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Dive into the research topics where Bernardo Gonzalez is active.

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Featured researches published by Bernardo Gonzalez.


Clinical Lymphoma, Myeloma & Leukemia | 2014

Pharmacological Profiles of Acute Myeloid Leukemia Treatments in Patient Samples by Automated Flow Cytometry: A Bridge to Individualized Medicine

Teresa A. Bennett; Pau Montesinos; Federico Moscardó; David Martínez-Cuadrón; Joaquin Martinez; Jorge Sierra; Raimundo García; Jaime Pérez de Oteyza; Pascual Fernandez; Josefina Serrano; Angeles Fernandez; Pilar Herrera; A. G. González; Concepción Bethancourt; Gabriela Rodriguez-Macias; A. Alonso; Juan Antonio Vera; Begoña Navas; Esperanza Lavilla; Juan Antonio López; Santiago Jimenez; Adriana Simiele; B. Vidriales; Bernardo Gonzalez; Carmen Burgaleta; Jose Angel Hernandez Rivas; Raul Cordoba Mascuñano; Guiomar Bautista; Jose A. Perez Simon; Adolfo de la Fuente

BACKGROUND We have evaluated the ex vivo pharmacology of single drugs and drug combinations in malignant cells of bone marrow samples from 125 patients with acute myeloid leukemia using a novel automated flow cytometry-based platform (ExviTech). We have improved previous ex vivo drug testing with 4 innovations: identifying individual leukemic cells, using intact whole blood during the incubation, using an automated platform that escalates reliably data, and performing analyses pharmacodynamic population models. PATIENTS AND METHODS Samples were sent from 24 hospitals to a central laboratory and incubated for 48 hours in whole blood, after which drug activity was measured in terms of depletion of leukemic cells. RESULTS The sensitivity of single drugs is assessed for standard efficacy (EMAX) and potency (EC50) variables, ranked as percentiles within the population. The sensitivity of drug-combination treatments is assessed for the synergism achieved in each patient sample. We found a large variability among patient samples in the dose-response curves to a single drug or combination treatment. CONCLUSION We hypothesize that the use of the individual patient ex vivo pharmacological profiles may help to guide a personalized treatment selection.


The Lancet Haematology | 2015

Use of newer prognostic indices for patients with myelodysplastic syndromes in the low and intermediate-1 risk categories: a population-based study

David Valcárcel; Guillermo Sanz; Margarita Ortega; Benet Nomdedeu; Elisa Luño; María Díez-Campelo; María Teresa Ardanaz; Carmen Pedro; Julía Montoro; Rosa Collado; Rafa Andreu; Victor Marco; Maria Teresa Cedena; Mar Tormo; Blanca Xicoy; Fernando Ramos; Joan Bargay; Bernardo Gonzalez; Salut Brunet; J.A. Muñoz; Valle Gomez; Alicia Bailen; Joaquin Sanchez; Brayan Merchán; Consuelo del Cañizo; Teresa Vallespi

BACKGROUND We aimed to compare the ability of recently developed prognostic indices for myelodysplastic syndromes to identify patients with poor prognoses within the lower-risk (low and intermediate-1) categories defined by the International Prognosis Scoring System (IPSS). METHODS We included patients with de-novo myelodysplastic syndromes diagnosed between Nov 29, 1972, and Dec 15, 2011, who had low or intermediate-1 IPSS scores and were in the Spanish Registry of Myelodysplastic Syndromes. We reclassified these patients with the new prognostic indices (revised IPSS [IPSS-R], revised WHO-based Prognostic Scoring System [WPSS-R], Lower Risk Scoring System [LRSS], and the Grupo Español de Síndromes Mielodisplásicos [Spanish Group of Myelodysplastic Syndromes; GESMD]) and calculated the overall survival of the different risk groups within each prognostic index to identify the groups of patients with overall poor prognoses (defined as an expected overall survival <30 months). We calculated overall survival with the Kaplan-Meier method. FINDINGS We identified 2373 patients. None of the prognostic indices could be used to identify a population with poor prognoses (median overall survival <30 months) for the patients with low IPSS scores (1290 individuals). In the group with intermediate-1 scores (1083 individuals), between 17% and 47% of patients were identified as having poor prognoses with the new prognostic indices. The LRSS had the best model fit with the lowest value in the Akaike information criteria test, whereas the IPSS-R identified the largest proportion of patients with poor prognoses (47%). Patients with intermediate-1 scores who were classified as having poor prognoses by one or more prognostic index (646 [60%] individuals) had worse median overall survival (33·1 months, 95% CI 28·4-37·9) than did patients who were classified as having low risk by all prognostic indices (63·7 months, 49·5-78·0], HR 1·9, 95% CI 1·6-2·3, p<0·0001) INTERPRETATION: Recently proposed prognostic indices for myelodysplastic syndromes can be used to improve identification of patients with poor prognoses in the group of patients with intermediate-1 IPSS scores, who could potentially benefit from a high-risk treatment approach. FUNDING None.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2014

Results of treatment with azacitidine in patients aged ≥ 75 years included in the Spanish Registry of Myelodysplastic Syndromes

Blanca Xicoy; María-José Jiménez; Olga García; Joan Bargay; Violeta Martínez-Robles; Salut Brunet; M.J. Arilla; Jaime Pérez de Oteyza; Rafael Andreu; Francisco-Javier Casaño; C. Cervero; Alicia Bailen; M. Díez; Bernardo Gonzalez; Ana-Isabel Vicente; Carme Pedro; Teresa Bernal; Elisa Luño; Maria-Teresa Cedena; Luis Palomera; Adriana Simiele; José-Manuel Calvo; Victor Marco; Eduardo Gómez; Marta Gómez; David Gallardo; Juan Muñoz; Javier Grau; Josep-Maria Ribera; Luis-Enrique Benlloch

Abstract The tolerability of azacitidine (AZA) allows its administration in elderly patients. The objective of this study was to analyze the clinical and biological characteristics, transfusion independence (TI), overall survival (OS) and toxicity in a series of 107 patients ≥ 75 years of age from the Spanish Registry of Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) treated with AZA. The median age (range) was 78 (75–90) years. According to the World Health Organization (WHO) classification, 86/102 (84%) had MDS, 10/102 (10%) had mixed myeloproferative/myelodysplastic disorder and 6/102 (6%) had acute myeloblastic leukemia. Regarding MDS by the International Prognostic Scoring System on initiation of AZA, 38/84 (45%) were low–intermediate-1 risk and 46/84 (55%) were intermediate-2–high risk. Ninety-five patients (89%) were red blood cell or platelet transfusion dependent. The AZA schedule was 5-0-0 in 39/106 (37%) patients, 5-2-2 in 36/106 (34%) patients and 7 consecutive days in 31/106 (29%) patients. The median number of cycles administered was 8 (range, 1–30). Thirty-eight out of 94 (40%) patients achieved TI. Median OS (95% confidence interval [CI]) was significantly better in patients achieving TI (n = 38) compared to patients who did not (n = 56) (22 [20.1–23.9] months vs. 11.1 [4.8–17.5] months, p = 0.001). No significant differences were observed in TI rate and OS among the three different schedules. With a median follow-up of 14 (min–max, 1–50) months, the median OS (95% CI) of the 107 patients was 18 (12–23) months and the probability of OS (95% CI) at 2 years was 34% (22–46%). Cycles were delayed in 31/106 (29%) patients and 47/101 patients (47%) were hospitalized for infection. These results show that treatment with AZA was feasible and effective in this elderly population, with 40% achieving TI, having a better OS than patients not achieving it. The schedule of AZA administration did not affect efficacy and toxicity.


European Journal of Haematology | 2016

Response to erythropoietic stimulating agents in patients with chronic myelomonocytic leukemia

Blanca Xicoy; Ulrich Germing; María-José Jiménez; Olga García; Regina Garcia; Jeniffer Schemenau; Carme Pedro; Elisa Luño; Teresa Bernal; Bernardo Gonzalez; Corinna Strupp; Maite Ardanaz; Andrea Kuendgen; Maria-Teresa Cedena; Judith Neukirchen; Marisa Calabuig; Salut Brunet; Angeles Medina; María-Luz Amigo; Fernando Ramos; Marta Callejas; María Díez-Campelo; Alicia Bailen; Rosa Collado; Ana Vicente; Montserrat Arnan; David Valcárcel; María J. Arilla; Lurdes Zamora; Luis Benlloch

The efficacy of erythropoietic‐stimulating agents (ESA) in chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) is unknown. Our objective was to analyze erythroid response (ER) and overall survival (OS) in a series of 94 patients with CMML treated with ESA.


Archive | 2016

An ex vivo native environment precision medicine test shows high clinical correlation with responses to first line acute myeloid leukemia treatment

Pau Montesinos; Joan Ballesteros; D Martinez Cuadron; J Martinez Lopez; Josefina Serrano; J Perez de Oteyza; Pascual Fernández; G Rodriguez Macias; B Vidriales; Pilar Herrera; Mar Tormo; Juan Bergua; Raimundo García; Susana Vives; Mª Ángeles Fernández Fernández; Esperanza Lavilla; Santiago Jimenez; Ja Perez Simon; Adriana Simiele; A. G. González; Bernardo Gonzalez; Carmen Burgaleta; Juan Antonio López; Concepción Bethancourt; Guiomar Bautista; A. Alonso; Mercedes Colorado; Jordi Sierra; Begoña Navas; Ja Hernandez Rivas

P Preventive and Personalized Medicine (PPPM) as the healthcare model of the near future and its tool, i.e., Translational Medicine (TraMed), represent an innovative model of healthcare services to consolidate advanced healthcare and robust platform for relevant branches of predictive diagnostics, personalized therapeutics and preventive drugs. To achieve the implementation of PPPM concept into practice, it is necessary to create a new strategy based upon the sub-clinical recognition of biomarkers long before the disease clinically manifests itself. This strategy would secure preventive measures whose personalization could have a significant influence on demographics! Meanwhile, penetration of new technologies into the market would demand the reforms not only in the area of healthcare but in medical education as well. Therefore, the problem of the preparation of specialists of the newest generation to secure priority in growing up medical doctors as creative artists is becoming particularly urgent and would require significant revision of training programs and curricula of the higher education as applicable to the medical schools. Modernization and integration of widely accepted medical and teaching standards require consolidation of both the life sciences and medicine that may become the conceptual basis for the medical curricula. The main goal of this training is not to achieve advanced training and expansion of technological skills but to provide development of novel multifaceted approaches to build academic schools of the newest generations and to outline curricula and courses to suit markets of the newest medical platforms. PPPM consists of a wide variety of tests and tools including so much complicated areas as networking, mathematic modeling, nanotools and nanotechnologies, cloudy and mobile technologies to suit the requests and standards of the new healthcare model. Coordinated measures to optimize the progress should be well-focused on solving the accumulating problems in healthcare and the concomitant economic burden that societies across the globe are facing more and more. Taking into consideration the current trends and personal experience, we have made first steps towards direct involvement in the modernization of the healthcare model. Guided by the above-mentioned facts, a non-canonical approach has become setting up under the aegis of EPMA (Brussels, EU), PMC (Washington, DC, USA) and ISPM (Tokyo, Japan) a unique team of medical students, young researchers, entrepreneurs in drug designing, clinicians and administrators of the future to come. Used as an educational-methodical kernel is a three-level basic education system (undergraduate, graduate, and postgraduate) to suit the continuing education. Group and individual vectors as part of the basic inventory are represented by translational medicine, bioinformatics, drug design, translational tools, regulatory courses, etc. The model for accelerated development of continuous vocational education (CVE) in PPPM and TraMed is based on the combinatorial approaches (competence, moduletype approach, personal activity, program-design and problem-oriented) to the elucidation of innovative processes of modernization of the existing educational model. The application of the model for development of CVE has required a new type of the infrastructure of the curricula. PPPM whilst secured by the upgraded educational system would offer great and real promise for the future. And the next generations will speak about the XXI century as a time, when healthcare services became predictive and preventive and its outcomes secured and guaranteed!RESULTS Background: We have overcome the limitations of 40 years of ex vivo testing. The aim of this study is to determine the ability of Vivias novel test (based on studying the ex-vivo sensitivity to drugs) to predict the complete remission (CR) rates after induction chemotherapy with cytarabine (Ara-C) and idarubicin (Ida) in 1st line AML.. Material and Methods: This has been an observational clinical trial where bone marrow samples from adult patients diagnosed with de novo AML in Spanish centers from the PETHEMA group were included. Whole marrow samples maintaining their Native Environment were incubated for 48h in well plates containing Ara-C, Ida, or their combination. Pharmacological responses are calculated using population models. Induction response was assessed according to the Cheson criteria (2003). Patients attaining a CR/CRi were classified as responders and the remaining as resistant. Results: 390 patient samples were used to calculate the dose response (DR) curves for Ara-C alone, Ida alone, and their synergism. For clinical correlation we used 142 patients with median 56 years. The strongest clinical predictors were the Area Under the Curve (AUC) of the DR of Ara-C (P=1.34E-05), and the AUC of IDA (P=3.9E-05). The GAM models revealed a significant relationship (RSquare=0.452 and deviance explained=45%) between these predictors and higher probabilities of post-induction resistance. Fig 1A shows a table illustrating the correlation between clinical outcome (columns) and the test predictions (lines). Using the cut off determined by the GAM models. The test obtain a high Specificity and Positive Protective Value (95% and 80,77%) and a lower sensitivity (50%) with a general prediction of a 81,69%. Interestingly, the 5 cases that the test identify as resistant but were clinically sensitive have high level of minimal residual disease. On the other hand, the test does not properly identify 21/142 that are clinically resistant and the test predicts as sensitive (bottom left quadrant right panel). This mismatched subgroup mimics the problems from molecular markers where a resistant clone present in a minority of leukemic cells cannot be detected yet drives the patient response. Consistent with this analysis, adding the cytogenetic risk factor to the ex vivo results, identifying the high risk population by molecular markers that might be present in a minority of the cells, significantly improves the correlation; Fig. 1B shows the 90% overall correlation achieved in 117 patient samples adding the cytogenetic risk factor, with a major improvement in the sensitivity from 50% to 72%. Both approaches lead to substantial improvements in estimated overall survival. ABSTRACT© 2019 The Egyptian Journal of Internal Medicine | Publ Background/purpose of the study Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is considered one of the major healthproblems.About170millionpatientswere infectedwithHCVworldwide.Till few years, Egypt was considered the highest HCV prevalent country worldwide, with predominant genotype number 4. The host immunity plays a major role in HCV infection with evolving data confirming the role of T-helper 17 cells in the formation of chronic HCV infection. The aim of our work was to determine the role of interleukins 17A (IL17A), 17F (IL17F) in the formation of chronic hepatitis C infection. Patients and methods We classify the patients into two groups: the first group included 51 chronic HCV patients who did not take antiviral therapy (the study group) and the second group included 51 healthy blood donors (as a control group). The levels of IL17A and IL17F in the serum of both groups were measured using the sandwich enzymelinked immunosorbent assay method. Results The serum values of IL17A were higher in patients with chronic HCV than the other group with the mean values being 52.9±32.6 pg/ml in the patient group and 17.1 ±10.4 pg/ml in the control group. IL17F was slightly higher in the HCV patient group than the control group, but it was statistically insignificant. Moreover, there were significant positive correlations between IL17A and alanine aminotransferase, viral load, and degree of liver fibrosis. Conclusion Patients with chronic HCV infections had a higher serum level of IL17A than the normal persons and it is positively correlated with alanine aminotransferase, viral load, and degree of liver fibrosis. This suggests its pivotal role in the formation of chronic HCV infection; so, it can be used as a new marker for disease progression due to its positive correlation with the severity of liver injury.


Journal of Geriatric Oncology | 2017

Further psychometric validation of the GAH scale: Responsiveness and effect size

A.J. Cruz-Jentoft; Bernardo Gonzalez; Javier de la Rubia; Jose Angel Hernandez Rivas; Juan Soler; Carlos Fernández Lago; Mario Arnao; Mercedes Gironella; Ernesto Pérez Persona; Maria Teresa Zudaire; Carmen Olivier; Alberto Altés; Antonio García Guiñón; Benet Nomdedeu; Montserrat Arnan; Ángel Ramírez Payer; Pedro Sánchez-Godoy; Nuria Pajuelo; David Vilanova; Diego Fernánez Monjil; Santiago Bonanad


Blood | 2012

Identification of Poor Risk Patients in Low and Intermediate-1 (Int-1) IPSS MDS with the New Ipssr Index and Comparison with Other Prognostic Indexes. A Study by the Spanish Group of MDS (GESMD)

David Valcárcel; Guillermo Sanz; Margarita Ortega; Benet Nomdedeu; Elisa Luño; María Díez-Campelo; M. Teresa Ardanaz; Carmen Pedro; Julia Montoro; Rosa Collado; Rafa Andreu; Victor Marco; Maria Teresa Cedena; Mar Tormo; Blanca Xicoy; Fernando Ramos; Joan Bargay; Bernardo Gonzalez; Salut Brunet; Juan Antonio Muñoz; Valle Gomez; Alicia Bailen; Joaquin Sanchez; Teresa Vallespi


Clinical Lymphoma, Myeloma & Leukemia | 2015

GAH Scale is a Simple, Comprehensive Assessment Tool in Older Patients With Hematological Malignancies That Shows Mortality Prediction Capacities

J. dela Rubia; Bernardo Gonzalez; J.Á. Hernández Rivas; David Valcárcel; A. Soler; C. Fernández Lago; E. Pérez-Persona; Maria Teresa Zudaire; C. Olivier; A. Altés; Montserrat Arnan; Antón García; M. Nomdedeu; P.S. Godoy; Angel R. Payer; Carmen Marrero; María-Antonia Durán; M. Marcos; A.J. Cruz-Jentoft; Santiago Bonanad


Blood | 2015

Disease-Attributable Mortality in the Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS): A Study from the Spanish MDS Cooperative Group (GESMD)

Meritxell Nomdedeu; Xavier Calvo; Dolors Costa; Montserrat Arnan; Helena Pomares; Guillermo Sanz; David Valcárcel; Elisa Luño; Fernando Ramos; María Díaz-Campelo; Rosa Collado; José-Francisco Falantes; Carme Pedro; Jordi Esteve; Rafael Andreu; M.T. Ardanaz; Joaquin Sanchez-Garcia; Mar Tormo; Maria-Teresa Cedena; Beatriz Arrizabalaga; Bernardo Gonzalez; Victor Marco; Salut Brunet; Arturo Pereira


Blood | 2015

High Correlation Clinical Responses to 1 st Line Acute Myeloid Leukemia Treatment with an Ex Vivo Native Environment Precision Medicine Test

Pau Montesinos; Joan Ballesteros; David Martínez-Cuadrón; Joaquin Martinez-Lopez; Josefina Serrano; Jaime Pérez de Oteyza; Pascual Fernández; Gabriela Rodriguez-Macias; Mª Belén Vidriales; Pilar Herrera; Mar Tormo; Juan Bergua; Raimundo García; Susana Vives; Mª Ángeles Fernández Fernández; Esperanza Lavilla; Santiago Jimenez; José A. Pérez-Simón; Adriana Simiele; A. G. González; Bernardo Gonzalez; Carmen Burgaleta; Juan Antonio López; Concepción Bethancourt; Guiomar Bautista; A. Alonso; Mercedes Colorado; Jordi Sierra; Begoña Navas; José Angel Hernández-Rivas

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David Valcárcel

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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A. Alonso

University of Navarra

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Juan Antonio López

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Mar Tormo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Salut Brunet

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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A. G. González

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Blanca Xicoy

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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