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Dive into the research topics where Joan Rodés is active.

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Featured researches published by Joan Rodés.


The Lancet | 2002

Arterial embolisation or chemoembolisation versus symptomatic treatment in patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma: a randomised controlled trial

Josep M. Llovet; Maria Isabel Real; Xavier Montañá; Ramon Planas; Susana Coll; John J. Aponte; Carmen Ayuso; Margarita Sala; Jordi Muchart; R. Solà; Joan Rodés; Jordi Bruix

BACKGROUND There is no standard treatment for unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma. Arterial embolisation is widely used, but evidence of survival benefits is lacking. METHODS We did a randomised controlled trial in patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma not suitable for curative treatment, of Child-Pugh class A or B and Okuda stage I or II, to assess the survival benefits of regularly repeated arterial embolisation (gelatin sponge) or chemoembolisation (gelatin sponge plus doxorubicin) compared with conservative treatment. 903 patients were assessed, and 112 (12%) patients were finally included in the study. The primary endpoint was survival. Analyses were by intention to treat. FINDINGS The trial was stopped when the ninth sequential inspection showed that chemoembolisation had survival benefits compared with conservative treatment (hazard ratio of death 0.47 [95% CI 0.25-0.91], p=0.025). 25 of 37 patients assigned embolisation, 21 of 40 assigned chemoembolisation, and 25 of 35 assigned conservative treatment died. Survival probabilities at 1 year and 2 years were 75% and 50% for embolisation; 82% and 63% for chemoembolisation, and 63% and 27% for control (chemoembolisation vs control p=0.009). Chemoembolisation induced objective responses sustained for at least 6 months in 35% (14)of cases, and was associated with a significantly lower rate of portal-vein invasion than conservative treatment. Treatment allocation was the only variable independently related to survival (odds ratio 0.45 [95% CI 0.25-0.81], p=0.02). INTERPRETATION Chemoembolisation improved survival of stringently selected patients with unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1999

EFFECT OF INTRAVENOUS ALBUMIN ON RENAL IMPAIRMENT AND MORTALITY IN PATIENTS WITH CIRRHOSIS AND SPONTANEOUS BACTERIAL PERITONITIS

Pau Sort; Miquel Navasa; Vicente Arroyo; Xavier Aldeguer; Ramon Planas; Luis Ruiz-del-Arbol; L. Castells; Victor Vargas; Germán Soriano; Mónica Guevara; Pere Ginès; Joan Rodés

BACKGROUND In patients with cirrhosis and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, renal function frequently becomes impaired. This impairment is probably related to a reduction in effective arterial blood volume and is associated with a high mortality rate. We conducted a study to determine whether plasma volume expansion with intravenous albumin prevents renal impairment and reduces mortality in these patients. METHODS We randomly assigned 126 patients with cirrhosis and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis to treatment with intravenous cefotaxime (63 patients) or cefotaxime and intravenous albumin (63 patients). Cefotaxime was given daily in dosages that varied according to the serum creatinine level, and albumin was given at a dose of 1.5 g per kilogram of body weight at the time of diagnosis, followed by 1 g per kilogram on day 3. Renal impairment was defined as nonreversible deterioration of renal function during hospitalization. RESULTS The infection resolved in 59 patients in the cefotaxime group (94 percent) and 62 in the cefotaxime-plus-albumin group (98 percent) (P=0.36). Renal impairment developed in 21 patients in the cefotaxime group (33 percent) and 6 in the cefotaxime-plus-albumin group (10 percent) (P=0.002). Eighteen patients (29 percent) in the cefotaxime group died in the hospital, as compared with 6 (10 percent) in the cefotaxime-plus-albumin group (P=0.01); at three months, the mortality rates were 41 percent (a total of 26 deaths) and 22 percent (a total of 14 deaths), respectively (P=0.03). Patients treated with cefotaxime had higher levels of plasma renin activity than those treated with cefotaxime and albumin; patients with renal impairment had the highest values. CONCLUSIONS In patients with cirrhosis and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, treatment with intravenous albumin in addition to an antibiotic reduces the incidence of renal impairment and death in comparison with treatment with an antibiotic alone.


The FASEB Journal | 2005

The selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor SC-236 reduces liver fibrosis by mechanisms involving non-parenchymal cell apoptosis and PPARγ activation

Anna Planagumà; Joan Clària; Rosa Miquel; Marta López-Parra; Esther Titos; Jaime L. Masferrer; Vicente Arroyo; Joan Rodés

The importance of inflammation in initiating the sequence of events that lead to liver fibrosis is increasingly recognized. In this study, we tested the effects of SC‐236, a selective cyclooxygenase (COX)‐2 inhibitor, in rats with carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)‐induced liver fibrosis. Livers from CCl4‐treated rats showed increased COX‐2 expression and 15‐deoxy‐prostaglandin (PG)J2 (15d‐PGJ2) formation, as well as decreased peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor (PPAR)γ expression. In these animals, SC‐236 reduced liver fibrosis as revealed by histological analysis and by a reduction in hepatic hydroxyproline levels, metalloproteinase‐2 activity, and α‐smooth muscle actin expression. Interestingly, SC‐236 normalized 15d‐PGJ2 levels and restored PPARγ expression in the liver of CCl4‐treated rats. In isolated hepatic stellate cells (HSCs)—the major player in liver fibrogenesis—and Kupffer cells—the cell type primarily responsible for increased hepatic COX‐2—SC‐236 exhibited remarkable pro‐apoptotic and growth inhibitory properties. Of interest, SC‐236 decreased HSC viability to a similar extent than the PPARγ ligand rosiglitazone. Moreover, SC‐236 significantly induced PPARγ expression in HSCs and acted as a potent PPARγ agonist in a luciferase‐reporter trans‐activation assay. These data indicate that, by mechanisms involving non‐parenchymal cell apoptosis and PPARγ activation, the selective COX‐2 inhibitor SC‐236 might have therapeutic potential for prevention of liver fibrosis.


The Lancet | 1989

PREVALENCE OF ANTIBODIES TO HEPATITIS C VIRUS IN SPANISH PATIENTS WITH HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA AND HEPATIC CIRRHOSIS

Jordi Bruix; Xavier Calvet; Josep Costa; Miquel Ventura; Miquel Bruguera; Ricard Castillo; Josep M. Barrera; Guadalupe Ercilla; José M. Sánchez-Tapias; Marti Vall; Concepció Brú; Joan Rodés

The prevalence of antibodies against hepatitis C virus (HCV) was investigated in 96 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, 106 patients with liver cirrhosis without evidence of cancer, and 177 controls without liver disease. 75% of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma had HCV antibodies (anti-HCV), a significantly higher proportion than that observed in patients with cirrhosis (55.6%), or controls (7.3%). The prevalence of anti-HCV was significantly higher in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (76%) than in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis alone (38.7%) whereas in patients with cryptogenic cirrhosis there was no significant difference between those with and without primary liver cell cancer (81.4% and 77.5%, respectively). These results indicate that HCV infection may have a role in the pathogenesis of hepatocellular carcinoma, even in patients with chronic liver disease apparently related to other agents such as alcohol, and that this recently identified hepatitis virus may be found in a large proportion of patients with cryptogenic cirrhosis.


Gastroenterology | 1993

Incidence, Predictive Factors, and Prognosis of the Hepatorenal Syndrome in Cirrhosis With Ascites

Angels Ginès; Angels Escorsell; Pere Ginès; Joan Saló; Wladimiro Jiménez; Luis Inglada; Miquel Navasa; Joan Clària; Antoni Rimola; Vicente Arroyo; Joan Rodés

BACKGROUND The aim of the study was to investigate the incidenc, predictive factors, and prognosis of the hepatorenal syndrome in cirrhosis with ascites. METHODS The study is a follow-up investigation in 234 nonazotemic patients with cirrhosis and ascites. Thirty-nine variables obtained at inclusion were analyzed as possible predictors of hepatorenal syndrome occurrence (Kaplan-Meier method, Mantel-Cox test, and step-wise Cox regression procedure). RESULTS The probability of hepatorenal syndrome occurrence was 18% at 1 year and 39% at 5 years. Sixteen variables had predictive value for hepatorenal syndrome occurrence in the univariate analysis: history of ascites, hepatomegaly, nutritional status, blood urea nitrogen level, serum creatinine concentration, serum sodium and potassium concentration, serum and urine osmolality, urinary sodium excretion, free water clearance after a water load, glomerular filtration rate, arterial pressure, plasma renin activity, plasma norepinephrine concentration, and esophageal varices. Neither etiology (alcoholic vs. nonalcoholic) nor the Child-Pugh score had predictive value. A multivariate analysis disclosed only three independent predictors of hepatorenal syndrome occurrence: low serum sodium concentration, high plasma renin activity, and absence of hepatomegaly. CONCLUSIONS The hepatorenal syndrome is a relatively frequent complication in cirrhotic patients with ascites that is associated with an extremely short survival. Liver size, plasma renin activity, and serum sodium concentration are predictors of hepatorenal syndrome occurrence in these patients.


Gastroenterology | 1988

Randomized comparative study of therapeutic paracentesis with and without intravenous albumin in cirrhosis

Pere Ginès; Llúcia Titó; Vicente Arroyo; Ramon Planas; Julià Panés; Josep M. Viver; Miquel Torres; P. Humbert; Antoni Rimola; Josep Llach; Salvatore Badalamenti; Wladimiro Jiménez; Joan Gaya; Joan Rodés

It has recently been shown that repeated large-volume paracentesis associated with intravenous albumin infusion is a rapid, effective, and safe therapy of ascites in cirrhosis. To investigate whether intravenous albumin infusion is necessary in the treatment of cirrhotics with large-volume paracentesis, 105 patients with tense ascites were randomly allocated into two groups. Fifty-two patients (group 1) were treated with paracentesis (4-6 L/day until disappearance of ascites) plus intravenous albumin infusion (40 g after each tap), and 53 (group 2) with paracentesis without albumin infusion. After disappearance of ascites, patients were discharged from the hospital with diuretics. Patients developing tense ascites during follow-up were treated according to their initial schedule. Paracentesis was effective in eliminating the ascites in 50 patients from group 1 and in 48 from group 2, with the duration of the hospital stay being approximately 11 days in both groups. Paracentesis plus intravenous albumin did not induce significant changes in standard renal function tests, plasma renin activity, and plasma aldosterone. In contrast, paracentesis without albumin was associated with a significant increase in blood urea nitrogen, a marked elevation in plasma renin activity and plasma aldosterone concentration, and a significant reduction in serum sodium concentration. One patient from group 1 and 11 from group 2 developed renal impairment or severe hyponatremia after treatment, or both (chi 2 = 9.19; p less than 0.01). The development of these complications could not be predicted by clinical and laboratory data before treatment. Although the probability of survival after entry into the study was similar in patients from both groups, a multivariate analysis identified the development of hyponatremia or renal impairment, or both, following the first paracentesis treatment and the occurrence of other complications during the first hospitalization (encephalopathy, gastrointestinal bleeding, and severe infection) as being the only independent predictors of mortality. These results indicate that intravenous albumin infusion is important in avoiding renal and electrolyte complications and activation of endogenous vasoactive systems in cirrhotics with ascites who are treated with repeated large-volume paracentesis. The development of such complications may impair survival in these patients.


Gastroenterology | 1988

Prognostic value of arterial pressure, endogenous vasoactive systems, and renal function in cirrhotic patients admitted to the hospital for the treatment of ascites

Josep Llach; Pere Ginès; Vicente Arroyo; Antoni Rimola; Llúcia Titó; Salvatore Badalamenti; Wladimiro Jiménez; Joan Gaya; Francisca Rivera; Joan Rodés

To identify prognostic factors in cirrhotic patients admitted to the hospital for the treatment of an episode of ascites, a survival analysis was performed in a series of 139 patients hospitalized in our Unit between 1980 and 1985. Mean follow-up was 12.8 +/- 14.2 mo (mean +/- SD). A total of 38 variables based on history, physical examination, hepatic biochemical tests, renal function tests, and endogenous vasoactive systems were analyzed for prognostic value. Eighteen of these variables had prognostic value in the univariate analysis. A multivariate analysis (Coxs regression method) disclosed that 7 of these 18 variables had independent prognostic value. Of these independent predictors of survival, mean arterial pressure and plasma norepinephrine concentration were the variables that best predicted prognosis. Two other variables that independently correlated with survival were urinary sodium excretion and glomerular filtration rate. The remaining three independent predictors of survival were nutritional status, hepatomegaly, and serum albumin concentration. Therefore, these findings indicate that, in patients with cirrhosis and ascites, parameters estimating systemic hemodynamics and renal function are better predictors of survival than those routinely used to estimate hepatic function.


Journal of Hepatology | 1999

S-adenosylmethionine in alcoholic liver cirrhosis: a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, multicenter clinical trial.

José M. Mato; Javier Cámara; Javier Fernández de Paz; Llorenç Caballería; Susana Coll; Antonio Caballero; Luisa García-Buey; Joaquín Beltrán; Vicente Benita; Joan Caballería; R. Solà; Ricardo Moreno-Otero; Félix Barrao; Antonio Martín-Duce; Jose A Correa; Albert Parés; Elena Barrao; Inmaculada Garcı́a-Magaz; Jose Puerta; Jorge Moreno; Gabrielle Boissard; Pablo Ortiz; Joan Rodés

BACKGROUND/AIM The efficacy of S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) in the treatment of liver cell injury has been demonstrated in several experimental models. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of AdoMet treatment in human alcoholic liver cirrhosis. METHODS A randomized, double-blind trial was performed in 123 patients treated with AdoMet (1200 mg/day, orally) or placebo for 2 years. All patients had alcoholic cirrhosis, and histologic confirmation of the diagnosis was available in 84% of the cases. Seventy-five patients were in Child class A, 40 in class B, and 8 in class C. Sixty-two patients received AdoMet and 61 received placebo. RESULTS At inclusion into the trial no significant differences were observed between the two groups with respect to sex, age, previous episodes of major complications of cirrhosis, Child classification and liver function tests. The overall mortality/liver transplantation at the end of the trial decreased from 30% in the placebo group to 16% in the AdoMet group, although the difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.077). When patients in Child C class were excluded from the analysis, the overall mortality/liver transplantation was significantly greater in the placebo group than in the AdoMet group (29% vs. 12%, p = 0.025), and differences between the two groups in the 2-year survival curves (defined as the time to death or liver transplantation) were also statistically significant (p = 0.046). CONCLUSIONS The present results indicate that long-term treatment with AdoMet may improve survival or delay liver transplantation in patients with alcoholic liver cirrhosis, especially in those with less advanced liver disease.


Gastroenterology | 1998

Clinical events after transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt: Correlation with hemodynamic findings

M.A. Casado; Jaume Bosch; Juan Carlos García-Pagán; C Bru; Rafael Bañares; Juan Carlos Bandi; Angels Escorsell; José Manuel Rodríguez-Láiz; Rosa Gilabert; Faust Feu; Carlos Schorlemer; Antonio Echenagusia; Joan Rodés

BACKGROUND & AIMS Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) procedures are increasingly being used, but the relationship between the hemodynamic effects of TIPS and the clinical events on follow-up remains undefined. Hence, we have investigated the hemodynamic correlations of portal hypertension-related events after a TIPS procedure. METHODS Prospective follow-up of 122 cirrhotic patients who had a TIPS procedure performed because of variceal hemorrhage was conducted. RESULTS The portacaval pressure gradient (PPG) significantly decreased after the TIPS procedure (from 19.7 +/- 4.6 to 8.6 +/- 2.7 mm Hg; P > 0.001), but increased thereafter and at rebleeding (n = 25) was > 12 mm Hg in all patients (18.4 +/- 4.6 mm Hg). Twenty-six patients developed ascites; the PPG (measured in 19) was always > 12 mm Hg. Increasing the PPG to > 12 mm Hg occurred very frequently (83% at 1 year). Within 1 year, 77% of patients underwent balloon angioplasty or restenting. However, 80% had again a PPG of > 12 mm Hg 1 year after reintervention. Hepatic encephalopathy developed in 31% of patients at 1 year; 21 of 23 patients had a PPG of < 12 mm Hg. CONCLUSIONS Total protection from the risk of recurrent complications of portal hypertension after a TIPS procedure requires that the PPG be decreased and maintained < 12 mm Hg. However, reintervention will be required in most patients within 1 year and again the second year. On the other hand, such portal decompression is associated with an increased risk of hepatic encephalopathy.


Gastroenterology | 1992

Modulation of the Hyperdynamic Circulation of Cirrhotic Rats by Nitric Oxide Inhibition

Pilar Pizcueta; Josep M. Piqué; Mercedes Fernández; Jaime Bosch; Joan Rodés; Brendan J.R. Whittle; Salvador Moncada

The effects of NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA), an inhibitor of nitric oxide (NO) biosynthesis on the splanchnic and systemic circulation, were investigated in rats with cirrhosis induced by carbon tetrachloride. Portal hypertension in these rats was accompanied by decreased arterial blood pressure and peripheral vascular resistance as well as by splanchnic vasodilation with increased portal venous inflow and decreased splanchnic resistance. Intravenous bolus administration of L-NMMA (25 mg/kg) significantly increased systemic blood pressure and decreased cardiac output. L-NMMA also significantly increased systemic and splanchnic vascular resistance; whereas blood flow to the stomach, small intestine, colon, pancreas, mesentery, spleen, and kidney was decreased significantly. L-NMMA did not alter the portal pressure or portosystemic shunting in these cirrhotic rats, yet portal vascular resistance increased, suggesting effects on the intrahepatic and collateral circulation. Pretreatment with L-arginine (300 mg/kg) prevented the hemodynamic changes induced by L-NMMA. These findings support the concept that local excess formation of NO contributes to changes in splanchnic circulation associated with portal hypertension in cirrhosis.

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Jaume Bosch

University of Barcelona

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Pere Ginès

University of Barcelona

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Jordi Bruix

University of Barcelona

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Joan Clària

University of Barcelona

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