43 results on '"Javier Sánchez-López"'
Search Results
2. Real Life Clinical Impact of Antimicrobial Stewardship Actions on the Blood Culture Workflow from a Microbiology Laboratory
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Jose Maria López-Pintor, Javier Sánchez-López, Carolina Navarro-San Francisco, Ana Maria Sánchez-Díaz, Elena Loza, and Rafael Cantón
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bacteremia ,antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) ,accelerate ,bloodstream infection ,sepsis ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Background: Accelerating the diagnosis of bacteremia is one of the biggest challenges in clinical microbiology departments. The fast establishment of a correct treatment is determinant on bacteremic patients’ outcomes. Our objective was to evaluate the impact of antimicrobial therapy and clinical outcomes of a rapid blood culture workflow protocol in positive blood cultures with Gram-negative bacilli (GNB). Methods: A quasi-experimental before–after study was performed with two groups: (i) control group (conventional work-protocol) and (ii) intervention group (rapid workflow-protocol: rapid identification by Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization-Time-Of-Flight (MALDI-TOF) and antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) from bacterial pellet without overnight incubation). Patients were divided into different categories according to the type of intervention over treatment. Outcomes were compared between both groups. Results: A total of 313 patients with GNB-bacteremia were included: 125 patients in the control group and 188 in the intervention. The time from positive blood culture to intervention on antibiotic treatment decreased from 2.0 days in the control group to 1.0 in the intervention group (p < 0.001). On the maintenance of correct empirical treatment, the control group reported 2.0 median days until the clinical decision, while in the intervention group was 1.0 (p < 0.001). In the case of treatment de-escalation, a significant difference between both groups (4.0 vs. 2.0, p < 0.001) was found. A decreasing trend on the change from inappropriate treatments to appropriate ones was observed: 3.5 vs. 1.5; p = 0.12. No significant differences were found between both groups on 7-days mortality or on readmissions in the first 30-days. Conclusions: Routine implementation of a rapid workflow protocol anticipates the report of antimicrobial susceptibility testing results in patients with GNB-bacteremia, decreasing the time to effective and optimal antibiotic therapy.
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- 2021
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3. Hypermucoviscous Klebsiella pneumoniae: A challenge in community acquired infection
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Javier Sánchez-López, Andrea García-Caballero, Carolina Navarro-San Francisco, Carmen Quereda, Patricia Ruiz-Garbajosa, Enrique Navas, Fernando Dronda, María Isabel Morosini, Rafael Cantón, and María Diez-Aguilar
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
In 1986, a new syndrome was described in Taiwan secondary to hypervirulent K. pneumoniae (hvKP), and its main feature was the ability to cause severe infection in young and immunocompetent hosts. Their virulence is explained by the efficient acquisition of iron and an increase in capsule production, which confer the characteristic hypermucoviscous phenotype. Most of these cases have been described in Asia and subsequently spread to America and Europe, where their prevalence is much lower. We present four cases of bacteremia and liver abscesses secondary to hypervirulent K. pneumoniae, two of them associated with endophthalmitis. K. pneumoniae isolates recovered from two of the patients belonged to capsular serotype K1 (genes wzx_K1 and magA), while the other two were K2 (gene wzy_K2). Both of the K1 isolates were classified into a ST23, and isolates of serotype K2 belonged to the ST375 and ST881 clones.In Europe, hvKP isolates are less frequently recovered, mostly associated with Asian citizens or travelers, which was not the case in our patients. K1 capsular serotype is a major cause of primary liver abscess and secondary septic embolus, and K2 is associated with secondary liver abscess. Although these hypervirulent variants usually affect immunocompetent patients as in our cases, diabetes mellitus is a major risk factor for the most invasive cases, with concomitant poor prognosis. Identification of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae serotypes K1 and K2 should be considered as part of the microbiological diagnosis of community-acquired liver abscess due to their clinical implications. Keywords: Hypermucoviscous Klebsiella pneumoniae, Liver abscess, Community acquired infection, MLST
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- 2019
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4. Emergence of the New KPC-49 Variant Conferring an ESBL Phenotype with Resistance to Ceftazidime-Avibactam in the ST131-H30R1 Escherichia coli High-Risk Clone
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Marta Hernández-García, Javier Sánchez-López, Laura Martínez-García, Federico Becerra-Aparicio, María Isabel Morosini, Patricia Ruiz-Garbajosa, and Rafael Cantón
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ST131-H30R1-E. coli high-risk clone ,ceftazidime-avibactam susceptibility ,blaKPC-49 ,whole genome sequencing ,Medicine - Abstract
We report the emergence of an isolate belonging to the sequence type (ST)131-Escherichia coli high-risk clone with ceftazidime-avibactam resistance recovered from a patient with bacteremia in 2019. Antimicrobial susceptibility was determined and whole genome sequencing (Illumina-NovaSeq6000) and cloning experiments were performed to investigate its resistance phenotype. A KPC-3-producing E. coli isolate susceptible to ceftazidime-avibactam (MIC = 0.5/4 mg/L) and with non-wild type MIC of meropenem (8 mg/L) was detected in a blood culture performed at hospital admission. Following 10-days of standard ceftazidime-avibactam dose treatment, a second KPC-producing E. coli isolate with a phenotype resembling an extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL) producer (meropenem 0.5 mg/L, piperacillin-tazobactam 16/8 mg/L) but resistant to ceftazidime-avibactam (16/4 mg/L) was recovered. Both E. coli isolates belonged to ST131, serotype O25:H4 and sublineage H30R1. Genomics analysis showed a core genome of 5,203,887 base pair with an evolutionary distance of 6 single nucleotide polymorphisms. A high content of resistance and virulence genes was detected in both isolates. The novel KPC-49 variant, an Arg-163-Ser mutant of blaKPC-3, was detected in the isolate with resistance to ceftazidime-avibactam. Cloning experiments revealed that blaKPC-49 gene increases ceftazidime-avibactam MIC and decreases carbapenem MICs when using a porin deficient Klebsiella pneumoniae strain as a host. Both blaKPC-3 and blaKPC-49 genes were located on the transposon Tn4401a as a part of an IncF [F1:A2:B20] plasmid. The emergence of novel blaKPC genes conferring decreased susceptibility to ceftazidime-avibactam and resembling ESBL production in the epidemic ST131-H30R1-E. coli high-risk clone presents a new challenge in clinical practice.
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- 2021
- Full Text
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5. Chronic pulmonary mycosis due to Paracoccidioides brasiliensis
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María Ángeles Asencio Egea, Jean Carlos Méndez González, Jorge Gaitán Pitera, José María López-Pintor Huertas, Javier Sánchez López, and María Huertas Vaquero
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Microbiology (medical) ,Pharmacology ,Mycoses ,Humans ,Paracoccidioides ,Pneumonia ,General Medicine - Published
- 2022
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6. [Potential usefulness of CT as a marker of persistence of positive PCR in patients with COVID-19.]
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José María, López-Pintor, Óscar, Herráez-Carrera, Jorge, Gaitán Pitera, Javier, Sánchez-López, Inmaculada, Bautista-Serrano, Fátima, Arribas-Pérez, Jean Carlos, Méndez-González, María, Huertas-Vaquero, Ángel, Arias-Arias, and María Ángeles, Asencio-Egea
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SARS-CoV-2 ,Spain ,Humans ,COVID-19 ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
One of the problems associated to SARS-CoV-2 was its persistence in nasopharyngeal tract. The existence of markers that help to predict this situation could be useful to management of the patients. The objective of this paper was to determine the relationship between the CT value from the initial PCR of patients with COVID-19 and the persistence of the infection.It was performed an observational retrospective study of patients with positive PCR to SARS-CoV-2 attended in emergency department of a general hospital. Data about compatible symptoms, radiological findings and the CT value obtained with each PCR kit were collected. The control group (G0) included patients with a positive PCR followed by two negative PCR results (P-N-N), while problem group (G1) included patients with at least three consecutive positive PCR results (P-P-P). Chronic infections were discarded selecting only patients with negative serology, and only were included those whose PCR were separated by a minimum of five and maximum of twenty days. The comparison between the study groups was carried out using the t-student test for quantitative variables and the χThe mean CT value were 30.8 and 21.5 (p0.001) on G0 and G1, respectively. G0 reported higher CT values than G1, regardless of symptoms, radiological pattern and the PCR kit utilized.The CT value from the SARS-CoV-2 initial PCR is related to the persistence of its positivity, regardless of the patient´s symptoms or radiological pattern. Thus, low CT values could be related to persistent infections.Uno de los problemas asociados al SARS-CoV-2 es su persistencia en el tracto nasofaríngeo. La existencia de marcadores que ayuden a predecir este fenómeno podría ser útil en el manejo del paciente. El objetivo de este trabajo fue determinar la relación entre el valor CT (umbral de ciclo) de la PCR inicial de pacientes con COVID-19 y la persistencia de la infección.Se realizó un estudio observacional retrospectivo de pacientes con PCR positiva para SARS-CoV-2 atendidos en las Urgencias de un hospital general. Se recogieron datos sobre sintomatología compatible y patrón radiológico de cada paciente, así como el CT obtenido en la PCR con cada equipo utilizado. El grupo control (G0) incluyó pacientes con una PCR positiva seguida de dos negativas (patrón P-N-N), mientras que el grupo problema (G1) incluyó pacientes con al menos tres PCR positivas consecutivas (patrón P-P-P). Se descartaron las infecciones crónicas, considerando únicamente a pacientes con serología negativa, y solo se incluyeron aquellos cuyas tres PCR estuvieron separadas un mínimo de cinco días y un máximo de veinte. La comparación entre los grupos de estudio se realizó mediante el test t-student para variables cuantitativas y el test de χLa media del valor CT fue de 30,8 en G0 y 21,5 en G1 (p0,001). G0 reportó CT superiores a G1, independientemente de la sintomatología, el patrón radiológico o el equipo de PCR utilizado.El valor CT de la PCR inicial de SARS-CoV-2 podría relacionase con la persistencia de su positividad, independientemente de la sintomatología o el patrón radiológico del paciente. Valores bajos de CT en la primera PCR podrían relacionarse con infecciones persistentes.
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- 2022
7. 961 Preliminary results of a phase 2 study of intratumoral administration of BO-112 with pembrolizumab in patients with advanced melanoma that have progressive disease on anti-PD-1-based therapy
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Roberto Martin Huertas, Stéphane Dalle, Juan Martin-Liberal, Sorilla Prey, Caroline Dutriaux, Henry Montaudie, Marisol Quintero, Philippe Saiag, Juan Francisco Rodriguez-Moreno, Enrique de Miguel, Julie Charles, Eva Muñoz Couselo, Alfonso Berrocal, Maria Gonzalez Cao, Elisa Funk-Brentano, Delvys Rodriguez Abreu, Eduardo Castanon Alvarez, Helena Escuin-Ordinas, Javier Sánchez López, Caroline Robert, Ana Arance, María Pilar López Criado, Luis Merino, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Ivan Marquez Rodas, Sonia Maciá, Marya F. Chaney, and Miguel F. Sanmamed
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Pharmacology ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Melanoma ,Immunology ,Mucosal melanoma ,Phases of clinical research ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Pembrolizumab ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Molecular Medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Progression-free survival ,business ,Progressive disease ,RC254-282 - Abstract
BackgroundIntratumoral immunotherapies are being tested in different solid tumors. They trigger local and systemic responses.1 2 BO-112 is a double stranded RNA nanoplexed with polyethyleneimine (PEI), which mimics a viral infection and mobilizes the immune system.In preclinical models and in a first in human clinical trial BO-112 activated dendritic cells, induced CD-8 infiltration, apoptosis and enhancement of immunogenic cell death and achieved an objective response in 2 out of 10 patients with melanoma with primary resistance to antiPD-1.3 4MethodsIn this phase 2 study, BO-112 plus pembrolizumab is evaluated in patients with advanced melanoma, who have developed progressive disease while on or within 12 weeks after anti-PD1/PD-L1 based therapy (either as first line or as adjuvant treatment). BO-112 is administered intratumorally once weekly in 1 to 8 tumor lesions, total dose 1 to 2 mg, for the first 7 weeks and thereafter every three weeks; pembrolizumab 200 mg is administered intravenously every three weeks. Overall response rate (ORR) is analyzed as primary endpoint by independent reviewer. Secondary objectives include disease control rate (DCR), duration of response and progression free survival (PFS); response assessment is done by RECIST 1.1 and iRECIST; in addition, CD-8 and PD-L1 IHC, NGS, itRECIST and radiomics signatures are prospectively assessed. Key eligibility criteria include cutaneous or mucosal melanoma with known BRAF status; at least one lesion RECIST 1.1 measurable and amenable for IT injection. Enrollment has been completed on 26th August.ResultsWith 26 evaluable patients with a first response assessment, seven have progressive disease (PD), five have partial response (PR) and fourteen patients show stable disease (SD). Preliminary ORR is 19.2% and DCR is 73.1% at week 8. Three patients with PR at week 8 have undergone a second assessment at week 16, with further decrease in sum of diameters (SOD) in both injected and non-injected lesions. Three out of five patients with SD and a second assessment maintain SD, showing a decrease in SOD in two cases (figure 1). In addition, two patients with only skin lesions have a pathological complete response. CD8 and PD-L1 have increased in 8 and 7 out of 13 patients with paired biopsies, being related with clinical benefit (figure 2).Abstract 961 Figure 1Swimmer plot, efficacy data for evaluable patients undergoing at least one response assessmentAbstract 961 Figure 2Immunohistochemistry data for CPS and CD8 data from paired biopsiesConclusionsDespite these data being preliminary, there is a trend for benefit in terms of ORR and also in long lasting stable diseases. BO-112 is able to increase PD-L1 expression in tumor cells and increase CD8-T cell infiltrates.AcknowledgementsMerck, Pivotal SLU, Quibim radiomics, Pangaea laboratories, all participating sites and patientsTrial RegistrationNCT04570332ReferencesAznar MA, Planelles L, Perez-Olivares M, et al. Immunotherapeutic effects of intratumoral nanoplexed poly I:C. J Immunother Cancer. 2019 May 2;7(1):116.5. Hamid O, Ismail R, Puzanov I. Intratumoral immunotherapy-update 2019. The Oncologist 2020;25:e423–438.Márquez-Rodas I, Longo F, Rodríguez-Ruiz M, et al. Intratumoral nanoplexed poly I:C BO-112 in combination with systemic anti-PD-1 for patients with anti-PD-1-refractory tumors. Sci Transl Med 2020 Oct 14;12(565):eabb0391.Kalbasi A, Tariveranmoshabad M, Hakimi K, Kremer S, et al. A. Uncoupling interferon signaling and antigen presentation to overcome immunotherapy resistance due to JAK1 loss in melanoma. Sci Transl Med 2020 Oct 14;12(565):eabb0152.Ethics ApprovalThe study obtained ethics approval by Spanish Health Agency (AEMPS), on 11th December 2020, and French Health Agency (ANSM) on 27th January 2021; study obtained approval from two Ethics Committee: Vall D’Hebron, Barcelona, Spain on 7th December 2020 (number 467), and Centre Léon Bérard, Lyon, France, CPP 20.11.10.38825 on 11th February 2021.For each study patient, written informed consent is obtained prior to any protocol-related activities. As part of this procedure, the principal investigator or one of his/her associates must explain orally and in writing the nature, duration, and purpose of the study, and the action of the study drug in such a manner that the patient is aware of the potential risks, inconveniences, or adverse effects that may occur. They should be informed that the patient may withdraw from the study at any time. They will receive all information that is required by the regulatory authorities and ICH guidelines. The ICF has been signed by the patient and a copy provided to them.ConsentN/A
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- 2021
8. Implementación de sistema de control automático de temperatura en proceso de parafinado mediante LabVIEW
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Héctor Javier Sánchez-López, Israel Alejandro Rojas-Olmedo, Erick Rojas-Ramírez, and Aldo González Gomeztagle
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General Medicine - Abstract
This paper details the design the automation processes for the control of temperature and length variables due to the need to control some of the main physical variables that are part of the production process |, thereby obtaining the physical signals and interpreting them for processing and assignment of a measurable baseline assessment, which allows controlling the values to determine the behavior of the processes. These automation processes were developed using computer-assisted control, LabVIEW graphic programming software and an NI 6000 USB data acquisition card. The processes to be implemented are based on: the control and monitoring of temperature in the area of pabileras, control and monitoring of proportion in the mixing of matches, as well as the control of size and temperature in the production of the wick. These automation processes for the control of quality variables allow the manipulation and monitoring of physical variables such as temperature and length, since they greatly influence the production of matches. Allowing the user to adjust the desired values in the production area and keep them as stable with reference to quality standards. The implementation of an automatic temperature control system for the paraffin process through LabVIEW is shown, an analysis will be carried out in the area of pábilo and paraffin production of the company Cerillera la Central S.A. de C.V. in which the temperature of 174 ° F to 188.6° F must be controlled, by means of solenoid valves activated by relays at 127 VAC, a resistive sensor (PT-100) coupled to a Wheatstone bridge will be used which will deliver analog data; which will be processed by the NI USB-6000 data acquisition card, a PC and NI-LabVIEW software in order to turn on or off the solenoid valves that activate the steam supply for paraffin heating.
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- 2019
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9. Evaluation of Rapid Polymyxin
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Javier, Sánchez-López, José Luis, Cortés-Cuevas, María, Díez-Aguilar, Carla, López-Causapé, Rafael, Cantón, and María Isabel, Morosini
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AcademicSubjects/MED00290 ,AcademicSubjects/MED00740 ,Original Article ,AcademicSubjects/MED00230 - Abstract
Background Pseudomonas aeruginosa is of great concern among MDR bacteria and rapid and reliable in vitro antibiotic susceptibility testing methods are extremely necessary. Colistin is, in many cases, among the limited useful alternatives for these isolates. Unfortunately, only a few reliable in vitro methods are validated for testing susceptibility to colistin. Although EUCAST and CLSI recommend broth microdilution (BMD) as the standard method for antibiotic susceptibility testing, this method is not routinely performed in microbiology laboratories. However, some commercial products based upon BMD have tested well and offer consistent results. Objectives To evaluate the performance of the colorimetric Rapid Polymyxin Pseudomonas Test (RPPT) (ELITech Microbiology, France). Methods Eighty-seven clinical P. aeruginosa strains, prospectively collected in two microbiology laboratories exhibiting either susceptibility or various degrees of multidrug resistance, including to colistin, were used. Different susceptibility testing methods were simultaneously performed and compared with reference BMD and interpreted using 2020 EUCAST criteria. Results Results indicate an essential agreement (EA) of 97.7% for RPPT while the other tests did not reach 90% of EA [66.7% MicroScan, 63.2% Etest (bioMérieux, France) and 60.9% other MIC Test Strips (MTS, Liofilchem, Italy)]. The categorical agreement was 98.9% for RPPT, 87.4% for MTS, 85.1% for Etest and 64.4% for MicroScan. Conclusions The RPPT was able to accurately detect both colistin-susceptible and -resistant isolates within 4 h, offering a rapid alternative for a prompt decision about the inclusion of this antibiotic in a patient’s treatment.
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- 2021
10. Emergence of the New KPC-49 Variant Conferring an ESBL Phenotype with Resistance to Ceftazidime-Avibactam in the ST131-H30R1 Escherichia coli High-Risk Clone
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Federico Becerra-Aparicio, María Isabel Morosini, Rafael Cantón, Javier Sánchez-López, Patricia Ruiz-Garbajosa, Marta Hernández-García, and Laura Martínez-García
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Microbiology (medical) ,clone (Java method) ,Carbapenem ,Klebsiella pneumoniae ,Virulence ,lcsh:Medicine ,medicine.disease_cause ,Meropenem ,Article ,Microbiology ,Plasmid ,ST131-H30R1-E. coli high-risk clone ,medicine ,polycyclic compounds ,Immunology and Allergy ,Molecular Biology ,Escherichia coli ,whole genome sequencing ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,lcsh:R ,blaKPC-49 ,ceftazidime-avibactam susceptibility ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,biology.organism_classification ,Ceftazidime/avibactam ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Infectious Diseases ,bla KPC-49 ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We report the emergence of an isolate belonging to the sequence type (ST)131-Escherichia coli high-risk clone with ceftazidime-avibactam resistance recovered from a patient with bacteremia in 2019. Antimicrobial susceptibility was determined and whole genome sequencing (Illumina-NovaSeq6000) and cloning experiments were performed to investigate its resistance phenotype. A KPC-3-producing E. coli isolate susceptible to ceftazidime-avibactam (MIC = 0.5/4 mg/L) and with non-wild type MIC of meropenem (8 mg/L) was detected in a blood culture performed at hospital admission. Following 10-days of standard ceftazidime-avibactam dose treatment, a second KPC-producing E. coli isolate with a phenotype resembling an extended-spectrum &beta, lactamase (ESBL) producer (meropenem 0.5 mg/L, piperacillin-tazobactam 16/8 mg/L) but resistant to ceftazidime-avibactam (16/4 mg/L) was recovered. Both E. coli isolates belonged to ST131, serotype O25:H4 and sublineage H30R1. Genomics analysis showed a core genome of 5,203,887 base pair with an evolutionary distance of 6 single nucleotide polymorphisms. A high content of resistance and virulence genes was detected in both isolates. The novel KPC-49 variant, an Arg-163-Ser mutant of blaKPC-3, was detected in the isolate with resistance to ceftazidime-avibactam. Cloning experiments revealed that blaKPC-49 gene increases ceftazidime-avibactam MIC and decreases carbapenem MICs when using a porin deficient Klebsiella pneumoniae strain as a host. Both blaKPC-3 and blaKPC-49 genes were located on the transposon Tn4401a as a part of an IncF [F1:A2:B20] plasmid. The emergence of novel blaKPC genes conferring decreased susceptibility to ceftazidime-avibactam and resembling ESBL production in the epidemic ST131-H30R1-E. coli high-risk clone presents a new challenge in clinical practice.
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- 2021
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11. Current status of the algae production industry in Europe: an emerging sector of the Blue Bioeconomy
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Rita Araújo, Fatima Vázquez Calderón, Javier Sánchez López, Isabel Costa Azevedo, Annette Bruhn, Silvia Fluch, Manuel Garcia Tasende, Fatemeh Ghaderiardakani, Tanel Ilmjärv, Martial Laurans, Micheal Mac Monagail, Silvio Mangini, César Peteiro, Céline Rebours, Tryggvi Stefansson, and Jörg Ullmann
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0106 biological sciences ,Cyanobacteria ,marine fisheries ,lcsh:QH1-199.5 ,Centro Oceanográfico de Santander ,Acuicultura ,Ocean Engineering ,lcsh:General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Blue growth ,12. Responsible consumption ,03 medical and health sciences ,Aquaculture ,Algae ,Environmental protection ,Production (economics) ,14. Life underwater ,lcsh:Science ,natural resources ,living resources ,bioeconomy ,030304 developmental biology ,Water Science and Technology ,2. Zero hunger ,Sustainable development ,Spirulina (genus) ,algae ,fish ,0303 health sciences ,Global and Planetary Change ,Biomass (ecology) ,biology ,biomass ,business.industry ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,biology.organism_classification ,Geography ,13. Climate action ,seaweed ,fisheries ,lcsh:Q ,production ,Sustainable growth rate ,business - Abstract
The EU Bioeconomy Strategy aims to support the sustainable growth and development of the EU bio-based sectors while creating jobs, innovation and services. Despite the recognized potential of the algae biomass value chain, significant knowledge gaps still exist regarding the dimension, capability, organization and structure of the algae production in Europe. This study presents and analyses the results of a comprehensive mapping and detailed characterization of the algae production at the European scale, encompassing macroalgae, microalgae, and the cyanobacteria Spirulina. This work mapped 447 algae and Spirulina production units spread between 23 countries, which represents an important addition to the reported number of algae producing countries. More than 50% of these companies produce microalgae and/or Spirulina. Macroalgae production is still depending on harvesting from wild stocks (68% of the macroalgae producing units) but macroalgae aquaculture (land-based and at sea) is developing in several countries in Europe currently representing 32% of the macroalgae production units. France, Ireland, and Spain are the top 3 countries in number of macroalgae production units while Germany, Spain, and Italy stand for the top 3 for microalgae. Spirulina producers are predominantly located in France, Italy, Germany, and Spain. Algae and Spirulina biomass is directed primarily for food and food-related applications including the extraction of high-value products for food supplements and nutraceuticals. Algae production in Europe remains limited by a series of technological, regulatory and market-related barriers. Yet, the results of this study emphasize that the European algae sector has a considerable potential for sustainable development as long as the acknowledged economic, social and environmental challenges are addressed., SI
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- 2021
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12. Abstract CT014: Efficacy of intratumoral BO-112 with systemic pembrolizumab in patients with advanced melanoma refractory to anti-PD-1-based therapy: Final results of SPOTLIGHT203 phase 2 study
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Iván Márquez-Rodas, Caroline Dutriaux, Philippe Saiag, Luis de la Cruz Merino, Eduardo Castanon Álvarez, Caroline Robert, Juan F. Rodríguez-Moreno, Ana M. Arance, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Henry Montaudié, Miguel F. Sanmamed, María González Cao, Julie Charles, María Pilar López Criado, Alfonso Berrocal, Enrique de Miguel, Elisa Funk-Brentano, Sorilla Prey, María del Carmen Álamo de la Gala, Javier Sánchez López, Helena Escuin-Ordinas, Sonia Macia, Marisol Quintero, Marya F. Chaney, and Stéphane Dalle
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
Background: BO-112 is a double stranded synthetic RNA formulated with polyethyleneimine that mimics a viral infection. Through dendritic cells activation, increase in CD8 T-cell infiltration and interferons induction, it produces an immunogenic cell death. Phase 1 study (NCT02828098) showed ORR 20% in patients (pts) with anti PD-1 resistant melanoma (mel). Hence phase 2 trial was designed. Study design: Single arm study (NCT04570332) with intratumoral BO-112 plus intravenous pembrolizumab in pts with mel (cutaneous, acral or mucosal) and confirmed progressive disease (PD) while on anti-PD1 based therapy. Pts were treated with BO-112, 1-2 mg on a weekly basis for 7 weeks and thereafter Q3W in 1-8 different lesions. Pembrolizumab 200 mg was administered Q3W. Primary endpoint was overall response rate (ORR) by RECIST 1.1 by independent reviewer. Secondary endpoints included disease control rate (DCR), progression free survival (PFS) and safety. Exploratory objectives included radiomic signatures, itRECIST and evaluation of tumor microenvironment. At least 20% of pts had to achieve response in order to consider primary endpoint met. Results: Recruitment was completed 24th August 2021 with 42 pts; female 43%; median age 66 (rank 27-88). Table summarizes basal characteristics. With 40 evaluable for response pts, 10 achieved response (25%): 3 complete response (CR) and 7 partial response (PR). 17 pts (44%) achieved a stable disease (SD), meaning a DCR of 68% with 18 pts still on treatment. The 4 pts with a baseline LDH>3xULN developed PD no later than week 8. Responses per histology were: 66% mucosal, 28% cutaneous, 0% acral. Responses per BRAF/NRAS status were: BRAF mutant (Mut) 43%, NRAS Mut 31%, and BRAF/NRAS wild type (WT) 17%. 33 pts (79%) had at least one BO-112 related adverse event (AE) being only in 2 cases grade>3 (G4 infusion reaction and G3 myalgia). Most common related AEs were asthenia, pyrexia, diarrhea, vomiting and chills. Study treatment was not discontinued in any pts due to related AE. Conclusions: The primary efficacy endpoint has been met. Additionally, disease control (PR+CR+SD) is meaningful and durable in a population with no current standard treatment options. Very high LDH levels (LDH >3xULN) and acral mel could predict poor outcome. Safety profile was manageable without treatment discontinuation due to AEs. N (ITT pts, 42) (%) AJCC8 M1C/D 19 (45) BRAF Mut 7 (17) WT 35 (83) Previous treatment Ipilimumab-nivolumab 6 (15) Anti PD-1 monotherapy 33 (79) Other combo 3 (7) Prior line indication Adjuvant 11 (26) Advanced 31 (74) LDH >ULN 17 (41) Best ORR (IRCR evaluable pts, N=40) Global Mucosal Cutaneous Acral ORR 10 (25) 2 (66) 8 (28) 0 PR 7 (18) 1 (33) 6 (21) 0 CR 3 (8) 1 (33) 2* (7) 0 SD 17 (43) 1 (33) 13 (45) 3 (37) PD 13 (33) 0 8 (28) 5 (63) *2 pts had pathologic CR and RECIST SD Citation Format: Iván Márquez-Rodas, Caroline Dutriaux, Philippe Saiag, Luis de la Cruz Merino, Eduardo Castanon Álvarez, Caroline Robert, Juan F. Rodríguez-Moreno, Ana M. Arance, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Henry Montaudié, Miguel F. Sanmamed, María González Cao, Julie Charles, María Pilar López Criado, Alfonso Berrocal, Enrique de Miguel, Elisa Funk-Brentano, Sorilla Prey, María del Carmen Álamo de la Gala, Javier Sánchez López, Helena Escuin-Ordinas, Sonia Macia, Marisol Quintero, Marya F. Chaney, Stéphane Dalle. Efficacy of intratumoral BO-112 with systemic pembrolizumab in patients with advanced melanoma refractory to anti-PD-1-based therapy: Final results of SPOTLIGHT203 phase 2 study [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr CT014.
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- 2022
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13. Abstract CT109: Radiomic features in tumor assessment, preliminary results from a phase 2 study of intratumoral administration of BO-112 with pembrolizumab in patients with anti PD1 refractory melanoma
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Paula Moreno, Philippe Saiag, Luis de la Cruz Merino, Caroline Dutriaux, Eduardo Castanon Álvarez, Caroline Robert, Juan F. Rodríguez-Moreno, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Ana M. Arance, Henry Montaudié, Miguel F. Sanmamed, María González Cao, María Pilar López Criado, Julie Charles, Alfonso Berrocal, Enrique de Miguel, Elisa Funk-Brentano, Pablo Sau Llanas, Sorilla Prey, Eva Muñoz-Couselo, Delvys Rodríguez Abreu, Juan Martin-Liberal, Ángel Alberich-Bayarri, Javier Sánchez López, Sonia Macia, Marisol Quintero, Marya F. Chaney, Stéphane Dalle, and Iván Márquez-Rodas
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
Background: There is a lack of predictive biomarkers for immunotherapy in melanoma. Immunohistochemistry and gene sequencing are frequently assessed as part of clinical research. Radiomic signatures may also add valuable information, based on parameters which can be related to immune infiltration, therefore defining an imaging biomarkers panel for this clinical scenario. BO-112 is a double stranded synthetic RNA formulated with polyethyleneimine (PEI) that, by mimicking the effect of a viral infection, mobilizes the immune system. The role of imaging biomarkers is being explored in the present phase II clinical trial. Study design: Single arm study with BO-112 plus pembrolizumab (NCT04570332) in patients with advanced melanoma in progression to anti-PD1 therapy. As part of exploratory objectives, a radiomics analysis was performed to detect changes in lesion texture features. Quantitative features were obtained by using Quibim Precision 2.9 platform (Quibim, Valencia, Spain) after the manual delineation of lesions on the CT study of each subject at each timepoint to obtain information about injected/non-injected lesions. Images were normalized by taking into account Hounsfield Units (HU) bias across scanners in a cross-calibration phantom and the Z-score. The difference (Delta) in the features between baseline and week 8 was calculated. Results: Studies were assessed based on event (progression) and based on whether lesions had been injected. Patients with only cutaneous disease were not included in this analysis. Out of 23 patients who had at least two imaging assessments, 6 developed progressive disease by week 8, and 17 subjects had no event by that time. Due to the small sample size, the radiomic analysis was based on hypothesis testing. With regards to volume, 50% of the non-progressing lesions reduced their value from that of the baseline. Regarding injected versus non-injected changes, up to 50% of injected lesions decreased their volume after 8 weeks of injected treatment whereas in non-injected lesions volume decreased in less than 25% of lesions. From the independent sample t-test of delta radiomics features against the injected/non-injected lesions variable, there were 4 features with a statistically significant difference between groups; all of them related to the Low Grey-Level Zone Emphasis. Specifically, Delta original GLRLM Low Grey-Level Run Emphasis showed the highest significant difference between injected and non-injected lesions (p=0.004), with higher and positive delta values in the injected group (75% injected lesions were above 0). Conclusions: Imaging biomarkers provide a large number of quantitative image features with a wide span of information, from size to heterogeneity of the tissue which may be indicator of tumor progression and immune infiltrate. In the analysis of radiomics features, delta GLRLM low grey-level zone emphasis was sensitive to the tumoral changes happening in injected lesions at week 8. This might add insights into the imaging-based evaluation of immune infiltration in intratumoral immunotherapy and the creation of associated imaging biomarkers panels. Citation Format: Paula Moreno, Philippe Saiag, Luis de la Cruz Merino, Caroline Dutriaux, Eduardo Castanon Álvarez, Caroline Robert, Juan F. Rodríguez-Moreno, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Ana M. Arance, Henry Montaudié, Miguel F. Sanmamed, María González Cao, María Pilar López Criado, Julie Charles, Alfonso Berrocal, Enrique de Miguel, Elisa Funk-Brentano, Pablo Sau Llanas, Sorilla Prey, Eva Muñoz-Couselo, Delvys Rodríguez Abreu, Juan Martin-Liberal, Ángel Alberich-Bayarri, Javier Sánchez López, Sonia Macia, Marisol Quintero, Marya F. Chaney, Stéphane Dalle, Iván Márquez-Rodas. Radiomic features in tumor assessment, preliminary results from a phase 2 study of intratumoral administration of BO-112 with pembrolizumab in patients with anti PD1 refractory melanoma [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr CT109.
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- 2022
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14. Abstract CT107: Correlation of biomarkers and clinical benefit of intratumoral BO112 and pembrolizumab in patients with anti PD1 refractory melanoma
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Ruth Roman, Philippe Saiag, Caroline Dutriaux, Luis de la Cruz Merino, Eduardo Castanon, Miguel F. Sanmamed, Caroline Robert, Juan F. Rodríguez-Moreno, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Ana M. Arance, María González Cao, Henry Montaudié, María Pilar López Criado, Julie Charles, Alfonso Berrocal, María del Carmen Álamo de la Gala, Enrique de Miguel, Elisa Funk-Brentano, Sorilla Prey, Eva Muñoz-Couselo, Delvys Rodríguez Abreu, Juan Martín-Liberal, Helena Escuin-Ordinas, Mark Branum, Sonia Macia, Marisol Quintero, Javier Sánchez López, Marya F. Chaney, Beatriz García-Peláez, Marta Vives-Usano, Miguel Ángel Molina, Stéphane Dalle, and Iván Márquez-Rodas
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
Background: There is a lack of predictive biomarkers for immunotherapy in melanoma. In terms of IHC, there is no strong rational to support the use of PD-L1 expression. BRAF mutations occur in 40-50% of melanomas and the MAPK pathway may also be activated by NRAS mutations. Patients harboring these mutations face usually a worse prognosis. BO-112 is a double stranded synthetic RNA formulated with polyethyleneimine (PEI) that, by mimicking the effect of a viral infection, mobilizes the immune system. Prior data from a phase I trial (NCT02828098) suggest that, when administered intratumorally, it causes an increase in CD8 infiltration and PD-L1 expression. The role of these and other biomarkers is being explored in the present phase II clinical trial. Study Design: Single arm study with BO-112 plus pembrolizumab (NCT04570332) in patients with advanced melanoma in progression to anti-PD1 therapy. Tumors were genotyped by next generation sequencing, whole exome sequencing and tumor mutation burden. Antitumor and immunological effects of the treatment in the tumor microenvironment were assessed by PDL1 and CD8 immunohistochemistry with a paired biopsy performed after 21 days of treatment. Results: A preliminary analysis has been performed, based on patients evaluable for clinical benefit (defined as response or stable disease>16 weeks). Samples from 35 patients have been analyzed, with 24 patients paired biopsies available. Patients with “cold” tumors (PD-L1 negative and CD8 low) at baseline had a trend to lack of clinical benefit. Only basal PD-L1 in the inflammatory component showed a statistically significant correlation with clinical outcome (4/20 (25%) tumors PDL1 IC negative had benefit versus 10/15 (67%) positive), p=0.0053. Fifteen patients had an increase in PD-L1 and 14 patients had increase in CD8 infiltrate after BO-112 treatment; the lack of increase in PDL1 and CD8 after treatment was also predictive of lack of response (p=0.04). BRAF/NRAS driver mutations correlated with positive outcome. Clinical benefit was observed in 4 of 17 (24%) patients not carrying activating mutations whereas 11 out of 18 (61%) patients with BRAF/NRAS activating mutations had clinical benefit (p=0.02), mainly in cutaneous histology (14% versus 65%, p=0.02). Mucosal melanoma patients (n=3) achieved an ORR 66.7% and DCR 100%. The two mucosal melanoma patients with partial response harbored SETD2 mutations and one of them showed extensive cyclic nucleotide-gated (CNGs), indicative of defects in DNA repair pathways. Regarding acral melanoma patients (n=9), no responses were observed, even in the single case with a NRAS mutation. The only patient achieving clinical benefit, with stable disease>16 weeks; had a unique mutation profile, with TP53 (inactivating) and KIT (activating) mutations. Conclusions: Patients basal mutant BRAF/NRAS could have more probability of benefit from BO-112 and pembrolizumab combination. PD-L1 and/or CD8 increase is an early marker of response. These findings could help to select patients in future clinical trials. Further investigation into predictive biomarkers is warranted. Citation Format: Ruth Roman, Philippe Saiag, Caroline Dutriaux, Luis de la Cruz Merino, Eduardo Castanon, Miguel F. Sanmamed, Caroline Robert, Juan F. Rodríguez-Moreno, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Ana M. Arance, María González Cao, Henry Montaudié, María Pilar López Criado, Julie Charles, Alfonso Berrocal, María del Carmen Álamo de la Gala, Enrique de Miguel, Elisa Funk-Brentano, Sorilla Prey, Eva Muñoz-Couselo, Delvys Rodríguez Abreu, Juan Martín-Liberal, Helena Escuin-Ordinas, Mark Branum, Sonia Macia, Marisol Quintero, Javier Sánchez López, Marya F. Chaney, Beatriz García-Peláez, Marta Vives-Usano, Miguel Ángel Molina, Stéphane Dalle, Iván Márquez-Rodas. Correlation of biomarkers and clinical benefit of intratumoral BO112 and pembrolizumab in patients with anti PD1 refractory melanoma [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr CT107.
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- 2022
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15. Incidence and mortality in adults with epilepsy in northern Spain
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Iván Seijo, Javier Sánchez-López, Gonzalo Mazuela, Elena Fonseca, Manuel Toledo, Estevo Santamarina, Manuel Quintana, José Alvarez-Sabín, and Laura Abraira
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Adolescent ,Population ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Epidemiology ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Mortality ,education ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Mortality rate ,Incidence ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,University hospital ,Neurology ,Spain ,Etiology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Objectives We aimed to determine the regional incidence and mortality of adult epilepsy, compare mortality rates with the expected in the general population, and identify predictors of shorter survival. Materials and methods We included all consecutive newly diagnosed epilepsy visited at a university hospital in Spain throughout 2012. We collected all relevant clinical data up to December 2018. We analyzed the incidence of epilepsy in our catchment area, studied mortality rates, and explored factors predictive of shorter survival. Results The annual incidence of epilepsy among adults was 37.7 cases/100,000 inhabitants. We studied 110 patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy. Mean age was 52.6 years, and 53.6% were men. Eighty-nine patients (80.9%) had focal epilepsy, 50 (45.5%) had a structural etiology, and 45 (40.9%) had an unknown cause. Nineteen patients died over a median follow-up of 5.3 years. Mortality was almost four times higher than expected in general population and was increased in patients aged 40-59 years. Mortality rates were 5.5%, 12%, and 16.8% in the first, second, and third year, after which they remained stable to the end of follow-up. Independent predictors of mortality were age (p = 0.001), tumor-related epilepsy (p = 0.003), and generalized seizures (p = 0.020). Conclusions There is a high incidence of epilepsy among adults in our geographic area, with a mortality rate quadrupling that expected for the general population. Age, generalized seizures, and tumor-related epilepsy are independently associated with a higher risk of death.
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- 2020
16. The economic burden of newly diagnosed epilepsy in Spain
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José Alvarez-Sabín, Gonzalo Mazuela, Javier Sánchez-López, Elena Fonseca, Manuel Quintana, Laura Abraira, Estevo Santamarina, and Manuel Toledo
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Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Financial Stress ,Newly diagnosed ,Newly diagnosed epilepsy ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Epilepsy ,Indirect costs ,Cost of Illness ,medicine ,Humans ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Health Care Costs ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Spain ,Cost driver ,Etiology ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Medical costs - Abstract
Objective The aim of this study was to determine the hospital burden and economic impact of epilepsy in adults in Spain and identify characteristics associated with higher direct medical costs. Method Patients newly diagnosed with epilepsy at the outpatient epilepsy unit of a tertiary hospital in Spain in 2012 were included. Sociodemographic and clinical data and use of health resources were collected retrospectively from electronic medical records from the time of diagnosis to the end of follow-up (2019). Direct costs (in 2012 Euro) were estimated and linear regression models built to explore predictors of higher costs. Results We studied 110 patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy. Their mean (SD) age was 52.6 (19.6) years and 53.6% were men. Eighty-nine patients (80.9%) had focal epilepsy and 45 (40.9%) had an unknown etiology. At 6 months, 79.1% of patients were classified as responders and 17.6% as having drug-resistant epilepsy. The mean direct cost in the first year of epilepsy diagnosis was €3816.06, 49.7% of which was due to hospital admissions. The mean annual cost per patient was €2584.17, 51.4% of which was due to anti-seizure medications (ASMs). Focal epilepsy and poor response in the first 6 months of treatment predicted higher annual costs, while focal epilepsy and pre-existing comorbidities predicted higher costs in the first year. Conclusions The direct cost of newly diagnosed epilepsy in adults in our area is €2584 per patient/year. Anti-seizure medication use is the main cost driver. Focal epilepsy, comorbidities, and poor response to ASMs are independent predictors of higher costs.
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- 2021
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17. Abstract CT233: Phase 2 clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intratumoral BO-112 in combination with pembrolizumab in patients with advanced melanoma that have progressive disease on anti-PD-1-based therapy
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Caroline Robert, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Stéphane Dalle, Brigitte Dréno, Miguel Fernández de Sanmamed Gutiérrez, Luis Merino, Vanesa Pons Sanz, Maria Gonzalez Cao, Alfonso Berrocal, Marisol Quintero, Juan Francisco Rodriguez-Moreno, Javier Sánchez-López, Ana Arance, Juana Oramas, Pilar Lopez Criado, Julie Charles, Sofía España, Philippe Saiag, María Rojas, Eduardo Castanon, Helena Escuin-Ordinas, Henri Montaudié, Sonia Maciá, Ivan Marquez-Rodas, and Caroline Dutriaux
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Melanoma ,Mucosal melanoma ,Cancer ,Pembrolizumab ,medicine.disease ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Immunogenic cell death ,Nivolumab ,business ,CD8 ,Progressive disease - Abstract
Background: BO-112 is a double stranded synthetic RNA formulated with polyethyleneimine (PEI), that acts as an agonist to toll-like receptor 3 and targets the cytosolic helicase melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5 and retinoic acid-inducible gene I. By mimicking the effect of a viral infection, it mobilizes the immune system, including activation of dendritic cells, CD8 T-cell infiltration, induction of interferons (IFNs), induction of apoptosis and enhancement of immunogenic cell death. Clinical data are available from the first-in-human study (NCT02828098) which evaluated single intratumoral (IT) BO-112 (Part 1; N = 16) and the combination of IT BO-112 with pembrolizumab or nivolumab (Part 2; N = 28). Part 2 showed an ORR of 11% and DCR of 46% in patients with multiple tumor types. Of them, 2 out of 10 (20%) patients with melanoma resistant to anti PD-1 achieved a partial response. Safety profile of BO-112, both as single agent and in combination with anti-PD-1, is manageable and currently characterized by Grade 1 fever and other flu-like symptoms. A phase 2 clinical study of IT BO-112 in combination with pembrolizumab in patients with liver metastases from colorectal or gastric/gastro-esophageal junction cancer patients is currently ongoing. Methods: Phase 2, single arm, open label study of IT BO-112 in combination with pembrolizumab in patients with advanced and/or metastatic melanoma that have progressed on anti-PD-1-containing treatment (NCT04570332). BO-112 will be administered once weekly (QW) in 1 to 8 tumor lesions, total dose 1-2 mg (depending on the number of injected lesions), for the first 7 weeks and then once every three weeks (Q3W); pembrolizumab 200 mg will be administered Q3W. Key eligibility criteria include histologically confirmed, unresectable cutaneous or mucosal melanoma with known BRAF status. Patients must have progressed on or after treatment with an anti-PD-1/L1 mAb. At least one lesion RECIST 1.1 measurable and amenable for weekly IT injection is needed. Primary efficacy variable is ORR by RECIST 1.1, assessed by independent central radiologist (by QUIBIM Precision platform). Secondary efficacy variables include clinical activity in terms of DCR, DOR, PFS, OS, iRECIST, safety and PKs. Exploratory objectives include itRECIST and evaluation of tumor microenvironment (by Pangaea laboratory). A 1-sided alpha of 4.19% and power of 81.8% are used. A total of 40 patients will be enrolled. If less than 8 patients out of 40 have ORR, the study will not meet the statistical bar. Study was approved on 14 December in Spain; enrollment is open; two sites are active as of 18 December 2020. Nineteen sites (12 in Spain and 7 in France) are planned to be activated. Citation Format: Iván Márquez-Rodas, Miguel Fernández de Sanmamed Gutiérrez, María González Cao, Ana M. Arance, Alfonso Berrocal, Eduardo Castañon, Sofía España, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Juan F. Rodríguez-Moreno, Pilar López Criado, Juana Oramas, Luis de la Cruz Merino, Stéphane Dalle, Caroline Dutriaux, Julie Charles, Caroline Robert, Brigitte Dréno, Henri Montaudié, Philippe Saiag, Javier Sánchez-López, María Rojas, Helena Escuin-Ordinas, Vanesa Pons Sanz, Sonia Maciá, Marisol Quintero. Phase 2 clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of intratumoral BO-112 in combination with pembrolizumab in patients with advanced melanoma that have progressive disease on anti-PD-1-based therapy [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr CT233.
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- 2021
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18. Abstract 1790: BO-112 as a modifier of the tumor microenvironment for liver metastases
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Javier Sánchez López, Mark Branum, Desiree Kanters, Mike Doherty, Vanesa Pons, Mercedes Pozuelo, Helena Escuin-Ordinas, Sonia Maciá, Marisol Quintero, María Rojas, and Juan M. Funes
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Cancer Research ,Tumor microenvironment ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cancer ,Pembrolizumab ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Immune system ,Oncology ,Antigen ,Cancer research ,Medicine ,business ,CD8 ,Progressive disease - Abstract
Introduction: BO-112 is an analogue of double-stranded viral RNA which is an agonist of TLR3, RIG-1 and MDA5. It is currently in phase II clinical development, being administered intratumorally (IT), in combination with checkpoint inhibitors. It has been administered through different tumor locations, including liver metastases. Liver metastases constitute a challenging setting, with a proven negative impact on prognosis in those patients treated with immunotherapy independently of the tumor type but especially in those tumors considered as cold. Liver has a particular microenvironment, due to its continuous exposure to nonself-antigens. In order to deal with those antigens arising from the gut via the portal circulation, the liver must strike a balance between tolerating them and exhibiting some degree of antimicrobial effect. This microenvironment shows low level expression of antigen presenting cells, impaired to prime T cells. As a result, it is challenging to respond to exposed antigens, what may eventually prevent protective immune responses. A viral infection mimic induced by BO-112 results in upregulation of genes involved in T-cell homing and migration. This rationale provide support for the potential of IT BO-112 administration into liver metastases. Besides, PD-L1 induced upregulation in response to BO-112, suggests the need to combine treatment with an anti-PD-1/PD-L1 agent. Methods: BO-112 has been injected intratumorally into the liver in 16 patients so far at two different studies: a phase I trial (NCT02828098, which included initially patients with solid tumors being treated with BO-112 monotherapy and, through subsequent amendment, in combination with anti PD-1 drugs in patients having developed progressive disease on these therapies, being treated with BO-112 plus the same checkpoint inhibitor) and a phase II study (NCT04508140), which is including patients with liver metastases from colorectal (CRC) or gastroesophageal (GE) origin, receiving IT BO-112 plus pembrolizumab. A new phase II in patients with metastatic melanoma will start enrollment shortly and will also allow injection of liver metastases (NCT04570332). New unpublished data: Tumor biopsy results from phase 1 study (NCT02828098) showed increased expression of gene signatures for IFN, CD8 T-cell activation, CTL effector function and tumor inflammation. Changes in CD8 lymphocytes infiltration of the tumor microenvironment (TME) and PD-L1 expression in the injected liver metastases from CRC and GE tumors will be presented as part of an independent abstract sharing NCT04508140 preliminary results. Conclusions: Liver is a challenging organ to achieve clinical benefit in terms of response; however, with IT BO-112 being administered in liver metastases from different tumors, there is a change in the TME with an increase in key biomarkers, which may overcome primary or secondary resistance to systemic immunotherapy. Citation Format: Marisol Quintero, Vanesa Pons, Sonia Maciá, María Rojas, Javier Sánchez López, Desiree Kanters, Helena Escuin-Ordinas, Mark Branum, Juan M. Funes, Mercedes Pozuelo, Mike Doherty. BO-112 as a modifier of the tumor microenvironment for liver metastases [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr 1790.
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- 2021
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19. A Preliminary Retrospective Analysis of the Effects of Policosanol on Ischemic Stroke Patients
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Julio César Fernández-Travieso, Javier Sánchez-López, José Illnait- Ferrer, Lilia Fernández-Dorta, and Sarahí Mendoza-Castaño
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Introduction: Stroke is one of the leading causes of mortality and disability. Clinical studies conducted in patients with a recent ischemic stroke and treated with policosanol (20 mg/day) + standard aspirin (AS) (125 mg/day) therapy have shown benefits versus placebo + AS to patients with recent ischemic stroke. The objective of the present paper is to a preliminary retrospective analysis of the policosanol treatment effects in the patients included in ischemic stroke recovery trials. Methods: This report analysed the records of all patients included in four ischemic stroke recovery studies. Patients with a modified Rankin Scale score (mRSs) 2 to 4 were randomized, within 30 days of onset, to policosanol+AS or placebo+AS, for 6 and 12 months. The primary outcome was mRSs reduction. Decreases on low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-C), total cholesterol and increases on high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C) were secondary outcomes. Results: Two hundred and seventy one patients (mean age: 67 years) were included in the analysis. At the six months more policosanol+AS (117/136, 86 %) than placebo+AS patients (10/135, 7.3 %) achieved mRSs goals. In correspondence, at the 12 months of the study more policosanol+AS (50/59, 84.7 %) than placebo+AS patients (5/59, 8.5 %) achieved mRSs goals. Treatment with policosanol+AS significantly decreased mean mRSs from the first interim check-up. The treatment effect did not wear off, even improved, after 6 and 12 months therapy when the net decrease versus placebo+AS was 56 % and 70.8 %, respectively. In addition, policosanol+AS reduced significantly LDL-C (21.6 %) and total cholesterol (12.5 %), and increased HDL-C (6.3 %). Treatments were safe and well tolerated. Eight patients reported serious adverse events (6 placebo+AS, 2 policosanol+AS) and other 13 patients (8 placebo+AS, 5 policosanol+AS) reported moderate or mild adverse events. Conclusions: The preliminary retrospective analysis of the effects of policosanol+AS on ischemic stroke patients indicate that this treatment for 6 and 12 months proved to be more effective than the placebo+AS treatment in the functional recovery of these patients. 
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- 2019
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20. Combination of radiomic and biomarker signatures as exploratory objective in a phase II trial with intratumoral BO-112 plus pembrolizumab for advanced melanoma
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Roberto Martin Huertas, Ruth Ann Roman, Miguel F. Sanmamed, Miguel Angel Molina Vila, Eva Muñoz-Couselo, Ana Arance, Ivan Marquez-Rodas, Javier Sánchez López, Stéphane Dalle, Angel Alberich-Bayarri, Delvys Rodriguez-Abreu, Maria Gonzalez-Cao, Sonia Maciá, Juan Francisco Rodriguez-Moreno, Marya F. Chaney, Irene Mayorga-Ruiz, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Marisol Quintero, Juan Martin-Liberal, and Eduardo Castanon
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Melanoma ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Pembrolizumab ,medicine.disease ,business ,Advanced melanoma - Abstract
TPS9586 Background: Intratumoral immunotherapies are gaining interest in oncology, particularly in melanoma. These therapies, however, have faced some issues. For instance, standard response criteria do not accurately describe tumor burden, and responses may differ for injected/non injected lesions. Besides, target lesions may become non evaluable. Biomarkers provide interesting information for these therapies. In addition, some radiomic signatures have been associated with CD-8 infiltration. BO-112 is a double stranded synthetic RNA formulated with polyethyleneimine (PEI) that mimics a viral infection, mobilizing the immune system and changing tumor microenvironment. Clinical data are available from a first-in-human study, which showed ORR of 11% and DCR of 46% in patients who had developed progressive disease on immunotherapy. In patients with melanoma, this ORR was 20%. A phase 2 clinical study of BO-112 with pembrolizumab in patients with liver metastases from digestive tumors is ongoing. Both studies brought up data regarding how some biomarkers are increased after a single dose of BO-112 and correlated with responses. In this phase II study in patients with pretreated melanoma (NCT04570332), we will prospectively assess CD-8 and PD-L1 by immunohistochemistry, which will be compared with multi-parametric radiologic findings and correlated with clinical benefit. In addition, retrospective DNA sequencing will be performed. This kind of exploratory analysis in intratumoral immunotherapies might be key to identify predictive and prognostic factors. Methods: Phase 2, single arm, open label study of BO-112 with pembrolizumab in patients with advanced melanoma. BO-112 is administered once weekly (QW) in 1 to 8 tumor lesions, total dose 1-2 mg (depending on the number of injected lesions), for the first 7 weeks and then once every three weeks (Q3W); pembrolizumab 200 mg will be administered Q3W. Key eligibility criteria: advanced cutaneous or mucosal melanoma; patients must have progressed on or after treatment with an antiPD-1/L1 mAb; at least one measurable lesion amenable for weekly IT injection. Primary efficacy variable is ORR by RECIST 1.1, assessed by independent central radiologist (QUIBIM Precision platform). A 1-sided alpha of 4.19% and power of 81.8% are used. If less than 8 patients out of 40 have ORR, the study will not meet the statistical bar. Secondary endpoints include clinical activity by RECIST1.1 and iRECIST, overall survival, safety and PKs. Exploratory objectives include itRECIST and evaluation of CD-8 and PD-L1 expression by immunohistochemistry (Pangaea laboratory), which will be correlated with radiomic signatures (first order and second order) from standard-of-care computed tomography (CT) images. Enrollment is open and 1 of planned 40 patients has been enrolled. Nineteen sites are planned to participate. Clinical trial information: NCT04570332.
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- 2021
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21. Coherent activity within and between hemispheres: cortico-cortical connectivity revealed by rTMS of the right posterior parietal cortex
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Chiara Mazzi, Sonia Mele, Chiara Bagattini, Javier Sanchez-Lopez, and Silvia Savazzi
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resting state ,EEG oscillatory dynamics ,functional connectivity ,inter-hemispheric coherence ,rTMS ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
IntroductionLow frequency (1 Hz) repetitive transcranial stimulation (rTMS) applied over right posterior parietal cortex (rPPC) has been shown to reduce cortical excitability both of the stimulated area and of the interconnected contralateral homologous areas. In the present study, we investigated the whole pattern of intra- and inter-hemispheric cortico-cortical connectivity changes induced by rTMS over rPPC.MethodsTo do so, 14 healthy participants underwent resting state EEG recording before and after 30 min of rTMS at 1 Hz or sham stimulation over the rPPC (electrode position P6). Real stimulation was applied at 90% of motor threshold. Coherence values were computed on the electrodes nearby the stimulated site (i.e., P4, P8, and CP6) considering all possible inter- and intra-hemispheric combinations for the following frequency bands: delta (0.5–4 Hz), theta (4–8 Hz), alpha (8–12Hz), low beta (12–20 Hz), high beta (20–30 Hz), and gamma (30–50 Hz).Results and discussionResults revealed a significant increase in coherence in delta, theta, alpha and beta frequency bands between rPPC and the contralateral homologous sites. Moreover, an increase in coherence in theta, alpha, beta and gamma frequency bands was found between rPPC and right frontal sites, reflecting the activation of the fronto-parietal network within the right hemisphere. Summarizing, subthreshold rTMS over rPPC revealed cortico-cortical inter- and intra-hemispheric connectivity as measured by the increase in coherence among these areas. Moreover, the present results further confirm previous evidence indicating that the increase of coherence values is related to intra- and inter-hemispheric inhibitory effects of rTMS. These results can have implications for devising evidence-based rehabilitation protocols after stroke.
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- 2024
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22. Direct antimicrobial susceptibility testing from the blood culture pellet obtained for MALDI-TOF identification of Enterobacterales and Pseudomonas aeruginosa
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C. Navarro-San Francisco, Rafael Cantón, Javier Sánchez-López, J.M. López-Pintor, María-Isabel Morosini, Andrea García-Caballero, and E Loza Fernández de Bobadilla
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0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,Time Factors ,Cefepime ,030106 microbiology ,Ceftazidime ,Bacteremia ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,medicine.disease_cause ,Tazobactam ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,polycyclic compounds ,medicine ,Tobramycin ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,business.industry ,Diagnostic Tests, Routine ,General Medicine ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Bacterial Typing Techniques ,Infectious Diseases ,Blood Culture ,Ticarcillin ,Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization ,Colistin ,business ,Gammaproteobacteria ,Piperacillin ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To standardize the methodology for conducting direct antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) of Enterobacterales and Pseudomonas aeruginosa causing bacteremia from positive blood culture pellets. Two methods for processing positive blood cultures with Enterobacterales and P. aeruginosa were compared: a conventional method for identification and AST versus a direct method obtaining a pellet for both matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization–time of flight (MALDI-TOF) identification and direct AST. A total of 157 (145 Enterobacterales, 12 P. aeruginosa) positive blood cultures were included. Microorganism identification showed 100% concordance between both methods at species and genus level. Definitive AST results were obtained 24 h earlier with the rapid method than the conventional one (p
- Published
- 2018
23. Immunohistochemical analysis of caspase expression in the brains of individuals with obesity or overweight
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Erick Gómez‐Apo, Juan Silva‐Pereyra, Virgilia Soto‐Abraham, Alejandra Mondragón‐Maya, and Javier Sanchez‐Lopez
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caspase‐1 ,caspase‐8 ,caspases ,immunohistochemical ,neuroinflammation ,Internal medicine ,RC31-1245 - Abstract
Abstract Mechanisms underlying the negative effects of obesity on the brain are still unknown. Obesity is associated with oxidative stress in the brain and neuroinflammation that promotes neurodegenerative diseases. Chronic low‐grade neuroinflammation in obesity could be associated with lower volumes of gray matter and lower neuronal density. If neuroinflammation mediated by the expression of cytokines and chemokines leads to apoptosis, this can be assessed by examining caspase expression. The aim of this study was to compare the expression of caspases in the 16 brains of donors with obesity/overweight (n = 8; Body Mass Index [BMI] = 31.6 ± 4.35 kg/m2; 2 females; Age = 52.9 ± 4.76 years) and normal weight (n = 8; BMI = 21.8 ± 1.5 kg/m2; 3 females; Age = 37.8 ± 19.2 years). Sixteen human brain samples were processed. Serial paraffin sections were examined by anti‐caspase immunochemistry (caspase‐3, caspase‐4, caspase‐6, caspase‐1, caspase‐8, and caspase‐9 antibodies). Postmortem samples of cerebral cortex tissue were captured as photomicrographs and the images obtained were analyzed using ImageJ software to obtain the percentage of positive caspase expression. Nonparametric Mann–Whitney U tests were performed to compare caspase expression between samples from donors with obesity/overweight and normal weight. Taking into consideration the immunohistochemistry results, the Search Tool for the Retrieval of Interacting Genes was used to model molecular interactions. Results showed that brain samples from individuals with obesity/overweight exhibited significantly greater values of positive expression for Caspase‐1 (U = 16.5, p = 0.05, Cohen d = 0.89) and −8 (U = 15, p = 0.03, Cohen d = 0.99) than those from donors with normal weight. This study contributes to the knowledge about the inflammatory effects of obesity/overweight on brain, suggesting the activation of the alternative inflammasome pathway in which interact caspase‐1 and ‐8.
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- 2023
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24. Hypermucoviscous Klebsiella pneumoniae: A challenge in community acquired infection
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Andrea García-Caballero, Enrique Navas, Carmen Quereda, Carolina Navarro-San Francisco, María Isabel Morosini, Fernando Dronda, María Díez-Aguilar, Patricia Ruiz-Garbajosa, Rafael Cantón, and Javier Sánchez-López
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Serotype ,biology ,business.industry ,Klebsiella pneumoniae ,030106 microbiology ,Virulence ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Article ,3. Good health ,Microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Infectious Diseases ,Endophthalmitis ,Bacteremia ,Medicine ,Multilocus sequence typing ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Risk factor ,business ,Liver abscess - Abstract
In 1986, a new syndrome was described in Taiwan secondary to hypervirulent K. pneumoniae (hvKP), and its main feature was the ability to cause severe infection in young and immunocompetent hosts. Their virulence is explained by the efficient acquisition of iron and an increase in capsule production, which confer the characteristic hypermucoviscous phenotype. Most of these cases have been described in Asia and subsequently spread to America and Europe, where their prevalence is much lower. We present four cases of bacteremia and liver abscesses secondary to hypervirulent K. pneumoniae, two of them associated with endophthalmitis. K. pneumoniae isolates recovered from two of the patients belonged to capsular serotype K1 (genes wzx_K1 and magA), while the other two were K2 (gene wzy_K2). Both of the K1 isolates were classified into a ST23, and isolates of serotype K2 belonged to the ST375 and ST881 clones.In Europe, hvKP isolates are less frequently recovered, mostly associated with Asian citizens or travelers, which was not the case in our patients. K1 capsular serotype is a major cause of primary liver abscess and secondary septic embolus, and K2 is associated with secondary liver abscess. Although these hypervirulent variants usually affect immunocompetent patients as in our cases, diabetes mellitus is a major risk factor for the most invasive cases, with concomitant poor prognosis. Identification of hypervirulent K. pneumoniae serotypes K1 and K2 should be considered as part of the microbiological diagnosis of community-acquired liver abscess due to their clinical implications. Keywords: Hypermucoviscous Klebsiella pneumoniae, Liver abscess, Community acquired infection, MLST
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- 2019
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25. Ataque transitorio de isquemia, el heraldo del ictus Transient ischemic attack: the herald of stroke
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Javier Sánchez López, Isis Rodríguez Ribalta, and Martha Beatriz Díaz Dehesa
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lcsh:R5-920 ,transient ischemic attack ,ictus isquémico ,ischemic stroke ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,ataque transitorio de isquemia - Abstract
Introducción: el ataque transitorio de isquemia constituye una parte fundamental de la enfermedad cerebrovascular, en muchas ocasiones no bien diagnosticado por su corta duración, lo difícil de ver y sus variadas manifestaciones clínicas. Esta investigación se realizó con el propósito de caracterizar a los pacientes con ictus isquémico y previo ataque transitorio de isquemia, atendidos en el servicio de consulta externa no. 3 del Instituto de Neurología y Neurocirugía (INN) entre febrero de 2006 y noviembre de 2009. Métodos: se realizó un estudio observacional, descriptivo en 50 pacientes que, previo al ictus isquémico, habían presentado cuadros de ataques transitorios de isquemia. Se describieron las manifestaciones clínicas de presentación de estos, se analizaron los factores de riesgo, el territorio vascular afectado y el tiempo transcurrido entre el ataque transitorio de isquemia y el ictus isquémico. Resultados: en el 100 % de los pacientes, los ictus isquémicos dañaron el mismo territorio vascular afectado por los ataques transitorios de isquemia que le antecedieron. Conclusiones: quedó demostrada la importancia del ataque transitorio de isquemia como piedra angular fundamental en la enfermedad cerebrovascular. El infarto cerebral ocurrió con más frecuencia en los primeros meses secundarios al ataque transitorio de isquemia. La hipertensión arterial, los inadecuados hábitos de vida y la diabetes mellitus, constituyeron los principales factores de riesgo en la población estudiada.Introduction: transient ischemic attack constitutes a major part of cerebrovascular disease. In many cases it is not well diagnosed, due to its short duration, its many clinical manifestations and the difficulty to spot it. This study was conducted with the purpose of characterizing patients with ischemic stroke and a previous transient ischemic attack cared for at Outpatient Service No. 3 of the Institute of Neurology and Neurosurgery (INN) between February 2006 and November 2009. Methods: an observational descriptive study was conducted with 50 patients who had had a transient ischemic attack before they had their stroke. A description was made of the clinical manifestations at presentation, and an analysis was performed of the risk factors, the affected vascular territory, and the time elapsed between the transient ischemic attack and the ischemic stroke. Results: in 100 % of the patients the vascular territory affected by the ischemic stroke was the same as that affected by the preceding transient attacks. Conclusions: it was demonstrated that the transient ischemic attack is a fundamental component of cerebrovascular disease. Cerebral infarction was more frequent during the first months following the transient ischemic attack. Arterial hypertension, inadequate life styles and diabetes mellitus were the main risk factors in the population studied.
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- 2012
26. Seroprevalence of Oestrus ovis (Diptera, Oestridae) Infestation and Associated Risk Factors in Ovine Livestock from Southwestern Spain
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María Alcaide, David Reina, Javier Sánchez-López, Eva Frontera, and Ignacio Navarrete
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Infectious Diseases ,General Veterinary ,Insect Science ,Parasitology - Published
- 2005
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27. Evaluación de la atención en deportistas de artes marciales. Expertos vs. novato
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Javier Sánchez López, Thalía Fernández, Juan Silva Pereyra, Juan A. Martínez Mesa, and Alma J. Moreno Aguirre
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Athletes ,TOVA ,Psicología - Abstract
"The aim of this study is to determine differences in the performance of an attention-related task involving martial arts skills. 12 expertmartial arts athletes and 13 novices took part, performing the Test of Variables of Attention (Leark, Greenberg, Kindschi, Dupuy and Hughes, 2007).Using a non-parametric statistical permutation method, the test data for each variable, condition and segment of the test was analysed. Comparisons ofthe groups showed a trend toward a higher global Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) score by the expert athletes as compared with thenovices. In order to find out each group’s performance during the test, a statistical intra-group analysis was performed. Generally, the results revealedmore consistent accuracy and response times by the experts than by the novice athletes. The results suggest that physical and mental training in themartial arts may increase the attention skills of sportsmen and women."
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- 2014
28. Atención en deportistas de artes marciales expertos versus novatos. Estudio de potenciales relacionados con eventos
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Javier Sánchez López
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- 2014
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29. Seroprevalence of Oestrus ovis (Diptera, Oestridae) infestation and associated risk factors in ovine livestock from southwestern Spain
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I. Navarrete, Eva Frontera, D. Reina, María Alcaide, and Javier Sánchez-López
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Veterinary medicine ,Animal breeding ,Sheep Diseases ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Population density ,Oestrus ovis ,Antibodies ,Myiasis ,Animal science ,Risk Factors ,Infestation ,Nose Diseases ,medicine ,Seroprevalence ,Animals ,Ovis ,Population Density ,Sheep ,General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Altitude ,Diptera ,biology.organism_classification ,Infectious Diseases ,Spain ,Insect Science ,Larva ,Parasitology ,Livestock ,Flock ,business - Abstract
This survey was carried out to determine the seroprevalence of nasal infestation by sheep bot fly, Oestrus ovis L., and to identify the risk factors associated with the disease in flocks in southwestern Spain. In total, 5,878 sera samples of adult sheep were collected at random in 551 farms from four provinces in the southwestern Spain: Badajoz, Cáceres, Córdoba, and Sevilla. Sera were tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for O. ovis antibodies, by using a crude L2 larval as antigen. The seropositive mean prevalence was 69.30%, and mean percentage of optical densities was 61.83%. There were significant differences between the provinces studied; C6rdoba and Sevilla were the provinces with more infested animals and higher seroprevalences. The correlation between seroprevalence and percentage of antibodies by farms was significant. There were only 18 farms free of seropositive animals, and 115 of the total 551 farms had all sampled animals seropositive, an indication of the high importance of this parasitosis in the investigated areas. Altitude, latitude, flock size, and ovine population density were the potential risk factors associated with the detection of O. ovis antibodies. Those animals breeding in regions located at low altitudes (500 m), meridian latitudes (39.5 degrees N), and on farms with medium-to-large flock size (250 sheep) and high ovine population density (100 sheep per km2) were more likely to be seropositive. These findings confirm that these studied factors should be considered as potential risk factors to the presence of O. ovis in ovines from southwestern Spain.
- Published
- 2005
30. Multilevel Evaluation of Rapid Weight Loss in Wrestling and Taekwondo
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Cecilia Castor-Praga, Jeanette M. Lopez-Walle, and Javier Sanchez-Lopez
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acute weight loss ,wrestling ,taekwondo ,multidimensional evaluation ,psycho-educational intervention ,Sociology (General) ,HM401-1281 - Abstract
The practice of strategies for rapid weight loss (RWL) involve diverse factors, such as individual expectations, social interactions, structural elements, etc., conforming to a “culture” of RWL, which must be evaluated and understood in a broad sense. Based on the need of a comprehensive evaluation of the use of RWL in practitioners of combat sports, an ad hoc questionnaire designed for this study, which includes the types and detailed descriptions of RWL strategies, that athletes currently use, the prevalence and frequency of use, the physiological and psychological consequences, the perception of the effect of RWL on their own performance and finally, the individuals who influence the adoption of this practice. One hundred and sixty combat athletes from wrestling and taekwondo disciplines, from Mexico, filled out this questionnaire. Data collected for their statistical analyses. Results revealed a RWL strategies prevalence of 96% across the participants. Our results revealed that 57% of those athletes using RWL lose more than 5% of their body mass. Across the athletes, the most commonly used RWL strategies and with higher intensity were increased exercise and training with plastic or thick clothes. The greater the relative weight loss, the greater the presence of physiological symptoms in athletes, such as rapid breathing and blood pressure. Athletes also mentioned mood states such as tiredness, sadness, confusion, fatigue and vigor, these last two positive and negative mood states are associated with the relative weight loss, respectively. Finally, the people who most influenced the adoption of RWL strategies were the coaches, parents and nutritionists. In conclusion, the questionnaire prepared for this study allowed us to obtain valuable information about the several factors, and their interactions, involved in the practice of RWL in combat athletes. This type of practice could increase health risks and decrease their performance. Therefore, here we state the importance of a comprehensive evaluation of RWL strategies that allows the development of psycho-educational and social-based interventions and programs for the promotion of proper weight maintenance, and prevention against RWL strategies, involving the individuals who influence the adoption of these practices and supporting it with the help of communication technologies.
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- 2021
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31. Face Recognition Deficits in a Patient With Alzheimer's Disease: Amnesia or Agnosia? The Importance of Electrophysiological Markers for Differential Diagnosis
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Chiara Mazzi, Gloria Massironi, Javier Sanchez-Lopez, Laura De Togni, and Silvia Savazzi
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prosopagnosia ,dementia ,electrophysiological markers ,faces ,N170 ,N250 ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Face recognition deficits are frequently reported in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and often attributed to memory impairment. However, it has been hypothesized that failure in identifying familiar people could also be due to deficits in higher-level perceptual processes, since there is evidence showing a reduced inversion effect for faces but not for cars in AD. To address the involvement of these higher processes, we investigated event-related potential (ERP) neural correlates of faces in a patient with AD showing a face recognition deficit. Eight healthy participants were tested as a control group. Participants performed different tasks following the stimulus presentation. In experiment 1, they should indicate whether the stimulus was either a face or a house or a scrambled image. In experiments 2 and 3, they should discriminate between upright and inverted faces (in experiment 2, stimuli were faces with neutral or fearful expressions, while in experiment 3, stimuli were famous or unfamiliar faces). Electrophysiological results reveal that the typical face-specific modulation of the N170 component, which is thought to reflect the structural encoding of faces, was not present in patient MCG, despite being affected by the emotional content of the face implicitly processed by MCG. Conversely, the N400 component, which is thought to reflect the recruitment of the memory trace of the face identity, was found to be implicitly modulated in MCG. These results may identify a possible role for gnosic processes in face recognition deficits in AD and suggest the importance of adopting an integrated approach to the AD diagnosis while considering electrophysiological markers.
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- 2020
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32. Effects of incidental physical activity on morphosyntactic processing in aging.
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Graciela C Alatorre-Cruz, Javier Sanchez-Lopez, Juan Silva-Pereyra, and Thalía Fernández
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Older adults have difficulties in sentence comprehension when working memory (WM) load increases (e.g., multiple embedded clauses). Structured physical activity has been related to improvements in cognition; however, incidental physical activity (PA, i.e., unstructured daily physical activities), particularly incidental vigorous activity has been poorly studied in relation to its effects on behavior. Furthermore, no positive effect on language has been reported in either form of physical activity. The aim of this study was to evaluate how two levels of PA (high or low) affect WM processing and how this, in turn, may affect morphosyntactic processing in older adults. Individuals with high PA (n = 18) had a higher WM load effect than those with low PA (n = 18), both behaviorally (greater differences between high and low WM loads in correct responses) and in terms of event-related potentials (only subjects with high PA showed LAN and P600b amplitude differences between high and low WM loads). These findings suggest that PA promotes cognitive strategies to face WM loads and morphosyntactic processing.
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- 2020
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33. Functional interactions in patients with hemianopia: A graph theory-based connectivity study of resting fMRI signal.
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Caterina A Pedersini, Joan Guàrdia-Olmos, Marc Montalà-Flaquer, Nicolò Cardobi, Javier Sanchez-Lopez, Giorgia Parisi, Silvia Savazzi, and Carlo A Marzi
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The assessment of task-independent functional connectivity (FC) after a lesion causing hemianopia remains an uncovered topic and represents a crucial point to better understand the neural basis of blindsight (i.e. unconscious visually triggered behavior) and visual awareness. In this light, we evaluated functional connectivity (FC) in 10 hemianopic patients and 10 healthy controls in a resting state paradigm. The main aim of this study is twofold: first of all we focused on the description and assessment of density and intensity of functional connectivity and network topology with and without a lesion affecting the visual pathway, and then we extracted and statistically compared network metrics, focusing on functional segregation, integration and specialization. Moreover, a study of 3-cycle triangles with prominent connectivity was conducted to analyze functional segregation calculated as the area of each triangle created connecting three neighboring nodes. To achieve these purposes we applied a graph theory-based approach, starting from Pearson correlation coefficients extracted from pairs of regions of interest. In these analyses we focused on the FC extracted by the whole brain as well as by four resting state networks: The Visual (VN), Salience (SN), Attention (AN) and Default Mode Network (DMN), to assess brain functional reorganization following the injury. The results showed a general decrease in density and intensity of functional connections, that leads to a less compact structure characterized by decrease in functional integration, segregation and in the number of interconnected hubs in both the Visual Network and the whole brain, despite an increase in long-range inter-modules connections (occipito-frontal connections). Indeed, the VN was the most affected network, characterized by a decrease in intra- and inter-network connections and by a less compact topology, with less interconnected nodes. Surprisingly, we observed a higher functional integration in the DMN and in the AN regardless of the lesion extent, that may indicate a functional reorganization of the brain following the injury, trying to compensate for the general reduced connectivity. Finally we observed an increase in functional specialization (lower between-network connectivity) and in inter-networks functional segregation, which is reflected in a less compact network topology, highly organized in functional clusters. These descriptive findings provide new insight on the spontaneous brain activity in hemianopic patients by showing an alteration in the intrinsic architecture of a large-scale brain system that goes beyond the impairment of a single RSN.
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- 2020
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34. Dynamics of Executive Functions, Basic Psychological Needs, Impulsivity, and Depressive Symptoms in American Football Players
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Yahel E. Rincón-Campos, Javier Sanchez-Lopez, Jeanette M. López-Walle, and Xóchitl Ortiz-Jiménez
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inhibition ,frustration ,football ,impulsivity ,motivational processes ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Executive functions play an important role in sports since the ability to plan, organize, and regulate behavior to reach an objective or goal depends on these functions. Some of the components of executive functions, such as inhibition of impulsive behavior and cognitive flexibility, are necessary for contact sports (e.g., American football) to carry out successful plays on the sports field. Executive functions have been studied in the sporting environment, but their relationship with the athletes’ basic psychological needs (BPN), such as autonomy, competence, and relatedness, remains unexplored. Due to the importance of motivational processes over cognitive functions and in the generated adaptive results in athletes, this relationship should be taken into account. Therefore, the aim of this study was to analyze and compare executive functioning and psychological need thwarting overimpulsivity and psychological distress, before and after the season (4 months) in 28 undergraduate football players. Neuropsychological and psychological tests were applied. The results showed that there was an improvement in inhibition and planning at the end of the season. There was also an increase in attention and motor impulsiveness, and a decrease in need thwarting at the end of the season. A positive association between executive function, impulsiveness, psychological needs, and affective symptoms were also found. Our findings reveal the dynamics of sport-related psychological variables throughout the sport season in American football players, the association of these for the achievement of sport success, and the importance of encouraging proper management of emotions.
- Published
- 2019
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35. Neural Correlates of Visuospatial Attention to Unseen Stimuli in Hemianopic Patients. A Steady-State Visual Evoked Potential Study
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Javier Sanchez-Lopez, Silvia Savazzi, Caterina Annalaura Pedersini, Nicolò Cardobi, and Carlo Alberto Marzi
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hemianopia ,attention ,visual awareness ,blindsight ,steady-state VEP ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The relationship between attention and awareness is a topic of great interest in cognitive neuroscience. Some studies in healthy participants and hemianopic patients have shown dissociation between these two processes. In contrast, others confirmed the classic notion that the two processes are mutually exclusive. To try and cast further light on this fascinating dilemma, in the present study we have investigated the neural mechanisms of visual spatial attention when perceptual awareness is totally lacking. To do that, we monitored with steady-state visual evoked potentials (SSVEPs) the neurophysiological correlates of endogenous spatial attention to unseen stimuli presented to the blind field of hemianopic patients. Behaviourally, stimulus detection (a brief change in the orientation of a gabor grating) was absent in the blind hemifield while in the sighted field there was a lower, but non-significant, performance in hit rate with respect to a healthy control group. Importantly, however, in both blind and sighted hemifield of hemianopics (as well as in healthy participants) SSVEP recordings showed an attentional effect with higher frequency power in the attended than unattended condition. The scalp distribution of this effect was broadly in keeping with the location of the dorsal system of endogenous spatial attention. In conclusion, the present results provide evidence that the neural correlates of spatial attention are present regardless of visual awareness and this is in accord with the general hypothesis of a possible dissociation between attention and awareness.
- Published
- 2019
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36. Effects of Age and Working Memory Load on Syntactic Processing: An Event-Related Potential Study
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Graciela C. Alatorre-Cruz, Juan Silva-Pereyra, Thalía Fernández, Mario A. Rodríguez-Camacho, Susana A. Castro-Chavira, and Javier Sanchez-Lopez
- Subjects
working memory ,normal aging ,syntactic processing ,LAN ,P600a ,P600b ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Cognitive changes in aging include working memory (WM) decline, which may hamper language comprehension. An increase in WM demands in older adults would probably provoke a poorer sentence processing performance in this age group. A way to increase the WM load is to separate two lexical units in an agreement relation (i.e., adjective and noun), in a given sentence. To test this hypothesis, event-related potentials (ERPs) were collected from Spanish speakers (30 older adults, mean age = 66.06 years old; and 30 young adults, mean age = 25.7 years old) who read sentences to detect grammatical errors. The sentences varied with regard to (1) the gender agreement of the noun and adjective, where the gender of the adjective either agreed or disagreed with the noun, and (2) the WM load (i.e., the number of words between the noun and adjective in the sentence). No significant behavioral differences between groups were observed in the accuracy of the response, but older adults showed longer reaction times regardless of WM load condition. Compared with young participants, older adults showed a different pattern of ERP components characterized by smaller amplitudes of LAN, P600a, and P600b effects when the WM load was increased. A smaller LAN effect probably reflects greater difficulties in processing the morpho-syntactic features of the sentence, while smaller P600a and P600b effects could be related to difficulties in recovering and mapping all sentence constituents. We concluded that the ERP pattern in older adults showed subtle problems in syntactic processing when the WM load was increased, which was not sufficient to affect response accuracy but was only observed to result in a longer reaction time.
- Published
- 2018
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37. Two Different Populations within the Healthy Elderly: Lack of Conflict Detection in Those at Risk of Cognitive Decline
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Sergio M. Sánchez-Moguel, Graciela C. Alatorre-Cruz, Juan Silva-Pereyra, Sofía González-Salinas, Javier Sanchez-Lopez, Gloria A. Otero-Ojeda, and Thalía Fernández
- Subjects
EEG ,theta activity ,inhibitory control ,ERPs ,counting-stroop task ,aging ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
During healthy aging, inhibitory processing is affected at the sensorial, perceptual, and cognitive levels. The assessment of event-related potentials (ERPs) during the Stroop task has been used to study age-related decline in the efficiency of inhibitory processes. Studies using ERPs have found that the P300 amplitude increases and the N500 amplitude is attenuated in healthy elderly adults compared to those in young adults. On the other hand, it has been reported that theta excess in resting EEG with eyes closed is a good predictor of cognitive decline during aging 7 years later, while a normal EEG increases the probability of not developing cognitive decline. The behavioral and ERP responses during a Counting-Stroop task were compared between 22 healthy elderly subjects with normal EEG (Normal-EEG group) and 22 healthy elderly subjects with an excess of EEG theta activity (Theta-EEG group). Behaviorally, the Normal-EEG group showed a higher behavioral interference effect than the Theta-EEG group. ERP patterns were different between the groups, and two facts are highlighted: (a) the P300 amplitude was higher in the Theta-EEG group, with both groups showing a P300 effect in almost all electrodes, and (b) the Theta-EEG group did not show an N500 effect. These results suggest that the diminishment in inhibitory control observed in the Theta-EEG group may be compensated by different processes in earlier stages, which would allow them to perform the task with similar efficiency to that of participants with a normal EEG. This study is the first to show that healthy elderly subjects with an excess of theta EEG activity not only are at risk of developing cognitive decline but already have a cognitive impairment.
- Published
- 2018
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38. High levels of incidental physical activity are positively associated with cognition and EEG activity in aging.
- Author
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Javier Sanchez-Lopez, Juan Silva-Pereyra, Thalía Fernández, Graciela C Alatorre-Cruz, Susana A Castro-Chavira, Mauricio González-López, and Sergio M Sánchez-Moguel
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
High levels of physical activity seem to positively influence health and cognition across the lifespan. Several studies have found that aerobic exercise enhances cognition and likely prevents cognitive decline in the elderly. Nevertheless, the association of incidental physical activity (IPA) with health and cognition during aging has not been studied. Thus, the aim of this study was to evaluate the association of IPA level with cognitive functions and resting electroencephalogram (EEG) in healthy old participants. Participants (n = 97) with normal scores on psychometric and neuropsychological tests and normal values in blood analyses were included. A cluster analysis based on the scores of the Yale Physical Activity Scale (YPAS) allowed the formation of two groups: active, with high levels of IPA, and passive, with low levels of IPA. Eyes-closed resting EEG was recorded from the participants; the fast Fourier transform was used offline to calculate absolute power (AP), relative power (RP), and mean frequency (MF) measures. There were no differences in socioeconomic status, cognitive reserve, general cognitive status, or lipid and TSH profiles between the groups. The results of cognitive tests revealed significant differences in the performance variables of the WAIS scores (p = .015), with advantages for the active group. The resting EEG exhibited significantly slower activity involving the frontal, central, and temporal regions in the passive group (p < .05). Specifically, higher delta RP (F7, T3), lower delta MF (F4, C4, T4, T6, Fz, Cz), higher theta AP (C4), higher theta RP (F4, C4, T3, Fz), lower alpha AP (F3, F7, T3), lower alpha RP (F7), and lower total MF (F3, F7, T3, T5, Fz) were found. Altogether, these results suggest that IPA induces a neuroprotective effect, which is reflected both in behavioral and electrophysiological variables during aging.
- Published
- 2018
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39. Lights from the Dark: Neural Responses from a Blind Visual Hemifield
- Author
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Alice Bollini, Javier Sanchez-Lopez, Silvia Savazzi, and Carlo A. Marzi
- Subjects
blindsight ,perceptual awareness ,event related potential ,hemianopia ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Here we present evidence that a hemianopic patient with a lesion of the left primary visual cortex (V1) showed an unconscious above-chance orientation discrimination with moving rather than static visual gratings presented to the blind hemifield. The patient did not report any perceptual experience of the stimulus features except for a feeling that something appeared in the blind hemifield. Interestingly, in the lesioned left hemisphere, following stimulus presentation to the blind hemifield, we found an event-related potential (ERP) N1 component at a post-stimulus onset latency of 180–260 ms and a source generator in the left BA 19. In contrast, we did not find evidence of the early visual components C1 and P1 and of the later component P300. A positive component (P2a) was recorded between 250 and 320 ms after stimulus onset frontally in both hemispheres. Finally, in the time range 320–440 ms there was a negative peak in right posterior electrodes that was present only for the moving condition. In sum, there were two noteworthy results: Behaviorally, we found evidence of above chance unconscious (blindsight) orientation discrimination with moving but not static stimuli. Physiologically, in contrast to previous studies, we found reliable ERP components elicited by stimuli presented to the blind hemifield at various electrode locations and latencies that are likely to index either the perceptual report of the patient (N1 and P2a) or, the above-chance unconscious performance with moving stimuli as is the case of the posterior ERP negative component. This late component can be considered as the neural correlate of a kind of blindsight enabling feature discrimination only when stimuli are moving and that is subserved by the intact right hemisphere through interhemispheric transfer.
- Published
- 2017
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40. Sustained attention in skilled and novice martial arts athletes: a study of event-related potentials and current sources
- Author
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Javier Sanchez-Lopez, Juan Silva-Pereyra, and Thalia Fernandez
- Subjects
Sustained attention ,Athletes ,Brain electrical activity ,Expertise ,ERP ,sLORETA ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Background. Research on sports has revealed that behavioral responses and event-related brain potentials (ERP) are better in expert than in novice athletes for sport-related tasks. Focused attention is essential for optimal athletic performance across different sports but mainly in combat disciplines. During combat, long periods of focused attention (i.e., sustained attention) are required for a good performance. Few investigations have reported effects of expertise on brain electrical activity and its neural generators during sport-unrelated attention tasks. The aim of the present study was to assess the effect of expertise (i.e., skilled and novice martial arts athletes) analyzing the ERP during a sustained attention task (Continuous Performance Task; CPT) and the cortical three-dimensional distribution of current density, using the sLORETA technique. Methods. CPT consisted in an oddball-type paradigm presentation of five stimuli (different pointing arrows) where only one of them (an arrow pointing up right) required a motor response (i.e., target). CPT was administered to skilled and novice martial arts athletes while EEG were recorded. Amplitude ERP data from target and non-target stimuli were compared between groups. Subsequently, current source analysis for each ERP component was performed on each subject. sLORETA images were compared by condition and group using Statistical Non-Parametric Mapping analysis. Results. Skilled athletes showed significant amplitude differences between target and non-target conditions in early ERP components (P100 and P200) as opposed to the novice group; however, skilled athletes showed no significant effect of condition in N200 but novices did show a significant effect. Current source analysis showed greater differences in activations in skilled compared with novice athletes between conditions in the frontal (mainly in the Superior Frontal Gyrus and Medial Frontal Gyrus) and limbic (mainly in the Anterior Cingulate Gyrus) lobes. Discussion. These results are supported by previous findings regarding activation of neural structures that underlie sustained attention. Our findings may indicate a better-controlled attention in skilled athletes, which suggests that expertise can improve effectiveness in allocation of attentional resources during the first stages of cognitive processing during combat.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Differences in visuo-motor control in skilled vs. novice martial arts athletes during sustained and transient attention tasks: a motor-related cortical potential study.
- Author
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Javier Sanchez-Lopez, Thalia Fernandez, Juan Silva-Pereyra, Juan A Martinez Mesa, and Francesco Di Russo
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Cognitive and motor processes are essential for optimal athletic performance. Individuals trained in different skills and sports may have specialized cognitive abilities and motor strategies related to the characteristics of the activity and the effects of training and expertise. Most studies have investigated differences in motor-related cortical potential (MRCP) during self-paced tasks in athletes but not in stimulus-related tasks. The aim of the present study was to identify the differences in performance and MRCP between skilled and novice martial arts athletes during two different types of tasks: a sustained attention task and a transient attention task. Behavioral and electrophysiological data from twenty-two martial arts athletes were obtained while they performed a continuous performance task (CPT) to measure sustained attention and a cued continuous performance task (c-CPT) to measure transient attention. MRCP components were analyzed and compared between groups. Electrophysiological data in the CPT task indicated larger prefrontal positive activity and greater posterior negativity distribution prior to a motor response in the skilled athletes, while novices showed a significantly larger response-related P3 after a motor response in centro-parietal areas. A different effect occurred in the c-CPT task in which the novice athletes showed strong prefrontal positive activity before a motor response and a large response-related P3, while in skilled athletes, the prefrontal activity was absent. We propose that during the CPT, skilled athletes were able to allocate two different but related processes simultaneously according to CPT demand, which requires controlled attention and controlled motor responses. On the other hand, in the c-CPT, skilled athletes showed better cue facilitation, which permitted a major economy of resources and "automatic" or less controlled responses to relevant stimuli. In conclusion, the present data suggest that motor expertise enhances neural flexibility and allows better adaptation of cognitive control to the requested task.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. 961 Preliminary results of a phase 2 study of intratumoral administration of BO-112 with pembrolizumab in patients with advanced melanoma that have progressive disease on anti-PD-1-based therapy
- Author
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Caroline Robert, Helena Escuin-Ordinas, Juan Martin-Liberal, Miguel Sanmamed, Stephane Dalle, Ana Arance, Marya Chaney, Sorilla Prey, Alfonso Berrocal, Caroline Dutriaux, Iván Márquez Rodas, Philippe Saiag, Luis de la Cruz Merino, Juan Rodríguez-Moreno, Eduardo Castañón Álvarez, Pablo Cerezuela-Fuentes, Henry Montaudie, María González Cao, Julie Charles, María Pilar López Criado, Enrique de Miguel, Elisa Funk-Brentano, Roberto Huertas, Delvys Rodríguez Abreu, Eva Muñoz Couselo, Javier Sánchez López, and Sonia Maciá
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Implementación de sistema de control automático de temperatura en proceso de parafinado mediante labview
- Author
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Israel Alejandro Rojas Olmedo, Héctor Javier Sánchez López, Aldo González Gomeztagle, and Erick Rojas Ramírez
- Subjects
Tarjeta de adquisición de datos USB NI 6000 ,Pabileras ,Mixtado ,Computer software ,QA76.75-76.765 - Abstract
El presente proyecto se enfoca en procesos de automatización para el control de variables de temperatura y longitud debido a la necesidad de controlar algunas de las principales variables físicas que forman parte del proceso de producción|, con ello obtener las señales físicas e interpretarlas para su procesamiento y asignación de una valoración de referencia medible, que permita controlar los valores para determinar el comportamiento de los procesos. Dichos procesos de automatización se desarrollaron mediante control asistido por computadora, software de programación grafica LabVIEW y una tarjeta de adquisición de datos USB NI 6000.
- Published
- 2020
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