Codjo Djignefa Djade
Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research
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Publication
Featured researches published by Codjo Djignefa Djade.
Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety | 2013
Luca Pasina; Codjo Djignefa Djade; Alessandro Nobili; Mauro Tettamanti; Carlotta Franchi; Francesco Salerno; Salvatore Corrao; Alessandra Marengoni; Alfonso Iorio; Maura Marcucci; Pier Mannuccio Mannucci
The aim of this study is to assess the prevalence of patients exposed to potentially severe drug–drug interactions (DDIs) at hospital admission and discharge and the related risk of in‐hospital mortality and adverse clinical events, readmission, and all‐cause mortality at 3 months.
Alzheimers & Dementia | 2015
Ugo Lucca; Mauro Tettamanti; Giancarlo Logroscino; Pietro Tiraboschi; Cristina Landi; Leonardo Sacco; Mariateresa Garrì; Sonia Ammesso; Chiara Bertinotti; Anna Biotti; Elena Gargantini; Alessandro Piedicorcia; Alessandro Nobili; Luca Pasina; Carlotta Franchi; Codjo Djignefa Djade; Emma Riva; Angela Recchia
Epidemiological studies commonly include too few of the oldest old to provide accurate prevalence rates of dementia in older age groups. Estimates of the number of those affected, necessary for healthcare planning, are thus flawed. The objective is to estimate the prevalence of dementia and levels of dementia severity in a very large population of oldest old and to investigate the relation between age and dementia prevalence in the extreme ages.
European Journal of Internal Medicine | 2013
Maura Marcucci; Alessandro Nobili; Mauro Tettamanti; Alfonso Iorio; Luca Pasina; Codjo Djignefa Djade; Carlotta Franchi; Alessandra Marengoni; Francesco Salerno; Salvatore Corrao; Francesco Violi; Pier Mannuccio Mannucci
BACKGROUND Scores for cardio-embolic and bleeding risk in patients with atrial fibrillation are described in the literature. However, it is not clear how they co-classify elderly patients with multimorbidity, nor whether and how they affect the physicians decision on thromboprophylaxis. METHODS Four scores for cardio-embolic and bleeding risks were retrospectively calculated for ≥ 65 year old patients with atrial fibrillation enrolled in the REPOSI registry. The co-classification of patients according to risk categories based on different score combinations was described and the relationship between risk categories tested. The association between the antithrombotic therapy received and the scores was investigated by logistic regressions and CART analyses. RESULTS At admission, among 543 patients the median scores (range) were: CHADS2 2 (0-6), CHA2DS2-VASc 4 (1-9), HEMORR2HAGES 3 (0-7), HAS-BLED 2 (1-6). Most of the patients were at high cardio-embolic/high-intermediate bleeding risk (70.5% combining CHADS2 and HEMORR2HAGES, 98.3% combining CHA2DS2-VASc and HAS-BLED). 50-60% of patients were classified in a cardio-embolic risk category higher than the bleeding risk category. In univariate and multivariable analyses, a higher bleeding score was negatively associated with warfarin prescription, and positively associated with aspirin prescription. The cardio-embolic scores were associated with the therapeutic choice only after adjusting for bleeding score or age. CONCLUSION REPOSI patients represented a population at high cardio-embolic and bleeding risks, but most of them were classified by the scores as having a higher cardio-embolic than bleeding risk. Yet, prescription and type of antithrombotic therapy appeared to be primarily dictated by the bleeding risk.
European Journal of Internal Medicine | 2015
Paola Santalucia; Carlotta Franchi; Codjo Djignefa Djade; Mauro Tettamanti; Luca Pasina; Salvatore Corrao; Francesco Salerno; Alessandra Marengoni; Maura Marcucci; Alessandro Nobili; Pier Mannuccio Mannucci
PURPOSE The aims of this study were to evaluate whether or not there are gender differences in drug use at hospital admission and prescription at discharge and to evaluate the effect of hospitalization on medication patterns in the elderly. METHOD In-patients aged >65years included in the REPOSI registry during a recruitment period of 3years (2008-2010-2012) were analyzed in order to evaluate drug use at hospital admission and prescription at discharge according to gender. RESULTS A total of 3473 patients, 52% women and 48% men, were considered. Polypharmacy (>5 drugs) is more frequent in men both at hospital admission and discharge. At hospital discharge, the number of prescriptions increased in both sexes at all age groups. Neuropsychiatric drugs were significantly more prescribed in women (p<0.0001). At admission men were more likely to be on antiplatelets (41.7% vs 36.7%; p=0.0029), ACE-inhibitors (28.7% vs 24.7%; p=0.0072) and statins (22.9% vs 18.3%; p=0.0008). At discharge, antiplatelets (43.7% vs 37.3%; p=0.0003) and statins (25,2% vs 19.6%; p<0.0001) continued to be prescribed more often in men, while women were given beta-blockers more often than men (21.8% vs 18.9%; p=0.0340). Proton pump inhibitors were the most prescribed drugs regardless of gender. At discharge, the medication pattern did not change according to gender. CONCLUSION Our study showed a gender difference in overall medications pattern in the hospitalized elderly. Hospitalization, while increasing the number of prescriptions, did not change drug distribution by sex.
European Journal of Internal Medicine | 2015
Salvatore Corrao; Christiano Argano; Alessandro Nobili; Maura Marcucci; Codjo Djignefa Djade; Mauro Tettamanti; Luca Pasina; Carlotta Franchi; Alessandra Marengoni; Francesco Salerno; Francesco Violi; P. M. Mannucci; Francesco Perticone
BACKGROUND It is well known that atrial fibrillation (AF) and chronic kidney disease (CKD) are associated with a higher risk of stroke, and new evidence links AF to cognitive impairment, independently from an overt stroke (CI). Our aim was to investigate, assuming an underlying role of atrial microembolism, the impact of CI and CKD in elderly hospitalized patients with AF. METHODS We retrospectively analyzed the data collected on elderly patients in 66 Italian hospitals, in the frame of the REPOSI project. We analyzed the clinical characteristics of patients with AF and different degrees of CI. Multivariate logistic analysis was used to explore the relationship between variables and mortality. RESULTS Among the 1384 patients enrolled, 321 had AF. Patients with AF were older, had worse CI and disability and higher rates of stroke, hypertension, heart failure, and CKD, and less than 50% were on anticoagulant therapy. Among patients with AF, those with worse CI and those with lower estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) had a higher mortality risk (odds ratio 1.13, p=0.006). Higher disability levels, older age, higher systolic blood pressure, and higher eGFR were related to lower probability of oral anticoagulant prescription. Lower mortality rates were found in patients on oral anticoagulant therapy. CONCLUSIONS Elderly hospitalized patients with AF are more likely affected by CI and CKD, two conditions that expose them to a higher mortality risk. Oral anticoagulant therapy, still underused and not optimally enforced, may afford protection from thromboembolic episodes that probably concur to the high mortality.
Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2013
Carlotta Franchi; Marco Sequi; Mauro Tettamanti; Francesca Bonometti; Alessandro Nobili; Ida Fortino; Angela Bortolotti; Luca Merlino; Luca Pasina; Codjo Djignefa Djade; Alessandra Marengoni
Abstract Meta-analyses have found conflicting evidence on the link between antipsychotics and cerebrovascular events (CVEs). The primary aim of this study was to evaluate the association between any antipsychotic prescription and CVEs in Italian elderly; second, to compare the effect of typical and atypical antipsychotics on CVEs; and third, to investigate the effect of antipsychotics on CVEs in the subgroup of persons coprescribed with acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs). Administrative claims from community-dwelling people aged 65 to 94 years living in Northern Italy were analyzed using a retrospective case-control design, from 2003 to 2005. The primary outcome measure was a hospital discharge diagnosis of CVEs during 2005. Four age-, sex-, and local health unit–matched control subjects were identified for each case. Antihypertensive drugs, anticoagulants, platelet inhibitors, antidiabetic drugs, lipid-lowering drugs, and AChEI were used as covariates in conditional logistic regression models testing the odds ratio (OR) for CVEs due to antipsychotics use. Three thousand eight hundred fifty-five cases of CVEs were identified and matched with 15,420 control subjects. In multiadjusted models, the association of any antipsychotics, typical or atypical with CVEs, was not significant. When antipsychotics were categorized according to the number of boxes prescribed during the observational period, being prescribed with at least 19 boxes of typical antipsychotics was significantly associated with CVEs (OR, 2.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.08–5.5). An interaction was found between any antipsychotic and AChEI coprescription on CVEs (OR, 0.46; 95% confidence interval, 0.23–0.92). In conclusion, only typical antipsychotics were associated with an increased odd of CVEs, but the association was duration dependent. Persons prescribed simultaneously with AChEI and antipsychotics may be at a lower risk of CVEs.
Clinical Interventions in Aging | 2015
Silvia Riva; Alessandro Nobili; Codjo Djignefa Djade; Maria Elisa Mancuso; Elena Santagostino; Gabriella Pravettoni
Elderly patients with hemophilia have to face new challenges linked to concomitant pathologies and concurrent use of different treatments. In order to promote optimal care in the elderly hemophilia population, this study is aimed to analyze treatment compliance in relation to the presence of comorbidities and the role of potential determinants that can affect compliance (positively or negatively), including health-related quality of life, cognitive decline, and sociodemographic parameters (eg, living situation, partnership, presence of caregivers). This will be an observational study of elderly patients with hemophilia (aged >60 years). Patients will be interviewed during their routine medical visits. The data interview will pertaining to several dimension of treatment management. This study will detect more vulnerable patients with special care needs and will highlight psychological factors that should be considered for future psychosocial interventions.
Psychogeriatrics | 2017
Deborah Chiesa; Alessandra Marengoni; Alessandro Nobili; Mauro Tettamanti; Luca Pasina; Carlotta Franchi; Codjo Djignefa Djade; Salvatore Corrao; Francesco Salerno; Maura Marcucci; Giuseppe Romanelli; Pier Mannuccio Mannucci
Recent scientific reports have shown that older persons treated with antipsychotics for dementia‐related behavioural symptoms have increased mortality. However, the impact of these drugs prescribed during hospitalization has rarely been assessed. We aimed to investigate whether antipsychotics are associated with an increased risk of mortality during hospitalization and at 3‐month follow‐up in elderly inpatients.
Rejuvenation Research | 2015
Gianfranco Bazzoni; Alessandra Marengoni; Mauro Tettamanti; Carlotta Franchi; Luca Pasina; Codjo Djignefa Djade; Ida Fortino; Angela Bortolotti; Luca Merlino; Alessandro Nobili
Networks are well suited to display and analyze complex systems that consist of numerous and interlinked elements. This study aimed at: (1) generating a series of drug prescription networks (DPNs) displaying co-prescription in community-dwelling elderly people; (2) analyzing DPN structure and organization; and (3) comparing various DPNs to unveil possible differences in drug co-prescription patterns across time and space. Data were extracted from the administrative prescription database of the Lombardy Region in northern Italy in 2000 and 2010. DPNs were generated, in which each node represents a drug chemical subclass, whereas each edge linking two nodes represents the co-prescription of the corresponding drugs to the same patient. At a global level, the DPN was a very dense and highly clustered network, whereas at the local level it was organized into anatomically homogeneous modules. In addition, the DPN was assortative by class, because similar nodes (representing drugs with the same anatomic, therapeutic, and pharmacologic annotation) connected to each other more frequently than expected, indicating that similar drugs are often co-prescribed. Finally, temporal changes in the co-prescription of specific drug sub-groups (for instance, proton pump inhibitors) translated into topological changes of the DPN and its modules. In conclusion, complementing more traditional pharmaco-epidemiology methods, the DPN-based method allows appreciatiation (and representation) of general trends in the co-prescription of a specific drug (e.g., its emergence as a heavily co-prescribed hub) in comparison with other drugs.
Alzheimers & Dementia | 2013
Ugo Lucca; Mauro Tettamanti; Mariateresa Garrì; Emma Riva; Sonia Ammesso; Alessandro Nobili; Luca Pasina; Carlotta Franchi; Codjo Djignefa Djade; Angela Recchia
Background: The risks, prevention and epidemiology of Alzheimer’s disease continue to remain uncertain despite extensive research. A few modifiable risk and preventive factors, such as low education, obesity, smoking, physical inactivity, and certain hormone therapies, have been reported from epidemiological studies. However, many studies have been limited by methodological quality and relatively small sample sizes, typically involving up to a few hundred Alzheimer’s disease cases and a few thousand participants. Studies from large-scale population-based cohorts with extensive exposure assessment and sufficiently long followup are critically needed. We describe the California Teachers Study cohort, established in 1995 primarily for breast cancer research, as a developing resource for large-scale etiologic Alzheimer’s disease research. Methods: The California Teachers Study consists of 133,479 women who have provided extensive exposure data over their life course including most putative risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease. Four waves of questionnaires have been sent since 1995. In the year 2000, we included neuropsychological test items that focused on visuospatial and language function. Results: Active and retired California public school professionals provided information on environmental and lifestyle factors that may be important for Alzheimer’s disease risk, including obesity, physical and social activity, medical history, medications, hormone use, diet, and demographic factors. In 2000-2001, w78,000 participants completeda clock drawing, cube drawing, and picture description task. Of these, w35,000 were 70 years or older in 2010. Assessment of Alzheimer’s disease in the cohort can be done by database linkage to California statewide hos pitalization data, which includes diagnoses after hospitalization, emergency department visits, and outpatient surgery. Conclusions:Large cohorts are needed in order to pursue risk and prevention research in Alzheimer’s disease, as recommended by the 2010 NIH State-ofthe-Science expert consensus conference. The California Teachers Study provides extensive high quality information on mostpotential environmental and lifestyle risk and protective factors, and represents a robust cohort for epidemiologic research, as a resource to conduct timely analyses using accrued cases, and for prospective outcomes research in Alzheimer’s disease.
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Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico
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