25 results on '"Rotonda, Christine"'
Search Results
2. Modèles descriptifs de l’adversité vécue durant l’enfance (Adverse Childhood Experiences) et implications pour la recherche : état des lieux et perspectives
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Tarquinio, Camille Louise, Trousselard, Marion, Rotonda, Christine, and Tarquinio, Cyril
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- 2024
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3. Réflexions autour du champ de recherche des expériences adverses vécues durant l’enfance (Adverse Childhood Experiences [ACEs]) — vers une clarification conceptuelle
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Tarquinio, Camille Louise, Trousselard, Marion, Rotonda, Christine, Jacquet-Smailovic, Murielle, and Tarquinio, Cyril
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- 2023
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4. La dimension du thérapeute dans l’efficacité de la prise en charge EMDR du trauma : la dimension oubliée ? Présentation d’un protocole de recherche
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Machado, Juliette, Gendarme, Sophie, Eby, Élise, Rotonda, Christine, and Tarquinio, Cyril
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- 2023
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5. Oncology health professionals' perspectives of determinants of exercise by cancer patients: A socio-ecological approach
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Nguyen, Jean-Marie, Rotonda, Christine, Gendarme, Sophie, Martin-Krumm, Charles, Omorou, Yacoubou Abdou, and Van Hoye, Aurélie
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- 2022
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6. Adaptation et validation française de l'échelle Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) en contexte scolaire
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Oger, Marie, Broc, Guillaume, Rotonda, Christine, Tarquinio, Cyril, and Martin-Krumm, Charles
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High schools ,Teenagers ,Youth ,Burn out (Psychology) ,Education - Abstract
L'enjeu de cet article est d'analyser, comme cela a déjà été réalisé avec des adultes dans leur domaine professionnel, la façon dont les jeunes à l'école perçoivent leur environnement de travail. L'objectif principal vise à étudier l'opérationnalisation du modèle théorique << exigences professionnelles-ressources >> (Job Demands-Resources [JD-R]) de Demerouti et al. (2001) en contexte scolaire. L'objectif secondaire est de valider une échelle adaptée au contexte scolaire qui permette à la fois de déterminer le niveau d'exigences et le niveau de ressources perçus par les élèves au sein de l'école. Dans une première étude, une échelle a été adaptée, puis remplie par 414 collégiens et lycéens. Les résultats des analyses factorielles exploratoires, puis confirmatoires, indiquent une structure en deux dimensions (exigences/ ressources) à trois facteurs chacun (physique, motivationnelle et cognitive) conformément à la version d'origine. Les propriétés psychométriques de l'échelle s'avèrent satisfaisantes. À l'aide d'analyses en pistes causales, la seconde étude réalisée avec 56 élèves a permis de mettre en avant la relation entre le modèle JD-R transposé à l'école et l'épuisement (burnout) scolaire. Les données recueillies à trois moments révèlent que les exigences et les ressources au T1 prédisent celles au T2, comme il était présumé. Toutefois, seules les ressources au T2 prédisent le burnout au T3. En définitive, l'analyse des processus révèle les effets du niveau de ressources perçu par les élèves au T1 sur le burnout scolaire au T3, et un effet des exigences qui n'est pas significatif. Pour conclure, le modèle a été partiellement validé mettant en avant des relations entre l'évolution des exigences, des ressources et leurs effets sur le burnout. Mots-clés : élèves du secondaire, exigences, ressources, épuisement scolaire, burnout The aim of this article is to analyze, as has been done with adults in their professional field, how young people in school perceive their work environment. The main objective is to study the operationalization of the theoretical model 'Job Demands-Resources (JD-R)' of Demerouti and al. (2001) in the school context. The secondary objective is to validate a scale adapted to the school context that makes it possible to determine the level of both demands and resources as perceived by the students within the school. In a first study, a scale was adapted, then administered, to 414 middle and high school students. The results of exploratory and then confirmatory factor analyses indicated a two-dimensional structure (demands/resources) with three items each (physical, motivational and cognitive) in accordance with the original version. The psychometric properties of the scale were found to be satisfactory. Using causal path analyses, the second study with 56 students highlighted the relationship between the JD-R model transposed to schools and school burnout. The results collected at three points in time reveal that the demands and resources at T1 predict those at T2, as was assumed. However, only resources at T2 predict burnout at T3. In the end, the process analysis reveals the effects of students' perceived level of resources at T1 on school burnout at T3, but indicates no significant effect of demands. In conclusion, the model was partially validated showing relationships between changes in demands, resources and their effects on burnout. Keywords: secondary school students, demands, resources, school burnout, Introduction Les chiffres sont alarmants. Selon le Bureau international du Travail (BIT, 2017), un travailleur succombe toutes les quinze secondes à une maladie professionnelle ou après un accident du travail, [...]
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- 2022
7. Evaluating the feasibility and acceptability of an adapted fencing intervention in breast cancer surgery post-operative care: the RIPOSTE pilot randomized trial.
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Hasnaoui, Sabrine, Van Hoye, Aurélie, Soudant, Marc, Rotonda, Christine, de Freitas, Andréia Carvalho, Peiffert, Didier, Delattre, Cécile, Raft, Julien, Temperelli, Margaux, Allado, Edem, Hily, Oriane, Chenuel, Bruno, Hornus-Dragne, Dominique, Omorou, Abdou Y., and Poussel, Mathias
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BREAST cancer surgery ,POSTOPERATIVE care ,FENCING ,SHOULDER exercises ,FENCES ,PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Background: Adapted physical activity programs have shown promising results in reducing the physical, social and psychological side effects associated with breast cancer, but the extent to which they can be effectively adopted, implemented and maintained is unclear. The aim of this study is to use the framework to guide the planning and evaluation of programs according to the 5 following keys: Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework to evaluate a fencing program under the French acronym RIPOSTE (Reconstruction, Image de soi, Posture, Oncologie, Santé, Thé rapie, Escrime) literally in English (Reconstruction, Self-Image, Posture, Oncology, Health, Therapy, Fencing). This program is an innovative intervention focused on improving the quality of life (QoL) of breast cancer surgery patients through fencing. Methods: A convergent mixed methods pilot study was conducted to preliminary evaluate the different RE-AIM dimension of the pilot program. Twenty-four participants who have just undergone surgery for invasive breast cancer were randomly allocated in two groups: one group started immediately after their inclusion (Early RIPOSTE group) and the other started 3 months following their inclusion (Delayed RIPOSTE group). Participants answered a questionnaire at inclusion and at the end of the program on QoL, shoulder functional capacity, fatigue, anxiety-depression and physical activity. Results: RIPOSTE program was able to reach mainly young and dynamic participants, attracted by the originality of fencing and keen to improve their physical condition. Regarding effectiveness, our results suggest a trend to the improvement of QoL, shoulder functional capacity, fatigue and anxietydepression state, even without any significant differences between the Early RIPOSTE group and the Delayed RIPOSTE group. Discussions: The cooperation, exchanges and cohesion within the group greatly facilitated the adoption of the program, whereas interruptions during school vacations were the main barriers. The intervention was moderately well implemented and adherence to the protocol was suitable. Conclusion: RIPOSTE is an acceptable and effective program for involving breast cancer survivors in physical activity, that needs to be tested at a larger scale to investigate its effectiveness, but has the potential to be transferred and scaled up worldwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Le mal-être des professionnels en Ehpad et en période pandémique.
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Pisu, Florian, Rotonda, Christine, Touchet, Claire, Lalloué, Benoît, Omorou, Abdou, Eby, Elise, and Tarquinio, Cyril
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- 2024
9. Can the e-OAKHQOL be an alternative to measure health-related quality of life in knee osteoarthritis?
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Wieczorek, Maud, Rotonda, Christine, Epstein, Jonathan, Guillemin, Francis, and Rat, Anne-Christine
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- 2018
10. Psychological and social determinants of physical activity from diagnosis to remission among French cancer patients (PERTINENCE): protocol for a mixed-method study
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Van Hoye, Aurélie, Omorou, Yacobou, Rotonda, Christine, Gendarme, Sophie, Tarquinio, Cyril, Houtmann, Bastien, Peiffert, Didier, Longo, Raffaele, and Martin-Krumm, Charles
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- 2019
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11. Validation of the French Version of the Colorectal-Specific Quality-of-life Questionnaires EORTC QLQ-CR38 and FACT-C
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Rotonda, Christine, Conroy, T., Mercier, M., Bonnetain, F., Uwer, L., Miny, J., Montcuquet, P., Léonard, I., Adenis, A., Breysacher, G., and Guillemin, F.
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- 2008
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12. Responsiveness of EORTC QLQ-C30, QLQ-CR38 and FACT-C quality of life questionnaires in patients with colorectal cancer
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Kaminsky Marie-Christine, Miny Joëlle, Guillemin Francis, Rotonda Christine, Uwer Lionel, Mercier Mariette, Tournier-Rangeard Laetitia, Leonard Isabelle, Montcuquet Philippe, Rauch Philippe, and Conroy Thierry
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Colorectal cancer ,Quality of life ,EORTC QLQ-C30 ,EORTC QLQ-CR38 ,FACT-C ,Responsiveness ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background The aim of this study was to compare the responsiveness of the European Organization for Research and Treatment (EORTC) quality of life questionnaires (QLQ-C30, QLQ-CR38) and the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-colorectal version 4 questionnaire (FACT-C). Method This prospective study included 127 patients with colorectal cancer: 71 undergoing chemotherapy and 56 radiation therapy. Responsiveness statistics included the Standardized Response Mean (SRM) and the Effect Size (ES). The patient's overall assessment of his/her change in state of health status was the reference criterion to evaluate the responsiveness of the QoL questionnaires. Results 34 patients perceived their health as stable and 17 as improved between the first and the fourth courses of chemotherapy. 21 patients perceived their health as stable and 22 as improved between before and the last week of radiotherapy. The responsiveness of the 3 questionnaires differed according to treatments. The EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire was more responsive in patients receiving chemotherapy, particulary functional scales (SRM > 0.55). The QLQ-CR38 and the FACT-C questionnaires provided little clinically relevant information during chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Conclusion The EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire appears to be more responsive in patients receiving chemotherapy.
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- 2011
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13. Quel soutien des médecins hospitaliers à la pratique d'activité physique des patients atteints du cancer ? Le cas du CHRU de Nancy.
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Houtmann, Bastien, Rotonda, Christine, Omorou, Abdou Yacoubou, Gendarme, Sophie, Martin-Krumm, Charles, and Van Hoye, Aurélie
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PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Copyright of Movement & Sport Sciences / Science & Motricité is the property of EDP Sciences and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2021
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14. EMDR in Telemental Health Counseling for Healthcare Workers Caring for COVID-19 Patients: A Pilot Study.
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Tarquinio, Cyril, Brennstuhl, Marie-Jo, Rydberg, Jenny Ann, Bassan, Fanny, Peter, Lydia, Tarquinio, Camille Louise, Auxéméry, Yann, Rotonda, Christine, and Tarquinio, Pascale
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CONCEPTUAL structures ,COUNSELING ,EMDR (Eye-movement desensitization & reprocessing) ,MENTAL health ,NONPARAMETRIC statistics ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,T-test (Statistics) ,TELEMEDICINE ,VIDEOCONFERENCING ,PILOT projects ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,MANN Whitney U Test ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic is putting a strain on health systems around the world. Healthcare workers, on the front lines of the epidemic, are facing major and potentially traumatic stressful events, overwhelming their ability to cope and their resources. The objective of this article will be to show how the use of the URG-EMDR protocol in a telemental health setting has proven to be feasible and effective in the treatment of a group of healthcare professionals working in nursing homes or hospital services that were highly mobilized during the acute phase of COVID-19. 17 participants, registered nurses (N = 7) and licensed practical nurses (N = 10), were remotely treated using the URG-EMDR protocol in a single session. The assessment focused on anxiety and depressive symptoms (HAD scale) and the level of perceived disturbance (SUD). An additional evaluation of the satisfaction with the remote psychotherapy intervention was conducted. As the URG-EMDR protocol has already proven itself during emergency interventions, it is interesting to note that its remote use in the treatment of healthcare providers caring for COVID-19 patients allows for an improvement in the emotional state and a decrease in perceived disturbance, in a single session. This result is maintained 1 week after the intervention, despite the continued professional activities of the participants and the continuity of the event. Moreover, the remote therapy setting was judged satisfactory by the patients, even if it required adjustments and certain recommendations for practice. The remote use of the URG-EMDR protocol opens up innovative perspectives for early interventions and the prevention of the development of psychological disorders in the long term following a situation of acute stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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15. What Have We Learned From Trajectory Analysis of Clinical Outcomes in Knee and Hip Osteoarthritis Before Surgery?
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Wieczorek, Maud, Rotonda, Christine, Guillemin, Francis, and Rat, Anne‐Christine
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OSTEOARTHRITIS ,DATABASES ,METHODOLOGY ,BODY mass index ,COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Objective: The past decade has seen a rapid increase in the publication of studies using trajectory analysis to describe the course of osteoarthritis (OA) symptoms. The aim of this systematic review was to describe the distinct trajectories for OA outcomes and the predictors of these trajectories. Methods: Medline and PsycInfo databases were searched for relevant studies. Selection criteria were 1) patients ≥18 years of age, 2) patients at high risk of or diagnosed with knee or hip OA, 3) studies aiming to identify homogeneous subgroups with distinct trajectories of clinical outcomes, and 4) methodology and analysis designed to identify trajectories (longitudinal design and repeated measures). The search was limited to publications in English or French. Results: Of the 5,177 abstracts retrieved, 44 studies met the inclusion criteria; 21 described the disease progression before surgery. The most frequent outcomes were pain and physical function. Up to 6 trajectories of pain were found for hip and knee OA. For function, between 1 and 5 trajectories were identified for knee OA. Low educational level, high body mass index, and high number of comorbidities were the most reported predictors of bad evolution. Conclusion: Although studies were heterogeneous (outcome, subgroup number, and composition), they revealed stable OA trajectories over time. This finding suggests that OA is a chronic disease that does not inevitably worsen in terms of patient‐reported symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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16. What Have We Learned About the Course of Clinical Outcomes After Total Knee or Hip Arthroplasty?
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Wieczorek, Maud, Rotonda, Christine, Guillemin, Francis, and Rat, Anne-Christine
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TOTAL hip replacement ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,METHODOLOGY ,MENTAL health ,ARTHROPLASTY - Abstract
Objective: To review homogeneous subgroups with a distinct course of clinical outcomes, to review the course of clinical outcomes in the study population as a whole, where applicable, and to determine the patient characteristics associated with the distinct courses after total knee or hip arthroplasty. Methods: MEDLINE and PsycInfo databases were searched for relevant studies. Selection criteria were patients ≥18 years old, patients at high risk of or diagnosed with knee or hip osteoarthritis, studies aiming to identify homogeneous subgroups with distinct trajectories or describe the mean change of clinical outcomes, and methodology and analysis designed to identify trajectories (longitudinal design and repeated measures). Results: Of the 5,128 abstracts retrieved, 23 met inclusion criteria. Most studies (12 of 23) focused on the mean course of outcomes after knee arthroplasty, and the most frequent outcomes reported were pain and physical function. Statistical approaches used, the number of trajectories, and predictors identified were heterogeneous across studies. Strong evidence was found that female sex, a high body mass index, poor mental health, a high number of painful sites, high preoperative pain level, a low preoperative lower‐extremity functioning, and knee arthroplasty were predictors of bad evolution. Conclusion: Few studies have used trajectory analysis to describe the course of clinical outcomes in homogeneous subgroups of patients. Yet this approach could lead to the identification of predictors of poor postsurgery outcomes that are specific to patients and thus to earlier identification of poor responders to total arthroplasty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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17. Factors of the evolution of fatigue dimensions in patients with breast cancer during the 2 years after surgery.
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Person, Hélène, Guillemin, Francis, Conroy, Thierry, Velten, Michel, and Rotonda, Christine
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BREAST cancer surgery ,MENTAL fatigue ,BREAST cancer ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,CANCER patients - Abstract
Women with breast cancer are increasingly being cured of the disease but fatigue remains the most frequently reported symptom. The aims of our study were to identify distinct trajectories in four fatigue dimensions during 2 years after breast cancer surgery and to explore the demographic, clinical and personality characteristics associated with these profiles. We included women from the prospective longitudinal multicenter FATSEIN cohort in France. They completed the Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory for nine follow‐ups over 24 months after surgery. A group‐based trajectory model identified distinct trajectories in each fatigue dimension. Multinomial logistic regression determined the factors associated with each profile. From the 459 women followed, 3–5 fatigue trajectories were revealed in each fatigue dimension, from its absence to its severest degree. In our multivariate analysis, the risk of severe fatigue was decreased in all dimensions by a high quality of life before surgery (measured by the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer 30‐item QoL questionnaire; e.g., for general and physical fatigue: OR = 0.93, 95% CI 0.91, 0.96), especially a high physical and emotional functions for general and physical fatigue, and a high cognitive function for mental fatigue. Both severe mental fatigue and severely reduced motivation worsened with low optimism before surgery (e.g., for mental fatigue: OR = 0.93, 95% CI 0.89, 0.97). Severely reduced activities increased by having chemotherapy (OR = 9.41, 95% CI 2.28, 38.79). Targeting women at risk for severe fatigue can provide early preventive and curative treatment and appropriate psychological support. What's new? Today breast cancer is increasingly being cured, but adverse effects persist, with fatigue being the most frequently reported symptom. In this longitudinal prospective study of long‐term, self‐reported fatigue trajectories of breast cancer survivors, fatigue increased after surgery, peaked at the end of chemotherapy, and then decreased up until 18 months before slightly rising again. The risk of severe fatigue was decreased by a high quality of life before surgery. Severe mental fatigue and severe reduced motivation both worsened with low optimism before surgery. The findings may help provide early preventive and curative treatment for women at risk for severe fatigue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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18. Serum albumin or body mass index: Which prognostic factor for survival in patients with acute myeloblastic leukaemia?
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Filliatre‐Clement, Lauriane, Broseus, Julien, Muller, Marc, Hosseini, Kossar, Rotonda, Christine, Schirmer, Luciane, Roth‐Guepin, Gabrielle, Bonmati, Caroline, Feugier, Pierre, Béné, Marie‐Christine, Perrot, Aurore, Filliatre-Clement, Lauriane, Roth-Guepin, Gabrielle, and Béné, Marie-Christine
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PROGNOSIS ,SERUM albumin ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,BODY mass index ,ACUTE myeloid leukemia ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,KAPLAN-Meier estimator ,NUTRITIONAL status - Abstract
Obesity has been associated with an increased risk of developing acute myeloblastic leukaemia (AML). The outcome of AML patients could thus be dependent on their nutritional status that can be evaluated by the simple measurement of serum albumin (SA) and body mass index (BMI). These two parameters could have a value as prognostic factors to guide patients' management. We evaluated the association between SA levels, BMI, and survival, evaluated as overall survival (OS) and event-free survival. Furthermore, we investigated the association between BMI, SA, and other prognostic factors of interest in AML. This retrospective single-center study included 159 patients diagnosed with AML at Nancy Hospital between 2005 and 2013, treated with aracytine and anthracycline. Forty-four percent of patients presented with normal weight while 56% were obese/overweight. Serum albumin levels were <30 g/L for 49 patients, and ≥30 g/L for 110. Thirty-four patients with low SA levels were also obese. Favourable OS was associated with SA levels ≥30 g/L (HR = 0.467; 95% CI 0.230-0.946; P = .034) but was not impacted by the BMI. Serum albumin levels appear to be an independent prognostic factor in AML and a better parameter than BMI for evaluating the nutritional status of patients at diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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19. Qualitative Methods Used to Generate Questionnaire Items: A Systematic Review.
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Ricci, Laetitia, Guillemin, Francis, Lemetayer, Fabienne, Spitz, Elisabeth, Lanfranchi, Jean-Baptiste, Rotonda, Christine, and Coste, Joël
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PSYCHOLOGY of authors ,CONTENT analysis ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDLINE ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SERIAL publications ,TIME ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,QUALITATIVE research ,CONTENT mining ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation - Abstract
A systematic review of articles using qualitative methods to generate questionnaire items identified in MEDLINE and PsycINFO from 2000 to 2014 was carried out. Articles were analyzed for (a) year of publication and journal domain, (b) qualitative data collection methods, (c) method of data content analysis, (d) professional experts' input in item generation, and (e) debriefing of the newly developed items. In total, 371 articles were included and results showed (a) an acceleration of published articles, (b) individual interviews and focus groups were common ways of generating items and no emergent approach was identified, (c) the content analysis was usually not described (43% of articles), (d) experts were involved in eliciting concepts in less than a third of articles, (e) 61% of articles involved a step of further submission of newly developed items to the population of interest. This review showed an insufficient reporting of qualitative methods used to generate new questionnaires despite previous recommendations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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20. The impact of physical activity on fatigue and quality of life during and after adjuvant treatment for breast cancer.
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Manneville, Florian, Rotonda, Christine, Conroy, Thierry, Bonnetain, Franck, Guillemin, Francis, and Omorou, Abdou Y.
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PHYSICAL activity , *FATIGUE (Physiology) , *QUALITY of life , *ADJUVANT treatment of cancer , *BREAST cancer treatment - Abstract
Background: Although physical activity (PA) can alleviate fatigue and improve quality of life (QoL) in patients with breast cancer (BC), not all domains of PA may have equal impact. The objective of the current study was to examine the longitudinal impact of PA components on the evolution of fatigue and QoL during and after adjuvant treatment for BC.Methods: The women included in the study were participants in the 2-year longitudinal FATSEIN ("Fatigue dans le cancer du Sein") study. Fatigue and QoL were measured using the Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory and the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer 30-item QoL questionnaire, respectively. Group-based trajectory analysis was used to determine patterns of PA evolution (frequency, duration, and intensity). Cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between PA patterns and fatigue and QoL were analyzed by using multivariable linear regression and a mixed model.Results: Among the 424 women who were included (mean ± standard deviation age, 57.1 ± 10.4 years), 2 trajectories were identified for each of the 3 PA components: low and insufficient frequency (51.2%) or regular and moderate frequency (48.8%), low and insufficient duration (47.6%) or regular and moderate duration (52.4%), and low intensity (47.2%) or low to moderate intensity (52.8%). Overall, during treatment, fatigue was increased and QoL was decreased, and the reverse was observed after treatment. During treatment, increased fatigue and decreased QoL were limited by regular PA frequency (β = -8.71 for total fatigue; β = 14.59 for emotional function), but the results were less significant after treatment.Conclusions: PA, especially its frequency, is an important determinant of fatigue and QoL during adjuvant treatment for BC. The promotion of regular PA among women who are receiving treatment for BC may be an effective way to reduce fatigue and improve QoL. Cancer 2018;124:797-806. © 2017 American Cancer Society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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21. Identifying patterns of adaptation in breast cancer patients with cancer-related fatigue using response shift analyses at subgroup level.
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Salmon, Maxime, Blanchin, Myriam, Rotonda, Christine, Guillemin, Francis, and Sébille, Véronique
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BREAST cancer treatment ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,SELF-evaluation ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling - Abstract
Fatigue is the most prevalent symptom in breast cancer. It might be perceived differently among patients over time as a consequence of the differing patients' adaptation and psychological adjustment to their cancer experience which can be related to response shift ( RS). RS analyses can provide important insights on patients' adaptation to cancer but it is usually assumed that RS occurs in the same way in all individuals which is unrealistic. This study aimed to identify patients' subgroups in which different RS effects on self-reported fatigue could occur over time using a combination of methods for manifest and latent variables. The FATSEIN study comprised 466 breast cancer patients followed over a 2-year period. Fatigue was measured with the Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory questionnaire ( MFI-20) during 10 visits. A novel combination of Mixed Models, Growth Mixture Modeling, and Structural Equation Modeling was used to assess the occurrence of RS in fatigue changes to identify subgroups displaying different RS patterns over time. An increase in fatigue was evidenced over the 8-month follow-up, followed by a decrease between the 8- and 24-month. Four latent classes of patients were identified. Different RS patterns were detected in all latent classes between the inclusion and 8 months (last cycle of chemotherapy). No RS was evidenced between 8- and 24-month. Several RS effects were evidenced in different groups of patients. Women seemed to adapt differently to their treatment and breast cancer experience possibly indicating differing needs for medical/psychological support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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22. Effect of Multimorbidity on Health-Related Quality of Life in Adults Aged 55 Years or Older: Results from the SU.VI.MAX 2 Cohort.
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Walker, Valentin, Perret-Guillaume, Christine, Kesse-Guyot, Emmanuelle, Agrinier, Nelly, Hercberg, Serge, Galan, Pilar, Assmann, Karen E., Briançon, Serge, and Rotonda, Christine
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COMORBIDITY ,HEALTH status indicators ,HEALTH of older people ,CHRONIC diseases ,EXPLORATORY factor analysis ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases - Abstract
Introduction: Multimorbid chronic diseases are usually considered separately in trials. Here, we aimed to describe overall multimorbidity patterns in adults aged 55 years or older and assess their effect on health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Methods: We used data for 5,647 participants included in the SUpplémentation en VItamines et Minéraux AntioXydants 2 (SU.VI.MAX 2) population-based trial. HRQoL was assessed by the French versions of the Medical Outcome Study Short Form 36 and the Duke Health Profile. An exploratory factor analysis was used to determine multimorbidity patterns, and a multimorbidity score for each resulting pattern was calculated. Adjusted multiple linear regression was used to examine the association between the identified multimorbidity and HRQoL scores by gender and for each age group (55–59, 60–64, 65–69, ≥ 70 years). Results: More than 63% of the sample reported two or more chronic conditions (from 55.8% for those 55–59 years to 74.4% for those ≥ 70 years). Multimorbidity was more common among women than men (67.3% vs 60%). Two different multimorbidity patterns were identified. Pattern A was represented mainly by mental illness and bone impairments. Pattern B was represented mainly by cardiovascular and metabolic disorders. After adjusting for covariates, a high pattern A score was associated with reduced HRQoL for the physical and mental components of each HRQoL questionnaire, and a high pattern B score was associated with reduced HRQoL for only the physical component of each questionnaire. These multimorbidity scores affected HRQoL differently by age group. Conclusion: Our study used a novel methodological approach to account for multimorbidity patterns in determining the link with chronic conditions. These multimorbidity scores (counted and weighted) can be used in clinical research to control for the effect of multimorbidity on patients’ HRQoL and may be useful for clinical practice. Clinical Trial Registration: Clinicaltrial.gov (number ). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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23. Early Psychological Preventive Intervention For Workplace Violence: A Randomized Controlled Explorative and Comparative Study Between EMDR-Recent Event and Critical Incident Stress Debriefing.
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Tarquinio, Cyril, Rotonda, Christine, Houllé, William A., Montel, Sébastien, Rydberg, Jenny Ann, Minary, Laetitia, Dellucci, Hélène, Tarquinio, Pascale, Fayard, Any, and Alla, François
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POST-traumatic stress disorder , *TREATMENT of post-traumatic stress disorder , *TREATMENT of emotional trauma , *TREATMENT of psychological stress , *PREVENTION of violence in the workplace , *CHI-squared test , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EMDR (Eye-movement desensitization & reprocessing) , *FISHER exact test , *INTERVIEWING , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MARITAL status , *PROBABILITY theory , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *SELF-evaluation , *STATISTICS , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *VICTIMS , *DATA analysis , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *REPEATED measures design , *EARLY medical intervention , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *KRUSKAL-Wallis Test , *ONE-way analysis of variance - Abstract
This randomized controlled trial study aims to investigate the efficacy of an early psychological intervention called EMDR-RE compared to Critical Incident Stress Debriefing on 60 victims of workplace violence, which were divided into three groups: ‘EMDR-RE’ (n = 19), ‘CISD’ (n = 23), and ‘delayed EMDR-RE’ (n = 18). EMDR-RE and CISD took place 48 hours after the event, whilst third intervention was delayed by an additional 48 hours. Results showed that after 3 months PCLS and SUDS scores were significantly lower with EMDR-RE and delayed EMDR-RE compared to CISD. After 48 hours and 3 months, none of the EMDR-RE-treated victims showed PTSD symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Impact of TG4010 Vaccine on Health-Related Quality of Life in Advanced Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: Results of a Phase IIB Clinical Trial.
- Author
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Rotonda, Christine, Anota, Amélie, Mercier, Mariette, Bastien, Bérangère, Lacoste, Gisèle, Limacher, Jean-Marc, Quoix, Elisabeth, and Bonnetain, Franck
- Subjects
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CANCER treatment , *NON-small-cell lung carcinoma , *CANCER vaccines , *QUALITY of life , *TUMOR classification , *CANCER chemotherapy , *CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Background: This study describes the effect of TG4010 vaccine on Health related Quality of Life (HRQOL) in patients with stage IIIb and IV non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Methods: 148 patients with advanced NSCLC expressing MUC1 were randomly assigned to receive TG4010 plus chemotherapy or chemotherapy alone. HRQOL was assessed with the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Lung (FACT-L) at baseline and every 6 weeks until disease progression. Time until definitive deterioration (TUDD) of the four well-being dimensions of the FACT-L physical (PWB), functional (FWB), emotional (EWB) and social well-being (SWB) and the Lung Cancer Subscale (LCS) domains were analyzed for a 5-point minimal clinically important difference. Results: No difference of TUDD of HRQOL has been found between treatment arms. No prognostic factors have been found to have a significant impact on the TUDD of PWB, SWB and LCS domains. The gender, the performance status and the smoking habits seemed to be associated with a shorter TUDD of EWB domain. The smokers and the former smokers seemed to present a shorter TUDD of FWB domain. Conclusion: This study suggests that adding therapeutic vaccination with TG4010 to standard chemotherapy in patients with advanced NSCLC is associated with a similar evolution in HRQOL compared to chemotherapy alone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Factors Associated With Fatigue After Surgery in Women With Early-Stage Invasive Breast Cancer.
- Author
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Rotonda, Christine, Guillemin, Francis, Bonnetain, Franck, Velten, Michel, and Conroy, Thierry
- Subjects
BREAST tumors ,CANCER complications ,STATISTICAL correlation ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,QUALITY of life ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,DATA analysis ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,CONTINUING education units ,DATA analysis software ,STATE-Trait Anxiety Inventory ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose. Fatigue is one of the most frequent symptoms in patients with cancer. However, the precise determinants of fatigue are still unknown. This study was conducted to investigate factors correlated with cancer-related fatigue before surgery and just before subsequent adjuvant therapy. Methods. Patients completed the Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory (MFI-20), the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer 30-item quality-of-life questionnaire before and after surgery, the Trait Anxiety Inventory and the Life Orientation Test before surgery, and the State Anxiety Inventory before the start of adjuvant therapy. Multiple regression analysis of determinants of change in MFI-20 total score after surgery was conducted. Results. A series of 466 eligible patients with stage I-III breast cancer with planned surgery were recruited. An increase in MFI-20 total score after surgery was significantly correlated with higher preoperative fatigue and lower role functioning before surgery; a decrease in role functioning, physical functioning, and cognitive functioning after surgery; an increase in insomnia after surgery; and a higher state anxiety after surgery. Disease stage, lymph node metastases, surgical procedure, and demographic characteristics (e.g., age, marital status, having children, educational level) were not correlated with fatigue in multivariate analysis. Conclusion. These results suggest that worsening fatigue after surgery for breast cancer is associated with a decrease in physical functioning and an increase in psychological distress rather than with the cancer characteristics. Therefore, screening measures should be implemented at the time of diagnosis--before starting treatment--to identify psychologically vulnerable patients and to offer them professional support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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