47 results on '"Béraud, Guillaume"'
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2. Combined Bacterial Meningitis and Infective Endocarditis: When Should We Search for the Other When Either One is Diagnosed?
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Béraud, Guillaume, Tubiana, Sarah, Erpelding, Marie-Line, Le Moing, Vincent, Chirouze, Catherine, Gorenne, Isabelle, Manchon, Pauline, Tattevin, Pierre, Vernet, Veronique, Varon, Emmanuelle, Hoen, Bruno, and Duval, Xavier
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- 2022
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3. Impact of vaccination on the symptoms of hospitalised patients with SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant (B.1.617.1) infection
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Epaulard, Olivier, Abgrall, Sophie, Lefebvre, Maeva, Faucher, Jean-François, Michon, Jocelyn, Frentiu, Emilia, Blanchi, Sophie, Janssen, Cécile, Charbonnier, Gabrielle, Fresse, Audrey, Laurent, Simon, Sandjakian, Lena, Casez, Pierre, Mahamat, Aba, and Beraud, Guillaume
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- 2022
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4. Survey of delivery of parenteral antimicrobials in non-inpatient settings across Europe
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Emilie, Caroline, de Nocker, Phebe, Saïdani, Nadia, Gilchrist, Mark, Seaton, R. Andrew, Patel, Sanjay, Beraud, Guillaume, Kofteridis, Diamantis, Schouten, Jeroen, Thilly, Nathalie, Berrevoets, Marvin, Hulscher, Marlies, Buyle, Franky, and Pulcini, Céline
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- 2022
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5. Relationship between serotypes, disease characteristics and 30-day mortality in adults with invasive pneumococcal disease
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Benadji, Amine, Duval, Xavier, Danis, Kostas, Hoen, Bruno, Page, Bernard, Béraud, Guillaume, Vernet-Garnier, Véronique, Strady, Christophe, Brieu, Nathalie, Maulin, Laurence, Roy, Carine, Ploy, Marie-Cécile, Gaillat, Jacques, Varon, Emmanuelle, and Tubiana, Sarah
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- 2022
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6. Dalbavancin in Real Life: Economic Impact of Prescription Timing in French Hospitals
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Béraud, Guillaume, Maupetit, Jean-Claude, Darras, Audric, Vimont, Alexandre, and Blachier, Martin
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- 2022
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7. Time trends in social contacts before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: the CONNECT study
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Drolet, Mélanie, Godbout, Aurélie, Mondor, Myrto, Béraud, Guillaume, Drolet-Roy, Léa, Lemieux-Mellouki, Philippe, Bureau, Alexandre, Demers, Éric, Boily, Marie-Claude, Sauvageau, Chantal, De Serres, Gaston, Hens, Niel, Beutels, Philippe, Dervaux, Benoit, and Brisson, Marc
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- 2022
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8. Hydroxychloroquine in mild-to-moderate coronavirus disease 2019: a placebo-controlled double blind trial
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Brangier, Antoine, Codron, Philippe, Lemée, Jean Michel, Pichon, Virginie, Dhersin, Robin, Urbanski, Geoffrey, Lavigne, Christian, Courtois, Roxane, Danielou, Hélène, Lebreton, Jonathan, Vatan, Rémi, Crochette, Nicolas, Lainé, Jean-Baptiste, Perez, Lucia, Blanchi, Sophie, Hitoto, Hikombo, Bernard, Louis, Maillot, François, Marchand Adam, Sylvain, Talarmin, Jean-Philippe, Gaigneux, Emeline, Motte-Vincent, Pauline, Morrier, Marine, Merrien, Dominique, Bleher, Yves, Flori, Maxime, Ducet-Boiffard, Amélie, Colin, Orane, Février, Ronan, Thill, Pauline, Tetart, Macha, Demaeght, François, Lafond-Desmurs, Barthelemy, Pradier, Maxime, Meybeck, Agnes, Picaud, Marjorie, Prazuck, Thierry, Chapelet, Guillaume, Rouaud, Agnès, Le Turnier, Paul, Sunder, Simon, Lorleac'h, Aurélien, Dollon, Christophe, Jacquet, Antoine, Le Vely, Francois, Gazeau, Pierre, Ansart, Séverine, Roger, Hélène, Laterza, François, Buzelé, Rodolphe, Tahmi, Fella, Lepeule, Raphael, Lacombe, Karine, Lefebvre, Bénédicte, Célarier, Thomas, Gagneux-Brunon, Amandine, Botelho-Nevers, Elisabeth, Bernard, Marc, Garnier, Camille, Mourguet, Morgane, Pugnet, Gregory, Vienne-Noyes, Sara, Martin-Blondel, Guillaume, Delobel, Pierre, Grouteau, Gaspard, Debard, Alexa, Guilleminault, Laurent, Arias, Pauline, Chakvetadze, Catherine, Flateau, Clara, Kopp, Aude, Putot, Alain, Barben, Jeremy, Mouries Martin, Suzanne, Nuss, Valentine, Piroth, Lionel, Claessens, Yann-Erick, Hentgen, Veronique, Martinot, Martin, Bach-Bunner, Maxime, Bonijoly, Thomas, Gravier, Simon, Michel, Jean-Marc, Andreu, Mathilde, Roriz, Mélanie, Baldolli, Aurélie, Brochard, Julia, Grossi, Olivier, Pineau, Samuel, Brisset, Josselin, Desvaux, Edouard, Gondran, Guillaume, Faucher, Jean-François, Quesnel, Paul-Antoine, Bezanahary, Holy, Danthu, Clément, Gutierrez, Blandine, Ly, Kim, Simonneau, Yannick, Cypierre, Anne, Pinet, Pauline, Durox, Hélène, Ducroix-Roubertou, Sophie, Genet, Claire, Beraud, Guillaume, Le Moal, Gwenael, Rammaert, Blandine, Lanoix, Jean-Philippe, Andrejak, Claire, Joseph, Cédric, Soriot-Thomas, Sandrine, Dhote, Robin, Abad, Sébastien, Benainous, Ruben, Boitiaux, Jean-François, Briend, Guillaume, Gonfroy, Celine, Harent, Stanislas, Lagrange, Aurore, Tone, Alina, Wayenberg, Laura, Desoutter, Sophie, Ettahar, Nicolas, Gey, Thomas, Leroy, Vincent, Gaillard, Sacha, Toma, Andrea, Broussier, Amaury, Etienne, Sandrine, Spivac, Yann, Martha, Benoit, Roch, Nathalie, Diaz, Pierre, N’guyen Baranoff, Danièle, Rebaudet, Stanislas, Jourda, François, Zeller, Valérie, Bienvenu, Boris, Boyer, Arnaud, Pellier, Isabelle, Mercat, Alain, Darsonval, Astrid, Blanchet, Odile, Custaud, Marc-Antoine, Lefeuvre, Caroline, Parot-Schinkel, Elsa, Vielle, Bruno, Briet, Marie, Roy, Pierre-Marie, Dubée, Vincent, Guidet, Bertrand, Mismetti, Patrick, Vicaut, Eric, Sanchez, Olivier, Girard, Philippe, Elias, Antoine, Couturaud, Francis, Gable, Béatrice, Lazareff, Sybille, Carballido, Loïc, Hue, Catherine, Chrétien, Jean-Marie, Goraguer, Adrien, Eeckhoutte, Lucie van, Abbara, Chadi, Boucher, Sophie, Devaud, Edouard, Robineau, Olivier, Rispal, Patrick, Guimard, Thomas, d’Anglejean, Emma, and Diamantis, Sylvain
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- 2021
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9. Neurologic manifestations associated with COVID-19: a multicentre registry
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Abgrall, Sophie, Alby-Laurent, Fanny, Allou, Thibault, Amevigbe, Joséphine, Amarguellay, Hanifa, Alloussi, Nabil, Baille, Guillaume, Barbaz, Mathilde, Bekri, Imen, Bencherif, Lamia, Bensaadi, Samia, Beraud, Guillaume, Bizot, Alexandra, Bottin, Laure, Bruneel, Fabrice, Camdessanche, Jean-Philippe, Chauffier, Jeanne, Csajaghy, Jean-Philippe, De Broucker, Chloé, De Broucker, Thomas, Defebvre, Luc, Delorme, Cécile, Dembloque, Elodie, Derache, Nathalie, Dereeper, Olivier, Derollez, Céline, Descotes-Genon, Cécile, Desestret, Virginie, Devaux, Mathilde, Dubuc, Lydie, Edan, Gilles, Fickl, Andréa, Fraisse, Thibault, Gugenheim, Michel, Hankiewicz, Karolina, Hansmann, Yves, Hautecloque-Raysz, Geoffroy, Henry, Carole, Jobard, Stéphanie, Jouan, Fanny, Kwiatkowski, Arnaud, Lalu, Thibault, Landre, Sophie, Lannuzel, Annie, Leguilloux, Johan, Lejeune, Camille, Liegeois, Clémence, Mahy, Sophie, Marey, Jonathan, Maury, Alexandra, Meppiel, Elodie, Michel, Laure, Mitri, Rita, Moulin, Chloé, Moulin, Solène, Peiffer-Smadja, Nathan, Omarjee, Asma, Ozsancak, Canan, Perrin, Peggy, Petitgas, Paul, Pico, Fernando, Poupard, Marie, Rabier, Valérie, Rizzato, Camille, Roos, Caroline, Saison, Julien, Sayre, Naomi, Sedillot, Nicolas, Sellal, François, Servan, Jérôme, Storey, Caroline, Suchet, Laurent, Tarteret, Paul, Tattevin, Pierre, Thiebaut, Mathilde, Vaduva, Claudia, Varlan, David, Wang, Adrien, Zarrouk, Virginie, Gorza, Lucas, SellaI, François, and de Broucker, Thomas
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- 2021
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10. How Should we Use Multicolumn Spinal Cord Stimulation to Optimize Back Pain Spatial Neural Targeting? A Prospective, Multicenter, Randomized, Double-Blind, Controlled Trial (ESTIMET Study)
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Rigoard, Philippe, Billot, Maxime, Ingrand, Pierre, Durand-Zaleski, Isabelle, Roulaud, Manuel, Peruzzi, Philippe, Dam Hieu, Phong, Voirin, Jimmy, Raoul, Sylvie, Page, Philippe, Djian, Marie-Christine, Fontaine, Denys, Lantéri-Minet, Michel, Blond, Serge, Buisset, Nadia, Cuny, Emmanuel, Cadenne, Myriam, Caire, François, Ranoux, Danièle, Mertens, Patrick, Naous, Hussein, Simon, Emile, Emery, Evelyne, Béraud, Guillaume, Debiais, Françoise, Durand, Géraldine, Serrie, Alain, Diallo, Bakari, Bulsei, Julie, Ounajim, Amine, Nivole, Kevin, Duranton, Sophie, Naiditch, Nicolas, Monlezun, Olivier, and Bataille, Benoit
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- 2021
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11. Community-acquired bacterial meningitis in adults: in-hospital prognosis, long-term disability and determinants of outcome in a multicentre prospective cohort
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Duval, Xavier, Hoen, Bruno, Mourvillier, Bruno, Ploy, Marie-Cécile, Tubiana, Sarah, Varon, Emmanuelle, Caron, François, Bollaert, Pierre-Edouard, Gaillot, Olivier, Taha, Muhamed-Kheir, Poyart, Claire, Bonacorsi, Stephane, Vandenesch, François, Cambau, Emmanuelle, Lecuit, Marc, Gravet, Alain, Frachet, Bruno, Broucker, Thomas De, Levy Bruhl, Daniel, Raffi, François, Anguel, Nadia, Argaud, Laurent, Arista, Sophie, Armand-Lefevre, Laurence, Balavoine, Stéphanie, Baraduc, Régine, Barnaud, Guilène, Beraud, Guillaume, Bernard, Louis, Bernars, Georges, Bertei, Dominique, Bessede, Emilie, Billard Pomares, Typhaine, Biron, Charlotte, Bland, Stéphane, Boileau, Julien, Boubeau, Patrice, Bourdon, Sandra, Bousquet, Aurore, Boyer, Sophie, Bozorg-Grayeli, Alexis, Bret, Laurent, Bretonniere, Cédric, Bricaire, François, Brocas, Elsa, Brun, Michel, Buret, Jennifer, Burucoa, Christophe, Cabalion, Jean, Cabon, Mathieu, Camuset, Guillaume, Canevet, Christophe, Carricajo, Anne, Castan, Bernard, Caumes, Eric, Cazanave, Charles, Chabrol, Amélie, Challan-Belval, Thibaut, Chanteperdrix-Marillier, Vanessa, Chaplain, Chantal, Charlier-Woerther, Caroline, Chaussade, Hélène, Chirouze, Catherine, Clair, Bernard, Colot, Julien, Conil, Jean-Marie, Cordel, Hugues, Cormier, Philippe, Cousson, Joël, Cronier, Pierrick, Cua, Eric, Dao-Dubremetz, Anne, Dargere, Sylvie, Degand, Nicolas, Dekeyser, Sophie, Delaune, Deborah, Denes, Eric, Dequin, Pierre-Francois, Descamps, Diane, Descloux, Elodie, Desmaretz, Jean-Luc, Diehl, Jean-Luc, Dimet, Jérôme, Dinh, Aurélien, Escaut, Lelia, Fabe, Claude, Faibis, Frédéric, Flateau, Clara, Fonsale, Nathalie, Forestier, Emmanuel, Fortineau, Nicolas, Gagneux-Brunon, Amandine, Garandeau, Garcia, Magali, Garot, Denis, Gaudry, Stéphane, Goehringer, François, Gregoire-Faucher, Valérie, Grosset, Marine, Gubavu, Camélia, Gueit, Isabelle, Guelon, Dominique, Guimard, Thomas, Guinard, Jérôme, Hadou, Tahar, Helene, Jean-Pierre, Henard, Sandrine, Henry, Benoit, Hochart, Anne-Cécile, Illes, Gabriela, Jaffuel, Sylvain, Jarrin, Irène, Jaureguy, Françoise, Joseph, Cédric, Juvin, Marie-Emmanuelle, Kayal, Samer, Lacassin, Flore, Lamaury, Isabelle, Lanotte, Philippe, Laurens, Etienne, Laurichesse, Henri, Le Brun, Cécile, Le Moing, Vincent, Le Turnier, Paul, Lecuyer, Hervé, Ledru, Sylvie, Legrix, Céline, Lemaignen, Adrien, Lemble, Chantal, Lemee, Ludovic, Lesens, Olivier, Levast, Marion, Lhommet, Claire, Males, Silvija, Malpote, Edith, Martin-Blondel, Guillaume, Marx, Matthieu, Masson, Raphael, Matray, Olivier, Mbadi, Aurore, Mechai, Frédéric, Mellon, Guillaume, Merens, Audrey, Meyohas, Marie Caroline, Michon, Adrien, Mootien Yoganaden, Joy, Morquin, David, Mouly, Stéphane, Mrozek, Natacha, Nguyen, Sophie, Nguyen, Yohan, Ogielska, Maja, Oziol, Eric, Page, Bernard, Patrat-Delon, Solène, Patry, Isabelle, Pechinot, André, Picot, Sandrine, Pierrejean, Piroth, Lionel, Plassart, Claire, Plessis, Patrice, Portel, Laurent, Poubeau, Patrice, Poupard, Marie, Prazuck, Thierry, Quaesaet, Luc, Ramanantsoa, Adriatsiferana, Rapp, Christophe, Raskine, Laurent, Raymond, Josette, Revest, Matthieu, Riche, Agnès, Robaday-Voisin, Stéphanie, Robin, Frédéric, Romaszko, Jean-Pierre, Rousseau, Florence, Roux, Anne-Laure, Royer, Cecile, Saada, Matthieu, Salmon, Dominique, Saroufim, Carlo, Schmit, Jean-Luc, Sebire, Manuela, Segonds, Christine, Sivadon-Tardy, Valérie, Soismier, Nathalie, Kerneis, Solen, Son, Olivia, Sunder, Simon, Suy, Florence, Tande, Didier, Tankovic, Jacques, Valin, Nadia, Van Grunderbeeck, Nicolas, Verdon, Renaud, Vergnaud, Michel, Vernet-Garnier, Véronique, Vidal, Magali, Vitrat, Virginie, Vittecoq, Daniel, Vuotto, Fanny, Coordination and statistical analyses, Gorenne, Isabelle, Laouenan, Cédric, Marcault, Estelle, Mentre, France, Pasquet, Blandine, Roy, Carine, Tubiana, S., Varon, E., Biron, C., Ploy, M.-C., Mourvillier, B., Taha, M.-K., Revest, M., Poyart, C., Martin-Blondel, G., Lecuit, M., Cua, E., Pasquet, B., Preau, M., Hoen, B., and Duval, X.
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- 2020
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12. Bag-in-the-lens implantation helps avoid posterior synechiae of the iris after phacovitrectomy
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Auchère Lavayssiere, Clément, Lux, Anne-Laure, Beraud, Guillaume, Degoumois, Alice, Billotte, Christian, and Denion, Éric
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- 2019
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13. What Place Is There for Long-Acting Antibiotics in the Management of Gram-Positive Infections? A Qualitative Cross-Sectional Study.
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Dinh, Aurélien, Béraud, Guillaume, Courjon, Johan, Le Goff, Yann, Ettahar, Nicolas Kader, Grégoire, Matthieu, and Senneville, Eric
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PROSTHESIS-related infections ,SOFT tissue infections ,URINARY tract infections ,GRAM-positive bacterial infections ,JOINT infections - Abstract
Objectives. To identify the current practices with long half-life lipoglycopeptides (LGPs) and potential use/position of oritavancin. Results. Despite their indication being limited to skin and soft tissue infections (SSTIs), long half-life lipoglycopeptides are mainly used off-label to treat bone and joint infections (BJIs) and infective endocarditis. Oritavancin and dalbavancin are both semisynthetic lipoglycopeptide antibiotics with activity against Gram-positive organisms. The game-changing property of these two antibiotics is their one-time dosing. Due to its shorter half-life, oritavancin might have an advantage over dalbavancin for a treatment duration of less than 2 weeks, as it could be used both in prolonged treatments of complicated patients in BJIs or administered as a single-dose treatment for Gram-positive cocci infections usually treated by a 5- to 10-day antibiotic course. These infections include urinary tract infections, bacteremias, catheter-related infections, etc. In addition to the possibility of being used as an end-of-treatment injection, oritavancin could be used as an empiric therapy treatment in the postoperative period in the context of device-associated especially prosthetic joint infections to allow for the early discharge of the patient. Methods. A qualitative survey was conducted in March 2022 including sixteen infectiologists, one internist, five hospital pharmacists, and one pharmacologist. Conclusion. Long half-life lipoglycopeptides contribute to changing the paradigm in the management of acute bacterial infections, as infectiologists now consider a range of indications and patient profiles for one single drug. Oritavancin strengthens the therapeutic arsenal in numerous infections from BJIs to urinary tract infections and could help to manage specific clinical situations, on top of providing potential benefits for the hospital's budget. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Mycobacterium tuberculosis prosthetic joint infections: A case series and literature review
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Uhel, Fabrice, Corvaisier, Gregory, Poinsignon, Yves, Chirouze, Catherine, Beraud, Guillaume, Grossi, Olivier, Varache, Nicolas, Arvieux, Cédric, Berre, Rozenn Le, and Tattevin, Pierre
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- 2019
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15. Legal framework of antimicrobial stewardship in hospitals (LEASH): a European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ESCMID) cross-sectional international survey
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Allerberger, Franz, Benko, Ria, Berild, Dag, Cunney, Robert, Debacker, Martine, Deptula, Aleksander, Dumpis, Uga, Dyar, Oliver J, Ergonul, Onder, Szabo, Balint Gergely, Gormley, Cairine, Grape, Malin, Gudnason, Thorolfur, Howard, Philip, Huttner, Benedikt, Ioannou, Petros, Ionescu, Ramona, Keuleyan, Emma, Knepper, Viviane, Kofteridis, Diamantis, Kostyanev, Tomislav, Krcmery, Vladimir, Lakatos, Botond, Luzzati, Roberto, ten Oever, Jaap, Pagani, Leonardo, Pardo, José Ramón Paño, Popescu, Mihaela, Popovici, Mihaela, Paul, Mical, Bix, Hege Salvesen, Schouten, Jeroen, Sneddon, Jacqueline, Stevanović, Goran, Wechsler-Fördös, Agnes, de With, Katja, Vlahović-Palčevski, Vera, Zarb, Peter, Beović, Bojana, Pulcini, Céline, Dumartin, Catherine, Béraud, Guillaume, Nerat, Barbara, Maurel, Cristina, Doušak, May, and Čižman, Milan
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- 2018
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16. Predominance of healthcare-associated cases among episodes of community-onset bacteraemia due to extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae
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Aissa, Nejla, Losniewski, Alain, Henard, Sandrine, Rabaud, Christian, Janssen, Cécile, Pagani, Léonardo, Bland, Stéphane, Gaillat, Jacques, Bru, Jean Pierre, Bonnin, Pierre, Clavère, Gaelle, Vitrat, Virginie, Maulin, Laurence, Quarsaet, Luc, Roger, Helene, Euzen, Jean-Baptiste, Denes, Eric, Couve-Daecon, Elodie, Lechiche, Catherine, Lavigne, Jean-Philippe, Mondain, Véronique, Pulcini, Celine, Garnier, Veronique, Lambert, Dorothée, Hentzien, Maxime, Nguyen, Yohan, Talarmin, Jean Paul, Rameau, Pascaline, Geffroy, Françoise, Salmon-Rousseau, Arnaud, Cattoir, Vincent, Froissart, Antoine, Aberrane, Said, Legout, Laurence, Roblot, France, Beraud, Guillaume, Pavese, Patricia, Belmonte, Olivier, Traversier, Nicolas, Bellec, Laurent, Lagrange-Xelot, Marie, Moiton, Marie-Pierre, Kuli, Barbara, Longuet, Pascal, Scanvic, Agnes, Colombain, Lea, Ferreyra, Milagros, Jean, Maxime, Eden, Aurelia, Laurens, Etienne, Saada, Matthieu, Aumaitre, Hugues, Malet, Martine, Roustant, Frederique, LeMoing, Vincent, Helene, Jean-Pierre, Theodore, Jonathan, Garandeau, Caroline, Caillon, Jocelyne, Olivero, Benjamin, Boutoille, David, Lepelletier, Didier, Grandière-Perez, Lucia, Beaudron, Aurélie, Ramanantsoa, Céline, Varache, Catherine, Varache, Nicolas, Crochette, Nicolas, Hitoto, Hikombo, Blanchi, Sophie, Penn, Pascale, Louis, Bernard, Vanjak, Dominique, Escande, Marie-Christine, Patrigeon, René-Gilles, Honoré, Stéphanie, Barrelet, Audrey, Amara, Marlène, Galempoix, Jean-Marc, Réveil, Jean-Claude, Bucchiotty, Patricia, Couzigou, Carine, LeMonnier, Alban, Boidin, Emilie, Sire, Stephane, Luizy, Nelly, Bronstain, Caroline, Harbarth, Stephan, Fankhauser, Carolina, Brossier, Caroline, von Dach, Elodie, Sauve, Colette, Adam, Marie-Noelle, Hocqueloux, Laurent, Bret, Laurent, André, Marie-Hélène, Barruet, Régine, Challier, Marion, Cabié, Andre, Roze, Benoit, Plesiat, Patrick, Jeanot, Katy, Patry, Isabelle, Moreau, Joséphine, Chirouze, Catherine, Laurent, Aaron, Bachelier, Marie-Nadège, Kac, Guillaume, Farthouat, Nicolas, Feuillebois, Nicolas, Guimard, Thomas, Bourdon, Sandra, Nguyen, Sophie, Alfandari, Serge, Bentayeb, Houcine, Albertini, Mari-Thérèse, Marchou, Bruno, Gaudré, Noémie, Dubois, Damien, Guillet-Caruba, Christelle, Doucet Populaire, Florence, Fortineau, Nicolas, Escaut, Leila, Lesprit, Philippe, Fihman, Vincent, Gauzit, Rémy, Raymond, Josette, Kerneis, Solene, Leflon-Guibout, Veronique, Lefort, Agnes, Dinh, Aurelien, Roux, Anne-Laure, Abgrall, Sophie, Jauréguy, Françoise, Lucet, Jean-Christophe, Soismier, Nathalie, Lopes, Amanda, Cambau, Emmanuelle, Manceron, Veronique, Barnaud, Guilène, Zahar, Jean-Ralph, Ruckly, Stephane, Hikombo, Hitoto, Bernard, Louis, Timsit, Jean-François, and Brun-Buisson, Christian
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- 2017
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17. Anal incontinence and vesico-sphincter events in systemic sclerosis: An epidemiologic bicentric cohort study
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Martin, Mickaël, Meaux-Ruault, Nadine, Magy-Bertrand, Nadine, Beraud, Guillaume, Parratte, Bernard, and Roblot, Pascal
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- 2016
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18. CT Imaging Assessment of Response to Treatment in Chronic Pulmonary Aspergillosis
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Laurent, François, Camara, Boubou, Pison, Christophe, Beigelman-Aubry, Catherine, Cottin, Vincent, Germaud, Patrick, Bergeron, Anne, Cadranel, Jacques, Khalil, Antoine, Toper, Cécile, Béraud, Guillaume, Blouin, Pascal, Godet, Cendrine, Philippe, Bruno, Ingrand, Pierre, Carette, Marie France, Frat, Jean-Pierre, and Roblot, France
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- 2016
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19. A 55-Year-Old French Man With Sudden Hemiparesis and Hemiplegia
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Brunet, Kevin, Minoza, Alida, Portet, Sylvain, Beraud, Guillaume, Rodier, Marie-Helene, and Cateau, Estelle
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- 2016
20. Impact of MALDI-TOF Will Be Highly Dependent on the Clinician
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Béraud, Guillaume, Garcia, Magali, and Rahbari-Oskoui, Frederic F.
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- 2013
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21. Remdesivir and dexamethasone as tools to relieve hospital care systems stressed by COVID-19: A modelling study on bed resources and budget impact.
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Béraud, Guillaume, Timsit, Jean-François, and Leleu, Henri
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REMDESIVIR , *HOSPITAL care , *INTENSIVE care units , *COVID-19 pandemic , *HOSPITAL size , *COVID-19 , *HOSPITALS , *DEXAMETHASONE - Abstract
Remdesivir and dexamethasone are the only drugs providing reductions in the lengths of hospital stays for COVID-19 patients. We assessed the impacts of remdesivir on hospital-bed resources and budgets affected by the COVID-19 outbreak. A stochastic agent-based model was combined with epidemiological data available on the COVID-19 outbreak in France and data from two randomized control trials. Strategies involving treating with remdesivir only patients with low-flow oxygen and patients with low-flow and high-flow oxygen were examined. Treating all eligible low-flow oxygen patients during the entirety of the second wave would have decreased hospital-bed occupancy in conventional wards by 4% [2%; 7%] and intensive care unit (ICU)-bed occupancy by 9% [6%; 13%]. Extending remdesivir use to high-flow-oxygen patients would have amplified reductions in ICU-bed occupancy by up to 14% [18%; 11%]. A minimum remdesivir uptake of 20% was required to observe decreases in bed occupancy. Dexamethasone had effects of similar amplitude. Depending on the treatment strategy, using remdesivir would, in most cases, generate savings (up to 722€) or at least be cost neutral (an extra cost of 34€). Treating eligible patients could significantly limit the saturation of hospital capacities, particularly in ICUs. The generated savings would exceed the costs of medications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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22. Lockdown impact on age-specific contact patterns and behaviours, France, April 2020.
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Bosetti, Paolo, Huynh, Bich-Tram, Abdou, Armiya Youssouf, Sanchez, Marie, Eisenhauer, Catherine, Courtejoie, Noémie, Accardo, Jérôme, Salje, Henrik, Guillemot, Didier, Moslonka-Lefebvre, Mathieu, Boëlle, Pierre-Yves, Béraud, Guillaume, Cauchemez, Simon, and Opatowski, Lulla
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- 2021
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23. Menopausal hormone therapy and risk of incident hypertension: role of the route of estrogen administration and progestogens in the E3N cohort.
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Madika, Anne-Laure, MacDonald, Conor James, Fournier, Agnès, Mounier-Vehier, Claire, Béraud, Guillaume, Boutron-Ruault, MarieChristine, and Boutron-Ruault, Marie-Christine
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- 2021
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24. Efficacy and Safety of Doravirine-Based Regimens in Real Life: A Prospective Monocentric French Study.
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Garcia, Magali, Martellosio, Jean Philippe, Giraud, Valentin, Béraud, Guillaume, Catroux, Mélanie, Roblot, France, and Le Moal, Gwénael
- Abstract
Doravirine (DOR) efficacy and safety have been evaluated in adult naive or treated patients starting a DOR-based regimen between September 15, 2019, and December 31, 2020. Medical history and examination, laboratory results, and tolerance were assessed during the 48 weeks of follow-up. Among the 77 patients included, virological control (VC) was noticed for 66 patients at baseline. Median age was 51 years, and 62% were men. The most common reason for initiating a DOR-based therapy was toxicity (44; 67%) and, especially, weight gain. A virological suppression (VS) was maintained in 55 (83%) patients of the VC group and noticed in 9 (82%) of the non-VC patients at week 48, by intention-to-treat analysis. On treatment analysis, 98% and 100% patients achieved VS in the VC and non-VC groups, respectively. The renal and metabolic tolerance were good. DOR-based regimens appear to be a safe and relevant strategy to circumvent drug interactions and drugs with a poor metabolic tolerance profile. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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25. Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Sex Differences in Social Contact Patterns and Implications for Tuberculosis Transmission and Control.
- Author
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Horton, Katherine C., Hoey, Anne L., Béraud, Guillaume, Corbett, Elizabeth L., and White, Richard G.
- Subjects
TUBERCULOSIS epidemiology ,HUMAN reproduction ,RESEARCH ,META-analysis ,RESEARCH methodology ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,DISEASE incidence ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Social contact patterns might contribute to excess burden of tuberculosis in men. We conducted a study of social contact surveys to evaluate contact patterns relevant to tuberculosis transmission. Available data describe 21 surveys in 17 countries and show profound differences in sex-based and age-based patterns of contact. Adults reported more adult contacts than children. Children preferentially mixed with women in all surveys (median sex assortativity 58%, interquartile range [IQR] 57%-59% for boys, 61% [IQR 60%-63%] for girls). Men and women reported sex-assortative mixing in 80% and 95% of surveys (median sex assortativity 56% [IQR 54%-58%] for men, 59% [IQR 57%-63%] for women). Sex-specific patterns of contact with adults were similar at home and outside the home for children; adults reported greater sex assortativity outside the home in most surveys. Sex assortativity in adult contacts likely contributes to sex disparities in adult tuberculosis burden by amplifying incidence among men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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26. Young doctors' perspectives on antibiotic use and resistance: a multinational and inter-specialty cross-sectional European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ESCMID) survey.
- Author
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Beović, Bojana, Doušak, May, Pulcini, Céline, Béraud, Guillaume, Pardo, Jose Ramon Paño, Sánchez-Fabra, David, Kofteridis, Diamantis, Cortez, Joana, Pagani, Leonardo, Klešnik, Maša, Nadrah, Kristina, Fink, Mitja Hafner, Nathwani, Dilip, Uhan, Samo, Paño Pardo, Jose Ramon, and Hafner Fink, Mitja
- Subjects
DRUG resistance in bacteria ,DIAGNOSTIC microbiology ,ANTIBIOTICS ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,PHYSICIANS ,MULTIPLE correspondence analysis (Statistics) - Abstract
Background: Postgraduate training has the potential to shape the prescribing practices of young doctors.Objectives: To investigate the practices, attitudes and beliefs on antibiotic use and resistance in young doctors of different specialties.Methods: We performed an international web-based exploratory survey. Principal component analysis (PCA) and bivariate and multivariate [analysis of variance (ANOVA)] analyses were used to investigate differences between young doctors according to their country of specialization, specialty, year of training and gender.Results: Of the 2366 participants from France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Slovenia and Spain, 54.2% of young doctors prescribed antibiotics predominantly as instructed by a mentor. Associations between the variability of answers and the country of training were observed across most questions, followed by variability according to the specialty. Very few differences were associated with the year of training and gender. PCA revealed five dimensions of antibiotic prescribing culture: self-assessment of knowledge, consideration of side effects, perception of prescription patterns, consideration of patient sickness and perception of antibiotic resistance. Only the country of specialization (partial η2 0.010-0.111) and the type of specialization (0.013-0.032) had a significant effect on all five identified dimensions (P < 0.01). The strongest effects were observed on self-assessed knowledge and in the perception of antibiotic resistance.Conclusions: The country of specialization followed by the type of specialization are the most important determinants of young doctors' perspectives on antibiotic use and resistance. The inclusion of competencies in antibiotic use in all specialty curricula and international harmonization of training should be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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27. Practices, organisation, and regulatory aspects in advising on antibiotic prescription: the international ESCMID AntibioLegalMap survey.
- Author
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Tebano, Gianpiero, Dyar, Oliver J., Beovic, Bojana, Claudot, Frédérique, Béraud, Guillaume, Thilly, Nathalie, and Pulcini, Céline
- Subjects
ANTIBIOTICS ,ANTI-infective agents ,BLOOD ,CELL culture ,DRUG utilization ,DRUG prescribing ,HEALTH services administration ,LEGAL liability ,MEDICAL referrals ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,WORLD health ,PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,PROFESSIONAL standards ,REGULATORY approval ,CROSS-sectional method ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose: Giving advice about antibiotic prescription through dedicated consultations is a cornerstone of antibiotic stewardship programmes. Our objective was to explore practices, organisation, and regulatory requirements related to antibiotic advising. Methods: We performed an international, exploratory, Internet-based, cross-sectional survey targeting infectious diseases and clinical microbiology specialists. It was disseminated through ESCMID and ESGAP networks. Results: Answers from 830 participants (74 countries, 77% of participants from Europe) were collected. Consultations were mostly given on demand (81%, 619/764), while unsolicited consultations targeting specific conditions (e.g., positive blood culture) were less frequent (66%, 501/764). Consultations usually included indications on diagnostic work-up and follow-up (> 79%). Curbside consultations (i.e., without examining the patient) were reported by 82% (598/733) of respondents, mainly by phone (89%, 531/598). The referring physician was considered authorised not to follow the advice by 57% (383/676). Direct consultations (i.e., after examining the patient) were recorded in the medical file more frequently than curbside consultations (69%, 472/689 vs 35%, 206/592). Concerning legal liability, the majority of respondents considered that it is shared between the adviser and the referring physician, who, however, is considered primarily responsible. The advisers' liability was considered to be lower in cases of curbside and unrecorded consultations. Significant inter-countries and intra-country variability were identified, suggesting that the setting markedly influenced practices. Conclusion: Significant variability exists in the practice of antibiotic advising. This concerns both the organisation of care and how advisers perceive regulatory requirements. These elements must be taken into account when implementing antibiotic stewardship programmes and when training stewards. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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28. Epidemiology and Characteristics of Kikuchi-Fujimoto Disease in the African-Descent Population of Martinique, French West Indies.
- Author
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Moinet, Florence, Molinié, Vincent, Béraud, Guillaume, Polomat, Katlyne, Cordel, Nadège, Sainte-Marie, Dominique, Duffas, Olivier, Duflo, Suzy, Bomahou, Charlène, Arfi, Serge, Deligny, Christophe, Molinié, Vincent, Béraud, Guillaume, Cordel, Nadège, and Bomahou, Charlène
- Abstract
Objective: To provide an epidemiologic description of Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease (KFD), and to describe its relationship with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in a population of sub-Saharan origin.Methods: Patients were retrospectively included on the basis of lymph node histology compatible with KFD reported in Martinique from 1991 until 2013. In order to describe the characteristics of the disease in a larger cohort, we subsequently included more patients of Afro-Caribbean origin from Guadeloupe and French Guiana.Results: In Martinique, mean annual incidence between 1991 and 2013 was 2.78 cases for 1 million inhabitants (95% confidence interval 1.73-3.93). A total of 36 Afro-Caribbean patients from the 3 French American regions were included. Mean age was 30.5 years (range 5-59 years) and the female:male ratio was 3:1. The main characteristics were cervical adenopathies (88.8%), fever (83.3%), asthenia (73.0%), weight loss (64.4%), and recurrence in 33.3%. KFD was associated with lupus (n = 9 for SLE, n = 2 for cutaneous lupus) in 36.6% (11 of 30).Conclusion: We report the first epidemiologic description of KFD in a population of sub-Saharan origin. According to our data, this disease is present in the black African diaspora and is strongly associated with autoimmune diseases, particularly lupus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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29. Case Studies in Infectious Disease Peter M. Lydyard Michael F. Cole John Holton William L. Irving Nino Porakishvili Pradhib Venkatesan Katherine N. Ward
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Béraud, Guillaume
- Published
- 2009
30. Mathematical models and vaccination strategies.
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Béraud, Guillaume
- Subjects
- *
VACCINATION , *MATHEMATICAL models , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *STRATEGIC planning , *DATA analysis - Abstract
Infection transmission is a complex and dynamic process, and is therefore difficult to assess. Consequently, mathematical models are a useful tool to understand any leverage on this transmission, such as vaccination. Models can provide guidance to implement an optimal vaccination campaign whether it concerns the fraction of the population or the age-group to be vaccinated. Mathematical models can also provide insights on counter-intuitive collateral effects of vaccination campaign, given the possibility that the overall benefits for the general population may hide deleterious effects on some sub-groups. As a large proportion of the population is now vaccinated, complex modelling taking into account individual and population heterogeneity and behaviour is necessary although challenging. But the most crucial aspect in the future of mathematical modelling still consists in obtaining precise and exhaustive data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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31. Modeling the impact of changes in day-care contact patterns on the dynamics of varicella transmission in France between 1991 and 2015.
- Author
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Marziano, Valentina, Poletti, Piero, Béraud, Guillaume, Boëlle, Pierre-Yves, Merler, Stefano, and Colizza, Vittoria
- Subjects
CHICKENPOX ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,VARICELLA-zoster virus ,PATHOGENIC microorganisms ,EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Annual incidence rates of varicella infection in the general population in France have been rather stable since 1991 when clinical surveillance started. Rates however show a statistically significant increase over time in children aged 0–3 years, and a decline in older individuals. A significant increase in day-care enrolment and structures’ capacity in France was also observed in the last decade. In this work we investigate the potential interplay between an increase of contacts of young children possibly caused by earlier socialization in the community and varicella transmission dynamics. To this aim, we develop an age-structured mathematical model, informed with historical demographic data and contact matrix estimates in the country, accounting for longitudinal linear increase of early childhood contacts. While the reported overall varicella incidence is well reproduced independently of mixing variations, age-specific empirical trends are better captured by accounting for an increase in contacts among pre-school children in the last decades. We found that the varicella data are consistent with a 30% increase in the number of contacts at day-care facilities, which would imply a 50% growth in the contribution of 0-3y old children to overall yearly infections in 1991–2015. Our findings suggest that an earlier exposure to pathogens due to changes in day-care contact patterns, represents a plausible explanation for the epidemiological patterns observed in France. Obtained results suggest that considering temporal changes in social factors in addition to demographic ones is critical to correctly interpret varicella transmission dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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32. Defensive medicine among antibiotic stewards: the international ESCMID AntibioLegalMap survey.
- Author
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Tebano, Gianpiero, Dyar, Oliver J., Beovic, Bojana, Béraud, Guillaume, Thilly, Nathalie, Pulcini, Céline, and ESCMID Study Group for Antimicrobial stewardshiP (ESGAP)
- Subjects
DRUG prescribing ,COMMUNICABLE diseases ,DRUG resistance in bacteria ,ANTI-infective agents ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Objectives: To investigate fear of legal claims and defensive behaviours among specialists in infectious diseases (ID) and clinical microbiology (CM) and to identify associated demographic and professional characteristics.Methods: AntibioLegalMap was an international cross-sectional internet-based survey targeting specialists in ID and CM. Three variables were explored: fear of legal liability in antibiotic prescribing/advising on antibiotic prescription; defensive behaviours in antibiotic prescribing; and defensive behaviours in advising. A multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed to identify factors significantly associated with each of the three variables.Results: Eight hundred and thirty individuals from 74 countries participated. Only 0.4% (3/779) had any kind of condemnation for malpractice related to antibiotic prescription. Concerning the fear of liability, 21.2% (164/774) of respondents said they never worried, 45.1% (349/774) sometimes worried and 28.6% (221/774) frequently worried when prescribing/advising on antibiotic prescription. Being female, younger than or equal to 35 years and aware of previous cases of litigation were independently associated with fear. Most respondents (85.0%, 525/618) reported some defensive behaviour in antibiotic prescribing. These behaviours were independently associated with being younger than or equal to 35 years and sometimes or often worried about liability. Similarly, 76.4% (505/661) reported defensive behaviours in advising. These behaviours were associated with being sometimes or often worried about liability. The preferred measures to reduce fear and defensive behaviours were having local guidelines and sharing decisions through teamwork.Conclusions: A significant proportion of specialists in ID and CM reported some form of defensive behaviour in prescribing or advising to prescribe antibiotics. Defensive medicine should be considered when implementing antibiotic stewardship programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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33. Resurgence risk for measles, mumps and rubella in France in 2018 and 2020.
- Author
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Béraud, Guillaume, Abrams, Steven, Beutels, Philippe, Dervaux, Benoit, and Hens, Niel
- Published
- 2018
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34. Are infection specialists recommending short antibiotic treatment durations? An ESCMID international cross-sectional survey.
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Macheda, Gabriel, Dyar, Oliver J, Luc, Amandine, Beovic, Bojana, Béraud, Guillaume, Castan, Bernard, Gauzit, Rémy, Lesprit, Philippe, Tattevin, Pierre, Thilly, Nathalie, Pulcini, Céline, and ESGAP and SPILF
- Subjects
ANTIBIOTICS ,CASE studies ,MEDICAL prescriptions ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,ONLINE information services ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SURVEYS ,CROSS-sectional method ,TREATMENT duration ,PHYSICIANS' attitudes - Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the current practice and the willingness to shorten the duration of antibiotic therapy among infection specialists.Methods: Infection specialists giving at least weekly advice on antibiotic prescriptions were invited to participate in an online cross-sectional survey between September and December 2016. The questionnaire included 15 clinical vignettes corresponding to common clinical cases with favourable outcomes; part A asked about the antibiotic treatment duration they would usually advise to prescribers and part B asked about the shortest duration they were willing to recommend.Results: We included 866 participants, mostly clinical microbiologists (22.8%, 197/863) or infectious diseases specialists (58.7%, 507/863), members of an antibiotic stewardship team in 73% (624/854) of the cases, coming from 58 countries on all continents. Thirty-six percent of participants (271/749) already advised short durations of antibiotic therapy (compared with the literature) to prescribers for more than half of the vignettes and 47% (312/662) chose shorter durations in part B compared with part A for more than half of the vignettes. Twenty-two percent (192/861) of the participants declared that their regional/national guidelines expressed durations of antibiotic therapy for a specific clinical situation as a fixed duration as opposed to a range and in the multivariable analysis this was associated with respondents advising short durations for more than half of the vignettes (adjusted OR 1.5, P = 0.02).Conclusions: The majority of infection specialists currently do not advise the shortest possible duration of antibiotic therapy to prescribers. Promoting short durations among these experts is urgently needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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35. A 5-Minute Interval between Two Dilating Eye Drops Increases Their Effect.
- Author
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Denion, Eric, Charlot, Frédérique, and Béraud, Guillaume
- Published
- 2017
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36. Nebulized Liposomal Amphotericin B for Treatment of Pulmonary Infection Caused by Hormographiella aspergillata: Case Report and Literature Review.
- Author
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Godet, Cendrine, Cateau, Estelle, Rammaert, Blandine, Grosset, Marine, Moal, Gwenaël, Béraud, Guillaume, Martellosio, Jean, Iriart, Xavier, Cadranel, Jacques, and Roblot, France
- Abstract
Invasive fungal infection is a serious complication following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Pulmonary infection due to Hormographiella aspergillata is an uncommon condition associated with a high mortality rate. The susceptibility of H. aspergillata to available antifungal agents is not well established. We report for the first time a case of H. aspergillata lung infection that responded poorly to conventional treatment with liposomal amphotericin B (LAmB; 3 mg kg of body weight per day) with renal damage at higher posology (5 mg kg of body weight per day), but improved rapidly after addition of nebulized LAmB to intravenous LAmB (3 mg kg of body weight per day). Successful treatment of our patient using nebulized LAmB would be worth evaluating in cases refractory to standard treatment or when the reference treatment may not be extended due to interaction or side effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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37. CT Imaging Assessment of Response to Treatment in Chronic Pulmonary Aspergillosis.
- Author
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Godet, Cendrine, Laurent, François, Bergeron, Anne, Ingrand, Pierre, Beigelman-Aubry, Catherine, Camara, Boubou, Cottin, Vincent, Germaud, Patrick, Philippe, Bruno, Pison, Christophe, Toper, Cécile, Carette, Marie France, Frat, Jean-Pierre, Béraud, Guillaume, Roblot, France, Cadranel, Jacques, Khalil, Antoine, Blouin, Pascal, and ACHROSCAN Study Group
- Subjects
PULMONARY aspergillosis ,COMPUTED tomography ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,ANTIFUNGAL agents ,BRONCHIECTASIS ,DIAGNOSIS ,CHRONIC diseases ,DRUG monitoring ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SERODIAGNOSIS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Background: Long-term antifungal therapy is usually the only treatment option for chronic pulmonary aspergillosis. However, response rates are difficult to compare because the reported clinical, mycologic, or radiologic criteria are not standardized. Objective parameters are therefore needed. To define the most relevant CT imaging variables in assessment of response to treatment, we investigated changes over time in CT imaging variables.Methods: Changes in CT imaging variables were assessed by systematic analysis of the CT scan findings of 36 patients at diagnosis and 6 months after initiation of treatment. The relevant radiologic variables were determined by selecting those showing significant changes over time. Two experienced thoracic radiologists, blinded for clinical and serologic response, independently performed CT scan analyses. Interreader agreement and concordance between radiologic and clinical response were evaluated.Results: Of the 36 patients, seven experienced clinical deterioration while undergoing therapy. Significantly evolving radiologic variables included cavity and pleural wall thickening (P < .05), which were associated with clinical improvement. There was a strong association between fungus ball disappearance and cavity/pleural wall thickening reduction and clinical improvement (P = .04). There was poor agreement between size changes of cavities or nodules, and clinical evolution (Cohen's κ, -0.13 to -0.24).Conclusions: Variations in cavity and pleural wall thickness may be the most relevant CT imaging variables for assessing response to treatment. Loss of fungus ball is strongly associated with clinical and radiologic improvement, but cavity size changes are unrelated to chronic pulmonary aspergillosis evolution. All these CT imaging variables may be applied in future clinical trials to assess treatment outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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38. The Sclerotic Scatter Limbal Arc Is More Easily Elicited under Mesopic Rather Than Photopic Conditions.
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Denion, Eric, Lux, Anne-Laure, Mouriaux, Frédéric, and Béraud, Guillaume
- Subjects
SCLERA ,LUMINOUS flux ,THRESHOLD (Perception) ,LIGHT scattering ,VISUAL perception ,IRIS (Eye) ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Introduction: We aimed to determine the limbal lighting illuminance thresholds (LLITs) required to trigger perception of sclerotic scatter at the opposite non-illuminated limbus (i.e. perception of a light limbal scleral arc) under different levels of ambient lighting illuminance (ALI). Material and Methods: Twenty healthy volunteers were enrolled. The iris shade (light or dark) was graded by retrieving the median value of the pixels of a pre-determined zone of a gray-level iris photograph. Mean keratometry and central corneal pachymetry were recorded. Each subject was asked to lie down, and the ALI at eye level was set to mesopic values (10, 20, 40 lux), then photopic values (60, 80, 100, 150, 200 lux). For each ALI level, a light beam of gradually increasing illuminance was applied to the right temporal limbus until the LLIT was reached, i.e. the level required to produce the faint light arc that is characteristic of sclerotic scatter at the nasal limbus. Results: After log-log transformation, a linear relationship between the logarithm of ALI and the logarithm of the LLIT was found (p<0.001), a 10% increase in ALI being associated with an average increase in the LLIT of 28.9%. Higher keratometry values were associated with higher LLIT values (p = 0.008) under low ALI levels, but the coefficient of the interaction was very small, representing a very limited effect. Iris shade and central corneal thickness values were not significantly associated with the LLIT. We also developed a censored linear model for ALI values ≤ 40 lux, showing a linear relationship between ALI and the LLIT, in which the LLIT value was 34.4 times greater than the ALI value. Conclusion: Sclerotic scatter is more easily elicited under mesopic conditions than under photopic conditions and requires the LLIT value to be much higher than the ALI value, i.e. it requires extreme contrast. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
39. Paradoxical response preceding control of Scedosporium apiospermum mycetoma with posaconazole treatment.
- Author
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Béraud, Guillaume, Desbois, Nicole, Coyo, Caroline, Quist, Danièle, Rozé, Benoit, Savorit, Luc, and Cabié, André
- Subjects
- *
MYCETOMA , *TRIAZOLES , *SOIL fungi , *IMMUNOCOMPROMISED patients , *MYCOSES , *PATHOLOGICAL physiology , *MYCOBACTERIAL diseases , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Mycetoma is a chronic granulomatous infection that is difficult to treat, notably when due to fungi such as Scedosporium apiospermum. Recent antifungal agents could be an option, but cases are rarely reported, and none with posaconazole. Paradoxical responses, defined as initial clinical worsening despite appropriate treatment, are common in tuberculosis but rare in deep mycoses in non-immunocompromised hosts. Hence, paradoxical responses in context other than mycobacterial infection in an immunocompromised host could provide insights into the pathophysiology and the optimal strategy for treatment. We report the fi rst case of a mycetoma caused by S. apiospermum with bone involvement treated with posaconazole, and the paradoxical response observed at the beginning of the treatment. As with mycobacterial infections, a paradoxical response in deep mycosis could represent the earliest marker of therapeutic efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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40. The French Connection: The First Large Population-Based Contact Survey in France Relevant for the Spread of Infectious Diseases.
- Author
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Béraud, Guillaume, Kazmercziak, Sabine, Beutels, Philippe, Levy-Bruhl, Daniel, Lenne, Xavier, Mielcarek, Nathalie, Yazdanpanah, Yazdan, Boëlle, Pierre-Yves, Hens, Niel, and Dervaux, Benoit
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC health , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *HEALTH surveys , *SOCIAL contact , *EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Empirical social contact patterns are essential to understand the spread of infectious diseases. To date, no such data existed for France. Although infectious diseases are frequently seasonal, the temporal variation of contact patterns has not been documented hitherto. Methods: COMES-F is the first French large-scale population survey, carried out over 3 different periods (February-March, April, April-May) with some participants common to the first and the last period. Participants described their contacts for 2 consecutive days, and reported separately on professional contacts when typically over 20 per day. Results: 2033 participants reported 38 881 contacts (weighted median [first quartile-third quartile]: 8[5–14] per day), and 54 378 contacts with supplementary professional contacts (9[5–17]). Contrary to age, gender, household size, holidays, weekend and occupation, period of the year had little influence on the number of contacts or the mixing patterns. Contact patterns were highly assortative with age, irrespective of the location of the contact, and gender, with women having 8% more contacts than men. Although most contacts occurred at home and at school, the inclusion of professional contacts modified the structure of the mixing patterns. Holidays and weekends reduced dramatically the number of contacts, and as proxies for school closure, reduced R0 by 33% and 28%, respectively. Thus, school closures could have an important impact on the spread of close contact infections in France. Conclusions: Despite no clear evidence for temporal variation, trends suggest that more studies are needed. Age and gender were found important determinants of the mixing patterns. Gender differences in mixing patterns might help explain gender differences in the epidemiology of infectious diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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41. Anicteric cholestasis among HIV infected patients with syphilis.
- Author
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Béraud, Guillaume, Pierre-François, Sandrine, Theodose, Raphaëlle, Desbois, Nicole, Abel, Sylvie, Liautaud, Bernard, and Cabie, Andre
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- *
DISEASE prevalence , *DIAGNOSIS of syphilis , *CHOLESTASIS , *HIV-positive persons , *LIVER function tests , *ALKALINE phosphatase , *PATIENTS - Abstract
In Martinique, among 9 HIV carriers recently diagnosed with early syphilis, 7 had biologic cholestasis. Less than half of the patients had been diagnosed on clinical grounds for syphilis (cutaneous eruption or syphilis in partner), whereas most of them were diagnosed on a systematic screening of HIV infected patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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42. Clinical Decision Support Systems for Antibiotic Prescribing: An Inventory of Current French Language Tools.
- Author
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Durand, Claire, Alfandari, Serge, Béraud, Guillaume, Tsopra, Rosy, Lescure, François-Xavier, and Peiffer-Smadja, Nathan
- Subjects
CLINICAL decision support systems ,FRENCH language ,CLINICAL epidemiology ,ANTIBIOTICS ,RESPIRATORY infections ,APPLICATION stores - Abstract
Clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) are increasingly being used by clinicians to support antibiotic decision making in infection management. However, coexisting CDSSs often target different types of physicians, infectious situations, and patient profiles. The objective of this study was to perform an up-to-date inventory of French language CDSSs currently used in community and hospital settings for antimicrobial prescribing and to describe their main characteristics. A literature search, a search among smartphone application stores, and an open discussion with antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) experts were conducted in order to identify available French language CDSSs. Any clinical decision support tool that provides a personalized recommendation based on a clinical situation and/or a patient was included. Eleven CDSSs were identified through the search strategy. Of the 11 CDSSs, only 2 had been the subject of published studies, while 9 CDSSs were identified through smartphone application stores and expert knowledge. The majority of CDSSs were available free of charge (n = 8/11, 73%). Most CDSSs were accessible via smartphone applications (n = 9/11, 82%) and online websites (n = 8/11, 73%). Recommendations for antibiotic prescribing in urinary tract infections, upper and lower respiratory tract infections, and digestive tract infections were provided by over 90% of the CDSSs. More than 90% of the CDSSs displayed recommendations for antibiotic selection, prioritization, dosage, duration, route of administration, and alternative antibiotics in case of allergy. Information about antibiotic side effects, prescription recommendations for specific patient profiles and adaptation to local epidemiology were often missing or incomplete. There is a significant but heterogeneous offer for antibiotic prescribing decision support in French language. Standardized evaluation of these systems is needed to assess their impact on antimicrobial prescribing and antimicrobial resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Severe ear chondritis due to cowpox virus transmitted by a pet rat.
- Author
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Elsendoorn, Antoine, Agius, Gérard, Le Moal, Gwenaël, Aajaji, Fouad, Favier, Anne-Laure, Wierzbicka-Hainault, Ewa, Béraud, Guillaume, Flusin, Olivier, Crance, Jean-Marc, and Roblot, France
- Subjects
ENDOMYCHIDAE ,EAR diseases ,VIRUS diseases ,DISEASE vectors ,RATS ,INFLAMMATION ,NECROSIS ,CELLULITIS - Abstract
Summary: We describe a case of cowpox virus infection leading to severe acute inflammation and chondritis of the outer ear, complicated by local necrosis and facial cellulitis. Secondary lesions occurred on a finger and the abdomen. Apart from scarring, outcome was favorable after repeated surgical excision of necrotic tissue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
44. Clindamycin and rifampicin: No bull's eye without a target.
- Author
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Béraud, Guillaume, Le Moal, Gwenaël, Sury, Sophie, and Venisse, Nicolas
- Published
- 2016
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45. Hysterectomy, non-malignant gynecological diseases, and the risk of incident hypertension: The E3N prospective cohort.
- Author
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Madika, Anne-Laure, MacDonald, Conor James, Gelot, Amandine, Hitier, Sixtine, Mounier-Vehier, Claire, Béraud, Guillaume, Kvaskoff, Marina, Boutron-Ruault, Marie-Christine, and Bonnet, Fabrice
- Subjects
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HYPERTENSION , *HYSTERECTOMY , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models , *UTERINE fibroids , *BLOOD pressure , *UTERINE hemorrhage - Abstract
Objectives: While it has been reported that women with uterine fibroids or endometriosis are commonly overweight and hypertensive, the association between non-malignant gynecological diseases and the risk of hypertension has been little studied prospectively. The aim of this study was to investigate in a large French cohort of women whether a history of hysterectomy, uterine fibroids, or endometriosis was prospectively related to an increased risk of incident hypertension.Study Design: We analyzed 50,286 women from the E3N cohort who were free of hypertension at baseline, with a median follow-up of 16.4 years.Main Outcome Measures: Gynecological diseases were based on self-report. Cox proportional hazards models with age as the timescale were used to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Covariates included smoking status, body mass index (BMI), physical activity, and hormonal factors.Results: A total of 12,073 women (24%) developed hypertension during follow-up. Women with a history of hysterectomy had an increased risk of incident hypertension, which persisted after adjustment for potential confounding factors (adjusted HR=1.18, 95% CI 1.12-1.24). Risk was similar in women with hysterectomy with or without oophorectomy. Risk of hypertension was higher in women with a history of endometriosis (HRendometriosis 1.19, 95%CI 1.11-1.22) or uterine fibroids (HRfibroids 1.18, 95%CI 1.13-1.22), irrespective of hysterectomy. Associations were similar after further adjustment for BMI.Conclusions: Hysterectomy and non-malignant gynecological diseases were associated with an increased risk of hypertension in this large prospective study. Women with these conditions may benefit from blood pressure monitoring. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03285230. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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46. Legal framework of antimicrobial stewardship in hospitals (LEASH): a European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (ESCMID) cross-sectional international survey.
- Author
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Beović, Bojana, Pulcini, Céline, Dumartin, Catherine, Béraud, Guillaume, Nerat, Barbara, Maurel, Cristina, Doušak, May, and Čižman, Milan
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ANTI-infective agents , *HOSPITAL administration , *CROSS-sectional method , *DRUG utilization , *DRUG resistance , *LAW - Abstract
Highlights • Legal framework of AMS in hospitals in Europe is heterogeneous. • In some countries AMS activities are successful without legal framework. • More regulations are needed in countries with high antimicrobial use and resistance. • Special attention should be paid to the implementation of the regulations. Abstract Antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) is the cornerstone activity in the combat against antimicrobial resistance. In order to ensure sustainable deployment and development of AMS, a strategic and regulatory framework needs to be provided by national healthcare authorities. Experts from 32 European countries, Israel and Turkey were invited to participate in a cross-sectional internet-based survey from October 2016 to May 2017 on the legal framework and mandatory components (structures, activities) of AMS in hospitals, i.e. components required by legislation or regulations. We collected data from 25 countries and two regions (in countries with federal health administration). Laws regulating AMS existed in seven countries and one region. Other health ministry regulations were applicable in 13 countries and one region. National strategies and/or action plans approved by ministries of health were in place in 13 countries and one region. Conversely, five countries and one region had no regulation of AMS in hospitals. Funding for AMS in hospitals was provided in five countries and one region. Eight countries and one region reported mandatory AMS structures and activities complying with the Transatlantic Taskforce on Antimicrobial Resistance (TATFAR) structure, policy and practice indicators. In 10/27 cases, however, the mandatory AMS activities were not being fully carried out. The survey showed heterogeneous legal frameworks for AMS in hospitals, and in many countries it was even lacking. The situation may be critical in countries with poor control of antimicrobial use and resistance. Recent international initiatives calling on policy-makers to address the threat of antimicrobial resistance could yield improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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47. Use of ceftolozane/tazobactam as salvage therapy for infections due to extensively drug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
- Author
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Dinh, Aurélien, Wyplosz, Benjamin, Kernéis, Solen, Lebeaux, David, Bouchand, Frédérique, Duran, Clara, Béraud, Guillaume, Lazaro, Pauline, Davido, Benjamin, Hénard, Sandrine, Canouï, Etienne, Ferry, Tristan, and Wolff, Michel
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PSEUDOMONAS aeruginosa infections , *TAZOBACTAM , *SALVAGE therapy , *DRUG resistance in bacteria , *CRITICAL care medicine , *THERAPEUTICS - Published
- 2017
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