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Dive into the research topics where Víctor Martínez Taboada is active.

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Featured researches published by Víctor Martínez Taboada.


Reumatología Clínica | 2013

El uso de abatacept en artritis reumatoide: revisión de la evidencia y recomendaciones

Emilio Martín Mola; Alejandro Balsa; Víctor Martínez Taboada; Raimon Sanmartí; José Luis Marenco; Federico Navarro Sarabia; Juan J. Gomez-Reino; José María Álvaro-Gracia; José Andrés Román Ivorra; L. Lojo; C. Plasencia; Loreto Carmona

OBJECTIVE To review the clinical evidence on abatacept and to formulate recommendations in order to clear up points related to its use in rheumatology. METHOD An expert panel of rheumatologists objectively summarized the evidence on the mechanism of action, practicalities, effectiveness and safety of abatacept, and formulated recommendations following a literature review. The level of evidence and degree of recommendation was established. RESULTS The document presents 21 statements focused on evidence or recommendations on abatacept (14 evidence summaries and 9 recommendations). The level of evidence was 2b or higher according to the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine scale on 14 occasions. The degree of the recommendation was A in two recommendations, C in one, and D in the rest. It was considered important to make recommendations on aspects with lower levels of evidence. CONCLUSIONS This is a practical document to supplement the summary of product characteristics.


Reumatol. clín. (Barc.) | 2016

SJÖGREN-SER: Registro nacional de pacientes con síndrome de Sjögren primario de la Sociedad Española de Reumatología: objetivos y metodología

Mónica Fernández Castro; José Luis Andreu; Carlos Sánchez-Piedra; Víctor Martínez Taboada; Alejandro Olivé; José Rosas; Fernando Sánchez-Alonso

OBJECTIVE To describe the objectives and methods of the Spanish Society of Rheumatology primary Sjögren syndrome (pSS) registry (SJOGREN-SER) METHODS: This is a multicenter descriptive transversal study of a cohort of pSS patients fulfilling European/American consensus criteria collected from Rheumatology clinics all over Spain. Patients were included by randomisation from an anonymised list provided by every department. Data were collected by reviewing clinical records and an interviewing the patients. Two hundred and ninety eight variables were investigated: epidemiological, clinical, serological characteristics, treatments and complications. Informed consent was obtained and local ethics committees approved the study. Variables were analysed by descriptive statistical methods, using means, medians, and rates, with their deviations and interquartile ranges (p25-p75). RESULTS A total of 3 rheumatology departments participated in the registry. A total of 437 patients were included. And 95% of them were women, with a median age of 58. Median age at pSS s diagnosis was 50 years. Dryness symptoms (95%) were the most frequent complaint and anti-Ro/SS-A were present in 94% of the cases. Only 27% of the patients fulfilled the new 2012 SICCA-ACR classification criteria. CONCLUSIONS SJOGREN-SER has been designed in order to characterize a representative pSS Spanish cohort, in clinical daily practice, to analyze the magnitude and distribution of its manifestations, activity, accumulated damage and therapeutic management of the disease. This will allow broadening the knowledge of this disease and plan strategies of action in pSS.


Rheumatology International | 2018

Factors associated with severe dry eye in primary Sjögren’s syndrome diagnosed patients

Mónica Fernández Castro; Carlos Sánchez-Piedra; José Luis Andreu; Víctor Martínez Taboada; Alejandro Olivé; José Rosas

IntroductionPrimary Sjögren’s syndrome (pSS) is an autoimmune disease, characterized by lymphocytic infiltration of exocrine glands and other organs, resulting in dry eye, dry mouth and extraglandular systemic findings.ObjectiveTo explore the association of severe or very severe dry eye with extraocular involvement in patients diagnosed with primary Sjögren’s syndrome.MethodsSJOGRENSER registry is a multicenter cross-sectional study of pSS patients. For the construction of our main variable, severe/very severe dry eye, we used those variables that represented a degree 3–4 of severity according to the 2007 Dry Eye Workshop classification. First, bivariate logistic regression models were used to identify the effect of each independent variable on severe/very severe dry eye. Secondly, multivariate analysis using regression model was used to establish the independent effect of patient characteristics.ResultsFour hundred and thirty-seven patients were included in SJOGRENSER registry; 94% of the patients complained of dry eye and 16% developed corneal ulcer. Schirmer’s test was pathological in 92% of the patients; 378 patients presented severe/very severe dry eye. Inflammatory articular involvement was significantly more frequent in patients with severe/very severe dry eye than in those without severe/very severe dry eye (82.5 vs 69.5%, p = 0,028). Inflammatory joint involvement was associated with severe/very severe dry eye in the multivariate analysis, OR 2.079 (95% CI 1.096–3.941).ConclusionSevere or very severe dry eye is associated with the presence of inflammatory joint involvement in patients with pSS. These results suggest that a directed anamnesis including systemic comorbidities, such as the presence of inflammatory joint involvement or dry mouth in patients with dry eye, would be useful to suspect a pSS.


Reumatol. clín. (Barc.) | 2017

Recomendaciones sobre actuaciones a seguir durante la edad fértil, el embarazo, posparto y lactancia en pacientes con enfermedades reumáticas inflamatorias y autoinmunes

Juan Antonio López; M. Luz García Vivar; Rafael Cáliz; Mercedes Freire; María Galindo; Maria Victoria Hernández; Francisco Javier López Longo; Víctor Martínez Taboada; Jose María Pego Reigosa; Esteban Rubio; Elisa Trujillo; Paloma Vela-Casasempere

OBJECTIVE To develop recommendations on the evaluation and management of patients with rheumatic autoimmune and inflammatory diseases during the reproductive age, pregnancy, post-partum and breastfeeding based on the best evidence and experience. METHODS Recommendations were generated using nominal group and Delphi techniques. An expert panel of 12 rheumatologists was established. A systematic literature review and a narrative review (websites, clinical guidelines and other relevant documentation) were performed and presented to the panel in its 1st meeting to be discussed and to help define recommendations. A first draft of recommendations was generated and circulated for comments and wording refinement. A national survey analyzing different aspects of this topic was undertaken separately, followed by a Delphi process (2 rounds). Agreement with each recommendation was ranked on a scale of 1 (total disagreement) to 10 (total agreement), and was considered to be achieved if at least 70% voted≥7. The level of evidence and grade of recommendation were assessed using the Oxford Centre for Evidence-based Medicine Levels of Evidence. RESULTS A total of 14 recommendations were generated for the preconception period (oral and hormonal contraception, reproductive techniques), pregnancy (planning, treatment and follow-up), and breastfeeding (treatment and follow-up). High-risk situations such as lupus or antiphospholipid syndrome were included. A consensus>90% was reached for all but one recommendation. CONCLUSIONS These recommendations are intended to provide rheumatologists, patients, families and other stakeholders with a consensus on the evaluation and management of patients with autoimmune and inflammatory diseases during the reproductive age, pregnancy, postpartum and breastfeeding.


Reumatología Clínica | 2010

Recomendaciones de manejo de la gripe A (H1N1) en pacientes reumáticos con inmunosupresión

Rosario García de Vicuña; Belén Padilla; Luis Carreño; Santiago Muñoz Fernández; Emilio Martín Mola; Juan J. Gomez-Reino; Víctor Martínez Taboada; Antonio López Sanromán; J.P. Gisbert; Federico Díaz González; Joaquín Hinojosa del Val; Emilio Bouza; Loreto Carmona

The Spanish Society of Rheumatology (SER), through a multidiscipline task force, has elaborated a document with specific recommendations for specialists in Rheumatology, emphasizing the special needs of patients with rheumatic diseases, with the objective of informing and orienting health professionals about the current influenza A/H1N1 virus pandemic. All of the recommendations are based on prior documents elaborated by the Ministry of Health and Social Policy task forces, as well as those from the autonomous communities, which are themselves based on the guidelines and documents routinely published by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in the US, this being the center designated by WHO for the coordination of efforts against the pandemic. All rheumatologists and potential users of these recommendations are encouraged to consult the original documents, as well as the general guidelines established at each health center.


Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2018

Genome-wide Association Study Meta-analysis Identifies Five New Loci For Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Antonio Julià; Francisco Javier López-Longo; José Javier Pérez Venegas; Sílvia Bonàs-Guarch; A. Olivé; José Luis Andreu; Mª. Ángeles Aguirre-Zamorano; Paloma Vela; Joan M. Nolla; José Luis Marenco de la Fuente; Antonio Zea; José M. Pego-Reigosa; Mercedes Freire; Elvira Díez; Esther Rodríguez-Almaraz; Patricia Carreira; Ricardo Blanco; Víctor Martínez Taboada; María López-Lasanta; Mireia López Corbeto; Josep M. Mercader; David Torrents; Devin Absher; Sara Marsal; Antonio Fernández-Nebro

BackgroundSystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a common systemic autoimmune disease with a complex genetic inheritance. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have significantly increased the number of significant loci associated with SLE risk. To date, however, established loci account for less than 30% of the disease heritability and additional risk variants have yet to be identified. Here we performed a GWAS followed by a meta-analysis to identify new genome-wide significant loci for SLE.MethodsWe genotyped a cohort of 907 patients with SLE (cases) and 1524 healthy controls from Spain and performed imputation using the 1000 Genomes reference data. We tested for association using logistic regression with correction for the principal components of variation. Meta-analysis of the association results was subsequently performed on 7,110,321 variants using genetic data from a large cohort of 4036 patients with SLE and 6959 controls of Northern European ancestry. Genetic association was also tested at the pathway level after removing the effect of known risk loci using PASCAL software.ResultsWe identified five new loci associated with SLE at the genome-wide level of significance (p < 5 × 10− 8): GRB2, SMYD3, ST8SIA4, LAT2 and ARHGAP27. Pathway analysis revealed several biological processes significantly associated with SLE risk: B cell receptor signaling (p = 5.28 × 10− 6), CTLA4 co-stimulation during T cell activation (p = 3.06 × 10− 5), interleukin-4 signaling (p = 3.97 × 10− 5) and cell surface interactions at the vascular wall (p = 4.63 × 10− 5).ConclusionsOur results identify five novel loci for SLE susceptibility, and biologic pathways associated via multiple low-effect-size loci.


Reumatología Clínica | 2014

Documento práctico para el uso de abatacept subcutáneo

Emilio Martín Mola; Alejandro Balsa; Víctor Martínez Taboada; José Luis Marenco; Federico Navarro Sarabia; Juan J. Gomez-Reino; José María Álvaro-Gracia; José Andrés Román Ivorra; L. Lojo; C. Plasencia; Loreto Carmona

OBJECTIVE To review the clinical evidence on subcutaneous (sc) abatacept and to formulate recommendations in order to clear up points related to its use in rheumatology. METHOD An expert panel of rheumatologists objectively summarized the evidence on the mechanism of action, practicality, effectiveness, and safety of abatacept sc and formulated recommendations after a literature review. RESULTS The efficacy and safety of abatacept sc was studied in 7 clinical trials, 3 double-blind, 3 open, and one mixed, with the following endpoints: comparison against abatacept iv, impact on immunogenicity, effect of replacing iv by sc, abatacept sc in monotherapy, and non-inferiority to adalimumab. No significant differences were found between sc and iv abatacept on efficacy or safety. The development of sc abatacept has allowed a complementary study to the iv, formulation, thus making the abatacept profile better defined. CONCLUSIONS This is a practical document to supplement the summary of product characteristics. In summary, abatacept sc is presented as an effective and safe drug and, therefore, as an alternative for use within the broad armamentarium the rheumatologist has to treat RA. It also has the advantage of being the only biological agent that can be administered iv and sc which can facilitate its use in certain patients.


Reumatología Clínica | 2010

Recommendations for the management of influenza A (H1N1) in rheumatic patients with immunosuppression

Rosario García de Vicuña; Belén Padilla; Luis Carreño; Santiago Muñoz Fernández; Emilio Martín Mola; Juan J. Gomez-Reino; Víctor Martínez Taboada; Antonio López Sanromán; J.P. Gisbert; Federico Díaz González; Joaquín Hinojosa del Val; Emilio Bouza; Loreto Carmona

The Spanish Society of Rheumatology (SER), through a multidiscipline task force, has elaborated a document with specific recommendations for specialists in Rheumatology, emphasizing the special needs of patients with rheumatic diseases, with the objective of informing and orienting health professionals about the current influenza A/H1N1 virus pandemic. All of the recommendations are based on prior documents elaborated by the Ministry of Health and Social Policy task forces, as well as those from the autonomous communities, which are themselves based on the guidelines and documents routinely published by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in the US, this being the center designated by WHO for the coordination of efforts against the pandemic. All rheumatologists and potential users of these recommendations are encouraged to consult the original documents, as well as the general guidelines established at each health center.


Reumatología Clínica | 2006

Riesgo cardiovascular en la artritis reumatoide. ¿Hasta dónde?

Víctor Martínez Taboada; Loreto Carmona

para una población de igual edad y sexo, y hay varios estudios en los que no se logra demostrar que la tasa de ingresos hospitalarios por causa CV sea mayor de la esperada para una población control sin artritis8. Esta contradicción entre un aumento de la mortalidad de causa CV que no siempre se corresponde con una mayor incidencia de episodios CV puede tener, además de una relación con factores de riesgo aún no bien estudiados, una explicación fisiológica. Cada vez hay más datos de que los pacientes con AR presentan una arteriosclerosis acelerada, con rigidez arterial y un aumento de la resistencia vascular que afecta a las arterias coronarias de forma muy extendida, pero también a vasos periféricos9,10. Si, paradójicamente, con tal extensión de arteriosclerosis no se producen más episodios CV, es posible que o bien los pacientes con AR mueren con mayor frecuencia durante o inmediatamente después del primer ingreso por causas CV11, o bien presentan menos dolor o interpretan el dolor anginoso de una forma distinta, por lo que no acudirían a servicios especializados y presentarían con mayor frecuencia IAM silentes y muerte súbita6.


Reumatología Clínica | 2013

Abatacept Use in Rheumatoid Arthritis: Evidence Review and Recommendations

Emilio Martín Mola; Alejandro Balsa; Víctor Martínez Taboada; Raimon Sanmartí; José Luis Marenco; Federico Navarro Sarabia; Juan J. Gomez-Reino; José María Álvaro-Gracia; José Andrés Román Ivorra; L. Lojo; C. Plasencia; Loreto Carmona

Collaboration


Dive into the Víctor Martínez Taboada's collaboration.

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Loreto Carmona

Universidad Camilo José Cela

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Emilio Martín Mola

Hospital Universitario La Paz

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Juan J. Gomez-Reino

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Alejandro Balsa

Hospital Universitario La Paz

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Alejandro Olivé

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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C. Plasencia

Hospital Universitario La Paz

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José Luis Andreu

Spanish National Research Council

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L. Lojo

Hospital Universitario La Paz

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