288 results on '"Sánchez Alonso P"'
Search Results
2. Interobserver Reliability and Sensitivity to Change of a Composite Ocular Inflammatory Activity Index: UVEDAI©
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Pato-Cour, Esperanza, Borrego-Sanz, Lara, Domínguez-Álvaro, Marta, Sánchez-Alonso, Fernando, Rodríguez-González, Fayna, Tejera-Santana, Marta, Esteban-Ortega, Mar, García-Lozano, Isabel, Martínez-Costa, Lucia, González-Ocampo, Samuel, Sainz-de-la-Maza, Maite, Moll-Udina, Aina, Plaza, Zulema, Fonollosa, Alejandro, Artaraz, Joseba, Díaz-Valle, Teresa, Gurrea-Almela, Maria, Díaz-Valle, David, and Méndez-Fernández, Rosalía
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- 2024
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3. Does HLA explain the high incidence of childhood-onset type 1 diabetes in the Canary Islands? The role of Asp57 DQB1 molecules
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Yeray Nóvoa-Medina, Itahisa Marcelino-Rodriguez, Nicolás M. Suárez, Marta Barreiro-Bautista, Eva Rivas-García, Santiago Sánchez-Alonso, Gema González-Martínez, Sofía Quinteiro-González, Ángela Domínguez, María Cabrera, Sara López, Svetlana Pavlovic, Carlos Flores, Gran Canarian Diabetes and Obesity Research Group, and Ana M. Wägner
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Genetics ,HLA ,Pediatrics ,Type 1 diabetes ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Abstract The Canary Islands inhabitants, a recently admixed population with significant North African genetic influence, has the highest incidence of childhood-onset type 1 diabetes (T1D) in Spain and one of the highest in Europe. HLA accounts for half of the genetic risk of T1D. Aims To characterize the classical HLA-DRB1 and HLA-DQB1 alleles in children from Gran Canaria with and without T1D. Methods We analyzed classic HLA-DRB1 and HLA-DQB1 alleles in childhood-onset T1D patients (n = 309) and control children without T1D (n = 222) from the island of Gran Canaria. We also analyzed the presence or absence of aspartic acid at position 57 in the HLA-DQB1 gene and arginine at position 52 in the HLA-DQA1 gene. Genotyping of classical HLA-DQB1 and HLA-DRB1 alleles was performed at two-digit resolution using Luminex technology. The chi-square test (or Fisher's exact test) and odds ratio (OR) were computed to assess differences in allele and genotype frequencies between patients and controls. Logistic regression analysis was also used. Results Mean age at diagnosis of T1D was 7.4 ± 3.6 years (46% female). Mean age of the controls was 7.6 ± 1.1 years (55% female). DRB1*03 (OR = 4.2; p = 2.13–13), DRB1*04 (OR = 6.6; p ≤ 2.00–16), DRB1* 07 (OR = 0.37; p = 9.73–06), DRB1*11 (OR = 0.17; p = 6.72–09), DRB1*12, DRB1*13 (OR = 0.38; p = 1.21–05), DRB1*14 (OR = 0.0; p = 0.0024), DRB1*15 (OR = 0.13; p = 7.78–07) and DRB1*16 (OR = 0.21; p = 0.003) exhibited significant differences in frequency between groups. Among the DQB1* alleles, DQB1*02 (OR: 2.3; p = 5.13–06), DQB1*03 (OR = 1.7; p = 1.89–03), DQB1*05 (OR = 0.64; p = 0.027) and DQB1*06 (OR = 0.19; p = 6.25–14) exhibited significant differences. A total of 58% of the studied HLA-DQB1 genes in our control population lacked aspartic acid at position 57. Conclusions In this population, the overall distributions of the HLA-DRB1 and HLA-DQB1 alleles are similar to those in other European populations. However, the frequency of the non-Asp-57 HLA-DQB1 molecules is greater than that in other populations with a lower incidence of T1D. Based on genetic, historical and epidemiological data, we propose that a common genetic background might help explain the elevated pediatric T1D incidence in the Canary Islands, North-Africa and middle eastern countries.
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- 2024
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4. Does HLA explain the high incidence of childhood-onset type 1 diabetes in the Canary Islands? The role of Asp57 DQB1 molecules
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Nóvoa-Medina, Yeray, Marcelino-Rodriguez, Itahisa, Suárez, Nicolás M., Barreiro-Bautista, Marta, Rivas-García, Eva, Sánchez-Alonso, Santiago, González-Martínez, Gema, Quinteiro-González, Sofía, Domínguez, Ángela, Cabrera, María, López, Sara, Pavlovic, Svetlana, Flores, Carlos, and Wägner, Ana M.
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- 2024
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5. Impact of multimorbidity on the first ts/bDMARD effectiveness and retention rate after two years of follow-up in patients with rheumatoid arthritis from the BIOBADASER registry
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Calvo-Gutiérrez, Jerusalem, López-Medina, Clementina, Otero-Varela, Lucía, Escudero-Contreras, Alejandro, Ortega-Castro, Rafaela, Ladehesa-Pineda, Lourdes, Campos, Cristina, Bernabeu-Gonzalvez, Pilar, Pérez-Gómez, Ana, García-Dorta, Alicia, Ruiz-Montesino, Dolores, Pombo-Suarez, Manuel, Ros-Vilamajo, Inmaculada, Sánchez-Alonso, Fernando, and Castrejón, Isabel
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- 2024
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6. Where Are We on Education Recovery?
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United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) (France), World Bank, United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Chanduvi, Jaime Saavedra, Jenkins, Robert, Dewan, Pragya, Reuge, Nicolas, Yao, Haogen, Alejo, Anna, Falconer, Aisling, Chakroun, Borhene, Chang, Gwang-Chol, Azevedo, João Pedro, Sánchez, Alonso, Giannini, Stefania, Brossard, Mathieu, Dreesen; Thomas, and Bergmann, Jessica
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Two years into the COVID-19 global pandemic, education has been seriously disrupted. In response to this crisis, the global priority remains to ensure every child is supported so they can return to school and catch up on lost learning. Recognizing the need to accelerate education recovery with urgent, at-scale action, this joint report by UNICEF in partnership with UNESCO and the World Bank highlights staggering levels of learning loss globally and takes stock of the measures being taken by countries to mitigate learning losses as schools reopen. Based on a survey of 122 UNICEF country and fundraising offices administered in early March 2022, the report presents the importance of and progress made in five key actions for education recovery, the RAPID: (1) Reach every child and retain them in school; (2) Assess learning levels; (3) Prioritize teaching the fundamentals; (4) Increase catch-up learning and progress beyond what was lost; and (5) Develop psychosocial health and well-being so every child is ready to learn.
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- 2022
7. Cognitive impairment and dementia in young onset Parkinson’s disease
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Santos-García, Diego, de Deus Fonticoba, Teresa, Cores Bartolomé, Carlos, Feal Painceiras, María J., García Díaz, Iago, Íñiguez Alvarado, María Cristina, Paz, Jose Manuel, Jesús, Silvia, Cosgaya, Marina, García Caldentey, Juan, Caballol, Nuria, Legarda, Ines, Hernández Vara, Jorge, Cabo, Iria, López Manzanares, Lydia, González Aramburu, Isabel, Ávila Rivera, Maria A., Gómez Mayordomo, Víctor, Nogueira, Víctor, Dotor García-Soto, Julio, Borrué, Carmen, Solano Vila, Berta, Álvarez Sauco, María, Vela, Lydia, Escalante, Sonia, Cubo, Esther, Mendoza, Zebenzui, Martínez Castrillo, Juan C., Sánchez Alonso, Pilar, Alonso Losada, Maria G., López Ariztegui, Nuria, Gastón, Itziar, Kulisevsky, Jaime, Seijo, Manuel, Valero, Caridad, Alonso Redondo, Ruben, Buongiorno, Maria Teresa, Ordás, Carlos, Menéndez-González, Manuel, McAfee, Darrian, Martinez-Martin, Pablo, and Mir, Pablo
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- 2023
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8. Interobserver Reliability and Sensitivity to Change of a Composite Ocular Inflammatory Activity Index: UVEDAI©
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Esperanza Pato-Cour, Lara Borrego-Sanz, Marta Domínguez-Álvaro, Fernando Sánchez-Alonso, Fayna Rodríguez-González, Marta Tejera-Santana, Mar Esteban-Ortega, Isabel García-Lozano, Lucia Martínez-Costa, Samuel González-Ocampo, Maite Sainz-de-la-Maza, Aina Moll-Udina, Zulema Plaza, Alejandro Fonollosa, Joseba Artaraz, Teresa Díaz-Valle, Maria Gurrea-Almela, David Díaz-Valle, and Rosalía Méndez-Fernández
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Uveitis ,Composite index ,UVEDAI ,Interobserver reliability ,Sensitivity to change ,Ophthalmology ,RE1-994 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction This was a multicenter, prospective, longitudinal, observational study involving eight Spanish tertiary hospitals to determine the interobserver reliability of an uveitis disease activity index, (UVEDAI) and assess its sensitivity to change in patients with receiving pharmacologic treatment. Methods Patients aged ≥ 18 years diagnosed with active noninfectious uveitis were included. A complete baseline assessment was performed by two ophthalmologists who determined ocular inflammatory activity using the UVEDAI index independently of each other. The principal ophthalmologist made a new visit at 4 weeks to determine the change in inflammatory activity. The interobserver reliability analysis was performed by calculating the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), with the values of the variables and the UVEDAI obtained by both ophthalmologists in the more active eye at the baseline visit. Sensitivity to change in the UVEDAI index was assessed at 4 weeks from the start of pharmacologic treatment by determining the clinically relevant change, defined as a change in UVEDAI of ≥ 0.8 points over baseline. The mean change between both measures was compared using the repeated-measures t-test. Results A total of 111 patients were included. In the interobserver reliability analysis, the ICC for the UVEDAI value was 0.9, and, when compared with the mean UVEDAI values obtained by the ophthalmologists, no statistically significant differences were found (p value > 0.05). As for the sensitivity to change in UVEDAI, statistically significant differences (p value = 0.00) were found for the mean values of the index compared with baseline. In all cases, the index value decreased by > 1 point at the 4-week visit. Conclusions The interobserver reliability of the UVEDAI was high in the total sample. Furthermore, the index was sensitive in determining the change in inflammatory activity after treatment. We believe that UVEDAI is a disease activity index that enables objective comparison of results in clinical practice and trials.
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- 2024
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9. Impact of multimorbidity on the first ts/bDMARD effectiveness and retention rate after two years of follow-up in patients with rheumatoid arthritis from the BIOBADASER registry
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Jerusalem Calvo-Gutiérrez, Clementina López-Medina, Lucía Otero-Varela, Alejandro Escudero-Contreras, Rafaela Ortega-Castro, Lourdes Ladehesa-Pineda, Cristina Campos, Pilar Bernabeu-Gonzalvez, Ana Pérez-Gómez, Alicia García-Dorta, Dolores Ruiz-Montesino, Manuel Pombo-Suarez, Inmaculada Ros-Vilamajo, Fernando Sánchez-Alonso, and Isabel Castrejón
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Rheumatoid arthritis ,Comorbidities ,bDMARDs ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Abstract
Abstract Background Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) have a higher prevalence of comorbidities compared to the general population. However, the implications of multimorbidity on therapeutic response and treatment retention remain unexplored. Objectives: (a) To evaluate the impact of multimorbidity on the effectiveness of the first targeted synthetic or biologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (ts/bDMARD), in patients with RA after 2-year follow-up; (b) to investigate the influence of multimorbidity on treatment retention rate. Methods Patients with RA from the BIOBADASER registry exposed to a first ts/bDMARDs were included. Patients were categorized based on multimorbidity status at baseline, defined as a Charlson Comorbidity index (CCI) score ≥ 3. A linear regression model, adjusted for sex and age, was employed to compare the absolute DAS28 score over time after ts/bDMARD initiation between the two groups. The Log-Rank test and Kaplan-Meier curve were used to compare the retention rates of the first ts/bDMARD between the groups. Results A total of 1128 patients initiating ts/bDMARD were included, with 107 (9.3%) exhibiting multimorbidity. The linear regression model showed significantly higher DAS28 (beta coefficient 0.33, 95%CI:0.07–0.58) over a two-year period in patients with multimorbidity, even after adjusting for age and sex. Finally, no differences in the ts/bDMARD retention rate were found between groups (median 6.94–6.96 years in CCI
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- 2024
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10. Safety outcomes in patients with rheumatoid arthritis treated with abatacept: results from a multinational surveillance study across seven European registries
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Dominique, Alyssa, Hetland, Merete Lund, Finckh, Axel, Gottenberg, Jacques-Eric, Iannone, Florenzo, Caporali, Roberto, Kou, Tzuyung Douglas, Nordstrom, Dan, Hernandez, Maria Victoria, Sánchez-Piedra, Carlos, Sánchez-Alonso, Fernando, Pavelka, Karel, Bond, T. Christopher, and Simon, Teresa A.
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- 2023
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11. A pilot 1-year follow-up randomised controlled trial comparing metacognitive training to psychoeducation in schizophrenia: effects on insight
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Lopez-Morinigo, Javier-David, Martínez, Adela Sánchez-Escribano, Barrigón, María Luisa, Escobedo-Aedo, Paula-Jhoana, Ruiz-Ruano, Verónica González, Sánchez-Alonso, Sergio, Mata-Iturralde, Laura, Muñoz-Lorenzo, Laura, Cuadras, Daniel, Ochoa, Susana, Baca-García, Enrique, and David, Anthony S.
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- 2023
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12. Factors associated with discontinuation of biologics in patients with inflammatory arthritis in remission: data from the BIOBADASER registry
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Valero, Marta, Sánchez-Piedra, Carlos, Freire, Mercedes, Colazo, María, Busquets, Noemí, Meriño-Ibarra, Erardo, Rodríguez-Lozano, Carlos, Manrique, Sara, Campos, Cristina, Sánchez-Alonso, Fernando, and Castrejón, Isabel
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- 2023
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13. Strategy to improve managerial technological intersectorality to perfect the family medicine program
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Lilian Maria Aparicio Meneses, Orlando Hernández Méndez, Yurisel Rafael Miguel Cruz, and Norkis Sánchez Alonso
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acciones integradas de salud ,intersectorialidad ,medicina familiar ,servicio de salud. ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Introduction: Intersectorality still shows potential for perfecting its conceptualization in the managerial and technological context to achieve improvements in programs. Objective: Design and evaluate a strategy for intersectoral technological management improvement, to improve the family medicine program. Methods: A quasi-experimental before and after intervention study was carried out, through an intersectoral improvement strategy. From the universe of 771 health users, a sample of 389 was chosen by proportional stratified sampling; It was made up of 330 from health, 38 community actors and 21 from other sectors. It was carried out in 4 stages: Diagnosis, design and validation, implementation and evaluation. The variables were studied: Level of knowledge, organizational climate and intersectoral actions. Absolute frequencies and percentages were used for the analysis of qualitative data and the McNemar test for the results of the intervention. Results: The application of the strategy in social practice was pertinent due to the results of the expected effectiveness(9.5). The level of knowledge of professionals improved (92.5 %), the organizational climate in the 3 dimensions (8.1, 8.2 and 9.3). 90 %(9) of the intersectoral actions were satisfactory with a significant association between the intervention and the results (p= 0.001). Conclusions: The designed strategy optimizes managerial technological intersectorality, and improves the family medicine program in the level of knowledge of professionals, the organizational climate and intersectoral actions.
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- 2024
14. Use of risk chart algorithms for the identification of psoriatic arthritis patients at high risk for cardiovascular disease: findings derived from the project CARMA cohort after a 7.5-year follow-up period
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Jesús Tornero, Alba Erra, Santos Castañeda, Carolina Pérez-García, Raimon Sanmartí, Sara Marsal, Ingrid Moller, Esperanza Naredo, Miguel A González-Gay, Celia Erausquin, Ivan Castellví, Javier Llorca, Alejandro Muñoz, María Galindo, Enrique Raya, Lydia Abasolo, Gema Bonilla, Alfonso Corrales, Inmaculada Ureña, Carlos Rodríguez-Lozano, Carlos González-Juanatey, Cristina Fernandez Carballido, Francisco J López-Longo, Miguel Ángel González-Gay, Eduardo Collantes, José A Miranda-Filloy, Sagrario Bustabad, Indalecio Monteagudo, Jose A Piqueras, Tatiana Cobo, Joan Maymó, Carmen Barbadillo, Soledad Ojeda, Jaime Calvo Alen, Antonio Fernandez Nebro, Isabel Rodríguez, Pilar Font, Martina Steiner, Eugenio Chamizo Carmona, Beatriz González Álvarez, Santiago Munoz, Joan M Nolla, Fernando Sánchez-Alonso, Julio Sanchez, Raul Menor Almagro, Ana Pérez Gómez, Monica Ibañez, Elena Heras-Recuero, Trinidad Pérez Sandoval, Miren Uriarte-Ecenarro, Angela Pecondón, Hye Sang Park, Jessica Polo y La Borda, Zulema Plaza, Carmen García Gómez, Ivan Ferraz-Amaro, Jesús Tomás Sanchez-Costa, Olga Carmen Sánchez-González, Ana Isabel Turrión-Nieves, Ana Perez-Alcalá, José L FernándezSueiro, José A Pinto-Tasende, Eugenia Gonzálezde Rábago, María J González-Fernández, Ramón Huguet Codina, Beatriz Yoldi, Mercedes Ramentol, Gabriela Ávila, Cayetano Alegre, Fernando Gamero, José García Torón, María P Moreno-Gil, Antonio Juan-Mas, Pilar Espiño, Inmaculada Ros, Horacio Berman, Oscar Fontseré Patón, Benjamín Fernández Gutiérrez, José M Pina-Salvador, María D Fábregas, Montserrat Romera, Jesús A García-Vadillo, Rosario García de Vicuña, María A Belmonte, María V Irigoyen, Olga Martínez González, Rebeca Belmonte Gómez, Pastora Granados Bautista, Azucena Hernández Sanz, José Santos Rey, Carmen O Sánchez-González, Javier Bachiller, Antonio Zea, Francisco J Manero, Chesús Beltrán Audera, Marta Medrano, Jesús Babío Herráez, Javier del Pino, Ruth López González, María Enriqueta Peiró, José M Senabre, José C Rosas, Isabel Rotés, Estefanía Moreno, Javier Calvo, Amalia Rueda, Pilar Morales, Ana Nieto, Ana Ruibal Escribano, Sergio Ros Expósito, Ginés Sánchez Nievas, Enrique Júdez Navarro, Manuela Sianes Fernández, Silvia Martínez Pardo, Manel Pujol, Alberto Cantabrana, Esmeralda Delgado, Sergio Rodríguez Montero, Javier Rivera Redondo, Teresa González Hernández, Francisco J González-Polo, José M Moreno, Emilio Giner Serret, Laura Cebrián Méndez, María Teresa Navío, Teresa Pedraz Penalva, Encarnación Pagán, Pablo Mesadel Castillo, Ana Cruz, Ana Turrión, Desireé Ruíz, Antonio López Meseguer, Manuel J Moreno, Luis F Linares, Mercedes Morcillo, María L González-Gómez, José M Aramburu, Natalia A Rivera, Olaia Fernández Berrizbeitia, Manel Riera, Yolanda María León, Miriam Amirall, Jordi Fiter, Julia Fernández Melón, Luis Espadaler, Joaquín Belzunegui, Inmaculada Bañegil, César Díaz, Ramón Valls, María Bonet, Eva Revuelta Evrard, Javier R Godo, and José A González-Fernández
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Medicine - Abstract
Objective To assess the predictive value of four cardiovascular (CV) risk algorithms for identifying high-risk psoriatic arthritis (PsA) patients.Methods Evaluation of patients with PsA enrolled in the Spanish prospective project CARdiovascular in RheuMAtology. Baseline data of 669 PsA patients with no history of CV events at the baseline visit, who were followed in rheumatology outpatient clinics at tertiary centres for 7.5 years, were retrospectively analysed to test the performance of the Systematic Coronary Risk Assessment (SCORE), the modified version (mSCORE) European Alliance of Rheumatology Associations (EULAR) 2015/2016, the SCORE2 algorithm (the updated and improved version of SCORE) and the QRESEARCH risk estimator version 3 (QRISK3).Results Over 4790 years of follow-up, there were 34 CV events, resulting in a linearised rate of 7.10 per 1000 person-years (95% CI 4.92 to 9.92). The four CV risk scales showed strong correlations and all showed significant associations with CV events (p
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- 2024
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15. Early identification of golimumab-treated patients with higher likelihood of long-term retention
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Alicia García-Dorta, Enrique González-Dávila, Marta Sánchez-Jareño, Luis Cea-Calvo, Manuel Pombo-Suárez, Fernando Sánchez-Alonso, Isabel Castrejón, and Federico Díaz-González
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golimumab ,treatment retention ,rheumatoid arthritis ,axial spondyloarthritis ,psoriatic arthritis ,biological therapy ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
BackgroundThe early identification of patients’ profiles most likely to respond to and maintain long-term therapy with a biological drug can have clinical and cost-effectiveness implications.ObjectivesTo evaluate the utility of an innovative approach for early identification of patient profiles associated with long-term persistence of golimumab, a tumour necrosis factor inhibitor, in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), psoriatic arthritis (PsA), and axial spondyloarthritis (SpA) under real-world conditions.DesignRetrospective non-interventional database analysis.MethodsKaplan-Meier curves of golimumab retention over 8 years from the BIOBADASER registry, overall and by indication, were analysed using a novel approach (a two-phase decay model) to identify the point at which the golimumab retention curve shifted from rapid (indicating high golimumab discontinuation rate) to slow decay (low discontinuation rate). Factors associated with golimumab retention at these time points were identified using Cox regression, and retention rates for different patient profiles were calculated.Results885 patients were included. The golimumab retention curve shifted from rapid to slow decay at month 10 for the overall population (retention rate: 73.4%), at month 24 for RA patients (retention: 45.0%), and at month 8 for SpA, including axial SpA and PsA (81.6%). Factors associated with golimumab discontinuation at these early points were, overall, similar to those previously identified at year 8 (RA diagnosis, golimumab as second- or third-line of biological therapy, disease activity over the median and treatment with corticosteroids at golimumab initiation, advanced age [in RA], and female gender [in SpA]).ConclusionWith this novel approach, the factors associated with long-term retention were identified in the initial period of rapid discontinuation of golimumab.
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- 2024
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16. Safety outcomes in patients with rheumatoid arthritis treated with abatacept: results from a multinational surveillance study across seven European registries
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Alyssa Dominique, Merete Lund Hetland, Axel Finckh, Jacques-Eric Gottenberg, Florenzo Iannone, Roberto Caporali, Tzuyung Douglas Kou, Dan Nordstrom, Maria Victoria Hernandez, Carlos Sánchez-Piedra, Fernando Sánchez-Alonso, Karel Pavelka, T. Christopher Bond, and Teresa A. Simon
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Rheumatoid arthritis ,Abatacept ,Biologic DMARD ,Safety ,Infections ,Malignancy ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Abstract
Abstract Background Patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have an increased risk of infection and malignancy compared with the general population. Infection risk is increased further with the use of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), whereas evidence on whether the use of biologic DMARDs increases cancer risk remains equivocal. This single-arm, post-marketing study estimated the incidence of prespecified infection and malignancy outcomes in patients with RA treated with intravenous or subcutaneous abatacept. Methods Data were included from seven European RA quality registries: ATTRA (Anti-TNF Therapy in Rheumatoid Arthritis [Czech Republic]), DANBIO (Danish Rheumatologic Database), ROB-FIN (National Registry of Antirheumatic and Biological Treatment in Finland), ORA (Orencia and Rheumatoid Arthritis [France]), GISEA (Italian Group for the Study of Early Arthritis), BIOBADASER (Spanish Register of Adverse Events of Biological Therapies in Rheumatic Diseases), and the SCQM (Swiss Clinical Quality Management) system. Each registry is unique with respect to design, data collection, definition of the study cohort, reporting, and validation of outcomes. In general, registries defined the index date as the first day of abatacept treatment and reported data for infections requiring hospitalization and overall malignancies; data for other infection and malignancy outcomes were not available for every cohort. Abatacept exposure was measured in patient-years (p-y). Incidence rates (IRs) were calculated as the number of events per 1000 p-y of follow-up with 95% confidence intervals. Results Over 5000 patients with RA treated with abatacept were included. Most patients (78–85%) were female, and the mean age range was 52–58 years. Baseline characteristics were largely consistent across registries. Among patients treated with abatacept, IRs for infections requiring hospitalization across the registries ranged from 4 to 100 events per 1000 p-y, while IRs for overall malignancy ranged from 3 to 19 per 1000 p-y. Conclusions Despite heterogeneity between registries in terms of design, data collection, and ascertainment of safety outcomes, as well as the possibility of under-reporting of adverse events in observational studies, the safety profile of abatacept reported here was largely consistent with previous findings in patients with RA treated with abatacept, with no new or increased risks of infection or malignancy.
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- 2023
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17. Four-years retention rate of golimumab administered after discontinuation of non-TNF inhibitors in patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases
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Manuel Pombo-Suárez, Daniel Seoane-Mato, Federico Díaz-González, Fernando Sánchez-Alonso, Marta Sánchez-Jareño, Luis Cea-Calvo, and Isabel Castrejón
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Axial spondyloarthritis ,Golimumab ,Medication retention ,Psoriatic arthritis ,Rheumatoid arthritis ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract Background In patients with rheumatic diseases, the use of biological (b) or targeted synthetic (ts) disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) after discontinuation of tumor necrosis factor inhibitors (TNFi) is known to be effective. However, data on the use of TNFi after discontinuation of non-TNFi bDMARDs or tsDMARDs (non-TNFi) are scarce. This study assessed the 4-years golimumab retention in patients with rheumatic diseases when used after discontinuation of non-TNFi. Methods Adults with rheumatoid arthritis (RA; n = 72), psoriatic arthritis (PsA; n = 30) or axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA; n = 23) who initiated golimumab after discontinuation of non-TNFi from the Spanish registry of biological drugs (BIOBADASER) were analyzed retrospectively. The retention rate (drug survival or persistence) of golimumab up to 4 years was evaluated. Results The golimumab retention rate was 60.7% (51.4–68.8) at year 1, 45.9% (36.0–55.2) at year 2, 39.9% (29.8–49.7) at year 3 and 33.4% (23.0–44.2) at year 4. Retention rates did not differ significantly whether golimumab was used as second, third, or fourth/subsequent line of therapy (p log-rank = 0.462). Golimumab retention rates were higher in axSpA or PsA patients than in RA patients (p log-rank = 0.002). When golimumab was administered as third or fourth/subsequent line, the 4-years retention rate after discontinuation of non-TNFi was similar to that after discontinuation of TNFi. Conclusion In patients who discontinued non-TNFi, most of whom received golimumab as third/subsequent line of therapy, one-third of patients remained on golimumab at year 4. Retention rates were higher in patients with axSpA and PsA than in those with RA.
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- 2023
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18. A complex network analysis of the Comprehensive R Archive Network (CRAN) package ecosystem
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Mora-Cantallops, Marçal, Sánchez-Alonso, Salvador, and García-Barriocanal, Elena
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Computer Science - Software Engineering - Abstract
Free and open source software package ecosystems have existed for a long time and are among the most sophisticated human-made systems. One of the oldest and most popular software package ecosystems is CRAN, the repository of packages of the statistical language R, which is also one of the most popular environments for statistical computing nowadays. CRAN stores a large number of packages that are updated regularly and depend on a number of other packages in a complex graph of relations; such graph is empirically studied from the perspective of complex network analysis (CNA) in the current article, showing how network theory and measures proposed by previous work can help profiling the ecosystem and detecting strengths, good practices and potential risks in three perspectives: macroscopic properties of the ecosystem (structure and complexity of the network), microscopic properties of individual packages (represented as nodes), and modular properties (community detection). Results show how complex network analysis tools can be used to assess a package ecosystem and, in particular, that of CRAN., Comment: Accepted in the Journal of Systems and Software
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- 2020
19. Preliminary data from a 4-year mirror-image and multicentre study of patients initiating paliperidone palmitate 6-monthly long-acting injectable antipsychotic: the Paliperidone 2 per Year study
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Juan Antonio García-Carmona, Alba García-Pérez, Guillermo Isidro García, Luis Alberto Forcen-Muñoz, Santiago Ovejero García, Rocío Sáez Povedano, Ana Luisa González-Galdámez, Laura Mata Iturralde, Fernando Hernández-Sánchez, Mariluz Ramirez Bonilla, Paloma Fuentes-Pérez, Claudia Ovejas-Catalán, Paula Suárez-Pinilla, Francisco Valdivia-Muñoz, Blanca Fernández Abascal, Miguel Omaña Colmenares, Ángela de Lourdes Martín-Pérez, María Pilar Campos-Navarro, Enrique Baca-García, Sergio Benavente-López, Alberto Raya Platero, Miguel Barberán Navalón, Sergio Sánchez-Alonso, Javier Vázquez-Bourgon, and Sofia Pappa
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Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Background: Paliperidone palmitate 6-monthly (PP6M) is the first long-acting antipsychotic injectable (LAI) to allow for only two medication administrations per year, though there is presently limited insight into its effectiveness and potential added value in real clinical practice conditions. Objectives: To present our ongoing study and draw its preliminary data on patient characteristics initiating PP6M and adherence during the first year of treatment. Methods: The paliperidone 2 per year (P2Y) study is a 4-year, multicentre, prospective mirror-image pragmatic study taking place at over 20 different sites in Europe. The mirror period covers 2 years either side of the PP6M LAI initiation. Retrospective data for the previous 2 years are collected for each patient from the electronic health records. Prospective data are recorded at baseline, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months of drug administration and also cover information on concomitant psychiatric medication, relapses, hospital admissions, side effects, discontinuation and its reasons. Meanwhile, here we present preliminary data from the P2Y study at basal and 6-month period (first and second PP6M administration). Results: At the point of PP6M initiation, the most frequent diagnosis was schizophrenia (69%), the clinical global impression scale mean score was 3.5 (moderately markedly ill) and the rate of previous hospital admissions per patient and year was 0.21. PP6M was initiated after a median of 3–4 years on previous treatment: 146 (73%) from paliperidone palmitate 3-monthly, 37 (19%) from paliperidone palmitate 1-monthly and 17 (9%) from other antipsychotics. The mean dose of the first PP6M was 1098.9 mg. The retention rate at 6 months and 1 year of treatment on PP6M in our cohort was 94%. Conclusion: Patient and clinician preference for LAIs with longer dosing intervals was the main reason for PP6M initiation/switching resulting in high treatment persistence. Future data are needed to evaluate the full impact of PP6M in clinical practice.
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- 2023
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20. Staging Parkinson's disease according to the MNCD classification correlates with caregiver burden
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Diego Santos‐García, Teresa deDeus Fonticoba, Carlos Cores Bartolomé, María J. Feal Painceiras, Iago García Díaz, María Cristina Íñiguez Alvarado, Jose Manuel Paz, Silvia Jesús, Marina Cosgaya, Juan García Caldentey, Nuria Caballol, Ines Legarda, Jorge Hernández Vara, Iria Cabo, Lydia López Manzanares, Isabel González Aramburu, Maria A. Ávila Rivera, Víctor Gómez Mayordomo, Víctor Nogueira, Julio Dotor García‐Soto, Carmen Borrué, Berta Solano Vila, María Álvarez Sauco, Lydia Vela, Sonia Escalante, Esther Cubo, Zebenzui Mendoza, Juan C. Martínez Castrillo, Pilar Sánchez Alonso, Maria G. Alonso Losada, Nuria López Ariztegui, Itziar Gastón, Jaime Kulisevsky, Manuel Seijo, Caridad Valero, Ruben Alonso Redondo, Maria Teresa Buongiorno, Carlos Ordás, Manuel Menéndez‐González, Darrian McAfee, Pablo Martinez‐Martin, Pablo Mir, and COPPADIS Study Group
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burden ,caregiver ,non‐motor symptoms ,Parkinson's disease ,stage ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background and objective Recently, we demonstrated that staging Parkinson's disease (PD) with a novel simple classification called MNCD, based on four axes (motor, non‐motor, cognition, and dependency) and five stages, correlated with disease severity and patients’ quality of life. Here, we analyzed the correlation of MNCD staging with PD caregiver's status. Patients and methods Data from the baseline visit of PD patients and their principal caregiver recruited from 35 centers in Spain from the COPPADIS cohort from January 2016 to November 2017 were used to apply the MNCD total score (from 0 to 12) and MNCD stages (from 1 to 5) in this cross‐sectional analysis. Caregivers completed the Zarit Caregiver Burden Inventory (ZCBI), Caregiver Strain Index (CSI), Beck Depression Inventory‐II (BDI‐II), PQ‐10, and EUROHIS‐QOL 8‐item index (EUROHIS‐QOL8). Results Two hundred and twenty‐four PD patients (63 ± 9.6 years old; 61.2% males) and their caregivers (58.5 ± 12.1 years old; 67.9% females) were included. The frequency of MNCD stages was 1, 7.6%; 2, 58.9%; 3, 31.3%; and 4–5, 2.2%. A more advanced MNCD stage was associated with a higher score on the ZCBI (p
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- 2023
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21. Improving OER Descriptions to Enhance Their Availability, Reuse, and Enrichment
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Herrera-Cubides, Jhon Francin, Gaona-García, Paulo Alonso, Montenegro-Marín, Carlos Enrique, and Sánchez-Alonso, Salvador
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Nowadays, information and communication technologies (ICTs) and virtual training have increased the use of educational resources. This growth use has highlighted educational resource reuse and availability problems. Resource descriptions adapted to particular needs and the lack of metadata enrichment taking advantage of the benefits provided by the Semantic Web are some examples of these problems. The purpose of this paper is to expose an enhanced and interoperable set of metadata elements for describing OER (Open Educational Resources), which takes full advantage of the Openness and data enrichment. In this research, requirements such as data quality dimensions, Linked Data, and mapping into RDF (Resource Description Framework) Graph, have been taken into account to provide well-described, available, reusable and enriched OER, in addition, to display them as Linked Data. These features contribute to the educational field strengthen the processes of Opening, Availability, Reuse, and Linking OER. In a nutshell, these features are necessary to facilitate innovative educational settings. Finally, this improved OER description can be extrapolated to other countries, serving as a potential Opening and reuse guidelines to publish OER on both applications and LOD (Linked Open Data) Cloud.
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- 2022
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22. Factors associated with discontinuation of biologics in patients with inflammatory arthritis in remission: data from the BIOBADASER registry
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Marta Valero, Carlos Sánchez-Piedra, Mercedes Freire, María Colazo, Noemí Busquets, Erardo Meriño-Ibarra, Carlos Rodríguez-Lozano, Sara Manrique, Cristina Campos, Fernando Sánchez-Alonso, and Isabel Castrejón
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Remission ,Biologic DMARD ,Discontinuation ,Real-world evidence ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Abstract
Abstract Background The objectives of this study were to assess the discontinuation of biologic therapy in patients who achieve remission and identify predictors of discontinuation of biologics in patients with inflammatory arthritis in remission. Methods An observational retrospective study from the BIOBADASER registry comprising adult patients diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), ankylosing spondylitis (AS), or psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and receiving 1 or 2 biological disease-modifying drugs (bDMARDs) between October 1999 and April 2021. Patients were followed yearly after initiation of therapy or until discontinuation of treatment. Reasons for discontinuation were collected. Patients who discontinued bDMARDs because of remission as defined by the attending clinician were studied. Predictors of discontinuation were explored using multivariable regression models. Results The study population comprised 3,366 patients taking 1 or 2 bDMARDs. Biologics were discontinued owing to remission by 80 patients (2.4%): 30 with RA (1.7%), 18 with AS (2.4%), and 32 with PsA (3.9%). The factors associated with a higher probability of discontinuation on remission were shorter disease duration (OR: 0.95; 95% CI: 0.91–0.99), no concomitant use of classic DMARDs (OR: 0.56; 95% CI: 0.34–0.92), and longer usage of the previous bDMARD (before the decision to discontinue biological therapy) (OR: 1.01; 95% CI: 1.01–1.02); in contrast, smoking status (OR: 2.48; 95% CI: 1.21–5.08) was associated with a lower probability. In patients with RA, positive ACPA was associated with a lower probability of discontinuation (OR: 0.11; 95% CI: 0.02–0.53). Conclusions Discontinuation of bDMARDs in patients who achieve remission is uncommon in routine clinical care. Smoking and positive ACPA in RA patients were associated with a lower probability of treatment discontinuation because of clinical remission.
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- 2023
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23. PLEIOTROPHIN: A BRIDGE BETWEEN OBESITY AND NEURODEGENERATIVE DISORDERS BY PROMOTING INCREMENT OF BODY WEIGHT, NEUROINFLAMMATION AND MEMORY IMPAIRMENT
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Héctor Cañeque-Rufo, Teresa Fontán-Baselga, Agata Zuccaro, Milagros Galán-Llario, María Rodríguez-Zpata, María Sánchez-Alonso, Julio Sevillano, Esther Gramage, María Del Pilar Ramos-Álvarez, and Gonzalo Herradón
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Published
- 2023
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24. Elies (Estudios de Lingüística Española)
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David Sánchez Alonso
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Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Published
- 2023
25. Pleiotrophin and metabolic disorders: insights into its role in metabolism
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Cristina Ballesteros-Pla, María Gracia Sánchez-Alonso, Javier Pizarro-Delgado, Agata Zuccaro, Julio Sevillano, and María Pilar Ramos-Álvarez
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pleiotrophin ,receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase β/ζ (RPTP β/ζ) ,metabolism ,metabolic disorders ,peripheral organs ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
Pleiotrophin (PTN) is a cytokine which has been for long studied at the level of the central nervous system, however few studies focus on its role in the peripheral organs. The main aim of this review is to summarize the state of the art of what is known up to date about pleiotrophin and its implications in the main metabolic organs. In summary, pleiotrophin promotes the proliferation of preadipocytes, pancreatic β cells, as well as cells during the mammary gland development. Moreover, this cytokine is important for the structural integrity of the liver and the neuromuscular junction in the skeletal muscle. From a metabolic point of view, pleiotrophin plays a key role in the maintenance of glucose and lipid as well as whole-body insulin homeostasis and favors oxidative metabolism in the skeletal muscle. All in all, this review proposes pleiotrophin as a druggable target to prevent from the development of insulin-resistance-related pathologies.
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- 2023
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26. Real-World Effectiveness and Treatment Retention of Secukinumab in Patients with Psoriatic Arthritis and Axial Spondyloarthritis: A Descriptive Observational Analysis of the Spanish BIOBADASER Registry
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Moreno-Ramos, Manuel José, Sanchez-Piedra, Carlos, Martínez-González, Olga, Rodríguez-Lozano, Carlos, Pérez-Garcia, Carolina, Freire, Mercedes, Campos, Cristina, Cáliz-Caliz, Rafael, Calvo, Jerusalem, Blanco-Madrigal, Juan María, Pérez-Gómez, Ana, Moreno-Martínez, María José, Linares, Luis, Sánchez-Alonso, Fernando, Sastré, Carlos, and Castrejón, Isabel
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- 2022
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27. Long-term persistence of treatment after hip fracture in a fracture liaison service
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Antonio Naranjo, Amparo Molina, Adrián Quevedo, Francisco J. Rubiño, Fernando Sánchez-Alonso, Carlos Rodríguez-Lozano, and Soledad Ojeda
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Long-term adherence to antiosteoporosis medication (AOM) in the setting of a fracture liaison service (FLS) are not well known. Patients ≥ 50 with hip fracture seen in an FLS and recommended for treatment to prevent new fractures were analyzed. Baseline data included demographics, identification mode, previous treatment and FRAX items. Patient records were reviewed 3–8 years later, and these data were collected: (1) survival; (2) major refracture; (3) initiation of treatment, proportion of days covered (PDC) and persistence with AOM. 372 patients (mean age, 79 years; 76% women) were included. Mean follow-up was 47 months, 52 patients (14%) had a refracture (22 hip) and 129 (34.5%) died. AOM was started in 283 patients (76.0%). Factors associated with initiation of AOM were previous use of bisphosphonate (OR 9.94; 95% CI 1.29–76.32) and a lower T-score lumbar (OR 0.80; 95% CI 0.65–0.99). Persistence decreased to 72.6%, 60% and 47% at 12, 36 and 60 months. A PDC > 80% was confirmed in 208 patients (55.7%) and associated with previous use of bisphosphonate (OR 3.38; 95% CI 1.34–8.53), treatment with denosumab (OR 2.69; 95% CI:1.37–5.27), and inpatient identification (OR 2.26; 95% CI 1.18–4.34). Long-term persistence with AOM was optimal in patients with hip fracture seen at an FLS. A PDC > 80% was associated with inpatient identification and prescription of denosumab.
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- 2022
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28. Pragmática aplicada a la enseñanza. Lingüística de la comunicación y enseñanza de lenguas, de Juan de Dios Martínez Agudo
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David Sánchez Alonso
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Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Published
- 2023
29. Predictors of transition from paliperidone palmitate 1 and 3 months (PP1M & PPP3M) to paliperidone palmitate 6 months (PP6M)
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P. J. Escobedo-Aedo, J. Merayo-Cano, S. Sánchez Alonso, S. Ovejero, L. Muñoz Lorenzo, and L. Mata Iturralde
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Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Introduction Schizophrenia is a severe, chronic, mental disease. Its stability relies upon a multidisciplinary treatment, where pharmacological treatment is a key aspect. Long-acting injectable antipsychotics (LAIs) have proved efficacy in improving adherence, reducing hospitalizations and relapses, compared with oral treatment[1,2]. Paliperidone palmitate is a long-acting antipsychotic, approved by FDA in 2009 for acute and chronic treatment in schizophrenia. To date, long evidence exists regarding treatment efficacy of paliperidone palmitate 1 month (PP1M) and paliperidone palmitate 3 month (PP3M)[3]. In September 2021 a new long-acting medication was approved for schizophrenia treatment, that is, paliperidone palmitate 6 months (PP6M). This is the first LAI with 6 months duration of treatment, which means, only 2 administrations per year. We here analyzed the factors explaining transitioning from PP1M and PP3M to PP6M treatment in a population previously described somewhere else[4]. Objectives To identify the variables explaining the transition from other long-acting formulations (PP1M and PP3M) to the new biannual formulation (PP6M) in our clinical practice. Methods 123 patients, previously diagnosed with psychotic disorders, in follow-up in our clinical center Fundación Jiménez Díaz Hospital, was analyzed. Sociodemographic factors and clinical evolution were compared in order to identify factors predicting transitioning from PP1M and PP3M to PP6M. Results In the PP1M group, patients transitioning to PP6M had more than 6 years of evolution of disease ans active consummation of drugs, compared with patients who stayed on PP1M. Other sociodemographic were similar in both groups. Only 1 patient was readmitted in hospital since transition to PP6M and no emergency visits were accounted for people transitioned. In the PP3M group, the majority of people transitioning to PP6M were under polypharmacy of which, 42% were on clozapine treatment. The percentage of people with schizophrenia diagnosis was significantly less than in the no transitioning group, though it remained the principal diagnosis. No other significant difference was found with regard to sociodemographic variables. Additionally, no emergency visits nor readmissions to hospital were accounted in this group. Finally, the PP3M transitioned to PP6M significantly more than PP1M group. Although no clear variable explained this situation. Conclusions With these results, we conclude that chronicity and drugs consummation were the main variables explaining transitioning from PP1M to PP6M. In the other hand, the main variable explaining transitioning from PP3M to PP6M was polypharmacy. These results are preliminary and, therefore, should be taken cautiously. We will probably dilucidated future tendency in these treatment use in the upcoming months. Disclosure of Interest None Declared
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- 2023
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30. Effects of COVID-19 vaccination on disease activity in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis on targeted therapy in the COVIDSER study
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Carlos Sanchez-Piedra, Jose M Alvaro-Gracia, Isabel Castrejón, Sara Manrique-Arija, Carlos Rodríguez-Lozano, Federico Díaz-González, Rosa Roselló, Mercedes Freire-González, Dolores Ruiz-Montesinos, Cristina Bohorquez, Enrique González-Dávila, Dante Culqui, Alicia Garcia-Dorta, Cristina Campos, Inmaculada Ros-Vilamajo, Rafael Caliz, Lourdes Mateo Soria, Noemí Busquets, and Fernando Sánchez-Alonso
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Medicine - Abstract
Objective To investigate the influence of COVID-19 vaccination on disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and psoriatic arthritis (PsA) patients under targeted therapies.Patients and methods 1765 vaccinated patients COVID-19, 1178 (66.7%) with RA and 587 (33.3%) with PsA from the COVID-19 registry in patients with rheumatic diseases (COVIDSER) project, were included. Demographics, disease characteristics, Disease Activity Score in 28 joints (DAS28) and targeted treatments were collected. DAS28-based flare rates and categorised disease activity distribution prevaccination and post vaccination were analysed by log-linear regression and contingency analyses, respectively. The influence of vaccination on DAS28 variation as a continuous measure was evaluated using a random coefficient model.Results The distribution of categorised disease activity and flare rates was not significantly modified by vaccination. Log-linear regression showed no significant changes in the rate of flares in the 6-month period after vaccination compared with the same period prior to vaccination in neither patients with RA nor patients with PsA. When DAS28 variations were analysed using random coefficient models, no significant variations in disease activity were detected after vaccination for both groups of patients. However, patients with RA treated with Janus kinase inhibitors (JAK-i) (1) and interleukin-6 inhibitor (IL-6-i) experienced a worsening of disease activity (1.436±0.531, p=0.007, and 1.201±0.550, p=0.029, respectively) in comparison with those treated with tumour necrosis factor inhibitor (TNF-i). Similarly, patients with PsA treated with interleukin-12/23 inhibitor (IL-12/23-i) showed a worsening of disease activity (4.476±1.906, p=0.019) compared with those treated with TNF-i.Conclusion COVID-19 vaccination was not associated with increased rate of flares in patients with RA and PsA. However, a potential increase in disease activity in patients with RA treated with JAK-i and IL-6-i and in patients with PsA treated with IL-12/23-i warrants further investigation.
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- 2023
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31. Impact of 3-Monthly Long-Acting Injectable Paliperidone Palmitate in Schizophrenia: A Retrospective, Real-World Analysis of Population-Based Health Records in Spain
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Gutiérrez‐Rojas, Luis, Sánchez-Alonso, Sergio, García Dorado, Marta, and López Rengel, Paola M.
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- 2022
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32. Long-term persistence of treatment after hip fracture in a fracture liaison service
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Naranjo, Antonio, Molina, Amparo, Quevedo, Adrián, Rubiño, Francisco J., Sánchez-Alonso, Fernando, Rodríguez-Lozano, Carlos, and Ojeda, Soledad
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- 2022
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33. Long-Term Survival of Subcutaneous Biosimilar Tumor Necrosis Factor Inhibitors Compared to Originators: Results From a Multicenter Prospective Registry.
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Martínez-Vidal, María Paz, Fernández-Carballido, Cristina, Otero-Varela, Lucía, Manero Ruiz, Francisco Javier, Pérez-Vera, Yanira, Arija, Sara Manrique, Campos Fernández, Cristina, Jovaní, Vega, Expósito, Lorena, Álvarez Lario, Bonifacio, García-González, Javier, Sánchez-Alonso, Fernando, and Castrejón, Isabel
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- 2024
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34. The Relevance of Open Data Principles for the Web of Data
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Jhon Francined Herrera-Cubides, Paulo Alonso Gaona-García, Carlos Enrique Montenegro-Marin, and Salvador Sánchez-Alonso
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Computer engineering. Computer hardware ,TK7885-7895 - Abstract
Open data has been improving both publishing platforms and the consumers-oriented process over the years, providing better openness policies and transparency. Although organizations have tried to open their data, the enrichment of their resources through the Web of Data has been decreasing. Linked data has been suffering from notable difficulties in different stages of its life cycle, becoming over the years less attractive to users. According to that, we decided to explore how the lack of some opening requirements affects the decline of the Web of Data. This paper presents the Web of Data radiography, analyzing the governmental domain as a case study. The results indicate that it is necessary to strengthen the data opening process to improve resource enrichment on the Web and have better datasets. These improvements describe that open data must be public, accessible (in machine-readable formats), described (use of robust, granular metadata), reusable (made available under an open license), complete (published in primary forms), and timely (preserve the value of the data). The implementation of these characteristics would enhance the availability and reuse of datasets. Besides, organizations must understand that opening and enriching their data require a completely new approach, and they have to pay special attention and control to this project, generally by putting money, the commitment by management at all levels, and lots of time. On the contrary, given the magnitude of availability and reuse problems identified in the opening and enrichment data process, it is believed that the Web of Data model would inevitably lose the interest it aroused at the beginning if not addressed immediately by data quality, openness, and enrichment issues. Besides, its use would be restricted to a few particular niches or would even disappear altogether.
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- 2023
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35. Prevalence and Factors Associated with Drooling in Parkinson’s Disease: Results from a Longitudinal Prospective Cohort and Comparison with a Control Group
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Diego Santos-García, Teresa de Deus Fonticoba, Carlos Cores Bartolomé, Maria J. Feal Painceiras, Maria Cristina Íñiguez-Alvarado, Silvia Jesús, Maria Teresa Buongiorno, Lluís Planellas, Marina Cosgaya, Juan García Caldentey, Nuria Caballol, Ines Legarda, Jorge Hernández Vara, Iria Cabo, Lydia López Manzanares, Isabel González Aramburu, Maria A. Ávila Rivera, Víctor Gómez Mayordomo, Víctor Nogueira, Víctor Puente, Julio Dotor García-Soto, Carmen Borrué, Berta Solano Vila, María Álvarez Sauco, Lydia Vela, Sonia Escalante, Esther Cubo, Francisco Carrillo Padilla, Juan C. Martínez Castrillo, Pilar Sánchez Alonso, Maria G. Alonso Losada, Nuria López Ariztegui, Itziar Gastón, Jaime Kulisevsky, Marta Blázquez Estrada, Manuel Seijo, Javier Rúiz Martínez, Caridad Valero, Mónica Kurtis, Oriol de Fábregues, Jessica González Ardura, Ruben Alonso Redondo, Carlos Ordás, Luis M. L. López Díaz, Darrian McAfee, Pablo Martinez-Martin, Pablo Mir, and Study Group COPPADIS
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Introduction. Drooling in Parkinson’s disease (PD) is frequent but often goes underrecognized. Our aim was to examine the prevalence of drooling in a PD cohort and compare it with a control group. Specifically, we identified factors associated with drooling and conducted subanalyses in a subgroup of very early PD patients. Patients and Methods. PD patients who were recruited from January 2016 to November 2017 (baseline visit; V0) and evaluated again at a 2-year ± 30-day follow-up (V2) from 35 centers in Spain from the COPPADIS cohort were included in this longitudinal prospective study. Subjects were classified as with or without drooling according to item 19 of the NMSS (Nonmotor Symptoms Scale) at V0, V1 (1-year ± 15 days), and V2 for patients and at V0 and V2 for controls. Results. The frequency of drooling in PD patients was 40.1% (277/691) at V0 (2.4% (5/201) in controls; p
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- 2023
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36. Telomerase RNA plays a major role in the completion of the life cycle in Ustilago maydis and shares conserved domains with other Ustilaginales.
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Juan Antonio Sanpedro-Luna, José Juan Jacinto-Vázquez, Estela Anastacio-Marcelino, Carmen María Posadas-Gutiérrez, Iván Olmos-Pineda, Jesús Antonio González-Bernal, Moisés Carcaño-Montiel, Leticia Vega-Alvarado, Candelario Vázquez-Cruz, and Patricia Sánchez-Alonso
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The RNA subunit of telomerase is an essential component whose primary sequence and length are poorly conserved among eukaryotic organisms. The phytopathogen Ustilago maydis is a dimorphic fungus of the order Ustilaginales. We analyzed several species of Ustilaginales to computationally identify the TElomere RNA (TER) gene ter1. To confirm the identity of the TER gene, we disrupted the gene and characterized telomerase-negative mutants. Similar to catalytic TERT mutants, ter1Δ mutants exhibit phenotypes of growth delay, telomere shortening and low replicative potential. ter1-disrupted mutants were unable to infect maize seedlings in heterozygous crosses and showed defects such as cell cycle arrest and segregation failure. We concluded that ter1, which encodes the TER subunit of the telomerase of U. maydis, have similar and perhaps more extensive functions than trt1.
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- 2023
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37. Identifying comorbidities and lifestyle factors contributing to the cognitive profile of early Parkinson’s disease
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Saul Martínez-Horta, Helena Bejr-Kasem, Andrea Horta-Barba, Berta Pascual-Sedano, Diego Santos-García, Teresa de Deus-Fonticoba, Silvia Jesús, Miquel Aguilar, Lluis Planellas, Juan García-Caldentey, Nuria Caballol, Bárbara Vives-Pastor, Jorge Hernández-Vara, Iria Cabo-Lopez, Lydia López-Manzanares, Isabel González-Aramburu, Maria Asunción Ávila-Rivera, Maria Jose Catalán, Luis Manuel López-Díaz, Victor Puente, Jose Manuel García-Moreno, Carmen Borrué, Berta Solano-Vila, Maria Álvarez-Sauco, Lydia Vela, Sonia Escalante, Esther Cubo, Francisco Carrillo-Padilla, Juan Carlos Martínez-Castrillo, Pilar Sánchez-Alonso, Maria Gema Alonso-Losada, Nuria López-Ariztegui, Itziar Gastón, Marta Blázquez-Estrada, Manual Seijo-Martínez, Javier Rúiz-Martínez, Caridad Valero-Merino, Monica Kurtis, Oriol de Fábregues-Boixar, Jessica González-Ardura, Cristina Prieto-Jurczynska, Pablo Martinez-Martin, Pablo Mir, Jaime Kulisevsky, and COPPADIS Study Group
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Parkinson’s disease ,PD-MCI ,Cognition ,Lifestyle ,Coppadis ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Background Identifying modifiable risk factors for cognitive impairment in the early stages of Parkinson’s disease (PD) and estimating their impact on cognitive status may help prevent dementia (PDD) and the design of cognitive trials. Methods Using a standard approach for the assessment of global cognition in PD and controlling for the effects of age, education and disease duration, we explored the associations between cognitive status, comorbidities, metabolic variables and lifestyle variables in 533 PD participants from the COPPADIS study. Results Among the overall sample, 21% of participants were classified as PD-MCI (n = 114) and 4% as PDD (n = 26). The prevalence of hypertension, diabetes and dyslipidemia was significantly higher in cognitively impaired patients while no between-group differences were found for smoking, alcohol intake or use of supplementary vitamins. Better cognitive scores were significantly associated with regular physical exercise (p
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- 2021
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38. Predictors of clinically significant quality of life impairment in Parkinson’s disease
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Santos García D., Teresa de Deus Fonticoba, Carlos Cores, Guillermo Muñoz, Jose M. Paz González, Cristina Martínez Miró, Ester Suárez, Silvia Jesús, Miquel Aguilar, Pau Pastor, Lluis Planellas, Marina Cosgaya, Juan García Caldentey, Nuria Caballol, Inés Legarda, Jorge Hernández Vara, Iria Cabo, Luis López Manzanares, Isabel González Aramburu, María A. Ávila Rivera, Maria J. Catalán, Víctor Nogueira, Víctor Puente, María Ruíz de Arcos, Carmen Borrué, Berta Solano Vila, María Álvarez Sauco, Lydia Vela, Sonia Escalante, Esther Cubo, Francisco Carrillo Padilla, Juan C. Martínez Castrillo, Pilar Sánchez Alonso, Maria G. Alonso Losada, Nuria López Ariztegui, Itziar Gastón, Pedro Clavero, Jaime Kulisevsky, Marta Blázquez Estrada, Manuel Seijo, Javier Rúiz Martínez, Caridad Valero, Mónica Kurtis, Oriol de Fábregues, Jessica González Ardura, Carlos Ordás, Luis M. López Díaz, Darrian McAfee, Pablo Martinez-Martin, Pablo Mir, and COPPADIS Study Group
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Quality of life (QOL) plays an important role in independent living in Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients, being crucial to know what factors impact QoL throughout the course of the disease. Here we identified predictors of QoL impairment in PD patients from a Spanish cohort. PD patients recruited from 35 centers of Spain from the COPPADIS cohort from January 2016, to November 2017, were followed up during 2 years. Health-related QoL (HRQoL) and global QoL (GQoL) were assessed with the 39-item Parkinson’s disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39) and the EUROHIS-QOL 8-item index (EUROHIS-QOL8), respectively, at baseline (V0) and at 24 months ± 1 month (V2). Clinically significant QoL impairment was defined as presenting an increase (PDQ-39SI) or decrement (EUROHIS-QOL8) at V2 ≥ 10% of the score at baseline (V0). A comparison with a control group was conducted for GQoL. GQoL did not change significantly in PD patients (N = 507; p = 0.686) or in the control group (N = 119; p = 0.192). The mean PDQ-39SI was significantly increased in PD patients (62.7 ± 8.5 years old; 58.8% males; N = 500) by 21.6% (from 16.7 ± 13 to 20.3 ± 16.4; p
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- 2021
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39. Resultados de una intervención para perfeccionar el programa del médico y la enfermera de la familia
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Lilian María Aparicio-Meneses, Orlando Hernández-Méndez, and Norkis Sánchez-Alonso
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indicadores de salud ,médicos de familia ,atención primaria de salud ,estrategia de salud familiar ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Fundamento: el programa del médico y la enfermera de la familia es pilar fundamental del sistema nacional de salud. No obstante, existe potencial para la mejora en la organización, calidad y eficiencia de los servicios en el primer nivel de atención. Objetivo: evaluar el impacto de una intervención para perfeccionar el programa del médico y la enfermera de la familia, realizada en el área de salud del Policlínico Universitario “Guillermo Tejas Silva”, de Las Tunas, entre octubre 2021 y marzo 2022. Métodos: se realizó un estudio cuasi experimental de intervención, en 23 consultorios médicos de la familia en el área de salud, periodo de tiempo y con el objetivo antes definidos. De un universo de 50 profesionales se seleccionaron como muestra los 47 con residencia en el área urbana. El estudio tuvo tres etapas: diagnóstico, intervención y evaluación. Se empleó como medida de resumen el porcentaje y para la validación estadística de los cambios después de la intervención, la prueba de Mc Nemar. Resultados: con la intervención se elevó el nivel de conocimientos en el 48,9 % de los profesionales, llegando a la categoría adecuado el 91,5 %. Se mejoró el clima organizacional en las dimensiones comportamiento organizacional, estructura y estilos de dirección. Se modificó el cuadro de salud en el 73,9 % de los consultorios 47,8 % más que antes de la intervención. El 86,9 % cumplieron los indicadores de impacto y se redujeron las insatisfacciones con los servicios prestados hasta el 8,7 %. Conclusiones: la intervención evidenció efectividad en los indicadores de resultados del programa.
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- 2022
40. Smartphone-based Ecological Momentary Intervention for secondary prevention of suicidal thoughts and behaviour: protocol for the SmartCrisis V.2.0 randomised clinical trial
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Maria Luisa Barrigon, Antonio Artes, Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez, Philippe Courtet, Enrique Baca-Garcia, Sofian Berrouiguet, Jorge Lopez-Castroman, Alejandro Porras-Segovia, María-Mercedes Pérez-Rodríguez, Antonio Artes-Rodríguez, Romain Billot, Juan José Carballo-Belloso, David Delgado-Gomez, Marta Migoya-Borja, Nora Palomar-Ciria, Alba Sedano-Capdevila, Sofía Abascal-Peiró, Susana Amodeo-Escriban, Ana de Granda, Rodrigo Carmona, Elena Gil-Benito, Laura Mata-Iturralde, Laura Muñoz-Lorenzo, Rocío Navarro-Jiménez, Santiago Ovejero, Sergio Sánchez-Alonso, Ezequiel Di Stasio, José Luis Palomo, Pedro Martín-Calvo, Ana José Ortega, Marta Segura-Valverde, María Luisa Martin-Calvo, Raquel Álvarez-García, Pablo Portillo-de Antonio, Pablo Puras-Rico, and Eva María Romero-Gómez
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Suicide is one of the leading public health issues worldwide. Mobile health can help us to combat suicide through monitoring and treatment. The SmartCrisis V.2.0 randomised clinical trial aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a smartphone-based Ecological Momentary Intervention to prevent suicidal thoughts and behaviour.Methods and analysis The SmartCrisis V.2.0 study is a randomised clinical trial with two parallel groups, conducted among patients with a history of suicidal behaviour treated at five sites in France and Spain. The intervention group will be monitored using Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) and will receive an Ecological Momentary Intervention called ‘SmartSafe’ in addition to their treatment as usual (TAU). TAU will consist of mental health follow-up of the patient (scheduled appointments with a psychiatrist) in an outpatient Suicide Prevention programme, with predetermined clinical appointments according to the Brief Intervention Contact recommendations (1, 2, 4, 7 and 11 weeks and 4, 6, 9 and 12 months). The control group would receive TAU and be monitored using EMA.Ethics and dissemination This study has been approved by the Ethics Committee of the University Hospital Fundación Jiménez Díaz. It is expected that, in the near future, our mobile health intervention and monitoring system can be implemented in routine clinical practice. Results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals and psychiatric congresses. Reference number EC005-21_FJD. Participants gave informed consent to participate in the study before taking part.Trial registration number NCT04775160.
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- 2022
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41. Global Gene Expression of Post-Senescent Telomerase-Negative ter1Δ Strain of Ustilago maydis
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Juan Antonio Sanpedro-Luna, Leticia Vega-Alvarado, Candelario Vázquez-Cruz, and Patricia Sánchez-Alonso
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telomerase ,ter1 mutants ,transcriptome analysis ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
We analyzed the global expression patterns of telomerase-negative mutants from haploid cells of Ustilago maydis to identify the gene network required for cell survival in the absence of telomerase. Mutations in either of the telomerase core subunits (trt1 and ter1) of the dimorphic fungus U. maydis cause deficiencies in teliospore formation. We report the global transcriptome analysis of two ter1Δ survivor strains of U. maydis, revealing the deregulation of telomerase-deleted responses (TDR) genes, such as DNA-damage response, stress response, cell cycle, subtelomeric, and proximal telomere genes. Other differentially expressed genes (DEGs) found in the ter1Δ survivor strains were related to pathogenic lifestyle factors, plant–pathogen crosstalk, iron uptake, meiosis, and melanin synthesis. The two ter1Δ survivors were phenotypically comparable, yet DEGs were identified when comparing these strains. Our findings suggest that teliospore formation in U. maydis is controlled by key pathogenic lifestyle and meiosis genes.
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- 2023
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42. Changes in the use patterns of bDMARDs in patients with rheumatic diseases over the past 13 years
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Carlos Sánchez-Piedra, Diana Sueiro-Delgado, Javier García-González, Inmaculada Ros-Vilamajo, Agueda Prior-Español, Manuel José Moreno-Ramos, Blanca Garcia-Magallon, Jerusalen Calvo-Gutiérrez, Yanira Perez-Vera, Raquel Martín-Domenech, Dolores Ruiz-Montesino, Paloma Vela-Casasempere, Lorena Expósito, Fernando Sánchez-Alonso, Enrique González-Davila, and Federico Díaz-González
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The better understanding of the safety of biologic DMARDs (bDMARDs), as well as the emergence of new bDMARDs against different therapeutic targets and biosimilars have likely influenced the use patterns of these compounds over time. The aim of this study is to assess changes in demographic characteristics, disease activity and treatment patterns in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), psoriatic arthritis (PsA), or ankylosing spondylitis (AS) who started a first- or second-line biologic between 2007 and mid-2020. Patients diagnosed with RA, PsA or AS included in the BIOBADASER registry from January 2007 to July 2020 were included. According to the start date of a first- or second-line biologic therapy, patients were stratified into four time periods: 2007–2009; 2010–2013; 2014–2017; 2018–2020 and analyzed cross-sectionally in each period. Demographic and clinical variables, as well as the type of biologic used, were assessed. Generalized linear models were applied to study the evolution of the variables of interest over time periods, the diagnosis, and the interactions between them. A total of 4543 patients initiated a first biologic during the entire time frame of the study. Over the four time periods, disease evolution at the time of biologic initiation (p
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- 2021
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43. Detection of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in serum is associated with increased mortality risk in hospitalized COVID-19 patients
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Diego A. Rodríguez-Serrano, Emilia Roy-Vallejo, Nelly D. Zurita Cruz, Alexandra Martín Ramírez, Sebastián C. Rodríguez-García, Nuria Arevalillo-Fernández, José María Galván-Román, Leticia Fontán García-Rodrigo, Lorena Vega-Piris, Marta Chicot Llano, David Arribas Méndez, Begoña González de Marcos, Julia Hernando Santos, Ana Sánchez Azofra, Elena Ávalos Pérez-Urria, Pablo Rodriguez-Cortes, Laura Esparcia, Ana Marcos-Jimenez, Santiago Sánchez-Alonso, Irene Llorente, Joan Soriano, Carmen Suárez Fernández, Rosario García-Vicuña, Julio Ancochea, Jesús Sanz, Cecilia Muñoz-Calleja, Rafael de la Cámara, Alfonso Canabal Berlanga, Isidoro González-Álvaro, Laura Cardeñoso, and the REINMUN-COVID Group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract COVID-19 has overloaded national health services worldwide. Thus, early identification of patients at risk of poor outcomes is critical. Our objective was to analyse SARS-CoV-2 RNA detection in serum as a severity biomarker in COVID-19. Retrospective observational study including 193 patients admitted for COVID-19. Detection of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in serum (viremia) was performed with samples collected at 48–72 h of admission by two techniques from Roche and Thermo Fischer Scientific (TFS). Main outcome variables were mortality and need for ICU admission during hospitalization for COVID-19. Viremia was detected in 50–60% of patients depending on technique. The correlation of Ct in serum between both techniques was good (intraclass correlation coefficient: 0.612; p
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- 2021
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44. Depression is Associated with Impulse-compulsive Behaviors in Parkinson’s disease
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Santos-García, D, de Deus Fonticoba, T, Cores Bartolomé, C, Suárez Castro, E, Jesús, S, Mir, P, Pascual-Sedano, B, Pagonabarraga, J, Kulisevsky, J, Hernández-Vara, J, Planellas, LL, Cabo-López, I, Seijo-Martínez, M, Legarda, I, Carrillo Padilla, F, Caballol, N, Cubo, E, Nogueira, V, Alonso Losada, MG, López Ariztegui, N, González Aramburu, I, García Caldentey, J, Borrue, C, Valero, C, and Sánchez Alonso, P
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- 2021
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45. Differences of use between paliperidone palmitate 3 month and paliperidone palmitate 1 month in real practice, with psychotic patients
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P. Escobedo-Aedo, J. Merayo-Cano, L. Mata Iturralde, L. Muñoz Lorenzo, S. Ovejero, and S. Sánchez Alonso
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Paliperidone palmitate ,severity ,Long-acting inyectable ,Treatment ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Introduction Paliperidone palmitate 1-month (PP1M) is a Long-acting injectable antipsychotic formulation, approved for the treatment of schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder. Recently, paliperidone palmitate 3-months (PP3M) formulation was introduced, which maintains stability while offering a longer dosing interval for the maintenance treatment in patients previously treated with PP1M. Despite of this, many patients are treated with PP1M without transition to PP3M. Objectives To identify variables explaining maintenance of PP1M treatment instead of going to PP3M. We hypothesize that more severe patients are delayed in transition to PP3M because of expectation to complete stabilization. Methods A descriptive analysis of 123 patients, diagnosed with psychotic disorders, on treatment with paliperidone palmitate 1 month or 3 months, was performed. Age, sex, type of paliperidone treatment, hospitalizations after the initiaton of treatment, years since diagnosis, polytherapy and toxic habits were some of the variables measured and compared between both groups (PP1M and PP3M). Results Most of patients (63,41%) were on PP3M. Both groups shared characteristics like male sex predominance, schizophrenia as the most common diagnosis, having a recent onset diagnosis, same frequency of polypharmacy and same pattern of drug consumption. There was a slight difference between both groups regarding severity. PP1M and PP3M showed respectively 33% and 16,7% of admissions after initiation. Conclusions No clear pattern determines less transition to PP3M from PP1M. No statistical difference was found except form the difference found in admission after change of treatment (to PP1M or PP3M), which could reflect influence of severity in treatment. Future research is needed in order to better elucidate this association. Disclosure No significant relationships.
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- 2022
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46. Correction to: Real-World Effectiveness and Treatment Retention of Secukinumab in Patients with Psoriatic Arthritis and Axial Spondyloarthritis: A Descriptive Observational Analysis of the Spanish BIOBADASER Registry
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Moreno-Ramos, Manuel José, Sanchez-Piedra, Carlos, Martínez-González, Olga, Rodríguez-Lozano, Carlos, Pérez-Garcia, Carolina, Freire, Mercedes, Campos, Cristina, Cáliz-Caliz, Rafael, Calvo, Jerusalem, Blanco-Madrigal, Juan María, Pérez-Gómez, Ana, Moreno-Martínez, María José, Linares, Luis, Sánchez-Alonso, Fernando, Sastré, Carlos, and Castrejón, Isabel
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- 2022
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47. Clinical factors associated with discontinuation of ts/bDMARDs in rheumatic patients from the BIOBADASER III registry
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A. Prior-Español, C. Sánchez-Piedra, J. Campos, F. J. Manero, C. Pérez-García, C. Bohórquez, N. Busquets-Pérez, J. M. Blanco-Madrigal, C. Díaz-Torne, F. Sánchez-Alonso, L. Mateo, and S. Holgado-Pérez
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Biologic and targeted synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (ts/bDMARDs) play a pivotal role in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), psoriatic arthritis (PsA), and ankylosing spondylitis (AS). Persistence of therapy provides an index of a drug’s overall effectiveness. The objective of the study was to identify factors associated with discontinuation of ts/bDMARDs in a real-world dataset. The study population comprised patients diagnosed with RA, PsA, and AS included in the BIOBADASER registry for whom follow-up data were available until November 2019. Patient features and treatment data were included in the analysis. The Kaplan–Meier method was used to study survival of the different drugs according to the reason for discontinuation. Factors associated with discontinuation were studied using Cox regression models and bivariate and multivariate analyses. P values of less than 0.05 were regarded as statistically significant. The study population comprised 4,752 patients who received a total of 8,377 drugs, of which 4,411 (52.65%) were discontinued. The Kaplan–Meier curves showed that survival for first-line treatment was greater in all 3 groups (p
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- 2021
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48. Implication of the PTN/RPTPβ/ζ Signaling Pathway in Acute Ethanol Neuroinflammation in Both Sexes: A Comparative Study with LPS
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María Rodríguez-Zapata, Milagros Galán-Llario, Héctor Cañeque-Rufo, Julio Sevillano, María Gracia Sánchez-Alonso, José M. Zapico, Marcel Ferrer-Alcón, María Uribarri, Beatriz de Pascual-Teresa, María del Pilar Ramos-Álvarez, Gonzalo Herradón, Carmen Pérez-García, and Esther Gramage
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pleiotrophin ,Midkine ,PTPRZ1 ,neuroinflammation ,alcohol ,adolescence ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Binge drinking during adolescence increases the risk of alcohol use disorder, possibly by involving alterations of neuroimmune responses. Pleiotrophin (PTN) is a cytokine that inhibits Receptor Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase (RPTP) β/ζ. PTN and MY10, an RPTPβ/ζ pharmacological inhibitor, modulate ethanol behavioral and microglial responses in adult mice. Now, to study the contribution of endogenous PTN and the implication of its receptor RPTPβ/ζ in the neuroinflammatory response in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) after acute ethanol exposure in adolescence, we used MY10 (60 mg/kg) treatment and mice with transgenic PTN overexpression in the brain. Cytokine levels by X-MAP technology and gene expression of neuroinflammatory markers were determined 18 h after ethanol administration (6 g/kg) and compared with determinations performed 18 h after LPS administration (5 g/kg). Our data indicate that Ccl2, Il6, and Tnfa play important roles as mediators of PTN modulatory actions on the effects of ethanol in the adolescent PFC. The data suggest PTN and RPTPβ/ζ as targets to differentially modulate neuroinflammation in different contexts. In this regard, we identified for the first time important sex differences that affect the ability of the PTN/RPTPβ/ζ signaling pathway to modulate ethanol and LPS actions in the adolescent mouse brain.
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- 2023
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49. The influence of external political events on social networks: the case of the Brexit Twitter Network
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Mora-Cantallops, Marçal, Sánchez-Alonso, Salvador, and Visvizi, Anna
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- 2021
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50. Interobserver Reliability and Sensitivity to Change of a Composite Ocular Inflammatory Activity Index: UVEDAI©.
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Pato-Cour, Esperanza, Borrego-Sanz, Lara, Domínguez-Álvaro, Marta, Sánchez-Alonso, Fernando, Rodríguez-González, Fayna, Tejera-Santana, Marta, Esteban-Ortega, Mar, García-Lozano, Isabel, Martínez-Costa, Lucia, González-Ocampo, Samuel, Sainz-de-la-Maza, Maite, Moll-Udina, Aina, Plaza, Zulema, Fonollosa, Alejandro, Artaraz, Joseba, Díaz-Valle, Teresa, Gurrea-Almela, Maria, Díaz-Valle, David, and Méndez-Fernández, Rosalía
- Published
- 2024
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