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Dive into the research topics where Juana Oramas is active.

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Featured researches published by Juana Oramas.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Customized Treatment in Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer Based on EGFR Mutations and BRCA1 mRNA Expression

Rafael Rosell; Laia Perez-Roca; Jose Javier Sanchez; Manuel Cobo; Teresa Moran; Imane Chaib; Mariano Provencio; Manuel Domine; Maria Sala; Ulpiano Jimenez; Pilar Diz; Isidoro Barneto; Jose Antonio Macias; Ramon De Las Penas; Silvia Catot; Dolores Isla; Jose Miguel Sanchez; Rafael Ibeas; Guillermo Lopez-Vivanco; Juana Oramas; Pedro Mendez; Noemi Reguart; Remei Blanco; Miquel Taron

Background Median survival is 10 months and 2-year survival is 20% in metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with platinum-based chemotherapy. A small fraction of non-squamous cell lung cancers harbor EGFR mutations, with improved outcome to gefitinib and erlotinib. Experimental evidence suggests that BRCA1 overexpression enhances sensitivity to docetaxel and resistance to cisplatin. RAP80 and Abraxas are interacting proteins that form complexes with BRCA1 and could modulate the effect of BRCA1. In order to further examine the effect of EGFR mutations and BRCA1 mRNA levels on outcome in advanced NSCLC, we performed a prospective non-randomized phase II clinical trial, testing the hypothesis that customized therapy would confer improved outcome over non-customized therapy. In an exploratory analysis, we also examined the effect of RAP80 and Abraxas mRNA levels. Methodology/Principal Findings We treated 123 metastatic non-squamous cell lung carcinoma patients using a customized approach. RNA and DNA were isolated from microdissected specimens from paraffin-embedded tumor tissue. Patients with EGFR mutations received erlotinib, and those without EGFR mutations received chemotherapy with or without cisplatin based on their BRCA1 mRNA levels: low, cisplatin plus gemcitabine; intermediate, cisplatin plus docetaxel; high, docetaxel alone. An exploratory analysis examined RAP80 and Abraxas expression. Median survival exceeded 28 months for 12 patients with EGFR mutations, and was 11 months for 38 patients with low BRCA1, 9 months for 40 patients with intermediate BRCA1, and 11 months for 33 patients with high BRCA1. Two-year survival was 73.3%, 41.2%, 15.6% and 0%, respectively. Median survival was influenced by RAP80 expression in the three BRCA1 groups. For example, for patients with both low BRCA1 and low RAP80, median survival exceeded 26 months. RAP80 was a significant factor for survival in patients treated according to BRCA1 levels (hazard ratio, 1.3 [95% CI, 1–1.7]; P = 0.05). Conclusions/Significance Chemotherapy customized according to BRCA1 expression levels is associated with excellent median and 2-year survival for some subsets of NSCLC patients , and RAP80 could play a crucial modulating effect on this model of customized chemotherapy. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00883480


Medical Oncology | 2001

Prognostic Significance of Ki-67 Nuclear Proliferative Antigen, bcl-2 Protein, and p53 Expression in Follicular and Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma

Marta Llanos; Hugo Álvarez-Argüelles; Remedios Alemán; Juana Oramas; Lucio Díaz-Flores; Norberto Batista

We analyzed 104 patients with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, follicular or diffuse large-B-cell-type lymphoma, in order to evaluate the correlation between clinical characteristics and immunohistochemical parameters. Immunostaining was performed by means of monoclonal antibodies against Ki-67, bcl-2, and p53 expression. Forty-nine of the patients showed follicular lymphoma. A high expression of bcl-2 was found in 93%, high expression of p53 in 57%, and low expression of Ki-67 in 96%. Follicular lymphoma grade III showed a p53 expression (p=0.07) slightly higher than follicular lymphoma grades I and II, not reaching statistical significance. Follicular lymphoma grades I and II tended to express lower Ki-67 and higher levels of bcl-2 expression than grade III (p=0.06). Fifty-five cases showed diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma. Among them, bcl-2 was absent in 39%, whereas p53 and Ki-67 expression were high in 38%. In the diffuse large-B-cell lymphomas, a high bcl-2 expression correlated with stages III and IV (p=0.03) and involvement of more than one extranodal area (p=0.03). High Ki-67 expression was also associated to extranodal involvement of more than one area (p=0.03). Overall survival of patients did not show statistically significant differences regarding Ki-67, bcl-2, and p53 tumoral expression. Prognostic factors for overall survival in the multivariate analysis were age (p=0.02) and LDH (p=0.003). Time to progression was worse among follicular lymphoma with high p53 expression than with mild/moderate p53 expression (p=0.009).


Journal of Nutritional & Environmental Medicine | 1994

Short-term Prognostic Value of Subjective Nutritional Assessment in General Medical Patients

Ana Tormo; Francisco Santolaria; Emilio González-Reimers; Juana Oramas; Eva Rodríguez-Rodríguez; F. Rodríguez-Moreno; Antonio Martínez-Riera; María Mar Alonso; José María Raya

In previous studies, we have found that subjective nutritional assessment in critical-care patients shows short-term prognostic value. In these studies, nutritional assessments were performed by only one observer. The aim of the present study is to ascertain the prognostic value of subjective nutritional assessment of general medical patients when performed by different physicians. Training of the physician team was simple and consisted of two tutorial rounds of about 30 minutes each. The nutritional status of 394 patients (232 males and 162 females) was evaluated at admission by the physician on duty as follows: temporal muscle atrophy, Bichats fat atrophy, upper and lower extremities muscle atrophy and subcutaneous fat atrophy; each parameter was categorized in three degrees and a nutritional score (the poorest value being 10 and 0 the best one) was obtained. Seventy-three patients died during this admission. Mortality rate was closely related to the nutritional score; 39% (39/99) of the patients with ...


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2018

CKD staging with cystatin C or creatinine-based formulas: flipping the coin

Sergio Luis-Lima; Beatriz Escamilla-Cabrera; Natalia Negrín-Mena; Sara Estupiñán; Patricia Delgado-Mallén; Domingo Marrero-Miranda; Ana González-Rinne; Rosa Miquel-Rodríguez; María Ángeles Cobo-Caso; Manuel Hernández-Guerra; Juana Oramas; Norberto Batista; Ana Aldea-Perona; Pablo Jorge-Pérez; Carlos González-Alayón; Miguel Moreno-Sanfiel; Juan Antonio González-Rodríguez; Laura Henríquez; Raquel Alonso-Pescoso; Laura Díaz-Martín; Federico González-Rinne; Bernardo Alio Lavín-Gómez; Judith Galindo-Hernández; Macarena Sánchez-Gallego; Alejandra González-Delgado; Alejandro Jiménez-Sosa; Armando Torres; Esteban Porrini

Background Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects 10-13% of the population worldwide. CKD classification stratifies patients in five stages of risk for progressive renal disease based on estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) by formulas and albuminuria. However, the reliability of formulas to reflect real renal function is a matter of debate. The effect of the error of formulas in the CKD classification is unclear, particularly for cystatin C-based equations. Methods We evaluated the reliability of a large number of cystatin C and/or creatinine-based formulas in the definition of the stages of CKD in 882 subjects with different clinical situations over a wide range of glomerular filtration rates (GFRs) (4.2-173.7 mL/min). Results Misclassification was a constant for all 61 formulas evaluated and averaged 50% for creatinine-based and 35% for cystatin C-based equations. Most of the cases were misclassified as one stage higher or lower. However, in 10% of the subjects, one stage was skipped and patients were classified two stages above or below their real stage. No clinically relevant improvement was observed with cystatin C-based formulas compared with those based on creatinine. Conclusions The error in the classification of CKD stages by formulas was extremely common. Our study questions the reliability of both cystatin C and creatinine-based formulas to correctly classify CKD stages. Thus the correct classification of CKD stages based on estimated GFR is a matter of chance. This is a strong limitation in evaluating the severity of renal disease, the risk for progression and the evolution of renal dysfunction over time.


Cytokine | 1999

CYTOKINE LEVELS (IL-6 AND IFN-γ), ACUTE PHASE RESPONSE AND NUTRITIONAL STATUS AS PROGNOSTIC FACTORS IN LUNG CANCER

Fancisco Martı́n; Francisco Santolaria; Norberto Batista; Antonio Milena; Emilio González-Reimers; Marı́a J. Brito; Juana Oramas


Clinica Chimica Acta | 2014

Measurement of glomerular filtration rate: Internal and external validations of the iohexol plasma clearance technique by HPLC

Sergio Luis-Lima; Flavio Gaspari; Esteban Porrini; Martín J. García-González; Norberto Batista; Francisco Bosa-Ojeda; Juana Oramas; Fabiola Carrara; José Manuel González-Posada; Domingo Marrero; Eduardo Salido; Armando Torres; Alejandro Jiménez-Sosa


European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 2016

Hematological toxicity of carboplatin for gynecological cancer according to body mass index.

Fernando Gutierrez; Guillermo Antonio Gonzalez-de-la-Fuente; Gloria Julia Nazco; Juana Oramas; Norberto Batista


ASCO Meeting Abstracts | 2007

Vinorelbine (VRB) plus gemcitabine (GEM) as first-line treatment for elderly patients (p) with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC): Molecular correlates

Inmaculada Maestu; Dolores Isla; P. Diz; J. Munoz; Juana Oramas; R. Garcia; S. del Barco; M. Provencio; Miquel Taron; Rafael Rosell


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2007

P2-284: First-line treatment with vinorelbine (VRL) plus gemcitabine (GEM) for elderly patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC): Molecular correlates

Inmaculada Maestu; Dolores Isla; Manuela Pedraza; J. Munoz; Juana Oramas; Ramon Garcia-Gomez; Sonia del Barco; Blanca Cantos; Miquel Taron; Rafael Rosell


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2007

Erlotinib as single agent in elderly patients (p) with advanced or metastatic NSCLC: P3-061

Vicente Alberola; O. Gallego; Guillermo Lopez Vivanco; Carlos Mesia; Juana Oramas; José Manuel Trigo; Juan Antonio Virizuela; Carlos Camps; Maria Luz Amador; Bartomeu Massuti

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Norberto Batista

Hospital Universitario de Canarias

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Miquel Taron

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Rafael Rosell

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Alejandro Jiménez-Sosa

Hospital Universitario de Canarias

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Emilio González-Reimers

Hospital Universitario de Canarias

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Francisco Santolaria

Hospital Universitario de Canarias

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