GABRIEL FIALKOVITZ DA COSTA LEITE

Índice h a partir de 2011
4
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 5 de 5
  • article 9 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Understanding Sabia virus infections (Brazilian mammarenavirus)
    (2022) NASTRI, Ana Catharina; DUARTE-NETO, Amaro Nunes; CASADIO, Luciana Vilas Boas; SOUZA, William Marciel de; CLARO, Ingra M.; MANULI, Erika R.; SELEGATTO, Gloria; SALOMA, Matias C.; FIALKOVITZ, Gabriel; TABORDA, Mariane; ALMEIDA, Bianca Leal de; MAGRI, Marcello C.; GUEDES, Ana Rubia; NETO, Laura Vieira Perdigao; SATAKI, Fatima Mitie; GUIMARAES, Thais; MENDES-CORREA, Maria Cassia; TOZETTO-MENDOZA, Tania R.; FUMAGALLI, Marcilio Jorge; HO, Yeh-Li; SILVA, Camila ALves Maia da; COLETTI, Thais M.; JESUS, Jacqueline Goes de; ROMANO, Camila M.; HILL, Sarah C.; PYBUS, Oliver; PINHO, Joao Renato Rebello; LEDESMA, Felipe Lourenco; CASAL, Yuri R.; KANAMURA, Cristina; ARAUJO, Leonardo Jose Tadeu de; FERREIRA, Camila Santos da Silva; GUERRA, Juliana Mariotti; FIGUEIREDO, Luiz Tadeu Moraes; DOLHNIKOFF, Marisa; FARIA, Nuno R.; SABINO, Ester C.; AVANCINI, Venacio; ALVES, Ferreira; LEVIN, Anna S.
    Background: Only two naturally occurring human Sabi ' a virus (SABV) infections have been reported, and those occurred over 20 years ago. Methods: We diagnosed two new cases of SABV infection using metagenomics in patients thought to have severe yellow fever and described new features of histopathological findings. Results: We characterized clinical manifestations, histopathology and analyzed possible nosocomial transmission. Patients presented with hepatitis, bleeding, neurological alterations and died. We traced twenty-nine hospital contacts and evaluated them clinically and by RT-PCR and neutralizing antibodies. Autopsies uncovered unique features on electron microscopy, such as hepatocyte ""pinewood knot"" lesions. Although previous reports with similar New-World arenavirus had nosocomial transmission, our data did not find any case in contact tracing. Conclusions: Although an apparent by rare, Brazilian mammarenavirus infection is an etiology for acute hemorrhagic fever syndrome. The two fatal cases had peculiar histopathological findings not previously described. The virological diagnosis was possible only by contemporary techniques such as metagenomic assays. We found no subsequent infections when we used serological and molecular tests to evaluate close contacts.
  • article 45 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Severe yellow fever in Brazil: clinical characteristics and management
    (2019) HO, Yeh-Li; JOELSONS, Daniel; LEITE, Gabriel F. C.; MALBOUISSON, Luiz M. S.; SONG, Alice T. W.; PERONDI, Beatriz; ANDRADE, Lucia C.; PINTO, Lecio F.; D'ALBUQUERQUE, Luiz A. C.; SEGURADO, Aluisio A. C.
    Background: Little is known about clinical characteristics and management of severe yellow fever as previous yellow fever epidemics often occurred in times or areas with little access to intensive care units (ICU). We aim to describe the clinical characteristics of severe yellow fever cases requiring admission to the ICU during the 2018 yellow fever outbreak in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Furthermore, we report on preliminary lessons learnt regarding clinical management of severe yellow fever. Methods: Retrospective descriptive cohort study. Demographic data, laboratory test results on admission, clinical follow-up, and clinical outcomes were evaluated. Results: From 10 January to 11 March 2018, 79 patients with laboratory confirmed yellow fever were admitted to the ICU in a tertiary hospital in Sao Paolo because of rapid clinical deterioration. On admission, the median AST was 7,000 IU/L, ALT 3,936 IU/L, total bilirubin 5.3 ml/dL, platelet 74 x 10(3)/mm(3), INR 2.24 and factor V 37%. Seizures occurred in 24% of patients, even without substantial intracranial hypertension. The high frequency of pancreatitis and rapidly progressive severe metabolic acidosis were notable findings. 73% of patients required renal replacement therapy. The in-hospital fatality rate was 67%. Patients with diabetes mellitus had a higher case fatality rate (CFR) of 80%, while patients without diabetes had a CFR of 65%. Leading causes of death were severe gastrointestinal bleeding, epileptic status, severe metabolic acidosis, necrohemorrhagic pancreatitis, and multiorgan failure. Conclusions: Severe yellow fever is associated with a high CFR. The following management lessons were learnt: Anticonvulsant drugs in patients with any symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy or arterial ammonia levels >70 mu mol/L was commenced which reduced the frequency of seizures from 28% to 17%. Other new therapy strategies included early institution of plasma exchange. Due to the high frequency of gastric bleeding, therapeutic doses of intravenous proton pump inhibitors should be administered.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Correlating drug prescriptions with prognosis in severe COVID-19: first step towards resource management
    (2022) LEVIN, Anna S.; FREIRE, Maristela P.; OLIVEIRA, Maura Salaroli de; NASTRI, Ana Catharina S.; HARIMA, Leila S.; PERDIGAO-NETO, Lauro Vieira; MAGRI, Marcello M.; FIALKOVITZ, Gabriel; FIGUEIREDO, Pedro H. M. F.; SICILIANO, Rinaldo Focaccia; SABINO, Ester C.; CARLOTTI, Danilo P. N.; RODRIGUES, Davi Silva; NUNES, Fatima L. S.; FERREIRA, Joao Eduardo
    Background Optimal COVID-19 management is still undefined. In this complicated scenario, the construction of a computational model capable of extracting information from electronic medical records, correlating signs, symptoms and medical prescriptions, could improve patient management/prognosis. Methods The aim of this study is to investigate the correlation between drug prescriptions and outcome in patients with COVID-19. We extracted data from 3674 medical records of hospitalized patients: drug prescriptions, outcome, and demographics. The outcome evaluated was hospital outcome. We applied correlation analysis using a Logistic Regression algorithm for machine learning with Lasso and Matthews correlation coefficient. Results We found correlations between drugs and patient outcomes (death/discharged alive). Anticoagulants, used very frequently during all phases of the disease, were associated with good prognosis only after the first week of symptoms. Antibiotics very frequently prescribed, especially early, were not correlated with outcome, suggesting that bacterial infections may not be important in determining prognosis. There were no differences between age groups. Conclusions In conclusion, we achieved an important result in the area of Artificial Intelligence, as we were able to establish a correlation between concrete variables in a real and extremely complex environment of clinical data from COVID-19. Our results are an initial and promising contribution in decision-making and real-time environments to support resource management and forecasting prognosis of patients with COVID-19.
  • article 9 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Performance of a qualitative rapid chromatographic immunoassay to diagnose COVID-19 in patients in a middle-income country
    (2020) COSTA, Silvia Figueiredo; BUSS, Lewis; ESPINOZA, Evelyn Patricia Sanchez; JR, Jose Mauro Vieira; SILVA, Lea Campos de Oliveira da; SOUZA, Regina Maia de; NETO, Lauro Perdigao; PORTO, Ana Paula Matos; LAZARI, Carolina; SANTOS, Vera Aparecida dos; DUARTE, Alberto da Silva; NASTRI, Ana Catharina; LEITE, Gabriel Fialkovitz da Costa; MANULI, Erika; OLIVEIRA, Maura Salaroli de; ZAMPELLI, Daniella Bosco; PASTORE JUNIOR, Laerte; SEGURADO, Aluisio Cotrim; LEVIN, Anna S.; SABINO, Ester
    Objectives: We evaluated a rapid chromatographic immunoassay (IgG/IgM antibodies) and an ELISA assay to diagnose COVID-19 in patient sat two Brazilian hospitals. Methods: A total of 122 subjects with COVID-19 were included: 106 SARS-COV-2 RT-PCR-positive patients and 16 RT-PCR-negative patients with symptoms and chest computed tomography (CT) consistent with COVID-19. Ninety-six historical blood donation samples were used as controls. Demographic and clinical characteristics were retrieved from electronic records. Sensitivity and specificity were calculated, as were their 95% binomial confidence intervals using the Clopper-Pearson method. All analyses were performed in R version 3.6.3. Results: The sensitivity of the chromatographic immunoassay in all RT-PCR-positive patients, irrespective of the timing of symptom onset, was 85.8% (95% binomial CI 77.7% to 91.9%). This increased with time after symptom onset, and at >14 days was 94.9% (85.9% to 98.9%). The specificity was 100% (96.4% to 100%). 15/16 (94%) RT- PCR-negative cases tested positive. The most frequent comorbidities were hypertension and diabetes mellitus and the most frequent symptoms were fever, cough, and dyspnea. All RT-PCR-negative patients had pneumonia. The most frequent thoracic CT findings were ground glass changes (n = 11, 68%), which were bilateral in 9 (56%) patients, and diffuse reticulonodular infiltrates (n = 5, 31%). Conclusions: The COVID-19 rapid chromatographic immunoassay evaluated in this study had a high sensitivity and specificity using plasma, particularly after 14 days from symptom onset. ELISA and qualitative rapid chromatographic immunoassays can be used for the diagnosis of RT-PCR-negative patients.
  • article 14 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Lipase and factor V (but not viral load) are prognostic factors for the evolution of severe yellow fever cases
    (2019) CASADIO, Luciana Vilas Boas; SALLES, Ana Paula Moreira; MALTA, Fernanda de Mello; LEITE, Gabriel Fialkovitz; HO, Yeh-Li; GOMES-GOUVEA, Michele Soares; MALBOUISSON, Luiz Marcelo Sa; LEVIN, Anna S.; AZEVEDO NETO, Raymundo Soares de; CARRILHO, Flair Jose; NASTRI, Ana Catharina Seixas Santos; PINHO, Joao Renato Rebello
    BACKGROUND Despite a highly efficacious vaccine, yellow fever (YF) is still a major threat in developing countries and a cause of outbreaks. In 2018, the Brazilian state of Sao Paulo witnessed a new YF outbreak in areas where the virus has not been detected before. OBJECTIVE The aim is to describe the clinical and laboratorial characteristics of severe cases of YF, evaluate viral to determine markers associated with fatal outcome. METHODS Acute severe YF cases (n = 62) were admitted to the Intensive Care Unit of a reference hospital and submitted to routine laboratorial evaluation on admission. YFV-RNA was detected in serum and urine by reverse transcription-quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) and then sequenced. Patients were classified in two groups: survival or death. FINDINGS In the univariate analysis the following variables were associated with outcome: alanin aminotransferase (ALT), aspartat aminotransferase (AST), AST/ALT ratio, total bilirubin (TB), chronic kidney disease epidemiology collaboration (CKD-EPI), ammonia, lipase, factor V, international normalised ratio (INR), lactate and bicarbonate. Logistic regression model showed two independent variables associated with death: lipase [odds ratio (OR) 1.018, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.007 to 1.030, p = 0.002], and factor V (OR -0.955, 95% CI 0.929 to 0.982, p = 0.001). The estimated lipase and factor V cut-off values that maximised sensitivity and specificity for death prediction were 147.5 U/L [area under the curve (AUC) = 0.879], and 56.5% (AUC = 0.913). MAIN CONCLUSIONS YF acute severe cases show a generalised involvement of different organs (liver, spleen, heart, kidneys, intestines and pancreas), and different parameters were related to outcome. Factor V and lipase are independent variables associated with death, reinforcing the importance of hemorrhagic events due to fulminant liver failure and pointing to pancreatitis as a relevant event in the outcome of the disease.