Publications by authors named "Frison E"

Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how a sensory support intervention (SSI) program impacts quality of life in individuals with mild-to-moderate dementia who also have hearing and vision difficulties.
  • Researchers conducted a randomized controlled trial across seven clinics in five European countries, evaluating the effectiveness of an 18-week program compared to standard care.
  • The primary outcome measured was changes in health-related quality of life, using the Dementia Quality of Life Instrument (DEMQoL), with a total of 252 participants randomly assigned to either the SSI group or a control group receiving usual care.
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Background: Inspiratory muscle training (IMT) is well-established as a safe option for combating inspiratory muscles weakness in the intensive care setting. It could improve inspiratory muscle strength and decrease weaning duration but a lack of knowledge on the optimal training regimen raise to inconsistent results. We made the hypothesis that an innovative mixed intensity program for both endurance and strength improvement could be more effective.

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Aging is associated with cognitive changes, even in the absence of brain pathology. This study aimed to determine if meditation training, by comparison to active and passive control groups, is linked to changes in the perception of cognitive functioning in older adults. One hundred thirty-four healthy older participants from the Age-Well Randomized Clinical Trial were included: 45 followed a meditation training, 45 a non-native language training and 44 had no intervention.

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  • The BEAT PAROX-AF trial is a European study comparing pulsed field ablation (PFA) with radiofrequency (RF) ablation for treating drug-resistant paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (AF), focusing on efficacy and safety.
  • A total of 292 participants were randomly assigned to either PFA or RF using specific protocols to measure outcomes such as the recurrence of atrial arrhythmia and serious adverse events.
  • The study began in December 2021 and will conclude recruitment in January 2024, with results expected to be published in mid-2025, aiming to improve treatment strategies for patients with paroxysmal AF.
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Importance: A major issue in the management of craniopharyngioma-related obesity (CRO) is the ineffectiveness of the current therapeutic approaches.

Objective: To study the efficacy of glucagon-like peptide-1 analogs compared with placebo in adults with obesity CRO.

Design: A double-blind multicenter superiority randomized clinical in trial in two parallel arms.

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Spondyloarthritis (SpA) is characterized by a strong genetic predisposition evidenced by the identification of up to 50 susceptibility loci, in addition to HLA-B27, the major genetic factor associated with the disease. These loci have not only deepened our understanding of disease pathogenesis but also offer the potential to improve disease management. Diagnostic delay is a major issue in SpA.

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To explore to which extent neurodegeneration and cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) could mediate the association between type-2 diabetes and higher dementia risk. The analytical sample consisted in 2228 participants, out of the Three-City study, aged 65 and older, free of dementia at baseline who underwent brain MRI. Diabetes was defined by medication intake or fasting or non-fasting elevated glucose levels.

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Concurrently to the recent development of percutaneous tracheostomy techniques in the intensive care unit (ICU), the amount of tracheostomized brain-injured patients has increased. Despites its advantages, tracheostomy may represent an obstacle to their orientation towards conventional hospitalization or rehabilitation services. To date, there is no recommendation for tracheostomy weaning outside of the ICU.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how functional non-epileptic seizures affect patients' quality of life and identifies factors that might predict these effects.
  • It involved 72 adult patients who were assessed at diagnosis and again six months later using the Quality of Life in Epilepsy Inventory-31 (QOLIE-31) along with psychiatric evaluations.
  • Results indicated that factors like depression and anxiety are linked to a decreased quality of life, highlighting the need for combined neurological and psychiatric approaches in treatment.
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Importance: Nonpharmacological interventions are a potential strategy to maintain or promote cognitive functioning in older adults.

Objective: To investigate the effects of 18 months' meditation training and 18 months' non-native language training on cognition in older adults.

Design, Setting, And Participants: This study was a secondary analysis of the Age-Well trial, an 18-month, observer-masked, randomized clinical trial with 3 parallel arms.

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  • The study aimed to develop a prediction model to identify mild COVID-19 patients at risk of worsening, utilizing clinical, biological, and chest CT data.
  • It involved training and validating the model across multiple hospitals, incorporating factors like age, gender, and lymphocyte counts alongside CT scan analysis.
  • Results indicated that combining CT scan quantification and radiomics with clinical parameters significantly improved prediction accuracy for identifying patients likely to develop more severe COVID-19.*
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Importance: No lifestyle-based randomized clinical trial directly targets psychoaffective risk factors of dementia. Meditation practices recently emerged as a promising mental training exercise to foster brain health and reduce dementia risk.

Objective: To investigate the effects of meditation training on brain integrity in older adults.

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Background: Older individuals with subjective cognitive decline (SCD) perceive that their cognition has declined but do not show objective impairment on neuropsychological tests. Individuals with SCD are at elevated risk of objective cognitive decline and incident dementia. Non-pharmacological interventions (including mindfulness-based and health self-management approaches) are a potential strategy to maintain or improve cognition in SCD, which may ultimately reduce dementia risk.

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Background: Evidence suggests that sarcopenia is a significant predictive factor of worst outcomes and treatment-associated toxicities in patients with metastatic solid tumours. The aim of this study was to explore the relationship between low muscle mass and clinical outcomes and immune-related severe toxicities (IrST) in patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).

Methods: A retrospective cohort of 261 consecutive metastatic solid tumour patients treated with ICIs were included in our study.

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Objective: To assess the role of biomarkers of Alzheimer disease (AD), neurodegeneration, and small vessel disease (SVD) as mediators in the association between diabetes mellitus and cognition.

Methods: The study sample was derived from MEMENTO, a cohort of French adults recruited in memory clinics and screened for either isolated subjective cognitive complaints or mild cognitive impairment. Diabetes was defined based on blood glucose assessment, use of antidiabetic agent, or self-report.

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Introduction: Older adults experiencing subjective cognitive decline (SCD) have a heightened risk of developing dementia and frequently experience subclinical anxiety, which is itself associated with dementia risk.

Objective: To understand whether subclinical anxiety symptoms in SCD can be reduced through behavioral interventions.

Methods: SCD-Well is a randomized controlled trial designed to determine whether an 8-week mindfulness-based intervention (caring mindfulness-based approach for seniors; CMBAS) is superior to a structurally matched health self-management program (HSMP) in reducing subclinical anxiety.

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Aim: Treatment strategies in locally recurrent rectal cancer (LRRC) are complex and need to be balanced against previous treatments received for the primary rectal cancer. Radiotherapy is an important component of treatment in LRRC. However, there is little high-quality evidence on the role of reirradiation in this cohort.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the reliability of two noninvasive liver fibrosis assessments, transient elastography (TE) and point shear-wave elastography using virtual touch quantification (pSWE VTQ), specifically in children with cystic fibrosis (CF).
  • Involvement of 56 children with CF allowed for an analysis of repeatability and reproducibility, showing high intraobserver and interobserver agreement for TE and moderate agreement for pSWE VTQ.
  • The findings affirm that both TE and pSWE VTQ are dependable methods for evaluating liver fibrosis in children with CF, suggesting they can be used for patient follow-up based on availability in CF care centers.
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Background: In France about 32% of hospitalized patients have a vascular access placement. However, a common complication associated with these is catheter-related bloodstream infection (CRBI) due to the introduction of microorganisms from the skin during catheter insertion. There is no consensus on the best way to clean the skin prior to catheter insertion, which could be a key element of CRBI prevention.

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Background: Optimising hearing and vision function may be important in improving a range of outcomes for people living with dementia (PwD) and their companions. The SENSE-Cog cross-national randomised controlled trial (RCT) is evaluating the effectiveness of a sensory intervention (SI) to improve quality of life for PwD with concurrent hearing and/or vision impairment, in five European countries. To ascertain how or why the intervention will, or will not, achieve its outcomes, we have designed a process evaluation to explore potential discrepancies between expected and observed outcomes.

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Background: GRECCAR 2 was the first multicentre, randomised trial to compare local excision with total mesorectal excision in downstaged low rectal cancer. Encouraging oncological results were noted at 3 years' follow-up but needed to be corroborated with longer follow-up. In this study, we aimed to report the 5-year oncological outcomes, including local recurrence, metastatic disease, and survival.

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Background: Since people with mental illness are more likely to die from cancer, we assessed whether people with mental illness undergo less cancer screening compared with the general population.

Methods: In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched PubMed and PsycINFO, without a language restriction, and hand-searched the reference lists of included studies and previous reviews for observational studies from database inception until May 5, 2019. We included all published studies focusing on any type of cancer screening in patients with mental illness; and studies that reported prevalence of cancer screening in patients, or comparative measures between patients and the general population.

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