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Publicações

Publicações por Pedro Pereira Rodrigues

2013

Preface

Autores
Rodrigues, PP; Pechenizkiy, M; Gama, J; Correia, RC; Liu, J; Traina, A; Lucas, P; Soda, P;

Publicação
Proceedings - IEEE Symposium on Computer-Based Medical Systems

Abstract

2017

Development and Validation of Risk Matrices for Crohn's Disease Outcomes in Patients Who Underwent Early Therapeutic Interventions

Autores
Dias, CC; Rodrigues, PP; Coelho, R; Santos, PM; Fernandes, S; Lago, P; Caetano, C; Rodrigues, Â; Portela, F; Oliveira, A; Ministro, P; Cancela, E; Vieira, AI; Barosa, R; Cotter, J; Carvalho, P; Cremers, I; Trabulo, D; Caldeira, P; Antunes, A; Rosa, I; Moleiro, J; Peixe, P; Herculano, R; Gonçalves, R; Gonçalves, B; Sousa, HT; Contente, L; Morna, H; Lopes, S; Magro, F; on behalf GEDII,;

Publicação
JOURNAL OF CROHNS & COLITIS

Abstract
Introduction: The establishment of prognostic models for Crohn's disease [CD] is highly desirable, as they have the potential to guide physicians in the decision-making process concerning therapeutic choices, thus improving patients' health and quality of life. Our aim was to derive models for disabling CD and reoperation based solely on clinical/demographic data. Methods: A multicentric and retrospectively enrolled cohort of CD patients, subject to early surgery or immunosuppression, was analysed in order to build Bayesian network models and risk matrices. The final results were validated internally and with a multicentric and prospectively enrolled cohort. Results: The derivation cohort included a total of 489 CD patients [64% with disabling disease and 18% who needed reoperation], while the validation cohort included 129 CD patients with similar outcome proportions. The Bayesian models achieved an area under the curve of 78% for disabling disease and 86% for reoperation. Age at diagnosis, perianal disease, disease aggressiveness and early therapeutic decisions were found to be significant factors, and were used to construct user-friendly matrices depicting the probability of each outcome in patients with various combinations of these factors. The matrices exhibit good performance for the most important criteria: disabling disease positive post-test odds = 8.00 [2.72-23.44] and reoperation negative post-test odds = 0.02 [0.00-0.11]. Conclusions: Clinical and demographical risk factors for disabling CD and reoperation were determined and their impact was quantified by means of risk matrices, which are applicable as bedside clinical tools that can help physicians during therapeutic decisions in early disease management.

2013

Clinical prognostic factors for disabling Crohn's disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Autores
Dias, CC; Rodrigues, PP; da Costa Pereira, A; Magro, F;

Publicação
WORLD JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY

Abstract
AIM: To identify demographic and clinical factors associated with disabling Crohn's disease (CD). METHODS: A systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies, focusing on the factors that can predict the prognosis of different outcomes of CD was undertaken. PubMed, ISI Web of Knowledge and Scopus were searched to identify studies investigating the above mentioned factors in adult patients with CD. Studies were eligible for inclusion if they describe prognostic factors in CD, with inclusion and exclusion criteria defined as follows. Studies with adult patients and CD, written in English and studying association between clinical factors and at least one prognosis outcome were included. Meta-analysis of effects was undertaken for the disabling disease outcome, using odds ratio (OR) to assess the effect of the different factors in the outcome. The statistical method used was MantelHaenszel for fixed effects. The 16-item quality assessment tool (QATSDD) was used to assess the quality of the studies (range: 0-42). RESULTS: Of the 913 papers initially selected, sixty studies were reviewed and three were included in the systematic review and meta-analysis. The global QATSDD scores of papers were 18, 21 and 22. Of a total of 1961 patients enrolled, 1332 (78%) were classified with disabling disease five years after diagnosis. In two studies, age at diagnosis was a factor associated with disabling disease five years after diagnosis. Individuals under 40 years old had a higher risk of developing disabling disease. In two studies, patients who were treated with corticosteroids on the first flare developed disabling disease five years after diagnosis. Further, perianal disease was found to be relevant in all of the studies at two and five years after diagnosis. Finally, one study showed localization as a factor associated with disabling disease five years after diagnosis, with L3 being a higher risk factor. This meta-analysis showed a significantly higher risk of developing disabling disease at five years after initial diagnosis among patients younger than 40 years of age (OR = 2.47, 95% CI: 1.74-3.51), with initial steroid treatment for first flare (OR = 2.42, 95% CI: 1.87-3.11) and with perianal disease (OR = 2.00, 95% CI: 1.41-2.85). CONCLUSION: Age at diagnosis, perianal disease, initial use of steroids and localization seem to be independent prognostic factors of disabling disease.

2017

30th IEEE International Symposium on Computer-Based Medical Systems, CBMS 2017, Thessaloniki, Greece, June 22-24, 2017

Autores
Bamidis, PD; Konstantinidis, ST; Rodrigues, PP;

Publicação
CBMS

Abstract

2015

Distributed Reasoning

Autores
Rodrigues, P; Gama, J;

Publicação
MATHEMATICS OF ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Abstract
This paper discusses the problem of learning a global model from local information. We consider ubiquitous streaming data sources, such as sensor networks, and discuss efficient learning distributed algorithms. We present the generic framework of distributed sources of data, an illustrative algorithm to monitor the global state of the network using limited communication between peers, and an efficient distributed clustering algorithm.

2013

Predisposition, Insult/Infection, Response and Organ Dysfunction (PIRO): A Pilot Clinical Staging System for Hospital Mortality in Patients with Infection

Autores
Cardoso, T; Teixeira Pinto, A; Rodrigues, PP; Aragao, I; Costa Pereira, A; Sarmento, AE;

Publicação
PLOS ONE

Abstract
Purpose: To develop a clinical staging system based on the PIRO concept (Predisposition, Infection, Response and Organ dysfunction) for hospitalized patients with infection. Methods: One year prospective cohort study of all hospitalized patients with infection (n = 1035), admitted into a large tertiary care, university hospital. Variables associated with hospital mortality were selected using logistic regressions. Based on the regression coefficients, a score for each PIRO component was developed and a classification tree was used to stratify patients into four stages of increased risk of hospital mortality. The final clinical staging system was then validated using an independent cohort (n = 186). Results: Factors significantly associated with hospital mortality were . for Predisposition: age, sex, previous antibiotic therapy, chronic hepatic disease, chronic hematologic disease, cancer, atherosclerosis and a Karnofsky index, 70; . for Insult/Infection: type of infection . for Response: abnormal temperature, tachypnea, hyperglycemia and severity of infection and . for Organ dysfunction: hypotension and SOFA score >= 1. The area under the ROC curve (CI95%) for the combined PIRO model as a predictor for mortality was 0.85 (0.82-0.88). Based on the scores for each of the PIRO components and on the cut-offs estimated from the classification tree, patients were stratified into four stages of increased mortality rates: stage I: <= 5%, stage II: 6-20%, stage III: 21-50% and stage IV: >50%. Finally, this new clinical staging system was studied in a validation cohort, which provided similar results (0%, 9%, 31% and 67%, in each stage, respectively). Conclusions: Based on the PIRO concept, a new clinical staging system was developed for hospitalized patients with infection, allowing stratification into four stages of increased mortality, using the different scores obtained in Predisposition, Response, Infection and Organ dysfunction. The proposed system will likely help to define inclusion criteria in clinical trials as well as tailoring individual management plans for patients with infection.

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