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Dive into the research topics where Alice Dragomir is active.

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Featured researches published by Alice Dragomir.


Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery | 2007

Intraoperative floppy-iris syndrome associated with α1-adrenoreceptors : Comparison of tamsulosin and alfuzosin

Marie-Claude Blouin; Julie Blouin; Sylvie Perreault; Andre Lapointe; Alice Dragomir

PURPOSE: To compare the incidence of intraoperative floppy‐iris syndrome (IFIS) in men exposed to tamsulosin and men exposed to alfuzosin and evaluate the effect of IFIS on the complication rate of cataract surgery. SETTING: Tertiary care hospital, Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada. METHODS: The medical charts of 64 men (92 eyes) who had phacoemulsification cataract surgery between June 2005 and July 2006 and reported having used tamsulosin or alfuzosin at their initial visit for cataract evaluation were reviewed. The presence or absence of IFIS, potential confounding clinical covariates, duration of surgery, and complications were noted. The history of taking an α1‐antagonist was verified. To address the main objective of the study, only patients who had exclusively used tamsulosin or alfuzosin were included. For the secondary objective, all eligible patients were included even if they had received more than one α1‐antagonist in the past. RESULTS: Of men exclusively exposed to tamsulosin (22) or alfuzosin (13), 86.4% and 15.4%, respectively, developed IFIS (P<.001). The adjusted odds ratio of IFIS in patients exposed to tamsulosin compared to those exposed to alfuzosin was 32.15 (95% confidence interval, 2.74‐377.11). Eyes with IFIS had a higher risk for complications (focal iris stromal atrophy, transient postoperative hypertension, major iris trauma, posterior capsule break with vitreous loss, zonular dehiscence, postoperative cystoid macular edema) than eyes without IFIS (P<.001). CONCLUSIONS: Men exposed to tamsulosin had a significantly higher risk for developing IFIS than men exposed to alfuzosin. Intraoperative floppy‐iris syndrome significantly increased the complication rate of cataract surgery.


Journal of Internal Medicine | 2009

Better adherence to antihypertensive agents and risk reduction of chronic heart failure.

Sylvie Perreault; Alice Dragomir; Michel White; Lyne Lalonde; Lucie Blais; Anick Bérard

Aims.  Antihypertensive (AH) agents have been shown to reduce the risk of major cardiovascular events including chronic heart failure (CHF). However, the impact of changes in patterns of AH agents use on CHF is unknown. Our objective was to estimate to which different patterns of AH agent use is associated with the occurrence of CHF in a population‐based study.


British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2008

Impact of noncompliance with alendronate and risedronate on the incidence of nonvertebral osteoporotic fractures in elderly women.

Julie Blouin; Alice Dragomir; Yola Moride; Louis-Georges Ste-Marie; Julio C. Fernandes; Sylvie Perreault

AIMS To evaluate the association between noncompliance with alendronate and risedronate and the risk of nonvertebral osteoporotic fracture in community-dwelling elderly women. METHODS A nested case-control study was conducted using the Quebec administrative health databases. To be included in the cohort, women needed to be aged > or = 68 years and to have initiated treatment with alendronate or risedronate between 1 January 2002 and 31 March 2005. Cases consisted of all women with an incident nonvertebral osteoporotic fracture occurring > or = 1 year after initiation of therapy. Each case was matched with up to 20 controls using incidence density sampling, according to age (+/- 1 year) and follow-up duration. A woman was noncompliant if she had a medication possession ratio (MPR) <80% for total follow-up duration. Rate ratios (RR) for fracture were estimated through conditional logistic regression analysis, adjusting for potential confounders. RESULTS Among the 30 259 women included in the cohort, 1036 nonvertebral fracture cases were identified and were matched to 20 069 controls. Compared with women with a MPR > or = 80%, those with a MPR < 80% had a greater risk of nonvertebral fracture [adjusted RR 1.27, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.12, 1.44]. Considering hip fracture only, the multivariate model yielded similar results, (adjusted RR 1.28, 95% CI 1.02, 1.61). CONCLUSIONS Among community-dwelling elderly women, noncompliance with alendronate or risedronate is associated with an increased risk of nonvertebral fracture.


European Urology | 2014

Conditional Survival After Radical Cystectomy for Bladder Cancer: Evidence for a Patient Changing Risk Profile over Time

G. Ploussard; Shahrokh F. Shariat; Alice Dragomir; Luis Kluth; Evanguelos Xylinas; Alexandra Masson-Lecomte; Malte Rieken; Michael Rink; Kazumasa Matsumoto; Eiji Kikuchi; Tobias Klatte; Stephen A. Boorjian; Yair Lotan; Florian Roghmann; Adrian Fairey; Yves Fradet; Peter C. Black; Ricardo Rendon; Jonathan I. Izawa; Wassim Kassouf

BACKGROUND Standard survival statistics do not take into consideration the changes in the weight of individual variables at subsequent times after the diagnosis and initial treatment of bladder cancer. OBJECTIVE To assess the changes in 5-yr conditional survival (CS) rates after radical cystectomy for bladder cancer and to determine how well-established prognostic factors evolve over time. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS We analyzed data from 8141 patients treated with radical cystectomy at 15 international academic centers between 1979 and 2012. INTERVENTIONS Radical cystectomy and pelvic lymph node dissection. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS Conditional cancer-specific survival (CSS) and overall survival (OS) estimates were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method. The multivariable Cox regression model was used to calculate proportional hazard ratios for the prediction of mortality after stratification by clinical characteristics (age, perioperative chemotherapy status) and pathologic characteristics (pT stage, grade, lymphovascular invasion, pN stage, number of nodes removed, margin status). The median follow-up was 32 mo. RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS The 5-yr CSS and OS rates were 67.7% and 57.5%, respectively. Given a 1-, 2-, 3-, 5- and 10-yr survivorship, the 5-yr conditional OS rates improved by +5.6 (60.7%), +8.4 (65.8%), +7.6 (70.8%), +3.0 (72.9%), and +1.9% (74.3%), respectively. The 5-yr conditional CSS rates improved by +5.6 (71.5%), +9.8 (78.5%), +7.9 (84.7%), +7.2 (90.8%), and 5.6% (95.9%), respectively. The 5- and 10-yr CS improvement was primarily noted among surviving patients with advanced stage disease. The impact of pathologic parameters on CS estimates decreased over time for both CSS and OS. Findings were confirmed on multivariable analyses. The main limitation was the retrospective design. CONCLUSIONS CS analysis demonstrates that the patient risk profile changes over time. The risk of mortality decreases with increasing survivorship. The CS rates improve mainly in the case of advanced stage disease. The impact of prognostic pathologic features decreases over time and can disappear for long-term CS.


Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety | 2008

Population-based study of the effectiveness of bone-specific drugs in reducing the risk of osteoporotic fracture†

Sylvie Perreault; Alice Dragomir; Lucie Blais; Yola Moride; Michel Rossignol; Louis-Georges Ste-Marie; Julio C. Fernandes

Evidence supports bone‐specific drugs (BSDs) efficacy in the fracture risk reduction. But treatment rates for osteoporosis among high‐risk patients are far below the recommended guidelines. A major concern about BSDs is the lack of adherence with treatment.


Kidney International | 2013

Adherence to antihypertensive agents improves risk reduction of end-stage renal disease

Louise Roy; Brian White-Guay; Marc Dorais; Alice Dragomir; Myriam Lessard; Sylvie Perreault

Uncontrolled hypertension is associated with an increased risk of end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Intensified blood pressure control may slow progression of chronic kidney disease; however, the impact of antihypertensive agent adherence on the prevention of ESRD has never been evaluated. Here we assessed the impact of antihypertensive agent adherence on the risk of ESRD in 185,476 patients in the RAMQ databases age 45 to 85 and newly diagnosed/treated for hypertension between 1999 and 2007. A case cohort study design was used to assess the risk of and multivariate Cox proportional models were used to estimate the adjusted hazard ratio of ESRD. Adherence level was reported as a medication possession ratio. Mean patient age was 63 years, 42.2% male, 14.0% diabetic, 30.3% dyslipidemic, and mean follow-up was 5.1 years. A high adherence level of 80% or more to antihypertensive agent(s) compared to a lower one was related to a risk reduction of ESRD (hazard ratio 0.67; 95% confidence intervals 0.54-0.83). Sensitivity analysis revealed that the effect is mainly in those without chronic kidney disease. Risk factors for ESRD were male, diabetes, peripheral artery disease, chronic heart failure, gout, previous chronic kidney disease, and use of more than one agent. Thus, our study suggests that a better adherence to antihypertensive agents is related to a risk reduction of ESRD and this adherence needs to be improved to optimize benefits.


Neurology | 2012

Adherence to antihypertensive agents after ischemic stroke and risk of cardiovascular outcomes

Sylvie Perreault; Amy Y. X. Yu; Robert Côté; Alice Dragomir; Brian White-Guay; Stéphanie Dumas

ABSTRACT Objective: To evaluate the relationship between antihypertensive (AH) drug adherence and cardiovascular (CV) outcomes among patients with a recent ischemic stroke and assess the validity of our approach. Methods: A cohort of 14,227 patients diagnosed with an ischemic stroke was assembled from individuals 65 years and older who were treated with AH agents from 1999 to 2007 in Quebec, Canada. A nested case-control design was used to evaluate the occurrence of nonfatal major CV outcomes and mortality. Each case was matched to 15 controls by age and cohort entry time. Medication possession ratio was used for AH agent adherence level. Adjusted conditional logistic regression models were used to estimate the rate ratio of CV events. The validity of the approach was assessed by evaluating the adherence level of CV-protective and non–CV-protective drugs. Results: Mean age was 75 years, 54% were male, 38% had coronary artery disease, 23% had diabetes, 47% dyslipidemia, and 14% atrial fibrillation or flutter. High adherence to AH therapy was mirrored by similar adherence to statins and antiplatelet agents and was associated with a lower risk of nonfatal vascular events compared with lower adherence (rate ratio 0.77 [0.70–0.86]). We observed a paradoxic link between adherence to several drugs and all-cause mortality. Conclusion: Adherence to AH agents is associated with adherence to other secondary preventive therapies and a risk reduction for nonfatal vascular events after an ischemic stroke. Overestimation of all-cause mortality reduction may be related to frailty and comorbidities, which may confound the apparent benefit of different drugs.


Human Pathology | 2014

The prognostic role of ERG immunopositivity in prostatic acinar adenocarcinoma: a study including 454 cases and review of the literature

Bin Xu; Myriam Chevarie-Davis; Simone Chevalier; Eleanora Scarlata; Nebras Zeizafoun; Alice Dragomir; Simon Tanguay; Wassim Kassouf; Armen Aprikian; Fadi Brimo

TMPRSS2/ERG fusion is among the most frequent genetic anomalies in prostate adenocarcinomas. Although positive immunostaining for ERG has been shown to tightly correlate with ERG fusion status, the clinical and prognostic significance of a positive ERG stain remains undetermined. The significance of ERG immunostaining in 454 consecutive prostate adenocarcinomas from radical prostatectomies (RPs) using tissue microarrays, herein, is evaluated. A separate set of 59 cases of incidental prostate adenocarcinoma detected on transurethral resection of prostate with a Gleason score of 6 was also included. ERG translocation was significantly more common in peripheral zone cancer in comparison with cancer of the transitional zone (33% in RP versus 5% in transurethral resection of prostate specimens). In the RP cohort, although ERG positivity was significantly associated with younger age at presentation and lower prostate-specific antigen values, it showed no association with Gleason score or with pathologic stage. In multivariate analysis, biochemical recurrence was only associated with the final RP Gleason score and elevated prostate-specific antigen levels and was unrelated to neither ERG positivity or to its staining intensity. In our hands, ERG positivity was unrelated to either aggressive local tumor characteristics or a worse outcome. Our results, as well as an extensive review of the related literature showing conflicting findings, seem to indicate that ERG immunopositivity cannot be considered as an important prognostic factor in prostate cancer.


Osteoporosis International | 2009

Comparison of direct health care costs related to the pharmacological treatment of osteoporosis and to the management of osteoporotic fractures among compliant and noncompliant users of alendronate and risedronate: a population-based study

Julie Blouin; Alice Dragomir; M. Fredette; Louis-Georges Ste-Marie; Julio C. Fernandes; Sylvie Perreault

SummaryThis population-based study aimed to compare direct health care costs related to the pharmacological treatment of osteoporosis and to the management of osteoporotic fractures among compliant and noncompliant users of alendronate and risedronate. During a 2-year follow-up period, compared to those with medication possession ratio (MPR) ≥ 80%, women with MPR < 80% incurred significantly higher physician care costs and hospital care costs.IntroductionThis study aimed to compare direct health care costs related to the treatment of osteoporosis and osteoporotic fractures among compliant and noncompliant users of alendronate and risedronate.MethodsA cohort of 15,027 women having initiated alendronate or risedronate was identified. MPR and direct health care costs (physician care, hospital care, drugs) were assessed during a 2-year period. Regression models were used to estimate mean predicted cost for compliant (MPR ≥ 80%) and noncompliant (MPR < 80%) women.ResultsMean predicted physician care cost (in Canadian dollars) was


Urologic Oncology-seminars and Original Investigations | 2016

Cost-effectiveness of multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging and targeted biopsy in diagnosing prostate cancer

Yannick Cerantola; Alice Dragomir; Simon Tanguay; Franck Bladou; Armen Aprikian; Wassim Kassouf

51 among women with MPR < 80% and

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Armen Aprikian

McGill University Health Centre

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Lucie Blais

Université de Montréal

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Lyne Lalonde

Université de Montréal

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Anick Bérard

Université de Montréal

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Julie Blouin

Université de Sherbrooke

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