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Dive into the research topics where Aurora Casanova is active.

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Featured researches published by Aurora Casanova.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2001

Etiology, Reasons for Hospitalization, Risk Classes, and Outcomes of Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Patients Hospitalized on the Basis of Conventional Admission Criteria

Beatriz Rosón; Jordi Carratalà; Jordi Dorca; Aurora Casanova; Frederic Manresa; Francesc Gudiol

We performed an observational analysis of prospectively collected data on 533 nonseverely immunosuppressed adult patients who were hospitalized for community-acquired pneumonia on the basis of conventional admission criteria. For this population, we correlated etiology, reasons for admission, and outcomes using the Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI), to identify major discrepancies between the PSI risk class and the conventional criteria for deciding the site of care. PSI classes and corresponding mortality rates were as follows: class I, 51 patients (0%); class II, 62 (2%); class III, 117 (3%); class IV, 198 (10%); and class V, 105 (29%). We identified significant discrepancies between both methods. Overall, 230 patients (40%) who were hospitalized according to conventional criteria were assigned to low-risk classes. Of these 230 patients, 137 (60%) needed supplementary oxygen or had pleural complications; for the remaining patients, there were no irrefutable reasons for admission. This latter group deserves prospective evaluation in randomized studies that compare ambulatory and in-hospital management.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2001

Current Understanding and Management of Chronic Hepatosplenic Suppurative Brucellosis

Javier Ariza; C. Pigrau; C. Cañas; Anna Marron; F. Martínez; B. Almirante; Juan Corredoira; Aurora Casanova; J. Fabregat; A. Pahissa

To outline the characteristics and define appropriate management of chronic hepatosplenic suppurative brucellosis (CHSB), 905 patients with brucellosis were analyzed. Sixteen episodes of CHSB (14 in the liver and 2 in the spleen) were found in 15 patients. Six patients had had previous remote brucellosis. Twelve patients presented with systemic symptoms, and 12 with local symptoms. Cultures of blood samples yielded negative results in all cases except 1, and the results of cultures of pus specimens were positive for Brucella melitensis in only 2 cases. All patients showed calcium deposits surrounded by a hypodense area on computed tomography. Patients often had low titers of agglutinating antibody. In patients who were receiving conservative management, early response was successful in 50% and late response was successful in 33.3%. In the patients who underwent surgery and concomitant antibiotic therapy, early and late response was successful in 100%. Thus, CHSB mainly represents a local reactivation of previous brucellosis. Its diagnosis may be difficult to establish and surgery may be required to cure many patients.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2001

Efficacy of interferon for chronic hepatitis C virus–related hepatitis in kidney transplant candidates on hemodialysis: results after transplantation

Teresa Casanovas-Taltavull; Carme Baliellas; Carmen Benasco; Teresa Serrano; Aurora Casanova; José Luis Pérez; Lourdes Guerrero; M Teresa González; Enric Andres; Salvador Gil-Vernet; Luis Casais

OBJECTIVES:Interferon-α (IFN) may have undesirable effects on a functioning graft. The aim of this study was to evaluate IFN treatment in kidney transplant candidates during the hemodialysis period as well as the results after transplantation.METHODS:A total of 29 noncirrhotic hemodialysis patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection (based on long-term rise in ALT, HCV serology, HCV RNA by polymerase chain reaction methods, and histological evidence) were included. Tolerability to IFN treatment, pre- and posttransplantation therapeutic results, and long-term outcome were recorded. IFN regimen consisted of 3 million units (MU) times per week after hemodialysis sessions for 6 months, followed by 1.5 MU after each hemodialysis session for an additional 6 months. All patients gave informed consent for participation.RESULTS:IFN therapy was fairly well tolerated. Adverse effects due to IFN toxicity, renal disease, or causes related to the immunological properties of IFN were observed in 24% of patients. At the end of treatment, ALT had normalized in 23/28 patients (82.1%), and HCV RNA had cleared in 23/28 patients (82.1%). During follow-up, HCV RNA was persistently negative in 18 patients (64%, including transplant recipients). A total of 14 patients (nine HCV RNA–negative) received a kidney transplant. Mean follow-up after the procedure was 41 ± 28 months. In all, 12 patients had a functioning graft, one had acute vascular rejection, and one died of carcinoma. All transplanted patients maintained normal ALT levels, and eight remained HCV RNA–negative.CONCLUSIONS:Treatment results in our study population were better than those observed in the general population. The long-term response achieved, which was maintained after transplantation, supports the use of IFN for HCV hepatitis in kidney transplant candidates under hemodialysis.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2011

The Rose Bengal Test in Human Brucellosis: A Neglected Test for the Diagnosis of a Neglected Disease

Ramón Díaz; Aurora Casanova; Javier Ariza; Ignacio Moriyón

Brucellosis is a highly contagious zoonosis affecting livestock and human beings. The human disease lacks pathognomonic symptoms and laboratory tests are essential for its diagnosis. However, most tests are difficult to implement in the areas and countries were brucellosis is endemic. Here, we compared the simple and cheap Rose Bengal Test (RBT) with serum agglutination, Coombs, competitive ELISA, Brucellacapt, lateral flow immunochromatography for IgM and IgG detection and immunoprecipitation with Brucella proteins. We tested 208 sera from patients with brucellosis proved by bacteriological isolation, 20 contacts with no brucellosis, and 1559 sera of persons with no recent contact or brucellosis symptoms. RBT was highly sensitive in acute and long evolution brucellosis cases and this related to its ability to detect IgM, IgG and IgA, to the absence of prozones, and to the agglutinating activity of blocking IgA at the pH of the test. RBT was also highly specific in the sera of persons with no contact with Brucella. No test in this study outperformed RBT, and none was fully satisfactory in distinguishing contacts from infected patients. When modified to test serum dilutions, a diagnostic titer >4 in RBT resulted in 87.4% sensitivity (infected patients) and 100% specificity (contacts). We discuss the limitations of serological tests in the diagnosis of human brucellosis, particularly in the more chronic forms, and conclude that simplicity and affordability of RBT make it close to the ideal test for small and understaffed hospitals and laboratories.


Liver Transplantation | 2004

Long‐term immune response after liver transplantation in patients with spontaneous or post‐treatment HCV‐RNA clearance

Teresa Casanovas-Taltavull; M. Guadalupe Ercilla; Cecilia P. Gonzalez; Elias Gil; Odette Viñas; Concha Cañas; Aurora Casanova; Juan Figueras; Teresa Serrano; Luis Casais

Recurrent HCV infection after liver transplantation is universal and sustained clearance of HCV‐RNA rarely occurs. The aim of this study was to characterize cell‐mediated immunity and cytokine production in HCV‐infected patients after liver transplant. The study included 6 pretransplantation patients (PT) and 15 liver transplanted patients, including 5 with spontaneous HCV‐RNA clearance (SC group), 5 with sustained virological response after antiviral treatment (SVR group), and 5 no response (NR group). The control group included 5 HCV‐RNA negative, anti‐HCV negative healthy individuals. This study examines proliferative T‐cell response and cytokine production (gamma‐interferon and IL‐10) after HCV specific and phytohemagglutinin (PHA) stimulation in cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from each group. Multispecific proliferative responses to HCV antigens (mean Stimulation Index; SI) were higher in the SVR group (mean SI 7.4 ± 2) and SC group, as compared with the NR group (P < .05, vs SVR) and PT group (P < .05, vs SVR and SC). After PHA stimulation, gamma‐interferon levels were similar to controls (4330 ± 640 pg/ml) in the SC (4474 ± 300 pg/mL) and SVR groups (3647 ± 300 pg/mL), but were significantly lower than controls in the PT (401 ± 331 pg/mL; P < .02) and NR groups (546 ± 360 pg/mL; P < .01). IL‐10 production after PHA stimulation was similar in SC, SVR, and controls (647 ± 279 pg/mL, 674 ± 310 pg/mL and 841 ± 294 pg/mL, respectively), but was lower in PT patients (232 ± 94 pg/mL). The NR group showed high basal IL‐10 production with little increase after stimulation. In conclusion, liver post‐transplantation patients with spontaneous clearance of HCV‐RNA and those with sustained viral response after therapy showed an immune response despite immunosuppression that might have contributed to their favorable outcome. (Liver Transpl 2004;10:584–594.)


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2006

Secondary Serological Response of Patients with Chronic Hepatosplenic Suppurative Brucellosis

Ramón Díaz; Javier Ariza; I. Alberola; Aurora Casanova; Manuel Rubio

ABSTRACT Chronic hepatosplenic suppurative brucellosis (CHSB) is a local reactivation of a previous brucellosis, coursing with an immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgA secondary immunological response. The observation of two cases of CHSB with an apparent IgM response gave rise to a detailed serological study of three of our patients. We studied the first sample from all three patients and successive samples from two of them. In cases 1 and 2, we found samples with positive IgM lateral flow and IgM enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay results concomitantly with rheumatoid factor (RF); after absorption with anti-RF serum, these results were rendered negative. In patients 2 and 3 the diagnosis of brucellosis was delayed, because none of the test results were initially very significant. However, a clear seroconversion of IgG antibodies was observed in subsequent months; titers of the Brucellacapt and Coombs tests increased in similar ways, although Brucellacapt decreased more rapidly than Coombs, which persisted at high titers for years. In patient 3 a relapse was observed in the fourth year of follow-up, detected by Coombs and also by IgG lateral flow and counterimmunoelectrophoresis (CIEP), although not by the rose bengal, agglutination, or Brucellacapt tests. Serological changes in CHSB may sometimes be mild and are detected mainly by the Coombs test. Brucellacapt does not offer additional information, although IgG lateral flow and CIEP may be of some use. Careful surveillance of titer changes in the Coombs test is the best marker of infection activity. As the disease progresses, an intense IgG response may develop and RF sometimes appears, simulating an IgM response.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2009

BrucellaCapt versus Classical Tests in the Serological Diagnosis and Management of Human Brucellosis

Aurora Casanova; Javier Ariza; Manuel Rubio; Cristina Masuet; Ramón Díaz

ABSTRACT The BrucellaCapt test is an immunocapture agglutination test suggested as a possible substitute for the Coombs test in the diagnosis of human brucellosis. Here it is compared with classical tests using 321 samples from 48 patients with brucellosis (6.9 ± 1.7 samples per patient), including 20 patients with focal disease and 8 patients with a total of 9 relapse episodes (mean follow-up, 18 months). The BrucellaCapt test was used according to the manufacturers instructions, and we also used a variant of the BrucellaCapt test in which the microtiter plates were not coated with antibodies against total human immunoglobulin (BCAPV). The correlation between the BrucellaCapt and BCAPV tests was 0.982 (P < 0.001), with 260 coincident pairs of titers (81%). The areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve for the BrucellaCapt and BCAPV tests with respect to the Coombs test were 0.969 and 0.960, respectively. Upon admission, the BrucellaCapt, BCAPV, and Coombs tests and the microagglutination test (MAT) were positive for all cases: titers were 1/2,560 by the BrucellaCapt test, 1/2,560 by the BCAPV test, 1/1,280 by the Coombs test, and 1/320 by the MAT. The decreases in the BrucellaCapt and BCAPV titers over time were pronounced in comparison with the Coombs titers. Cumulative probabilities of persistence 12 months after therapy were as follows: 80% by the BrucellaCapt test, 80% by the BCAPV test, 87% by the Coombs test, and 35% by the MAT. Serological changes during relapse were detected in seven cases (88%) by the Coombs test, in five cases by the BrucellaCapt and BCAPV tests, and in three cases by the MAT. The BrucellaCapt test is a sensitive, specific, and simple test for routine use in human brucellosis. Similar results were obtained with the BCAPV test. However, in some cases of relapse and chronic forms of the disease, the slight changes observed in low-affinity antibodies alone are better detected by the Coombs test.


Transplant International | 2005

Successful treatment with tenofovir in a child C cirrhotic patient with lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B virus awaiting liver transplantation. Post-transplant results.

Teresa Casanovas Taltavull; Nadia Chahri; Blanca Verdura; Joan B. Gornals; Carmen Lopez; Aurora Casanova; Concha Cañas; Juan Figueras; Luis Casais

Antiviral treatment can be complex in decompensated hepatitis B virus (HBV) cirrhosis because of potential emergence of lamivudine‐resistant mutants and worsening liver function, and to multifactorial nephrotoxicity. Negative HBV‐DNA status by hybridization before liver transplantation is a favorable prognostic factor. We present the case of a 54‐year‐old HBV+ liver transplantation candidate who, after testing negative for HBV‐DNA, developed YMDD lamivudine‐resistant mutants resulting in a deteriorated clinical condition. After 8 months of adefovir plus lamivudine double therapy, only partial response was achieved. Tenofovir was added to this regimen, and an early decline of HBV‐DNA was seen at 4 weeks without adverse events. The patient underwent transplantation. At 21‐month postoperative follow‐up, the patients outcome was excellent. Post‐transplantation HBV prophylaxis, taking into account the prior development of mutants, consists of hepatitis B immunoglobulin plus lamivudine and adefovir. Tenofovir was well tolerated and produced a fast antiviral response, suggesting its potential value in combined antiviral treatment for liver transplantation candidates.


Enfermedades Infecciosas Y Microbiologia Clinica | 2011

Prevalence of Transmitted Antiretroviral Resistance and Distribution of HIV-1 Subtypes Among Patients with Recent Infection in Catalonia (Spain) between 2003 and 2005

Omar Sued; Teresa Puig; Anna Esteve; Tomás Pumarola; Jordi Casabona; Victoria González; Lurdes Matas; Cristina Tural; Isabel Rodrigo; Núria Margall; Pere Domingo; Aurora Casanova; Elena Ferrer; Estrella Caballero; Esteve Ribera; Joan Farré; M. José Amengual; Gemma Navarro; Josep M. Prat; Àngels Masabeu; Josep M. Simó; Carlos Alonso Villaverde; Pilar Barrufet; M. Goretti Sauca; Xavier Ortín; Amat Ortí; Rosa Navarro; Josep M. Euras; Josep Vilaró; M. Carme Villà

OBJECTIVES The objectives of this study were to assess the prevalence of transmitted HIV-1 drug resistances (TDR) and HIV-1 subtypes in recently infected patients in Catalonia between 2003 and 2005 and to describe the characteristics of these patients according to the presence or absence of TDR and HIV-1 subtype. METHODS After application of the Serological Testing Algorithm for Recent HIV Seroconversion (STARHS), residual aliquots of serum samples from recently infected antiretroviral-naïve individuals were genotyped. FASTA sequences were analyzed using the HIVDB Program. The World Health Organization 2009 List of Mutations for Surveillance of Transmitted HIV-1 Drug Resistant HIV Strains was used to estimate the prevalence of TDR. RESULTS Of 182 recently infected patients, 14 (7.7%) presented TDR. Seven (3.8%) had genotypic evidence of TDR against non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, 6 (3.3%) against nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, 3 (1.6%) against protease inhibitors (PIs), and only 2 individuals (1.1%) presented TDR against more than one class of drugs. Thirty-five (19.2%) patients were infected with a non-B HIV-1 subtype. CONCLUSION This is the first study to estimate the prevalence of TDR in recently infected patients in Catalonia. The results are similar to those of studies performed in other Spanish regions. Correct monitoring of these parameters requires systematic epidemiologic surveillance of transmitted resistance.


European Journal of Public Health | 2012

Identification of recent HIV-1 infection among newly diagnosed cases in Catalonia, Spain (2006-08)

Victoria González; Anna Esteve; Elisa Martró; L. Matas; Cristina Tural; Tomás Pumarola; Aurora Casanova; Elena Ferrer; Estrella Caballero; Esteve Ribera; Núria Margall; Pere Domingo; Joan Farré; Teresa Puig; MªGoretti Sauca; Pilar Barrufet; MªJosé Amengual; Gemma Navarro; Maria Navarro; Josep Vilaró; Xavier Ortín; Amat Ortí; Ferran Pujol; Josep M. Prat; Àngels Massabeu; Josep M. Simó; Carlos Alonso Villaverde; Miguel Ángel Benítez; Isabel Garcia; Olga Díaz

BACKGROUND Quantification and description of patients recently infected by HIV can provide an accurate estimate of the dynamics of HIV transmission. Between 2006 and 2008 in Catalonia, we estimated the prevalence of recent HIV infection among newly diagnosed cases, described the epidemiological characteristics of the infection according to whether it was recent, long-standing or advanced, and identified factors associated with recent infection. METHODS A Test for Recent Infection (TRI) was performed in serum samples from patients newly diagnosed with HIV. Two different TRI were used: the Vironostika-LS assay (January 2006-May 2007) and the BED-CEIA CEIA (June 2007 onwards). Samples were obtained within the first 6 months of diagnosis. Patients whose samples tested positive in the TRI were considered recently infected. RESULTS Of 1125 newly diagnosed patients, 79.9% were men (median age, 35.4 years), 38.7% were born outside Spain, 48.9% were men who have sex with men (MSM) and 10.6% presented other sexually transmitted infections. The overall percentage of recent infection was 23.0%, which increased significantly, from 18.1% in 2006 to 26.2% in 2008. This percentage was higher for patients from South America (27.6%). Factors associated with recent infection were acquiring infection through sexual contact between MSM [odds ratio (OR) 2.0; 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.1-3.9], compared with acquiring infection through heterosexual relations and being under 30 years of age (OR 5.9; 95% CI 1.9-17.4), compared with being over 50 years of age. CONCLUSION The highest percentage of recent infection was identified in MSM, suggesting either a higher incidence or a greater frequency of HIV testing. Information regarding testing patterns is necessary to correctly interpret data from recently infected individuals. Systems to monitor the HIV epidemic should include both parameters.

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Luis Casais

University of Barcelona

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Javier Ariza

University of Barcelona

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C. Baliellas

University of Barcelona

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F. Gudiol

University of Barcelona

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