33 research outputs found

    Intelligence-based medicine

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    Despite seven hundred thousand new medical references last year, the relationship between a given set of medical features and specific pathophysiology, treatment, and criteria of improvement is often weak. Moreover, the generalization of evidences obtained in specific settings may lead to under-treat or to over-treat a significant proportion of patients. We expose an application of the cybernetic loop, based on traditional medical steps: nosology, semeiology, pathophysiology, therapy and on the four transitions between these steps. This approach leads to formulate eight basic questions evaluating the steps in terms of reproducibility and the transitions in terms of predictivity. We detail two practical applications: 1) the evaluation of a medical decision (implantation of an internal cardioverter-defibrillator) and 2) the evaluation of a specific study (EPHESUS). Using this loop allows to determine clearly when evidence is lacking and/or to which extend an evidence really increases the medical knowledge or just creates a market

    Study protocol: The DOse REsponse Multicentre International collaborative initiative (DO-RE-MI)

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    INTRODUCTION: Current practices for renal replacement therapy in intensive care units (ICUs) remain poorly defined. The DOse REsponse Multicentre International collaborative initiative (DO-RE-MI) will address the issue of how the different modes of renal replacement therapy are currently chosen and performed. Here, we describe the study protocol, which was approved by the Scientific and Steering Committees. METHODS: DO-RE-MI is an observational, multicentre study conducted in ICUs. The primary end-point will be the delivered dose of dialysis, which will be compared with ICU mortality, 28-day mortality, hospital mortality, ICU length of stay and number of days of mechanical ventilation. The secondary end-point will be the haemodynamic response to renal replacement therapy, expressed as percentage reduction in noradrenaline (norepinephrine) requirement. Based on the the sample analysis calculation, at least 162 patients must be recruited. Anonymized patient data will be entered online in electronic case report forms and uploaded to an internet website. Each participating centre will have 2 months to become acquainted with the electronic case report forms. After this period official recruitment will begin. Patient data belong to the respective centre, which may use the database for its own needs. However, all centres have agreed to participate in a joint effort to achieve the sample size needed for statistical analysis. CONCLUSION: The study will hopefully help to collect useful information on the current practice of renal replacement therapy in ICUs. It will also provide a centre-based collection of data that will be useful for monitoring all aspects of extracorporeal support, such as incidence, frequency, and duration

    Clustering ICU patients with sepsis based on the patterns of their circulating biomarkers: A secondary analysis of the CAPTAIN prospective multicenter cohort study.

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    peer reviewed[en] BACKGROUND: Although sepsis is a life-threatening condition, its heterogeneous presentation likely explains the negative results of most trials on adjunctive therapy. This study in patients with sepsis aimed to identify subgroups with similar immune profiles and their clinical and outcome correlates. METHODS: A secondary analysis used data of a prospective multicenter cohort that included patients with early assessment of sepsis. They were described using Predisposition, Insult, Response, Organ failure sepsis (PIRO) staging system. Thirty-eight circulating biomarkers (27 proteins, 11 mRNAs) were assessed at sepsis diagnosis, and their patterns were determined through principal component analysis (PCA). Hierarchical clustering was used to group the patients and k-means algorithm was applied to assess the internal validity of the clusters. RESULTS: Two hundred and three patients were assessed, of median age 64.5 [52.0-77.0] years and SAPS2 score 55 [49-61] points. Five main patterns of biomarkers and six clusters of patients (including 42%, 21%, 17%, 9%, 5% and 5% of the patients) were evidenced. Clusters were distinguished according to the certainty of the causal infection, inflammation, use of organ support, pro- and anti-inflammatory activity, and adaptive profile markers. CONCLUSIONS: In this cohort of patients with suspected sepsis, we individualized clusters which may be described with criteria used to stage sepsis. As these clusters are based on the patterns of circulating biomarkers, whether they might help to predict treatment responsiveness should be addressed in further studies. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The CAPTAIN study was registered on clinicaltrials.gov on June 22, 2011, # NCT01378169

    Circulating biomarkers may be unable to detect infection at the early phase of sepsis in ICU patients: the CAPTAIN prospective multicenter cohort study.

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    PURPOSE: Sepsis and non-septic systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) are the same syndromes, differing by their cause, sepsis being secondary to microbial infection. Microbiological tests are not enough to detect infection early. While more than 50 biomarkers have been proposed to detect infection, none have been repeatedly validated. AIM: To assess the accuracy of circulating biomarkers to discriminate between sepsis and non-septic SIRS. METHODS: The CAPTAIN study was a prospective observational multicenter cohort of 279 ICU patients with hypo- or hyperthermia and criteria of SIRS, included at the time the attending physician considered antimicrobial therapy. Investigators collected blood at inclusion to measure 29 plasma compounds and ten whole blood RNAs, and-for those patients included within working hours-14 leukocyte surface markers. Patients were classified as having sepsis or non-septic SIRS blindly to the biomarkers results. We used the LASSO method as the technique of multivariate analysis, because of the large number of biomarkers. RESULTS: During the study period, 363 patients with SIRS were screened, 84 having exclusion criteria. Ninety-one patients were classified as having non-septic SIRS and 188 as having sepsis. Eight biomarkers had an area under the receiver operating curve (ROC-AUC) over 0.6 with a 95% confidence interval over 0.5. LASSO regression identified CRP and HLA-DRA mRNA as being repeatedly associated with sepsis, and no model performed better than CRP alone (ROC-AUC 0.76 [0.68-0.84]). CONCLUSIONS: The circulating biomarkers tested were found to discriminate poorly between sepsis and non-septic SIRS, and no combination performed better than CRP alone

    Les études négatives publiées en anesthésie-réanimation

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    La médecine factuelle repose sur les études cliniques que les biais éloignent des faits que l on pense interpréter. Les études négatives regroupent un ensemble disparate allant des études de puissance et de méthodologie adéquate démontrant l absence de différence aux études normalement non concluantes car de puissance et/ou de méthodologie insuffisantes. Nous avons étudié les 63 études négatives publiées sur 2 périodes d un an dans les 2 plus prestigieux journaux d anesthésie réanimation, à 10 ans d intervalle. La majorité des études étaient monocentriques, présentaient des critères d inclusion trop larges. La randomisation et l aveugle n étaient corrects que dans 20%, une analyse en intention de traiter n était réalisée que dans 10% des cas. Plus de 80% des études publiées n avaient pas la puissance requise: près de 50% ne mentionnaient pas de calcul a priori de l effectif, 15% n atteignaient pas le nombre de sujets nécessaires, 8% avaient un critère de jugement non pertinent, 8% incluaient une population trop hétérogène et près de 2% avaient surestimé l effet de l intervention. Plus de 50% des auteurs concluaient à l absence de différence, 20% remettaient leurs résultats en question en dépit des faits. Plus de 15% opéraient à une diversion sur des critères de jugement secondaires ou sur un sous-groupe. Près de 8% s attardaient sur des tendances non significatives et 5% concluaient à tort à l équivalence. La diffusion des recommandations CONSORT et la création de registres d études devraient se traduire par une amélioration méthodologique, un recours plus fréquent au calcul a priori de l effectif nécessaire, une remise en question plus fréquente des résultats négatifs.PARIS6-Bibl.Pitié-Salpêtrie (751132101) / SudocPARIS-BIUM (751062103) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Intelligence-based medicine

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    Collaboration entre médecins généralistes et médecins anesthésistes-réanimateurs

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    But : étudier la nature de la collaboration entre médecins anesthésistes et médecins généralistes, et la perception du risque anesthésique par les généralistes. Méthodes : enquête prospective par questionnaire, à l été 2009, auprès de médecins généralistes. Résultats : Nous avons eu 1040 réponses, bien réparties sur toute la France. Seuls 6% des généralistes envoient systématiquement un courrier à l anesthésiste avant une anesthésie. Un déficit de connaissance est associé à une collaboration moindre. 18% des généralistes ne savaient pas que la consultation d anesthésie permet de réduire le risque anesthésique. Pour les médecins généralistes, un compte rendu d anesthésie serait utile avant tout pour conserver une trace de l anesthésie (surtout en cas de problème), pour pouvoir agir et pour se former à l anesthésie. Conclusion : une collaboration plus étroite peut être obtenue par une meilleure formation des généralistes ; ils ont jugé utile de recevoir un compte rendu d anesthésie.Aim : To study the nature of collaboration between anesthesiologists and general practitioners, and anesthetic risk perception by general practitioners. Methods: prospective survey by questionnaire in summer 2009, with general practitioners. Results: We had 1,040 responses, evenly distributed throughout France. Only 6% of GPs routinely send a letter to the anesthesiologist before anesthesia. A lack of knowledge is associated with a lesser collaboration. 18% of GPs were not aware that the consultation of anesthesia reduces the risk of anesthesia. For GPs, a report of anesthesia would be useful primarily to keep track of anesthesia (especially in case of problems), to act, and to be trained in anesthesia. Conclusion : closer collaboration can be achieved by better training of GPs; they have found it useful to receive an accounting of anesthesia.PARIS13-BU Serge Lebovici (930082101) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Do simple screening statistical tools help to detect reporting bias?

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    International audienceBACKGROUND: As a result of reporting bias, or frauds, false or misunderstood findings may represent the majority of published research claims. This article provides simple methods that might help to appraise the quality of the reporting of randomized, controlled trials (RCT). METHODS: This evaluation roadmap proposed herein relies on four steps: evaluation of the distribution of the reported variables; evaluation of the distribution of the reported p values; data simulation using parametric bootstrap and explicit computation of the p values. Such an approach was illustrated using published data from a retracted RCT comparing a hydroxyethyl starch versus albumin-based priming for cardiopulmonary bypass. RESULTS: Despite obvious nonnormal distributions, several variables are presented as if they were normally distributed. The set of 16 p values testing for differences in baseline characteristics across randomized groups did not follow a Uniform distribution on [0,1] (p = 0.045). The p values obtained by explicit computations were different from the results reported by the authors for the two following variables: urine output at 5 hours (calculated p value = 0.05); packed red blood cells (PRBC) during surgery (calculated p value = 0.08; reported p 0.05 in only 5 of the 10,000 simulated datasets concerning urine output 5 hours after surgery. Concerning PRBC transfused during surgery, parametric bootstrap showed that only the corresponding p value had less than a 50% chance to be inferior to 0.05 (3,920/10,000, p value < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Such simple evaluation methods might offer some warning signals. However, it should be emphasized that such methods do not allow concluding to the presence of error or fraud but should rather be used to justify asking for an access to the raw data
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