Selamat , Vedrana Sember , Abhijit Sen , Idowu O Senbanjo , Sadaf G Sepanlou , Victor Sequera , Luis Serra-Majem , Jennifer Servais , Ludmila Ševcíková , Svetlana A Shalnova , Teresa Shamah-Levy , Morteza Shamshirgaran , Coimbatore Subramaniam Shanthirani , Maryam Sharafkhah , Sanjib K Sharma , Jonathan E Shaw , Amaneh Shayanrad , Ali Akbar Shayesteh , Lela Shengelia , Zumin Shi , Kenji Shibuya , Hana Shimizu-Furusawa , Dong Wook Shin , Majid Shirani , Rahman Shiri , Namuna Shrestha , Khairil Si-Ramlee , Alfonso Siani , Rosalynn Siantar , Abla M Sibai , Antonio M Silva , Diego Augusto Santos Silva , Mary Simon , Judith Simons , Leon A Simons , Agneta Sjöberg , Michael Sjöström , Gry Skodje , Jolanta Slowikowska-Hilczer , Przemyslaw Slusarczyk , Liam Smeeth , Hung-Kwan So , Fernanda Cunha Soares , Grzegorz Sobek , Eugène Sobngwi , Morten Sodemann , Stefan Söderberg , Moesijanti Ye Soekatri , Agustinus Soemantri , Reecha Sofat , Vincenzo Solfrizzi , Mohammad Hossein Somi , Emily Sonestedt , Yi Song , Thorkild Ia Sørensen , Elin P Sørgjerd , Charles Sossa Jérome , Victoria E Soto-Rojas , Aïcha Soumaré , Slavica Sovic , Bente Sparboe-Nilsen , Karen Sparrenberger , Angela Spinelli , Igor Spiroski , Jan A Staessen , Hanspeter Stamm , Maria G Stathopoulou , Kaspar Staub , Bill Stavreski , Jostein Steene-Johannessen , Peter Stehle , Aryeh D Stein , George S Stergiou , Jochanan Stessman , Ranko Stevanovic , Jutta Stieber , Doris Stöckl , Tanja Stocks , Jakub Stokwiszewski , Ekaterina Stoyanova , Gareth Stratton , Karien Stronks , Maria Wany Strufaldi , Lela Sturua , Ramón Suárez-Medina , Machi Suka , Chien-An Sun , Johan Sundström , Yn-Tz Sung , Jordi Sunyer , Paibul Suriyawongpaisal , Boyd A Swinburn , Rody G Sy , Holly E Syddall , René Charles Sylva , Moyses Szklo , Lucjan Szponar , E Shyong Tai , Mari-Liis Tammesoo , Abdonas Tamosiunas , Eng Joo Tan , Xun Tang , Maya Tanrygulyyeva , Frank Tanser , Yong Tao , Mohammed Rasoul Tarawneh , Jakob Tarp , Carolina B Tarqui-Mamani , Radka Taxová Braunerová , Anne Taylor , Julie Taylor , Félicité Tchibindat , William R Tebar , Grethe S Tell , Tania Tello , Yih Chung Tham , K R Thankappan , Holger Theobald , Xenophon Theodoridis , Lutgarde Thijs , Nihal Thomas , Betina H Thuesen , Lubica Tichá , Erik J Timmermans , Anne Tjonneland , Hanna K Tolonen , Janne S Tolstrup , Murat Topbas , Roman Topór-Madry , Liv Elin Torheim , María José Tormo , Michael J Tornaritis , Maties Torrent , Laura Torres-Collado , Stefania Toselli , Giota Touloumi , Pierre Traissac , Thi Tuyet-Hanh Tran , Dimitrios Trichopoulos , Antonia Trichopoulou , Oanh Th Trinh , Atul Trivedi , Lechaba Tshepo , Maria Tsigga , Shoichiro Tsugane , Azaliia M Tuliakova , Marshall K Tulloch-Reid , Fikru Tullu , Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen , Jaakko Tuomilehto , Maria L Turley , Gilad Twig , Per Tynelius , Themistoklis Tzotzas , Christophe Tzourio , Peter Ueda , Eunice Ugel , Flora Am Ukoli , Hanno Ulmer , Belgin Unal , Zhamyila Usupova , Hannu Mt Uusitalo , Nalan Uysal , Justina Vaitkeviciute , Gonzalo Valdivia , Susana Vale , Damaskini Valvi , Rob M van Dam , Johan Van der Heyden , Yvonne T van der Schouw , Koen Van Herck , Hoang Van Minh , Natasja M 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Weghuber , Wenbin Wei , Aneta Weres , Bo Werner , Peter H Whincup , Kurt Widhalm , Indah S Widyahening , Andrzej Wiecek , Rainford J Wilks , Johann Willeit , Peter Willeit , Julianne Williams , Tom Wilsgaard , Bogdan Wojtyniak , Roy A Wong-McClure , Andrew Wong , Jyh Eiin Wong , Tien Yin Wong , Jean Woo , Mark Woodward , Frederick C Wu , Jianfeng Wu , Li Juan Wu , Shouling Wu , Haiquan Xu , Liang Xu , Nor Azwany Yaacob , Uruwan Yamborisut , Weili Yan , Ling Yang , Xiaoguang Yang , Yang Yang , Nazan Yardim , Mehdi Yaseri , Tabara Yasuharu , Xingwang Ye , Panayiotis K Yiallouros , Moein Yoosefi , Akihiro Yoshihara , Qi Sheng You , San-Lin You , Novie O Younger-Coleman , Safiah Md Yusof , Ahmad Faudzi Yusoff , Luciana Zaccagni , Vassilis Zafiropulos , Ahmad A Zainuddin , Seyed Rasoul Zakavi , Farhad Zamani , Sabina Zambon , Antonis Zampelas , Hana Zamrazilová , Maria Elisa Zapata , Abdul Hamid Zargar , Ko Ko Zaw , Tomasz Zdrojewski , Kristyna Zejglicova , Tajana Zeljkovic Vrkic , Yi Zeng 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Lundqvist, Robert, Lunet, Nuno, Lunogelo, Charle, Lustigová, Michala, Łuszczki, Edyta, Ma, Guansheng, Ma, Jun, Ma, Xu, Machado-Coelho, George LL, Machado-Rodrigues, Aristides M, Macieira, Luisa M, Madar, Ahmed A, Maggi, Stefania, Magliano, Dianna J, Magnacca, Sara, Magriplis, Emmanuella, Mahasampath, Gowri, Maire, Bernard, Majer, Marjeta, Makdisse, Marcia, Mäki, Päivi, Malekzadeh, Fatemeh, Malekzadeh, Reza, Malhotra, Rahul, Rao, Kodavanti Mallikharjuna, Malyutina, Sofia K, Maniego, Lynell V, Manios, Yanni, Mann, Jim I, Mansour-Ghanaei, Fariborz, Manzato, Enzo, Margozzini, Paula, Markaki, Anastasia, Markey, Oonagh, Ioannidou, Eliza Markidou, Marques-Vidal, Pedro, Marques, Larissa Pruner, Marrugat, Jaume, Martin-Prevel, Yve, Martin, Rosemarie, Martorell, Reynaldo, Martos, Eva, Maruszczak, Katharina, Marventano, Stefano, Mascarenhas, Luis P, Masoodi, Shariq R, Mathiesen, Ellisiv B, Mathur, Prashant, Matijasevich, Alicia, Matsha, Tandi E, Mavrogianni, Christina, Mazur, Artur, Mbanya, Jean Claude N, McFarlane, Shelly R, McGarvey, Stephen T, McKee, Martin, McLachlan, Stela, McLean, Rachael M, McLean, Scott B, McNulty, Breige A, Benchekor, Sounnia Mediene, Medzioniene, Jurate, Mehdipour, Parinaz, Mehlig, Kirsten, Mehrparvar, Amir Houshang, Meirhaeghe, Aline, Meisfjord, Jørgen, Meisinger, Christa, Menezes, Ana Maria B, Menon, Geetha R, Mensink, Gert BM, Menzano, Maria Teresa, Mereke, Alibek, Meshram, Indrapal I, Metspalu, Andre, Meyer, Haakon E, Mi, Jie, Michaelsen, Kim F, Michels, Nathalie, Mikkel, Kairit, Milkowska, Karolina, Miller, Jody C, Minderico, Cláudia S, Mini, GK, Miquel, Juan Francisco, Mirjalili, Mohammad Reza, Mirkopoulou, Daphne, Mirrakhimov, Erkin, Mišigoj-Durakovic, Marjeta, Mistretta, Antonio, Mocanu, Veronica, Modesti, Pietro A, Moghaddam, Sahar Saeedi, Mohajer, Bahram, Mohamed, Mostafa K, Mohamed, Shukri F, Mohammad, Kazem, Mohammadi, Zahra, Mohammadifard, Noushin, Mohammadpourhodki, Reza, Mohan, Viswanathan, Mohanna, Salim, Yusoff, Muhammad Fadhli Mohd, Mohebbi, Iraj, Mohebi, Farnam, Moitry, Marie, Molbo, Drude, Møllehave, Line T, Møller, Niels C, Molnár, Déne, Momenan, Amirabba, Mondo, Charles K, Monroy-Valle, Michele, Monterrubio-Flores, Eric, Monyeki, Kotsedi Daniel K, Moon, Jin Soo, Moosazadeh, Mahmood, Moreira, Leila B, Morejon, Alain, Moreno, Luis A, Morgan, Karen, Morin, Suzanne N, Mortensen, Erik Lykke, Moschonis, George, Mossakowska, Malgorzata, Mostafa, Aya, Mota-Pinto, Anabela, Mota, Jorge, Motlagh, Mohammad Esmaeel, Motta, Jorge, Moura-dos-Santos, Marcos André, Mridha, Malay K, Msyamboza, Kelias P, Mu, Thet Thet, Muc, Magdalena, Mugoša, Boban, Muiesan, Maria L, Mukhtorova, Parvina, Müller-Nurasyid, Martina, Murphy, Neil, Mursu, Jaakko, Murtagh, Elaine M, Musa, Kamarul Imran, Milanovic, Sanja Music, Musil, Vera, Mustafa, Norlaila, Nabipour, Iraj, Naderimagham, Shohreh, Nagel, Gabriele, Naidu, Balkish M, Najafi, Farid, Nakamura, Harunobu, Námešná, Jana, Ei K Nang, Ei, Nangia, Vinay B, Nankap, Martin, Narake, Sameer, Nardone, Paola, Nauck, Matthia, Neal, William A, Nejatizadeh, Azim, Nekkantti, Chandini, Nelis, Keiu, Nelis, Lii, Nenko, Ilona, Neovius, Martin, Nervi, Flavio, Nguyen, Chung T, Nguyen, Nguyen D, Nguyen, Quang Ngoc, Nieto-Martínez, Ramfis E, Nikitin, Yury P, Ning, Guang, Ninomiya, Toshiharu, Nishtar, Sania, Noale, Marianna, Noboa, Oscar A, Nogueira, Helena, Norat, Teresa, Nordendahl, Maria, Nordestgaard, Børge G, Noto, Davide, Nowak-Szczepanska, Natalia, Al Nsour, Mohannad, Nuhoglu, Irfan, Nurk, Eha, O'Neill, Terence W, O'Reilly, Dermot, Obreja, Galina, Ochimana, Caleb, Ochoa-Avilés, Angélica M, Oda, Eiji, Oh, Kyungwon, Ohara, Kumiko, Ohlsson, Clae, Ohtsuka, Ryutaro, Olafsson, Örn, Olinto, Maria Teresa A, Oliveira, Isabel O, Omar, Mohd Azahadi, Onat, Altan, Ong, Sok King, Ono, Lariane M, Ordunez, Pedro, Ornelas, Rui, Ortiz, Ana P, Ortiz, Pedro J, Osler, Merete, Osmond, Clive, Ostojic, Sergej M, Ostovar, Afshin, Otero, Johanna A, Overvad, Kim, Owusu-Dabo, Elli, Paccaud, Fred Michel, Padez, Cristina, Pagkalos, Ioanni, Pahomova, Elena, de Paiva, Karina Mary, Pajak, Andrzej, Palli, Domenico, Palloni, Alberto, Palmieri, Luigi, Pan, Wen-Harn, Panda-Jonas, Songhomitra, Pandey, Arvind, Panza, Francesco, Papandreou, Dimitrio, Park, Soon-Woo, Park, Suyeon, Parnell, Winsome R, Parsaeian, Mahboubeh, Pascanu, Ionela M, Pasquet, Patrick, Patel, Nikhil D, Pecin, Ivan, Pednekar, Mangesh S, Peer, Nasheeta, Pei, Gao, Peixoto, Sergio Viana, Peltonen, Markku, Pereira, Alexandre C, Peres, Marco A, Pérez-Farinós, Napoleón, Pérez, Cynthia M, Peterkova, Valentina, Peters, Annette, Petersmann, Astrid, Petkeviciene, Janina, Petrauskiene, Ausra, Pettenuzzo, Emanuela, Peykari, Niloofar, Pham, Son Thai, Pichardo, Rafael N, Pierannunzio, Daniela, Pigeot, Iri, Pikhart, Hynek, Pilav, Aida, Pilotto, Lorenza, Pistelli, Francesco, Pitakaka, Freda, Piwonska, Aleksandra, Pizarro, Andreia N, Plans-Rubió, Pedro, Poh, Bee Koon, Pohlabeln, Hermann, Pop, Raluca M, Popovic, Stevo R, Porta, Miquel, Posch, Georg, Poudyal, Anil, Poulimeneas, Dimitrio, Pouraram, Hamed, Pourfarzi, Farhad, Pourshams, Akram, Poustchi, Hossein, Pradeepa, Rajendra, Price, Alison J, Price, Jacqueline F, Providencia, Rui, Puder, Jardena J, Pudule, Iveta, Puhakka, Soile E, Puiu, Maria, Punab, Margu, Qasrawi, Radwan F, Qorbani, Mostafa, Bao, Tran Quoc, Radic, Ivana, Radisauskas, Ricarda, Rahimikazerooni, Salar, Rahman, Mahfuzar, Rahman, Mahmudur, Raitakari, Olli, Raj, Manu, Rakhimova, Ellina, Rakhmatulloev, Sherali, Rakovac, Ivo, Rao, Sudha Ramachandra, Ramachandran, Ambady, Ramke, Jacqueline, Ramos, Elisabete, Ramos, Rafel, Rampal, Lekhraj, Rampal, Sanjay, Rarra, Vayia, Rascon-Pacheco, Ramon A, Rasmussen, Mette, Rech, Cassiano Ricardo, Redon, Josep, Reganit, Paul Ferdinand M, Regecová, Valéria, Revilla, Lui, Rezaianzadeh, Abba, Ribas-Barba, Lourde, Ribeiro, Robespierre, Riboli, Elio, Richter, Adrian, Rigo, Fernando, Rinaldo, Natascia, de Wit, Tobias F Rinke, Rito, Ana, Ritti-Dias, Raphael M, Rivera, Juan A, Robitaille, Cynthia, Roccaldo, Romana, Rodrigues, Daniela, Rodríguez-Artalejo, Fernando, del Cristo Rodriguez-Perez, María, Rodríguez-Villamizar, Laura A, Roggenbuck, Ulla, Rojas-Martinez, Rosalba, Rojroongwasinkul, Nipa, Romaguera, Dora, Romeo, Elisabetta L, Rosario, Rafaela V, Rosengren, Annika, Rouse, Ian, Roy, Joel GR, Rubinstein, Adolfo, Rühli, Frank J, Ruidavets, Jean-Bernard, Ruiz-Betancourt, Blanca Sandra, Ruiz-Castell, Maria, Moreno, Emma Ruiz, Rusakova, Iuliia A, Jonsson, Kenisha Russell, Russo, Paola, Rust, Petra, Rutkowski, Marcin, Sabanayagam, Charumathi, Sacchini, Elena, Sachdev, Harshpal S, Sadjadi, Alireza, Safarpour, Ali Reza, Safiri, Saeid, Saki, Nader, Salanave, Benoit, Martinez, Eduardo Salazar, Salmerón, Diego, Salomaa, Veikko, Salonen, Jukka T, Salvetti, Massimo, Samoutian, Margarita, Sánchez-Abanto, Jose, Sandjaja, null, Sans, Susana, Marina, Loreto Santa, Santos, Diana A, Santos, Ina S, Santos, Lèlita C, Santos, Maria Paula, Santos, Osvaldo, Santos, Rute, Sanz, Sara Santo, Saramies, Jouko L, Sardinha, Luis B, Sarrafzadegan, Nizal, Sathish, Thirunavukkarasu, Saum, Kai-Uwe, Savva, Savva, Savy, Mathilde, Sawada, Norie, Sbaraini, Mariana, Scazufca, Marcia, Schaan, Beatriz D, Rosario, Angelika Schaffrath, Schargrodsky, Herman, Schienkiewitz, Anja, Schipf, Sabine, Schmidt, Carsten O, Schmidt, Ida Maria, Schnohr, Peter, Schöttker, Ben, Schramm, Sara, Schramm, Stine, Schröder, Helmut, Schultsz, Constance, Schutte, Aletta E, Sein, Aye Aye, Selamat, Rusidah, Sember, Vedrana, Sen, Abhijit, Senbanjo, Idowu O, Sepanlou, Sadaf G, Sequera, Victor, Serra-Majem, Lui, Servais, Jennifer, Ševcíková, Ludmila, Shalnova, Svetlana A, Shamah-Levy, Teresa, Shamshirgaran, Morteza, Shanthirani, Coimbatore Subramaniam, Sharafkhah, Maryam, Sharma, Sanjib K, Shaw, Jonathan E, Shayanrad, Amaneh, Shayesteh, Ali Akbar, Shengelia, Lela, Shi, Zumin, Shibuya, Kenji, Shimizu-Furusawa, Hana, Shin, Dong Wook, Shirani, Majid, Shiri, Rahman, Shrestha, Namuna, Si-Ramlee, Khairil, Siani, Alfonso, Siantar, Rosalynn, Sibai, Abla M, Silva, Antonio M, Silva, Diego Augusto Santo, Simon, Mary, Simons, Judith, Simons, Leon A, Sjöberg, Agneta, Sjöström, Michael, Skodje, Gry, Slowikowska-Hilczer, Jolanta, Slusarczyk, Przemyslaw, Smeeth, Liam, So, Hung-Kwan, Soares, Fernanda Cunha, Sobek, Grzegorz, Sobngwi, Eugène, Sodemann, Morten, Söderberg, Stefan, Soekatri, Moesijanti YE, Soemantri, Agustinu, Sofat, Reecha, Solfrizzi, Vincenzo, Somi, Mohammad Hossein, Sonestedt, Emily, Song, Yi, Sørensen, Thorkild IA, Sørgjerd, Elin P, Jérome, Charles Sossa, Soto-Rojas, Victoria E, Soumaré, Aïcha, Sovic, Slavica, Sparboe-Nilsen, Bente, Sparrenberger, Karen, Spinelli, Angela, Spiroski, Igor, Staessen, Jan A, Stamm, Hanspeter, Stathopoulou, Maria G, Staub, Kaspar, Stavreski, Bill, Steene-Johannessen, Jostein, Stehle, Peter, Stein, Aryeh D, Stergiou, George S, Stessman, Jochanan, Stevanovic, Ranko, Stieber, Jutta, Stöckl, Dori, Stocks, Tanja, Stokwiszewski, Jakub, Stoyanova, Ekaterina, Stratton, Gareth, Stronks, Karien, Strufaldi, Maria Wany, Sturua, Lela, Suárez-Medina, Ramón, Suka, Machi, Sun, Chien-An, Sundström, Johan, Sung, Yn-Tz, Sunyer, Jordi, Suriyawongpaisal, Paibul, Swinburn, Boyd A, Sy, Rody G, Syddall, Holly E, Sylva, René Charle, Szklo, Moyse, Szponar, Lucjan, Tai, E Shyong, Tammesoo, Mari-Lii, Tamosiunas, Abdona, Tan, Eng Joo, Tang, Xun, Tanrygulyyeva, Maya, Tanser, Frank, Tao, Yong, Tarawneh, Mohammed Rasoul, Tarp, Jakob, Tarqui-Mamani, Carolina B, Braunerová, Radka Taxová, Taylor, Anne, Taylor, Julie, Tchibindat, Félicité, Tebar, William R, Tell, Grethe S, Tello, Tania, Tham, Yih Chung, Thankappan, KR, Theobald, Holger, Theodoridis, Xenophon, Thijs, Lutgarde, Thomas, Nihal, Thuesen, Betina H, Tichá, Lubica, Timmermans, Erik J, Tjonneland, Anne, Tolonen, Hanna K, Tolstrup, Janne S, Topbas, Murat, Topór-Madry, Roman, Torheim, Liv Elin, Tormo, María José, Tornaritis, Michael J, Torrent, Matie, Torres-Collado, Laura, Toselli, Stefania, Touloumi, Giota, Traissac, Pierre, Tran, Thi Tuyet-Hanh, Trichopoulos, Dimitrio, Trichopoulou, Antonia, Trinh, Oanh TH, Trivedi, Atul, Tshepo, Lechaba, Tsigga, Maria, Tsugane, Shoichiro, Tuliakova, Azaliia M, Tulloch-Reid, Marshall K, Tullu, Fikru, Tuomainen, Tomi-Pekka, Tuomilehto, Jaakko, Turley, Maria L, Twig, Gilad, Tynelius, Per, Tzotzas, Themistokli, Tzourio, Christophe, Ueda, Peter, Ugel, Eunice, Ukoli, Flora AM, Ulmer, Hanno, Unal, Belgin, Usupova, Zhamyila, Uusitalo, Hannu MT, Uysal, Nalan, Vaitkeviciute, Justina, Valdivia, Gonzalo, Vale, Susana, Valvi, Damaskini, van Dam, Rob M, Van der Heyden, Johan, van der Schouw, Yvonne T, Van Herck, Koen, Van Minh, Hoang, Van Schoor, Natasja M, van Valkengoed, Irene GM, Vanderschueren, Dirk, Vanuzzo, Diego, Varbo, Anette, Varela-Moreiras, Gregorio, Varona-Pérez, Patricia, Vasan, Senthil K, Vega, Toma, Veidebaum, Tooma, Velasquez-Melendez, Gustavo, Velika, Biruta, Veronesi, Giovanni, Verschuren, WM Monique, Victora, Cesar G, Viegi, Giovanni, Viet, Lucie, Villalpando, Salvador, Vineis, Paolo, Vioque, Jesu, Virtanen, Jyrki K, Visser, Marjolein, Visvikis-Siest, Sophie, Viswanathan, Bharathi, Vladulescu, Mihaela, Vlasoff, Tiina, Vocanec, Dorja, Vollenweider, Peter, Völzke, Henry, Voutilainen, Ari, Voutilainen, Sari, Vrijheid, Martine, Vrijkotte, Tanja GM, Wade, Alisha N, Wagner, Aline, Waldhör, Thoma, Walton, Janette, Wambiya, Elvis OA, Bebakar, Wan Mohamad Wan, Mohamud, Wan Nazaimoon Wan, de Souza Wanderley Júnior, Rildo, Wang, Ming-Dong, Wang, Ningli, Wang, Qian, Wang, Xiangjun, Wang, Ya Xing, Wang, Ying-Wei, Wannamethee, S Goya, Wareham, Nichola, Weber, Adelheid, Wedderkopp, Niel, Weerasekera, Deepa, Weghuber, Daniel, Wei, Wenbin, Weres, Aneta, Werner, Bo, Whincup, Peter H, Widhalm, Kurt, Widyahening, Indah S, Wiecek, Andrzej, Wilks, Rainford J, Willeit, Johann, Willeit, Peter, Williams, Julianne, Wilsgaard, Tom, Wojtyniak, Bogdan, Wong-McClure, Roy A, Wong, Andrew, Wong, Jyh Eiin, Wong, Tien Yin, Woo, Jean, Woodward, Mark, Wu, Frederick C, Wu, Jianfeng, Wu, Li Juan, Wu, Shouling, Xu, Haiquan, Xu, Liang, Yaacob, Nor Azwany, Yamborisut, Uruwan, Yan, Weili, Yang, Ling, Yang, Xiaoguang, Yang, Yang, Yardim, Nazan, Yaseri, Mehdi, Yasuharu, Tabara, Ye, Xingwang, Yiallouros, Panayiotis K, Yoosefi, Moein, Yoshihara, Akihiro, You, Qi Sheng, You, San-Lin, Younger-Coleman, Novie O, Md Yusof, Safiah, Yusoff, Ahmad Faudzi, Zaccagni, Luciana, Zafiropulos, Vassili, Zainuddin, Ahmad A, Zakavi, Seyed Rasoul, Zamani, Farhad, Zambon, Sabina, Zampelas, Antoni, Zamrazilová, Hana, Zapata, Maria Elisa, Zargar, Abdul Hamid, Ko Zaw, Ko, Zdrojewski, Tomasz, Zejglicova, Kristyna, Vrkic, Tajana Zeljkovic, Zeng, Yi, Zhang, Luxia, Zhang, Zhen-Yu, Zhao, Dong, Zhao, Ming-Hui, Zhao, Wenhua, Zhen, Shiqi, Zheng, Wei, Zheng, Yingfeng, Zholdin, Bekbolat, Zhou, Maigeng, Zhu, Dan, Zins, Marie, Zitt, Emanuel, Zocalo, Yanina, Cisneros, Julio Zuñiga, Zuziak, Monika, Ezzati, Majid, Filippi, Sarah, Cohortes épidémiologiques en population (CONSTANCES), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris-Saclay-Université Paris Cité (UPCité), Université Paris Cité (UPCité), Centre International de Hautes Études Agronomiques Méditerranéennes (CIHEAM)-Centre International de Hautes Études Agronomiques Méditerranéennes (CIHEAM)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro - Montpellier SupAgro, and Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)
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Population -- Health aspects ,Leanness ,Baixo peso/Underweight ,none ,Double burden ,alipainoisuus ,tulotaso ,global health ,systematic analysis ,Sedentary behaviors ,RC1200 ,Prospective associations ,0302 clinical medicine ,underweight ,nälänhätä ,Biology (General) ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Children ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Body mass index ,Human Nutrition & Health ,education.field_of_study ,Humane Voeding & Gezondheid ,ylipaino ,General Medicine ,kansainvälinen vertailu ,3. Good health ,World health ,Medicine ,A100 Pre-clinical Medicine ,Population distribution ,medicine.medical_specialty ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Socio-culturale ,Nursing ,Social sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Thinness ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,BMI ,epidemiology ,obesity ,None ,Humans ,Obesidade/Obesity ,SDG 2 - Zero Hunger ,education ,VLAG ,US adults ,Omvårdnad ,body mass index ,malnutrition ,obesity, underweight ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,medicine.disease ,terveellisyys ,Obesity ,Faculdade de Ciências Sociais ,Body Mass Index ,Prevalence ,Risk Factors ,General Biochemistry ,WIAS ,lihavuus ,RA ,Demography ,N.A ,double burden ,Settore MED/09 - Medicina Interna ,alueelliset erot ,Nutrition and Disease ,Animal Nutrition ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Medizin ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Change distribution of body mass index ,RA0421 ,Voeding en Ziekte ,Epidemiology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Global health ,Índice de massa corporal/Body Mass Index ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Underweight ,painoindeksi ,2. Zero hunger ,General Neuroscience ,aliravitsemus ,elintarvikkeet ,health ,Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology ,Diervoeding ,3142 Public health care science, environmental and occupational health ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.01.03 [https] ,Chinese adults ,pooled analysis ,medicine.symptom ,Diet quality ,B120 Physiology ,Research Article ,trends ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#1.06.03 [https] ,prevalence ,Population ,Mothers ,Genetics and Molecular Biology ,3121 Internal medicine ,medicine ,Life Science ,ddc:610 ,3125 Otorhinolaryngology, ophthalmology ,kehonkoostumus ,Nutrition ,Australian adults ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.01.04 [https] ,Ciências sociais ,Folkhälsovetenskap, global hälsa, socialmedicin och epidemiologi ,Malnutrition ,Epidemiology and Global Health ,sense organs ,Estilos de Vida e Impacto na Saúde - Abstract
From 1985 to 2016, the prevalence of underweight decreased, and that of obesity and severe obesity increased, in most regions, with significant variation in the magnitude of these changes across regions. We investigated how much change in mean body mass index (BMI) explains changes in the prevalence of underweight, obesity, and severe obesity in different regions using data from 2896 population-based studies with 187 million participants. Changes in the prevalence of underweight and total obesity, and to a lesser extent severe obesity, are largely driven by shifts in the distribution of BMI, with smaller contributions from changes in the shape of the distribution. In East and Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, the underweight tail of the BMI distribution was left behind as the distribution shifted. There is a need for policies that address all forms of malnutrition by making healthy foods accessible and affordable, while restricting unhealthy foods through fiscal and regulatory restrictions., Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council, peer-reviewed
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- 2021
48. HIV continuum of care: bridging cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses
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Giota, Touloumi, Christos, Thomadakis, Nikos, Pantazis, Vasileios, Papastamopoulos, Vasilios, Paparizos, Simeon, Metallidis, Georgios, Adamis, Maria, Chini, Mina, Psichogiou, Georgios, Chrysos, Helen, Sambatakou, Emmanouil, Barbunakis, Georgia, Vourli, and Anastasia, Antoniadou
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Cohort Studies ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Incidence ,Humans ,HIV Infections ,Continuity of Patient Care ,Viral Load - Abstract
The aim of this study was to propose a unified continuum-of-care (CoC) analysis combining cross-sectional and longitudinal elements, incorporating time spent between stages.The established 90-90-90 target follows a cross-sectional four-stage CoC analysis, lacking information on timing of diagnosis, antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation, and viral suppression durability.Data were derived from the Athens Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (AMACS). In the cross-sectional CoC, we added stratification of diagnosed people with HIV (PWH) by estimated time from infection to diagnosis; of those who ever initiated ART or achieved viral suppression by corresponding current status (in 2018); and cumulative incidence function (CIF) of ART initiation and viral suppression, treating loss-to-follow-up (LTFU) as competing event. Viral suppression was defined as viral load less than 500 copies/ml. Viral suppression durability was assessed by the CIF of viral load rebound.About 89.1% of PWH in 2018 were diagnosed (range of diagnoses: 1980-2018). Median time to diagnosis was 3.5 years (IQR: 1.1-7.0). Among diagnosed, 89.1% were ever treated, of whom 86.7% remained on ART. CIF of ART initiation and LTFU before ART initiation were 80.9 and 6.0% at 5 years since diagnosis, respectively. Among treated, 89.4% achieved viral suppression, of whom 87.4% were currently virally suppressed. The CIF of viral load rebound was 24.2% at 5 years since first viral suppression but substantially reduced in more recent years.The proposed analysis highlights time gaps in CoC not evident by the standard cross-sectional approach. Our analysis highlights the need for early diagnosis and identifies late presenters as a key population for interventions that could decrease gaps in the CoC.
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- 2021
49. Validation of the Patient Health Questionnaire-4 (PHQ-4) to screen for depression and anxiety in the Greek general population
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Anna Christodoulaki, Valia Baralou, George Konstantakopoulos, and Giota Touloumi
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Adult ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Greece ,Psychometrics ,Depression ,Reproducibility of Results ,Anxiety ,Patient Health Questionnaire ,Anxiety Disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Mass Screening - Abstract
The Patient Health Questionnaire-4 (PHQ-4) is an ultra-brief self-report screening scale for depression and anxiety with promising psychometric properties; however, its reliability and validity have not been investigated in Greece yet. The objective of the current study was to investigate the reliability and validity of the PHQ-4 and to establish a cut-off score to identify depression and anxiety in the Greek general population.The reliability of the PHQ-4 was assessed using a random sample of 204 students from Athens, Greece. The internal consistency (Cronbach's α) was evaluated whereas the test-retest reliability was measured over a one-week period with intra-class correlation (ICC). The scale's validity was assessed in a cross-sectional study of 591 adults living in Greece using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Cut-offs were determined using the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) as the gold standard.Cronbach's α of the PHQ-4 was 0.80 and the overall ICC 0.96. CFA yielded a two-factor model, structurally invariant by age and gender. A GAD-2 score of 2 was the optimal cut-off point to detect any anxiety disorder (sensitivity = 0.82, specificity = 0.75) and 3 to detect generalized anxiety disorder (sensitivity = 0.77, specificity = 0.82). As for PHQ-2, a score of 2 was the optimal cut-off point to detect any depressive disorder (sensitivity = 0.87, specificity = 0.85) and 3 to detect major depressive disorder (sensitivity = 0.77, specificity = 0.94).The PHQ-4 is a reliable and valid screening scale for depression and anxiety in the Greek general population.
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- 2021
50. Could the 2010 HIV outbreak in Athens, Greece have been prevented? A mathematical modeling study
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Giota Touloumi, Ilias Gountas, Anastasios Fotiou, Georgios K. Nikolopoulos, and Kyriakos Souliotis
- Subjects
RNA viruses ,Epidemiology ,Psychological intervention ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Athens greece ,HIV Infections ,Hepacivirus ,Notification system ,medicine.disease_cause ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Disease Outbreaks ,Immunodeficiency Viruses ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Prevalence ,Public and Occupational Health ,Substance Abuse, Intravenous ,Multidisciplinary ,Greece ,Hepatitis C virus ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,virus diseases ,HIV diagnosis and management ,Medical Microbiology ,HIV epidemiology ,Viral Pathogens ,Viruses ,Medicine ,Infectious diseases ,Pathogens ,Research Article ,Medical conditions ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Science ,Viral diseases ,Microbiology ,Environmental health ,Retroviruses ,medicine ,Humans ,Microbial Pathogens ,Flaviviruses ,business.industry ,Lentivirus ,Organisms ,Outbreak ,Biology and Life Sciences ,HIV ,Models, Theoretical ,Diagnostic medicine ,Hepatitis viruses ,Medical Risk Factors ,business - Abstract
Introduction In 2009 and 2010, Athens, Greece experienced a hepatitis C virus (HCV) and a Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) outbreak among People Who Inject Drugs (PWID), respectively. The HCV outbreak was not detected, while that of HIV was identified in 2011. The integrated HIV-interventions, launched in early 2012, managed to reduce directly the HIV incidence and indirectly the HCV incidence. This study aims to assess what would have been the course of the HIV outbreak and its associated economic consequences if the 2009 HCV outbreak had been detected and integrated interventions had been initiated 1- or 2-years earlier. Methods The model was calibrated to reproduce the observed HIV epidemiological and clinical parameters among PWID of Athens, Greece. We examined the effect of the 1- or 2-years earlier detection scenarios, the 1-year later detection, the non-detection scenario, and compared them to the status quo scenario. Results Cumulative HIV cases, under the status-quo scenario during 2009‐2019, were 1360 (90% Credible intervals: 290, 2470). If the HCV outbreak had been detected 1- or 2- years earlier, with immediate initiation of integrated interventions, 740 and 1110 HIV cases could be averted by 2019, respectively. Regarding the costs, if there was an efficient notification system to detect the HCV outbreak 1 or 2 years earlier, 35.2–53.2 million euros could be saved compared to the status quo by 2019. Conclusions If the HCV outbreak had been detected and promptly addressed, the HIV outbreak would have been prevented and 35.2–53.2 million euros could have been saved.
- Published
- 2021
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