Arturo Pereira - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Arturo Pereira is Senior Consultant in Hematology at the Hospital Clínic of Barcelona (Spain). He holds a Ph.D. in Medicine by the University of Barcelona, a M.S. in Management of Health Services (University of Barcelona), a M.A. in Applied Economics (UNED) and a M.A. in Applied Statistics (UNED). He is expert in statistical analysis applied to biomedical studies, mainly survival analysis and the design of prognostic models. He has worked in several projects on efficiency evaluation (cost-effectiveness analysis) of medical and health Care interventions and programs.
less
Uploads
Papers by Arturo Pereira
The remission rate with plasma exchange (PE) in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) exceeds... more The remission rate with plasma exchange (PE) in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) exceeds 80%, but the disease relapses in up to 20–30% of the cases. Clinical characteristics and response to treatment of relapsed TTP are not well defined. The objective of the present study was to compare the clinical and biological characteristics at presentation and the response to treatment between de novo and relapsed TTP. For such purpose, a total of 102 episodes of idiopathic TTP (70 de novo and 32 relapses) included in a recent multicentric prospective cohort study were analysed. All patients were homogeneously treated with daily PE and costicosteroids. In comparison with de novo TTP, episodes of relapsed TTP showed a higher Hb level (median, 122 g/l versus 91 g/l, p < 0.001) and lower serum lactate dehydrogenase (2.2-versus 4.5-fold above the upper limit of normality, p < 0.001). Neurological symptoms and fever were less frequently observed in patients with relapsed TTP than in patients with de novo TTP. Patients with relapsed TTP needed fewer PE sessions
British Journal of Haematology, 1997
Ash Annual Meeting Abstracts, Nov 20, 2009
Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer, 2015
Chromosomal translocations are rare in the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and chronic myelomonoc... more Chromosomal translocations are rare in the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML). With the exception of t(3q), translocations are not explicitly considered in the cytogenetic classification of the IPSS-R and their impact on disease progression and patient survival is unknown. The present study was aimed at determining the prognostic impact of translocations in the context of the cytogenetic classification of the IPSS-R. We evaluated 1,653 patients from the Spanish Registry of MDS diagnosed with MDS or CMML and an abnormal karyotype by conventional cytogenetic analysis. Translocations were identified in 168 patients (T group). Compared with the 1,485 patients with abnormal karyotype without translocations (non-T group), the T group had a larger proportion of patients with refractory anemia with excess of blasts and higher scores in both the cytogenetic and global IPSS-R. Translocations were associated with a significantly shorter survival and higher incidence of transformation into AML at univariate analysis but both features disapeared after multivariate adjustment for the IPSS-R cytogenetic category. Patients with single or double translocations other than t(3q) had an outcome similar to those in the non-T group in the intermediate cytogenetic risk category of the IPSS-R. In conclusion, the presence of translocations identifies a subgroup of MDS/CMML patients with a more aggressive clinical presentation that can be explained by a higher incidence of complex karyotypes. Single or double translocations other than t(3q) should be explicitly considered into the intermediate risk category of cytogenetic IPSS-R classification. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Medicina Clínica
The clinical and hematological profile of 53 patients in whom primary myelofibrosis (PMF) had bee... more The clinical and hematological profile of 53 patients in whom primary myelofibrosis (PMF) had been diagnosed during the last 15 years was evaluated. Median age was 64 years (range 17-86). Thirty-five patients were males and 18 females. The most frequent symptoms were associated with the hypermetabolic state, anemia and splenomegaly. The latter was found in 96% of patients, while 83% had hepatomegaly and 9% had lymphadenopathy. Thirty-three patients had anemia at the time of diagnosis. The leukocyte and platelet counts were normal or moderately high in most cases. Myelemia was found in 83% of patients, with circulating erythroblasts in 72%. The most common biochemical abnormalities were the increased serum LDH (84%) and hypocholesterolemia (62%). Bone marrow aspirate was not analyzable in most cases. Bone marrow biopsy showed myelofibrosis in hypercellular phase in 22 patients, myelofibrosis without osteosclerosis in 17, and myelofibrosis with osteosclerosis in 14. The median survival of the series was 3.8 years; 34 patients had died at the time of the analysis. The major causes of death were infection, cardiovascular complications and hemorrhage. In 4 patients the evolution from PMF to acute leukemia was observed.
American Journal of Clinical Pathology
European Journal Of Haematology
The remission rate with plasma exchange (PE) in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) exceeds... more The remission rate with plasma exchange (PE) in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) exceeds 80%, but the disease relapses in up to 20–30% of the cases. Clinical characteristics and response to treatment of relapsed TTP are not well defined. The objective of the present study was to compare the clinical and biological characteristics at presentation and the response to treatment between de novo and relapsed TTP. For such purpose, a total of 102 episodes of idiopathic TTP (70 de novo and 32 relapses) included in a recent multicentric prospective cohort study were analysed. All patients were homogeneously treated with daily PE and costicosteroids. In comparison with de novo TTP, episodes of relapsed TTP showed a higher Hb level (median, 122 g/l versus 91 g/l, p < 0.001) and lower serum lactate dehydrogenase (2.2-versus 4.5-fold above the upper limit of normality, p < 0.001). Neurological symptoms and fever were less frequently observed in patients with relapsed TTP than in patients with de novo TTP. Patients with relapsed TTP needed fewer PE sessions
British Journal of Haematology, 1997
Ash Annual Meeting Abstracts, Nov 20, 2009
Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer, 2015
Chromosomal translocations are rare in the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and chronic myelomonoc... more Chromosomal translocations are rare in the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML). With the exception of t(3q), translocations are not explicitly considered in the cytogenetic classification of the IPSS-R and their impact on disease progression and patient survival is unknown. The present study was aimed at determining the prognostic impact of translocations in the context of the cytogenetic classification of the IPSS-R. We evaluated 1,653 patients from the Spanish Registry of MDS diagnosed with MDS or CMML and an abnormal karyotype by conventional cytogenetic analysis. Translocations were identified in 168 patients (T group). Compared with the 1,485 patients with abnormal karyotype without translocations (non-T group), the T group had a larger proportion of patients with refractory anemia with excess of blasts and higher scores in both the cytogenetic and global IPSS-R. Translocations were associated with a significantly shorter survival and higher incidence of transformation into AML at univariate analysis but both features disapeared after multivariate adjustment for the IPSS-R cytogenetic category. Patients with single or double translocations other than t(3q) had an outcome similar to those in the non-T group in the intermediate cytogenetic risk category of the IPSS-R. In conclusion, the presence of translocations identifies a subgroup of MDS/CMML patients with a more aggressive clinical presentation that can be explained by a higher incidence of complex karyotypes. Single or double translocations other than t(3q) should be explicitly considered into the intermediate risk category of cytogenetic IPSS-R classification. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Medicina Clínica
The clinical and hematological profile of 53 patients in whom primary myelofibrosis (PMF) had bee... more The clinical and hematological profile of 53 patients in whom primary myelofibrosis (PMF) had been diagnosed during the last 15 years was evaluated. Median age was 64 years (range 17-86). Thirty-five patients were males and 18 females. The most frequent symptoms were associated with the hypermetabolic state, anemia and splenomegaly. The latter was found in 96% of patients, while 83% had hepatomegaly and 9% had lymphadenopathy. Thirty-three patients had anemia at the time of diagnosis. The leukocyte and platelet counts were normal or moderately high in most cases. Myelemia was found in 83% of patients, with circulating erythroblasts in 72%. The most common biochemical abnormalities were the increased serum LDH (84%) and hypocholesterolemia (62%). Bone marrow aspirate was not analyzable in most cases. Bone marrow biopsy showed myelofibrosis in hypercellular phase in 22 patients, myelofibrosis without osteosclerosis in 17, and myelofibrosis with osteosclerosis in 14. The median survival of the series was 3.8 years; 34 patients had died at the time of the analysis. The major causes of death were infection, cardiovascular complications and hemorrhage. In 4 patients the evolution from PMF to acute leukemia was observed.
American Journal of Clinical Pathology
European Journal Of Haematology