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Dive into the research topics where Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez is active.

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Featured researches published by Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez.


European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2003

Candidemia in a Tertiary Care Hospital: Epidemiology and Factors Influencing Mortality

Héctor Alonso-Valle; O. Acha; José D. García-Palomo; Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez; C. Fernández-Mazarrasa; María Carmen Fariñas

The present study was conducted in order to assess the epidemiology and clinical course of candidemia and to identify the risk factors associated with mortality. A total of 143 episodes of nosocomial candidemia were identified during a 5-year period, and these were included in the study. The majority of candidemic episodes were due to Candida albicans (63, 44%), followed by Candida parapsilosis (32, 22%). The overall mortality was 45%. The following independent prognostic factors for mortality were identified: bacterial sepsis, rapidly fatal illness, chronic obstructive lung disease, presence of a central venous catheter, candidemia due to Candida albicans, and lack of antifungal therapy.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 1999

Coinfections by HIV, hepatitis B and hepatitis C in imprisoned injecting drug users

José R. Pallás; Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez; Dolores Prieto; Miguel Delgado-Rodríguez

In order to know the prevalence and risk factors for coinfections by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) among injecting drug users (IDUs), a cross-sectional study was carried out in two prisons of the province of Cantabria, northern Spain. Three hundred and sixty-two IDU inmates were recruited. All inmates were interviewed and their blood tested for HIV, HBV and HCV. Crude and multiple risk factor adjusted for (by polychotomous logistic regression) odds ratios were calculated. Prevalence of HBV-HCV coinfection (42.5%) was higher than HIV-HBV-HCV coinfection (37.3%), whereas monoinfections were very uncommon (overall: 13%). Long-term injectors and reincarceration were the foremost risk factors for both coinfections, showing a trend between the degree of association and the number of viruses infecting a patient. No significant relationship between coinfection status and sexual practices was observed. The results related to coinfections are consistent with previous studies of prevalence and risk factors for HIV, HBV and HCV, in indicating that the high rates of coinfections among IDU inmates emphasise the need to harm-reduction policy across prisons in Spain.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2010

Clinical course and predictors of death in prosthetic valve endocarditis over a 20-year period

Héctor Alonso-Valle; Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez; José D. García-Palomo; José M. Bernal; Rafael Martín-Durán; Jose Francisco Gutiérrez Díez; José M. Revuelta; M. Carmen Fariñas

OBJECTIVE To compare early and late outcome of patients with prosthetic valve endocarditis treated medically versus surgically and to determine predictors of in-hospital death. We retrospectively reviewed patients clinical records, including laboratory findings, surgery, and pathologic files, in an acute-care, 1200-bed teaching hospital. METHODS One hundred thirty-three episodes of definite prosthetic valve endocarditis as defined by the Duke University diagnostic criteria occurred in 122 patients from January 1986 to December 2005. Logistic regression model was used to identify prognostic factors of in-hospital mortality. Long-term follow-up was made to assess late prognosis. RESULTS Bioprostheses were involved in 52% of cases and mechanical valves in 48%. The aortic valve was affected in 45% of patients. Staphylococcus epidermidis was isolated in 23% of cases, Streptococcus spp in 21%, S aureus in 13%, and Enterococcus in 8%. Cultures were negative in 18% of cases. Twenty-six patients were treated medically and 107 with combined antibiotics and valve replacement. The operative mortality was 6.5% and the in-hospital mortality, 29%. Presence of an abscess at echocardiography, urgent surgical treatment, heart failure, thrombocytopenia, and renal failure were significant predictors of in-hospital death. Kaplan-Meier survival at 12 months was 42% in patients treated medically and 71% in those treated surgically (P = .0007). Freedom from endocarditis was 91% at the end of follow-up. CONCLUSIONS Prosthetic valve endocarditis is a serious condition with high mortality. Patients with perivalvular abscess had a worse prognosis, and combined surgical and medical treatment could be the preferred approach to improve outcome.


Epidemiology and Infection | 1999

Risk factors for monoinfections and coinfections with HIV, hepatitis B and hepatitis C viruses in northern Spanish prisoners

J. Pallás; Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez; Dolores Prieto; Javier Llorca; Miguel Delgado-Rodríguez

A cross-sectional study was conducted in prisons of Cantabria (northern Spain) from June 1992 to December 1994. Inmates were asked to participate in a survey on prevalence and risk factors for monoinfections and coinfections with HIV, HBV and HCV. Crude and multiple odds ratios of risk factors were calculated (by polychotomous logistic regression). Prevalence of coinfections was higher than that of monoinfections. IDU risk factors were the main independent variables associated with monoinfections and coinfections with these agents. The strength of association increased with the degree of coinfection for IDU risk factors and penal status, e.g. duration of injecting drug use for more than 5 years yielded an adjusted OR ranging from 1.3 (95% CI: 0.4-5.1) for HBV monoinfection to 180 (95% CI: 61.0-540.0) for HIV-HBV-HCV coinfection. In comparison, sexual behaviours were less important than IDU risk factors.


Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2016

Time trends in the aetiology of prosthetic joint infections: a multicentre cohort study

N. Benito; M. Franco; A. Ribera; A. Soriano; D. Rodriguez-Pardo; Luisa Sorlí; G. Fresco; M. Fernández-Sampedro; M. Dolores del Toro; L. Guío; E. Sánchez-Rivas; A. Bahamonde; M. Riera; Jaime Esteban; J.M. Baraia-Etxaburu; J. Martínez-Alvarez; A. Jover-Sáenz; Carlos Dueñas; A. Ramos; B. Sobrino; G. Euba; L. Morata; C. Pigrau; Pere Coll; I. Mur; J. Ariza; F. Barcenilla; F. Pérez-Villar; L. Prats-Gispert; R. Cisterna

It is important to know the spectrum of the microbial aetiology of prosthetic joint infections (PJIs) to guide empiric treatment and establish antimicrobial prophylaxis in joint replacements. There are no available data based on large contemporary patient cohorts. We sought to characterize the causative pathogens of PJIs and to evaluate trends in the microbial aetiology. We hypothesized that the frequency of antimicrobial-resistant organisms in PJIs has increased in the recent years. We performed a cohort study in 19 hospitals in Spain, from 2003 to 2012. For each 2-year period (2003-2004 to 2011-2012), the incidence of microorganisms causing PJIs and multidrug-resistant bacteria was assessed. Temporal trends over the study period were evaluated. We included 2524 consecutive adult patients with a diagnosis of PJI. A microbiological diagnosis was obtained for 2288 cases (90.6%). Staphylococci were the most common cause of infection (1492, 65.2%). However, a statistically significant rising linear trend was observed for the proportion of infections caused by Gram-negative bacilli, mainly due to the increase in the last 2-year period (25% in 2003-2004, 33.3% in 2011-2012; p 0.024 for trend). No particular species contributed disproportionally to this overall increase. The percentage of multidrug-resistant bacteria PJIs increased from 9.3% in 2003-2004 to 15.8% in 2011-2012 (p 0.008), mainly because of the significant rise in multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacilli (from 5.3% in 2003-2004 to 8.2% in 2011-2012; p 0.032). The observed trends have important implications for the management of PJIs and prophylaxis in joint replacements.


American Journal of Infection Control | 2010

Evaluating the impact of a hand hygiene campaign on improving adherence.

Trinidad Dierssen-Sotos; Verónica Brugos-Llamazares; Mónica Robles-García; Henar Rebollo-Rodrigo; Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez; Francisco Manuel Antolín-Juarez; María Luz Fernández-Núñez; de la Cal López Marta; Javier Llorca

We monitored compliance with hand hygiene (HH) by direct observation in 3 hospitals in Cantabria, Spain before and after implementation of an HH informational campaign, separately analyzing the effect of a training program. We report that training plus an informational campaign doubled the probability of HH, whereas the informational campaign without training decreased adherence, acting as a deleterious factor in HH adherence.


European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2000

Prognostic factors for pneumococcal bacteremia in a university hospital.

Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez; María Carmen Fariñas; José D. García-Palomo; M. González-Ruiz; C. Fernández-Mazarrasa; J. A. Parra; J. González-Macías

Abstract The records of adult patients with pneumococcal bacteremia who were seen over an 8-year-period at an 1100-bed university teaching hospital were reviewed in order to revise the clinical and laboratory findings and to identify the risk factors associated with mortality. A total of 156 patients were studied, 101 men and 55 women. The mean age of the patients was 65 years. Eighty-seven percent of the patients had community-acquired bacteremia and 13% had nosocomial pneumococcal bacteremia. The overall mortality was 33.9% and the related mortality was 20.5%. The following factors were associated with an increased risk of adverse outcome in the univariate analysis: mechanical ventilation (risk ratio [RR]=3.40; 95% confidence interval [95% CI]=1.44–8.05), administration of parenteral nutrition (RR=3.40; 95% CI=1.44–8.05), and the presence of an intravenous catheter (RR=2.33; 95% CI=1.27–4.24). In the multivariate analysis, the independent prognostic factors for mortality were as follows: development of clinical complications during the episode of bacteremia, rapidly fatal illness, advanced age and administration of parenteral nutrition. The results suggest that the overall mortality due to pneumococcal bacteremia continues to be high. Four independent risk factors associated with increased mortality were identified. Prevention and immunization with polyvalent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine should be practiced more widely.


Gaceta Sanitaria | 2001

Fracción atribuible poblacional: cálculo e interpretación

Javier Llorca; Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez; Miguel Delgado-Rodríguez

Resumen El objetivo de este articulo es realizar una revision de los metodos de calculo de la fraccion atribuible poblacional y discutir sus interpretaciones. A partir de la clasica formula de la fraccion atribuible poblacional: (Ip – I0) / Ip, donde Ip es la incidencia acumulada en la poblacion e I0 es la incidencia acumulada en los no expuestos, se presentan otras formulas aplicables en analisis con mas de dos niveles de exposicion y en presencia de factores de confusion. Se discuten las diferencias de calculo de la fraccion atribuible poblacional en estudios de cohortes y de casos y controles, y se presentan formulas para la estimacion de intervalos de confianza. Finalmente, se discuten algunas interpretaciones –incluyendo los conceptos de caso etiologico y caso en exceso, propuestos por Greenland y Robbins– y algunos de los errores mas frecuentes.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2006

Surgical Site Infection During Hospitalization and After Discharge in Patients Who Have Undergone Cardiac Surgery

Marta Fernández-Ayala; Daniel N. Nan; Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez; José M. Revuelta; Jesús González-Macías; M. Carmen Fariñas

During a 13-month period, 513 patients who were scheduled to undergo cardiac surgery were prospectively observed for surgical site infection during hospitalization after surgery and for 1 month after hospital discharge. Fifty-three patients showed evidence of surgical site infection (during hospitalization for 31 patients and after discharge for 22). Multivariate analysis identified that risk factors for surgical site infection differed between infections that occurred during hospitalization and those that occurred after discharge.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2000

Applicability of two surgical-site infection risk indices to risk of sepsis in surgical patients.

Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez; M. Carmen Fariñas; Dolores Prieto; Miguel Delgado-Rodríguez

OBJECTIVE To compare the ability of the Study of the Efficacy of Nosocomial Infection Control (SENIC) and the National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance (NNIS) indices to predict the development of nosocomial sepsis in subjects undergoing surgery. DESIGN 1-year prospective case-control study. SETTING A tertiary-care center in Spain. PATIENTS Cases were surgical patients with nosocomial sepsis defined using the criteria of the Consensus Conference on Sepsis, identified by daily prospective surveillance. METHODS Controls were randomly selected from the daily list of surgical inpatients. Data were prospectively collected. To determine whether either index added explanatory information to the other, two methods were used. The first method involved computing a set of residuals for both variables. Residuals and primary variables were introduced in logistic regression models. The second method evaluated both indices with the Goodman-Kruskal (G) nonparametric coefficient. RESULTS 99 cases and 97 controls were included. After controlling for confounders, both the SENIC index (P<.001) and the NNIS index (P=.04) showed a significant trend. Residuals of the SENIC index added discriminating ability to the NNIS index, whereas residuals of the NNIS index did not improve the prediction ability of the SENIC index. Similar results were yielded by the G statistic: the SENIC index showed higher predictive power than the NNIS index (G=0.56 vs G=0.41). CONCLUSIONS Both indices performed about equally well for discriminating risk of nosocomial sepsis. The SENIC index had a somewhat better ability than the NNIS index only when the number of discharge diagnoses (not truly a predictive factor) were involved in the calculation of the SENIC index.

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