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Dive into the research topics where Gloria Fernández-Esparrach is active.

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Featured researches published by Gloria Fernández-Esparrach.


Journal of Hepatology | 2001

A prognostic model for predicting survival in cirrhosis with ascites

Gloria Fernández-Esparrach; Alberto Sanchez-Fueyo; Pere Ginès; Juan Uriz; Llorenç Quintó; Pere Ventura; Andrés Cárdenas; Mónica Guevara; Pau Sort; Wladimiro Jiménez; Ramon Bataller; Vicente Arroyo; Juan Rodés

BACKGROUND/AIMS Parameters evaluating renal function and systemic hemodynamics are of prognostic significance in cirrhosis with ascites but are rarely used in the evaluation of survival of these patients. The aim of the current study was to develop a prognostic model to estimate survival of patients with cirrhosis and ascites. METHODS 216 Cirrhotic patients admitted to hospital for the treatment of ascites were evaluated. Thirty-two demographic, clinical and laboratory variables, including parameters assessing liver and renal function and systemic hemodynamics, were analyzed as predictive factors of survival by using a Cox regression model. RESULTS Four variables had independent prognostic value: renal water excretion, as assessed by measuring diuresis after water load, mean arterial pressure, Child-Pugh class, and serum creatinine. According to these features a prognostic index was calculated that allows to estimate survival in patients with cirrhosis and ascites. The model accurately predicted survival in an independent series of 84 patients with cirrhosis and ascites. CONCLUSION A prognostic model that uses four easily available variables and predicts prognosis in cirrhotic patients with ascites has been developed. This model may be useful in the evaluation of patients with ascites for liver transplantation.


Endoscopy | 2011

Indications, results, and clinical impact of endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided sampling in gastroenterology: European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) Clinical Guideline

Jean-Marc Dumonceau; Marcin Polkowski; Alberto Larghi; Peter Vilmann; Marc Giovannini; Jean-Louis Frossard; Denis Heresbach; B. Pujol; Gloria Fernández-Esparrach; Enrique Vazquez-Sequeiros; Angels Ginès

This article is part of a combined publication that expresses the current view of the European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ESGE) about endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided sampling in gastroenterology, including EUS-guided fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) and EUS-guided trucut biopsy (EUS-TCB), of submucosal tumors, diffuse esophageal/gastric wall thickening, pancreatic solid masses and cystic-appearing lesions, mediastinal lesions unrelated to lung or esophageal cancer, cancer of the esophagus, stomach, and rectum, lymph nodes of unknown origin, adrenal gland masses, and focal liver lesions. False-positive cytopathological results and needle tract seeding are also discussed. The present Clinical Guideline describes the results of EUS-guided sampling in the different clinical settings, considers the role of this technique in patient management, and makes recommendations on circumstances that warrant its use. A two-page executive summary of evidence statements and recommendations is provided. A separate Technical Guideline describes the general technique of EUS-guided sampling, particular techniques to maximize the diagnostic yield depending on the nature of the target lesion, and sample processing. The target readership for the Clinical Guideline mostly includes gastroenterologists, oncologists, internists, and surgeons while the Technical Guideline should be most useful to endoscopists who perform EUS-guided sampling.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2004

Wireless capsule endoscopy in patients with obscure gastrointestinal bleeding: a comparative study with push enteroscopy

Alfredo Mata; Josep M. Bordas; Faust Feu; Angels Ginès; Maria Pellise; Gloria Fernández-Esparrach; Francesc Balaguer; Josep M. Piqué; Josep Llach

Background : The identification and treatment of lesions located in the small intestine in obscure gastrointestinal bleeding is always a clinical challenge.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2005

A prospective trial comparing wireless capsule endoscopy and barium contrast series for small-bowel surveillance in hereditary GI polyposis syndromes

Alfredo Mata; Josep Llach; Antoni Castells; Josep María Rovira; Maria Pellise; Angels Ginès; Gloria Fernández-Esparrach; Montserrat Andreu; Josep M. Bordas; Josep M. Piqué

BACKGROUND Capsule endoscopy has demonstrated its clinical utility in the evaluation of the small bowel, and, accordingly, it has been suggested that it could be useful for the identification of small-intestinal polyps in patients with polyposis syndromes. The objective was to establish the effectiveness of wireless capsule endoscopy for detecting small-bowel polyps in patients with hereditary GI polyposis syndromes in comparison with barium contrast series. METHODS Consecutive patients with GI polyposis syndromes were included. Small-bowel follow-through series and capsule endoscopy were performed within 1 week, in a blind fashion. The number and the location of polyps were analyzed. RESULTS Twenty-four patients with familial adenomatous polyposis (n = 20) or Peutz-Jeghers syndrome (n = 4) were included. Capsule endoscopy detected small-bowel polyps in 7 of 24 patients (29%), whereas a barium contrast study identified small-intestinal polyps in only 3 of these 7 patients. In the 4 remaining patients, all of them with familial adenomatous polyposis, polyps detected by the capsule but missed in radiographic series were located at either ileum (2 patients), jejunum (1), or duodenum (1). No procedure-related complication was observed in any patient. CONCLUSIONS Wireless capsule endoscopy is a highly accurate technique for the detection of small-bowel polyps in patients with hereditary GI polyposis syndromes, and it represents a valuable alternative to barium contrast series in the surveillance of patients with Peutz-Jeghers syndrome.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2010

Severe Complications Limit Long-Term Clinical Success of Self-Expanding Metal Stents in Patients With Obstructive Colorectal Cancer

Gloria Fernández-Esparrach; Josep M. Bordas; María Dolores Giráldez; Angels Ginès; Maria Pellise; Oriol Sendino; Graciela Martínez-Pallí; Antoni Castells; Josep Llach

OBJECTIVES:Self-expanding metal stents (SEMS) are increasingly being used to treat malignant colorectal obstruction. However, complications have been reported in up to 50% of patients. There is limited information on long-term outcomes of these patients. The aim of this study was to retrospectively assess the long-term clinical success of SEMS in patients with malignant colorectal obstruction in a single tertiary center and to identify possible predictive factors of developing complications.METHODS:A total of 47 attempts to insert colorectal SEMS were made in 47 patients during a 5-year period. Stents of 9-cm length were placed under endoscopic and radiologic monitoring. After 24 h, all patients underwent abdominal X-ray to verify correct positioning of the stent. Patients were followed at the outpatient clinic.RESULTS:Insertion success was achieved in 44 (94%) patients. Acceptable initial colonic decompression was observed in 44 out of 47 (94%) attempts and in all (100%) successfully inserted stents. The stents were placed in the rectum (n=7, 15%), sigmoid (n=33, 70%), left colon (n=4, 9%), or anastomosis (n=3, 6%). The majority of patients had stage IV disease (n=40, 85%). SEMS served as a bridge to scheduled surgery in 9 (20%) patients and as a palliative definitive treatment in 38 (80%) cases. Three patients were lost to follow-up, so the outcome was evaluated in 41 patients. Long-term clinical failure occurred in 21 (51%) patients and was due to complications such as: migration (n=9, 22%), obstruction (n=7, 17%), perforation (n=3, 7%), and tenesmus (n=2, 5%). Perforations occurred 3, 4, and 34 days after insertion, and all patients died. In the bridge-to-surgery group, primary anastomosis was possible in only four of nine patients (44%). Clinical failure was not associated with any tumor-related factor. However, eight of nine patients with stent migration and two of three patients with perforation had been previously treated with chemotherapy.CONCLUSIONS:Placement of SEMS does not seem to be as effective as suggested because of late complications. For patients with potentially curable lesions, the use of colonic stents for malignant obstruction should only be considered when surgery is scheduled shortly after the stent insertion. Moreover, in patients with incurable obstructing colorectal cancer eligible for chemotherapy and a long life expectancy, palliative treatments other than SEMS should be considered.


Endoscopy | 2010

Endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration and trucut biopsy in the diagnosis of gastric stromal tumors: a randomized crossover study.

Gloria Fernández-Esparrach; O. Sendino; M. Solé; Maria Pellise; Ll Colomo; A. Pardo; Graciela Martínez-Pallí; L. Argüello; Josep M. Bordas; Josep Llach; Angels Ginès

BACKGROUND AND AIM The diagnosis of gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) has important prognostic and therapeutic implications. The specific diagnosis of GIST has to be based on immunocytochemistry. This study aimed to prospectively compare in a crossover manner the accuracy of endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided fine-needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) and EUS-guided trucut biopsy (EUS-TCB) in the specific diagnosis of gastric GISTs. We hypothesized that EUS-TCB is superior to EUS-FNA in this respect. PATIENTS AND METHODS Forty patients with gastric subepithelial tumors suspected on the basis of EUS of being a GIST underwent both EUS-FNA and EUS-TCB. The sequence in which the techniques were employed was randomly assigned to avoid bias. RESULTS Forty tumors were sampled (mean number of passes: 2.1 +/- 0.9 with EUS-TNB and 1.9 +/- 0.8 with EUS-FNA; P = not significant, NS). Final diagnoses were: GIST (n = 27), carcinoma (n = 2), leiomyoma (n = 1), schwannoma (n = 1), and no diagnosis possible (n = 9). Device failure occurred in 6 patients with EUS-TCB. A cytohistological diagnosis of mesenchymal tumor (n = 29) and carcinoma (n = 2) was made in 70 % of cases by EUS-FNA and in 60 % of cases by EUS-TCB ( P = NS). Among the samples that were adequate, immunohistochemistry could be performed in 74 % of EUS-FNA samples and in 91 % of EUS-TCB samples ( P = 0.025). When inadequate samples were included, the overall diagnostic accuracy of EUS-FNA was 52 % and that of EUS-TCB was 55 % ( P = NS). There were no complications. CONCLUSIONS EUS-TCB is not superior to EUS-FNA in GISTs because of the high rate of technical failure of trucut. However, when an adequate sample is obtained with EUS-TCB, immunohistochemical phenotyping is almost always possible. EUS-TCB can be safely performed in this set of patients.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2011

Narrow-band imaging as an alternative to chromoendoscopy for the detection of dysplasia in long-standing inflammatory bowel disease: a prospective, randomized, crossover study

Maria Pellise; Maria Lopez-Ceron; Cristina Rodríguez de Miguel; Mireya Jimeno; Michel Zabalza; Elena Ricart; Montserrat Aceituno; Gloria Fernández-Esparrach; Angels Ginès; Oriol Sendino; Miriam Cuatrecasas; Josep Llach; Julián Panés

BACKGROUND Narrow-band imaging (NBI) is a novel technique that may represent an alternative method to chromoendoscopy (CE) for the detection of colitis-associated intraepithelial neoplasia (IN) in patients with long-standing inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). OBJECTIVE To compare NBI with CE for the detection of IN. DESIGN Prospective, randomized, crossover study. SETTING Academic hospital. PATIENTS Patients with clinically inactive colonic IBD (≥8 years). INTERVENTION Patients underwent both CE and NBI in randomized order. Targeted biopsy specimens from abnormal areas were obtained. Pathological examination was regarded as the reference standard. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS Number of false-positive and true-positive lesions in patients undergoing CE and NBI were compared as well as the proportion of patients with missed IN lesions. RESULTS Eighty patients were screened, of whom 20 were excluded. Mean ± standard deviation withdrawal time for CE was significantly longer than that for NBI (26.87 ± 9.89 minutes vs 15.74 ± 5.62 minutes, P < .01). Thirteen patients had at least 1 IN lesion on 1 of the examinations. In the per-lesion analysis, NBI resulted in a significantly inferior false-positive biopsy rate (P = .001) and a similar true-positive rate. The percentage of missed IN lesions and patients was superior with NBI, albeit without reaching statistical significance. LIMITATIONS Lesions were sampled immediately after detection, which precluded the possibility of paired analysis. CONCLUSIONS NBI appears to be a less time-consuming and equally effective alternative to CE for the detection of IN. However, given the NBI lesion and patient miss rates, it cannot be recommended as the standard technique.


Gastroenterology | 1998

Increased adrenomedullin levels in cirrhosis: relationship with hemodynamic abnormalities and vasoconstrictor systems.

Mónica Guevara; Pere Ginès; Wladimiro Jiménez; Pau Sort; Gloria Fernández-Esparrach; Angels Escorsell; Ramon Bataller; Jaume Bosch; Vicente Arroyo; Francisca Rivera; Juan Rodés

BACKGROUND & AIMS Arterial vasodilation in cirrhosis may be related to increased circulating levels of vasodilators. This study was designed to assess the circulating levels of adrenomedullin, a recently described vasodilator peptide, in cirrhosis. METHODS Plasma adrenomedullin levels were measured in 17 healthy subjects and 34 cirrhotic patients. Hemodynamic parameters, renal function, and levels of vasoactive substances were also assessed. RESULTS Patients with ascites had increased adrenomedullin levels (289 +/- 47 pg/mL) compared with healthy subjects and patients without ascites (135 +/- 17 and 142 +/- 32 pg/mL, respectively; P < 0.05). Adrenomedullin levels correlated inversely with arterial pressure, glomerular filtration rate, and renal plasma flow and correlated directly with pulse rate, endothelin levels, and aldosterone and plasma renin activity. In cirrhotic patients, no significant differences in adrenomedullin levels were found between samples obtained from hepatic vein, renal vein, pulmonary artery, and femoral artery. Plasma expansion with albumin suppressed the renin-angiotensin system but did not affect adrenomedullin levels. CONCLUSIONS Circulating levels of adrenomedullin are increased in patients with ascites and correlate with hemodynamic and renal abnormalities and activation of vasoconstrictor systems. These increased levels seem to result from a generalized increase in adrenomedullin production from vascular tissue and are not suppressed by plasma expansion. Adrenomedullin may participate in the pathogenesis of arterial vasodilation in cirrhosis.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2008

The beneficial effects of argon plasma coagulation in the management of different types of gastric vascular ectasia lesions in patients admitted for GI hemorrhage

Samuel Herrera; Josep M. Bordas; Josep Llach; Angels Ginès; Maria Pellise; Gloria Fernández-Esparrach; F. Mondelo; Alfredo Mata; Andrés Cárdenas; Antoni Castells

BACKGROUND Despite different forms of treatment, few studies have been performed on the outcome and prognosis of patients admitted to the hospital because of gastric vascular ectasia (GVE) and upper-GI bleeding (UGIB). There is also little knowledge on the efficacy of argon plasma coagulation (APC) in different subgroups of GVE lesions. OBJECTIVE This study was designed to evaluate the efficacy of APC in patients admitted to the hospital with UGIB because of GVE. DESIGN Prospective evaluation of consecutive cases of UGIB because of GVE. SETTING Tertiary and university-affiliated hospital. PATIENTS AND INTERVENTIONS Twenty-nine patients were included and divided into 3 subgroups: focal vascular ectasia lesions (FVE) (n = 10), portal hypertensive gastropathy (PHG) (n = 11), and gastric antral vascular ectasia (GAVE) (n = 8). Patients were followed at 3 months and every 6 months thereafter during a mean of 23.1 months (range 18-37 months). All patients received intensive APC treatment that was repeated, depending on the endoscopic appearance or clinical evaluation. RESULTS The overall success of APC treatment was 86%, with only one recurrence of UGIB during the follow-up period. The number of APC sessions was 1.2, 2.2, and 2.3, in each subgroup (not significant), with a total number of sessions of 1.9 +/- 1.3. Treatment success was 90% in the FVE group, 81% in the PHG group, and 87.5% in the GAVE group (NS). The rise in hematocrit from baseline values in the overall group and in each subgroup was significant (P > .01). LIMITATIONS A single-center study and small sample. CONCLUSIONS Endoscopic thermal ablation with APC is effective in managing UGIB and in reducing transfusion requirements in patients admitted for GI hemorrhage because of different endoscopic types of GVE.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2004

Detection of Lymph Node Micrometastases by Gene Promoter Hypermethylation in Samples Obtained by Endosonography- Guided Fine-Needle Aspiration Biopsy

Maria Pellise; Antoni Castells; Angels Ginès; Ruben Agrelo; Manel Solé; Sergi Castellví-Bel; Gloria Fernández-Esparrach; Josep Llach; Manel Esteller; Josep M. Bordas; Josep M. Piqué

Endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) has become a fundamental procedure for gastrointestinal and lung cancer staging. However, there is growing evidence that micrometastases are present in lymph nodes, which cannot be detected with standard pathological methods. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether hypermethylation gene promoter analysis was feasible on samples obtained by EUS-FNA from lymph nodes, as well as to establish the usefulness of this strategy for the detection of micrometastases in patients with gastrointestinal and non-small cell lung cancer. Suspicious lymph nodes based on EUS findings from consecutive patients with esophageal, gastric, rectal, and non-small cell lung cancer were sampled by EUS-FNA. Hypermethylation analysis of the MGMT, p16INK4a, and p14ARF gene promoter CpG islands were performed by methylation-specific PCR. Effectiveness of conventional cytology, methylation analysis, and their combination were established with respect to the definitive diagnosis. Twenty-seven patients were included, thus representing a total of 42 lymph nodes (esophageal cancer, n = 11; rectal cancer, n = 7; gastric cancer, n = 3; and lung cancer, n = 21). According to definitive diagnosis, 21 (50%) corresponded to metastatic lymph nodes. Sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy of conventional cytology were 76%, 100%, and 88%, respectively, whereas the corresponding values for the methylation analysis were 81%, 67%, and 74%, respectively. Combination of both techniques increased sensitivity (90%) but decreased specificity (67%) with respect to conventional cytology. In conclusion, it is feasible to detect occult neoplastic cells in EUS-FNA samples by hypermethylation gene promoter analysis. Moreover, addition of methylation analysis to conventional cytology may increase its sensitivity at the expenses of a decrease in its specificity.

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Josep Llach

University of Barcelona

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