6 results on '"Ángel Serna"'
Search Results
2. Severe infections in patients with lymphoproliferative diseases treated with new targeted drugs: A multicentric real‐world study
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Maria Stefania Infante, Ana Fernández‐Cruz, Lucia Núñez, Cecilia Carpio, Ana Jiménez‐Ubieto, Javier López‐Jiménez, Lourdes Vásquez, Raquel Del Campo, Samuel Romero, Carmen Alonso, Daniel Morillo, Margarita Prat, José Luis Plana, Paola Villafuerte, Gabriela Bastidas, Ana Bocanegra, Ángel Serna, Rodrigo De Nicolás, Juan Marquet, Carmen Mas‐Ochoa, Raúl Cordoba, Julio García‐Suárez, Alessandra Comai, Xavier Martín, Mariana Bastos‐Oreiro, Cristina Seri, Belén Navarro‐Matilla, Armando López‐Guillermo, Joaquín Martínez‐López, José Ángel Hernández‐Rivas, Isabel Ruiz‐Camps, Carlos Grande, and Grupo Español de Linfomas y Trasplante Autólogo de Medula Ósea (GELTAMO)
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infectious diseases ,infectious risk ,lymphoproliferative disease ,prophylaxis ,targeted drugs ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Lymphoid neoplasms treatment has recently been renewed to increase antitumor efficacy and conventional chemotherapies toxicities. Limited data have been published about the infection risk associated with these new drugs, therefore this study analyzes the infectious complications in patients with lymphoproliferative diseases (LPD) treated with monoclonal antibodies (obinutuzumab, ofatumumab, brentuximab, nivolumab, or pembrolizumab), BTK inhibitors (ibrutinib and acalabrutinib), PI3K inhibitors (idelalisib) and BCL2 inhibitors (venetoclax). Methods Multicenter retrospective study of 458 LPD patients treated with targeted therapies in real‐life setting, in 18 Spanish institutions, from the time of their commercial availability to August 2020. Results Severe infections incidence was 23% during 17‐month median follow‐up; cumulative incidence was higher in the first 3–6 months of targeted drug treatment and then decreased. The most frequent etiology was bacterial (54%). Nine (6%) Invasive fungal infections (IFI) were observed, in its majority in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients treated predominantly with ibrutinib. Significant risk factors for severe infection were: severe lymphopenia (p = 0.009, OR 4.7, range 1.3–1.7), combined targeted treatment vs single agent treatment (p = 0.014 OR 2.2 range 1.1–4.2) and previous rituximab (p = 0.03 OR 1.8, range 1.05–3.3). Infection‐related mortality was 6%. In 22% of patients with severe infections, definitive discontinuation of the targeted drug was observed. Conclusion A high proportion of patients presented severe infections during follow‐up, with non‐negligible attributable mortality, but infection incidence is not superior to the one observed during the chemotherapy era. In selected cases with specific risk factors for infection, antimicrobial prophylaxis should be considered.
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- 2021
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3. Google Cardboard 3D-VR: Dispositivo de realidad virtual para el aprendizaje inmersivo en el entrenamiento policial
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Gustavo Adolfo Paz Balanta, Jorge Luis Cabezas, Miguel Ángel Serna Gómez, and Fernando Augusto Poveda Aguja
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Los dispositivos de realidad virtual (VR) son más asequibles y accesibles, por lo que revisten una importancia en la educación, ya que, llevan el aprendizaje a otro nivel de aplicación y potencialización de la experiencia, o sea, un aprendizaje inmersivo por la acción y de la aplicación de lo experimentado, tanto en la formación y/o capacitación presencial, a distancia y virtual (online y offline). Para explicar esto desde un punto de vista metodológico, se hizo necesario aplicar una revisión sistemática de literatura (RSL), para rastrear los avances en el desarrollo de aplicaciones educativas en enseñanza y aprendizaje. El objetivo fue desarrollar una herramienta de aprendizaje inmersivo que sea útil para el entrenamiento policial, al recrear la visión experiencial de casos en la vida real adecuados para la formación y capacitación en procedimientos policiales, utilizando Google Cardboard 3D-VR, un dispositivo electrónico móvil integrado con gafas y auriculares de bajo costo, que ofrece experiencias de realidad virtual envolventes a través de un smartphone a toda clase de usuario, sin que sean necesarios movimientos espaciales e interacción con las manos. Para lograr que se dé una innovación educativa, la investigación que muestra este tipo de dispositivos móviles es una alternativa eficaz para el entrenamiento, como herramienta tecnológica de reciente introducción al entorno educativo, frente a la cual se encontraron resultados satisfactorios, que pueden establecer replicas en diversos ámbitos de aplicación.
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- 2021
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4. Infection Risk in Lymphoproliferative Diseases (LPD) Treated with Targeted Drugs. Geltamo Real-Life Experience
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Maria Stefania Infante, Ana Fernandez-Cruz, Lucia Nuñez, Cecilia Carpio, Ana Jimenez-Ubieto, Javier Lopez Jimenez, Lourdes Vázquez, Raquel Del Campo, Samuel Romero, Carmen Alonso Prieto, Daniel Murillo, Margarita Prat, Jose Luis Plana Cuenca, Paola Villaverde Gutiérrez, Gabriela Bastidas, Ana Bocanegra, Ángel Serna, Rodrigo de Nicolas, Juan Marquet Palomanes, Julio Garcia-Suarez, Maria Carmen Mas Ochoa, Alessandra Comai, Xabier Martin, Cristina Seri, Belen Navarro Matilla, Jose Angel Hernandez-Rivas, Armando Lopez-Guillermo, Isabel Ruiz-Campos, and Carlos Grande
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Immunology ,Retrospective cohort study ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Ofatumumab ,Biochemistry ,Discontinuation ,Clinical trial ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Obinutuzumab ,Internal medicine ,Ibrutinib ,medicine ,business ,Idelalisib - Abstract
Introduction:Recently there has been a renewal of therapeutic tools for the treatment of lymphoid neoplasms to increase the antitumor efficacy and reduce the toxicity generated by conventional chemotherapies, which adds to the intrinsic immunological dysfunction of the disease itself. To date, few data are published about infection risk of these new drugs, and the need for infectious prophylaxis is unknown. The aim of the study is to analyze the infectious complications in patients with LPD treated with monoclonal antibodies (obinutuzumab, ofatumumab, brentuximab, nivolumab and pembrolizumab), BTK inhibitors (ibrutinib, acalabrutinib) and PI3K inhibitors (idelalisib). Methods: Multicenter retrospective study in patients with LPD treated with targeted therapies (single agents or combination) in 18 Hematology centers in Spain, from the time of their commercial availability to March 2020. Patients in clinical trials were excluded as well as patients with active infections at the beginning of treatment. Results:During the study period, 380 patients were included.Baseline characteristics of the entire cohort are shown in Table 1.Median follow-up was 17.3 months (range 0-103), the longest follow-up corresponding to CLL patients (24 months, range 0-98) and the shortest to LBCL (5 months, range 0-25). Median exposure to target drugs was 8 months (range 0-72).Ibrutinib was administered to 219 patients(1 FL, 147 CLL, 27 MCL, 10 DLBCL, 1 TL and 32 WM, 1 HL),Brentuximab to 49(31 HL, 14 TL and 4 DLBCL) andIdelalisibto 35 patients (16 affected by chronic lymphocytic leukemia - CLL, 15 FL and 1 DLBCL, 1 WM, 1MCL, 1HL).Obinutuzumabcombinations were used in 10 (6 CLL, 3 FL, 1 MCL) and 5 HL patients (of which 4/5 underwent previous BMT) receivedNivolumab. A total number of 237 infectious events occurred in 148/380 patients (38.9%), 39% of which were grade 3 and 54/148 (36.4%) experienced 2 or more infective episodes: of those 54, 21 (38%) had underwent 3 or more lines of therapy and 28 (51%) had hypogammaglobulinemia. Hospitalization was required in 59.2% events. A bacterial cause of infection was reported in 40% of cases, and viral in 16%, including 11/237 (4,6%) SARS-CoV-2 infection. Invasive fungal infection (IFI) occurred in 3.3% (8/237). Noteworthy, no case of PJP was identified. Lung was the most frequent site of infection in 24% of cases (57/237) while the upper respiratory tract was involved in 17% of events (41/237). Urinary tract infections were diagnosed in 10% (24/237). Other sites involved were skin and soft tissue 7%, gastrointestinal tract 5,4%, bloodstream infections 3% and catheter related infections 2,5%. Considering drugs individually, 86 patients that receivedIbrutinib(39.2 %)experienced a total of 137 infectious episodes: 30% bacterial, 19% viral, 5% fungal and 45% clinical and image-based infections; the 17(34.6%of those who received Brentuximab, experienced a total of 16 infectious episodes: 56% bacterial, 37.5% viral infections and one catheter-related sepsis. Of those who receivedIdelalisib,18 (51.4%)experienced a total of 28 episodes: 42% bacterial, 14% viral and 7% fungal. Four patients treated withObinutuzumabcombinations (40%) experienced one infection during treatment (25% bacterial and 75% viral). Only one patient treated withNivolumabexperienced more than three infections, he was also under corticosteroid treatment. Focusing on IFI (Table 2): 7/8 infections were identified in CLL patients, 6 out 7 being on ibrutinib treatment and 1/7 on Idelalisib.Aspergilluswas the fungus most frequently isolated. The targeted drug was discontinued temporarily in 4 patients and indefinitely in 3. Twenty three (6%) patients died due to infection in our series. Conclusions: 1. We identified 38.7% infections in our LPD patients treated with targeted drugs, with a median drug-exposure time of 8 months (range 0-72), with a non-negligible incidence of bacterial infections. 2. The highest rates of infection were found in patients treated with with Idelalisib and Ibrutinib (51.4% and 39.2% respectively). 3. IFI (3.3%) occurred with low frequency, mostly in CLL patients during ibrutinib treatment, leading to its temporal discontinuation in most of the cases. 4. No case of PJP was identified in our cohort. 5. An analysis to determine risk factors for infection and the optimal monitoring and prophylaxis for these patients is ongoing. Disclosures Hernandez-Rivas: Janssen:Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees;Abbvie:Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees;Roche:Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees;AstraZeneca:Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees;Gilead:Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees;Celgene/BMS:Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees;Rovi:Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.Lopez-Guillermo:novartis:Consultancy;celgene:Consultancy, Research Funding;roche:Consultancy, Research Funding;gilead:Consultancy, Research Funding.
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- 2020
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5. Improvement of gypsum plaster strain capacity by the addition of rubber particles from recycled tyres
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Mariano González, Mercedes del Río, José Gabriel Palomo, and Ángel Serna
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Materials science ,Gypsum ,Building and Construction ,Polymer ,engineering.material ,Cracking ,chemistry ,Natural rubber ,visual_art ,Hardening (metallurgy) ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,Elasticity (economics) ,Elastic modulus ,Civil and Structural Engineering - Abstract
This paper shows the results of a research project to valorize rubber waste from end-of-life tyres (ELTs). The aim of this study is to improve the elastic behaviour of gypsum plaster by the addition of a highly elastic polymer, such as rubber, so that the elasticity modulus of the resulting compound is smaller than gypsum plaster without additives. In this way, reducing the probability of cracking in the first hours after hardening, due to lack of material elasticity will be possible. This study analyses the mechanical behaviour of gypsum plaster with different granulometries of rubber particles (0–1 mm, 1–2 mm and 2–4 mm), and in different rubber volume fractions (1%, 3% and 5%). The experimental results are compared with results of gypsum plaster specimens without rubber.
- Published
- 2012
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6. Enfermedad de Van der Knaap (leucoencefalopatía megaencefálica con quistes subcorticales). Informe en un niño mexicano.
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Peña-Landín, Dora, Dávila-Gutiérrez, Guillermo, Gómez-Garza, Gilberto, and Ángel Serna, Miguel
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PROGRESSIVE multifocal leukoencephalopathy ,CYSTS (Pathology) ,MEXICANS ,MYELIN sheath diseases ,MOLECULAR genetics ,METACHROMATIC leukodystrophy ,EPILEPSY ,PEDIATRICIANS - Abstract
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- Published
- 2011
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