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Dive into the research topics where Ylana Chalem is active.

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Featured researches published by Ylana Chalem.


International Journal of Clinical Practice | 2012

Antidepressant switching patterns in the treatment of major depressive disorder: a General Practice Research Database (GPRD) Study

Delphine Saragoussi; Julien Chollet; Sébastien Bineau; Ylana Chalem; D. Milea

Aims: To investigate switching patterns of major antidepressant treatments and associated factors in a primary care adult population with major depressive disorder (MDD) using data from the General Practitioner Research Database (GPRD).


PLOS ONE | 2015

The Effects of as-Needed Nalmefene on Patient-Reported Outcomes and Quality of Life in Relation to a Reduction in Alcohol Consumption in Alcohol-Dependent Patients

Clément François; Nora Rahhali; Ylana Chalem; Per Sørensen; Amandine Luquiens; Henri-Jean Aubin

Background The objective of this article was to investigate the effect of as-needed nalmefene on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in patients with alcohol dependence, and to relate changes in drinking behavior and status to HRQoL outcomes. Methods This post hoc analysis was conducted on a pooled subgroup of patients with at least a high drinking risk level (men: >60 g/day; women: >40 g/day) who participated in one of two randomized controlled 6-month studies, ESENSE 1 and ESENSE 2. Patients received nalmefene 18 mg or placebo on an as-needed basis, in addition to a motivational and adherence-enhancing intervention (BRENDA). At baseline and after 12 and 24 weeks questionnaires for the Medical Outcomes Study (MOS) 36-item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36), European Quality of life-5 Dimensions (EQ-5D) and the Drinker Inventory of Consequences (DrInC-2R) were completed. Results The pooled population consisted of 667 patients (nalmefene: 335; placebo: 332), with no notable between-group differences in baseline patient demographics/characteristics. At week 24, nalmefene had a superior effect compared to placebo in improving SF-36 mental component summary scores (mean difference [95% CI], p-value: 3.09 [1.29, 4.89]; p=0.0008), SF-36 physical component summary scores (1.23 [0.15, 2.31]; p=0.026), EQ-5D utility index scores (0.03 [0.00, 0.06]; p=0.045), EQ-5D health state scores (3.46 [0.75, 6.17]; p=0.012), and DrInC-2R scores (-3.22 [-6.12, 0.33]; p=0.029). The improvements in SF-36 mental component summary scores at week 24, and the DrInC-2R total score change from baseline to week 24, were significantly correlated to reductions in heavy drinking days and total alcohol consumption at week 24. Conclusions As-needed nalmefene significantly improved almost all patient-reported HRQoL measures included in SF-36 and EQ-5D compared with placebo. These HRQoL gains were significantly correlated to reduced drinking behavior, as determined by reductions in heavy drinking days and total alcohol consumption.


European Addiction Research | 2014

A Predictive Microsimulation Model to Estimate the Clinical Relevance of Reducing Alcohol Consumption in Alcohol Dependence

Clément François; Philippe Laramée; Nora Rahhali; Ylana Chalem; S. Aballea; Aurélie Millier; Sébastien Bineau; Mondher Toumi; Jürgen Rehm

Background: Alcohol consumption is one of the most important factors for disease and disability in Europe. In clinical trials, nalmefene has resulted in a significant reduction in the number of heavy-drinking days (HDDs) per month and total alcohol consumption (TAC) among alcohol-dependent patients versus placebo. Methods: A microsimulation model was developed to estimate alcohol-attributable diseases and injuries in patients with alcohol dependence and to explore the clinical relevance of reducing alcohol consumption. Results: For all diseases and injuries considered, the number of events (inpatient episodes) increased with the number of HDDs and TAC per year. The model predicted that a reduction of 20 HDDs per year would result in 941 fewer alcohol-attributable events per 100,000 patients, while a reduction in intake of 3,000 g/year of pure alcohol (ethanol) would result in 1,325 fewer events per 100,000 patients. Conclusion: The potential gains of reducing consumption in alcohol-dependent patients were considerable.


BMC Psychiatry | 2018

Characteristics of patients with depression initiating or switching antidepressant treatment: baseline analyses of the PERFORM cohort study

Josep Maria Haro; François-Xavier Lamy; Bengt Jönsson; Martin Knapp; M. Brignone; Hugo Caillou; Ylana Chalem; Lene Hammer-Helmich; Benoît Rive; Delphine Saragoussi

BackgroundPatients who require a switch in their antidepressant therapy may have different clinical profiles and treatment needs compared with patients initiating or maintaining a first-line antidepressant therapy.MethodsThe Prospective Epidemiological Research on Functioning Outcomes Related to Major depressive disorder (MDD) (PERFORM) study was a 2-year observational cohort study in outpatients with MDD in five European countries. Enrolled patients were either initiating or undergoing the first switch to an antidepressant monotherapy. Baseline data on patients’ clinical status, functioning, productivity, quality of life and medical-resource use were compared in a cross-sectional baseline analysis.ResultsA total of 1402 patients were enrolled, of whom 1159 (82.7%) provided analysable baseline data. The majority (78.7%) of the analysable population were initiating antidepressant treatment and most (83.6%) were enrolled and followed up by general practitioners. Compared with patients initiating antidepressants, those switching antidepressants (21.3%) tended to have more severe depressive symptoms, greater anxiety, worse health-related quality of life, greater functional impairment, greater medical-resource use and had a different medical history. Limitations included an over-representation of switches due to lack of efficacy among patients who were switching treatment, as patients were selected based on presence of depressive symptoms.ConclusionsPatients with MDD who are switching treatment for the first time have a different profile and different depression-associated health needs compared with those initiating treatment. Therapeutic management should therefore be adapted for patients who switch.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT01427439; Retrospectively registered 26 August 2011.


Journal of Market Access & Health Policy | 2017

Creating an index to measure health state of depressed patients in automated healthcare databases: the methodology

Clément François; Adrian Tanasescu; François-Xavier Lamy; Nicolas Despiegel; Bruno Falissard; Ylana Chalem; Christophe Lançon; Pierre-Michel Llorca; Delphine Saragoussi; Patrice Verpillat; Alan G Wade; Djamel A. Zighed

ABSTRACT Background and objective: Automated healthcare databases (AHDB) are an important data source for real life drug and healthcare use. In the filed of depression, lack of detailed clinical data requires the use of binary proxies with important limitations. The study objective was to create a Depressive Health State Index (DHSI) as a continuous health state measure for depressed patients using available data in an AHDB. Methods: The study was based on historical cohort design using the UK Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD). Depressive episodes (depression diagnosis with an antidepressant prescription) were used to create the DHSI through 6 successive steps: (1) Defining study design; (2) Identifying constituent parameters; (3) Assigning relative weights to the parameters; (4) Ranking based on the presence of parameters; (5) Standardizing the rank of the DHSI; (6) Developing a regression model to derive the DHSI in any other sample. Results: The DHSI ranged from 0 (worst) to 100 (best health state) comprising 29 parameters. The proportion of depressive episodes with a remission proxy increased with DHSI quartiles. Conclusion: A continuous outcome for depressed patients treated by antidepressants was created in an AHDB using several different variables and allowed more granularity than currently used proxies.


Value in Health | 2013

Patient-Reported Cognitive Dysfunction Negatively Impacts Functioning in Patients with Major Depressive Disorder – Preliminary Findings from the Perform Study

Delphine Saragoussi; Josep Maria Haro; J.P. Boulenger; Bengt Jönsson; Martin Knapp; H. Caillou; Ylana Chalem; D. Milea; Clément François


Applied Health Economics and Health Policy | 2016

A Trial-Based Predictive Microsimulation Assessing the Public Health Benefits of Nalmefene and Psychosocial Support for the Reduction of Alcohol Consumption in Alcohol Dependence

Philippe Laramée; Aurélie Millier; Nora Rahhali; Olivier Cristeau; S. Aballea; Clément François; Ylana Chalem; Mondher Toumi; Juergen Rehm


Value in Health | 2014

Functional Impairment and Cognitive Dysfunction in Depressed Patients in South-Korea: Results of Perform-K.

Jae-Min Kim; Ylana Chalem; S. Di Nicola; Jin Pyo Hong; S.H. Won; D. Milea


Value in Health | 2013

Naturalistic Disease Management Study of Patients with Alcohol Dependence in the Primary Care Setting in the United Kingdom (STREAM)

Florence Coste; Ylana Chalem; Clément François; P. Wallace


Post-Print | 2016

A Trial-Based Predictive Microsimulation Assessing the Public Health ă Benefits of Nalmefene and Psychosocial Support for the Reduction of ă Alcohol Consumption in Alcohol Dependence

Philippe Laramée; Aurélie Millier; Nora Rahhali; Olivier Cristeau; S. Aballea; Clément François; Ylana Chalem; Mondher Toumi; Juergen Rehm

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Mondher Toumi

Aix-Marseille University

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