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Dive into the research topics where María José Ortiz is active.

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Featured researches published by María José Ortiz.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Quality-of-Life Impact of Primary Treatments for Localized Prostate Cancer in Patients Without Hormonal Treatment

Yolanda Pardo; Ferran Guedea; Ferran Aguiló; Pablo Fernández; Víctor Macías; Alfonso Mariño; Asunción Hervás; Ismael Herruzo; María José Ortiz; Javier Ponce de León; Jordi Craven-Bratle; José Francisco Suárez; Ana Boladeras; Àngels Pont; A. Ayala; Gemma Sancho; E. Martinez; Jordi Alonso; Montserrat Ferrer

PURPOSE Earlier studies evaluating the effect on quality of life (QoL) of localized prostate cancer interventions included patients receiving adjuvant hormone therapy, which could have affected their outcomes. Our objective was to compare the QoL impact of the three most common primary treatments on patients who were not receiving adjuvant hormonal treatment. PATIENTS AND METHODS This was a prospective study of 435 patients treated with radical prostatectomy, external-beam radiotherapy, or brachytherapy. QoL was assessed before and after treatment with the Short Form-36 and the Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite. Differences between groups were tested by analysis of variance. Distribution of outcome at 3 years was examined by stratifying according to baseline status. Generalized estimating equation models were constructed to assess the effect of treatment over time. RESULTS Compared with the brachytherapy group, the prostatectomy group showed greater deterioration on urinary incontinence and sexual scores but better urinary irritative-obstructive results (-18.22, -13.19, and +6.38, respectively, at 3 years; P < .001). In patients with urinary irritative-obstructive symptoms at baseline, improvement was observed in 64% of those treated with nerve-sparing radical prostatectomy. Higher bowel worsening (-2.87, P = .04) was observed in the external radiotherapy group, with 20% of patients reporting bowel symptoms. CONCLUSION Radical prostatectomy caused urinary incontinence and sexual dysfunction but improved pre-existing urinary irritative-obstructive symptoms. External radiotherapy and brachytherapy caused urinary irritative-obstructive adverse effects and some sexual dysfunction. External radiotherapy also caused bowel adverse effects. Relevant differences between treatment groups persisted for up to 3 years of follow-up, although the difference in sexual adverse effects between brachytherapy and prostatectomy tended to decline over long-term follow-up. These results provide valuable information for clinical decision making.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2008

Health-Related Quality of Life 2 Years After Treatment With Radical Prostatectomy, Prostate Brachytherapy, or External Beam Radiotherapy in Patients With Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer

Montserrat Ferrer; José Francisco Suárez; Ferran Guedea; Pablo Fernández; Víctor Macías; Alfonso Mariño; Asunción Hervás; Ismael Herruzo; María José Ortiz; Humberto Villavicencio; Jordi Craven-Bratle; Olatz Garin; Ferran Aguiló

PURPOSE To compare treatment impact on health-related quality of life (HRQL) in patients with localized prostate cancer, from before treatment to 2 years after the intervention. METHODS AND MATERIALS This was a longitudinal, prospective study of 614 patients with localized prostate cancer treated with radical prostatectomy (134), three-dimensional external conformal radiotherapy (205), and brachytherapy (275). The HRQL questionnaires administered before and after treatment (months 1, 3, 6, 12, and 24) were the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short Form, the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy (General and Prostate Specific), the Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite (EPIC), and the American Urological Association Symptom Index. Differences between groups were tested by analysis of variance and within-group changes by univariate repeated-measures analysis of variance. Generalized estimating equations (GEE) models were constructed to assess between-group differences in HRQL at 2 years of follow-up after adjusting for clinical variables. RESULTS In each treatment group, HRQL initially deteriorated after treatment with subsequent partial recovery. However, some dimension scores were still significantly lower after 2 years of treatment. The GEE models showed that, compared with the brachytherapy group, radical prostatectomy patients had worse EPIC sexual summary and urinary incontinence scores (-20.4 and -14.1; p < 0.001), and external radiotherapy patients had worse EPIC bowel, sexual, and hormonal summary scores (-3.55, -5.24, and -1.94; p < 0.05). Prostatectomy patients had significantly better EPIC urinary irritation scores than brachytherapy patients (+4.16; p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Relevant differences between treatment groups persisted after 2 years of follow-up. Radical prostatectomy had a considerable negative effect on sexual functioning and urinary continence. Three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy had a moderate negative impact on bowel functioning, and brachytherapy caused moderate urinary irritation. These results provide relevant information for clinical decision making.


Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2013

Quality of life impact of treatments for localized prostate cancer: Cohort study with a 5 year follow-up

Montse Ferrer; Ferran Guedea; José Francisco Suárez; Belén De Paula; Víctor Macías; Alfonso Mariño; Asunción Hervás; Ismael Herruzo; María José Ortiz; Javier Ponce de León; Gemma Sancho; Ana Boladeras; A. Ayala; Jordi Craven-Bratle; Mónica Ávila; Oriol Cunillera; Yolanda Pardo; Jordi Alonso; Ferran Aguiló

PURPOSE To assess long-term quality of life (QoL) impact of treatments in localized prostate cancer patients treated with radical prostatectomy, external beam radiotherapy or brachytherapy. MATERIAL AND METHODS Observational, prospective cohort study with pre-treatment QoL evaluation and follow-up until five years after treatment. 704 patients with low or intermediate risk localized prostate cancer were consecutively recruited in 2003-2005. QoL was measured by the EPIC questionnaire, with urinary irritative-obstructive, incontinence, bowel, sexual, and hormonal scores (ranging 0-100). RESULTS Brachytherapys QoL impact was restricted to the urinary domain, Generalized Estimating Equation models showed score changes at five years of -12.0 (95% CI=-15.0, -9.0) in incontinence and -5.3 (95% CI=-7.5, -3.1) in irritative-obstructive scales. Compared to brachytherapy, radical prostatectomy fared +3.3 (95% CI=+0.0, +6.5) points better in irritative-obstructive but -17.1 (95% CI=-22.7, -11.5) worse in incontinence. Sexual deterioration was observed in radical prostatectomy (-19.1; 95% CI=-25.1, -13.1) and external radiotherapy groups (-7.5; 95% CI=-12.5, -2.5). CONCLUSIONS Brachytherapy is the treatment causing the least impact on QoL except for moderate urinary irritative-obstructive symptoms. Our study provides novel long-term valuable information for clinical decision making, supporting brachytherapy as a possible alternative to radical prostatectomy for patients seeking an attempted curative treatment, while limiting the risk for urinary incontinence and sexual impact on QoL.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2013

Quality of Life Impact of Treatments for Localized Prostate Cancer

Ferran Ferrer; F. Guedea; Yolanda Pardo; Montserrat Ferrer; José Francisco Suárez; Asunción Hervás; Alfonso Mariño; Ismael Herruzo; María José Ortiz; Gemma Sancho

Conclusions: High-dose IMRT with intraprostatic fiducial markers is associated with a very low toxicity and with a significant lower rate of GI and GU complications compared to 3DCRT even considering the lower follow-up for the IMRT cohort. These data confirms that this technique is safe to deliver radiation dose above 80 Gy. Author Disclosure: A. Zapatero: None. F. Garcia-Vicente: None. C. Matin de Vidales: None. G. Rodriguez: None. O. Leaman: None. R. Bermudez: None. A. Cruz-Conde: None. O. Linan: None. L. Perez: None. J. Torres: None.


Acta Tropica | 2006

Sensitization to Anisakis simplex s.l. in a healthy population

A. Del Rey Moreno; Antonio D. Valero; C. Mayorga; B. Gómez; M.J. Torres; J. Hernández; María José Ortiz; J. Lozano Maldonado


Medicina Clinica | 2009

Evaluación de la calidad de vida de los pacientes con cáncer de próstata localizado: validación de la versión española del cuestionario EPIC

Montse Ferrer; Olatz Garin; Joan Pera; Josep Maria Prats; Joan Mendivil; Jordi Alonso; Belén De Paula; Ismael Herruzo; Asunción Hervás; Víctor Macías; Alfonso Mariño; María José Ortiz; Sergio Pastor; Javier Ponce de León; Gemma Sancho


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2015

Estimating Preferences for Treatments in Patients With Localized Prostate Cancer

Mónica Ávila; Virginia Becerra; Ferran Guedea; José Francisco Suárez; Pablo Orviz Fernández; Víctor Macías; Alfonso Mariño; Asunción Hervás; Ismael Herruzo; María José Ortiz; Javier Ponce de León; Gemma Sancho; Oriol Cunillera; Yolanda Pardo; Francesc Cots; Montse Ferrer; Jordi Alonso; Olatz Garin; Àngels Pont; Ana Boladeras; Ferran Ferrer; E. Martinez; Joan Pera; Montse Ventura; Ferran Aguiló; Manel Castells; Humberto Villavicencio; Jordi Craven-Bratle; Belén De Paula; B. Guix


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016

Regorafenib as a single agent for first-line treatment of frail and/or unfit for polychemotherapy patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC): A study of the Spanish Cooperative Group for digestive tumor therapy (TTD).

Enrique Grande; Carmen Guillén-Ponce; Jose Maria Vieitez de Prado; Margarita Reboredo; Gema Duran; Bartolomeu Massuti Sureda; Laura Layos; Antonia Salud; E. Falcó; Vicente Alonso; Pilar Alfonso; María José Ortiz; Javier Sastre; Fernando Rivera; Javier Gallego; L. Robles; Beatriz Gonzalez Astorga; Emma Dotor; Alfredo Carrato; Enrique Aranda


Clinical & Translational Oncology | 2011

PITASOR epidemiological study: prevalence, incidence and treatment of anaemia in radiation therapy oncology departments in Spain

Pilar Samper Ots; Julia Bolívar Muñoz; Albert Biete; María José Ortiz; María Acuña; Joaquín Cabrera; Concepción López Carrizosa; Eloísa Bayo; Ismael Herruzo; María Mar Pérez; Miguel Angel Dominguez; Virginia Morillo Macías; Moisés Mira; Ana Casas; María Mar Sevillano; Isabel García Ríos; Francisco Andreu; Amalia Sotoca; Ana Fernández-Teijeiro Álvarez; Escarlata López; María Ángeles Pérez Escutia; Armando Loayza Villaroel


Archive | 2002

Análisis de riesgo de inundación por tsunamis en el Golfo de Guayaquil

P. Arreaga Vargas; María José Ortiz

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Enrique Aranda

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Ferran Guedea

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Jordi Alonso

Pompeu Fabra University

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Montse Ferrer

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Yolanda Pardo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Gemma Sancho

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Olatz Garin

Pompeu Fabra University

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