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Dive into the research topics where Stéphanie Polazzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Stéphanie Polazzi.


Critical Care Medicine | 2015

Patient Mortality Is Associated With Staff Resources and Workload in the ICU: A Multicenter Observational Study.

Antoine Neuraz; Claude Guérin; Cécile Payet; Stéphanie Polazzi; Frédéric Aubrun; Frédéric Dailler; Jean-Jacques Lehot; Vincent Piriou; J. Neidecker; Thomas Rimmelé; Anne-Marie Schott; Antoine Duclos

Objective:Matching healthcare staff resources to patient needs in the ICU is a key factor for quality of care. We aimed to assess the impact of the staffing-to-patient ratio and workload on ICU mortality. Design:We performed a multicenter longitudinal study using routinely collected hospital data. Setting:Information pertaining to every patient in eight ICUs from four university hospitals from January to December 2013 was analyzed. Patients:A total of 5,718 inpatient stays were included. Interventions:None. Measurements and Main Results:We used a shift-by-shift varying measure of the patient-to-caregiver ratio in combination with workload to establish their relationships with ICU mortality over time, excluding patients with decision to forego life-sustaining therapy. Using a multilevel Poisson regression, we quantified ICU mortality-relative risk, adjusted for patient turnover, severity, and staffing levels. The risk of death was increased by 3.5 (95% CI, 1.3–9.1) when the patient-to-nurse ratio was greater than 2.5, and it was increased by 2.0 (95% CI, 1.3–3.2) when the patient-to-physician ratio exceeded 14. The highest ratios occurred more frequently during the weekend for nurse staffing and during the night for physicians (p < 0.001). High patient turnover (adjusted relative risk, 5.6 [2.0–15.0]) and the volume of life-sustaining procedures performed by staff (adjusted relative risk, 5.9 [4.3–7.9]) were also associated with increased mortality. Conclusions:This study proposes evidence-based thresholds for patient-to-caregiver ratios, above which patient safety may be endangered in the ICU. Real-time monitoring of staffing levels and workload is feasible for adjusting caregivers’ resources to patients’ needs.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2009

Breast cancer incidence using administrative data: correction with sensitivity and specificity

C.-M. Couris; Stéphanie Polazzi; F. Olive; Laurent Remontet; Nadine Bossard; F. Gomez; Anne-Marie Schott; Nicolas Mitton; Marc Colonna; Béatrice Trombert

OBJECTIVE To estimate breast cancer incidence in the general population using a method that corrects for lack of sensitivity and specificity in the identification of incident breast cancer in inpatient claims data. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTINGS Two-phase study: phase 1 to identify incident cases in claims data, and phase 2 to estimate sensitivity and specificity in a subset of the population. Two algorithms (1: principal diagnosis; 2: principal diagnosis+specific surgery procedures) were used to identify incident cases in claims of women aged 20 years or older, living in a French district covered by a cancer registry. Sensitivity and specificity were estimated in one district and used to correct incident cases identified. RESULTS The sensitivity and specificity for algorithms 1 and 2 were 69.0% and 99.89%, and 64.4% and 99.93%, respectively. In contrast to specificity, the sensitivity for both algorithms was lower for women younger than 40 years and older than 65 years. Cases reported by cancer registries were closer to cases identified with algorithm 2 (-3.2% to +20.1%) and to corrected numbers with algorithm 1 (-1% to +15%). CONCLUSION To obtain reliable estimates of breast cancer incidence in the general population, sensitivity and specificity, which reflect medical and coding practice variations, are necessary.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 2008

Is it possible to estimate the incidence of breast cancer from medico-administrative databases?

Laurent Remontet; Nicolas Mitton; C.-M. Couris; Jean Iwaz; F. Gomez; F. Olive; Stéphanie Polazzi; Anne-Marie Schott; Béatrice Trombert; Nadine Bossard; Marc Colonna

One approach to estimate cancer incidence in the French Départements is to quantify the relationship between data in cancer registries and data obtained from the PMSI (Programme de Médicalisation des Systèmes d’Information Médicale). This relationship may then be used in Départements without registries to infer the incidence from local PMSI data. We present here some methodological solutions to apply this approach. Data on invasive breast cancer for 2002 were obtained from 12 Départemental registries. The number of hospital stays was obtained from the National PMSI using two different algorithms based on the main diagnosis only (Algorithm 1) or on that diagnosis associated to a mention of “resection” (Algorithm 2). Considering registry data as gold standard, a calibration approach was used to model the ratio of the number of hospital stays to the number of incident cases. In Départements with registries, validation of the predictions was done through cross-validation. In Départements without registries, validation was done through a study of homogeneity of the mean number of hospital stays per patient. Cross-validation showed that the estimates predicted by the model were true with data extracted by Algorithm 1 but not by Algorithm 2. However, with Algorithm 1, there was an important heterogeneity between French Départements as to the mean number of hospital stays per patient, which had an important impact on the estimations. In the near future, the method will allow using medico-administrative data (after calibration with registry data) to estimate Départemental incidence of selected cancers.


Revue D Epidemiologie Et De Sante Publique | 2011

Analyse critique des données du PMSI pour l’épidémiologie des cancers : une approche longitudinale devient possible

F. Olive; F. Gomez; Anne-Marie Schott; Laurent Remontet; Nadine Bossard; Nicolas Mitton; Stéphanie Polazzi; Marc Colonna; B. Trombert-Paviot

BACKGROUND Use of French Diagnosis Related Groups (DRGs) program databases, apart from financial purposes, has recently been improved since a unique anonymous patient identification number has been created for each inpatient in administrative case mix database. Based on the work of the group for cancer epidemiological observation in the Rhône-Alpes area, (ONC-EPI group), we review the remaining difficulties in the use of DRG data for epidemiological purposes and we consider a longitudinal approach based on analysis of database over several years. We also discuss limitations of this approach. DIFFICULTIES The main problems are related to a lack of quality of administrative data, especially coding of diagnoses. These errors come from missing or inappropriate codes, or not being in accordance with prioritization rules (causing an over- or under-reporting or inconsistencies in coding over time). One difficulty, partly due to the hierarchy of coding and the type of cancer, is the choice of an extraction algorithm. In two studies designed to estimate the incidence of cancer cared in hospitals (breast, colon-rectum, kidney, ovaries), a first algorithm, including a code of cancer as principal diagnosis with a selection of surgical procedures less performed than the second one including a code of cancer as principal diagnosis only, for which the number of hospitalizations per patient ratio was stable across time and space. The chaining over several years allows, by tracing the trajectory of the patient, to detect and correct inaccuracies, errors and missing values, and for incidence studies, to correct incident cases by removing prevalent cases. DISCUSSION However, linkage, complete only since 2007, does not correct data in all cases. Ways of future improvement certainly pass through improved algorithms for case identification and especially by linking DRG data with other databases.


Stroke | 2013

Can Hospital Discharge Databases Be Used to Follow Ischemic Stroke Incidence

Julie Haesebaert; Anne Termoz; Stéphanie Polazzi; Christelle Mouchoux; Laura Mechtouff; Laurent Derex; Norbert Nighoghossian; Anne-Marie Schott

Background and Purpose— Because acute ischemic strokes (ISs) are mainly hospitalized, hospital discharge data could be used to routinely follow their incidence management. We aimed to assess sensitivity and positive predictive value of the French hospital discharge database (HDD) to identify patients with acute IS using a prospective and exhaustive cohort (AVC69) of acute IS cases. Methods— A selection algorithm based on IS diagnosis coded with the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) and cerebral imaging codes was used to identify all hospital stays with the primary diagnosis of IS in the HDD of the university hospitals of the Rhône area. Cases identified through HDD search were compared with IS cases identified through an exhaustive cohort study conducted in the Rhône district and confirmed on medical records review. Results— There were 465 confirmed cases of IS hospitalized in 1 of the 4 university hospitals during the study period. The HDD search identified 313 among those (true-positive cases) but missed 152 cases (false-negative cases). The sensitivity of the HDD search was 67.3% (95% confidence interval, 63.1–71.5), and the positive predictive value was 95.1% (95% confidence interval, 92.8–97.4). Additionally, HDD search retrieved 16 cases, which were not eventually IS (false positives). Sensitivity was better when patients were hospitalized in neurological departments. Conclusions— The lack of sensitivity to identify acute IS patients through HDD search does not seem to be accurate enough to validate the use of these data for incidence estimates. Efforts have to be made to improve the coding quality.


Journal of Cancer Epidemiology | 2011

A Suitable Approach to Estimate Cancer Incidence in Area without Cancer Registry

Nicolas Mitton; Marc Colonna; Béatrice Trombert; F. Olive; F. Gomez; Jean Iwaz; Stéphanie Polazzi; Anne-Marie Schott-Petelaz; Z. Uhry; Nadine Bossard; Laurent Remontet

Objective. Use of cancer cases from registries and PMSI claims database to estimate Département-specific incidence of four major cancers. Methods. Case extraction used principal diagnosis then surgery codes. PMSI cases/registry cases ratios for 2004 were modelled then Département-specific incidence for 2007 estimated using these ratios and 2007 PMSI cases. Results. For 2007, only colon-rectum and breast cancer estimations were satisfactorily validated for infranational incidence not ovary and kidney cancers. For breast, the estimated national incidence was 50,578 cases and the incidence rate 98.6 cases per 100,000 person per year. For colon-rectum, incidence was 21,172 in men versus 18,327 in women and the incidence rate 38 per 100,000 versus 24.8. For ovary, the estimated incidence was 4,637 and the rate 8.6 per 100,000. For kidney, incidence was 6,775 in men versus 3,273 in women and the rate 13.3 per 100.000 versus 5.2. Conclusion. Incidence estimation using PMSI patient identifiers proved encouraging though still dependent on the assumption of uniform cancer treatments and coding.


BMC Medical Education | 2016

Comparison of French training and non-training general practices: a cross-sectional study

Laurent Letrilliart; Pauline Rigault-Fossier; Benoit Fossier; Nadir Kellou; Françoise Paumier; Christophe Bois; Stéphanie Polazzi; Anne-Marie Schott; Yves Zerbib

BackgroundAs the medicine practiced in hospital settings has become more specialized, training in primary care is becoming increasingly essential for medical students, especially for future general practitioners (GPs). Only a few limited studies have investigated the representativeness of medical practices delivering this training. The aim of this study was to assess the representativeness of French GP trainers in terms of socio-demographics, patients and activities.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional study covering all private GPs practicing in the Rhône-Alpes region of France in 2011. This population consisted of 4992 GPs, including 623 trainers and 4369 non-trainers, managing 8,198,684 individual patients. Data from 2011 to 2012 were provided by the Regional Health Care Insurance (RHCI). We compared GP trainers with non-trainers using the Pearson chi-square test for qualitative variables and the Student t-test for quantitative variablesResultsGP trainers do not differ from non-trainers for gender, but they tend to be younger, more frequently in mid-career, and more likely to practice in a rural area. Their patients are broadly representative of patients attending general practice for age (with the exception of a higher consultation rate for infants), but patients with medical fee exemption status relating to low income are underrepresented. GP trainers have a heavier workload in terms of office visits and on-call duties. They prescribe a higher proportion of generic drugs, perform more electrocardiograms and cervical smears, and fewer plaster casts. GP trainers show better performance in diabetes follow-up, and to a lesser extent for seasonal flu vaccination and mammograms.ConclusionsGPs and patients of training practices are globally representative, which is particularly critical in countries such as France, where the length of specialty training in a general practice setting is still limited to a few months. In addition, GP trainers tend to have better clinical performance, which conforms to their teaching modelling role and may encourage other GPs to become trainers.


International Journal of Stroke | 2012

Effectiveness of thrombolysis in the Rhône region, France: a prospective population-based study

Sylvie Porthault-Chatard; Anne Termoz; Laurent Derex; Stéphanie Polazzi; Serkan Cakmak; Norbert Nighoghossian; Jean-Stéphane David; Anne-Marie Schott

Although thrombolysis with intravenous alteplase significantly improves stroke outcomes (1), overall effectiveness of acute stroke management is often unknown because most studies use stroke units or stroke registries perspective (2). Our aim was to observe in a defined French population management of stroke from diagnostic suspicion. AVC69 study was a population-based prospective study founded by the Ministry of Health. Over seven-months, all consecutive patients with a suspected acute stroke admitted to any emergency department (ED) or stroke unit of the Rhone area (1·7 millions inhabitants) were included. Definitive diagnosis was based on cerebral imaging (computed tomography scan or magnetic resonance imaging). Among the 1206 patients included in this comprehensive cohort (Fig. 1), only 108 were directly hospitalized in a stroke unit (9%), whereas 1098 (91%) were admitted in an ED, among which 101 (9%) were subsequently transferred to a stroke unit. Among the 193 patients eligible to thrombolysis admitted in ED, only 8% were thrombolysed, although 50% arrived within three-hours from onset. Median time from arrival to imaging was 2h20 for patients admitted in the ED, six times longer than for those admitted directly in the stroke unit (P < 0·0001). Despite numerous campaigns designed to increase stroke symptoms awareness and the need to call emergency medical services, at the population level, 91% patients with a suspected stroke were admitted to an ED in 2007. These results led us to develop an ongoing randomized stepped wedge trial to assess the effectiveness of an educational program designed to increase awareness and skills of ED professionals. This program associated with the effect of time-window extension, and creation of three stroke units in the region is expected to significantly increase thrombolysis rate (3,4). Our study will be repeated in 2013 as the effectiveness of thrombolysis for acute ischaemic stroke in assessment should rely on population-based studies (5).


Methods of Information in Medicine | 2010

Identifying Prevalent Cases of Breast Cancer in the French Case-mix Databases

B. Trombert Paviot; F. Gomez; F. Olive; Stéphanie Polazzi; Laurent Remontet; Nadine Bossard; Nicolas Mitton; Marc Colonna; Anne-Marie Schott

OBJECTIVES Little is known about cancer prevalence due to a lack of systematic recording of cancer patient follow-up data. To estimate the annual hospital prevalence of breast cancer in the general population of the Isère department (1.1 million inhabitants) in the Rhône-Alpes region, the second largest region in France (6 million inhabitants), we used the inpatient case-mix data, available in most European countries, to develop a method of cancer case identification. METHODS A selection process was applied to the acute care hospital datasets among women aged 18 years or older, living in the Isère department and treated for breast cancer between 2004 and 2007. The first step in case selection was based on the national anonymous unique patient identifier. The second step consisted of retrieving all hospital stays for each case. The third step was designed to detect inconsistencies in the coding of the primary localization. An algorithm based on ICD-10 code for the hospital admission diagnosis was used to rule out hospitalizations unrelated to breast cancer. Five possible models for estimating prevalence were created combining selection steps with the admission diagnosis algorithm. RESULTS Hospital prevalence over the four-year period varied from 6073 breast cancer cases for the simplest model (first selection step without the admission diagnosis algorithm) to 4951 when the first selection step was associated with the breast cancer code as admission diagnosis. The model combining the third selection step with a breast cancer-specific admission reason provided 5275 prevalent cases. CONCLUSION The last model seems more appropriate for case-mix-data coding. Selecting admission diagnosis improved specificity. Combining all hospital stays for each patient has improved diagnostic sensitivity.


Cancer Epidemiology | 2012

Joint use of epidemiological and hospital medico-administrative data to estimate prevalence. Application to French data on breast cancer

Marc Colonna; Nicolas Mitton; Anne-Marie Schott; Laurent Remontet; F. Olive; F. Gomez; Jean Iwaz; Stéphanie Polazzi; Nadine Bossard; Béatrice Trombert

BACKGROUND Estimate complete, limited-duration, and hospital prevalence of breast cancer in a French Département covered by a population-based cancer registry and in whole France using complementary information sources. METHODS Incidence data from a cancer registry, national incidence estimations for France, mortality data, and hospital medico-administrative data were used to estimate the three prevalence indices. The methods included a modelling of epidemiological data and a specific process of data extraction from medico-administrative databases. RESULTS Limited-duration prevalence at 33 years was a proxy for complete prevalence only in patients aged less than 70 years. In 2007 and in women older than 15 years, the limited-duration prevalence at 33 years rate per 100,000 women was estimated at 2372 for Département Isère and 2354 for whole France. The latter rate corresponded to 613,000 women. The highest rate corresponded to women aged 65-74 years (6161 per 100,000 in whole France). About one third of the 33-year limited-duration prevalence cases were diagnosed five years before and about one fourth were hospitalized for breast-cancer-related care (i.e., hospital prevalence). In 2007, the rate of hospitalized women was 557 per 100,000 in whole France. Among the 120,310 women hospitalized for breast-cancer-related care in 2007, about 13% were diagnosed before 2004. CONCLUSION Limited-duration prevalence (long- and short-term), and hospital prevalence are complementary indices of cancer prevalence. Their efficient direct or indirect estimations are essential to reflect the burden of the disease and forecast median- and long-term medical, economic, and social patient needs, especially after the initial treatment.

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F. Olive

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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Marc Colonna

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble

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Laurent Remontet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean Iwaz

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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