Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Frédéric Collart is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Frédéric Collart.


Ndt Plus | 2012

Renal replacement therapy in Europe: a summary of the 2012 ERA-EDTA Registry Annual Report

Maria Pippias; Vianda S. Stel; Nikolaos Afentakis; Jose Antonio Herrero-Calvo; Manuel Arias; Natalia Tomilina; Encarnación Bouzas Caamaño; Jadranka Buturovic-Ponikvar; Svjetlana Čala; Fergus Caskey; Harijs Cernevskis; Frédéric Collart; Ramón Alonso de la Torre; Maria de los Ángeles García Bazaga; Johan De Meester; Joan M. Díaz; Ljubica Djukanovic; Manuel Ferrer Alamar; Patrik Finne; Liliana Garneata; Eliezer Golan; Raquel González Fernández; Gonzalo Gutiérrez Avila; James G. Heaf; Andries J. Hoitsma; Nino Kantaria; Mykola Kolesnyk; Reinhard Kramar; Anneke Kramer; Mathilde Lassalle

Background This article summarizes the 2012 European Renal Association—European Dialysis and Transplant Association Registry Annual Report (available at www.era-edta-reg.org) with a specific focus on older patients (defined as ≥65 years). Methods Data provided by 45 national or regional renal registries in 30 countries in Europe and bordering the Mediterranean Sea were used. Individual patient level data were received from 31 renal registries, whereas 14 renal registries contributed data in an aggregated form. The incidence, prevalence and survival probabilities of patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) receiving renal replacement therapy (RRT) and renal transplantation rates for 2012 are presented. Results In 2012, the overall unadjusted incidence rate of patients with ESRD receiving RRT was 109.6 per million population (pmp) (n = 69 035), ranging from 219.9 pmp in Portugal to 24.2 pmp in Montenegro. The proportion of incident patients ≥75 years varied from 15 to 44% between countries. The overall unadjusted prevalence on 31 December 2012 was 716.7 pmp (n = 451 270), ranging from 1670.2 pmp in Portugal to 146.7 pmp in the Ukraine. The proportion of prevalent patients ≥75 years varied from 11 to 32% between countries. The overall renal transplantation rate in 2012 was 28.3 pmp (n = 15 673), with the highest rate seen in the Spanish region of Catalonia. The proportion of patients ≥65 years receiving a transplant ranged from 0 to 35%. Five-year adjusted survival for all RRT patients was 59.7% (95% confidence interval, CI: 59.3–60.0) which fell to 39.3% (95% CI: 38.7–39.9) in patients 65–74 years and 21.3% (95% CI: 20.8–21.9) in patients ≥75 years.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

Cardiovascular and noncardiovascular mortality among men and women starting dialysis

Juan-Jesus Carrero; Dinanda J. de Jager; Marion Verduijn; Pietro Ravani; J. De Meester; James G. Heaf; Patrik Finne; A.J. Hoitsma; Julio Pascual; Faical Jarraya; Anna Varberg Reisæter; Frédéric Collart; Friedo W. Dekker; K.J. Jager

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Although women have a survival advantage in the general population, women on dialysis have similar mortality to men. We hypothesized that this paired mortality risk during dialysis may be explained by a relative excess of cardiovascular-related mortality in women. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS We compared 5-year age-stratified cardiovascular and noncardiovascular mortality rates, relative risks, and hazard ratios in a European cohort of incident adult dialysis patients (European Renal Association-European Dialysis and Transplant Association [ERA-EDTA] Registry) with the European general population (Eurostat). Cause of death was recorded by ERA-EDTA codes in dialysis patients and by International Statistical Classification of Diseases codes in the general population. RESULTS Overall, sex did not have a predictive effect on outcome in dialysis. Stratification into age categories and causes of death showed greater noncardiovascular mortality in young women (<45 years). In other age categories (45 to 55 and >55 years), women presented lower cardiovascular mortality. This cardiovascular benefit was, however, smaller than in the general population. Stratification by diabetic nephropathy showed that diabetic women in all age categories remained at increased mortality risk compared with men, an effect mainly attributed to the noncardiovascular component. CONCLUSIONS Mortality rates and causes of death in men and women on dialysis vary with age. Increased noncardiovascular mortality may explain the loss of the survival advantage of women on dialysis. Both young and diabetic women starting dialysis are at a higher mortality risk than equal men.


Kidney International | 2014

Analysis of data from the ERA-EDTA Registry indicates that conventional treatments for chronic kidney disease do not reduce the need for renal replacement therapy in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease

Edwin M. Spithoven; Anneke Kramer; Esther Meijer; Bjarne Orskov; Christoph Wanner; Fergus Caskey; Frédéric Collart; Patrik Finne; Damian Fogarty; Jaap W. Groothoff; A.J. Hoitsma; Marie-Béatrice Nogier; Pietro Ravani; Oscar Zurriaga; Kitty J. Jager; Ron T. Gansevoort

Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is a major cause of end-stage kidney failure, but is often identified early and therefore amenable to timely treatment. Interventions known to postpone the need for renal replacement therapy (RRT) in non-ADPKD patients have also been tested in ADPKD patients, but with inconclusive results. To help resolve this we determined changes in RRT incidence rates as an indicator for increasing effective renoprotection over time in ADPKD. We analyzed data from the European Renal Association-European Dialyses and Transplant Association Registry on 315,444 patients starting RRT in 12 European countries between 1991 and 2010, grouped into four 5-year periods. Of them, 20,596 were due to ADPKD. Between the first and last period the mean age at onset of RRT increased from 56.6 to 58.0 years. The age- and gender-adjusted incidence rate of RRT for ADPKD increased slightly over the four periods from 7.6 to 8.3 per million population. No change over time was found in the incidence of RRT for ADPKD up to age 50, whereas in recent time periods the incidence in patients above the age of 70 clearly increased. Among countries there was a significant positive association between RRT take-on rates for non-ADPKD kidney disease and ADPKD. Thus, the increased age at onset of RRT is most likely due to an increased access for elderly ADPKD patients or lower competing risk prior to the start of RRT rather than the consequence of effective emerging renoprotective treatments for ADPKD.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1993

Twenty-four-Hour Blood Pressure and Heart Rate Patterns in Chronic Hemodialysis Patients

Philippe van de Borne; Christian Tielemans; Frédéric Collart; Jean-Louis Vanherweghem; Jean-Paul Degaute

To test the assumption that the previously reported abnormal 24-hour blood pressure (BP) variations in hemodialysis (HD) patients might be due to associated complications of chronic renal failure, we recorded the 24-hour noninvasive BP and heart rate (HR) patterns in 14 carefully selected chronic HD patients. No of the patients suffered from orthostatic hypotension, and all were free of any previously reported associated condition known to affect the 24-hour BP profiles. The BP and HR profiles were quantitatively analyzed using the periodogram method. The results were compared those from 14 controls matched for age, sex, and casual BP. No difference could be found between the HD patients and the controls, either in the absolute and relative amplitudes of the 24-hour systolic BP and diastolic BP variations or in the timings and levels of their respective acrophases and nadirs (except for the timings of the second systolic BP and diastolic BP acrophases; P < 0.05). The absolute levels of the HR acrophases and nadirs were higher in the HD patients than in the controls (P < 0.05 and P < 0.01, respectively), while both the absolute and relative amplitudes of the 24-hour HR profiles and the relative values and timings of the HR acrophases and nadirs were similar in both groups. Consequently, the 24-hour HR pattern was similar in the HD patients than in the controls, except that the entire profile was shifted upward.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2008

From registry data collection to international comparisons: examples of haemodialysis duration and frequency

Cécile Couchoud; Jeroen P. Kooman; Patrik Finne; Torbjørn Leivestad; Olivera Stojceva-Taneva; Jadranka Buturovic Ponikvar; Frédéric Collart; Reinhard Kramar; Angel de Francisco; Kitty J. Jager

BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to investigate haemodialysis (HD) dose practice patterns in different European countries in the light of the European Best Practice Guidelines (EBPG) and to study the associations of patient characteristics and country with weekly dialysis duration. METHODS Renal registries in Europe were asked to contribute to the study with individual patient data on weekly HD duration, number of HD sessions a week and last measured Kt/V. Additional items were age, sex, date of first renal replacement therapy (RRT), dry weight, height, HD modality, HD technique, diabetes status and vascular access type. Multivariate logistic regression was used to study the probability of receiving HD for <12 h per week. RESULTS Seven registries contributed data on 26 136 patients on HD on 31 December 2005. Eighty-three percent of the patients received HD for at least 12 h per week as recommended by the EBPG (range 49.0-97.3% across countries). Multivariate analysis showed significant differences across countries concerning the risk of receiving <12 h. Other risk factors included age (older), sex (female), BMI (low) and duration of RRT (shorter). Diabetes was associated with longer total HD duration. CONCLUSION This study shows a great international variability in weekly HD duration and some discrepancies between current practices and the EBPG. It also points out the difficulty of obtaining and comparing Kt/V values under current registry practices.


Ndt Plus | 2016

Renal replacement therapy in Europe: a summary of the 2013 ERA-EDTA Registry Annual Report with a focus on diabetes mellitus

Anneke Kramer; Maria Pippias; Vianda S. Stel; Marjolein Bonthuis; Nikolaos Afentakis; Ramón Alonso de la Torre; Patrice M. Ambühl; Boris Bikbov; Encarnación Bouzas Caamaño; Ivan Bubić; Jadranka Buturovic-Ponikvar; Fergus Caskey; Harijs Cernevskis; Frédéric Collart; Jordi Comas Farnés; Maria de los Ángeles García Bazaga; Johan De Meester; Manuel Ferrer Alamar; Patrik Finne; Liliana Garneata; Eliezer Golan; James G. Heaf; Marc Hemmelder; Kyriakos Ioannou; Nino Kantaria; Mykola Kolesnyk; Reinhard Kramar; Mathilde Lassalle; Visnja Lezaic; František Lopot

Background This article provides a summary of the 2013 European Renal Association–European Dialysis and Transplant Association (ERA-EDTA) Registry Annual Report (available at http://www.era-edta-reg.org), with a focus on patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) as the cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Methods In 2015, the ERA-EDTA Registry received data on renal replacement therapy (RRT) for ESRD from 49 national or regional renal registries in 34 countries in Europe and bordering the Mediterranean Sea. Individual patient data were provided by 31 registries, while 18 registries provided aggregated data. The total population covered by the participating registries comprised 650 million people. Results In total, 72 933 patients started RRT for ESRD within the countries and regions reporting to the ERA-EDTA Registry, resulting in an overall incidence of 112 per million population (pmp). The overall prevalence on 31 December 2013 was 738 pmp (n = 478 990). Patients with DM as the cause of ESRD comprised 24% of the incident RRT patients (26 pmp) and 17% of the prevalent RRT patients (122 pmp). When compared with the USA, the incidence of patients starting RRT pmp secondary to DM in Europe was five times lower and the incidence of RRT due to other causes of ESRD was two times lower. Overall, 19 426 kidney transplants were performed (30 pmp). The 5-year adjusted survival for all RRT patients was 60.9% [95% confidence interval (CI) 60.5–61.3] and 50.6% (95% CI 49.9–51.2) for patients with DM as the cause of ESRD.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2012

New primary renal diagnosis codes for the ERA-EDTA

Gopalakrishnan Venkat-Raman; Charles R.V. Tomson; Yongsheng Gao; Ronald Cornet; Bénédicte Stengel; Carola Grönhagen-Riska; Christopher Reid; C. Jacquelinet; Elke Schaeffner; Els W. Boeschoten; Francesco G. Casino; Frédéric Collart; Johan De Meester; Oscar Zurriaga; Reinhard Kramar; Kitty J. Jager; Keith Simpson

The European Renal Association-European Dialysis and Transplant Association (ERA-EDTA) Registry has produced a new set of primary renal diagnosis (PRD) codes that are intended for use by affiliated registries. It is designed specifically for use in renal centres and registries but is aligned with international coding standards supported by the WHO (International Classification of Diseases) and the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organization (SNOMED Clinical Terms). It is available as supplementary material to this paper and free on the internet for non-commercial, clinical, quality improvement and research use, and by agreement with the ERA-EDTA Registry for use by commercial organizations. Conversion between the old and the new PRD codes is possible. The new codes are very flexible and will be actively managed to keep them up-to-date and to ensure that renal medicine can remain at the forefront of the electronic revolution in medicine, epidemiology research and the use of decision support systems to improve the care of patients.


Journal of Infection | 1985

Campylobacter fetus peritonitis followed by septicaemia in a patient on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis

Robert Wens; Max Dratwa; Catherine Potvliege; Willy Hansen; Christian Tielemans; Frédéric Collart

A 62-year-old man being treated by continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) developed peritonitis due to Campylobacter fetus subspecies fetus (intestinalis), an organism seldom isolated in such circumstances. After appropriate and apparently effective antibiotic therapy, the patient relapsed 6 weeks later with septicaemia. Blood cultures yielded a similar organism, thereby suggesting a clinically silent metastatic infection during the episode of peritonitis, probably at an old arteriovenous fistula. Parenteral tobramycin followed by oral erythromycin achieved a complete cure of this unusual complication.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2016

Lifetime risk of renal replacement therapy in Europe: a population-based study using data from the ERA-EDTA Registry

Jan A.J.G. van den Brand; Maria Pippias; Vianda S. Stel; Fergus Caskey; Frédéric Collart; Partik Finne; James G. Heaf; Jean Philippe Jais; Reinhard Kramar; Ziad A. Massy; Johan De Meester; Jamie P. Traynor; Anna Varberg Reisæter; Jack F.M. Wetzels; Kitty J. Jager

Background. Upcoming KDIGO guidelines for the evaluation of living kidney donors are expected to move towards a personal risk‐based evaluation of potential donors. We present the age and sex‐specific lifetime risk of renal replacement therapy (RRT) for end‐stage renal disease in 10 European countries. Methods. We defined lifetime risk of RRT as the cumulative incidence of RRT up to age 90 years. We obtained RRT incidence rates per million population by 5‐year age groups and sex using data from the European Renal Association‐European Dialysis and Transplant Association (ERA‐EDTA) Registry, and used these to estimate the cumulative incidence of RRT, adjusting for competing mortality risk. Results. Lifetime risk of RRT varied from 0.44% to 2.05% at age 20 years and from 0.17% to 1.59% at age 70 years across countries, and was twice as high in men as in women. Lifetime RRT risk decreased with age, ranging from an average of 0.77% to 0.44% in 20‐ to‐ 70‐year‐old women, and from 1.45% to 0.96% in 20‐ to‐ 70‐year‐old men. The lifetime risk of RRT increased slightly over the past decade, more so in men than in women. However, it appears to have stabilized or even decreased slightly in more recent years. Conclusions. The lifetime risk of RRT decreased with age, was lower in women as compared with men of equal age and varied considerably throughout Europe. Given the substantial differences in lifetime risk of RRT between the USA and Europe, country‐specific estimates should be used in the evaluation and communication of the risk of RRT for potential living kidney donors.


Acta Endoscopica | 1984

Mesure endoscopique de la pression dans les varices œsophagiennes du cirrhotique: Corrélation avec la pression portale

M. De Reuck; A. Burette; M. Van Gossum; N. Dumont; Frédéric Collart; M. Deltenre

RésuméLes auteurs rapportent une étude de corrélation entre la pression portale et la pression intra-variqueuse chez 30 patients cirrhotiques avec hypertension portale. Les mesures ont été effectuées par ponction directe per-endoscopique des varices et au cours d’une angiographie sus-hépatique. Une corrélation positive est observée entre la pression dans les varices et la pression sinusoïdale corrigée, ð l’exception des patients étudiés au décours d’une hémorragie digestive sur rupture de varices. Ils mettent également en évidence un gradient de pression au long des colonnes variqueuses. Ils discutent les résultats obtenus sur base de la sélection des patients et de critères non retenus dans leur série pour tenter de définir la relation hypertension portale - risque hémorragique sur rupture de varice.SummaryThe authors present a study of the correlation between portal pressure and the intra-varicose pressure in 30 patients suffering from cirrhosis with portal hypertension. The measurements were carried out by direct puncture in endoscopy of the varices and during the course of a sub-hepatic angiography. A positive correlation was observed between the pressure in the varices and the corrected sinusoidal pressure with the exception of patients studied in the course of digestive hemorrhage with rupture of the varices. They also show a gradient of pressure along the varicose columns. They discuss the results obtained on the basis of a selection of patients and other criteria not retained in their series in an attempt to define the relationship between portal hypertension and risk of hemorrhage with rupture of the varices.

Collaboration


Dive into the Frédéric Collart's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Max Dratwa

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert Wens

Free University of Brussels

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kitty J. Jager

Public Health Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James G. Heaf

University of Copenhagen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joëlle Nortier

Université libre de Bruxelles

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge