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Dive into the research topics where Adriana Carrá is active.

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Featured researches published by Adriana Carrá.


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2009

Epidemiological characteristics of pregnancy, delivery, and birth outcome in women with multiple sclerosis in Argentina (EMEMAR study)

N Fernández Liguori; D Klajn; L Acion; Fernando Caceres; A Calle; Adriana Carrá; Edgardo Cristiano; N. Deri; Orlando Garcea; A Jaureguiberry; P Onaha; Liliana Patrucco; P Riccio; R. Rotta Escalante; M.L. Saladino; Vladimiro Sinay; Adriana Tarulla; Andres Villa

Background The influence of pregnancy on Multiple Sclerosis (MS) has been extensively studied but such influence on Latin American women with MS has not been characterized. Our objective was to describe the course of pregnancy and birth outcome in Argentinean MS patients and the evolution of MS during pregnancy and after delivery. Method We used a retrospective design in eight MS centers in Argentina and administered a survey to women with definite MS (Mc Donald) with pregnancies during or after MS onset. We contacted 355 women of which 81 met inclusion criteria. We recorded 141 pregnancies. Results Involuntary abortion was observed in 16% of pregnancies (95% CI = 10–23). Thirty five women received immunomodulatory therapy (IMT) before 42 pregnancies. Twenty three (55%) out of 42 pregnancies were exposed to IMT. The mean time of IMT discontinuation before conception in 19 (45.2%) pregnancies without exposure, was 104 days (95% CI = 61.0–147.0). There were 103 deliveries: 79% full term. Birth defects were detected in 19% of pregnancies exposed to IMT (95% CI = 4–46) and in 2% of non-exposed (95% CI = 0.3–8.0). The mean relapse rate was: pre-pregnancy year: 0.22 (95% CI = 0.12–0.32); pregnancy: 0.31 in 1st (95% CI = 0.10–0.52), 0.19 (95% CI = 0.03–0.36) in 2nd, and 0.04 in 3rd trimester (95% CI = –0.04–0.12); 1st trimester post delivery: 0.82 (95% CI = 0.42–1.22). Conclusion We observed a higher rate of birth defects among infants exposed to immunomodulators in utero than those not exposed. The reduction in MS relapses during 2nd and 3rd trimester of pregnancy and its increase during postpartum is consistent with previous reports.


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2008

Argentine Patagonia: prevalence and clinical features of multiple sclerosis

Mo Melcon; L Gold; Adriana Carrá; Fernando Caceres; Jorge Correale; Edgardo Cristiano; N Fernández Liguori; Orlando Garcea; Geraldine Luetic; M Kremenchutzky

There are few studies reporting multiple sclerosis prevalence rates in the Buenos Aires region, Argentina (latitude 34°S) (between 12–18.5/100 000 inhabitants), and no studies have been performed in the larger region between parallels 36° and 55°S. The aim of this study is to determine the prevalence rates and clinical features of multiple sclerosis in residents of the Argentine Patagonia. Four cities from the region were selected for this study, giving a sample population of 417 666 inhabitants (~24% of the total Patagonia population). 1st March 2002 was determined as prevalence day. Patients were ascertained using multiple case-finding methods. The point prevalence rate was 17.2/100 000 (17.2 age-adjusted to the world population). Prevalence rates were higher for women than for men, 22.1 versus 12.2/100 000 inhabitants (21.4 versus 12.7 sex-adjusted to the world population). The study population was mainly of European descent and mestizoes. Clinical features were similar to those reported in other countries. This study shows that Argentine Patagonia is a medium-risk area with no south–north gradient between parallels 55° and 36°S. The Patagonia population shows recent internal migration that makes it difficult to determine whether the exposure to potential risk factors has been long enough to modify the disease incidence.


Therapeutic Advances in Neurological Disorders | 2011

Optimizing outcomes in multiple sclerosis: consensus guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of multiple sclerosis in Latin America.

Adriana Carrá; Miguel Angel Macias-Islas; Alberto Alan Gabbai; Jorge Correale; Carlos Bolaña; Eduardo Duriez Sotelo; Juan García Bonitto; Fernando Vergara-Edwards; Darwin Vizcarra-Escobar

Objective: The prevalence of multiple sclerosis (MS) in Latin America varies across different studies but an intermediate risk and increased frequency of the disease have been reported in recent years. The circumstances of Latin American countries are different from those of Europe and North America, both in terms of differential diagnoses and disease management. Methods: An online survey on MS was sent to 855 neurologists in nine Latin American countries. A panel of nine experts in MS analyzed the results. Results: Diagnostic and therapeutic recommendations were outlined with special emphasis on the specific needs and circumstances of Latin America. The experts proposed guidelines for MS diagnosis, treatment, and follow up, highlighting the importance of considering endemic infectious diseases in the differential diagnoses of MS, the identification of patients at high risk of developing MS in order to maximize therapeutic opportunities, early treatment initiation, and cost-effective control of treatment efficacy, as well as global assessment of disability. Conclusions: The experts recommended that healthcare systems allocate a longer consultation time for patients with MS, which must be conducted by neurologists trained in the management of the disease. All drugs currently approved must be available in all Latin American countries and must be covered by healthcare plans. The expert panel supported the creation of a permanent forum to discuss future clinical and therapeutic recommendations that may be useful in Latin American countries.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Central Nervous System Idiopathic Inflammatory Demyelinating Disorders in South Americans: A Descriptive, Multicenter, Cross-Sectional Study

Regina Maria Papais-Alvarenga; Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos; Adriana Carrá; Ibis Soto de Castillo; Sara Florentin; Fernando Hamuy Diaz de Bedoya; Raul Mandler; Luiza Campanella de Siervi; Maria Lúcia Vellutini Pimentel; Marina Papais Alvarenga; Marcos Papais Alvarenga; Anderson Kuntz Grzesiuk; Ana Beatriz Calmon Nogueira da Gama Pereira; Antonio Pereira Gomes Neto; Carolina Velasquez; Carlos Soublette; Cynthia Veronica Fleitas; Denise Sisteroli Diniz; Elizabeth Armas; Elizabeth Batista; Freda Hernandez; Fernanda Ferreira Chaves da Costa Pereira; Heloise Helena Siqueira; Hideraldo Cabeça; Jose Javier Sanchez; Joseph Bruno Bidin Brooks; Marcus Vinicius Magno Goncalves; Maria Cristina Del Negro Barroso; Maria Elena Ravelo; Maria Carlota Castillo

The idiopathic inflammatory demyelinating disease (IIDD) spectrum has been investigated among different populations, and the results have indicated a low relative frequency of neuromyelitis optica (NMO) among multiple sclerosis (MS) cases in whites (1.2%-1.5%), increasing in Mestizos (8%) and Africans (15.4%-27.5%) living in areas of low MS prevalence. South America (SA) was colonized by Europeans from the Iberian Peninsula, and their miscegenation with natives and Africans slaves resulted in significant racial mixing. The current study analyzed the IIDD spectrum in SA after accounting for the ethnic heterogeneity of its population. A cross-sectional multicenter study was performed. Only individuals followed in 2011 with a confirmed diagnosis of IIDD using new diagnostic criteria were considered eligible. Patients’ demographic, clinical and laboratory data were collected. In all, 1,917 individuals from 22 MS centers were included (73.7% female, 63.0% white, 28.0% African, 7.0% Mestizo, and 0.2% Asian). The main disease categories and their associated frequencies were MS (76.9%), NMO (11.8%), other NMO syndromes (6.5%), CIS (3.5%), ADEM (1.0%), and acute encephalopathy (0.4%). Females predominated in all main categories. The white ethnicity also predominated, except in NMO. Except in ADEM, the disease onset occurred between 20 and 39 years old, early onset in 8.2% of all cases, and late onset occurred in 8.9%. The long-term morbidity after a mean disease time of 9.28±7.7 years was characterized by mild disability in all categories except in NMO, which was scored as moderate. Disease time among those with MS was positively correlated with the expanded disability status scale (EDSS) score (r=0.374; p=<0.001). This correlation was not observed in people with NMO or those with other NMO spectrum disorders (NMOSDs). Among patients with NMO, 83.2% showed a relapsing-remitting course, and 16.8% showed a monophasic course. The NMO-IgG antibody tested using indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) with a composite substrate of mouse tissues in 200 NMOSD cases was positive in people with NMO (95/162; 58.6%), longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis (10/30; 33.3%) and bilateral or recurrent optic neuritis (8/8; 100%). No association of NMO-IgG antibody positivity was found with gender, age at onset, ethnicity, early or late onset forms, disease course, or long-term severe disability. The relative frequency of NMO among relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) + NMO cases in SA was 14.0%. Despite the high degree of miscegenation found in SA, MS affects three quarters of all patients with IIDD, mainly white young women who share similar clinical characteristics to those in Western populations in the northern hemisphere, with the exception of ethnicity; approximately one-third of all cases occur among non-white individuals. At the last assessment, the majority of RRMS patients showed mild disability, and the risk for secondary progression was significantly superior among those of African ethnicity. NMO comprises 11.8% of all IIDD cases in SA, affecting mostly young African-Brazilian women, evolving with a recurrent course and causing moderate or severe disability in both ethnic groups. The South-North gradient with increasing NMO and non-white individuals from Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil and Venezuela confirmed previous studies showing a higher frequency of NMO among non-white populations.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2012

Latin American algorithm for treatment of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis using disease-modifying agents

Alessandro Finkelsztejn; Alberto Alain Gabbai; Yara Dadalti Fragoso; Adriana Carrá; Miguel Angel Macias-Islas; Raul Arcega-Revilla; Juan García-Bonitto; Carlos Luis Oehninger-Gatti; Geraldine Orozco-Escobar; Adriana Tarulla; Fernando Vergara; Darwin Vizcarra

OBJECTIVE It is estimated that circa 50,000 individuals have relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis in Latin America. European and North-American algorithms for the treatment of multiple sclerosis do not foresee our regional difficulties and the access of patients to treatment. METHODS The Latin American Multiple Sclerosis Forum is an independent and supra-institutional group of experts that has assessed the latest scientific evidence regarding efficacy and safety of disease-modifying treatments. Accesses to treatment and pharmacovigilance programs for each of the eight countries represented at the Forum were also analyzed. RESULTS A specific set of guidelines based upon evidence-based recommendations was designed for Latin America. Future perspectives of multiple sclerosis treatment were also discussed. CONCLUSIONS The present paper translated an effort from representatives of eight countries discussing a matter that cannot be adapted to our region directly from purely European and North-American guidelines for treatment.


Multiple sclerosis and related disorders | 2016

Increasing prevalence of multiple sclerosis in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Edgardo Cristiano; Liliana Patrucco; Jimena Miguez; Diego Giunta; Jorge Correale; Marcela Fiol; María C. Ysrraelit; Fernando Caceres; N. Fernandez Liguori; M.L. Saladino; Orlando Garcea; Berenice Silva; Ricardo Alonso; Adriana Carrá; María Celeste Curbelo; Alejandra D. Martínez; Judith Steinberg; S. Giachello; M.O. Melcom; Juan Ignacio Rojas

UNLABELLED In 1996, the prevalence of multiple sclerosis (MS) for the metropolitan area of Buenos Aires using the capture-recapture method was estimated to be between 14 and 19.8 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. The aim of this study was to update the prevalence to 2014 following the same methodology. METHODS Gran Buenos Aires is the denomination that refers to the megalopolis comprised by the autonomous city of Buenos Aires and the surrounding conurbation of the province of Buenos Aires. The study was carried out taking December 2014 as the prevalence month. We used the capture-recapture method to estimate the prevalence of MS cross-matching registries from 6 MS Centers from the metropolitan area of Buenos Aires. Log-linear model Poisson regression was used to estimate the number of affected MS patients not detected by any of the 6 sources considered. RESULTS 1035 registries were obtained from the 6 lists from 910 different patients detected. The population of the area based on 2010 census was 12,806,866, the number of MS cases estimated amongst source interactions were 4901. The estimated prevalence was 38.2 per 100,000 inhabitants (95% CI 36.1-41.2). CONCLUSION The study is an update almost 20 years after the first one in the area showing a significant increase in the previous reported prevalence. Our findings are in line with previous studies performed in other regions of the world.


Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics | 2015

Biological and nonbiological complex drugs for multiple sclerosis in Latin America: regulations and risk management

Adriana Carrá; Miguel Angel Macías Islas; Adriana Tarulla; Denis Bernardi Bichuetti; Alessandro Finkelsztejn; Yara Dadalti Fragoso; Raul Arcega-Revilla; Claudia Rodríguez; Juan Carlos Durán; Juan García Bonitto; Rosalba León; Carlos Oehninger Gatti; Geraldine Orozco; Darwin Vizcarra Escobar

Biological drugs and nonbiological complex drugs with expired patents are followed by biosimilars and follow-on drugs that are supposedly similar and comparable with the reference product in terms of quality, safety and efficacy. Unlike simple molecules that can be copied and reproduced, biosimilars and follow-on complex drugs are heterogeneous and need specific regulations from health and pharmacovigilance agencies. A panel of 14 Latin American experts on multiple sclerosis from nine different countries met to discuss the recommendations regarding biosimilars and follow-on complex drugs for treating multiple sclerosis. Specific measures relating to manufacturing, therapeutic equivalence assessment and pharmacovigilance reports need to be implemented before commercialization. Physical, chemical, biological and immunogenic characterizations of the new product need to be available before clinical trials start. The new product must maintain the same immunogenicity as the original. Automatic substitution of biological and complex drugs poses unacceptable risks to the patient.


Multiple sclerosis and related disorders | 2016

Disease onset in familial and sporadic multiple sclerosis in Argentina

Juan Ignacio Rojas; Liliana Patrucco; Jimena Miguez; Vladimiro Sinay; F. Pagani Cassara; Fernando Caceres; N. Fernandez Liguori; M.L. Saladino; N. Deri; G. Jaacks; M. Parada Marcilla; M.I. Arrigoni; Jorge Correale; Marcela Fiol; María C. Ysrraelit; Adriana Carrá; María Celeste Curbelo; Alejandra Martinez; Judith Steinberg; Santiago Bestoso; Javier Pablo Hryb; J.L. Di Pace; Mónica Perassolo; E. Carnero Contentti; Alejandro Caride; Pablo A. López; C. Martinez; E. Reich; Edgardo Cristiano

UNLABELLED The present study was carried out to assess if there is an anticipation of age at onset in younger generations of familial multiple sclerosis (FMS) vs. sporadic MS (SMS) in Argentina. METHODS multicenter study that included patients from 14 MS Centers of Argentina. Patients were considered as FMS if they had in their family at least one relative of first or second degree diagnosed with MS; otherwise, patients were considered to have SMS. We compared the age at onset between familial and sporadic cases as well as the age at onset between relatives from different generations in FMS vs. SMS. RESULTS 1333 patients were included, 97 of them were FMS (7.3%). A lower age at onset in the younger generations of FMS cases was found compared with older generations of FMS as well as. SMS cases (24.1±3.7 years vs. 30.3±5.7 years, and 32.4±9.4 respectively; p<0.001). No differences were observed between older generations of FMS vs. SMS cases (p=0.12). CONCLUSION we observed an anticipation of age at onset of MS in younger generations of patients with FMS vs. older generations of FMS and SMS.


Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2017

Gender ratio trends over time in multiple sclerosis patients from Argentina

Juan Ignacio Rojas; Liliana Patrucco; Jimena Miguez; Vladimiro Sinay; F. Pagani Cassara; Fernando Caceres; N. Fernandez Liguori; M.L. Saladino; N. Deri; G. Jaacks; M. Parada Marcilla; M.I. Arrigoni; Jorge Correale; Marcela Fiol; María C. Ysrraelit; Adriana Carrá; María Celeste Curbelo; Alejandra Martinez; Judith Steinberg; Santiago Bestoso; Javier Pablo Hryb; J.L. Di Pace; Mónica Perassolo; E. Carnero Contentti; Alejandro Caride; Pablo A. López; C. Martinez; E. Reich; Diego Giunta; Edgardo Cristiano

Several studies in multiple sclerosis (MS) suggest a trend of increasing disease frequency in women during the last decades. A direct comparison of gender ratio trends among MS populations from Argentina remains to be carried out. The objective of the study was to compare gender ratio trends, over a 50-year span in MS populations from Argentina. METHODS multicenter study that included patients from 14 MS Centers of Argentina. Patients with definite MS with birth years ranging from 1940 to 1989 were included. Gender ratios were calculated by five decades based on year of birth and were adjusted for the F/M born-alive ratio derived from the Argentinean national registry of births. The F/M ratios were calculated using a multivariate logistic regression per five decades by the year of birth approach. Analyses were performed using Stata 10.1. RESULTS 1069 patients were included. Gender ratios showed a significant increase from the first to the last decade in the whole MS sample (from 1.8 to 2.7; p value for trend=0.023). The Gender ratio did not show differences considering MS subtype. CONCLUSION our study showed a modest increase of the F/M ratio (from 1.8 to 2.7) over time among patients affected by MS in Argentina.


Archive | 2015

A 2-year observational study of patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis converting to glatiramer acetate from other disease-modifying therapies: the COPTIMIZE trial (vol 261, pg 2101, 2014)

Niall Tubridy; Jc de Sa; Anne-Marie Landtblom; Ovidiu Bajenaru; Adriana Carrá; Rhl Delgado; Olivier Heinzlef; Mam Islas; N de Klippel; J. L. Frederiksen; Tjalf Ziemssen; Yossi Gilgun-Sherki; Astrid Edland; Klimentini E. Karageorgiou

Erratum to : A 2-year observational study of patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis converting to glatiramer acetate from other disease-modifying therapies

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Edgardo Cristiano

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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Orlando Garcea

University of Buenos Aires

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Liliana Patrucco

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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Fernando Caceres

Spanish National Research Council

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Juan Ignacio Rojas

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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