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Featured researches published by Alessandra Vanoli.


The Lancet | 2007

The SANAD study of effectiveness of carbamazepine, gabapentin, lamotrigine, oxcarbazepine, or topiramate for treatment of partial epilepsy: an unblinded randomised controlled trial

Anthony G Marson; Asya M Al-Kharusi; Muna Alwaidh; Richard Appleton; Gus A. Baker; David Chadwick; Celia Cramp; Oliver C Cockerell; Paul Cooper; Julie Doughty; Barbara Eaton; Carrol Gamble; Peter Goulding; Stephen Howell; Adrian Hughes; Margaret Jackson; Ann Jacoby; Mark Kellett; Geoff rey R Lawson; John Paul Leach; Paola Nicolaides; Richard Roberts; Phil Shackley; Jing Shen; David F. Smith; Philip E. M. Smith; Catrin Tudur Smith; Alessandra Vanoli; Paula Williamson

BACKGROUND Carbamazepine is widely accepted as a drug of first choice for patients with partial onset seizures. Several newer drugs possess efficacy against these seizure types but previous randomised controlled trials have failed to inform a choice between these drugs. We aimed to assess efficacy with regards to longer-term outcomes, quality of life, and health economic outcomes. METHODS SANAD was an unblinded randomised controlled trial in hospital-based outpatient clinics in the UK. Arm A recruited 1721 patients for whom carbamazepine was deemed to be standard treatment, and they were randomly assigned to receive carbamazepine, gabapentin, lamotrigine, oxcarbazepine, or topiramate. Primary outcomes were time to treatment failure, and time to 12-months remission, and assessment was by both intention to treat and per protocol. This study is registered as an International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial, number ISRCTN38354748. FINDINGS For time to treatment failure, lamotrigine was significantly better than carbamazepine (hazard ratio [HR] 0.78 [95% CI 0.63-0.97]), gabapentin (0.65 [0.52-0.80]), and topiramate (0.64 [0.52-0.79]), and had a non-significant advantage compared with oxcarbazepine (1.15 [0.86-1.54]). For time to 12-month remission carbamazepine was significantly better than gabapentin (0.75 [0.63-0.90]), and estimates suggest a non-significant advantage for carbamazepine against lamotrigine (0.91 [0.77-1.09]), topiramate (0.86 [0.72-1.03]), and oxcarbazepine (0.92 [0.73-1.18]). In a per-protocol analysis, at 2 and 4 years the difference (95% CI) in the proportion achieving a 12-month remission (lamotrigine-carbamazepine) is 0 (-8 to 7) and 5 (-3 to 12), suggesting non-inferiority of lamotrigine compared with carbamazepine. INTERPRETATION Lamotrigine is clinically better than carbamazepine, the standard drug treatment, for time to treatment failure outcomes and is therefore a cost-effective alternative for patients diagnosed with partial onset seizures.


BMJ | 2007

Strategies to prevent falls and fractures in hospitals and care homes and effect of cognitive impairment: systematic review and meta-analyses

David Oliver; James Connelly; Christina R. Victor; Fiona Shaw; Anne Whitehead; Yasemin Genç; Alessandra Vanoli; Finbarr C. Martin; Margot Gosney

Objectives To evaluate the evidence for strategies to prevent falls or fractures in residents in care homes and hospital inpatients and to investigate the effect of dementia and cognitive impairment. Design Systematic review and meta-analyses of studies grouped by intervention and setting (hospital or care home). Meta-regression to investigate the effects of dementia and of study quality and design. Data sources Medline, CINAHL, Embase, PsychInfo, Cochrane Database, Clinical Trials Register, and hand searching of references from reviews and guidelines to January 2005. Results 1207 references were identified, including 115 systematic reviews, expert reviews, or guidelines. Of the 92 full papers inspected, 43 were included. Meta-analysis for multifaceted interventions in hospital (13 studies) showed a rate ratio of 0.82 (95% confidence interval 0.68 to 0.997) for falls but no significant effect on the number of fallers or fractures. For hip protectors in care homes (11 studies) the rate ratio for hip fractures was 0.67 (0.46 to 0.98), but there was no significant effect on falls and not enough studies on fallers. For all other interventions (multifaceted interventions in care homes; removal of physical restraints in either setting; fall alarm devices in either setting; exercise in care homes; calcium/vitamin D in care homes; changes in the physical environment in either setting; medication review in hospital) meta-analysis was either unsuitable because of insufficient studies or showed no significant effect on falls, fallers, or fractures, despite strongly positive results in some individual studies. Meta-regression showed no significant association between effect size and prevalence of dementia or cognitive impairment. Conclusion There is some evidence that multifaceted interventions in hospital reduce the number of falls and that use of hip protectors in care homes prevents hip fractures. There is insufficient evidence, however, for the effectiveness of other single interventions in hospitals or care homes or multifaceted interventions in care homes.


BMC Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders | 2006

Protocol for north of England and Scotland study of tonsillectomy and adeno-tonsillectomy in children (NESSTAC). A pragmatic randomised controlled trial comparing surgical intervention with conventional medical treatment in children with recurrent sore throats

John Bond; Janet A. Wilson; Martin Eccles; Alessandra Vanoli; Nick Steen; Ray Clarke; Andrew Zarod; Catherine A. Lock; Katie Brittain; Chris Speed; Nikki Rousseau

BackgroundUncertainties surrounding the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of childhood tonsillectomy for recurrent sore throat led the NHS Health Technology Assessment Programme to commission this research to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of tonsillectomy and adeno-tonsillectomy in comparison with standard non-surgical management in children aged under 16 with recurrent throat infections. The aim is to evaluate if tonsillectomy and adeno-tonsillectomy reduces the number of episodes of sore throats among children to a clinically significant extent.Methods/designA simple prospective pragmatic randomised controlled trial with economic analysis and prospective cohort study of non-trial participants comparing surgical intervention with conventional medical treatment. The treatment arm will receive tonsillectomy and adeno-tonsillectomy while in the control arm non-surgical conventional medical treatment only will be used. The primary outcome measure will be reported number of episodes of sore throat over two years with secondary outcomes measures of reported number of episodes of sore throat, otitis media and upper respiratory tract infection which invoke a GP consultation; reported number of symptom-free days; reported severity of sore throats and surgical and anaesthetic morbidity. The study will take place in five hospitals in the UK. The trial population will be 406 children aged 4–15 on their last birthday with recurrent sore throat referred by primary care to the 5 otolaryngology departments. The duration of the study is seven years (July 2001- July 2008).DiscussionAs with all pragmatic randomised controlled trials it is impossible to control the external environment in which the research is taking place. Since this trial began a number of factors have arisen which could affect the outcome including; a reduction in the incidence of respiratory tract infections, marked socio-economic differences in consultation rates, the results from the National Prospective Tonsillectomy Audit and the Governments waiting list initiatives.


Health Technology Assessment | 2006

A systematic literature review of the effectiveness of non-pharmacological interventions to prevent wandering in dementia and evaluation of the ethical implications and acceptability of their use

Lesley Robinson; Deborah Hutchings; Lynn Corner; Fiona Beyer; Heather O Dickinson; Alessandra Vanoli; Tracy Finch; Jeannine Hughes; Clive Ballard; Carl May; John Bond


International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2007

Effectiveness and acceptability of non-pharmacological interventions to reduce wandering in dementia: a systematic review

Louise Robinson; Deborah Hutchings; Heather O Dickinson; Lynne Corner; Fiona Beyer; Tracy Finch; Julian C. Hughes; Alessandra Vanoli; Clive Ballard; John Bond


Health Technology Assessment | 2007

A randomised controlled trial examining the longer-term outcomes of standard versus new antiepileptic drugs. The SANAD trial

Anthony G Marson; Richard Appleton; Gus A. Baker; David Chadwick; Julie Doughty; Barbara Eaton; Carrol Gamble; Ann Jacoby; Phil Shackley; David F. Smith; Catrin Tudur-Smith; Alessandra Vanoli; Paula Williamson


Health Technology Assessment | 2010

North of England and Scotland Study of Tonsillectomy and Adeno-tonsillectomy in Children (NESSTAC): a pragmatic randomised controlled trial with a parallel non-randomised preference study

Catherine A. Lock; Janet A. Wilson; N. Steen; Martin Eccles; Mason H; Sean Carrie; Ray Clarke; Haytham Kubba; Chris Raine; Andrew Zarod; Katie Brittain; Alessandra Vanoli; John Bond


BMC Health Services Research | 2002

A randomised controlled trial of a patient based Diabetes Recall and Management System: the DREAM trial: a study protocol [ISRCTN32042030].

Martin P Eccles; Gillian Hawthorne; Paula Whitty; Nick Steen; Alessandra Vanoli; Jeremy Grimshaw; Linda J Wood


Implementation Science | 2007

A pragmatic cluster randomised controlled trial of a Diabetes REcall And Management system: the DREAM trial

Martin P Eccles; Paula Whitty; Chris Speed; Ian Nicholas Steen; Alessandra Vanoli; Gillian Hawthorne; Jeremy Grimshaw; Linda J Wood; David McDowell


Practical Diabetes International | 2004

Improving services for people with diabetes: lessons from setting up the DREAM trial

Paula Whitty; Martin Eccles; G Hawthorne; Nick Steen; Alessandra Vanoli; Jm Grimshaw; Linda J Wood; C Speed; D McDowell

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Lynn Corner

University of Newcastle

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Andrew Zarod

Boston Children's Hospital

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Ray Clarke

Boston Children's Hospital

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Richard Appleton

Boston Children's Hospital

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Ann Jacoby

University of Liverpool

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