1,406 results on '"P, Demoly"'
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2. Machine learning-enabled forward prediction and inverse design of 4D-printed active plates
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Xiaohao Sun, Liang Yue, Luxia Yu, Connor T. Forte, Connor D. Armstrong, Kun Zhou, Frédéric Demoly, Ruike Renee Zhao, and H. Jerry Qi
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Shape transformations of active composites (ACs) depend on the spatial distribution of constituent materials. Voxel-level complex material distributions can be encoded by 3D printing, offering enormous freedom for possible shape-change 4D-printed ACs. However, efficiently designing the material distribution to achieve desired 3D shape changes is significantly challenging yet greatly needed. Here, we present an approach that combines machine learning (ML) with both gradient-descent (GD) and evolutionary algorithm (EA) to design AC plates with 3D shape changes. A residual network ML model is developed for the forward shape prediction. A global-subdomain design strategy with ML-GD and ML-EA is then used for the inverse material-distribution design. For a variety of numerically generated target shapes, both ML-GD and ML-EA demonstrate high efficiency. By further combining ML-EA with a normal distance-based loss function, optimized designs are achieved for multiple irregular target shapes. Our approach thus provides a highly efficient tool for the design of 4D-printed active composites.
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- 2024
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3. Correction to 'Impact of liquid sublingual immunotherapy on asthma onset and progression in patients with allergic rhinitis: a nationwide population-based study (EfficAPSI study)' [The Lancet Regional Health – Europe 41 (2024) 100915]
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Pascal Demoly, Mathieu Molimard, Jean-François Bergmann, Bertrand Delaisi, Amandine Gouverneur, Jade Vadel, Cédric Collin, Laurence Girard, Silvia Scurati, and Philippe Devillier
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2024
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4. Who is at-risk for severe anaphylaxis in France?
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Luciana Kase Tanno, MD, PhD, Pham Thao Van Luong, MD, MSc, Megane Dieval, MSc, Caroline Dunoyer, PhD, Djito Tevi Lawson, MSc, Nicolas Molinari, PhD, Isabella Annesi-Maesano, MD, PhD, and Pascal Demoly, MD, PhD
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Anaphylaxis ,Classification ,Coding ,Epidemiology ,Hospitalization ,Mortality ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Background: The understanding of risk factors related to severe anaphylaxis is key to implementing prevention strategies. We present the first French population-based nine-year anaphylaxis hospitalization study evaluating specific trends and factors related to severe anaphylaxis (SA), to support identification of phenotypes at-risk. Methods: This study used descriptive data from the French hospitalization database for the years 2012–2021, and included all patients hospitalized with anaphylaxis using International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 codes listed as a primary diagnosis. SA were cases that either required a hospitalization in intensive care units or resulted in death. Potential risk factors were identified according to corresponding ICD codes, available as secondary data during the patient's hospitalization. Results: The average hospitalization rate of all cases of anaphylaxis (SA and non-SA) was 1.34/100,000/year, and rate of admissions for SA was 0.08/100,000/year. Among the 5463 SA, 37.7% had unspecified coding label, when trigger was not identified. For SA cases in which trigger was identified, most were related to drugs (45.6%), followed by food (9.3%) and insect sting (7.2%). Overall, admissions due to anaphylaxis (SA and non-SA) were more frequent in males (57%). However, when the trigger was drugs, the proportion was significantly higher in females. For children aged 5–9 years, the most common trigger for SA was food. Patients for which SA was triggered by insect stings were identified exclusively in the 10–14 years age group. Chronic spontaneous urticaria was associated with insect sting-induced anaphylaxis, regardless of the severity. Angioedema was associated with all causes of SA. Cases of anaphylaxis presenting with urticaria and angioedema included cases with identified and unidentified triggers. Asthma and a personal history of allergy were associated with drug- and food-induced anaphylaxis. Conclusion: This is the first study to provide data on severe phenotypes of anaphylaxis in France. Data presented is key to the implementation of public health actions and preventive strategies to improve quality care.
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- 2024
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5. Allergic and hypersensitivity condition in the International Patients’ Summary (IPS) standard: The need of updates through the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-11
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Luciana Kase Tanno, MD, PhD, Alain Perie, PhD, Jonathan A. Bernstein, MD, James L. Sublett, MD, Karapet Davtyan, MD, MPH, MBA, Frederic Berard, MD, PhD, Ruby Pawankar, MD, PhD, Marylin Valentin Rostan, MD, Herberto Chong, MD, PhD, Anahi Yañez, MD, Ignacio J. Ansontegui, MD, PhD, Motohiro Ebisawa, MD, PhD, Gary W.K. Wong, MD, PhD, Mario Morais-Almeida, MD, Bryan Martin, MD, Yann Briand, PhD, and Pascal Demoly, MD, PhD
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Allergy ,Anaphylaxis ,Classification ,Coding ,Epidemiology ,Hypersensitivity ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
In 2010, the United States Human and Health Services (US HHS) and the European Union's (EU) Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology signed a memorandum of understanding to stimulate cooperation surrounding health-related information communications technology. The key project that emerged from this agreement is the International Patient Summary (IPS), intended to provide succinct clinically relevant patient summaries, which are generalizable and condition-independent, that can be readily used by all clinicians for the care of patients. Although allergies are included in the main information required by the IPS library and framework, it is misrepresented which leads to underdiagnosis or misdiagnosis of patients suffering from allergic and hypersensitivity conditions (A/H). The French and Montpellier World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Centres have provided arguments for supporting representation of A/H in the IPS. These are based on the relevance of the new classification of A/H in the WHO International Classification of Diseases 11th version (ICD-11), and the need for alignment of eHealth tools with harmonized health information. We first present the A/H in the IPS initiative with the mission of producing an international information system that can be used globally in electronic health records to standardize clinical diagnoses and facilitate communication between clinicians caring for patients with A/H diseases. It is believed this initiative will provide a strong voice for the allergy community and an effective process for improving the quality of health data that will optimize medical care for our patients worldwide.
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- 2024
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6. Safety of 300IR house dust mite sublingual tablet from pooled clinical trial and post-marketing data
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Margitta Worm, MD, Pascal Demoly, MD, PhD, Yoshitaka Okamoto, MD, PhD, Carmen Vidal, MD, PhD, Katia Daghildjian, PharmD, PhD, Kwok Yan, MD, Thomas B. Casale, MD, and Karl-Christian Bergmann, MD, PhD
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Antigens ,Dermatophagoides ,Asthma ,Dust mite allergy ,Rhinitis ,Allergic ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Background: The 300IR house dust mite (HDM) sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) tablet is approved for treatment of HDM-induced allergic rhinitis (AR). To provide a comprehensive review of the 300IR HDM-SLIT tablet safety profile based on randomized controlled trial (RCT) pooled data and post-marketing (PM) pharmacovigilance data. Methods: Subjects (5–65 years) with confirmed HDM-AR with or without controlled asthma were treated with 300IR or placebo in 8 RCTs. Reported treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were pooled and analyzed descriptively in subsets of adults/adolescents and children. Adverse reactions (ADRs) collected from spontaneous reporting and PM studies through a pharmacovigilance system since the first marketing authorization were also analyzed. Results: Across RCTs, 1853 subjects were treated with the 300IR HDM-SLIT tablet and 1846 with placebo. In both subsets of adults/adolescents and children whichever their asthma status, treatment-related TEAEs of higher incidence in active groups vs placebo were mostly consistent with mild or moderate local application-site reactions. They were mainly reported on the first days of treatment and decreased over time. 4 severe laryngopharyngeal reactions (2 requiring adrenaline/epinephrine) and 1 moderate eczema considered serious rapidly resolved with medications; no anaphylaxis was reported. In PM settings, ADRs reported in more than 235,000 patients were in line with RCT findings. Severe systemic reactions occurred rarely; 12 anaphylactic reactions resolved safely (5 with adrenaline). No new safety signal was raised. Conclusion: Safety data from RCTs and more than 7 years of real-life experience confirmed the favorable safety profile of 300IR HDM-SLIT tablet in patients across different regions, regardless of age and asthma status. Clinical trial registrations: NCT00674700; Retrospectively registered 06 May 2008.NCT01199133; Retrospectively registered 09 September 2010.NCT01527188; Retrospectively registered 01 February 2012.NCT02443805; Registered 29 April 2015/EudraCT 2014-004223-46; Registered 16 September 2015.jRCT2080221872/JapicCTI-121917; Registered 01 August 2012.jRCT2080222929/JapicCTI-15298; Registered 04 August 2015.
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- 2024
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7. Impact of liquid sublingual immunotherapy on asthma onset and progression in patients with allergic rhinitis: a nationwide population-based study (EfficAPSI study)Research in context
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Pascal Demoly, Mathieu Molimard, Jean-François Bergmann, Bertrand Delaisi, Amandine Gouverneur, Jade Vadel, Cédric Collin, Laurence Girard, Silvia Scurati, and Philippe Devillier
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Asthma ,Rhinitis ,Allergic ,Sublingual immunotherapy ,Precision medicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Summary: Background: The only disease-modifying treatment currently available for allergic rhinitis (AR) is allergen immunotherapy (AIT). The main objective of the EfficAPSI real-world study (RWS) was to evaluate the impact of liquid sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT-liquid) on asthma onset and evolution in AR patients. Methods: An analysis with propensity score weighting was performed using the EfficAPSI cohort, comparing patients dispensed SLIT-liquid with patients dispensed AR symptomatic medication with no history of AIT (controls). Index date corresponded to the first dispensation of either treatment. The sensitive definition of asthma event considered the first asthma drug dispensation, hospitalisation or long-term disease (LTD) for asthma, the specific one omitted drug dispensation and the combined one considered omalizumab or three ICS ± LABA dispensation, hospitalisation or LTD. In patients with pre-existing asthma, the GINA treatment step-up evolution was analysed. Findings: In this cohort including 112,492 SLIT-liquid and 333,082 controls, SLIT-liquid exposure was associated with a significant lower risk of asthma onset vs. control, according to all definitions (combined: HR [95% CI] = 0.62 [0.60–0.63], sensitive: 0.77 [0.76–0.78], and specific: 0.67 [0.61–0.72]). Exposure to SLIT was associated with a one-third reduction in GINA step-up regardless baseline steps. Interpretation: In this national RWS with the largest number of person-years of follow-up to date in the field of AIT, SLIT-liquid was associated with a significant reduction in the risk of asthma onset or worsening. The use of three definitions (sensitive or specific) and GINA step-up reinforced the rigorous methodology, substantiating SLIT-liquid evidence as a causal treatment option for patients with respiratory allergies. Funding: Stallergenes Greer.
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- 2024
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8. Computational design for 4D printing of topology optimized multi-material active composites
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Athinarayanarao, Darshan, Prod’hon, Romaric, Chamoret, Dominique, Qi, H. Jerry, Bodaghi, Mahdi, André, Jean-Claude, and Demoly, Frédéric
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- 2023
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9. The Primary Care and Environmental Health e-Learning Course to Integrate Environmental Health in General Practice: Before-and-After Feasibility Study
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Jean-Baptiste Tostain, Marina Mathieu, Agnès Oude Engberink, Bernard Clary, Michel Amouyal, Béatrice Lognos, Pascal Demoly, Isabella Annesi-Maesano, Grégory Ninot, Nicolas Molinari, Arnaud Richard, Maha Badreddine, Claire Duflos, and Francois Carbonnel
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Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundEnvironmental and behavioral factors are responsible for 12.6 million deaths annually and contribute to 25% of deaths and chronic diseases worldwide. Through the One Health initiative, the World Health Organization and other international health organizations plan to improve these indicators to create healthier environments by 2030. To meet this challenge, training primary care professionals should be the priority of national policies. General practitioners (GPs) are ready to become involved but need in-depth training to gain and apply environmental health (EH) knowledge to their practice. In response, we designed the Primary Care Environment and Health (PCEH) online course in partnership with the Occitanie Regional Health Agency in France. This course was used to train GP residents from the Montpelier-Nimes Faculty of Medicine in EH knowledge. The course was organized in 2 successive parts: (1) an asynchronous e-learning modular course focusing on EH knowledge and tools and (2) 1 day of face-to-face sessions. ObjectiveThis study assessed the impact of the e-learning component of the PCEH course on participants’ satisfaction, knowledge, and behavior changes toward EH. MethodsThis was a pilot before-and-after study. Four modules were available in the 6-hour e-learning course: introduction to EH, population-based approach (mapping tools and resources), clinical cases, and communication tools. From August to September 2021, we recruited first-year GP residents from the University of Montpellier (N=130). Participants’ satisfaction, knowledge improvements for 19 EH risks, procedure to report EH risks to health authorities online, and behavior change (to consider the possible effects of the environment on their own and their patients’ health) were assessed using self-reported questionnaires on a Likert scale (1-5). Paired Student t tests and the McNemar χ2 test were used to compare quantitative and qualitative variables, respectively, before and after the course. ResultsA total of 74 GP residents completed the e-learning and answered the pre- and posttest questionnaires. The mean satisfaction score was 4.0 (SD 0.9) out of 5. Knowledge scores of EH risks increased significantly after the e-learning course, with a mean difference of 30% (P
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- 2024
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10. Respiratory allergic diseases and allergen immunotherapy: A French patient survey before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Philippe Devillier, MD, PhD, Sarah Saf, MD, Christine Rolland, BA, Giorgio Walter Canonica, MD, and Pascal Demoly, MD, PhD
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COVID-19 ,Allergen immunotherapy ,Respiratory allergy ,Allergic rhinitis ,Asthma ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic brought unprecedented global disruption to both healthcare providers and patients with respiratory allergies. There are limited real-life data on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the risk perception of patients with allergy treated with allergen immunotherapy (AIT). Objective: To understand the risk perception of allergic patients treated with sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) before and during the pandemic, and their attitudes towards COVID-19 infection and vaccination. Methods: This was a non-interventional, cross-sectional survey conducted from October to November 2021 in France. Adult patients, who had been prescribed and had received a Stallergenes SLIT (liquid or liquid and tablets) before the pandemic (from August 1, 2018 to March 10, 2020) and during the pandemic (from March 11, 2020 to August 31, 2021), were identified from the Stallergenes named-patient products (NPP) database. Patients completed an online questionnaire. Data were analyzed descriptively. Results: A total of 5258 patients from all over France completed the questionnaire. Mean (±SD) age of the respondents was 39.3 (±13.0) years and 66.9% were female. Some of them (11.8%) were obese (BMI >30 kg/m2). Main allergic diseases were rhinitis (80.0% of patients) with or without conjunctivitis, and asthma (39.0%). More than half of the patients experienced moderate to severe (58.0%) and persistent allergic rhinitis profile (70.4%). Most patients were poly-allergic (72.7%), mostly to house dust mites (61.9%), grass pollens (61.5%), tree pollens (57.8%), and cat dander (37.2%). Only 14.1% of patients experienced an aggravation of their allergy symptoms during lockdown and 14.8% were infected with COVID-19, with hospitalization required for 1.8%. Only 3.1% of patients reported their SLIT initiation as being postponed due to the pandemic. SLIT was changed, temporarily interrupted or permanently discontinued during the pandemic in 21.9% of patients. Changes mainly concerned the maintenance dose for SLIT-liquid (63.2%). SLIT modification was due to COVID-19 infection in only 4.2%. Most patients did not feel vulnerable (53.1%), anxious (55.2%), at risk to present severe symptoms of COVID-19 (77.1%), or at risk to transmit coronavirus (80.4%). However, greater anxiety was reported in patients with allergic asthma (33.6%) or other respiratory disorders (50.4%). Patients who felt vulnerable partly assigned their vulnerability to their allergic disease (59.3%). Suffering from an allergic disease did not make patients feel more vulnerable to side effects of COVID-19 vaccine for 79.6% of them. Conclusion: Overall, most patients with allergy and under SLIT were not strongly concerned by the COVID-19 infection. SLIT did not have a negative impact on the COVID-19 symptoms.
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- 2024
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11. Association between physical activity over a 10-year period and current insomnia symptoms, sleep duration and daytime sleepiness: a European population-based study
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Thorarinn Gislason, Joachim Heinrich, Pascal Demoly, Rain Jogi, Kjell Torén, Jennifer L Perret, Debbie Jarvis, Judith Garcia Aymerich, Eva Lindberg, Christer Janson, Erla Bjornsdottir, Bryndis Benediktsdottir, Vanessa Garcia Larsen, Karl Franklin, Sandra Dorado-Arenas, and Elin Helga Thorarinsdottir
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Medicine - Abstract
Objectives To explore the relationship between physical activity over a 10-year period and current symptoms of insomnia, daytime sleepiness and estimated sleep duration in adults aged 39–67.Design Population-based, multicentre cohort study.Setting 21 centres in nine European countries.Methods Included were 4339 participants in the third follow-up to the European Community Respiratory Health Survey (ECRHS III), who answered questions on physical activity at baseline (ECRHS II) and questions on physical activity, insomnia symptoms, sleep duration and daytime sleepiness at 10-year follow-up (ECRHS III). Participants who reported that they exercised with a frequency of at least two or more times a week, for 1 hour/week or more, were classified as being physically active. Changes in activity status were categorised into four groups: persistently non-active; became inactive; became active; and persistently active.Main outcome measures Insomnia, sleep time and daytime sleepiness in relation to physical activity.Results Altogether, 37% of participants were persistently non-active, 25% were persistently active, 20% became inactive and 18% became active from baseline to follow-up. Participants who were persistently active were less likely to report difficulties initiating sleep (OR 0.60, 95% CI 0.45–0.78), a short sleep duration of ≤6 hours/night (OR 0.71, 95% CI 0.59–0.85) and a long sleep of ≥9 hours/night (OR 0.53, 95% CI 0.33–0.84) than persistently non-active subjects after adjusting for age, sex, body mass index, smoking history and study centre. Daytime sleepiness and difficulties maintaining sleep were not related to physical activity status.Conclusion Physically active people have a lower risk of some insomnia symptoms and extreme sleep durations, both long and short.
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- 2024
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12. Robotic Conformal Material Extrusion 3D Printing for Appending Structures on Unstructured Surfaces
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Connor David Armstrong, Stuart Macrae Montgomery, Liang Yue, Frédéric Demoly, Kun Zhou, and H. Jerry Qi
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3D printing ,additive manufacturing ,functional structures ,robotic printing ,Computer engineering. Computer hardware ,TK7885-7895 ,Control engineering systems. Automatic machinery (General) ,TJ212-225 - Abstract
Fabrication of structures in unstructured conditions is a promising area of bolstering the application spaces of additive manufacturing (AM). One emerging application is appending structures on existing ones that may have nonplanar surfaces in unconventional orientations. However, extrusion‐based AM techniques are limited to printing on structured, planar environments with a fixed single‐nozzle direction. Herein, the authors present a dexterous conformal material extrusion printing method using a six‐axis robotic arm capable of constructing complex parts onto highly unstructured surfaces with rough topographies. The manufacturing method employs a custom algorithm that generates layers consisting of 3D spatial coordinates of print path as well as the extrusion nozzle oriented in the normal direction of the substrate, thereby enabling conformal motion of the extrusion nozzle to the unstructured surface. The capabilities of the surface‐informed robotic conformal 3D printing method to fabricate structures on surfaces with a variety of topographies in unconventional orientations are demonstrated. Finally, via addition of deposited conductive paths, a high‐strength, functional reinforcement capable of in situ deformation monitoring is appended. This work has the potential for reconstructing, repairing, and reinforcing existing structures in human‐limited or inaccessible spaces. Integration of functional elements can also enable in situ sensing, monitoring, and self‐diagnosis.
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- 2024
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13. Transformações cognitivas nas trajetórias de envelhecimento e longevidade em Saúde Mental
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Laryssa Dayanna Costa Ferreira, Karla Rosane do Amaral Demoly, and Yákara Vasconcelos Pereira
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Envelhecer ,Longevidade ,Oficinas ,Saúde Mental ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Este trabalho analisa os movimentos da cognição relacionados a percursos do envelhecimento e da longevidade no contexto de usuários atendidos em um Centro de Atenção Psicossocial. Buscamos apoio, especialmente, nos estudos da Biologia do Conhecer sobre os processos de cuidar e viver. A metodologia adotada é qualitativa, na forma da pesquisa-intervenção, com emprego de oficinas cenopoéticas que favorecem a livre expressão mediante múltiplas formas de ação na linguagem. Como resultado desta pesquisa, pudemos compreender mudanças de condutas na experiência dos participantes; e coordenações de ações novas e emergentes dirigidas ao cuidado com a saúde mental nos percursos do envelhecimento e da longevidade.
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- 2024
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14. Food hypersensitivity: an examination of factors influencing symptoms and temporal changes in the prevalence of sensitization in an adult sample
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Lam, Holly C. Y., Neukirch, Catherine, Janson, Christer, Garcia-Aymerich, Judith, Clausen, Michael, Idrose, N. Sabrina, Demoly, Pascal, Bertelsen, Randi J., Ruiz, Lidia C., Raherison, Chantal, and Jarvis, Deborah L.
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- 2023
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15. Bio-inspired design, modeling, and 3D printing of lattice-based scale model scooter decks
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Namvar, Naser, Moloukzadeh, Ilya, Zolfagharian, Ali, Demoly, Frédéric, and Bodaghi, Mahdi
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- 2023
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16. 4D Printing: Bridging the Gap between Fundamental Research and Real-World Applications
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Frédéric Demoly and Jean-Claude André
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4D printing ,epistemology ,innovation ,artificial intelligence ,Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The Special Issue “4D Printing: State-of-the-art, Recent Trends, and Applications” highlights the significant impact of scientific advancements on practical and innovative applications. It focuses on the interdisciplinary challenges of multi-material printability on a voxel basis and optimizing the actuation performance of composite structures with various stimuli. Key considerations, such as mechanical strength and potential adverse effects, shape the design methods suited to specific quantitative data limitations. Four-dimensional printing calls for creativity, interdisciplinary collaboration, and practical applications. While recognizing experience-based approaches in research, this review paper emphasizes integrating science and technology through alternative strategies; innovative approaches; and the exploration of engineering, design, and artificial intelligence.
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- 2024
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17. Clinical benefits with 300 IR HDM SLIT tablet in Europeans with house dust mite allergic rhinitis: Post hoc analysis of a large phase 3 trial
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Oliver Pfaar, MD, PhD, Frédéric De BLAY, MD, Giorgio Walter Canonica, MD, Thomas B. Casale, MD, PhD, Philippe Gevaert, MD, PhD, Peter W. Hellings, MD, PhD, Krzysztof Kowal, MD, PhD, Giovanni Passalacqua, MD, Miguel Tortajada-Girbés, MD, PhD, Carmen Vidal, MD, PhD, Margitta Worm, MD, PhD, Farah Bahbah, MD, and Pascal Demoly, MD, PhD
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Allergic rhinitis ,Combined score ,House dust mite ,Quality of life ,Sublingual immunotherapy tablet ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Background: House dust mite (HDM)-induced allergic rhinitis (AR) is a major cause of allergic respiratory disease. The efficacy and safety of the 300 IR HDM sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) tablet in patients with moderate-to-severe HDM-AR was confirmed in a large, international, phase 3 randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Here, we analyzed the results in the European population. Methods: Data from 91 European centers that participated in the international, double-blind, RCT (EudraCT 2014-004223-46, NCT02443805) with the 300 IR HDM SLIT tablet versus placebo over 12 months were analyzed post hoc. The treatment effect in European adults and adolescents was notably assessed through the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (EAACI)-recommended combined symptom and medication score (CSMS0-6, pre-defined endpoint) and the total combined rhinitis score (TCRS0-24, post hoc endpoint, also balanced) during the primary evaluation period (4 weeks at the end of treatment period) using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA). Results: There were 818 patients who comprised the modified full analysis set in Europe. Over the primary period, the differences in CSMS0-6 and TCRS0-24 between the 300 IR and placebo groups were statistically significant (p
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- 2024
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18. Computational design for 4D printing of topology optimized multi-material active composites
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Darshan Athinarayanarao, Romaric Prod’hon, Dominique Chamoret, H. Jerry Qi, Mahdi Bodaghi, Jean-Claude André, and Frédéric Demoly
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Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 ,Computer software ,QA76.75-76.765 - Abstract
Abstract Recent efforts on design for four-dimensional (4D) printing have considered the spatial arrangement of smart materials and energy stimuli. The development of multifunctional structures and their desired mechanical/actuation performances require tackling 4D printing from a multi-material design perspective. With the materials distributions there is an opportunity to increase the spectrum of design concepts with computational approaches. The main goal being to achieve the “best” distribution of material properties in a voxelized structure, a computational framework that consists of a finite element analysis-based evolutionary algorithm is presented. It fuses the advantages of optimizing both the materials distribution and material layout within a design space via topology optimization to solve the inverse design problem of finding an optimal design to achieve a target shape change by integrating void voxels. The results demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed method in providing a highly capable tool for the design of 4D-printed active composites.
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- 2023
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19. Anaphylaxis management in a French pediatric emergency department: Lessons from the ANA‐PED study
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Evangéline Clark, Luciana Kase Tanno, Tram Vo, Brigitte Blanc, Pascal Demoly, and Davide Caimmi
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anaphylaxis ,children ,emergency department ,epinephrine/adrenaline ,treatment ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract Background Anaphylaxis is a serious systemic hypersensitivity reaction that requires immediate recognition and prompt administration of epinephrine/adrenaline. The present study aimed to assess the appropriateness of epinephrine/adrenaline use in children identified as allergic by physicians in the emergency department (ED) at the time of the reaction, and to identify factors that are possibly associated with epinephrine/adrenaline administration, auto‐injector prescription, and further referral to an allergist. Methods We performed a retrospective cross‐sectional study at the pediatric ED of the University Hospital of Montpellier, France. We included all consecutive children who attended the ED between 2016 and 2020 with an allergy‐related diagnosis at discharge. Results We included 1056 allergy‐related visits, including 224 (21.2%) with a diagnosis of anaphylaxis at discharge; only 17.0% of them received an epinephrine/adrenaline injection, and 57.1% consulted an allergist after the acute episode. An auto‐injector was prescribed to 63 (28.1%) patients at discharge from the ED. Besides the severity of the clinical presentation, factors associated with a guidelines‐based management of the anaphylactic reaction and with an increased administration rate of epinephrine/adrenaline included presence of asthma symptoms and presence of extended skin reactions. Conclusions Our study underlines persistent gaps in the management of pediatric anaphylaxis in ED, focusing on hereby identified levers. By disseminating current knowledge and guidelines on anaphylaxis and allergies, specialists could work together with emergency physicians to establish effective management algorithms and improve anaphylaxis management and care pathways for children experiencing allergic reactions, especially anaphylaxis. Trail Registration Clinical Trials, number NCT05112367.
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- 2023
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20. CHOICE international survey: Clusters of allergen immunotherapy prescription from French and Spanish cohorts
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Pablo Rodriguez del Rio, MD, PhD, Davide Caimmi, MD, PhD, Pilar Rico Nieto, MD, PhD, Carmen Vidal, MD, PhD, Carmen Moreno, MD, PhD, Maria Teresa González-Fernández, MD, Margarita Tomás-Pérez, MD, Ana Beristain, MD, Isa Bosse, MD, Hoai Bich Trinh, MD, Thomas B. Casale, MD, PhD, Pascal Demoly, MD, PhD, and Moises A. Calderon, MD, PhD
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Allergen immunotherapy ,Sublingual administration ,Subcutaneous injection ,Prescription ,Rhinitis ,Asthma ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Background: There is no description of the drivers of prescription for allergen immunotherapy (AIT) for respiratory allergic diseases. Methods: A prospective, multicentre, observational, non-interventional real-life study was performed in France and Spain for 20 months. Data were gathered using 2 different questionnaires, anonymously collected in an online platform. No names of AIT products were recorded. Multivariate analysis and unsupervised cluster analysis were performed. Results: One hundred and three physicians (50.5% from Spain and 49.5% from France) reported 1735 patients (433 in France and 1302 in Spain), 47.9% males, 64.8% adults with a mean age 26.2 years old. They suffered from allergic rhinitis (99%), allergic conjunctivitis (70.4%), allergic asthma (51.8%), atopic dermatitis (13.9%), and food allergy (9.9%). A clustering analysis based on 13 predefined relevant variables for AIT-prescription identified 5 different clusters, each of them including information regarding doctor's profile and patient demographics, baseline disease characteristics, and main AIT indication: 1) Looking at the future: focusing on asthma prevention (n = 355), 2) Efficacy after discontinuation of AIT (n = 293), 3) Fighting severe allergic disease (n = 322), 4) Looking at the present, facing current symptoms (n = 265) and 5) Doctor's own clinical experience (n = 500). Each one of these clusters have specific patients' and doctors' characteristics, representing distinctive AIT prescription drivers. Conclusion: Using data-driven analysis, we identified for the first time some reasons and patterns of AIT prescriptions in real-life clinical settings. There is no uniform indication for prescribing AIT, which varies amongst patients and doctors with multiple but specific drivers, taking into account several relevant parameters.
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- 2023
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21. A Pragmatic Primary Practice Approach to Using Specific IgE in Allergy Testing in Asthma Diagnosis, Management, and Referral
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Demoly P, Liu AH, Rodriguez del Rio P, Pedersen S, Casale TB, and Price D
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primary care ,allergy ,asthma ,sensitization ,specific ige ,component resolved diagnostics ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Pascal Demoly,1,2 Andrew H Liu,3 Pablo Rodriguez del Rio,4 Soren Pedersen,5 Thomas B Casale,6,7 David Price8 1Division of Allergy, Department of Pulmonology, Hôpital Arnaud de Villeneuve, Montpellier, France; 2IDESP Inserm, University, Hospital of Montpellier, Montpellier, France; 3Airway Inflammation, Resilience & the Environment (AIRE) Program, Breathing Institute, Section of Pediatric Pulmonary & Sleep Medicine, Children’s Hospital Colorado, Professor of Pediatrics, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Adjunct Professor of Pediatrics, National Jewish Health, Denver, CO, USA; 4Pediatric Board of the EAACI, University Children’s Hospital, Madrid, Spain; 5GINA Program, Department of Pediatrics, Kolding Hospital, Kolding, Denmark; 6Food Allergy Research and Education (FARE), McLean, VA, USA; 7Department of Medicine and Pediatrics, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA; 8Observational and Pragmatic Research Institute, SingaporeCorrespondence: David Price, Email dprice@opri.sgAbstract: Asthma afflicts an estimated 339 million people globally and is associated with ill health, disability, and early death. Strong risk factors for developing asthma are genetic predisposition and environmental exposure to inhaled substances that may provoke allergic reactions. Asthma guidelines recommend identifying causal or trigger allergens with specific IgE (sIgE) testing after a diagnosis of asthma has been made. Allergy testing with sIgE targets subpopulations of patients considered at high risk, such as those with frequent exacerbations, emergency visits or hospitalizations, or uncontrolled symptoms. Specific recommendations apply to preschool children, school-age children, patients with persistent or difficult-to-control asthma, patients needing oral corticosteroids or high-dose inhaled steroids, patients seeking understanding and guidance about their disease, and candidates for advanced therapies (biologics, allergen immunotherapy). Allergen skin testing is common in specialized settings but less available in primary care. Blood tests for total and sIgE are accessible and yield quantifiable results for tested allergens, useful for detecting sensitization. Results are interpreted in the context of the patient’s clinical presentation, age, and relevant allergen exposures. Incorporating sIgE testing into asthma management adds objective information to identify specific allergies and can guide personalized treatment plans, which reinforce patient-doctor communication. Test results can also be used to predict exacerbations and response to therapies. Additional diagnostic information can be gleaned from (i) eosinophil count ≥ 300 μL, which significantly increases the odds of having exacerbations, and emerging eosinophil biomarkers (eg, eosinophil-derived neurotoxin), which can be measured in plasma or serum samples, and (ii) fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO), with values ≥ 25 ppb regarded as the cutoff for diagnosis, evaluating inhaled corticosteroid response, and of probable response to anti-IgE, anti-IL4 and anti-IL5 receptor biologics. Referral to asthma/allergy specialists is warranted when the initial diagnosis is uncertain, and when asthma symptoms, impairment, or exacerbations are repeated or severe.Keywords: primary care, allergy, asthma, sensitization, specific IgE, component resolved diagnostics
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- 2022
22. Origami-Based Design for 4D Printing of 3D Support-Free Hollow Structures
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Bingcong Jian, Frédéric Demoly, Yicha Zhang, H. Jerry Qi, Jean-Claude André, and Samuel Gomes
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Origami-based design ,4D printing ,Smart material ,Hollow 3D structures ,Additive manufacturing ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
The integration of additive manufacturing (AM) in design and engineering has prompted a wide spectrum of research efforts, involving topologically optimized solid/lattice structures, multimaterial structures, bioinspired organic structures, and multiscale structures, to name a few. However, except for obvious cases, very little attention has been given to the design and printing of more complex three-dimensional (3D) hollow structures or folded/creased structures. One of the main reasons is that such complex open or closed 3D cavities and regular/freeform folds generally lead to printing difficulties from support-structure-related issues. To address this barrier, this paper aims to investigate four-dimensional (4D) printing as well as origami-based design as an original research direction to design and build 3D support-free hollow structures. This work consists of describing the rough 3D hollow structures in terms of two-dimensional (2D) printed origami precursor layouts without any support structure. Such origami-based definitions are then embodied with folding functions that can be actuated and fulfilled by 3D printed smart materials. The desired 3D shape is then built once an external stimulus is applied to the active materials, therefore ensuring the transformation of the 2D origami layout to 3D structures. To demonstrate the relevance of the proposal, some illustrative cases are introduced.
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- 2022
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23. Premature menopause and autoimmune primary ovarian insufficiency in two international multi-center cohorts
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Elinor Chelsom Vogt, Francisco Gómez Real, Eystein Sverre Husebye, Sigridur Björnsdottir, Bryndis Benediktsdottir, Randi Jacobsen Bertelsen, Pascal Demoly, Karl Anders Franklin, Leire Sainz de Aja Gallastegui, Francisco Javier Callejas González, Joachim Heinrich, Mathias Holm, Nils Oscar Jogi, Benedicte Leynaert, Eva Lindberg, Andrei Malinovschi, Jesús Martínez-Moratalla, Raúl Godoy Mayoral, Anna Oudin, Antonio Pereira-Vega, Chantal Raherison Semjen, Vivi Schlünssen, Kai Triebner, and Marianne Øksnes
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premature ovarian insufficiency ,premature ovarian failure ,premature menopause ,primary ovarian insufficiency ,autoimmune ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
Objective: To investigate markers of premature menopause (
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- 2022
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24. Erratum to: Building bridges for innovation in ageing: Synergies between action groups of the EIP on AHA
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Bousquet, Jean, Bewick, M., Cano, A., Eklund, P., Fico, G., Goswami, N., Guldemond, N. A., Henderson, D., Hinkema, M. J., Liotta, G., Mair, A., Molloy, W., Monaco, A., Monsonis-Paya, I., Nizinska, A., Papadopoulos, H., Pavlickova, A., Pecorelli, S., Prados-Torres, A., Roller-Wirnsberger, R. E., Somekh, D., Vera-Muñoz, C., Visser, F., Farrell, J., Malva, J., Andersen Ranberg, K., Camuzat, T., Carriazo, A. M., Crooks, G., Gutter, Z., Iaccarino, G., de Keenoy, E. Manuel, Moda, G., Rodriguez-Mañas, L., Vontetsianos, T., Abreu, C., Alonso, J., Alonso-Bouzon, C., Ankri, J., Arredondo, M. T., Avolio, F., Bedbrook, A., Białoszewski, A. Z., Blain, H., Bourret, R., Cabrera-Umpierrez, M. F., Catala, A., O’Caoimh, R., Cesari, M., Chavannes, N. H., Correia-Da-Sousa, J., Dedeu, T., Ferrando, M., Ferri, M., Fokkens, W. J., Garcia-Lizana, F., Guérin, O., Hellings, P. W., Haahtela, T., Illario, M., Inzerilli, M. C., Lodrup Carlsen, K. C., Kardas, P., Keil, T., Maggio, M., Mendez-Zorrilla, A., Menditto, E., Mercier, J., Michel, J. P., Murray, R., Nogues, M., O’Byrne-Maguire, I., Pappa, D., Parent, A. S., Pastorino, M., Robalo-Cordeiro, C., Samolinski, B., Siciliano, P., Teixeira, A. M., Tsartara, S. I., Valiulis, A., Vandenplas, O., Vasankari, T., Vellas, B., Vollenbroek-Hutten, M., Wickman, M., Yorgancioglu, A., Zuberbier, T., Barbagallo, M., Canonica, G. W., Klimek, L., Maggi, S., Aberer, W., Akdis, C., Adcock, I. M., Agache, I., Albera, C., Alonso-Trujillo, F., Angel Guarcia, M., Annesi-Maesano, I., Apostolo, J., Arshad, S. H., Attalin, V., Avignon, A., Bachert, C., Baroni, I., Bel, E., Benson, M., Bescos, C., Blasi, F., Barbara, C., Bergmann, K. C., Bernard, P. L., Bonini, S., Bousquet, P. J., Branchini, B., Brightling, C. E., Bruguière, V., Bunu, C., Bush, A., Caimmi, D. P., Calderon, M. A., Canovas, G., Cardona, V., Carlsen, K. H., Cesario, A., Chkhartishvili, E., Chiron, R., Chivato, T., Chung, K. F., D’Angelantonio, M., de Carlo, G., Cholley, D., Chorin, F., Combe, B., Compas, B., Costa, D. J., Costa, E., Coste, O., Coupet, A. -L., Crepaldi, G., Custovic, A., Dahl, R., Dahlen, S. E., Demoly, P., Devillier, P., Didier, A., Dinh-Xuan, A. T., Djukanovic, R., Dokic, D., du Toit, G., Dubakiene, R., Dupeyron, A., Emuzyte, R., Fiocchi, A., Wagner, A., Fletcher, M., Fonseca, J., Fougère, B., Gamkrelidze, A., Garces, G., Garcia-Aymeric, J., Garcia-Zapirain, B., Gemicioğlu, B., Gouder, C., Hellquist-Dahl, B., Hermosilla-Gimeno, I., Héve, D., Holland, C., Humbert, M., Hyland, M., Johnston, S. L., Just, J., Jutel, M., Kaidashev, I. P., Kaitov, M., Kalayci, O., Kalyoncu, A. F., Keijser, W., Kerstjens, H., Knezović, J., Kowalski, M., Koppelman, G. H., Kotska, T., Kovac, M., Kull, I., Kuna, P., Kvedariene, V., Lepore, V., Macnee, W., Maggio, M., Magnan, A., Majer, I., Manning, P., Marcucci, M., Marti, T., Masoli, M., Melen, E., Miculinic, N., Mihaltan, F., Milenkovic, B., Millot-Keurinck, J., Mlinarić, H., Momas, I., Montefort, S., Morais-Almeida, M., Moreno-Casbas, T., Mösges, R., Mullol, J., Nadif, R., Nalin, M., Navarro-Pardo, E., Nekam, K., Ninot, G., Paccard, D., Pais, S., Palummeri, E., Panzner, P., Papadopoulos, N. K., Papanikolaou, C., Passalacqua, G., Pastor, E., Perrot, M., Plavec, D., Popov, T. A., Postma, D. S., Price, D., Raffort, N., Reuzeau, J. C., Robine, J. M., Rodenas, F., Robusto, F., Roche, N., Romano, A., Romano, V., Rosado-Pinto, J., Roubille, F., Ruiz, F., Ryan, D., Salcedo, T., Schmid-Grendelmeier, P., Schulz, H., Schunemann, H. J., Serrano, E., Sheikh, A., Shields, M., Siafakas, N., Scichilone, N., Siciliano, P., Skrindo, I., Smit, H. A., Sourdet, S., Sousa-Costa, E., Spranger, O., Sooronbaev, T., Sruk, V., Sterk, P. J., Todo-Bom, A., Touchon, J., Tramontano, D., Triggiani, M., Tsartara, S. I., Valero, A. L., Valovirta, E., van Ganse, E., van Hage, M., van den Berge, M., Vandenplas, O., Ventura, M. T., Vergara, I., Vezzani, G., Vidal, D., Viegi, G., Wagemann, M., Whalley, B., Wickman, M., Wilson, N., Yiallouros, P. K., Žagar, M., Zaidi, A., Zidarn, M., Hoogerwerf, E. J., Usero, J., Zuffada, R., Senn, A., and de Oliveira-Alves, B.
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- 2023
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25. Symptom control and health‐related quality of life in allergic rhinitis with and without comorbid asthma: A multicentre European study
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Subhabrata Moitra, Marzia Simoni, Sandra Baldacci, Sara Maio, Anna Angino, Patrizia Silvi, Giovanni Viegi, Stefania La Grutta, Franco Ruggiero, Gianni Bedini, Francesca Natali, Lorenzo Cecchi, Uwe Berger, Maria Prentovic, Amir Gamil, Nour Baïz, Michel Thibaudon, Samuel Monnier, Davide Caimmi, Luciana K. Tanno, Pascal Demoly, Simone Orlandini, and Isabella Annesi‐Maesano
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allergy treatment ,CARAT ,food allergy ,pollen ,RHINASTHMA ,rhinitis ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract Background Allergic rhinitis (AR) is a major non‐communicable disease that affects the health‐related quality of life (HRQoL) of patients. However, data on HRQoL and symptom control in AR patients with comorbid asthma (AR + asthma) are lacking. Methods In this multicentre, cross‐sectional study, patients with AR were screened and administered questionnaires of demographic characteristics and health conditions (symptoms/diagnosis of AR and asthma, disease severity level, and allergic conditions). HRQoL was assessed using a modified version of the RHINASTHMA questionnaire (30, ‘not at all bothered’ ‐ 150 ‘very much bothered’) and symptom control was evaluated by a modified version of the Control of Allergic Rhinitis/Asthma Test (CARAT) (0, ‘no control’ ‐ 30, ‘very high control’). Results Out of 643 patients with AR, 500 (78%) had asthma as a comorbidity, and 54% had moderate‐severe intermittent AR, followed by moderate‐severe persistent AR (34%). Compared to the patients with AR alone, patients with AR + asthma had significantly higher RHINASTHMA (e.g., median RHINASTHMA‐total score 48.5 vs. 84, respectively) and a significantly lower CARAT score (median CARAT‐total score 23 vs. 16.5, respectively). Upon stratifying asthma based on severity, AR patients with severe persistent asthma had worse HRQoL and control than those with mild persistent asthma. The association was significantly higher among non‐obese participants compared to obese ones, with RHINASTHMA‐upper symptoms score but not with CARAT. Conclusions Our observation of poorer HRQoL and symptoms control in AR patients with comorbid asthma supports the importance of a comprehensive approach for the management of AR in case of a comorbid allergic condition.
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- 2023
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26. Criteria used by health professionals on the selection of allergen immunotherapy in real clinical practice: Methodology
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Davide Caimmi, MD, PhD, Pablo Rodríguez del Río, MD, PhD, Pilar Rico, MD, PhD, Carmen Vidal, MD, Carmen Moreno, MD, Thomas B. Casale, MD, PhD, Pascal Demoly, MD, PhD, and Moises A. Calderón, MD, PhD
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Allergen immunotherapy ,Clinical practice ,Drivers ,Prescription ,Survey ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Background: Allergen immunotherapy (AIT) is today the only etiological therapy for respiratory allergic diseases, including allergic rhinitis, allergic conjunctivitis, and allergic asthma. Even though interest in real-world data has recently increased, publications mainly focus on short-term and long-term efficacy and safety of AIT. Indeed, information is still lacking regarding the “key parameters” or “drivers of prescription” used by doctors to prescribe AIT or by the patients to accept AIT as treatment for their respiratory allergic disease. Examining these factors is therefore the main goal of the CHOICE-Global Survey: “Criteria Used by Health Professionals on the Selection of Allergen Immunotherapy in Real Clinical Practice: An international academic electronic survey”. Methods: We present the methodology of the CHOICE-Global Survey, an academic, prospective, multicenter, observational, transversal, web-based e-survey, conducted in real-life clinical settings designed to collect data from 31 countries representing 9 global different socio-economic and demographic regions. In the present document, we describe the survey, how it was conceived and developed, how data are stored and analyzed, and the different steps that will provide this information to the allergy community. Conclusions: The CHOICE-Global Survey will be able to provide, from an academic point of view, information on the drivers of prescription of AIT in real-life practice and improve understanding regarding the key parameters considered by doctors and patients for such therapy.
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- 2023
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27. Unstructured Direct Ink Write 3D Printing of Functional Structures with Ambient Temperature Curing Dual‐Network Thermoset Ink
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Connor D. Armstrong, Liang Yue, Frédéric Demoly, Kun Zhou, and H. Jerry Qi
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3D printing ,additive manufacturing ,dual-network polymers ,functional structures ,Computer engineering. Computer hardware ,TK7885-7895 ,Control engineering systems. Automatic machinery (General) ,TJ212-225 - Abstract
Fabrication of structures in unstructured environments is a promising field to expand the application spaces of additive manufacturing (AM). One potential application is to add new components directly onto existing structures. Herein, a versatile, reconfigurable direct ink writing (DIW) manufacturing method is developed in tandem with a two‐stage hybrid ink designed to fabricate high‐strength, self‐supporting parts in unconventional printing spaces such as underneath a build surface or horizontally. This two‐stage hybrid DIW ink combines a photopolymer and a tough epoxy resin. The photopolymer can cure rapidly to enable layer‐by‐layer printing of complex structures. It also possesses adequate adhesion to allow the fabrication of large volume structures on a diversity of substrates including acrylic, wood, glass, aluminum, and concrete. The epoxy component can cure after 72 h in ambient conditions with further increased adhesion strengths. The capabilities of the reconfigurable DIW extrusion nozzle method to print complex structures in inverted and horizontal environments are demonstrated. Finally, via addition of DIW‐deposited conductive paths, a functional 3D‐printed structure capable of in situ deformation monitoring is created. This work has the potential to be used for applications such as appending new parts to existing structures for increasing functionality, repair, and structure health monitoring.
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- 2023
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28. Update about Oralair® as a treatment for grass pollen allergic rhinitis
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L. Klimek, R. Brehler, R. Mösges, P. Demoly, J. Mullol, D. Y. Wang, R. E. O’Hehir, A. Didier, M. Kopp, C. Bos, and E. Karagiannis
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5-grass pollen tablet ,allergen immunotherapy ,sublingual immunotherapy ,allergic rhinoconjunctivitis ,asthma ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) is a well-tolerated, safe, and effective approach to treating allergic rhinitis (AR). Oralair® is a five-grass pollen SLIT tablet containing natural pollen allergens from five of the major grass species responsible for seasonal AR due to grass pollen allergy. Recommended use is in a pre-coseasonal regimen, starting daily treatment approximately 4 months before the start of the pollen season, with treatment then continued daily throughout the season; treatment should continue for 3–5 y. Clinical efficacy and safety of Oralair® in patients with grass pollen-induced AR has been demonstrated in a comprehensive clinical development program of randomized controlled trials. Effectiveness has been substantiated in subsequent observational studies with sustained efficacy following treatment cessation and a favorable level of adherence, quality of life, benefit, and satisfaction for the patients. Supportive evidence for a benefit in reducing the risk or delaying the development of allergic asthma is emerging.
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- 2022
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29. Hypersensitivity reactions to iodinated radiocontrast media: Cluster analysis reveals distinct clinical phenotypes
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Witchaya Srisuwatchari, MD, Tram Vo, MD, Amélie Gauthier, MD, Nicolas Molinari, PhD, Rik Schrijvers, MD, PhD, Pascal Demoly, MD, PhD, and Anca Mirela Chiriac, MD, PhD
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Iodinated radiocontrast media ,Drug hypersensitivity reaction ,Clinical phenotype ,Cluster analysis ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Background: Drug hypersensitivity reaction (DHR) to iodinated radiocontrast media (iRCM) is reported in 1%–3% of injections. Risk assessment of patients with suspicion of DHR to iRCM relies solely on clinical phenotyping and drug allergy workup. Using a novel unsupervised TwoStep cluster analysis, we aimed to identify prototypic patterns within a large cohort of patients evaluated for a potential iRCM DHR. Methods: A retrospective study was conducted using data from the Drug Allergy and Hypersensitivity Database of the Allergy Unit, University Hospital of Montpellier, Montpellier, France. All referred patients during February 2001 to December 2019 with suspicion of iRCM DHR with either confirmed positive or confirmed negative skin tests were included in the analysis. Results: A total of 1439 patients were evaluated. The chronology of the index reaction was immediate and nonimmediate in 77.1% and 22.4%, respectively. Cluster analysis categorized the total study population in 5 clusters. Cluster 1 compiled all nonimmediate and cluster 2–5 almost all immediate reactors. Cluster 1 and 2 had recent reactions (
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- 2022
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30. Comparative Performance of 4 Penicillin-Allergy Prediction Strategies in a Large Cohort
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Ghiordanescu, Ileana-Maria, Ciocănea-Teodorescu, Iuliana, Molinari, Nicolas, Jelen, Anais, Al-Ali, Omar, Schrijvers, Rik, Demoly, Pascal, and Chiriac, Anca Mirela
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A safe and pragmatic guide for labelling and delabelling patients with suspected penicillin allergy is mandatory.
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- 2024
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31. Association between lung function decline and obstructive sleep apnoea: the ALEC study
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Emilsson, Össur Ingi, Sundbom, Fredrik, Ljunggren, Mirjam, Benediktsdottir, Bryndis, Garcia-Aymerich, Judith, Bui, Dinh Son, Jarvis, Deborah, Olin, Anna-Carin, Franklin, Karl A., Demoly, Pascal, Lindberg, Eva, Janson, Christer, Aspelund, Thor, and Gislason, Thorarinn
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- 2021
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32. A hybrid additive manufacturing platform based on fused filament fabrication and direct ink writing techniques for multi-material 3D printing
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Cadiou, Thibaut, Demoly, Frédéric, and Gomes, Samuel
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- 2021
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33. Real-life impact of uncontrolled severe asthma on mortality and healthcare use in adolescents and adults: findings from the retrospective, observational RESONANCE study in France
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Pascal Demoly, Nicolas Roche, Vincent Perez, Gilles Garcia, Alexandre de Larrard, Charlotte Cancalon, Stève Bénard, Aymeric Mahieu, and Laurine Vieu
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Medicine - Abstract
Objective To characterise uncontrolled severe asthma and compare the disease burden with the general and asthmatic populations.Design Retrospective observational study using a national sample of a French healthcare database (Echantillon Généraliste des Bénéficiaires (EGB)).Setting The EGB, an anonymised permanent sample of health insurance databases, representing 1/97th of the French population.Participants Patients (≥12 years) were selected in year 2014 and followed 2 years. A cohort of patients with uncontrolled severe asthma was defined using an algorithm based on peer-reviewed literature and Global Initiative for Asthma recommendations. Index date was the occurrence of the first marker of uncontrolled asthma. This cohort was matched with two control cohorts, general population and asthmatic controls, on baseline characteristics.Main outcomes measures Mortality, healthcare use and associated costs were studied in the 2 years of follow-up.Results Among 467 716 individuals in the EGB, 16 588 patients with asthma were identified, including 739 (4.5%) with uncontrolled severe disease. The survival probability at 2 years for patients with uncontrolled severe asthma (92.0%) was lower than in the general population cohort (96.6%; relative risk of death: 2.35; 95% CI: 1.70 to 3.29; p
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- 2022
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34. Revisiting Late-Onset Asthma: Clinical Characteristics and Association with Allergy
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Quirce S, Heffler E, Nenasheva N, Demoly P, Menzies-Gow A, Moreira-Jorge A, Nissen F, and Hanania NA
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asthma ,diagnosis ,age of onset ,allergy ,allergic asthma ,asthma phenotypes ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Santiago Quirce,1 Enrico Heffler,2 Natalia Nenasheva,3 Pascal Demoly,4 Andrew Menzies-Gow,5 Ana Moreira-Jorge,6 Francis Nissen,7 Nicola A Hanania8 1Department of Allergy, La Paz University Hospital, IdiPAZ and Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid, Spain; 2Personalized Medicine, Asthma and Allergy, Humanitas Clinical and Research Center, IRCCS, Rozzano, MI, Italy; 3Department of Allergology and Immunology of Russian Medical Academy for Continuous Medical Education, Moscow, Russian Federation; 4Department of Pulmonology, Division of Allergy, Hôpital Arnaud de Villeneuve, University Hospital of Montpellier, Montpellier, France; 5Department of Respiratory Medicine, Royal Brompton Hospital, London, UK; 6Novartis Farmaceutica, S.A., Barcelona, Spain; 7London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK; 8Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USACorrespondence: Santiago QuirceHospital Universitario La Paz, P. La Castellana, 261, Madrid, 28046 SpainEmail squirce@gmail.comAbstract: The Global Initiative for Asthma (GINA) 2020 defines late-onset asthma (LOA) as one of the clinical phenotypes of asthma wherein patients, particularly women, present with asthma for the first time in adult life, tend to be non-allergic and often require higher doses of inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) or are relatively refractory to corticosteroid treatment. In this review, we examine the published literature improve the understanding of the following aspects of LOA: 1) the age cut-off for its diagnosis; 2) its distinct clinical phenotypes, characteristics and risk factors; and 3) its association with allergic comorbidities and conditions. Overall, our review reveals that clinicians and researchers have used multiple age cut-offs to define LOA, with cut-off ages ranging from > 12 years to ≥ 65 years. LOA has also been classified into several distinct phenotypes, some of which drastically differ in their clinical characteristics, course and prognosis. Although LOA has traditionally been considered non-allergic in nature, our review indicates that it is commonly associated with allergic features and comorbidities. Our findings suggest that there is an urgent need for the development of more clear clinical practice guidelines that can provide more clarity on the definition and other aspects of LOA. In addition, the association of LOA and allergy needs to be re-examined to frame a more optimal treatment strategy for patients with LOA.Keywords: asthma, diagnosis, age of onset, allergy, allergic asthma, asthma phenotypes
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- 2020
35. The SQ HDM SLIT‐Tablet is safe and well tolerated in patients with House Dust Mite allergic rhinitis with or without asthma: A 'real‐life' French study
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Pascal Demoly, Christophe Leroyer, Elie Serrano, Annelore Le Maux, Gabrielle Magnier, and Antoine Chartier
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Asthme ,Immunothérapie ,Traitement de l'allergie ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract Background The SQ House Dust Mite (HDM) SubLingual ImmunoTherapy (SLIT)‐Tablet (Acarizax) is the only allergen immunotherapy authorized by European regulatory authorities to treat HDM‐induced allergic asthma (AA) that is not well‐controlled by inhaled corticosteroids and associated with mild‐to‐severe HDM allergic rhinitis (AR). The aim of this study was to add evidence on the safety of the SQ HDM SLIT‐Tablet in patients with AR, alone or with AA, under real‐life conditions. Methods This was a French “real‐life”, multicenter, non‐comparative, longitudinal, prospective study. It included patients initiating the SQ HDM SLIT‐Tablet for either persistent moderate‐to‐severe HDM AR or AA not well‐controlled by inhaled corticosteroids and associated with mild‐to‐severe HDM AR. Adverse Events (AEs) were collected at the first intake and throughout the study. Logistic regression was used to compare safety according to asthma control before treatment initiation. Results Between May 09, 2018 and May 29, 2019, 1526 patients were enrolled at 185 sites and 1483 were included in the safety population (SAF). Of them, 33.6% had suspected clinical manifestations of AA. Asthma was uncontrolled for 18.2% of the patients, partially controlled for 27.9% and well‐controlled for 53.8%. Overall, 31.9% of the SAF patients experienced at least one AE. The percentage of patients with AEs was 29.9% among patients with AR alone and 35.9% among those with AA (p = 0.0193). No significant difference was observed in the rate of AE or SAE depending on asthma control at inclusion (2.2% of SAEs reported for patients with uncontrolled asthma, 1.4% for partly controlled and 1.1% for well‐controlled). Conclusions The overall results indicate a good SQ HDM SLIT‐Tablet safety profile consistent with that reported in previous studies, regardless of asthma control.
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- 2022
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36. The disease burden in patients with respiratory allergies induced by house dust mites: a year-long observational survey in three European countries
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Pascal Demoly, Andrea Matucci, Oliviero Rossi, and Carmen Vidal
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Respiratory allergy ,House dust mite ,Long-term observational survey ,Burden of disease ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract Background House dust mite (HDM) allergens constitute the most frequent cause of persistent allergic rhinitis and asthma. The symptoms vary throughout the year but typically peak in spring, autumn and (to a lesser extent) mid-winter. Methods We performed a 13-month, observational, multicentre survey of adult patients with a self-reported history of moderate-to-severe, poorly controlled, physician-diagnosed HDM respiratory allergy in three European countries (France, Italy and Spain). After screening and inclusion, 28 detailed, fortnightly telephone interviews were used to gather extensive data on the participants’ symptom prevalence and intensity, medical consultations, disease burden and medication use from late May 2012 to early July 2013. This report focuses on the disease burden. Results Of the 22,995 screened participants, 313 met the inclusion criteria and completed the post-inclusion questionnaire (n = 114 in Italy, 92 in France and 107 in Spain). The median time since the first symptoms of HDM allergy was ≥ 13 years in each country. A relevant minority of the participants suffered from symptoms of HDM allergy every day or almost every day of the year (14% in Italy, 46% in France and 37% in Spain). According to the fortnightly telephone interviews, the most frequently impacted disease burden variables were sleep, daytime tiredness and irritability, with the highest values in spring 2012, autumn 2012 and spring 2013 (mirroring symptom intensities). Professional activities were more affected than social activities. The burden data were heterogeneous: around a quarter of participants were strongly or very strongly affected but most of the remaining participants were only rarely bothered or not bothered. Conclusions In a 13-month, fortnightly survey of patients in France, Italy and Spain with a self-reported history of moderate-to-severe, poorly controlled, HDM-induced allergic rhinitis and asthma, we found that a relevant minority of participants regularly reported a severe or very severe impact of their allergy on tiredness, sleep and professional activities (including time off work). The disease burden peaked in autumn and late spring.
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- 2020
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37. New Keratoconus Risk Factors: A Cross-Sectional Case—Control Study
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Eloi Debourdeau, Gabriel Planells, Chloe Chamard, David Touboul, Max Villain, Pascal Demoly, Fanny Babeau, Pierre Fournie, and Vincent Daien
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Ophthalmology ,RE1-994 - Abstract
Purpose. To evaluate risk factors associated with keratoconus in a monocentric cross-sectional case-control study. Methods. This observational study occurred from June 2019 to February 2021 in a university hospital (France). The case group consisted of 195 patients with keratoconus in at least one eye who were followed up by a corneal specialist. The control group consisted of 195 patients without any evidence of keratoconus on slit-lamp examination and corneal topography, who were matched 1 : 1 to controls by age and sex. Data were collected by a self-completed paper questionnaire before the consultation, and a multivariate logistic regression was performed. Results. Multivariate analysis revealed significant associations of keratoconus with family history (odds ratio [OR] = 22.2, p
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- 2022
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38. Female sex hormones and symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea in European women of a population-based cohort.
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Erla S Sigurðardóttir, Thorarinn Gislason, Bryndis Benediktsdottir, Steinar Hustad, Payam Dadvand, Pascal Demoly, Karl A Franklin, Joachim Heinrich, Mathias Holm, Diana A van der Plaat, Rain Jõgi, Benedicte Leynaert, Eva Lindberg, Jesus Martinez-Moratalla, Leire Sainz De Aja, Giancarlo Pesce, Isabelle Pin, Chantal Raherison, Antonio Pereira-Vega, Francisco Gómez Real, and Kai Triebner
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundThe prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea is higher in women after menopause. This is suggested to be a result of an altered sex hormone balance but has so far not been confirmed in a population-based study.ObjectiveTo investigate whether serum concentration of estrogens and progesterone are associated with the prevalence of sleep apnea symptoms in middle-aged women of the general population.MethodsWe analyzed data from 774 women (40-67 years) from 15 study centers in seven countries participating in the second follow-up of the European Community Respiratory Health Survey (2010-2012). Multiple logistic regression models were fitted with self-reported symptoms of sleep apnea as outcomes and serum concentrations of various estrogens and progesterone as predictors. All analyses were adjusted for relevant covariates including age, BMI, education, study center, smoking habits, and reproductive age.ResultsAmong all included women, a doubling of serum concentrations of estrone and progesterone was associated with 19% respectively 9% decreased odds of snoring. Among snorers, a doubling of the concentrations of 17β-estradiol, estrone and estrone 3-sulfate was associated with 18%, 23% and 17% decreased odds of breathing irregularly, and a doubling of the progesterone concentration was further associated with 12% decreased odds of waking up suddenly with a chocking sensation. Other evaluated associations were not statistically significant.ConclusionsMiddle-aged women with low serum estrogen and progesterone levels are more likely to snore and report symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea.
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- 2022
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39. The status, barriers, challenges, and future in design for 4D printing
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Frédéric Demoly, Martin L. Dunn, Kristin L. Wood, H. Jerry Qi, and Jean-Claude André
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4D printing ,Additive manufacturing ,Smart materials ,Design ,Engineering ,Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 - Abstract
The combination of scientific advances in additive manufacturing (AM) and smart materials (SMs) has enabled the development of a new interdisciplinary research area: 4D printing. This technology offers – via stimuli-responsive materials – promising transformation capabilities to objects whether at the functional, shape, or property levels. By considering such capabilities, researchers from multiple disciplines have investigated a large spectrum of stimuli-SMs associations with proofs-of-concept built from either commercial or custom 3D printers. Despite the abundant initiatives, 4D printing requires additional developments to meet robust system applications for the industry. The paper aims to highlight the status, inherent barriers, and challenges of 4D printing to be addressed from a product-systems design perspective. It firstly reminds the fundamentals of SMs, processes, stimulus, and AM to which a synthesis of significant research works related to 4D printing highlighting the current status as well as scientific, technical, and organizational limitations is provided. Beyond this comprehensive study, the paper emphasizes opportunities and challenges from multiple perspectives and draws a research roadmap for engineering design and cross-disciplinary design. The outcome of the work tends to structure research efforts for the next decade towards the development of smart products that meet use for humans and the industry.
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- 2021
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40. Constructing assembly design model capable of capturing and sharing semantic dynamic motion information in heterogeneous CAD systems
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Khan, Md Tarique Hasan, Demoly, Frédéric, and Kim, Kyoung-Yun
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- 2020
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41. Premedication for Iodinated Contrast Media Induced Immediate Hypersensitivity Reactions
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Schrijvers, Rik, Demoly, Pascal, and Chiriac, Anca Mirela
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- 2019
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42. Evidence-Based Medicine and Real-World Data in Allergen Immunotherapy Today and in the Future: Quality or Quantity?
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Calderon, Moisés A., Nieto, Pilar Rico, and Demoly, Pascal
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- 2019
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43. Drug allergy awareness and perspectives with the implementation of the International Classification of Diseases-11
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Tanno, Luciana Kase, Briand, Yann, Perie, Alain, Castells, Mariana, and Demoly, Pascal
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- 2024
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44. Worsening of chronic house-dust-mite-induced respiratory allergies: An observational survey in three European countries
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Pascal Demoly, Catherine Bos, and Carmen Vidal
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Respiratory allergy ,House dust mite ,Disease exacerbation ,Worsening ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Background: Although respiratory allergies to house dust mites (HDMs) can often be controlled with symptomatic medications, some patients do not achieve satisfactory disease control. Objective: To assess fortnightly fluctuations (notably worsening and/or exacerbations) in disease parameters among patients taking only symptomatic medications for HDM allergy. Methods: In a 13-month, observational, multicenter survey of adults with a self-reported history of poorly controlled, moderate-to-severe, physician-diagnosed HDM respiratory allergy in France, Italy, and Spain, fortnightly telephone interviews were used to gather information on medication use, symptoms, the disease burden, and medical consultations from late May 2012 to early July 2013. Results: A total of 313 patients completed the study (n = 114 in Italy, 92 in France, and 107 in Spain). Although most participants reported improvements in symptoms, a substantial minority (ranging from 12% to 44% per fortnightly telephone interview in 2012 and from 16% to 37% in 2013) complained of worsening. A few study participants did not improve at any time in the study: 4% overall, and 2%, 2%, and 7% in Italy, France and Spain, respectively. A change in the weather and/or contact with other allergens were the most frequent self-reported reasons for worsening, although the answer “I don't know” was also prominent. Conclusion: In a 13-month survey of patients with HDM allergy in Italy, France, and Spain, the participants’ symptom status fluctuated significantly — illustrating the complexity of this condition. Although most participants reported improvements, the “never-improver” profile warrants further investigation. More prominence could be given to symptom control and a low exacerbation risk as treatment goals in allergic rhinitis.
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- 2021
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45. Erratum to 'IgE allergy diagnostics and other relevant tests in allergy, a World Allergy Organization position paper' [World Allergy Organ J 13/2 (2020) 100080]
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Ignacio J. Ansotegui, Giovanni Melioli, Giorgio Walter Canonica, Luis Caraballo, Elisa Villa, Motohiro Ebisawa, Giovanni Passalacqua, Eleonora Savi, Didier Ebo, R.Maximiliano Gómez, Olga Luengo Sánchez, John J. Oppenheimer, Erika Jensen-Jarolim, David A. Fischer, Tari Haahtela, Martti Antila, Jean J. Bousquet, Victoria Cardona, Wen Chin Chiang, Pascal M. Demoly, Lawrence M. DuBuske, Marta Ferrer Puga, Roy Gerth van Wijk, Sandra Nora González Díaz, Alexei Gonzalez-Estrada, Edgardo Jares, Ayse Füsun Kalpaklioğlu, Luciana Kase Tanno, Marek L. Kowalski, Dennis K. Ledford, Olga Patricia Monge Ortega, Mário Morais-Almeida, Oliver Pfaar, Lars K. Poulsen, Ruby Pawankar, Harald E. Renz, Antonino G. Romano, Nelson A. Rosário Filho, Lanny Rosenwasser, Mario A. Sánchez Borges, Enrico Scala, Gian-Enrico Senna, Juan Carlos Sisul, Mimi L.K. Tang, Bernard Yu-Hor Thong, Rudolf Valenta, Robert A. Wood, and Torsten Zuberbier
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Published
- 2021
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46. ARIA‐EAACI care pathways for allergen immunotherapy in respiratory allergy
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Jean Bousquet, Oliver Pfaar, Ioana Agache, Anna Bedbrook, Cezmi A Akdis, G. Walter Canonica, Tomas Chivato, Mona Al‐Ahmad, Amir H Abdul Latiff, Ignacio J Ansotegui, Claus Bachert, Abdullah Baharuddin, Karl‐Christian Bergmann, Carsten Bindslev‐Jensen, Leif Bjermer, Matteo Bonini, Sinthia Bosnic‐Anticevich, Isabelle Bosse, Helen A. Brough, Luisa Brussino, Moises A Calderon, Luis Caraballo, Victoria Cardona, Pedro Carreiro‐Martins, Tomas Casale, Lorenzo Cecchi, Alfonso M Cepeda Sarabia, Ekaterine Chkhartishvili, Derek K Chu, Ieva Cirule, Alvaro A Cruz, Wienczyslawa Czarlewski, Stefano delGiacco, Pascal Demoly, Philippe Devillier, Dejan Dokic, Stephen L Durham, Motohiro Ebisawa, Yehia El‐Gamal✝, Regina Emuzyte, Amiran Gamkrelidze, Jean Luc Fauquert, Alessandro Fiocchi, Wytske J Fokkens, Joao A Fonseca, Jean‐François Fontaine, Radoslaw Gawlik, Asli Gelincik, Bilun Gemicioglu, Jose E Gereda, Roy Gerth van Wijk, R Maximiliano Gomez, Maia Gotua, Ineta Grisle, Maria‐Antonieta Guzmán, Tari Haahtela, Susanne Halken, Enrico Heffler, Karin Hoffmann‐Sommergruber, Elham Hossny, Martin Hrubiško, Carla Irani, Juan Carlos Ivancevich, Zhanat Ispayeva, Kaja Julge, Igor Kaidashev, Omer Kalayci, Musa Khaitov, Ludger Klimek, Edward Knol, Marek L Kowalski, Helga Kraxner, Inger Kull, Piotr Kuna, Violeta Kvedariene, Vicky Kritikos, Antti Lauerma, Susanne Lau, Daniel Laune, Michael Levin, Desiree E Larenas‐Linnemann, Karin C Lodrup Carlsen, Carlo Lombardi, Olga M Lourenço, Bassam Mahboub, Hans‐Jørgen Malling, Patrick Manning, Gailen D Marshall, Erik Melén, Eli O Meltzer, Neven Miculinic, Branislava Milenkovic, Mostafa Moin, Stephen Montefort, Mario Morais‐Almeida, Charlotte G Mortz, Ralph Mösges, Joaquim Mullol, Leyla Namazova Baranova, Hugo Neffen, Kristof Nekam, Marek Niedoszytko, Mikaëla Odemyr, Robyn E O'Hehir, Markus Ollert, Liam O'Mahony, Ken Ohta, Yoshitaka Okamoto, Kimi Okubo, Giovanni B Pajno, Oscar Palomares, Susanna Palkonen, Petr Panzner, Nikolaos GPapadopoulos, Hae‐Sim Park, Giovanni Passalacqua, Vincenzo Patella, Ruby Pawankar, Nhân Pham‐Thi, Davor Plavec, Todor A Popov, Marysia Recto, Frederico S Regateiro, Carmen Riggioni, Graham Roberts, Monica Rodriguez‐Gonzales, Nelson Rosario, Menachem Rottem, Philip W Rouadi, Dermot Ryan, Boleslaw Samolinski, Mario Sanchez‐Borges✝, Faradiba S Serpa, Joaquin Sastre, Glenis K. Scadding, Mohamed H Shamji, Peter Schmid‐Grendelmeier, Holger J Schünemann, Aziz Sheikh, Nicola Scichilone, Juan Carlos Sisul, Mikhail Sofiev, Dirceu Solé, Talant Sooronbaev, Manuel Soto‐Martinez, Manuel Soto‐Quiros, Milan Sova, Jürgen Schwarze, Isabel Skypala, Charlotte Suppli‐Ulrik, Luis Taborda‐Barata, Ana Todo‐Bom, Maria J Torres, Marylin Valentin‐Rostan, Peter‐Valentin Tomazic, Antonio Valero, Sanna Toppila‐Salmi, Ioanna Tsiligianni, Eva Untersmayr, Marilyn Urrutia‐Pereira, Arunas Valiulis, Erkka Valovirta, Olivier Vandenplas, Maria Teresa Ventura, Pakit Vichyanond, Martin Wagenmann, Dana Wallace, Jolanta Walusiak‐Skorupa, De Yun Wang, Susan Waserman, Gary WK Wong, Arzu Yorgancioglu, Osman M Yusuf, Mario Zernotti, Luo Zhang, Mihaela Zidarn, Torsten Zuberbier, and Marek Jutel
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allergic rhinitis ,asthma ,immunotherapy ,precision medicine ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Published
- 2021
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47. Contraindications to immunotherapy: a global approach
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C. Pitsios, M. Tsoumani, M. B. Bilò, G. J. Sturm, P. Rodríguez del Río, R. Gawlik, F. Ruëff, G. Paraskevopoulos, E. Valovirta, O. Pfaar, M. A. Calderón, and P. Demoly
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Allergen immunotherapy ,Venom hypersensitivity ,Contraindications ,Beta-blocker ,Asthma ,Autoimmunity ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract Background Recommendations on contraindications to allergen immunotherapy (AIT) have been independently developed by National and International Societies/Academies. AIT contraindications are mainly based on case reports, case-series, or experts’ opinion, while evidence-based information is limited. The aim of the present review was to describe existing guidelines on contraindications to AIT and to highlight differences between them. Main body An extended review of the literature regarding contraindications to AIT for respiratory allergy and venom hypersensitivity was performed. Furthermore, Societies and Academies registered in the World Allergy Organization and EAACI databases, were asked for additional information. Only AIT guidelines published under official auspicies were included. A large heterogeneity among the various recommendations on contraindications was registered. Common contraindications to most of the guidelines were: lack of adherence, pregnancy before the start of AIT, the use of beta-blockers, certain age groups, uncontrolled asthma, autoimmune diseases and malignancies. Conclusion As new data arise, revisions might soon be needed allowing AIT in the cases of patients treated with ACE inhibitors and beta-blockers, in elderly patients and in patients with concomitant autoimmune diseases and neoplasias in remission. The decision to prescribe AIT is always tailor-made, balancing risk vs benefit. Creating globally accepted guidelines would help Allergologists in their decision making.
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- 2019
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48. Second-hand smoke exposure in adulthood and lower respiratory health during 20 year follow up in the European Community Respiratory Health Survey
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Claudia Flexeder, Jan-Paul Zock, Deborah Jarvis, Giuseppe Verlato, Mario Olivieri, Geza Benke, Michael J. Abramson, Torben Sigsgaard, Cecilie Svanes, Kjell Torén, Dennis Nowak, Rain Jõgi, Jesús Martinez-Moratalla, Pascal Demoly, Christer Janson, Thorarinn Gislason, Roberto Bono, Mathias Holm, Karl A. Franklin, Judith Garcia-Aymerich, Valérie Siroux, Bénédicte Leynaert, Sandra Dorado Arenas, Angelo Guido Corsico, Antonio Pereira-Vega, Nicole Probst-Hensch, Isabel Urrutia Landa, Holger Schulz, and Joachim Heinrich
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Adults ,Smoking ,Lung function ,Asthma ,Respiratory symptoms ,Bronchitis ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Abstract Background Early life exposure to tobacco smoke has been extensively studied but the role of second-hand smoke (SHS) for new-onset respiratory symptoms and lung function decline in adulthood has not been widely investigated in longitudinal studies. Our aim is to investigate the associations of exposure to SHS in adults with respiratory symptoms, respiratory conditions and lung function over 20 years. Methods We used information from 3011 adults from 26 centres in 12 countries who participated in the European Community Respiratory Health Surveys I-III and were never or former smokers at all three surveys. Associations of SHS exposure with respiratory health (asthma symptom score, asthma, chronic bronchitis, COPD) were analysed using generalised linear mixed-effects models adjusted for confounding factors (including sex, age, smoking status, socioeconomic status and allergic sensitisation). Linear mixed-effects models with additional adjustment for height were used to assess the relationships between SHS exposure and lung function levels and decline. Results Reported exposure to SHS decreased in all 26 study centres over time. The prevalence of SHS exposure was 38.7% at baseline (1990–1994) and 7.1% after the 20-year follow-up (2008–2011). On average 2.4% of the study participants were not exposed at the first, but were exposed at the third examination. An increase in SHS exposure over time was associated with doctor-diagnosed asthma (odds ratio (OR): 2.7; 95% confidence interval (95%-CI): 1.2–5.9), chronic bronchitis (OR: 4.8; 95%-CI: 1.6–15.0), asthma symptom score (count ratio (CR): 1.9; 95%-CI: 1.2–2.9) and dyspnoea (OR: 2.7; 95%-CI: 1.1–6.7) compared to never exposed to SHS. Associations between increase in SHS exposure and incidence of COPD (OR: 2.0; 95%-CI: 0.6–6.0) or lung function (β: − 49 ml; 95%-CI: -132, 35 for FEV1 and β: − 62 ml; 95%-CI: -165, 40 for FVC) were not apparent. Conclusion Exposure to second-hand smoke may lead to respiratory symptoms, but this is not accompanied by lung function changes.
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- 2019
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49. Important questions in drug allergy and hypersensitivity: consensus papers from the 2018 AAAAI/WAO international drug allergy symposium
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Pascal Demoly and Mariana Castells
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Drug allergy ,Hypersensitivity ,Beta-lactam ,Radiographic contrast media ,In vitro allergy testing ,Delayed drug reactions ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract This article is one of a series of international consensus documents developed from the International Drug Allergy Symposium held at the Joint Congress of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology/World Allergy Organization on March 1, 2018, in Orlando, Florida, USA. The symposium was sponsored by The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice, and The World Allergy Organization Journal and chaired by Mariana Castells, MD, PhD, and Pascal Demoly, MD, PhD.
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- 2018
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50. Les biothérapies dans l’asthme sévère de l’enfant
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E. Clark, M. Tabardel, Y. Bouderbala, P. Demoly, and D. Caimmi
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General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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