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Dive into the research topics where Luis Lasalvia is active.

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Featured researches published by Luis Lasalvia.


International Journal of Cancer | 2013

Gene-expression signature of tumor recurrence in patients with stage II and III colon cancer treated with 5'fluoruracil-based adjuvant chemotherapy.

María Dolores Giráldez; Juan José Lozano; Miriam Cuatrecasas; Virginia Alonso-Espinaco; Joan Maurel; Maribel Marmol; Carlos Horndler; Javier Ortego; Vicente Alonso; P. Escudero; Gina Ramírez; Christoph Petry; Luis Lasalvia; Kerstin Bohmann; Ralph M. Wirtz; Aurea Mira; Antoni Castells

Although receiving adjuvant chemotherapy after radical surgery, a disappointing proportion of patients with colorectal cancer will develop tumor recurrence. Probability of relapse is currently predicted from pathological staging, there being a need for additional markers to further select high‐risk patients. This study was aimed to identify a gene‐expression signature to predict tumor recurrence in patients with Stages II and III colon cancer treated with 5′fluoruracil (5FU)‐based adjuvant chemotherapy. Two‐hundred and twenty‐eight patients diagnosed with Stages II–III colon cancer and treated with surgical resection and 5FU‐based adjuvant chemotherapy were included. RNA was extracted from formalin‐fixed, paraffin‐embedded tissue samples and expression of 27 selected candidate genes was analyzed by RT‐qPCR. A tumor recurrence predicting model, including clinico‐pathological variables and gene‐expression profiling, was developed by Cox regression analysis and validated by bootstrapping. The regression analysis identified tumor stage and S100A2 and S100A10 gene expression as independently associated with tumor recurrence. The risk score derived from this model was able to discriminate two groups with a highly significant different probability of tumor recurrence (HR, 2.75; 95%CI, 1.71–4.39; p = 0.0001), which it was maintained when patients were stratified according to tumor stage. The algorithm was also able to distinguish two groups with different overall survival (HR, 2.68; 95%CI, 1.12–6.42; p = 0.03). Identification of a new gene‐expression signature associated with a high probability of tumor recurrence in patients with Stages II and III colon cancer receiving adjuvant 5FU‐based chemotherapy, and its combination in a robust, easy‐to‐use and reliable algorithm may contribute to tailor treatment and surveillance strategies.


Respirology | 2014

Cystatin C: A potential biomarker for pulmonary arterial hypertension

Brett Fenster; Luis Lasalvia; Joyce Schroeder; Jamey Smyser; Lori J. Silveira; J. Kern Buckner; Kevin K. Brown

Cystatin C (CysC), a novel marker of renal function, predicts left heart failure and cardiovascular mortality. The hypothesis that serum CysC levels correlate with right ventricular (RV) morphology, function and pressure in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) was tested.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2016

Utility of galectin-3 in predicting post-infarct remodeling after acute myocardial infarction based on extracellular volume fraction mapping.

Rosario J. Perea; Manuel Morales-Ruiz; José T. Ortiz-Pérez; Xavier Bosch; David Andreu; Roger Borràs; Juan Acosta; Diego Penela; Susanna Prat-González; Teresa M. de Caralt; Mikel Martínez; Blai Morales-Romero; Luis Lasalvia; James Donnelly; Wladimiro Jiménez; Aurea Mira; Lluis Mont; Antonio Berruezo

AIMS ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) triggers remote extracellular matrix expansion. Myocardial extracellular volume fraction (ECV), determined by cardiovascular magnetic resonance, permits quantification of interstitial space expansion. Our aim was to determine the relationship between early serum fibrosis biomarkers and 180-day post-infarct remote myocardium remodeling using ECV. METHODS AND RESULTS In 26 patients with STEMI, functional imaging, T1-mapping, and late-gadolinium-enhancement were performed on a 3-T CMR scanner at baseline (days 3 to 5) and 180days. Biomarkers were measured at days 1, 3, and 7 after STEMI. The mean initial and follow-up left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) were 48.3±18.1% and 52.6±12.3%, respectively. Initial infarct size was 11.6±16.8% of LV mass. ECV in the remote myocardium at 180days correlated with indexed end-systolic volume (r=0.4, p=0.045). A significant correlation was observed between galectin-3 at day 7 and ECV at 6months (r=0.428, p=0.037). A trend towards a direct correlation was found for BNP (r=0.380, p=0.059). Multivariate analysis revealed that BNP and galectin-3 were independent predictors of long-term changes in ECV and explained nearly 30% of the variance in this parameter (r2=0.34; p=0.01). A galectin-3 cutoff value of 10.15ng/mL was the most powerful predictor of high ECV values (≥28.5%) at follow-up. Galectin-3 at day 7 was an independent predictor of high ECV values at follow-up (OR=22.51; CI 95%: 2.1-240.72; p=0.01) with 0.76 AUC (CI: 0.574-0.964; p=0.03). CONCLUSIONS Galectin-3 measured acutely after STEMI is an independent predictor of increased ECV at 6-month follow-up that might be useful for long-term risk stratification.


BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | 2014

The utility of circulating LHCGR as a predictor of Down's syndrome in early pregnancy.

Anne E. Chambers; Walter E Mills; Imma Mercadé; Francesca Crovetto; Fatima Crispi; Laia Rodriguez-Revenga Bodi; Michael J. Pugia; Aurea Mira; Luis Lasalvia; Subhasis Banerjee; Elena Casals; Eduard Gratacós

BackgroundPrevious studies showed that soluble LHCGR/hCG-sLHCGR concentrations in serum or plasma combined with PAPP-A and free βhCG significantly increased the sensitivity of Down’s syndrome screen at early pregnancy without altering the false positive rate. The goal of the present study was to further examine the role of sLHCGR forms as combinatorial markers and to investigate whether sLHCGR could serve as an independent biomarker for Down’s syndrome in first trimester pregnancy screens.MethodsThe PAPP-A, free βhCG, and hCG-sLHCGR concentrations together with nuchal translucency (NT) were measured in 40 Down’s and 300 control pregnancies. The sLHCGR concentration was analysed in 40 Down’s and 206 control pregnancies.ResultsThe hCG-LHCGR in combination with PAPP-A and free βhCG increased the detection rate (DR) by 35% without altering the false positive rate (FPR). The sLHCGR: hCG-sLHCGR ratio alone detected 80% of Down’s pregnancies in first trimester screening, with a false positive rate of 0.5%.ConclusionsWhile measurement of sLHCGR forms in combination with PAPP-A and free βhCG significantly increases the detection rate of Down’s syndrome at first trimester, the ratio of sLHCGR: hCG-sLHCGR acts as an independent marker with a detection rate that is significantly higher than the existing biochemical markers individually for prenatal first trimester screening of Down’s syndrome.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2017

Cost-effectiveness of enhanced liver fibrosis test to assess liver fibrosis in chronic hepatitis C virus and alcoholic liver disease patients

Marcelo Soto; Laura Sampietro-Colom; Luis Lasalvia; Aurea Mira; Wladimiro Jiménez; Miquel Navasa

AIM To assess liver fibrosis (LF) in hepatitis C virus (HCV) and alcoholic liver disease (ALD), estimate health outcomes and costs of new noninvasive testing strategies METHODS A Markov model was developed to simulate LF progression in HCV and ALD for a cohort of 40-year-old men with abnormal levels of transaminases. Three different testing alternatives were studied: a single liver biopsy; annual Enhanced liver fibrosis (ELF™) followed by liver stiffness measurement (LSM) imaging as a confirmation test if the ELF test is positive; and annual ELF test without LSM. The analysis was performed from the perspective of a university hospital in Spain. Clinical data were obtained from published literature. Costs were sourced from administrative databases of the hospital. Deterministic and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were performed. RESULTS In HCV patients, annual sequential ELF test/LSM and annual ELF test alone prevented respectively 12.9 and 13.3 liver fibrosis-related deaths per 100 persons tested, compared to biopsy. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) were respectively €13400 and €11500 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY). In ALD, fibrosis-related deaths decreased by 11.7 and 22.1 per 100 persons tested respectively with sequential ELF test/LSM and annual ELF test alone. ICERs were €280 and €190 per QALY, respectively. CONCLUSION The use of the ELF test with or without a confirmation LSM are cost-effective options compared to a single liver biopsy for testing liver fibrosis in HCV and ALD patients in Spain.


Heart Rhythm | 2017

Identification of the potentially arrhythmogenic substrate in the acute phase of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction

Diego Penela; Juan Acosta; David Andreu; José T. Ortiz-Pérez; Xavier Bosch; Rosario J. Perea; Teresa M. de Caralt; Juan Fernández-Armenta; David Soto-Iglesias; Susana Prat-González; Roger Borràs; Lluis Mont; Vanessa Hervas; Manuel Morales-Ruiz; Wladimiro Jiménez; Aurea Mira; Jim Donnelly; Okan Ekinci; Luis Lasalvia; Antonio Berruezo

BACKGROUND Predicting sudden cardiac death risk in the first months after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) remains challenging. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to investigate the ability of late gadolinium enhancement cardiac magnetic resonance (LGE-CMR) to identify the potentially arrhythmogenic substrate and its temporal evolution after STEMI. METHODS One hundred consecutive patients with a first STEMI were included. Three-dimensional high-resolution LGE-CMR was obtained at 3 T on days 7 and 180. Left ventricular wall was segmented and characterized by pixel signal intensity algorithm in 5 layers from endocardium to epicardium. A 3-dimensional color-coded shell map was obtained for each layer, depicting scar core and border zone (BZ) distribution. Presence and characteristics of BZ channels were registered for each layer. RESULTS At 180 days, left ventricular ejection fraction had improved significantly (from 46.7% ± 10% to 51.5% ± 10%; P <.001) and scar mass was reduced (from 22.6 ± 20 g to 13.8 ± 12 g; P <.001). Most BZ channels (89%) were identified in the same myocardial layer and American Heart Association (AHA) segment, with the same orientation and morphology in both studies. Early LGE-CMR had 96% sensitivity and 90% specificity for predicting presence of BZ channels at 180 days. Greater presence was observed in patients with no-reflow phenomenon at baseline (P = .01). CONCLUSION Most BZ channels can be identified by LGE-CMR at day 7 post-STEMI and, despite scar mass reduction, remain unaltered at 6 months, suggesting that the potentially arrhythmogenic substrate is established within the first week post-STEMI.


Fetal Diagnosis and Therapy | 2015

Forms of Circulating Luteinizing Hormone Human Chorionic Gonadotropin Receptor for the Prediction of Early and Late Preeclampsia in the First Trimester of Pregnancy

Francesca Crovetto; Francesc Figueras; Fatima Crispi; Stefania Triunfo; Michael J. Pugia; Luis Lasalvia; Anne E. Chambers; Walter E Mills; Subhasis Banerjee; Imma Mercadé; Elena Casals; Aurea Mira; Laia Rodriguez-Revenga Bodi; Eduard Gratacós

Objective: To explore the value of circulating luteinizing human chorionic gonadotropin receptor (LHCGR) forms for the prediction of preeclampsia (PE) in the first trimester of pregnancy. Methods: Case-control study, based on a cohort of 5,759 pregnancies, including 20 early PE, 20 late PE, and 300 controls. We recorded/measured maternal characteristics, mean arterial pressure (MAP), uterine artery (UtA) Doppler, placental growth factor (PlGF), soluble Fms-like tyrosine kinase-1 (sFtl-1), and LHCGR forms (hCG-LHCGR and soluble LHCGR), and their independent predictive values were analyzed by logistic regression. Results: For early PE, the model included black ethnicity, chronic hypertension, previous PE, MAP, UtA Doppler, PlGF, sFlt-1, and LHCGR forms, achieving detection rates (DR) of 83% at 10% of false-positive rates (FPR) [AUC: 0.961 (95% CI: 0.921-1)]. For late PE, the model included body mass index, previous PE, UtA Doppler, PlGF, sFlt-1, and LHCGR forms, with DR of 75% at 10% of FPR [AUC: 0.923 (95% CI: 0.871-0.976)]. In both early and late PE, LHCGR forms improved DR by 6-15%. Conclusions: LHCGR forms improved the prediction for early and late PE. These results should be confirmed in larger prospective studies.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2014

GALECTIN 3: A POTENTIAL BIOMARKER FOR PULMONARY ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION

Brett Fenster; Jamey Smyser; J. Kern Buckner; Joyce Schroeder; Luis Lasalvia

Galectin-3 (Gal 3) is a novel marker of left heart failure and cardiovascular mortality. We tested the hypothesis that Gal-3 predicts pulmonary artery pressure and right ventricular (RV) function in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Using a prospective study, 15 subjects with right heart


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013

CYSTATIN C: A NOVEL BIOMARKER FOR PULMONARY ARTERIAL HYPERTENSION

Brett Fenster; Jamey Smyser; Joyce Schroeder; J. Kern Buckner; Luis Lasalvia

Cystatin C, a novel marker of renal function, is associated with left heart failure and cardiovascular mortality. We tested the hypothesis that cystatin C accurately predicts pulmonary artery pressure and right ventricular (RV) function in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Using a prospective


Heart and Vessels | 2016

Galectin‑3 levels are associated with right ventricular functional and morphologic changes in pulmonary arterial hypertension

Brett Fenster; Luis Lasalvia; Joyce Schroeder; Jamey Smyser; Lori J. Silveira; J. Kern Buckner; Kevin K. Brown

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