4 results on '"Marlen Castellanos-Fernández"'
Search Results
2. The establishment of public health policies and the burden of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in the Americas
- Author
-
Luis Antonio Díaz, Eduardo Fuentes-López, Gustavo Ayares, Francisco Idalsoaga, Jorge Arnold, Andrea Márquez-Lomas, Carolina A Ramírez, María Paz Medel, Francisca Viñuela, Lucas Lacalle, Juan Pablo Roblero, Catterina Ferreccio, Mariana Lazo, Mayur Brahmania, Ashwani K Singal, Melisa Dirchwolf, Nahum Méndez-Sánchez, Norberto Chavez-Tapia, Patricia Guerra, Juan Carlos Restrepo, Claudia P Oliveira, Julissa Lombardo, Abel Sánchez, Martín Elizondo, Martín Tagle, Martín Padilla, Marco Sánchez, Enrique Carrera, Marcos Girala, Omega Chery, Marlen Castellanos-Fernández, Francisco Barrera, Jeffrey V Lazarus, Patrick S Kamath, Ramon Bataller, Marco Arrese, and Juan Pablo Arab
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease ,Risk Factors ,Health Policy ,Gastroenterology ,non-alcoholic fatty liver diseases ,Humans ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Obesity ,Public Health ,Americas ,the Americas ,digestive system diseases - Abstract
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) affects 20-25% of the general population and is associated with morbidity, increased mortality, and elevated health-care costs. Most NAFLD risk factors are modifiable and, therefore, potentially amenable to being reduced by public health policies. To date, there is no information about NAFLD-related public health policies in the Americas. In this study, we analysed data from 17 American countries and found that none have established national public health policies to decrease NAFLD-related burden. There is notable heterogeneity in the existence of public health policies to prevent NAFLD-related conditions. The most common public health policies were related to diabetes (15 [88%] countries), hypertension (14 [82%] countries), cardiovascular diseases (14 [82%] countries), obesity (nine [53%] countries), and dyslipidaemia (six [35%] of countries). Only seven (41%) countries had a registry of the burden of NAFLD, and efforts to raise awareness in the Americas were scarce. The implementation of public health policies are urgently needed in the Americas to decrease the burden of NAFLD.
- Published
- 2022
3. Alcohol-related liver disease is rarely detected at early stages compared with liver diseases of other etiologies worldwide
- Author
-
Nerma Zahiragic, Mohamed Alboraie, Daniela Reis, Suzane K. Ono, Marina Biryukova, Rakesh Kochhar, Won Kim, Mohamed El Kassas, Ling Yang, Agustina Rodil, Jacob George, Narendra Dhaka, Way Siow, Caridad Ruenes Domech, Federico Sáez-Royuela, Nadja Sivac-Burina, Mercy Karoney, Alberto Queiroz Farias, Wenfang Gui, Vasily Isakov, Johannes Kluwe, Yuanjie Yu, John Chen Hsiang, Prem Harichander Thurairajah, Fernando Bessone, Ramon Bataller, Fatma Some, Julio Vorobioff, A. Sidney Barritt, Ester Badia-Aranda, Josepmaria Argemi, Chaoqun Zhang, Helena Cortez-Pinto, Meritxell Ventura-Cots, Enrique Arús-Soler, Mariana A. Nabeshima Pharm, Sanjin Spreckic, Shiyun Tan, Ahmad Alfadhli, Andrew Wandera, Zaily Dorta Guiridi, Pedro Miguel Marques da Costa, Christoph Scheurich, Edna Solange Dos Santos Traquino, Marlen Castellanos Fernández, Flair José Carrilho, Mohamed Yacoub, Neil D. Shah, Pengbo Wu, Juan G. Abraldes, Azra Husic-Selimovic, Teo Eng-Kiong, and Repositório da Universidade de Lisboa
- Subjects
Liver Cirrhosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cirrhosis ,Biopsy ,Hepatitis C virus ,Disease ,Global Health ,medicine.disease_cause ,Gastroenterology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Liver disease ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,NAFLD ,Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Mortality ,Liver Diseases, Alcoholic ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Liver ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Disease Progression ,Etiology ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Viral hepatitis - Abstract
© 2019 by the AGA Institute, Background & aims: Despite recent advances in treatment of viral hepatitis, liver-related mortality is high, possibly owing to the large burden of advanced alcohol-related liver disease (ALD). We investigated whether patients with ALD are initially seen at later stages of disease development than patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection or other etiologies. Methods: We performed a cross-sectional study of 3453 consecutive patients with either early or advanced liver disease (1699 patients with early and 1754 with advanced liver disease) seen at 17 tertiary care liver or gastrointestinal units worldwide, from August 2015 through March 2017. We collected anthropometric, etiology, and clinical information, as well as and model for end-stage liver disease scores. We used unconditional logistic regression to estimate the odds ratios for evaluation at late stages of the disease progression. Results: Of the patients analyzed, 81% had 1 etiology of liver disease and 17% had 2 etiologies of liver disease. Of patients seen at early stages for a single etiology, 31% had HCV infection, 21% had hepatitis B virus infection, and 17% had nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, whereas only 3.8% had ALD. In contrast, 29% of patients seen for advanced disease had ALD. Patients with ALD were more likely to be seen at specialized centers, with advanced-stage disease, compared with patients with HCV-associated liver disease (odds ratio, 14.1; 95% CI, 10.5-18.9; P < .001). Of patients with 2 etiologies of liver disease, excess alcohol use was associated with 50% of cases. These patients had significantly more visits to health care providers, with more advanced disease, compared with patients without excess alcohol use. The mean model for end-stage liver disease score for patients with advanced ALD (score, 16) was higher than for patients with advanced liver disease not associated with excess alcohol use (score, 13) (P < .01). Conclusions: In a cross-sectional analysis of patients with liver disease worldwide, we found that patients with ALD are seen with more advanced-stage disease than patients with HCV-associated liver disease. Of patients with 2 etiologies of liver disease, excess alcohol use was associated with 50% of cases. Early detection and referral programs are needed for patients with ALD worldwide., This study was funded by the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism grants U01AA021908 and U01AA020821, a scholarship grant from the Spanish Association for the Study of the Liver (M.V.-C.), and a grants NSFC 81570530 and 81370550 from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (L.Y.).
- Published
- 2019
4. Tolerancia del tratamiento con interferón estándar y ribavirina en pacientes cirróticos por virus de la hepatitis C Tolerance to treatment with standard interferon and ribavirin in patients presenting with cirrhosis from hepatitis C
- Author
-
Zaily Dorta Guridi, Marlen Castellanos Fernández, Hugo Nodarse Cuní, Enrique Arús Soler, Frank Pérez Triana, and Licet González Fabián
- Subjects
Tratamiento ,cirrosis hepática por virus C ,Treatment ,hepatic cirrhosis by hepatitis C virus ,Medicine - Abstract
En el tratamiento de la cirrosis hepática compensada de etiología vírica la respuesta viral sostenida con el interferón y ribavirina es menor y se acompaña de mayor frecuencia e intensidad de efectos adversos en relación con pacientes no cirróticos. No obstante, dadas las pocas opciones terapéuticas para este grupo de pacientes y la necesidad de retrasar la aparición de las complicaciones, nos motivamos a la realización de este trabajo. Se presentan los resultados de un grupo de 36 pacientes con diagnóstico de cirrosis hepática por el virus de la hepatitis C (VHC) en estadio de Child A incluidos en un ensayo clínico multicéntrico, liderado por el Instituto de Gastroenterología, a los que se les administró un esquema terapéutico de interferón alfa-2b más ribavirina por 48 sem, se evaluó su tolerancia a través de los eventos adversos tantos clínicos como hematológicos. Los resultados demuestran que esta alternativa de tratamiento es segura y bien tolerada.In treatment of compensating hepatic cirrhosis of viral etiology the maintained viral response with Interferon and Ribavirin is minor and it is accompanied of a greater frequency of adverse effects in relation to non-cirrhotic patients. However, due to the scarce therapeutical options for this group of patients and the need to retard the appearance of complications, was the reason of present paper. Authors present the results from a group of 36 patients diagnosed with hepatic cirrhosis from HCV in A Child's stage included in multicenter clinical trials, sponsored by the Institute of Gastroenterology; patients received a therapeutical scheme of Interferon alfa-2b plus Ribavirin during 48 weeks assessing their tolerance by clinical and hematologic adverse events. Results demonstrate that this treatment alternative is safe and well-tolerated.
- Published
- 2010
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.