Browsing by Author "Liew, Aaron (36900561300)"
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
- Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Methodological considerations in injury burden of disease studies across Europe: a systematic literature review(2022) ;Charalampous, Periklis (57226411746) ;Pallari, Elena (57188667049) ;Gorasso, Vanessa (57204857488) ;von der Lippe, Elena (55756303500) ;Devleesschauwer, Brecht (55175586600) ;Pires, Sara M. (26031106700) ;Plass, Dietrich (57217142114) ;Idavain, Jane (55962569100) ;Ngwa, Che Henry (57204436107) ;Noguer, Isabel (6603532907) ;Padron-Monedero, Alicia (56532107100) ;Sarmiento, Rodrigo (57204744430) ;Majdan, Marek (36147855100) ;Ádám, Balázs (8562137500) ;AlKerwi, Ala’a (57197724313) ;Cilovic-Lagarija, Seila (57205339757) ;Clarsen, Benjamin (36682048700) ;Corso, Barbara (54402100400) ;Cuschieri, Sarah (55912623000) ;Dopelt, Keren (36166568700) ;Economou, Mary (16833616600) ;Fischer, Florian (55508208800) ;Freitas, Alberto (57217280282) ;García-González, Juan Manuel (56699691100) ;Gazzelloni, Federica (57605924800) ;Gkitakou, Artemis (57845953600) ;Gulmez, Hakan (55540842700) ;Hynds, Paul (55358692000) ;Isola, Gaetano (25825125500) ;Jakobsen, Lea S. (57132462000) ;Kabir, Zubair (57207901718) ;Kissimova-Skarbek, Katarzyna (6508376962) ;Knudsen, Ann Kristin (57192966362) ;Konar, Naime Meriç (57201976681) ;Ladeira, Carina (36463788000) ;Lassen, Brian (26654870800) ;Liew, Aaron (36900561300) ;Majer, Marjeta (36643014700) ;Mechili, Enkeleint A. (56728736500) ;Mereke, Alibek (57205595662) ;Monasta, Lorenzo (7801520497) ;Mondello, Stefania (23094881100) ;Morgado, Joana Nazaré (57575023600) ;Nena, Evangelia (22939035500) ;Ng, Edmond S. W. (7201647518) ;Niranjan, Vikram (57216689994) ;Nola, Iskra Alexandra (56008693200) ;O’Caoimh, Rónán (55347164900) ;Petrou, Panagiotis (57604661700) ;Pinheiro, Vera (57223934769) ;Ortiz, Miguel Reina (53364227000) ;Riva, Silvia (57195951336) ;Samouda, Hanen (50562170500) ;Santos, João Vasco (57226214352) ;Santoso, Cornelia Melinda Adi (57218210290) ;Milicevic, Milena Santric (57209748201) ;Skempes, Dimitrios (55993238700) ;Sousa, Ana Catarina (34868922900) ;Speybroeck, Niko (6701719825) ;Tozija, Fimka (6506353206) ;Unim, Brigid (37862108700) ;Uysal, Hilal Bektaş (57091343800) ;Vaccaro, Fabrizio Giovanni (57210986165) ;Varga, Orsolya (16432987900) ;Vasic, Milena (6506419355) ;Violante, Francesco Saverio (7003555890) ;Wyper, Grant M. A. (56503829800) ;Polinder, Suzanne (12766122200)Haagsma, Juanita A. (57202571125)Background: Calculating the disease burden due to injury is complex, as it requires many methodological choices. Until now, an overview of the methodological design choices that have been made in burden of disease (BoD) studies in injury populations is not available. The aim of this systematic literature review was to identify existing injury BoD studies undertaken across Europe and to comprehensively review the methodological design choices and assumption parameters that have been made to calculate years of life lost (YLL) and years lived with disability (YLD) in these studies. Methods: We searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, Cochrane Central, Google Scholar, and Web of Science, and the grey literature supplemented by handsearching, for BoD studies. We included injury BoD studies that quantified the BoD expressed in YLL, YLD, and disability-adjusted life years (DALY) in countries within the European Region between early-1990 and mid-2021. Results: We retrieved 2,914 results of which 48 performed an injury-specific BoD assessment. Single-country independent and Global Burden of Disease (GBD)-linked injury BoD studies were performed in 11 European countries. Approximately 79% of injury BoD studies reported the BoD by external cause-of-injury. Most independent studies used the incidence-based approach to calculate YLDs. About half of the injury disease burden studies applied disability weights (DWs) developed by the GBD study. Almost all independent injury studies have determined YLL using national life tables. Conclusions: Considerable methodological variation across independent injury BoD assessments was observed; differences were mainly apparent in the design choices and assumption parameters towards injury YLD calculations, implementation of DWs, and the choice of life table for YLL calculations. Development and use of guidelines for performing and reporting of injury BoD studies is crucial to enhance transparency and comparability of injury BoD estimates across Europe and beyond. © 2022, The Author(s). - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Thromboembolic Disease in Patients With Cancer and COVID-19: Risk Factors, Prevention and Practical Thromboprophylaxis Recommendations–State-of-the-Art(2022) ;Dimakakos, Evangelos (15829158000) ;Gomatou, Georgia (57203262751) ;Catalano, Mariella (7102930035) ;Olinic, Dan-Mircea (56010642600) ;Spyropoulos, Alex C. (7003458027) ;Falanga, Anna (7006586115) ;Maraveyas, Anthony (6701792215) ;Liew, Aaron (36900561300) ;Schulman, Sam (55792310000) ;Belch, Jill (8111605900) ;Gerotziafas, Grigorios (6603855152) ;Marschang, Peter (6601968639) ;Cosmi, Benilde (7003397621) ;Spaak, Jonas (6602440473) ;Syrigos, Konstantinos (35465809000) ;Antic, Darko (23979576100) ;Blinc, Ales (57203082448) ;Boc, Vinko (56565419000) ;Boccardo, Francesco (55198376600) ;Brodmann, Marianne (55145360000) ;Carpentier, Patrick (7102669043) ;Celovska, Denisa (24824034200) ;De Marchi, Sergio (7005964306) ;Dimitrov, Gabriel (36190738200) ;Farkas, Katalin (7004818788) ;Fionik, Olga (6503989626) ;Fyta, Eleni (57350590000) ;Gkiozos, Ioannis (18436760200) ;Gottsater, Anders (7003798100) ;Gresele, Paolo (7005707924) ;Hamade, Amer (56624975100) ;Heiss, Christian (35272137800) ;Karahan, Oguz (24448103900) ;Karakatsanis, Stamatis (57209733640) ;Kavousi, Maryam (35068219800) ;Kollias, Anastasios (24722882200) ;Kolossvary, Endre (8707168500) ;Kotteas, Elias (14060440400) ;Kozak, Matija (7102680923) ;Kroon, Abraham (35452655900) ;Kubat, Emre (55669426500) ;Lefkou, Eleftheria (57221993187) ;Lessani, Gianfranco (57798962300) ;Manu, Chris (56364963500) ;Mazzolai, Lucia (6603072127) ;Milic, Dragan (35877861700) ;Nancheva, Jasminka (57460737800) ;Pantazopoulos, Kosmas (23477967000) ;Patriarcheas, Vasileios (57567755400) ;Pazvanska, Evelina (6603311550) ;Pecsvarady, Zsolt (56038401400) ;Pillon, Sergio (57130511200) ;Prior, Manilo (57798962400) ;Ptohis, Nikolaos (13007966600) ;Quere, Isabelle (7006293340) ;Righini, Marc (7004475013) ;Roztocil, Karel (7003366142) ;Schernthaner, Gerit-Holger (16742161100) ;Schlager, Oliver (22136051600) ;Sieron, Aleksander (57202372591) ;Sprynger, Muriel (24406952000) ;Stanek, Agata (23989329500) ;Stojkovski, Igor (25229451600) ;Stvrtinova, Viera (6701770653) ;Suput, Dusan (55749495800) ;Syrigos, Nikolaos (57195420598) ;Trontzas, Ioannis (57221305091) ;Vasic, Dragan (7003336138) ;Visona, Adriana (7005906226)Xhepa, Sokol (57191967535)Cancer and COVID-19 are both well-established risk factors predisposing to thrombosis. Both disease entities are correlated with increased incidence of venous thrombotic events through multifaceted pathogenic mechanisms involving the interaction of cancer cells or SARS-CoV2 on the one hand and the coagulation system and endothelial cells on the other hand. Thromboprophylaxis is recommended for hospitalized patients with active cancer and high-risk outpatients with cancer receiving anticancer treatment. Universal thromboprophylaxis with a high prophylactic dose of low molecular weight heparins (LMWH) or therapeutic dose in select patients, is currently indicated for hospitalized patients with COVID-19. Also, prophylactic anticoagulation is recommended for outpatients with COVID-19 at high risk for thrombosis or disease worsening. However, whether there is an additive risk of thrombosis when a patient with cancer is infected with SARSCoV2 remains unclear. In the current review, we summarize and critically discuss the literature regarding the epidemiology of thrombotic events in patients with cancer and concomitant COVID-19, the thrombotic risk assessment, and the recommendations on thromboprophylaxis for this subgroup of patients. Current data do not support an additive thrombotic risk for patients with cancer and COVID-19. Of note, patients with cancer have less access to intensive care unit care, a setting associated with high thrombotic risk. Based on current evidence, patients with cancer and COVID-19 should be assessed with well-established risk assessment models for medically ill patients and receive thromboprophylaxis, preferentially with LMWH, according to existing recommendations. Prospective trials on well-characterized populations do not exist. © 2022 International Institute of Anticancer Research. All rights reserved. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Thromboembolic Disease in Patients With Cancer and COVID-19: Risk Factors, Prevention and Practical Thromboprophylaxis Recommendations–State-of-the-Art(2022) ;Dimakakos, Evangelos (15829158000) ;Gomatou, Georgia (57203262751) ;Catalano, Mariella (7102930035) ;Olinic, Dan-Mircea (56010642600) ;Spyropoulos, Alex C. (7003458027) ;Falanga, Anna (7006586115) ;Maraveyas, Anthony (6701792215) ;Liew, Aaron (36900561300) ;Schulman, Sam (55792310000) ;Belch, Jill (8111605900) ;Gerotziafas, Grigorios (6603855152) ;Marschang, Peter (6601968639) ;Cosmi, Benilde (7003397621) ;Spaak, Jonas (6602440473) ;Syrigos, Konstantinos (35465809000) ;Antic, Darko (23979576100) ;Blinc, Ales (57203082448) ;Boc, Vinko (56565419000) ;Boccardo, Francesco (55198376600) ;Brodmann, Marianne (55145360000) ;Carpentier, Patrick (7102669043) ;Celovska, Denisa (24824034200) ;De Marchi, Sergio (7005964306) ;Dimitrov, Gabriel (36190738200) ;Farkas, Katalin (7004818788) ;Fionik, Olga (6503989626) ;Fyta, Eleni (57350590000) ;Gkiozos, Ioannis (18436760200) ;Gottsater, Anders (7003798100) ;Gresele, Paolo (7005707924) ;Hamade, Amer (56624975100) ;Heiss, Christian (35272137800) ;Karahan, Oguz (24448103900) ;Karakatsanis, Stamatis (57209733640) ;Kavousi, Maryam (35068219800) ;Kollias, Anastasios (24722882200) ;Kolossvary, Endre (8707168500) ;Kotteas, Elias (14060440400) ;Kozak, Matija (7102680923) ;Kroon, Abraham (35452655900) ;Kubat, Emre (55669426500) ;Lefkou, Eleftheria (57221993187) ;Lessani, Gianfranco (57798962300) ;Manu, Chris (56364963500) ;Mazzolai, Lucia (6603072127) ;Milic, Dragan (35877861700) ;Nancheva, Jasminka (57460737800) ;Pantazopoulos, Kosmas (23477967000) ;Patriarcheas, Vasileios (57567755400) ;Pazvanska, Evelina (6603311550) ;Pecsvarady, Zsolt (56038401400) ;Pillon, Sergio (57130511200) ;Prior, Manilo (57798962400) ;Ptohis, Nikolaos (13007966600) ;Quere, Isabelle (7006293340) ;Righini, Marc (7004475013) ;Roztocil, Karel (7003366142) ;Schernthaner, Gerit-Holger (16742161100) ;Schlager, Oliver (22136051600) ;Sieron, Aleksander (57202372591) ;Sprynger, Muriel (24406952000) ;Stanek, Agata (23989329500) ;Stojkovski, Igor (25229451600) ;Stvrtinova, Viera (6701770653) ;Suput, Dusan (55749495800) ;Syrigos, Nikolaos (57195420598) ;Trontzas, Ioannis (57221305091) ;Vasic, Dragan (7003336138) ;Visona, Adriana (7005906226)Xhepa, Sokol (57191967535)Cancer and COVID-19 are both well-established risk factors predisposing to thrombosis. Both disease entities are correlated with increased incidence of venous thrombotic events through multifaceted pathogenic mechanisms involving the interaction of cancer cells or SARS-CoV2 on the one hand and the coagulation system and endothelial cells on the other hand. Thromboprophylaxis is recommended for hospitalized patients with active cancer and high-risk outpatients with cancer receiving anticancer treatment. Universal thromboprophylaxis with a high prophylactic dose of low molecular weight heparins (LMWH) or therapeutic dose in select patients, is currently indicated for hospitalized patients with COVID-19. Also, prophylactic anticoagulation is recommended for outpatients with COVID-19 at high risk for thrombosis or disease worsening. However, whether there is an additive risk of thrombosis when a patient with cancer is infected with SARSCoV2 remains unclear. In the current review, we summarize and critically discuss the literature regarding the epidemiology of thrombotic events in patients with cancer and concomitant COVID-19, the thrombotic risk assessment, and the recommendations on thromboprophylaxis for this subgroup of patients. Current data do not support an additive thrombotic risk for patients with cancer and COVID-19. Of note, patients with cancer have less access to intensive care unit care, a setting associated with high thrombotic risk. Based on current evidence, patients with cancer and COVID-19 should be assessed with well-established risk assessment models for medically ill patients and receive thromboprophylaxis, preferentially with LMWH, according to existing recommendations. Prospective trials on well-characterized populations do not exist. © 2022 International Institute of Anticancer Research. All rights reserved.