0000000001117198

AUTHOR

D. Ferraro

showing 8 related works from this author

Predictors of Hepatitis B Surface Antigen Titers two decades after vaccination in a cohort of students and post-graduates of the Medical School at th…

2017

Introduction and objective. The introduction of a vaccine against hepatitis B virus (HBV) for newborn babies in Italy in 1991, extended to 12-year-old children for the first 12 years of application, has been a major achievement in terms of the prevention of HBV infection. The objective of this study was to analyse the long-term immunogenicity and effectiveness of HBV vaccination among healthcare students with different working seniorities. Materials and method. A cross-sectional observational study of undergraduate and postgraduate students attending the Medical School of the University of Palermo was conducted from January 2014 – July 2016. HBV serum markers were performed with commercial …

0301 basic medicineMaleHBsAgSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaStudents Medicalmedicine.disease_causeLogistic regressionCohort Studies0302 clinical medicine030212 general & internal medicineChildWaste Management and DisposalHBV infectionlcsh:Environmental sciencesSchools Medicallcsh:GE1-350Anti-HBs titreHepatitis BVaccinationCohortFemaleAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyHepatitis B virusAdolescent030106 microbiologyHBV infection HBV vaccination Anti-HBs titre Healthcare students postgraduate medical studentsHealthcare studentslcsh:Agriculture03 medical and health sciencesYoung AdultInternal medicinemedicineHumansHepatitis B VaccinesHepatitis B AntibodiesStudentsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHBV vaccinationHepatitis B virusHepatitis B Surface Antigensbusiness.industrySettore MED/44 - Medicina Del Lavorolcsh:SPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthOdds ratioConfidence intervalpostgraduate medical studentsCross-Sectional StudiesImmunologyObservational studybusinessBiomarkersFollow-Up Studies
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Occult HBV infection and suppression of HCV replication in the early phase of combination therapy for chronic hepatitis C

2003

Occult HBV infection in subjects with chronic hepatitis C is related to more severe disease outcome. It has been suggested that it might reduce sensitivity to antiviral treatment.To assess in HBsAg negative subjects with chronic hepatitis C any effect of the presence of HBV genomes in the liver on the early kinetics of HCV-RNA under PEG-IFN plus ribavirin.Twenty-two anti-HCV and HCV-RNA positive subjects, with biopsy-proven chronic hepatitis C (M/F 15/7; 50 +/- 8.6 years, 16 genotype 1b) were given PEG-IFN alpha 2b 1.0 microg qw plus ribavirin (800 to 1,200 mg daily according to body weight) for an intended 52 week period. Early virological response was assessed over the first 4 weeks of th…

AdultMaleHepatitis B viruspegylated interferon-alphaGenotypeBiopsyHepacivirusInterferon alpha-2Virus ReplicationAntiviral AgentsPolyethylene GlycolsHepatitis B AntibodieRibavirinchronic hepatitis CHumansHepatitis B AntibodiesAntiviral AgentHepaciviruoccult HBV infection; chronic hepatitis C; pegylated interferon-alpha; viral dynamics; treatment responseoccult HBV infectiontreatment responseInterferon-alphaAlanine TransaminaseHepatitis B viruHepatitis C AntibodiesHepatitis C ChronicMiddle AgedRecombinant ProteinViral LoadHepatitis Bviral dynamicsRecombinant ProteinsTreatment OutcomeLiverDNA ViralRNA ViralDrug Therapy CombinationFemaleHepatitis C AntibodieHuman
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Liver disease in chelated transfusion-dependent thalassemics: the role of iron overload and chronic hepatitis C.

2008

Abstract Iron overload and hepatitis virus C infection cause liver fibrosis in thalassemics. In a monocentric retrospective analysis of liver disease in a cohort of 191 transfusion-dependent thalassemics, in 126 patients who had undergone liver biopsy (mean age 17.2 years; 58 hepatitis virus C-RNA positive and 68 hepatitis virus C-RNA negative) the liver iron concentration (median 2.4 mg/gr dry liver weight) was closely related to serum ferritin levels (R = 0.58; p<0.0001). Male gender (OR 4.12) and serum hepatitis virus C-RNA positivity (OR 11.04) were independent risk factors for advanced liver fibrosis. The majority of hepatitis virus C-RNA negative patients with low iron load did not de…

Iron HCV thalassemicsSettore MED/12 - GastroenterologiaSettore MED/08 - Anatomia Patologica
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DETECTION OF ENTERIC ADENOVIRUS 40 AND 41 IN STOOL SPECIMENS BY MONOCLONAL-BASED ENZYME IMMUNOASSAYS

1996

o examine the role of enteric adenoviruses (Ad40 and Ad41) in children with acute gastroenteritis, we evaluated 273 children with diarrhoea and 137 without enteric symptoms in Palermo, Italy, during an 8-month period. Stools were tested by two home-made monoclonal-based ELISAs to detected genus-specific adenovirus antigen and to type Ad40 and Ad41. Twenty-five samples (6.1%) were found to contain adenovirus, 18 of which were grown in Graham 293 and in HEp-2 cells. Ad40 and Ad41 were detected in 2.6% of children with diarrhoea and in none in the control group, while non-enteric adenoviruses were obtained from both patients (3.2%) and controls (6.5%). Samples containing Ad40 and Ad41 were pos…

adenovirus
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Heterogeneity of HVR-1 quasispecies is predictive of early but not sustained virological response in genotype 1b-infected patients undergoing combine…

2003

ISDR mutation pattern and HVR-1 quasispecies were analyzed in HCV genotype 1b-infected patients treated with either PEG- or STD-IFN plus ribavirin, in order to find virological correlates of therapy outcome. ISDR region analysis, performed at baseline (T0) and at 4 weeks of therapy (T1), indicated that ISDR mutation pattern was not predictive of response to treatment. Moreover, no selection of putative resistant strains in the first month of therapy was observed. Viral load was not correlated with any parameter of HVR-1 heterogeneity. Among the HVR-1 heterogeneity parameters considered, complexity was inversely correlated to viral load decline at T1. In univariate analysis, complexity, prop…

GenotypeHepacivirusInterferon alpha-2Viral Nonstructural ProteinsAntiviral AgentsPolyethylene GlycolsViral ProteinsGenetic HeterogeneityRibavirinHumansViral ProteinPhylogenyAntiviral AgentHepaciviruViral Nonstructural ProteinInterferon-alphaSequence Analysis DNAHepatitis C ChronicRecombinant ProteinViral LoadRecombinant ProteinsTreatment OutcomeLinear ModelsLinear ModelDrug Therapy CombinationSequence AlignmentHuman
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Surgeons' fear of getting infected by COVID19: A global survey

2020

During the last three months, COVID- 19 pandemic had led to a serious backlog of operations globally, and plans for restarting operation are imperative. Recommendations for surgical activities were studied, aiming to protect the surgical staff from being infected. In the meantime, it is also important to give attention to the surgeon’s personal feeling during work. We conducted a survey to investigate global surgi- cal practices during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the surgeon’s personal feeling was also investigated in the sur- vey. In this special letter, we performed multivariate analysis to explore factors that associated with surgeon’s fear of getting infected by COVID-19.

Surgery COVID-19medicine.medical_specialty2019-20 coronavirus outbreakInfectious Disease Transmission Patient-to-Professionalsurvey covid19Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Attitude of Health PersonnelSettore MED/18 - CHIRURGIA GENERALESevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Infectious Disease TransmissionCOVID-19. Global surgery.MEDLINEGlobal HealthNOPatient-to-ProfessionalTumours of the digestive tract Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 14]Surveys and QuestionnairesCorrespondencemedicineGlobal healthInfection controlHumansGeneralPersonal protective equipmentPersonal Protective EquipmentLS7_4SurgeonsInfection Controlcovid-19; pandemic; surgerySARS-CoV-2business.industrypandemicVaccinationCOVID-19covidFearSettore MED/18Occupational DiseasesCOVID-19; Global Health; Humans; Infection Control; Occupational Diseases; Personal Protective Equipment; Surgeons; Surveys and Questionnaires; Attitude of Health Personnel; Fear; Infectious Disease Transmission Patient-to-ProfessionalSurgeon - infection - COVID19 - surveyFamily medicineSurgerybusiness
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Impact of asymptomatic COVID-19 patients in global surgical practice during the COVID-19 pandemic

2020

The rapid spread of COVID-19 has changed the global surgical care. Patients infected with COVID-19 may present without typical symptoms, and such asymptomatic patients may potentially trigger in-hospital outbreaks by transmitting the disease to health care providers and other hospitalized patients. Further, asymptomatic COVID-19 patients have worse postop- erative outcomes with an unexpectedly high morbidity and mortality, reaching 20⋅5 per cent deaths. However, we do not have objective global data on this issue. In an attempt to clarify the current global surgical practice under the COVID-19 pandemic particularly focusing on the preoperative screening of asymptomatic COVID-19 patients, we …

2019-20 coronavirus outbreakmedicine.medical_specialtyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)covid-19 pandemic surgerySevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Settore MED/18 - CHIRURGIA GENERALEMEDLINECOVID-19. Global surgery.AsymptomaticCOVID-19 Critical Pathways Cross Infection Cross-Sectional Studies Health Care Surveys Humans Pandemics Postoperative Complications SARS-CoV-2 Surgical Procedures Operative Asymptomatic InfectionsCOVID-19; Critical Pathways; Cross Infection; Cross-Sectional Studies; Health Care Surveys; Humans; Pandemics; Postoperative Complications; SARS-CoV-2; Surgical Procedures Operative; Asymptomatic InfectionsNOsurgeryTumours of the digestive tract Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 14]Postoperative ComplicationsPandemicCorrespondencemedicineHumansPandemicsAsymptomatic InfectionsLS7_4COVIDCross InfectionSurgical ProceduresCritical pathwaysbusiness.industrySARS-CoV-2pandemicCOVID-19Surgical proceduresOperativeSettore MED/18covid 19 surgical practiceCOVID-19 - surgeryCross-Sectional StudiesSurgical Procedures OperativeHealth Care SurveysEmergency medicineCritical Pathwaysmedicine.symptombusiness
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Role of IL-28B and inosine triphosphatase polymorphisms in efficacy and safety of Peg-Interferon and ribavirin in chronic hepatitis C compensated cir…

2013

Genetic factors can influence the outcome of antiviral therapy in chronic hepatitis C (HCV). We evaluated the role of interleukin-28B single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and inosine triphosphatase (ITPA) gene variants in HCV cirrhosis treated with Peg-Interferon and ribavirin. A prospective cohort of 233 patients with compensated cirrhosis received 1-1.5 μg/kg/week of Peg-Interferon alpha-2b plus 1000-1200 mg/day of RBV for 48 weeks. A sustained virologic response (SVR) was achieved in 27% of patients. On multivariate logistic analysis, the absence of oesophageal varices (OR 3.64 CI 95% 1.27-10.44 P = 0.016), infection with genotype 2 or 3 (OR 4.06, CI 95% 1.08-15.26, P = 0.038), C/C all…

Liver CirrhosisMaleSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaAnemia HemolyticGenotypeHepacivirusInterferon alpha-2Esophageal and Gastric VaricesAntiviral AgentsPolymorphism Single NucleotidePolyethylene GlycolsSettore BIO/13 - Biologia ApplicataRibavirinHumanschronic hepatitis C cirrhosis IL-28B inosine triphosphatase sustained virologic responseProspective StudiesPyrophosphatasesGenetic Association StudiesAgedSettore MED/12 - GastroenterologiaDose-Response Relationship DrugInterleukinsInterferon-alphaSequence Analysis DNAHepatitis C ChronicMiddle AgedRecombinant ProteinsLogistic ModelsTreatment OutcomeMultivariate AnalysisDrug Therapy CombinationFemaleInterferonsJournal of viral hepatitis
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