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Dive into the research topics where Iris Goetz is active.

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Featured researches published by Iris Goetz.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2006

Evidence for three distinct classes of 'typical', 'psychotic' and 'dual' mania : results from the EMBLEM study

Josep Maria Haro; Jim van Os; Eduard Vieta; Catherine Reed; M. Lorenzo; Iris Goetz

Objective:  To describe patients included in the European Mania in Bipolar Longitudinal Evaluation of Medication (EMBLEM) study and to assess and clinically validate the presence of clinical subtypes of patients with acute mania.


Depression and Anxiety | 2012

Comprehensive review of factors implicated in the heterogeneity of response in depression

Gebra Cuyun Carter; R. A. Cantrell; Victoria Zarotsky; V. Haynes; Glenn A. Phillips; Carlos Alatorre; Iris Goetz; Rosirene Paczkowski; Lauren B. Marangell

Heterogeneity in overall response and outcomes to pharmacological treatment has been reported in several depression studies but with few sources that integrate these results. The goal of this study was to review the literature and attempt to identify nongenetic factors potentially predictive of overall response to depression treatments.


Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism | 2010

A review of treatment response in type 2 diabetes: assessing the role of patient heterogeneity.

R. A. Cantrell; Carlos Alatorre; E. J. Davis; Victoria Zarotsky; E. Le Nestour; G. Cuyun Carter; Iris Goetz; Rosirene Paczkowski; J. Sierra-Johnson

The response to treatment for type 2 diabetes typically varies among individuals within a study population. This variation is known as heterogeneity of treatment response. We conducted a comprehensive literature review to identify factors that account for heterogeneity of treatment response in patients treated for type 2 diabetes. Three databases (PubMed, EMBASE and Cochrane Library) were searched for articles published in the last 10 years describing investigations of factors associated with treatment response and outcomes among people with type 2 diabetes receiving pharmacological treatment. Of the 43 articles extracted and summarized, 35 (81%) discussed clinical factors, 31 (72%) described sociodemographic factors and 17 (40%) reported on comorbidity or behavioural factors. Clinical factors identified included baseline glycated hemoglobin A1c or fasting plasma glucose (FPG) levels, insulin response or sensitivity, C‐peptide, body composition, adipose tissue proteins, lipid profile, plasma albumin levels and duration of disease or insulin treatment. Other factors identified included age, sex, race, socioeconomic status and comorbidities. This review identified the following research gaps: use of multiple definitions for response, few patient‐reported measures and lack of evidence regarding whether factors were associated with treatment response for only specific medications or across pharmacological therapies. Furthermore, identification of factors associated with type 2 diabetes treatment response was generally a secondary objective in the research reviewed. Understanding which patient subgroups are more likely to respond to treatment and identifying factors associated with response may result in targeted treatment decisions and alter the interpretation of efficacy or effectiveness of results. In conclusion, accounting for these factors in clinical trials and when making clinical treatment decisions may improve therapy selection and individual patient outcomes.


European Psychiatry | 2010

Work impairment in bipolar disorder patients - results from a two-year observational study (EMBLEM)

Catherine Reed; Iris Goetz; Eduard Vieta; M. Bassi; Josep Maria Haro

OBJECTIVES To explore factors associated with work impairment at 2 years following an acute episode. METHODS European Mania in Bipolar disorder Longitudinal Evaluation of Medication (EMBLEM) is a prospective, observational study on the outcomes of patients with a manic/mixed episode. Work impairment was measured using a Longitudinal Interval Follow-up Evaluation (slice of LIFE) item and patients were categorised with either low or high work impairment at each observation. Baseline factors associated with work impairment at 2 years were assessed using multivariate modelling. RESULTS At baseline (n=2289), 69% of patients had high work impairment. At 2 years (n=1393), high impairment reduced to 41%. Modelling identified rapid cycling as the strongest disease-related factor associated with high work impairment at 2 years, although high work impairment at baseline had the strongest association overall. Lower levels of education, recent admissions, CGI-BP overall severity in the 12 months prior to baseline and CGI-BP mania at baseline all predicted higher work impairment. Living together in a relationship and independent housing were both significantly associated with having low work impairment at 2 years. CONCLUSIONS Work impairment in bipolar disorder is maintained over long periods, and is strongly associated with relationship status, living conditions and various disease-related factors.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2017

Series: Pragmatic trials and real world evidence: Paper 1. Introduction

Mira Zuidgeest; Iris Goetz; Rolf H.H. Groenwold; Elaine Irving; Ghislaine J.M.W. van Thiel; Diederick E. Grobbee

This is the introductory paper in a series of eight papers. In this series, we integrate the theoretical design options with the practice of conducting pragmatic trials. For most new market-approved treatments, the clinical evidence is insufficient to fully guide physicians and policy makers in choosing the optimal treatment for their patients. Pragmatic trials can fill this gap, by providing evidence on the relative effectiveness of a treatment strategy in routine clinical practice, already in an early phase of development, while maintaining the strength of randomized controlled trials. Selecting the setting, study population, mode of intervention, comparator, and outcome are crucial in designing pragmatic trials. In combination with monitoring and data collection that does not change routine care, this will enable appropriate generalization to the target patient group in clinical practice. To benefit from the full potential of pragmatic trials, there is a need for guidance and tools in designing these studies while ensuring operational feasibility. This paper introduces the concept of pragmatic trial design. The complex interplay between pragmatic design options, feasibility, stakeholder acceptability, validity, precision, and generalizability will be clarified. In this way, balanced design choices can be made in pragmatic trials with an optimal chance of success in practice.


BMC Psychiatry | 2007

The management of bipolar mania: a national survey of baseline data from the EMBLEM study in Italy

Cesario Bellantuono; Alessandra Barraco; Andrea Rossi; Iris Goetz

BackgroundAlthough a number of studies have assessed the management of mania in routine clinical practice, no studies have so far evaluated the short- and long-term management and outcome of patients affected by bipolar mania in different European countries.The objective of the study is to present, in the context of a large multicenter survey (EMBLEM study), an overview of the baseline data on the acute management of a representative sample of manic bipolar patients treated in the Italian psychiatric hospital and community settings. EMBLEM is a 2-year observational longitudinal study that evaluates across 14 European countries the patterns of the drug prescribed in patients with bipolar mania, their socio-demographic and clinical features and the outcomes of the treatment.MethodsThe study consists of a 12-week acute phase and a ≤ 24-month maintenance phase. Bipolar patients were included into the study as in- or out-patients, if they initiated or changed, according to the decision of their psychiatrist, oral antipsychotics, anticonvulsants and/or lithium for the treatment of an episode of mania.Data concerning socio-demographic characteristics, psychiatric and medical history, severity of mania, prescribed medications, functional status and quality of life were collected at baseline and during the follow-up period.ResultsIn Italy, 563 patients were recruited in 56 sites: 376 were outpatients and 187 inpatients. The mean age was 45.8 years. The mean CGI-BP was 4.4 (± 0.9) for overall score and mania, 1.9 (± 1.2) for depression and 2.6 (± 1.6) for hallucinations/delusions. The YMRS showed that 14.4% had a total score < 12, 25.1% ≥ 12 and < 20, and 60.5% ≥ 20. At entry, 75 patients (13.7%) were treatment-naïve, 186 (34.1%) were receiving a monotherapy (of which haloperidol [24.2%], valproate [16.7%] and lithium [14.5%] were the most frequently prescribed) while 285 (52.2%) a combined therapy (of which 8.0% were represented by haloperidol/lithium combinations). After a switch to an oral medication, 137 patients (24.8%) were prescribed a monotherapy while the rest (415, 75.2%) received a combination of drugs.ConclusionData collected at baseline in the Italian cohort of the EMBLEM study represent a relevant source of information to start addressing the short and long-term therapeutic strategies for improving the clinical as well as the socio-economic outcomes of patients affected by bipolar mania. Although its not an epidemiological investigation and has some limitations, the results show several interesting findings as a relatively late age of onset of bipolar disorder, a low rate of past suicide attempts, a low lifetime rate of alcohol abuse and drug addiction.


Current Medical Research and Opinion | 2011

Review of treatment response in rheumatoid arthritis: assessment of heterogeneity.

Iris Goetz; Gebra Cuyun Carter; Melanie Lucero; Victoria Zarotsky; Carlos Alatorre; R. A. Cantrell; Rosirene Paczkowski; Kimberly L. Sterling

Abstract Objective: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, systemic, progressive, inflammatory disorder. The primary goals of treatment in RA are to reduce the signs and symptoms of disease, prevent progression of joint damage and improve patients’ physical function. Patients with different sociodemographic characteristics, varying degrees of severity of illness, and comorbidities tend to exhibit differential response to treatment. The purpose of this review was to identify a broad set of factors that are associated with and/or predictive of RA treatment response and determine those that warrant further research. Research design and methods: A comprehensive review of the literature from the last 10 years was performed using three key databases (PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane). All relevant articles that met the inclusion/exclusion criteria were selected and scored for their levels of evidence using the National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE) scoring method. Data on study design, interventions and treatment outcomes were abstracted using a structured abstraction table. Results: A total of 30 articles were included in the review and data abstraction. Besides gender, baseline clinical variables such as C-reactive protein level, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, measures of disease activity, and Health Assessment Questionnaire scores (based on five patient-centered dimensions) were consistently associated with treatment response over time. Conclusions: This comprehensive literature review identified several factors associated with treatment response which might be valuable to include as relevant measures in future studies of RA treatment. Inclusion of these factors, particularly those in the clinical and sociodemographic domains, in the design of future trials will further the understanding that ultimately may help clinicians deliver targeted treatment to community practice RA patients, thus resulting in improved patient outcomes.


International Journal of Clinical Practice | 2011

A comprehensive review of predictive and prognostic composite factors implicated in the heterogeneity of treatment response and outcome across disease areas

Carlos Alatorre; Gebra Cuyun Carter; C. Chen; C. Villarivera; V. Zarotsky; R. A. Cantrell; Iris Goetz; Rosirene Paczkowski; D. Buesching

Aim:  To assess and present the current body of evidence regarding composite measures associated with differential treatment response or outcome as a result of patient heterogeneity and to evaluate their consistency across disease areas.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2017

Series: Pragmatic trials and real world evidence : Paper 6. Outcome measures in the real world

Paco M. J. Welsing; Katrien Oude Rengerink; Sue Collier; Laurent Eckert; Maarten van Smeden; Antonio Ciaglia; Gaëlle Nachbaur; Sven Trelle; Aliki Taylor; Matthias Egger; Iris Goetz

Results from pragmatic trials should reflect the comparative treatment effects encountered in patients in real-life clinical practice to guide treatment decisions. Therefore, pragmatic trials should focus on outcomes that are relevant to patients, clinical practice, and treatment choices. This sixth article in the series (see Box) discusses different types of outcomes and their suitability for pragmatic trials, design choices for measuring these outcomes, and their implications and challenges. Measuring outcomes in pragmatic trials should not interfere with real-world clinical practice to ensure generalizability of trial results, and routinely collected outcomes should be prioritized. Typical outcomes include mortality, morbidity, functional status, well-being, and resource use. Surrogate endpoints are typically avoided as primary outcome. It is important to measure outcomes over a relevant time horizon and obtain valid and precise results. As pragmatic trials are often open label, a less subjective outcome can reduce bias. Methods that decrease bias or enhance precision of the results, such as standardization and blinding of outcome assessment, should be considered when a high risk of bias or high variability is expected. The selection of outcomes in pragmatic trials should be relevant for decision making and feasible in terms of executing the trial in the context of interest. Therefore, this should be discussed with all stakeholders as early as feasible to ensure the relevance of study results for decision making in clinical practice and the ability to perform the study.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2017

Series: Pragmatic trials and real world evidence: Paper 4. Informed consent

Shona Kalkman; Ghislaine J.M.W. van Thiel; Mira Zuidgeest; Iris Goetz; Boris M. Pfeiffer; Diederick E. Grobbee; Johannes J. M. van Delden

The GetReal consortium of the Innovative Medicines Initiative aims to develop strategies to incorporate real-world evidence earlier into the drug life cycle to better inform health care decision makers on the comparative risks and benefits of new drugs. Pragmatic trials are currently explored as a means to generate such evidence in routine care settings. The traditional informed consent model for randomized clinical trials has been argued to pose substantial hurdles to the practicability of pragmatic trials: it would lead to recruitment difficulties, reduced generalizability of the results, and selection bias. The present article analyzes these challenges and discusses four proposed alternative informed consent models: integrated consent, targeted consent, broadcast consent, and a waiver of consent. These alternative consent models each aim at overcoming operational and methodological challenges, while still providing patients all the relevant information they need to make informed decisions. Each consent model, however, relies on different attitudes toward the principle of respect for persons and the related duty to inform patients as well as represents different views on whether the common good demands moral duties from patients. Such normative consequences of modifying consent requirements should be at least acknowledged and ought to be assessed in light of the validity of empirical claims.

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Eduard Vieta

University of Barcelona

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