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Dive into the research topics where Jean Roger Le Gall is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean Roger Le Gall.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Outcome of Cancer Patients Considered for Intensive Care Unit Admission: A Hospital-Wide Prospective Study

Guillaume Thiery; Elie Azoulay; Michael Darmon; Magali Ciroldi; Sandra de Miranda; Vincent Levy; Fabienne Fieux; Delphine Moreau; Jean Roger Le Gall; Benoı̂t Schlemmer

PURPOSE To evaluate the outcome of cancer patients considered for admission to the intensive care unit (ICU). PATIENTS AND METHODS Prospective, one-year hospital-wide study of all cancer and hematology patients, including bone marrow transplantation patients, for whom admission to the ICU was requested. RESULTS Of the 206 patients considered for ICU admission, 105 patients (51%) were admitted. Of the 101 patients who were not admitted, 54 patients (26.2%) were considered too sick to benefit, and 47 patients (22.8%) were considered to be too well to benefit from the ICU. Of these 47 patients, 13 patients were admitted later. Survival rates after 30 and 180 days were significantly associated with admission status (P < .0001). Remission of the malignancy (odds ratio [OR], 3.37; 95% CI, 1.25 to 9.07) was independently associated with ICU admission, whereas poor chronic health status (OR, 0.38; 95% CI, 0.16 to 0.74) and solid tumor (OR, 0.43; 95% CI, 0.24 to 0.78) were associated with ICU refusal. In admitted patients, 30-day and 6-month survival rates were 54.3% and 32.4%, respectively. Of the patients considered too sick to benefit from ICU admission, 26% were alive on day 30 and 16.7% on day 180. Among patients considered too well to benefit, the 30-day survival rate was a worrisome 78.7%. Calibration of the Mortality Probability Model (the only score available at triage) was of limited value for predicting 30-day survival (area under the curve, 0.62). CONCLUSION Both the excess mortality in too-well patients later admitted to the ICU and the relatively good survival in too-sick patients suggest the need for a broader admission policy.


Critical Care Medicine | 2001

Compliance with triage to intensive care recommendations.

Elie Azoulay; Frédéric Pochard; Sylvie Chevret; Christophe Vinsonneau; Maité Garrouste; Yves Cohen; Marie Thuong; Catherine Paugam; Corinne Apperre; Bertrand De Cagny; Frédéric Brun; Caroline Bornstain; Antoine Parrot; Fabienne Thamion; Jean Claude Lacherade; Yves Bouffard; Jean Roger Le Gall; Christian Herve; Marc Grassin; Robert Zittoun; Benoît Schlemmer; Jean François Dhainaut

Design Recommendations for triage to intensive care units (ICUs) have been issued but not evaluated. Setting In this prospective, multicenter study, all patients granted or refused admission to 26 ICUs affiliated with the French Society for Critical Care were included during a 1-month period. Characteristics of participating ICUs and patients, circumstances of triage, and description of the triage decision with particular attention to compliance with published recommendations were recorded. Results During the study period, 1,009 patients were and 283 were not admitted to the participating ICUs. Refused patients were more likely to be older than 65 yrs (odds ratio [OR], 3.53; confidence interval [CI], 1.98–5.32) and to have a poor chronic health status (OR, 3.09; CI, 2.05–4.67). An admission diagnosis of acute respiratory or renal failure, shock, or coma was associated with admission, whereas chronic severe respiratory and heart failure or metastatic disease without hope of remission were associated with refusal (OR, 2.24; CI, 1.38–3.64). Only four (range, 0–8) of the 20 recommendations for triage to ICU were observed; a full unit and triage over the phone were associated with significantly poorer compliance with recommendations (0 [0–2] vs. 6 [2–9], p = .0003; and 1 [0–6] vs. 6 [1–9], p < .0001; respectively). Conclusion Recommendations for triage to intensive care are rarely observed, particularly when the unit is full or triage is done over the phone. These recommendations may need to be redesigned to improve their practicability under real-life conditions, with special attention to phone triage and triaging to a full unit.


Critical Care | 2005

Mortality prediction using SAPS II: an update for French intensive care units

Jean Roger Le Gall; Anke Neumann; François Hemery; Jean Pierre Bleriot; Jean Pierre Fulgencio; Bernard Garrigues; Christian Gouzes; Eric Lepage; Pierre Moine; Daniel Villers

IntroductionThe standardized mortality ratio (SMR) is commonly used for benchmarking intensive care units (ICUs). Available mortality prediction models are outdated and must be adapted to current populations of interest. The objective of this study was to improve the Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS) II for mortality prediction in ICUs, thereby improving SMR estimates.MethodA retrospective data base study was conducted in patients hospitalized in 106 French ICUs between 1 January 1998 and 31 December 1999. A total of 77,490 evaluable admissions were split into a training set and a validation set. Calibration and discrimination were determined for the original SAPS II, a customized SAPS II and an expanded SAPS II developed in the training set by adding six admission variables: age, sex, length of pre-ICU hospital stay, patient location before ICU, clinical category and whether drug overdose was present. The training set was used for internal validation and the validation set for external validation.ResultsWith the original SAPS II calibration was poor, with marked underestimation of observed mortality, whereas discrimination was good (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.858). Customization improved calibration but had poor uniformity of fit; discrimination was unchanged. The expanded SAPS II exhibited good calibration, good uniformity of fit and better discrimination (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.879). The SMR in the validation set was 1.007 (confidence interval 0.985–1.028). Some ICUs had better and others worse performance with the expanded SAPS II than with the customized SAPS II.ConclusionThe original SAPS II model did not perform sufficiently well to be useful for benchmarking in France. Customization improved the statistical qualities of the model but gave poor uniformity of fit. Adding simple variables to create an expanded SAPS II model led to better calibration, discrimination and uniformity of fit, producing a tool suitable for benchmarking.


Critical Care Medicine | 2004

Cardiovascular effects of the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor NG-methyl-L-arginine hydrochloride (546C88) in patients with septic shock: results of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled multicenter study (study no. 144-002).

David Watson; Robert Grover; Antonio Anzueto; José A. Lorente; Mark Smithies; Rinaldo Bellomo; Kalpalatha K. Guntupalli; Steven H. Grossman; Jill Donaldson; Jean Roger Le Gall

ObjectiveTo assess the hemodynamic effects of the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor 546C88 in patients with septic shock, although this was not a stated aim of the protocol. The predefined primary efficacy objective of the protocol was resolution of shock determined at the end of a 72-hr treatment period. DesignMulticentered, randomized, placebo-controlled, safety and efficacy study. SettingForty-eight intensive care units in Europe, North America, and Australia. PatientsA total of 312 patients with septic shock diagnosed within 24 hr before randomization. InterventionsPatients were randomly allocated to receive either 546C88 or placebo (5% dextrose) by intravenous infusion for up to 72 hrs. Conventional vasoactive therapy was restricted to norepinephrine, dopamine, and dobutamine. Study drug was initiated at 0.1 mL/kg/hr (5 mg/kg/hr 546C88) and titrated according to response up to a maximum rate of 0.4 mL/kg/hr with the objective to maintain mean arterial pressure at 70 mm Hg while attempting to withdraw any concurrent vasopressor(s). Measurements and Main ResultsRequirement for vasopressors, systemic and pulmonary hemodynamics, indices of oxygen transport, and plasma concentrations of arginine and nitrate were assessed over time. The median mean arterial pressure for both groups was maintained ≥70 mm Hg. There was an early increase in systemic and pulmonary vascular tone and oxygen extraction, whereas both cardiac index and oxygen delivery decreased for patients in the 546C88 cohort. Although these parameters subsequently returned toward baseline values, the observed differences between the treatment groups, except for pulmonary vascular resistance and oxygen extraction, persisted throughout the treatment period, despite a reduced requirement for vasopressors in the 546C88 cohort. These changes were associated with a reduction in plasma nitrate concentrations, which were elevated in both groups before the start of therapy. ConclusionsThe nitric oxide synthase inhibitor 546C88 can reduce the elevated plasma nitrate concentrations observed in patients with septic shock. In this study, treatment with 546C88 for up to 72 hrs was associated with an increase in vascular tone and a reduction in both cardiac index and oxygen delivery. The successful maintenance of a target mean arterial blood pressure ≥70 mm Hg was achieved with a reduction in the requirement for, or withdrawal of, conventional inotropic vasoconstrictor agents (i.e., dopamine and norepinephrine). There were no substantive untoward consequences accompanying these hemodynamic effects. An international, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase III study has since been conducted in patients with septic shock. Recruitment into the study was discontinued due to the emergence of increased mortality in the 546C88-treated group.


Intensive Care Medicine | 1978

Haemodynamic study of patients with severe sepsis during haemodialysis.

Kamran Samii; M. Rapin; Jean Roger Le Gall; Bernard Regnier

A study was perfomed in order to observe haemodynamic changes induced by haemodialysis in 14 patients with acute renal failure and severe sepsis. Left ventricular function, as assessed by changes in pulmonary wedge pressure and left ventricular stroke work index through plasma volume expansion, did not change during haemodialysis. Ultrafiltration-induced decreases in cardiac index provoked in 8 patients, with nearly normal initial systemic arteriolar resistance, had adequate and constant increase in their resistance (p<0.001), whereas 6 patients with low initial systemic arteriolar resistance did not increase their resistance and had a frequent (9/13 measurements) and significant (p<0.001) fall in mean aortic pressure. This abnormality of vascular tone is probably due to severe sepsis and explains why hypotension is a frequent occurrence during haemodialysis in such patients.


Intensive Care Medicine | 2002

Epidemiology of sepsis and infection in ICU patients from an international multicentre cohort study

Corinne Alberti; Christian Brun-Buisson; H. Burchardi; Claudio M. Martin; Sergey Goodman; Antonio Artigas; Alberto Sicignano; Mark Palazzo; Rui Moreno; Ronan Boulmé; Eric Lepage; Jean Roger Le Gall


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2003

Influence of Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome and Sepsis on Outcome of Critically Ill Infected Patients

Corinne Alberti; Christian Brun-Buisson; Sergey Goodman; Daniela Guidici; John Granton; Rui Moreno; Mark Smithies; Oliver Thomas; Antonio Artigas; Jean Roger Le Gall


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2005

Systemic inflammatory response and progression to severe sepsis in critically ill infected patients.

Corinne Alberti; Christian Brun-Buisson; Sylvie Chevret; Massimo Antonelli; Sergey Goodman; Claudio M. Martin; Rui Moreno; Ana Ochagavia; Mark Palazzo; Karl Werdan; Jean Roger Le Gall


Intensive Care Medicine | 2003

Infectious diseases as a trigger in thrombotic microangiopathies in intensive care unit (ICU) patients

Paul Coppo; Christophe Adrie; Elie Azoulay; Ghislaine Leleu; Eric Oksenhendler; Lionel Galicier; Jean Roger Le Gall; Annette Bussel; Benoît Schlemmer


Bulletin De L Academie Nationale De Medecine | 2011

Burn out syndrome among critical care workers

Jean Roger Le Gall; Elie Azoulay; Nathalie Embriaco; Marie Cécile Poncet; Frédéric Pochard

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Rui Moreno

Nova Southeastern University

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Sergey Goodman

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Antonio Artigas

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Claudio M. Martin

University of Western Ontario

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Mark Palazzo

Imperial College London

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