Publications by authors named "Saves M"

Background: Some studies have investigated the role of socio-demographic inequalities in the association between screening and survival. However, in France, no study has been conducted to describe the socio-demographic characteristics and survival of women with breast cancer based on their participation to mass screening. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of socio-demographic inequalities on the association between participation in mass screening program and survival of women with breast cancer.

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Evidence-based medicine : basic principles. The clinical judgment of health professionals is improving over the time of experience, but they need to keep their medical knowledge up to date. Yet, practitionners are inundated by an exponentially increasing biomedical literature, whom quality is questioned.

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Background: Soft-tissue sarcomas (STSs) are rare tumors with varied histological presentations. Management and treatment are thus complex, but crucial for patient outcomes. We assess adherence to adult STS management guidelines across two French regions (10% of the French population).

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Background: The main source of key medical information consists in original articles published in peer-reviewed biomedical journals. Reported studies use increasingly sophisticated statistical and epidemiological approaches that first require a solid understanding of core methods. However, such understanding is not widely shared among physicians.

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Background: Hospital-based cancer registries (HBR) of Comprehensive cancer centers (CCC) named "Enquête permanente cancer (EPC)" could represent an important information source of data for a population-based cancer registry (PBR). The main purpose of this study was to evaluate the concordance between data from HBR of the CCC for regions of Bordeaux and South-Western France and data from PBR of the General cancer registry of Gironde and the completeness for the year 2005, in order to explore the possibility for immediate integration of data collected by the HBR in the database of the PBR and to reduce the systematic consultation of medical records for cancer cases notified by the HBR.

Methods: We estimated the proportion of concordant cases between the HBR and the PBR and the unweighted and weighted Cohen's Kappa coefficient for certain variables.

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Background: Cancer registries cover 18% of the French population. A national surveillance might be warranted for some potentially environment-related cancers such as tumors of the central nervous system (CNS) to detect abnormal incidence variations. The PMSI database provides an interesting source of comprehensive, standardized and mandatory data collected from all health facilities.

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Background: SID (Supplemental Immunization Days) is a special strategy intended to accelerate eradication of poliomyelitis in countries where it is still endemic (India, Afghanistan, and Pakistan in Asia, and Nigeria in Africa). This strategy is also applied in Nigeria's neighbours (Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Benin). Since the poliomyelitis virus was imported from Nigeria in 2001, Chad has reported cases of poliomyelitis every year.

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Abstract We evaluated the prognostic value of different mediators of inflammation: TNF-alpha and its soluble receptor p75, platelet-activating factor, and glutathione tripeptide in a case-control study nested within a cohort of 1281 patients infected by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) started on highly active antiretroviral treatment (HAART). During the first year of HAART, 16 cases experienced an AIDS-defining event and 6 experienced an evolution of T CD4(+) cell count <100/mm(3). Forty-four controls who did not progress during the same follow-up period were matched for age, baseline CD4(+), and HIV-RNA.

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Objective: The ERAMS study addressed the value of arterial stiffness in predicting the severity of systemic sclerosis.

Methods: ERAMS was a prospective multicentre cohort study including patients with definite systemic sclerosis. Arterial stiffness was measured by the standardized non-invasive QKd 100-60 method.

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Aim Of The Study: The aim of this work is to show to what extent a psychosocial evaluation can lead bring to comprehension of the subjectivity of Quality of Life (QoL) among HIV-infected patients. Evaluation of QoL makes it possible to understand the link between the therapeutic effectiveness and the subjective evaluation of the treatment, but also to estimate more precisely how people live and take their treatment in the context of HIV infection.

Method: This work confronts the variation of QoL with the variation of several social and psychosocial parameters identified as of the components of the system, which is the subjective evaluation, and more precisely to a specific side effect of Highly Active AntiRetroviral Therapies (HAART): lipodystrophy syndrome that consists in body fat redistribution.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to explore how levels of apolipoproteins C3 (APOC3) and E (APOE) in the blood relate to lipid and carbohydrate metabolism issues, as well as signs of lipodystrophy in HIV-1 patients on specific antiretroviral treatment.
  • - Conducted on a subset of 1,181 HIV-1-infected adults, it found that higher levels of APOC3 were linked to increased triglycerides and cholesterol, and these levels also rose with more severe glucose metabolism problems.
  • - The findings suggest that elevated APOC3 levels may indicate lipid and glucose metabolism disorders in these patients and are associated with clinical signs of insulin resistance and lipodystrophy. *
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Objectives: The French National Mesothelioma Surveillance Program (NMSP) was established in 1998 by the National Institute for Health Surveillance (InVS). Its objectives are to estimate the trends in mesothelioma incidence and the proportion attributable to occupational asbestos exposure, to help improve its pathology diagnosis, to assess its compensation as an occupational disease, and to contribute to research.

Methods: The NMSP records incident pleural tumours in 21 French districts that cover a population of approximately 16 million people (a quarter of the French population).

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OBVIOUS EFFICACY, BUT ALSO RISKS: The administration of combinations of highly active antiretroviral since 1996 has greatly decreased morbidity and mortality in HIV-1 infected patients. Side effects associated with these treatments were rapidly described. Other than abnormal distribution of fat, the dyslipidemia and insulin-resistance leads to a pro-atherogenic profile in these patients.

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The distribution of risk factors for cardiovascular disease in patients aged 35-44 years who were treated for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection was compared with that for a population-based cohort. HIV-1-infected men treated with a protease inhibitor-containing regimen (n=223), compared with HIV-1-uninfected men (n=527), were characterized by a lower prevalence of hypertension, a lower mean high-density lipoprotein cholesterol level, a higher prevalence of smoking, a higher mean waist-to-hip ratio, and a higher mean triglyceride level. No difference was found for total plasma or low-density cholesterol levels, nor for the prevalence of diabetes.

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Objective: To study whether hepatitis C virus (HCV) co-infection or the severe elevation of transaminases is associated with survival after the initiation of antiretroviral combination therapy.

Design: Prospective hospital-based cohort (Aquitaine Cohort).

Methods: HIV-infected adults started on an antiretroviral combination before 30 June 1999.

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We assessed the correlations between some plasma markers of immune activation (soluble receptors of interleukin 2 (sIL2-R) and TNFap75 (sTNFII-R) and usual markers of HIV infection in patients treated with protease-inhibitors (PI). Forty-six PI-naive HIV-1-infected adults were included in a 1-year prospective cohort from the initiation of a P1-containing regimen (M0). Measurements of CD4+cell count, plasma HIV-RNA, sIL2-R and sTNFII-R were performed at M0, M6, and M12.

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Morphologic and metabolic changes associated with protease inhibitor (PI) therapy have been reported since the introduction of PIs for treatment of human immunodeficiency virus infection. These changes were measured 12-20 months after initiation of PI therapy in a cross-sectional study involving 614 patients from the Antiprotéases Cohorte (APROCO) Study (Agence Nationale de Recherches sur le Sida-EP11). The prevalence was 21% for isolated peripheral atrophy, 17% for isolated fat accumulation, 24% for mixed syndrome, 23% for glucose metabolism alterations, 28% for hypertriglyceridemia (triglyceride level, > or =2.

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In a sample of 277 patients included in the French APROCO cohort study who were initially adherent at follow-up visit 4 months after initiation of a protease inhibitor-containing regimen, 76.4% self-reported at least one lipodystrophy-related symptom and 30.0% failed to maintain adherence behaviour 20 months after enrolment.

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In Human Immunodeficiency Virus infection, several statistical methods are available to analyze viral load (HIV-1 RNA) used as a surrogate outcome in trials of antiretroviral treatments. We compared the most frequently used methods and applied them to one of these trials, where HIV-1 RNA was measured using two lower limits of detection. Methods were reviewed for different properties dealing with validity, interpretation, and handling.

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We assessed the prognostic role of plasma levels of beta2-microglobulin, TNF-alpha, sTNFR-II, and IFN-gamma on the progression to AIDS in patients mostly treated with combination antiretroviral therapies. HIV-1-infected patients with advanced HIV disease (baseline CD4+ cell count between 50 and 250 x 10(6)/L) were included in a prospective cohort followed up for 36 months. In the 113 patients included, 22 first AIDS-defining events were reported.

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After initiation of a treatment for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection containing a protease inhibitor, immune restoration associated with increases in CD4-positive (CD4+) T lymphocyte count may be delayed. In a sample of patients who had been prescribed protease inhibitors for the first time, the authors tested to see whether there was a minimal duration of CD4+ cell count increase before the increase had an impact on the occurrence of opportunistic infections. The evolution (difference between time t and baseline) of CD4+ cell count was modeled using a mixed effects linear model.

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Objective: To study the safety of discontinuing cytomegalovirus (CMV) maintenance therapy among patients with cured CMV retinitis receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART).

Methods: Patients with a history of CMV retinitis who were receiving anti-CMV maintenance therapy and who had a CD4 cell count > 75 x 10(6) cells/l and a plasma HIV RNA level < 30000 copies/ml while on HAART were included in a multicentre prospective study. Maintenance therapy for CMV retinitis was discontinued at enrolment and all the patients were monitored for 48 weeks by ophthalmological examinations and by determination of CMV markers, CD4 cell counts and plasma HIV RNA levels.

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In a cohort of 1,047 human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected patients started on protease inhibitors (PIs), the incidence of severe hepatic cytolysis (alanine aminotransferase concentration five times or more above the upper limit of the normal level >/= 5N) was 5% patient-years after a mean follow-up of 5 months. Only positivity for hepatitis C virus antibodies (hazard ratio [HR], 7. 95; P < 10(-3)) or hepatitis B virus surface antigen (HR, 6.

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