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Dive into the research topics where Joseph Papaparaskevas is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph Papaparaskevas.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2011

Comparative activity of carbapenem testing: the COMPACT study

Patrice Nordmann; Juan J. Picazo; Reinier Mutters; Volkan Korten; Alvaro Quintana; Joerg Laeuffer; Joyce Chen Hian Seak; Robert K. Flamm; Ian Morrissey; Berge Azadian; Khalid El-Bouri; Graeme Jones; Bob Masterton; Marina Morgan; Beryl A. Oppenheim; David Waghorn; E.G. Smyth; Marianne Abele-Horn; Enno Jacobs; Uwe Mai; Wolfgang Pfister; Christoph Schoerner; Harald Seifert; Cécile Bébéar; Edouard Bingen; Richard Bonnet; François Jehl; Pierre-Yves Levy; Micheline Roussel Delvallez; Olga Paniara

OBJECTIVES Doripenem is a new carbapenem recently introduced into Europe. The COMParative Activity of Carbapenem Testing (COMPACT) study compared the susceptibility of common Gram-negative bacilli causing serious infections in hospitalized patients with doripenem, imipenem and meropenem. METHODS Gram-negative isolates (4498 total: 2171 Pseudomonas species; 1910 Enterobacteriaceae; and 417 other Gram-negative bacilli) were collected from 80 centres in 16 countries in Europe, the Middle East and Africa during 2008-09. The MICs of doripenem, imipenem and meropenem were determined using Etest methodology and broth microdilution. Susceptibility was interpreted according to CLSI, EUCAST and FDA breakpoints. RESULTS The MIC(90)s of doripenem, imipenem and meropenem for all isolates were 8, ≥64 and 32 mg/L, respectively. Doripenem had the lowest MIC(90) for Pseudomonas species at 16 mg/L, with imipenem and meropenem values of ≥64 mg/L. Enterobacteriaceae were highly susceptible to all three carbapenems, with MIC(90)s of doripenem, imipenem and meropenem of 0.06, 0.5 and 0.12 mg/L, respectively. Other Gram-negative isolates, predominantly Acinetobacter baumannii, were resistant to all three carbapenems (MIC(90) ≥64 mg/L). Susceptibility to doripenem was observed in 14.9% of isolates resistant to imipenem and/or meropenem. CONCLUSIONS Doripenem showed excellent activity against Gram-negative isolates; generally it was more active than imipenem and at least as good as meropenem. Against Pseudomonas species, doripenem was more active than both imipenem and meropenem, with doripenem susceptibility observed for some imipenem- and/or meropenem-resistant isolates.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2008

Moxifloxacin resistance is prevalent among Bacteroides and Prevotella species in Greece

Joseph Papaparaskevas; Angeliki Pantazatou; Anastasia Katsandri; Dimitra P. Houhoula; Nicholas J. Legakis; Athanassios Tsakris; Athina Avlamis

OBJECTIVES Moxifloxacin is recommended in the empirical treatment of infections involving Gram-negative anaerobes. However, current European data regarding its activity against anaerobic pathogens are limited. In order to evaluate its potency, we comparatively studied the activity of moxifloxacin against recently isolated Gram-negative anaerobes. METHODS Four hundred and ninety-five Gram-negative anaerobic clinical isolates (296 Bacteroides fragilis group, 58 non-fragilis Bacteroides spp. and 141 Prevotella spp.) were prospectively recovered in six Greek hospitals. Moxifloxacin MICs were determined in comparison with those of penicillin, piperacillin/tazobactam, cefoxitin, imipenem, metronidazole and clindamycin. RESULTS Overall moxifloxacin MIC(50) and MIC(90) were 2 and 32 mg/L, respectively. Based on the current CLSI breakpoints (susceptible, < or =2 mg/L; resistant, > or =8 mg/L), almost half of the total isolates (49%) were non-susceptible to moxifloxacin (32% resistant; 17% intermediate). This was more evident among the non-fragilis Bacteroides species, where 47% of the isolates were resistant and 14% intermediate to moxifloxacin. Species variation was noticed, with the highest non-susceptible rates detected among Prevotella oralis (90%), Prevotella bivia (80%), Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron (75%), Bacteroides uniformis (70%) and Bacteroides capillosus (67%) species. Among the 19 (4%) isolates that were metronidazole non-susceptible (MIC > or = 16 mg/L), only 4 (21%) were additionally non-susceptible to moxifloxacin. CONCLUSIONS High resistance rates to moxifloxacin among Bacteroides and Prevotella spp. were recorded, exceeding those previously reported in Europe and contraindicating its use as monotherapy for infections involving Gram-negative anaerobes without prior microbiological confirmation. For empirical usage, moxifloxacin should be combined with metronidazole in order to cover for these pathogens.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2006

Two Cases of Infections Due to Multidrug-Resistant Bacteroides fragilis Group Strains

Anastasia Katsandri; Joseph Papaparaskevas; Angeliki Pantazatou; Georgios Petrikkos; Georgios Thomopoulos; Dimitra P. Houhoula; Athina Avlamis

ABSTRACT Bacteroides fragilis group strains are still considered susceptible to most antimicrobial agents used for the treatment of infections caused by anaerobic organisms. We describe two cases of infections due to isolates simultaneously resistant to clindamycin, tetracycline, cefoxitin, piperacillin-tazobactam, and imipenem and, in one of the two cases, to metronidazole. Such infections, although still rare, do exist and tend to complicate treatment.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2004

Ruling out Bacillus anthracis.

Joseph Papaparaskevas; Dimitra P. Houhoula; Maria Papadimitriou; Georgios Saroglou; Nicholas J. Legakis; Loukia Zerva

Optimization of methods for ruling out Bacillus anthracis leads to increased yields, faster turnaround times, and a lighter workload. We used 72 environmental non–B. anthracis bacilli to validate methods for ruling out B. anthracis. Most effective were horse blood agar, motility testing after a 2-h incubation in trypticase soy broth, and screening with a B. anthracis–selective agar.


Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 2010

In vitro activity of tigecycline against 2423 clinical isolates and comparison of the available interpretation breakpoints

Joseph Papaparaskevas; Leonidas S. Tzouvelekis; Athanassios Tsakris; Theodore E. Pittaras; Nicholas J. Legakis

MICs to tigecycline and 12 antimicrobials were performed by microdilution method, against 2423 nonduplicate pathogens recently isolated in 17 Greek hospitals. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EUCAST) criteria were used comparatively for interpretation of tigecycline MICs. Tigecycline exhibited potent in vitro activity against the majority of the isolates tested. (MIC(90) values of 0.5, 1, 2, 0.125, 1, 0.25, 0.125, and 1 mg/L were observed for Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter spp., Moraxella catarrhalis, Acinetobacter spp., Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus spp., and Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates, respectively.) Tigecycline activity was the same, irrespective of the resistance profile to other antimicrobials (Gram-negative pathogens susceptible or resistant to imipenem, Enterococcus spp., S. aureus, or S. pneumoniae isolates, susceptible or resistant to vancomycin, methicillin or penicillin, respectively). Interpretation using EUCAST and FDA breakpoints differed among isolates of K. pneumoniae and Enterobacter spp. having tigecycline MICs of 2 to 4 mg/L. In conclusion, tigecycline exhibited potent activity against pathogens recently isolated in a region that experiences high antimicrobial resistance rates. Indications that the available criteria might categorize differently tigecycline susceptibility status in K. pneumoniae and Enterobacter spp. isolates were also detected.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2010

Chlamydia trachomatis Serovar Distribution and Neisseria gonorrhoeae Coinfection in Male Patients with Urethritis in Greece

Helen Papadogeorgakis; Theodore E. Pittaras; Joseph Papaparaskevas; Vassiliki Pitiriga; Andreas Katsambas; Athanassios Tsakris

ABSTRACT The distribution of Chlamydia trachomatis serovars and Neisseria gonorrhoeae coinfection was studied in a group of 100 C. trachomatis-positive males with urethritis in Greece. The serovar distribution revealed that apart from the predominant worldwide types E and F, the relatively uncommon type G is also prevalent. Gonococcal coinfection was frequent (30%) and was associated with genovariant Ja (75%, P = 0.008).


International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2003

Changes in the epidemiology of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in a Greek tertiary care hospital, over an 8-year-period

Angeliki Pantazatou; Joseph Papaparaskevas; Ioanna Stefanou; John Papanicolas; Elli Demertzi; Athina Avlamis

A total of 1019 non-replicate, consecutively isolated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strains were collected from in-patients of a tertiary care general hospital in Athens, Greece, during the period 1994-2001. The susceptibility, resistance phenotypes and the dissemination of these isolates among hospital wards were studied. Total MRSA and gentamicin-resistant MRSA, as a proportion of the S. aureus isolates, increased from 33 and 9% in 1994 to 50.1 and 33.3% in 2001, respectively. Three main multi-resistant phenotypes predominated, representing 50.9% of the total MRSA isolates in 2001. MRSA strains susceptible to all antibiotics tested decreased to 1.9% in 1997 and again increased to 13.5% in 2001. A gradual decrease in the susceptibility of vancomycin during the 8-year-period was detected, but no vancomycin resistant S. aureus strains were isolated.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2009

Colonization with Multiple Staphylococcus aureus Strains among Patients in European Intensive Care Units

Alexander L. A. Bloemendaal; Ad C. Fluit; W. T. M. Jansen; Menno R. Vriens; Tristan Ferry; J. M. Amorim; Álvaro Pascual; Stefania Stefani; Joseph Papaparaskevas; I. H. M. Borei Rinkes; Jan Verhoef

Intensive Care Units • Author(s): A. L. A. Bloemendaal , MD, A. C. Fluit , PhD, W. T. M. Jansen , PhD, M. R. Vriens , MD, PhD, T. Ferry , MD, PhD, J. M. Amorim , MD, A. Pascual , MD, PhD, S. Stefani , MD, PhD, J. Papaparaskevas , MD, PhD, I. H. M. Borel Rinkes , MD, PhD, J. Verhoef , MD, PhD Reviewed work(s): Source: Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, Vol. 30, No. 9 (September 2009), pp. 918920 Published by: The University of Chicago Press on behalf of The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/605640 . Accessed: 14/02/2012 12:46


Frontiers of Medicine in China | 2014

Detection of bacteria bearing resistant biofilm forms, by using the universal and specific PCR is still unhelpful in the diagnosis of periprosthetic joint infections

Batool H. Zegaer; Anastasios Ioannidis; George C. Babis; Vassiliki Ioannidou; Athanassios Kossyvakis; Sotiris Bersimis; Joseph Papaparaskevas; Efthimia Petinaki; Paraskevi Pliatsika; Stylianos Chatzipanagiotou

Intraoperative conventional bacteriological cultures were compared with different polymerase chain reaction (PCR) methods in patients with total joint arthroplasties. The isolated bacteria were investigated for biofilm formation, and the biofilm forming strains, in their planktonic and biofilm forms, were further tested for their antimicrobial resistance against several clinically important antimicrobials. Forty four bone and joint samples were included and classified as infected or non-infected according to standard criteria for periprosthetic hip and knee infections. For the bacteriological diagnosis, conventional culture, two types of universal PCR and species specific PCR for three selected pathogens (Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa) were applied. Biofilm formation determination was performed by the tissue culture plate method. Antimicrobial susceptibility of the planktonic bacteria was performed by the minimal inhibitory concentration determination and, of the biofilm forms, by the minimal inhibitory concentration for bacterial regrowth from the biofilm. Twenty samples were culture positive, with S. epidermidis, S. aureus, or P. aeruginosa. All PCR methods were very ineffective in detecting only one pathogen. All isolates were biofilm positive and their biofilm forms, were highly resistant. In this study, compared to PCR, culture remains the “gold standard.” The biofilm formation by the causative bacteria and the concomitant manifold increased antimicrobial resistance may explain the clinical failure of treatment in some cases and should be considered in the future for therapeutic planning.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2014

Differences in the epidemiology between paediatric and adult invasive Streptococcus pyogenes infections.

L. Zachariadou; Angeliki Stathi; Panayotis T. Tassios; Anastasia Pangalis; Nicholas J. Legakis; Joseph Papaparaskevas

In order to investigate for possible differences between paediatric and adult invasive Streptococcus pyogenes (iGAS) infections, a total of 142 cases were identified in 17 Greek hospitals during 2003-2007, of which 96 were children and 46 adults. Bacteraemia, soft tissue infections, streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS), and necrotizing fasciitis were the main clinical presentations (67·6%, 45·1%, 13·4%, and 12·0% of cases, respectively). Bacteraemia and lymphadenitis were significantly more frequent in children (P=0·019 and 0·021, respectively), whereas STSS was more frequent in adults (P=0·017). The main predisposing factors in children were varicella and streptococcal pharyngotonsillitis (25% and 19·8%, respectively), as opposed to malignancy, intravenous drug abuse and diabetes mellitus in adults (19·6%, 15·2% and 10·9%, respectively). Of the two dominant emm-types, 1 and 12 (28·2% and 8·5%, respectively), the proportion of emm-type 12 remained stable during the study period, whereas emm-type 1 rates fluctuated considerably. Strains of emm-type 1 from children were associated with erythromycin susceptibility, STSS and intensive-care-unit admission, whereas emm-type 12 isolates from adults were associated with erythromycin and clindamycin resistance. Finally, specific emm-types were detected exclusively in adults or in children. In conclusion, several clinical and epidemiological differences were detected, that could prove useful in designing age-focused strategies for prevention and treatment of iGAS infections.

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Dive into the Joseph Papaparaskevas's collaboration.

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Nicholas J. Legakis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Athanassios Tsakris

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Athina Avlamis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Dimitra P. Houhoula

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Anastasia Katsandri

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Panayotis T. Tassios

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Alkiviadis C. Vatopoulos

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Ioanna Stefanou

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Georgios Petrikkos

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Victoria Mela

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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