23 results on '"Isernia, V."'
Search Results
2. Efficacy and tolerability of combined antiretroviral treatment with bictegravir/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide initiated at the time of primary HIV infection
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Bachelard, A, primary, Isernia, V, additional, Vallois, D, additional, Le Gac, S, additional, Chalal, L, additional, Landman, R, additional, Damond, F, additional, Descamps, D, additional, Yazdanpanah, Y, additional, Peytavin, G, additional, and Ghosn, J, additional more...
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- 2021
- Full Text
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Catalog
3. Évaluation prospective de l’initiation d’un traitement antirétroviral par l’association TAF/FTC/BIC au stade de la primo-infection VIH
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Bachelard, A., primary, Isernia, V., additional, Vallois, D., additional, Le Gac, S., additional, Chalal, L., additional, Landman, R., additional, Le Hingrat, Q., additional, Yazdanpanah, Y., additional, Peytavin, G., additional, and Ghosn, J., additional more...
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- 2020
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4. Safety and Tolerability of More than Six Days of Tedizolid Treatment
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Mensa Vendrell M, Tasias Pitarch M, Salavert Lletí M, Calabuig Muñoz E, Morata Ruiz L, Castells Lao G, López Suñé E, Mensa Pueyo J, Oltra Sempere MR, Pedro-Botet Montoya ML, Isernia V, Reynaga Sosa EA, Moreno Nuñez L, Pasquau Liaño J, Sequera Arquelladas S, Yuste Ara JR, and Soriano Viladomiu A more...
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adverse events, safety, tedizolid, tolerability - Abstract
Tedizolid has demonstrated its efficacy and safety in clinical trials; however, data concerning its tolerability in long-term treatments are scarce. The aim of the study was to assess the indications and to describe the long-term safety profile of tedizolid. A multicentric retrospective study of patients who received tedizolid for more than 6 days was conducted. Adverse events (AEs) were identified from patients' medical records and laboratory data. The World Health Organization causality categories were used to discern AEs that were probably associated with tedizolid. Eighty-one patients, treated with tedizolid 200 mg once daily for a median (interquartile range [IQR]) duration of 28 (14 to 59) days, were included; 36 (44.4%) had previously received linezolid. The most common reasons for selecting tedizolid were to avoid linezolid potential toxicities or interactions (53.1%) or due to previous linezolid-related toxicities (27.2%). The most common indications were off-label, including prosthetic joint infections, osteomyelitis, and respiratory infections (77.8%). Overall, 9/81 patients (11.1%) experienced a probably associated AE. Two patients (2.5%) developed gastrointestinal disorders, 1 (1.2%) developed anemia, and 6 developed thrombocytopenia (7.4%) after a median (IQR) duration of treatment of 26.5 (17 to 58.5) days. Four (5%) patients discontinued tedizolid due to AEs. Among 23 patients with chronic renal failure (CRF), the rate of myelotoxicity was 17.4%, and only 8.7% had to stop tedizolid; 20 out of 22 with previous linezolid-associated toxicity had no AE. Long-term tedizolid treatments had good tolerance with rates of gastrointestinal AE and hematological toxicity lower than those reported with linezolid, particularly in patients with CRF and in those with a history of linezolid-associated toxicity. more...
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- 2020
5. Safety and tolerability of more than 6 days of tedizolid treatment
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Mensa Vendrell M, Tasias Pitarch M, Salavert Lleti M, Calabuig Munoz E, Morata Ruiz L, Castells Lao G, Lopez Sune E, Mensa Pueyo J, Oltra Sempere M, Pedro-Botet Montoya M, Isernia V, Reynaga Sosa E, Moreno Nunez L, Pasquau Liano J, Sequera Arquelladas S, Yuste Ara J, and Soriano Viladomiu A more...
- Abstract
Tedizolid has demonstrated its efficacy and safety in clinical trials, however, data concerning its tolerability in long-term treatments is scarce. The aim of the study was to assess the indications and to describe the long-term safety profile of tedizolid.A multicentric, retrospective study of patients who received tedizolid for more than 6-days was conducted. Adverse events (AEs) were identified from patients' medical records and laboratory data. The World Health Organization causality categories were used to discern AEs probably associated with tedizolid.Eighty-one patients, treated with tedizolid 200mg once-daily for a median (IQR) duration of 28 (14-59) days, were included, 36 (44.4%) had previously received linezolid. Most common reasons for selecting tedizolid were to avoid linezolid potential toxicities or interactions (53.1%) or due to previous linezolid-related toxicities (27.2%). Most common indications were off-label, including prosthetic joint infections, osteomyelitis and respiratory infections (77.8%). Overall, 9/81 patients (11.1%) experienced a probably associated AE. Two patients (2.5%) developed gastrointestinal disorders, 1 (1.2%) anemia and 6 thrombocytopenia (7.4%) after a median (IQR) duration of treatment of 26.5 (17-58.5) days. Four (5%) patients discontinued tedizolid due to AEs. Among 23 patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) the rate of mielotoxicity was 17.4% and only 8.7% had to stop tedizolid and 20 out of 22 with previous linezolid-associated toxicity had no AE.Long-term tedizolid treatments had good tolerance with rates of gastrointestinal AE and hematological toxicity lower than those reported with linezolid, particularly in patients with CRF and in those with a previous history of linezolid-associated toxicity. Copyright © 2020 American Society for Microbiology. more...
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- 2020
6. Prophylaxie pré-exposition au VIH (PrEP) dans la population transgenre : suivi à 3 ans dans un CeGIDD hospitalier
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Phung, B., primary, Isernia, V., additional, Leprêtre, A., additional, Julia, Z., additional, Rioux, C., additional, Le Gac, S., additional, Roullier, A., additional, Magrini, G., additional, Yazdanpanah, Y., additional, and Ghosn, J., additional more...
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- 2019
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7. Artritis séptica de rodilla por Staphylococcus warneri
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Rodríguez-Montserrat, D, primary, Calle-García, JA, additional, Dellonder-Frigolé, J, additional, Isernia, V, additional, Molinos-Abdós, S, additional, Hernández-Hermoso, JA, additional, and Martínez-Pastor, JC, additional more...
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- 2018
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8. Celulitis por Streptococcus pneumoniae
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Díez de los Ríos, J., primary, Isernia, V., additional, and Navarro, M., additional
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- 2017
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9. Approach for Initial Treatment of Skin and Soft Tissue Infection
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Gonzalez del Castillo, J., primary, Isernia, V., additional, Candel, F. J., additional, and Martin-Sanchez, F. J., additional
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- 2014
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10. Nevirapine vs efavirenz in virologically supressed patients: differences in lipoprotein subclasses and inflammatory biomarkers
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Estrada, V, primary, Gómez‐Garre, M, additional, Santos, J, additional, Gutiérrez, F, additional, Labarga, P, additional, Palacios, R, additional, Masiá, M, additional, López‐Vázquez, M, additional, Isernia, V, additional, Vispo, E, additional, and Fernández‐Cruz, A, additional more...
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- 2012
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11. Sarilumab in patients admitted to hospital with severe or critical COVID-19: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial
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François-Xavier Lescure, Hitoshi Honda, Robert A Fowler, Jennifer Sloane Lazar, Genming Shi, Peter Wung, Naimish Patel, Owen Hagino, Ignacio J. Bazzalo, Marcelo M. Casas, Sebastián A. Nuñez, Yael Pere, Carlos M. Ibarrola, Marco A. Solis Aramayo, Maria C. Cuesta, Andrea E. Duarte, Pablo M. Gutierrez Fernandez, Maria A. Iannantuono, Erica A. Miyazaki, Javier P. Silvio, Dario G. Scublinsky, Alessandra Bales, Daniela Catarino, Elie Fiss, Sara Mohrbacher, Victor Sato, Antonio Baylao, Adilson Cavalcante, Francini Correa, Celso A. de Andrade, Juvencio Furtado, Nelson Ribeiro Filho, Valéria Telles, Leopoldo T. Trevelin, Ricardo Vipich, Rodrigo Boldo, Paula Borges, Suzana Lobo, Graziela Luckemeyer, Luana Machado, Maysa B. Alves, Ana C. Iglessias, Marianna M. Lago, Daniel W. Santos, Hugo Chapdelaine, Emilia L. Falcone, Rahima Jamal, Me-Linh Luong, Madeleine Durand, Stephane Doucet, François-Martin Carrier, Bryan A. Coburn, Lorenzo Del Sorbo, Sharon L. Walmsley, Sara Belga, Luke Y. Chen, Allison D. Mah, Theodore Steiner, Alissa J. Wright, J. Hajek, Neill Adhikari, Robert A. Fowler, Nick Daneman, Kosar A. Khwaja, Jason Shahin, Carolina Gonzalez, Rafael Silva, Marcelo Lindh, Gabriel Maluenda, Patricia Fernandez, Maite Oyonarte, Martin Lasso, Alexandre Boyer, Didier Bronnimann, Hoang-Nam Bui, Charles Cazanave, Helene Chaussade, Arnaud Desclaux, Mailys Ducours, Alexandre Duvignaud, Denis Malvy, Lisa Martin, Didier Neau, Duc Nguyen, Thierry Pistone, Gaetane Soubrane-Wirth, Julie Leitao, Clotilde Allavena, Charlotte Biron, Sabelline Bouchez, Benjamin Gaborit, Antoine Gregoire, Paul Le Turnier, Anne-Sophie Lecompte, Raphael Lecomte, Maeva Lefebvre, Francois Raffi, David Boutoille, Pascale H. Morineau, Romain Guéry, Emmanuel Chatelus, Nathalie Dumoussaud, Renaud Felten, Florina Luca, Bernard Goichot, Francis Schneider, Marie-Caroline Taquet, Matthieu Groh, Mathilde Roumier, Mathilde Neuville, Antoine Bachelard, Valentina Isernia, F-Xavier Lescure, Bao-Chau Phung, Anne Rachline, Aurelie Sautereau, Dorothee Vallois, Yves Bleher, Delphine Boucher, Clémentine Coudon, Jean Esnault, Thomas Guimard, Sophie Leautez-Nainville, Dominique Merrien, Marine Morrier, Pauline Motte-Vincent, Romain Gabeff, Hélène Leclerc, Céline Cozic, Romain Decours, Ronan Février, Gwenhael Colin, Sophie Abgrall, Dorothee Vignes, Raluca Sterpu, Mira Kuellmar, Melanie Meersch-Dini, Raphael Weiss, Alexander Zarbock, Christiane Antony, Marc Berger, Thorsten Brenner, Christian Taube, Frank Herbstreit, Sebastian Dolff, Margarethe Konik, Karsten Schmidt, Markus Zettler, Oliver Witzke, Boris Boell, Jorge Garcia Borrega, Philipp Koehler, Thomas Zander, Fabian Dusse, Othman Al-Sawaf, Philipp Köhler, Dennis Eichenauer, Matthias Kochanek, Alexander Shimabukuro-Vornhagen, Sibylle Mellinghoff, Annika Claßen, Jan-Michel Heger, Charlotte Meyer-Schwickerath, Paul Liedgens, Katrin Heindel, Ana Belkin, Asaf Biber, Mayan Gilboa, Itzchak Levy, Vladislav Litachevsky, Galia Rahav, Anat Finesod Wiedner, Tal Zilberman-Daniels, Yonatan Oster, Jacob Strahilevitz, Sigal Sviri, Elena M. Baldissera, Corrado Campochiaro, Giulio Cavalli, Lorenzo Dagna, Giacomo De Luca, Emanuel Della Torre, Alessandro Tomelleri, Davide Bernasconi De Luca, Amedeo F. Capetti, Massimo Coen, Maria V. Cossu, Massimo Galli, Andrea Giacomelli, Guido A. Gubertini, Stefano Rusconi, Giulia J. Burastero, Margherita Digaetano, Giovanni Guaraldi, Marianna Meschiari, Cristina Mussini, Cinzia Puzzolante, Sara Volpi, Marina Aiello, Alarico Ariani, Alfredo A. Chetta, Annalisa Frizzelli, Andrea Ticinesi, Domenico Tuttolomondo, Stefano Aliberti, Francesco B. Blasi, Marta F. Di Pasquale, Sofia Misuraca, Tommaso Pilocane, Edoardo Simonetta, Alessio M. Aghelmo, Claudio Angelini, Enrico Brunetta, Giorgio W. Canonica, Michele Ciccarelli, Sara Dal Farra, Maria De Santis, Sebastian Ferri, Marco Folci, Giacomo M. Guidelli, Enrico M. Heffler, Ferdinando Loiacono, Giacomo Malipiero, Giovanni Paoletti, Rosa Pedale, Francesca A. Puggioni, Francesca Racca, Aurora Zumbo, Morihiko Satou, Tatyana Lisun, Denis Protsenko, Nikolay Rubtsov, Irina Beloglazova, Daria Fomina, Mariana Lysenko, Sofia Serdotetskova, Vitali Firstov, Ivan Gordeev, Ilia Kokorin, Ksenia Komissarova, Nina Lapochkina, Elena Luchinkina, Valentin Malimon, Sevinch Mamedguseyinova, Ksenia Polubatonova, Natalia Suvorova, Jose Arribas, Alberto M. Borobia Perez, Fernando de la Calle Prieto, Juan Carlos Figueira, Rocio Motejano Sanchez, Marta Mora-Rillo, Concepcion Prados Sanchez, Javier Queiruga Parada, Francisco Fernandez Arnalich, Maria Guerro Barrientos, Alejandro Bendala Estrada, Aranzazu Caballero Marcos, Maria E. Garcia Leoni, Rita García-Martínez, Ana María Collado, Patricia Munoz Garcia, Ana Torres do Rego, María V. Villalba García, Almudena Burrillo, Maricela Valerio Minero, Paloma Gijon Vidaurreta, Sonsoles Infante Herrero, Elena Velilla, Marina Machado, Maria Olmedo, Blanca Pinilla, Benito Almirante Gragera, Maria de la Esperanza Cañas Ruano, Sofia Contreras Medina, Alejandro Cortés Herrera, Vicenç Falcó Ferrer, Ricard Ferrer Roca, Xavier Nuvials Casals, Esteve Ribera Pascuet, Paula Suanzes Diez, Pedro Rebollo Castro, Felipe Garcia Alcaide, Alejandro Soriano, Aina Oliver Caldes, Ana González Cordón, Celia Cardozo, Lorena De la Mora Cañizo, Romina Pena López, Sandra Chamorro, Clara Crespillo-Andujar, Rosa Escudero Sanchez, Jesús Fortún-Abete, Begoña Monge-Maillo, Ana Moreno Zamora, Francesca Norman, Matilde Sanchez Conde, Sergio Serrano Villar, Pilar Vizcarra, Lescure, F. -X., Honda, H., Fowler, R. A., Lazar, J. S., Shi, G., Wung, P., Patel, N., Hagino, O., Bazzalo, I. J., Casas, M. M., Nunez, S. A., Pere, Y., Ibarrola, C. M., Solis Aramayo, M. A., Cuesta, M. C., Duarte, A. E., Gutierrez Fernandez, P. M., Iannantuono, M. A., Miyazaki, E. A., Silvio, J. P., Scublinsky, D. G., Bales, A., Catarino, D., Fiss, E., Mohrbacher, S., Sato, V., Baylao, A., Cavalcante, A., Correa, F., de Andrade, C. A., Furtado, J., Ribeiro Filho, N., Telles, V., Trevelin, L. T., Vipich, R., Boldo, R., Borges, P., Lobo, S., Luckemeyer, G., Machado, L., Alves, M. B., Iglessias, A. C., Lago, M. M., Santos, D. W., Chapdelaine, H., Falcone, E. L., Jamal, R., Luong, M. -L., Durand, M., Doucet, S., Carrier, F. -M., Coburn, B. A., Del Sorbo, L., Walmsley, S. L., Belga, S., Chen, L. Y., Mah, A. D., Steiner, T., Wright, A. J., Hajek, J., Adhikari, N., Daneman, N., Khwaja, K. A., Shahin, J., Gonzalez, C., Silva, R., Lindh, M., Maluenda, G., Fernandez, P., Oyonarte, M., Lasso, M., Boyer, A., Bronnimann, D., Bui, H. -N., Cazanave, C., Chaussade, H., Desclaux, A., Ducours, M., Duvignaud, A., Malvy, D., Martin, L., Neau, D., Nguyen, D., Pistone, T., Soubrane-Wirth, G., Leitao, J., Allavena, C., Biron, C., Bouchez, S., Gaborit, B., Gregoire, A., Le Turnier, P., Lecompte, A. -S., Lecomte, R., Lefebvre, M., Raffi, F., Boutoille, D., Morineau, P. H., Guery, R., Chatelus, E., Dumoussaud, N., Felten, R., Luca, F., Goichot, B., Schneider, F., Taquet, M. -C., Groh, M., Roumier, M., Neuville, M., Bachelard, A., Isernia, V., Phung, B. -C., Rachline, A., Sautereau, A., Vallois, D., Bleher, Y., Boucher, D., Coudon, C., Esnault, J., Guimard, T., Leautez-Nainville, S., Merrien, D., Morrier, M., Motte-Vincent, P., Gabeff, R., Leclerc, H., Cozic, C., Decours, R., Fevrier, R., Colin, G., Abgrall, S., Vignes, D., Sterpu, R., Kuellmar, M., Meersch-Dini, M., Weiss, R., Zarbock, A., Antony, C., Berger, M., Brenner, T., Taube, C., Herbstreit, F., Dolff, S., Konik, M., Schmidt, K., Zettler, M., Witzke, O., Boell, B., Garcia Borrega, J., Koehler, P., Zander, T., Dusse, F., Al-Sawaf, O., Kohler, P., Eichenauer, D., Kochanek, M., Shimabukuro-Vornhagen, A., Mellinghoff, S., Classen, A., Heger, J. -M., Meyer-Schwickerath, C., Liedgens, P., Heindel, K., Belkin, A., Biber, A., Gilboa, M., Levy, I., Litachevsky, V., Rahav, G., Finesod Wiedner, A., Zilberman-Daniels, T., Oster, Y., Strahilevitz, J., Sviri, S., Baldissera, E. M., Campochiaro, C., Cavalli, G., Dagna, L., De Luca, Giacomo., Della Torre, E., Tomelleri, A., Bernasconi De Luca, D., Capetti, A. F., Coen, M., Cossu, M. V., Galli, M., Giacomelli, A., Gubertini, G. A., Rusconi, S., Burastero, G. J., Digaetano, M., Guaraldi, G., Meschiari, M., Mussini, C., Puzzolante, C., Volpi, S., Aiello, M., Ariani, A., Chetta, A. A., Frizzelli, A., Ticinesi, A., Tuttolomondo, D., Aliberti, S., Blasi, F. B., Di Pasquale, M. F., Misuraca, S., Pilocane, T., Simonetta, E., Aghelmo, A. M., Angelini, C., Brunetta, E., Canonica, G. W., Ciccarelli, M., Dal Farra, S., De Santis, M., Ferri, S., Folci, M., Guidelli, G. M., Heffler, E. M., Loiacono, F., Malipiero, G., Paoletti, G., Pedale, R., Puggioni, F. A., Racca, F., Zumbo, A., Satou, M., Lisun, T., Protsenko, D., Rubtsov, N., Beloglazova, I., Fomina, D., Lysenko, M., Serdotetskova, S., Firstov, V., Gordeev, I., Kokorin, I., Komissarova, K., Lapochkina, N., Luchinkina, E., Malimon, V., Mamedguseyinova, S., Polubatonova, K., Suvorova, N., Arribas, J., Borobia Perez, A. M., de la Calle Prieto, F., Figueira, J. C., Motejano Sanchez, R., Mora-Rillo, M., Prados Sanchez, C., Queiruga Parada, J., Fernandez Arnalich, F., Guerro Barrientos, M., Bendala Estrada, A., Caballero Marcos, A., Garcia Leoni, M. E., Garcia-Martinez, R., Collado, A. M., Munoz Garcia, P., Torres do Rego, A., Villalba Garcia, M. V., Burrillo, A., Valerio Minero, M., Gijon Vidaurreta, P., Infante Herrero, S., Velilla, E., Machado, M., Olmedo, M., Pinilla, B., Almirante Gragera, B., Canas Ruano, M. D. L. E., Contreras Medina, S., Cortes Herrera, A., Falco Ferrer, V., Ferrer Roca, R., Nuvials Casals, X., Ribera Pascuet, E., Suanzes Diez, P., Rebollo Castro, P., Garcia Alcaide, F., Soriano, A., Oliver Caldes, A., Gonzalez Cordon, A., Cardozo, C., De la Mora Canizo, L., Pena Lopez, R., Chamorro, S., Crespillo-Andujar, C., Escudero Sanchez, R., Fortun-Abete, J., Monge-Maillo, B., Moreno Zamora, A., Norman, F., Sanchez Conde, M., Serrano Villar, S., and Vizcarra, P. more...
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Critical Care ,International Cooperation ,Population ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Placebo ,Severity of Illness Index ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,Intensive care ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Immunologic Factors ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Mortality ,education ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,education.field_of_study ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Hazard ratio ,COVID-19 ,Articles ,Middle Aged ,Receptors, Interleukin-6 ,Sarilumab ,Treatment Outcome ,030228 respiratory system ,Female ,Drug Monitoring ,Cytokine Release Syndrome ,business - Abstract
Summary Background Elevated proinflammatory cytokines are associated with greater COVID-19 severity. We aimed to assess safety and efficacy of sarilumab, an interleukin-6 receptor inhibitor, in patients with severe (requiring supplemental oxygen by nasal cannula or face mask) or critical (requiring greater supplemental oxygen, mechanical ventilation, or extracorporeal support) COVID-19. Methods We did a 60-day, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multinational phase 3 trial at 45 hospitals in Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, Russia, and Spain. We included adults (≥18 years) admitted to hospital with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and pneumonia, who required oxygen supplementation or intensive care. Patients were randomly assigned (2:2:1 with permuted blocks of five) to receive intravenous sarilumab 400 mg, sarilumab 200 mg, or placebo. Patients, care providers, outcome assessors, and investigators remained masked to assigned intervention throughout the course of the study. The primary endpoint was time to clinical improvement of two or more points (seven point scale ranging from 1 [death] to 7 [discharged from hospital]) in the modified intention-to-treat population. The key secondary endpoint was proportion of patients alive at day 29. Safety outcomes included adverse events and laboratory assessments. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04327388; EudraCT, 2020-001162-12; and WHO, U1111-1249-6021. Findings Between March 28 and July 3, 2020, of 431 patients who were screened, 420 patients were randomly assigned and 416 received placebo (n=84 [20%]), sarilumab 200 mg (n=159 [38%]), or sarilumab 400 mg (n=173 [42%]). At day 29, no significant differences were seen in median time to an improvement of two or more points between placebo (12·0 days [95% CI 9·0 to 15·0]) and sarilumab 200 mg (10·0 days [9·0 to 12·0]; hazard ratio [HR] 1·03 [95% CI 0·75 to 1·40]; log-rank p=0·96) or sarilumab 400 mg (10·0 days [9·0 to 13·0]; HR 1·14 [95% CI 0·84 to 1·54]; log-rank p=0·34), or in proportions of patients alive (77 [92%] of 84 patients in the placebo group; 143 [90%] of 159 patients in the sarilumab 200 mg group; difference −1·7 [−9·3 to 5·8]; p=0·63 vs placebo; and 159 [92%] of 173 patients in the sarilumab 400 mg group; difference 0·2 [−6·9 to 7·4]; p=0·85 vs placebo). At day 29, there were numerical, non-significant survival differences between sarilumab 400 mg (88%) and placebo (79%; difference +8·9% [95% CI −7·7 to 25·5]; p=0·25) for patients who had critical disease. No unexpected safety signals were seen. The rates of treatment-emergent adverse events were 65% (55 of 84) in the placebo group, 65% (103 of 159) in the sarilumab 200 mg group, and 70% (121 of 173) in the sarilumab 400 mg group, and of those leading to death 11% (nine of 84) were in the placebo group, 11% (17 of 159) were in the sarilumab 200 mg group, and 10% (18 of 173) were in the sarilumab 400 mg group. Interpretation This trial did not show efficacy of sarilumab in patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19 and receiving supplemental oxygen. Adequately powered trials of targeted immunomodulatory therapies assessing survival as a primary endpoint are suggested in patients with critical COVID-19. Funding Sanofi and Regeneron Pharmaceuticals. more...
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- 2021
12. Corrigendum to: Intervention to reduce the incidence of nonventilator-associated hospital-acquired pneumonia: A pilot study. [American Journal of Infection Control, 51/12 (2023) 1324-1328, 6552].
- Author
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Sopena N, Isernia V, Casas I, Díez B, Guasch I, Sabrià M, and Pedro-Botet ML
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- 2024
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13. Intervention to reduce the incidence of non-ventilator-associated hospital-acquired pneumonia: A pilot study.
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Sopena N, Isernia V, Casas I, Díez B, Guasch I, Sabrià M, and Pedro-Botet ML
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- Humans, Pilot Projects, Incidence, Prospective Studies, Hospitals, University, Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated epidemiology, Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Our aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of an intervention to reduce the incidence of non-ventilator-associated hospital-acquired pneumonia (NV-HAP) and determine compliance with preventive measures., Methods: This was a quasi-experimental before-after study involving patients in the 53-bed Internal Medicine ward in a university hospital in Spain. The preventive measures included hand hygiene, dysphagia detection, head-of-bed elevation, withdrawal of sedatives in the event of confusion, oral care, and sterile or bottled water use. A prospective post-intervention study of the incidence of NV-HAP was carried out from February 2017 to January 2018 and compared with baseline incidence (May 2014 to April 2015). Compliance with preventive measures was analyzed with 3-point-prevalence studies (December 2015, October 2016, and June 2017)., Results: The rate of NV-HAP decreased from 0.45 cases (95% confidence interval 0.24-0.77) in the pre-intervention period to 0.18 cases per 1,000 patient-days (95% confidence interval 0.07-0.39) in the post-intervention period (P = .07). Compliance with most preventive measures improved after intervention and remained stable over time., Conclusions: The strategy improved the adherence to most of the preventive measures, with a decrease in the incidence of NV-HAP. Efforts to enhance adherence to such fundamental preventive measures are critical to lowering the incidence of NV-HAP., (Copyright © 2023 Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.) more...
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- 2023
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14. Same-day initiation of bictegravir/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide: Week 48 results of the FAST study-IMEA 055.
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Bachelard A, Isernia V, Charpentier C, Benalycherif A, Mora M, Donadille C, Duvivier C, Lacombe K, El Mouhebb M, Spire B, Landman R, Descamps D, Peytavin G, Assoumou L, and Ghosn J
- Subjects
- Humans, Emtricitabine therapeutic use, Prospective Studies, Adenine, Alanine therapeutic use, Pyridones therapeutic use, Drug Combinations, Heterocyclic Compounds, 4 or More Rings therapeutic use, HIV Infections drug therapy, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: Initiating same-day ART for newly HIV-diagnosed individuals reduces secondary HIV transmissions and the risk of them being lost to follow-up between diagnosis and initiation of ART., Methods: The FAST study was a national, prospective, single-arm study assessing the efficacy, safety and feasibility of bictegravir/emtricitabine/tenofovir alafenamide (BIC/FTC/TAF) in a same-day initiation model. ART had to be started on the first medical appointment, before any laboratory results were available. Participants completed a self-administered questionnaire at each visit including a HIV anxiety 5-point Likert scale. The primary outcome was the proportion of participants in the ITT population with plasma HIV RNA (pVL) < 50 copies/mL at Week (W) 24 using the FDA Snapshot algorithm., Results: Overall, 112 participants were included in the ITT population. During follow-up, seven participants discontinued the study drug but remained on the study, and seven others discontinued follow-up. According to FDA Snapshot analysis, at W24 and W48, 90/112, (80.4%; 95% CI: 71.8-87.3) and 95/112 (84.8%; 95% CI: 76.8-90.9) of participants achieved pVL < 50 copies/mL, respectively. The protocol-defined virological failure (PDVF, 2 consecutive pVL ≥ 50 copies/mL as of W24) was observed in 11/112 (9.8%) at W24 and 14/112 (12.5%) at W48. No emergent resistance-associated mutation was detected in those with PDVF at W24 and W48. BIC/FTC/TAF was well tolerated through to W48, with a low incidence of grade 3-4 adverse events (15/100 person-years). Patient opinion of same-day treatment initiation and continuing BIC/FTC/TAF was very favourable., Conclusions: These results suggest that BIC/FTC/TAF is safe, effective and well accepted for same-day initiation., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.) more...
- Published
- 2023
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15. Risk Factors Associated with Severe/Critical COVID-19 in People Living with HIV-1.
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Bachelard A, Sautereau A, Digumber M, Isernia V, Phung B, Lehur AC, Gac SL, Landman R, Yazdanpanah Y, and Ghosn J
- Subjects
- COVID-19 Testing, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 complications, HIV Seropositivity, HIV-1
- Abstract
Introduction: Our objective was to determine the risk factors of a "severe/critical" form of COVID-19 in a cohort of people living with HIV-1 (PLWH1) followed in the Bichat University Hospital center in PARIS, FRANCE., Methods: This study was an observational retrospective monocentric cohort of PLWH1 diagnosed with COVID-19 between February 1 st and November 31 st, 2020. Risk factors associated with "severe/critical" forms were determined using stepwise forward selection., Results: One-hundred-and-twenty-nine PLWH1 with COVID-19 were included. COVID-19 diagnosis was confirmed in 98 cases (75.9%) and deemed probable according to the association of clinical criteria and contact case in 31 cases (24.1%). Clinical presentation of COVID-19 was "asymptomatic/mild/moderate" in 95 (73.6%), "severe" in 26 (21.7%) and "critical" in eight (6%). Patients with "severe/critical" COVID-19 tended to be older (median 54 year old), have a higher BMI (median 28.8 kg/m²) and were likely to have diabetes (9 versus 5) or chronic kidney disease (5 versus 2). Transgender women had higher risk too (OR: 4.9 (IC95: 1.35-24.0)). No association was observed between severity of COVID-19 and viral suppression or CD4 rates., Conclusion: Risk factors for severe COVID-19 were similar in PLWH1 than in the general population and PLWH1 transgender women were at higher risk., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors have no competing interest to declare., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.) more...
- Published
- 2022
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16. Contribution of Clinical Metagenomics to the Diagnosis of Bone and Joint Infections.
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d'Humières C, Gaïa N, Gueye S, de Lastours V, Leflon-Guibout V, Maataoui N, Duprilot M, Lecronier M, Rousseau MA, Gamany N, Lescure FX, Senard O, Deconinck L, Dollat M, Isernia V, Le Hur AC, Petitjean M, Nazimoudine A, Le Gac S, Chalal S, Ferreira S, Lazarevic V, Guigon G, Gervasi G, Armand-Lefèvre L, Schrenzel J, and Ruppé E more...
- Abstract
Bone and joint infections (BJIs) are complex infections that require precise microbiological documentation to optimize antibiotic therapy. Currently, diagnosis is based on microbiological culture, sometimes complemented by amplification and sequencing of the 16S rDNA gene. Clinical metagenomics (CMg), that is, the sequencing of the entire nucleic acids in a sample, was previously shown to identify bacteria not detected by conventional methods, but its actual contribution to the diagnosis remains to be assessed, especially with regard to 16S rDNA sequencing. In the present study, we tested the performance of CMg in 34 patients (94 samples) with suspected BJIs, as compared to culture and 16S rDNA sequencing. A total of 94 samples from 34 patients with suspicion of BJIs, recruited from two sites, were analyzed by (i) conventional culture, (ii) 16S rDNA sequencing (Sanger method), and (iii) CMg (Illumina Technology). Two negative controls were also sequenced by CMg for contamination assessment. Based on the sequencing results of negative controls, 414 out of 539 (76.7%) bacterial species detected by CMg were considered as contaminants and 125 (23.2%) as truly present. For monomicrobial infections (13 patients), the sensitivity of CMg was 83.3% as compared to culture, and 100% as compared to 16S rDNA. For polymicrobial infections (13 patients), the sensitivity of CMg was 50% compared to culture, and 100% compared to 16S rDNA. For samples negative in culture (8 patients, 21 samples), CMg detected 11 bacteria in 10 samples from 5 different patients. In 5/34 patients, CMg brought a microbiological diagnosis where conventional methods failed, and in 16/34 patients, CMg provided additional information. Finally, 99 antibiotic resistance genes were detected in 24 patients (56 samples). Provided sufficient genome coverage (87.5%), a correct inference of antibiotic susceptibility was achieved in 8/8 bacteria (100%). In conclusion, our study demonstrated that the CMg provides complementary and potentially valuable data to conventional methods of BJIs diagnosis., Competing Interests: GGu and GGe were employed by bioMérieux SA. SF was employed by Genoscreen. ER received consulting fees from Illumina and Pathoquest. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 d’Humières, Gaïa, Gueye, de Lastours, Leflon-Guibout, Maataoui, Duprilot, Lecronier, Rousseau, Gamany, Lescure, Senard, Deconinck, Dollat, Isernia, Le Hur, Petitjean, Nazimoudine, Le Gac, Chalal, Ferreira, Lazarevic, Guigon, Gervasi, Armand-Lefèvre, Schrenzel and Ruppé.) more...
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- 2022
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17. Pre-exposure HIV prophylaxis (PrEP) among transgender women: 3 years of follow-up in a university hospital in Paris.
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Isernia V, Phung B, Lepretre AM, Azadi B, Rincon G, Zelie J, Le Gac S, Deprez A, Michard F, Yazdanpanah Y, and Ghosn J
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Medication Adherence, Paris, Retrospective Studies, Sex Workers, HIV Infections prevention & control, Hospitals, University statistics & numerical data, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis statistics & numerical data, Transgender Persons statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: The principal outcome was to describe clinical characteristics of a transgender male-to-female (TGW) cohort followed for pre-exposure HIV prophylaxis (PrEP)., Introduction: Few efforts and preventive interventions have targeted transgender population, despite them being at great risk of HIV infection., Methods: This was a retrospective transgender male-to-female (TGW) cohort followed for PrEP at Bichat Hospital Sexual Health Clinic between February 2016 and January 2019.The principal outcome was to describe clinical characteristics of this TGW population: modalities of PrEP uptake, treatment adherence and tolerance, sanitary system retention, hormonal therapy and STIs.Data about age, ethnicity, language, sex work and sanitary healthcare insurance coverage were also collected., Results: Forty-nine TGW were included, with a median age of 33 years; 43/49 (87.7%) were from South America and 43/49 (87.7%) were sex workers. Forty-four 44/49 TGW (89.7%) had no regular healthcare insurance coverage. Nineteen out of 49 (38.7%) had a history of STI in the last 12 months. Hormone intake was reported in 16/49 (32.60%). PrEP with oral TDF/FTC was prescribed on a daily basis for 45/49 TG (91.8%). Two TGW discontinued PrEP for gastrointestinal intolerance. No case of renal toxicity or HIV seroconversion has been reported. Retention rate was high (71.4%), but average follow-up was 9 months., Conclusions: Our data showed a very vulnerable population, with a high proportion of migrants, sex workers and with a low healthcare insurance coverage. Retention rate was high (71.4%). Further multi-component interventions are needed to improve global sex health approach, PreP follow-up and sanitary system retention among TGW population., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.) more...
- Published
- 2021
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18. SARS-COV2 infection in 30 HIV-infected patients followed-up in a French University Hospital.
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Isernia V, Julia Z, Le Gac S, Bachelard A, Landman R, Lariven S, Joly V, Deconinck L, Rioux C, Lescure X, Yazdanpanah Y, and Ghosn J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hospitals, University, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, COVID-19 etiology, HIV Infections complications, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Introduction: An acute respiratory disease caused by a novel coronavirus (SARSCOV2) is spreading from China since January 2020. Surprisingly, few cases of Covid-19 have been reported in people living with HIV (PLWHIV)., Methods: Here we present a series of 30 PLWHIV diagnosed for SARS-COV2 infection. The principal outcome was to describe clinical characteristics of this population., Results: Eighteen (60%) patients were men, 10/30 (33,3%) women and 2/30 (6,7%) transgender women. Median age was 53,7 years (range 30-80 years) and 23/30 patients (76,7%) were born in a foreign country (out of France). The most common comorbidities were cardiovascular disease (11/30, 36,7%), hypertension (11/30, 36,7%), diabetes (9/30,30%) obesity (7/30, 23%) and chronic renal disease (5/30, 16,7%). Twenty (66,7%) patients presented overweight. Five patients (16,7%) had a Charlson comorbidity (Quan et al., 2011) score ≥3. Twenty-seven (90%) patients were virologically suppressed.CD4 count was >500cell/mm 3 in 23/30 (76,6%) patients. An antiviral treatment for SARS-COV2 was administered, in addition to HIV treatment, in 5/30 patients (16,3%). Twenty-four patients (80%) recovered from covid-19, 3/30 (10%) required invasive mechanical ventilation, 2/30 (6,7%) patients died and 4/30 (13,3%) patients were still hospitalized., Conclusions: Most of the patients were virologically suppressed with CD4>500 mm3. Risk factors were the same as those described in other SARS-COV2 series, suggesting that HIV infection is probably not an independent risk factor for covid-19., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Ltd.) more...
- Published
- 2020
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19. Case report study of the first five COVID-19 patients treated with remdesivir in France.
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Dubert M, Visseaux B, Isernia V, Bouadma L, Deconinck L, Patrier J, Wicky PH, Le Pluart D, Kramer L, Rioux C, Le Hingrat Q, Houhou-Fidouh N, Yazdanpanah Y, Ghosn J, and Lescure FX
- Subjects
- Adenosine Monophosphate adverse effects, Adenosine Monophosphate therapeutic use, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Alanine adverse effects, Alanine therapeutic use, Antiviral Agents adverse effects, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Betacoronavirus drug effects, Betacoronavirus physiology, COVID-19, Coronavirus Infections virology, Female, France, Hospitalization, Humans, Male, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral virology, SARS-CoV-2, Viral Load drug effects, Withholding Treatment, Adenosine Monophosphate analogs & derivatives, Alanine analogs & derivatives, Coronavirus Infections drug therapy, Pneumonia, Viral drug therapy
- Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has been identified as the virus responsible for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak worldwide. Data on treatment are scare and parallels have been made between SARS-CoV-2 and other coronaviruses. Remdesivir is a broad-spectrum antiviral with efficient in vitro activity against SARS-CoV-2. Evidence of clinical improvement in patients with severe COVID-19 treated with remdesivir is controversial. The aim of this study was to describe the clinical outcomes and virological monitoring of the first five COVID-19 patients admitted to the intensive care unit of Bichat-Claude Bernard University Hospital, Paris, France, for severe pneumonia related to SARS-CoV-2 and treated with remdesivir. Quantitative reverse transcription PCR was used to monitor SARS-CoV-2 in blood plasma and the lower and upper respiratory tract. Among the five patients treated, two needed mechanical ventilation and one needed high-flow cannula oxygen. A significant decrease in SARS-CoV-2 viral load in the upper respiratory tract was observed in most cases, but two patients died with active SARS-CoV-2 replication in the lower respiratory tract. Plasma samples were positive for SARS-CoV-2 in only one patient. Remdesivir was interrupted before the initialy planned duration in four patients, two because of alanine aminotransferase elevations (3 to 5 normal range) and two because of renal failure requiring renal replacement. This case series of five COVID-19 patients requiring intensive care unit treatment for respiratory distress and treated with remdesivir, highlights the complexity of remdesivir use in such critically ill patients., (Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.) more...
- Published
- 2020
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20. [Septic arthritis of the knee by Staphylococcus warneri].
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Rodríguez-Montserrat D, Calle-García JA, Dellonder-Frigolé J, Isernia V, Molinos-Abdós S, Hernández-Hermoso JA, and Martínez-Pastor JC
- Subjects
- Humans, Staphylococcus, Arthritis, Infectious diagnosis, Knee Joint microbiology, Staphylococcal Infections diagnosis
- Abstract
Septic arthritis usually occurs as an acute joint process that can cause a rapid destruction of the cartilage, if the necessary therapeutic measures were not taken. Rarely, Staphylococcus warneri may be the cause of this pathology although due to its diagnostic difficulty we can make mistakes in its treatment. We present the case of a patient with septic arthritis of the knee by this germ and we intend to remark what are the diagnostic measures and recommendations to consider for this osteoarticular infection. more...
- Published
- 2018
21. Approach for initial treatment of skin and soft tissue infection.
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González del Castillo J, Isernia V, Candel FJ, and Martín-Sánchez FJ
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- Animals, Humans, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Skin Diseases, Infectious diagnosis, Skin Diseases, Infectious drug therapy, Soft Tissue Infections diagnosis, Soft Tissue Infections drug therapy
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- 2015
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22. Peak bone mass in young HIV-infected patients compared with healthy controls.
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Negredo E, Domingo P, Ferrer E, Estrada V, Curran A, Navarro A, Isernia V, Rosales J, Pérez-Álvarez N, Puig J, Bonjoch A, Echeverría P, Podzamczer D, and Clotet B
- Subjects
- Absorptiometry, Photon, Adult, Bone Density, Bone Diseases, Metabolic diagnosis, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Osteoporosis diagnosis, Risk Factors, Spain, Young Adult, Bone Diseases, Metabolic epidemiology, Bone and Bones physiopathology, HIV Infections complications, Osteoporosis epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Peak bone mass (PBM) is the amount of bone present at the end of skeletal maturation. It is an important determinant of osteoporotic fracture risk. Data on the PBM in the HIV-infected population are lacking., Design and Methods: We performed a multicenter (6 centers in Spain), case-control study to assess PBM using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry. We studied HIV-infected patients aged 20-30 years and compared them with age- and gender-matched non-HIV-infected controls. We also assessed the predictive factors for a low PBM., Results: We included 307 subjects: 232 HIV-infected patients and 75 non-HIV-infected controls. Bone mineral density was similar in both groups although differences were seen in the total femur T-score (-0.15SD versus +0.50SD, respectively, P = 0.018). The percentage of osteopenia and osteoporosis was higher in the HIV-infected patients (56.5% and 10.7%, respectively) than in the controls (50.7% and 4%, respectively; P = 0.019). Osteoporosis was more frequent in HIV-infected men than in control men and HIV-infected women (12.2% versus 5.5% and 4.8%, P = 0.033). Protease inhibitors and nadir CD4 T-cells were negatively associated with PBM, whereas fat and lean mass were positively associated with PBM., Conclusions: Bone mineral density was similar between HIV-infected patients aged 20-30 years than in age- and gender-matched controls. However, lower femoral T-scores and higher rate of osteopenia and osteoporosis were seen in HIV-infected men. Therapy with protease inhibitors, nadir CD4 counts, and fat and lean mass were predictive factors of PBM. Given that these patients will be living with HIV infection for many years, every effort should be made to modify risk factors. more...
- Published
- 2014
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23. [Measles in a 12 weeks pregnant woman].
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Díaz-Pollán B, Nuñez-Orantos MJ, Isernia V, and Mariano-Lázaro JA
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Trimester, First, Measles diagnosis, Measles therapy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious diagnosis, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious therapy
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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