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Dive into the research topics where François Philippart is active.

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Featured researches published by François Philippart.


Critical Care Medicine | 2012

Impact of an intensive care unit diary on psychological distress in patients and relatives

Maité Garrouste-Orgeas; Isaline Coquet; Antoine Perier; Jean-François Timsit; Frédéric Pochard; Frédéric Lancrin; François Philippart; Aurélien Vesin; Cédric Bruel; Youssef Blel; Stéphanie Angeli; Natalie Cousin; Benoit Misset

Objective:To assess the impact of an intensive care unit diary on the psychological well-being of patients and relatives 3 and 12 months after intensive care unit discharge. Design:Prospective single-center study with an intervention period between two control periods. Setting:Medical-surgical intensive care unit in a 460-bed tertiary hospital. Patients:Consecutive patients from May 2008 to November 2009 and their relatives. Study inclusion occurred after the fourth day in the intensive care unit. Interventions:A diary written by both the patient’s relatives and the intensive care unit staff. Measurements and Main Results:Patients and relatives completed the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and Peritraumatic Dissociative Experiences Questionnaire 3 months after intensive care unit discharge, and completed the Impact of Events Scale assessing posttraumatic stress–related symptoms 12 months after intensive care unit discharge. Of the 378 patients admitted during the study period, 143 were included (48 in the prediary period, 49 in the diary period, and 46 in the postdiary period). In relatives, severe posttraumatic stress–related symptoms after 12 months varied significantly across periods (prediary 80%, diary 31.7%, postdiary 67.6%; p<.0001). Similar results were obtained in the posttraumatic stress–related symptom score after 12 months in the surviving patients (prediary 34.6 ± 15.9, diary 21 ± 12.2, and postdiary 29.8 ± 15.9; p = .02). Conclusions:The intensive care unit diary significantly affected posttraumatic stress–related symptoms in relatives and surviving patients 12 months after intensive care unit discharge.


Critical Care Medicine | 2008

Perceptions of a 24-hour visiting policy in the intensive care unit.

Maité Garrouste-Orgeas; François Philippart; Jean-François Timsit; Frédérique Diaw; Vincent Willems; Alexis Tabah; Ghylaine Bretteville; Aude Verdavainne; Benoit Misset

Objective:To examine perceptions by intensive care unit (ICU) workers of unrestricted visitation, to measure visiting times, and to determine prevalence of symptoms of anxiety and depression in family members. Design:Observational, prospective, single-center cohort. Setting:Medical-surgical ICU in a 460-bed tertiary-care hospital. Patients:Two hundred nine consecutive patients hospitalized >3 days were studied over the first 5 ICU days. Interventions:None. Measurements and Main Results:Characteristics of patients (n = 209), families (n = 149), and ICU workers (n = 43) were collected. ICU workers reported their perceptions of unrestricted visitation, and family members completed the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Daily severity scores (Simplified Acute Physiology Score II and Logistic Organ Failure) and a workload score (Nine Equivalents of Nursing Manpower) were computed. Maximum median visit length was 120 mins per patient per day and occurred on days 4 and 5. No correlations were found among severity of illness, workload, and visit length. For 115 patients, both nurse and physician questionnaires were available; although several differences were noted, neither nurses nor physicians perceived open visitation as disrupting patient care. The median rating for delay in organizing care was “never” for physicians and “occasionally” for nurses. Nurses perceived more disorganization of care than physicians (p = .008). Compared with nurses, the physicians reported greater family trust (p = .0023), more family stress (p = .047), and greater unease when examining the patient (p = .02). The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale indicated symptoms of anxiety in 73 (49%) family members and depression in 44 (29.5%). Conclusions:The 24-hr visitation policy was perceived favorably by families. It induced only moderate discomfort among ICU workers, due to the potential for care interruption, in particular for nurses.


Critical Care | 2010

Quality of life in patients aged 80 or over after ICU discharge

Alexis Tabah; François Philippart; Jean-François Timsit; Vincent Willems; Adrien Français; Alain Leplege; Cédric Bruel; Benoit Misset; Maité Garrouste-Orgeas

IntroductionOur objective was to describe self-sufficiency and quality of life one year after intensive care unit (ICU) discharge of patients aged 80 years or over.MethodsWe performed a prospective observational study in a medical-surgical ICU in a tertiary non-university hospital. We included patients aged 80 or over at ICU admission in 2005 or 2006 and we recorded age, admission diagnosis, intensity of care, and severity of acute and chronic illnesses, as well as ICU, hospital, and one-year mortality rates. Self-sufficiency (Katz Index of Activities of Daily Living) was assessed at ICU admission and one year after ICU discharge. Quality of life (WHO-QOL OLD and WHO-QOL BREF) was assessed one year after ICU discharge.ResultsOf the 115 consecutive patients aged 80 or over (18.2% of admitted patients), 106 were included. Mean age was 84 ± 3 years (range, 80 to 92). Mortality was 40/106 (37%) at ICU discharge, 48/106 (45.2%) at hospital discharge, and 73/106 (68.9%) one year after ICU discharge. In the 23 patients evaluated after one year, self-sufficiency was unchanged compared to the pre-admission status. Quality of life evaluations after one year showed that physical health, sensory abilities, self-sufficiency, and social participation had slightly worse ratings than the other domains, whereas social relationships, environment, and fear of death and dying had the best ratings. Compared to an age- and sex-matched sample of the general population, our cohort had better ratings for psychological health, social relationships, and environment, less fear of death and dying, better expectations about past, present, and future activities and better intimacy (friendship and love).ConclusionsAmong patients aged 80 or over who were selected at ICU admission, 80% were self-sufficient for activities of daily living one year after ICU discharge, 31% were alive, with no change in self-sufficiency and with similar quality of life to that of the general population matched on age and sex. However, these results must be interpreted cautiously due to the small sample of survivors.


Critical Care Medicine | 2008

Impact of adverse events on outcomes in intensive care unit patients.

Maite Garrouste Orgeas; Jean-François Timsit; Lilia Soufir; Muriel Tafflet; Christophe Adrie; François Philippart; Jean Ralph Zahar; Christophe Clec’h; Dany Goldran-Toledano; Samir Jamali; Anne-Sylvie Dumenil; Elie Azoulay

Objective:To examine the association between predefined adverse events (AE) (including nosocomial infections) and intensive care unit (ICU) mortality, controlling for multiple adverse events in the same patient and confounding variables. Design:Prospective observational cohort study of the French OUTCOMEREA multicenter database. Setting:Twelve medical or surgical ICUs. Patients:Unselected patients hospitalized for ≥48 hrs enrolled between 1997 and 2003. Interventions:None. Measurements and Main Results:Of the 3,611 patients included, 1415 (39.2%) experienced one or more AEs and 821 (22.7%) had two or more AEs. Mean number of AEs per patient was 2.8 (range, 1–26). Six AEs were associated with death: primary or catheter-related bloodstream infection (BSI) (odds ratio [OR], 2.92; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.6–5.32), BSI from other sources (OR, 5.7; 95% CI, 2.66–12.05), nonbacteremic pneumonia (OR, 1.69; 95% CI, 1.17–2.44), deep and organ/space surgical site infection without BSI (OR, 3; 95% CI, 1.3–6.8), pneumothorax (OR, 3.1; 95% CI, 1.5–6.3), and gastrointestinal bleeding (OR, 2.6; 95% CI, 1.4–4.9). The results were not changed when the analysis was confined to patients with mechanical ventilation on day 1, intermediate severity of illness (Simplified Acute Physiology Score II between 35 and 55), no treatment-limitation decisions, or no cardiac arrest in the ICU. Conclusions:AEs were common and often occurred in combination in individual patients. Several AEs independently contributed to death. Creating a safe ICU environment is a challenging task that deserves careful attention from ICU physicians.


Journal of Critical Care | 2010

Opinions of families, staff, and patients about family participation in care in intensive care units

Maité Garrouste-Orgeas; Vincent Willems; Jean-François Timsit; Frédérique Diaw; Sandie Brochon; Aurélien Vesin; François Philippart; Alexis Tabah; Isaline Coquet; Cédric Bruel; Marie-Luce Moulard; Benoit Misset

PURPOSE The aims of the study were to assess opinions of caregivers, families, and patients about involvement of families in the care of intensive care unit (ICU) patients; to evaluate the prevalence of symptoms of anxiety and depression in family members; and to measure family satisfaction with care. MATERIALS AND METHODS Between days 3 and 5, perceptions by families and ICU staff of family involvement in care were collected prospectively at a single center. Family members completed the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and a satisfaction scale (Critical Care Family Needs Inventory). Nurses recorded care provided spontaneously by families. Characteristics of patient-relative pairs (n = 101) and ICU staff (n = 45) were collected. Patients described their perceptions of family participation in care during a telephone interview, 206 ± 147 days after hospital discharge. RESULTS The numbers of patient-relative pairs for whom ICU staff reported favorable perceptions were 101 (100%) of 101 for physicians, 91 (90%) for nurses, and 95 (94%) for nursing assistants. Only 4 (3.9%) of 101 families refused participation in care. Only 14 (13.8%) of 101 families provided care spontaneously. The HADS score showed symptoms of anxiety in 58 (58.5%) of 99 and of depression in 26 (26.2%) of 99 family members. The satisfaction score was high (11.0 ± 1.25). Among patients, 34 (77.2%) of 44 had a favorable perception of family participation in care. CONCLUSIONS Families and ICU staff were very supportive of family participation in care. Most patients were also favorable to care by family members.


BMC Microbiology | 2010

In vivo bioluminescence imaging and histopathopathologic analysis reveal distinct roles for resident and recruited immune effector cells in defense against invasive aspergillosis

Oumaïma Ibrahim-Granet; Grégory Jouvion; Tobias M. Hohl; Sabrina Droin-Bergère; François Philippart; Oh Yoen Kim; Reto A. Schwendener; Jean-Marc Cavaillon; Matthias Brock

BackgroundInvasive aspergillosis (IA) is a major cause of infectious morbidity and mortality in immune compromised patients. Studies on the pathogenesis of IA have been limited by the difficulty to monitor disease progression in real-time. For real-time monitoring of the infection, we recently engineered a bioluminescent A. fumigatus strain.ResultsIn this study, we demonstrate that bioluminescence imaging can track the progression of IA at different anatomic locations in a murine model of disease that recapitulates the natural route of infection. To define the temporal and functional requirements of distinct innate immune cellular subsets in host defense against respiratory A. fumigatus infection, we examined the development and progression of IA using bioluminescence imaging and histopathologic analysis in mice with four different types of pharmacologic or numeric defects in innate immune function that target resident and recruited phagocyte subsets. While bioluminescence imaging can track the progression and location of invasive disease in vivo, signals can be attenuated by severe inflammation and associated tissue hypoxia. However, especially under non-inflammatory conditions, such as cyclophosphamide treatment, an increasing bioluminescence signal reflects the increasing biomass of alive fungal cells.ConclusionsImaging studies allowed an in vivo correlation between the onset, peak, and kinetics of hyphal tissue invasion from the lung under conditions of functional or numeric inactivation of phagocytes and sheds light on the germination speed of conidia under the different immunosuppression regimens. Conditions of high inflammation -either mediated by neutrophil influx under corticosteroid treatment or by monocytes recruited during antibody-mediated depletion of neutrophils- were associated with rapid conidial germination and caused an early rise in bioluminescence post-infection. In contrast, 80% alveolar macrophage depletion failed to trigger a bioluminescent signal, consistent with the notion that neutrophil recruitment is essential for early host defense, while alveolar macrophage depletion can be functionally compensated.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2015

Randomized Intubation with Polyurethane or Conical Cuffs to Prevent Pneumonia in Ventilated Patients

François Philippart; Stéphane Gaudry; Laurent Quinquis; Nicolas Lau; Islem Ouanes; Samia Touati; Jean Claude Nguyen; Catherine Branger; Frédéric Faibis; Maha Mastouri; Xavier Forceville; Fekri Abroug; Jean Damien Ricard; Sophie Grabar; Benoit Misset

RATIONALE The occurrence of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is linked to the aspiration of contaminated pharyngeal secretions around the endotracheal tube. Tubes with cuffs made of polyurethane rather than polyvinyl chloride or with a conical rather than a cylindrical shape increase tracheal sealing. OBJECTIVES To test whether using polyurethane and/or conical cuffs reduces tracheal colonization and VAP in patients with acute respiratory failure. METHODS We conducted a multicenter, prospective, open-label, randomized study in four parallel groups in four intensive care units between 2010 and 2012. A cohort of 621 patients with expected ventilation longer than 2 days was included at intubation with a cuff composed of cylindrical polyvinyl chloride (n = 148), cylindrical polyurethane (n = 143), conical polyvinyl chloride (n = 150), or conical polyurethane (n = 162). We used Kaplan-Meier estimates and log-rank tests to compare times to events. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS After excluding 17 patients who secondarily refused participation or had met an exclusion criterion, 604 were included in the intention-to-treat analysis. Cumulative tracheal colonization greater than 10(3) cfu/ml at Day 2 was as follows (median [interquartile range]): cylindrical polyvinyl chloride, 0.66 (0.58-0.74); cylindrical polyurethane, 0.61 (0.53-0.70); conical polyvinyl chloride, 0.67 (0.60-0.76); and conical polyurethane, 0.62 (0.55-0.70) (P = 0.55). VAP developed in 77 patients (14.4%), and postextubational stridor developed in 28 patients (6.4%) (P = 0.20 and 0.28 between groups, respectively). CONCLUSIONS Among patients requiring mechanical ventilation, polyurethane and/or conically shaped cuffs were not superior to conventional cuffs in preventing tracheal colonization and VAP. Clinical trial registered with clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01114022).


Annals of Intensive Care | 2013

Role of biomarkers in the management of antibiotic therapy: an expert panel review: I – currently available biomarkers for clinical use in acute infections

Anne-Marie Dupuy; François Philippart; Yves Péan; Sigismond Lasocki; Pierre Emmanuel Charles; Martin Chalumeau; Yann-Eric Claessens; Jean-Pierre Quenot; Christèle Gras-Le Guen; S. Ruiz; Charles-Edouard Luyt; Nicolas Roche; Jean-Paul Stahl; Jean-Pierre Bedos; Jérôme Pugin; Rémy Gauzit; Benoit Misset; Christian Brun-Buisson

In the context of worldwide increasing antimicrobial resistance, good antimicrobial prescribing in more needed than ever; unfortunately, information available to clinicians often are insufficient to rely on. Biomarkers might provide help for decision-making and improve antibiotic management. The purpose of this expert panel review was to examine currently available literature on the potential role of biomarkers to improve antimicrobial prescribing, by answering three questions: 1) Which are the biomarkers available for this purpose?; 2) What is their potential role in the initiation of antibiotic therapy?; and 3) What is their role in the decision to stop antibiotic therapy? To answer these questions, studies reviewed were limited to recent clinical studies (<15 years), involving a substantial number of patients (>50) and restricted to controlled trials and meta-analyses for answering questions 2 and 3. With regard to the first question concerning routinely available biomarkers, which might be useful for antibiotic management of acute infections, these are currently limited to C-reactive protein (CRP) and procalcitonin (PCT). Other promising biomarkers that may prove useful in the near future but need to undergo more extensive clinical testing include sTREM-1, suPAR, ProADM, and Presepsin. New approaches to biomarkers of infections include point-of-care testing and genomics.


Annals of Intensive Care | 2013

Role of biomarkers in the management of antibiotic therapy: an expert panel review II: clinical use of biomarkers for initiation or discontinuation of antibiotic therapy

Jean-Pierre Quenot; Charles-Edouard Luyt; Nicolas Roche; Martin Chalumeau; Pierre-Emmanuel Charles; Yann-Eric Claessens; Sigismond Lasocki; Jean-Pierre Bedos; Yves Péan; François Philippart; S. Ruiz; Christele Gras-Leguen; Anne-Marie Dupuy; Jérôme Pugin; Jean-Paul Stahl; Benoit Misset; Rémy Gauzit; Christian Brun-Buisson

Biomarker-guided initiation of antibiotic therapy has been studied in four conditions: acute pancreatitis, lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI), meningitis, and sepsis in the ICU. In pancreatitis with suspected infected necrosis, initiating antibiotics best relies on fine-needle aspiration and demonstration of infected material. We suggest that PCT be measured to help predict infection; however, available data are insufficient to decide on initiating antibiotics based on PCT levels. In adult patients suspected of community-acquired LRTI, we suggest withholding antibiotic therapy when the serum PCT level is low (<0.25 ng/mL); in patients having nosocomial LRTI, data are insufficient to recommend initiating therapy based on a single PCT level or even repeated measurements. For children with suspected bacterial meningitis, we recommend using a decision rule as an aid to therapeutic decisions, such as the Bacterial Meningitis Score or the Meningitest®; a single PCT level ≥0.5 ng/mL also may be used, but false-negatives may occur. In adults with suspected bacterial meningitis, we suggest integrating serum PCT measurements in a clinical decision rule to help distinguish between viral and bacterial meningitis, using a 0.5 ng/mL threshold. For ICU patients suspected of community-acquired infection, we do not recommend using a threshold serum PCT value to help the decision to initiate antibiotic therapy; data are insufficient to recommend using PCT serum kinetics for the decision to initiate antibiotic therapy in patients suspected of ICU-acquired infection. In children, CRP can probably be used to help discontinue therapy, although the evidence is limited. In adults, antibiotic discontinuation can be based on an algorithm using repeated PCT measurements. In non-immunocompromised out- or in- patients treated for RTI, antibiotics can be discontinued if the PCT level at day 3 is < 0.25 ng/mL or has decreased by >80-90%, whether or not microbiological documentation has been obtained. For ICU patients who have nonbacteremic sepsis from a known site of infection, antibiotics can be stopped if the PCT level at day 3 is < 0.5 ng/mL or has decreased by >80% relative to the highest level recorded, irrespective of the severity of the infectious episode; in bacteremic patients, a minimal duration of therapy of 5 days is recommended.


Intensive Care Medicine | 2015

Strategies to reduce curative antibiotic therapy in intensive care units (adult and paediatric)

Cédric Bretonnière; Marc Leone; Christophe Milési; B. Allaouchiche; Laurence Armand-Lefevre; Olivier Baldesi; Lila Bouadma; Dominique Decré; Samy Figueiredo; Rémy Gauzit; Benoit Guery; Nicolas Joram; Boris Jung; Sigismond Lasocki; Alain Lepape; F. Lesage; Olivier Pajot; François Philippart; Bertrand Souweine; Pierre Tattevin; Jean-François Timsit; Renaud Vialet; Jean Ralph Zahar; Benoit Misset; Jean-Pierre Bedos

Emerging resistance to antibiotics shows no signs of decline. At the same time, few new antibacterials are being discovered. There is a worldwide recognition regarding the danger of this situation. The urgency of the situation and the conviction that practices should change led the Société de Réanimation de Langue Française (SRLF) and the Société Française d’Anesthésie et de Réanimation (SFAR) to set up a panel of experts from various disciplines. These experts met for the first time at the end of 2012 and have since met regularly to issue the following 67 recommendations, according to the rigorous GRADE methodology. Five fields were explored: i) the link between the resistance of bacteria and the use of antibiotics in intensive care; ii) which microbiological data and how to use them to reduce antibiotic consumption; iii) how should antibiotic therapy be chosen to limit consumption of antibiotics; iv) how can antibiotic administration be optimized; v) review and duration of antibiotic treatments. In each institution, the appropriation of these recommendations should arouse multidisciplinary discussions resulting in better knowledge of local epidemiology, rate of antibiotic use, and finally protocols for improving the stewardship of antibiotics. These efforts should contribute to limit the emergence of resistant bacteria.

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Benoit Misset

Paris Descartes University

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Alexis Tabah

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

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