Mònica Sabaté
Autonomous University of Barcelona
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Mònica Sabaté.
Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2007
Mònica Sabaté; Luisa Ibáñez; Eulàlia Pérez; Xavier Vidal; Maria Buti; X. Xiol; Antoni Mas; C. Guarner; M. Forné; R. Solà; J. Castellote; J. Rigau; Joan-Ramon Laporte
Background Acute liver injury of uncertain aetiology is often drug related and quantitative information about the associated risk is scarce.
BMC Gastroenterology | 2011
Mònica Sabaté; Luisa Ibáñez; Eulàlia Pérez; Xavier Vidal; Maria Buti; Xavier Xiol; Antoni Mas; Carlos Guarner; Montserrat Forné; R. Solà; Jose Castellote; Joaquim Rigau; Joan-Ramon Laporte
BackgroundAcute liver injury (ALI) induced by paracetamol overdose is a well known cause of emergency hospital admission and death. However, there is debate regarding the risk of ALI after therapeutic dosages of the drug.The aim is to describe the characteristics of patients admitted to hospital with jaundice who had previous exposure to therapeutic doses of paracetamol. An assessment of the causality role of paracetamol was performed in each case.MethodsBased on the evaluation of prospectively gathered cases of ALI with detailed clinical information, thirty-two cases of ALI in non-alcoholic patients exposed to therapeutic doses of paracetamol were identified. Two authors assessed all drug exposures by using the CIOMS/RUCAM scale. Each case was classified into one of five categories based on the causality score for paracetamol.ResultsIn four cases the role of paracetamol was judged to be unrelated, in two unlikely, and these were excluded from evaluation. In seven of the remaining 26 cases, the RUCAM score associated with paracetamol was higher than that associated with other concomitant medications. The estimated incidence of ALI related to the use of paracetamol in therapeutic dosages was 0.4 per million inhabitants older than 15 years of age and per year (99%CI, 0.2-0.8) and of 10 per million paracetamol users-year (95% CI 4.3-19.4).ConclusionsOur results indicate that paracetamol in therapeutic dosages may be considered in the causality assessment in non-alcoholic patients with liver injury, even if the estimated incidence of ALI related to paracetamol appears to be low.
Neuroepidemiology | 2014
Pili Ferrer; Elena Ballarín; Mònica Sabaté; Xavier Vidal; Marietta Rottenkolber; Justyna Amelio; Joerg Hasford; Sven Schmiedl; Luisa Ibáñez
Background: Since the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) report on antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) and suicide risk was released (2008), several studies have been published on this controversial relationship. This systematic review (SR) gives an updated approach to this health issue. Summary: We searched 6 databases. We ultimately included 11 publications: 4 cohort studies, 1 case-crossover study, 2 community case-control studies, and 4 SRs. Overall, 1 SR described studies already included; 3 studies reported a 2- to 4-fold overall increase in risk; 1 study reported an increased risk of suicide among epilepsy patients on AEDs with high risk of depression; 1study showed a protective effect among epilepsy patients; 2 studies were conducted with patients with bipolar disorder (1 showed a protective effect, whereas the other showed a 3-fold increase in risk of suicide), and the other 3 studies reported results for single AEDs. Several biases affected the published results. Key Messages: There is no clear evidence of an association between the use of AEDs and an increased risk of suicide because of the heterogeneity in the studies at the clinical and methodological level. A future study should cover all indications for use, retrieve information from a healthcare database, and include a defined set of covariates to avoid bias.
Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety | 2008
Luisa Ibáñez; Mònica Sabaté; Elena Ballarín; R. Puig; X. Vidal; J.‐R. Laporte
The use of granulocyte colony‐stimulating factor (G‐CSF) in the treatment of non‐chemotherapy drug‐ induced agranulocytosis is controversial. We aimed at assessing the effect of G‐CSF on the duration of agranulocytosis.
Respiratory Medicine | 2014
Marietta Rottenkolber; Dominik Rottenkolber; Rainald Fischer; Luisa Ibáñez; Joan Fortuny; Elena Ballarín; Mònica Sabaté; Pili Ferrer; Petra Thürmann; Joerg Hasford; Sven Schmiedl
OBJECTIVE Empirical results indicate an increased risk for cardiovascular (CV) adverse drug events (ADE) in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients treated with beta-2-agonists (B2A) and muscarinic antagonists (MA). A systematic review (including a meta-analysis for drug classes with sufficient sample size) was conducted assessing the association between B2A or MA and acute myocardial infarctions (MI) in COPD patients. METHODS Comprehensive literature search in electronic databases (MEDLINE, Cochrane database) was performed (January 1, 1946-April 1, 2013). Results were presented by narrative synthesis including a comprehensive quality assessment. In the meta-analysis, a random effects model was used for estimating relative risk estimates for acute MI. RESULTS Eight studies (two systematic reviews, two randomized controlled trials, and four observational studies) were comprised. Most studies comparing tiotropium vs. placebo showed a decreased MI risk for tiotropium, whereas for studies with active control arms no clear tendency was revealed. For short-acting B2A, an increased MI risk was shown after first treatment initiation. For all studies, a good quality was found despite some shortcomings in ADE-specific criteria. A meta-analysis could be conducted for tiotropium vs. placebo only, showing a relative risk reduction of MI (0.74 [0.61-0.90]) with no evidence of statistical heterogeneity among the included trials (I(2) = 0%; p = 0.8090). CONCLUSIONS An MI-protective effect of tiotropium compared to placebo was found, which might be attributable to an effective COPD treatment leading to a decrease in COPD-related cardiovascular events. Further studies with effective control arms and minimal CV risk are required determining precisely tiotropiums cardiovascular risk.
International Journal of Public Health | 2014
Pili Ferrer; Elena Ballarín; Mònica Sabaté; Joan-Ramon Laporte; Marieke Schoonen; Marietta Rottenkolber; Joan Fortuny; Joerg Hasford; Iain Tatt; Luisa Ibáñez
AbstractObjectives This study aimed at outlining the characteristics of nationwide administrative databases monitoring drug consumption in Europe.MethodsInternet and bibliographic databases (April 2010) were searched and experts in drug utilization (DU) research interviewed to find nationwide administrative medicines consumption databases in Europe, with data for the out- and inpatient healthcare sector. A questionnaire was developed to gather additional information. We collected data providers, websites, accessibility, data sources, healthcare settings, population coverage, medicines-related data, patient and prescriber data, periods covered, and linkage to other databases.ResultsThirty-one administrative nationwide medicine consumption databases in 25 countries were identified. Questionnaires were responded for 20 databases. Eleven provided wholesalers’ sales data, 11 on reimbursed, 5 on prescribed, and 4 on dispensing medicines. Fifteen databases provided inpatient drug consumption data, mainly wholesalers’ sales.Conclusions Nationwide administrative databases are of value to all stakeholders involved in the conduct and interpretation of post-marketing safety studies, and in the conduct of DU research. The endorsement of the anatomical therapeutic chemical/defined daily dose methodology by these databases contributes to data harmonization. However, there is still a lack of information on inpatient medicines consumption at a patient-level.
BMC Research Notes | 2014
Mònica Sabaté; Juan Fernando Pacheco; Elena Ballarín; Pili Ferrer; Hans Petri; Joerg Hasford; Marieke Schoonen; Marietta Rottenkolber; Joan Fortuny; Joan-Ramon Laporte; Luisa Ibáñez
BackgroundThe assessment of the benefit-risk of medicines needs careful consideration concerning their patterns of utilization. Systems for the monitoring of medicines consumption have been established in many European countries, and several international groups have identified and described them. No other compilation of European working groups has been published.As part of the PROTECT project, as a first step in searching for European data sources on the consumption of five selected groups of medicines, we aimed to identify and describe the main characteristics of the existing collaborative European working groups.FindingsGoogle and bibliographic searches (PubMed) of articles containing information on databases and other sources of drug consumption data were conducted. For each working group the main characteristics were recorded.Nineteen selected groups were identified, focusing on: a) general drug utilisation (DU) research (EuroDURG, CNC, ISPE’S SIG-DUR, EURO-MED-STAT, PIPERSKA Group, NorPEN, ENCePP, DURQUIM), b) specific DU research: b.1) antimicrobial drugs (ARPAC, ESAC, ARPEC, ESGAP, HAPPY AUDIT), b.2) cardiovascular disease (ARITMO, EUROASPIRE), b.3) paediatrics (TEDDY), and b.4) mental health/central nervous system effects (ESEMeD, DRUID, TUPP/EUPoMMe). Information on their aims, methods and activities is presented.ConclusionsWe assembled and updated information on European working groups in DU research and in the utilisation of five selected groups of drugs for the PROTECT project. This information should be useful for academic researchers, regulatory and health authorities, and pharmaceutical companies conducting and interpreting post-authorisation and safety studies. European health authorities should encourage national research and collaborations in this important field for public health.
Basic & Clinical Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2016
Pili Ferrer; Justyna Amelio; Elena Ballarín; Mònica Sabaté; Xavi Vidal; Marietta Rottenkolber; Sven Schmiedl; Joan-Ramon Laporte; Luisa Ibáñez
Antibacterials are frequently associated with idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (DILI). The objective of this study was to estimate the risk of macrolides and amoxicillin/clavulanate (AMC) on DILI. We conducted a systematic review (SR) and meta-analysis (MA) with studies retrieved from PubMed, Cochrane Library Plus, Web of Knowledge, clinicaltrials.gov, Livertox and Toxline (1980-2014). We searched for macrolides, AMC and MeSH and synonym terms for DILI. We included all study designs except case reports/series, all population ages and studies with a placebo/non-user comparator. We summarized the evidence with a random-effects MA. Quality of the studies was appraised with a checklist developed for SR of adverse effects. Heterogeneity and publication bias were assessed with different exploratory tools. We finally included 10 (two randomized clinical trials, six case-control, one cohort and one case-population studies) and 9 (case-population excluded) articles in the SR and MA, respectively. The overall summary relative risk of DILI for macrolides was 2.85 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.81-4.47], p < 0.0001, I(2) = 57%. Three studies were perceived to be missing in the area of low statistical significance. Year of study and selected exposure window partly explained the variability between studies. For AMC, the risk of DILI was 9.38 (95% CI 0.65-135.41) p = 0.3, I2 = 95%. In conclusion, although spontaneous reports and case series have long established an association between macrolides and AMC with acute liver injury, these SR and MA have assessed the magnitude of this association. The low incidence of DILI and the therapeutic place of these antibiotics might tilt the balance in favour of their benefits.
Epidemiology, biostatistics, and public health | 2014
Pili Ferrer; Concita Rafaniello; Mònica Sabaté; Elena Ballarín; Anna Coma; Corinne Zara; Annalisa Capuano; Francesco Rossi; Joan-Ramon Laporte; Luisa Ibáñez
data were retrieved from the norwegian Prescription register, danish register of Medicinal Product statistics and daTaMarT ® in catalonia, for 2007-2011. We calculated defined daily doses/1,000 inhabitants/ day (dId), by age and gender. aEds were defined according to the anatomical Therapeutic chemical classification (n03a). We reviewed the population covered by the databases, the drug data source and the definition of outpatient healthcare sector to compare the results across the three settings. rEsulTs: The total aEd use steadily increased over the study period in the three settings. In 2011, consumption was highest in catalonia (15.2 dId), followed by denmark (15.1 dId) and norway (14.2 dId). The “other aEds” (n03aX) subgroup represented 60% of all aEd use. The n03a pattern by gender did not differ across the three settings. Marked differences by age and gender appeared when studying lamotrigine, topiramate, gabapentin, pregabalin and levetiracetam. differences among the databases occurred primarily in the definition of outpatient healthcare setting. conclusIons: There was a rapid increase in “other aEds” in all three settings, which explained the high use of aEds. drug data source, population coverage and definition of the healthcare setting were key items to understand the patterns of drug use across countries.
SpringerPlus | 2015
Pili Ferrer; Mònica Sabaté; Elena Ballarín; Joan Fortuny; Marietta Rottenkolber; Sven Schmiedl; Joan‑Ramon Laporte; Luisa Ibáñez
Monitoring the use of antibiotics is relevant due to the public health impact of microbial resistance, adverse effects, and costs. We present data on the consumption of macrolides, lincosamides, streptogramins and amoxicillin/clavulanate (AMC) between 2007 and 2010 in the in-and outpatient healthcare setting in 10 European countries provided by IMS Health. Antibiotics were classified according to the anatomical therapeutic chemical classification and consumption was expressed in defined daily doses/1000 inhabitants/day (DIDs). We analysed the number of prescriptions by diagnostic codes between 2008 and 2010, based on the International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision (ICD-10). These ICD-10 codes were grouped into four main categories: respiratory infections, genitourinary infections, other infections and other diagnoses. In 2010, the consumption of macrolides and lincosamides ranged from 0.45 DIDs (Sweden) to 5.46 DIDs (Italy), and from 0.04 DIDs (Denmark) to 1.00 DID (Germany), respectively. Streptogramins were available in France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Spain and United Kingdom with a consumption of <0.001 DID exclusively in the hospital setting. The consumption of AMC ranged from <0.001 DIDs (Norway) to 11.67 DIDs (Spain). During the study period, the consumption of macrolides decreased, the consumption of AMC increased in most of European countries, and lincosamides varied very slightly. Macrolides and AMC were mainly prescribed for respiratory infections in all countries but United Kingdom, where most of the prescriptions were assigned to diagnostic codes not clearly related with an infection. Lincosamides were prescribed for the respiratory infections and other infections groups. There was a wide inter-country variability in the percentage of the prescriptions assigned to each of the diagnostic categories. The inter-country differences in the consumption of these antibiotics and their prescription by diagnostic categories point to an inappropriate use of antibiotics.