MARIO GUIMARAES PESSOA

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
15
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto Central, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico

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  • article 14 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Disease burden of chronic hepatitis C in Brazil
    (2015) FERREIRA, Paulo Roberto Abrao; BRANDAO-MELLO, Carlos Eduardo; ESTES, Chris; GONCALES JUNIOR, Fernando Lopes; COELHO, Henrique Sergio Moraes; RAZAVI, Homie; CHEINQUER, Hugo; WOLFF, Fernando Herz; FERRAZ, Maria Lucia Gomes; PESSOA, Mario Guimardes; MENDES-CORREA, Maria Cassia
    Background: Hepatitis C virus infection is a major cause of cirrhosis; hepatocellular carcinoma; and liver transplantation. The aim of this study was to estimate hepatitis C virus disease progression and the burden of disease from a nationwide perspective. Methods: Using a model developed to forecast hepatitis C virus disease progression and the number of cases at each stage of liver disease; hepatitis C virus-infected population and associated disease progression in Brazil were quantified. The impact of two different strategies was compared: higher sustained virological response and treatment eligibility rates (1) or higher diagnosis and treatment rates associated with increased sustained virological response rates (2). Results: The number of infected individuals is estimated to decline by 35% by 2030 (1,255,000 individuals); while the number of cases of compensated (n =325,900) and decompensated (n=45,000) cirrhosis; hepatocellular carcinoma (n=19,100); and liver-related deaths (n=16,700) is supposed to peak between 2028 and 2032. In strategy 2; treated cases increased over tenfold in 2020 (118,800 treated) as compared to 2013 (11,740 treated); with sustained virological response increased to 90% and treatment eligibility to 95%. Under this strategy; the number of infected individuals decreased by 90% between 2013 and 2030. Compared to the base case; liver-related deaths decreased by 70% by 2030; while hepatitis C virus-related liver cancer and decompensated cirrhosis decreased by 75 and 80%; respectively. Conclusions: While the incidence and prevalence of hepatitis C virus in Brazil are decreasing; cases of advanced liver disease continue to rise. Besides higher sustained virological response rates; new strategies focused on increasing the proportion of diagnosed patients and eligibility to treatment should be adopted in order to reduce the burden of hepatitis C virus infection in Brazil.
  • conferenceObject
    The Antibody response to hepatitis B virus vaccination is not influenced by the hepatitis C virus viral load in patients with chronic hepatitis C
    (2015) MEDEIROS, Roseane P.; LOPES, Marta; MAZO, Daniel F.; OLIVEIRA, Claudia P.; ZITTELI, Patricia M.; PINHO, Joao Renato R.; CARRILHO, Flair J.; PESSOA, Mario G.
  • conferenceObject
    IMPAIRED ANTI-HBV VACCINE RESPONSE IN NON-CIRRHOTIC CHRONIC HCV PATIENTS COMPARED TO HEALTHY CONTROLS
    (2015) PESSOA, M. G.; MEDEIROS, R. P.; LOPES, M.; MAZO, D.; OLIVEIRA, C. P.; ZITELLI, P. M.; PINHO, J. R.; CARRILHO, F. J.