ODELI NICOLE ENCINAS SEJAS

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
6
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto do Câncer do Estado de São Paulo, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico
LIM/48 - Laboratório de Imunologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 9 de 9
  • article 18 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Chikungunya in kidney transplant recipients: A series of cases
    (2017) PIERROTTI, Ligia Camera; LOPES, Max Igor Banks Ferreira; NASCIMENTO, Ana Patricia do; CAIAFFA-FILHO, Helio; LEMOS, Francine Brambate Carvalhinho; REUSING JR., Jose Otto; SEJAS, Odeli Nicole Encinas; DAVID-NETO, Elias; AZEVEDO, Luiz Sergio
    Chikungunya (CHIK) is a mosquito-borne virus (CHIKV) infection that recently appeared in the Americas and thousands of confirmed cases have been reported in Brazil since the first autochthonous cases were reported in September 2014. We reported four cases of CHIK in kidney transplant recipients. The diagnosis was confirmed by positive CHIKV real-time polymerase chain reaction in two cases and positive CHIKV-IgM serology in two patients. The time between transplantation and CHIKV infection ranged from 2 to 11 years. All of them had arthralgia, and 3 of them had fever. Other symptoms were mild conjunctivitis, rash, and retro-orbital pain. Kidney function remained stable in all cases. In three patients prednisone doses were temporally increased and the symptoms disappeared concurrently with the increase of the dose. As for the fourth patient, the prednisone dose remained unchanged and yet she improved. Other immunosuppressive drugs were not changed for the four cases. As far as we know, there are only two previously reported cases of CHIK among solid organ transplant recipients besides the four cases reported here. Despite the small number of cases, we can speculate that the use of immunosuppression might have played a role in the paucity of symptoms and the gradual complete recovery with no complication. (C) 2017 The Authors.
  • conferenceObject
    Chikungunya infection in a kidney transplant recipiente: A case report
    (2016) PIERROTTI, Ligia; SEJAS, Odeli Nicole E.; NASCIMENTO, Ana Patricia; DAVID-NETO, Elias E.; AZEVEDO, Luis Sergio L. S.
  • article 15 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A systematic review of adult tetanus-diphtheria-acellular (Tdap) coverage among healthcare workers
    (2019) RANDI, Bruno A.; SEJAS, Odeli Nicole Encinas; MIYAJI, Karina T.; INFANTE, Vanessa; LARA, Amanda N.; IBRAHIM, Karim Y.; LOPES, Marta H.; SARTORI, Ana Marli C.
    During the last decades pertussis incidence raised globally. Several vaccination strategies targeting adults to reduce pertussis among young infants have been proposed, including vaccination of healthcare workers (HCWs). The aim of this study was to analyse, by performing a systematic review of literature, published papers that evaluated Tdap coverage among HCWs, variables associated with vaccine uptake and efforts implemented to raise vaccination rates. We searched the MedLine, Embase, SCOPUS, LILACS, Web of Science and Cochrane for full-text studies that evaluated Tdap coverage in HCW. Two independent reviewers screened the articles and extracted the data. Twenty-eight studies published from 2009 to 2018 were reviewed. Most studies were conducted in the USA. Initial Tdap coverage varied from 6.1% to 63.9%. USA and France are the only two countries with studies evaluating Tdap coverage within HCWs using national data. In the USA, Tdap coverage in HCWs raised from 6.1% to 45.1% from 2007 to 2015. In the analysis of French national data, a Tdap coverage of 63.9% was observed. Five studies used interventions to raise Tdap coverage in HCWs. Two intervention studies implemented mandatory vaccination and three used educational strategies. All of them achieved coverages over 86%. Only eleven studies analysed the association of Tdap vaccination with variables of interest. Previous immunization with other vaccines recommended for HCWs (like influenza, hepatitis B and MMR) was positively associated with Tdap uptake in four studies. In conclusion, overall Tdap coverage among HCWs is low, but seems to increase over the years after the vaccine introduction and with implementation of interventions to increase coverage.
  • article 29 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A Brazilian Inter-Hospital Candidemia Outbreak Caused by Fluconazole-Resistant Candida parapsilosis in the COVID-19 Era
    (2022) THOMAZ, Danilo Y.; NEGRO, Gilda M. B. Del; RIBEIRO, Leidiane B.; SILVA, Mirian da; CARVALHO, Gabrielle O. M. H.; CAMARGO, Carlos H.; ALMEIDA, Joao N. de; MOTTA, Adriana L.; SICILIANO, Rinaldo F.; SEJAS, Odeli N. E.; ROSSI, Flavia; ABDALA, Edson; STRABELLI, Tania M. V.; BENARD, Gil
    Horizontal transmission of fluconazole-resistant Candida parapsilosis (FRCP) through healthcare workers' hands has contributed to the occurrence of candidemia outbreaks worldwide. Since the first COVID-19 case in Brazil was detected in early 2020, hospitals have reinforced hand hygiene and disinfection practices to minimize SARS-CoV-2 contamination. However, a Brazilian cardiology center, which shares ICU patients with a cancer center under a FRCP outbreak since 2019, reported an increased FRCP candidemia incidence in May 2020. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to investigate an inter-hospital candidemia outbreak caused by FRCP isolates during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil. C. parapsilosis bloodstream isolates obtained from the cancer (n = 35) and cardiology (n = 30) centers in 2020 were submitted to microsatellite genotyping and fluconazole susceptibility testing. The ERG11 gene of all isolates from the cardiology center was sequenced and compared to the corresponding sequences of the FRCP genotype responsible for the cancer center outbreak in 2019. Unprecedentedly, most of the FRCP isolates from the cardiology center presented the same genetic profile and Erg11-Y132F mutation detected in the strain that has been causing the persistent outbreak in the cancer center, highlighting the uninterrupted horizontal transmission of clonal isolates in our hospitals during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • article 11 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Outcomes and Prognostic Factors in a Large Cohort of Hospitalized Cancer Patients With COVID-19
    (2021) MARTA, Guilherme Nader; BONADIO, Renata Colombo; SEJAS, Odeli Nicole Encinas; WATARAI, Gabriel; MACHADO, Maria Cecilia Mathias; FRASSON, Lorena Teixeira; MONIZ, Camila Motta Venchiarutti; ITO, Raquel Keiko de Luca; PEIXOTO, Driele; HOFF, Camilla Oliveira; ANASTACIO, Veruska Menegatti; JR, Ulysses Ribeiro; PEREIRA, Juliana; ROCHA, Vanderson; ABDALA, Edson; ESTEVEZ-DIZ, Maria Del Pilar; HOFF, Paulo M.
    PURPOSE Patients with cancer are at increased risk for unfavorable outcomes from COVID-19. Knowledge about the outcome determinants of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection in this population is essential for risk stratification and definition of appropriate management. Our objective was to evaluate prognostic factors for all-cause mortality in patients diagnosed with both cancer and COVID-19. METHODS All consecutive patients with cancer hospitalized at our institution with COVID-19 were included. Electronic medical records were reviewed for clinical and laboratory characteristics potentially associated with outcomes. RESULTS Five hundred seventy-six consecutive patients with cancer and COVID-19 were included in the present study. An overall in-hospital mortality rate of 49.3% was demonstrated. Clinical factors associated with increased risk of death because of COVID-19 were age over 65 years, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status > 0 zero, best supportive care, primary lung cancer, and the presence of lung metastases. Laboratory findings associated with a higher risk of unfavorable outcomes were neutrophilia, lymphopenia, and elevated levels of D-dimer, creatinine, C-reactive protein, or AST. CONCLUSION A high mortality rate in patients with cancer who were diagnosed with COVID-19 was demonstrated in the present study, emphasizing the need for close surveillance in this group of patients, especially in those with unfavorable prognostic characteristics. (C) 2021 by American Society of Clinical Oncology
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Performance of a Real-Time PCR Assay for the Detection of Five Candida Species in Blood Samples from ICU Patients at Risk of Candidemia
    (2023) FELIX, Gabriel N.; FREITAS, Vera L. T. de; SILVA JUNIOR, Afonso R. da; MAGRI, Marcello M. C.; ROSSI, Flavia; SEJAS, Odeli N. E.; ABDALA, Edson; MALBOUISSON, Luiz M. S.; GUIMARAES, Thais; BENARD, Gil; NEGRO, Gilda M. B. Del
    The gold standard for diagnosing invasive candidiasis still relies on blood cultures, which are inefficient and time-consuming to analyze. We developed an in-house qPCR assay to identify the 5 major Candida species in 78 peripheral blood (PB) samples from ICU patients at risk of candidemia. Blood cultures and (1,3)-beta-D-glucan (BDG) testing were performed concurrently to evaluate the performance of the qPCR. The qPCR was positive for DNA samples from all 20 patients with proven candidemia (positive PB cultures), showing complete concordance with Candida species identification in blood cultures, except for detection of dual candidemia in 4 patients, which was missed by blood cultures. Additionally, the qPCR detected Candida species in six DNA samples from patients with positive central venous catheters blood (CB) but negative PB cultures. BDG values were similarly high in these six samples and the ones with proven candidemia, strongly suggesting the diagnosis of a true candidemia episode despite the negative PB cultures. Samples from patients neither infected nor colonized yielded negative results in both the qPCR and BDG testing. Our qPCR assay was at least as sensitive as blood cultures, but with a shorter turnaround time. Furthermore, negative results from the qPCR provided strong evidence for the absence of candidemia caused by the five major Candida species.
  • article 21 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Outcomes in patients with fungal endocarditis: A multicenter observational cohort study
    (2018) SICILIANO, Rinaldo Focaccia; GUALANDRO, Danielle Menosi; SEJAS, Odeli Nicole Encinas; IGNOTO, Bruno Giuliano; CARAMELLI, Bruno; MANSUR, Alfredo Jose; SAMPAIO, Roney Orismar; PIERROTTI, Ligia Camera; BARBOSA, Giovanna; GOLEBIOVSKI, Wilma; WEKSLER, Clara; LAMAS, Cristiane; FORTES, Natalia Rodrigues Querido; FORTES, Claudio Querido; TARASOUTCHI, Flavio; STRABELLI, Tania Mara Varejao
    Objective: To compare the clinical and epidemiological features, treatments, and outcomes of patients with isolated right-sided and left-sided fungal endocarditis and to determine the risk factors for in-hospital mortality in patients with Candida sp endocarditis. Methods: A retrospective review of all consecutive cases of fungal endocarditis from five hospitals was performed. Clinical features were compared between patients with isolated right-sided and left-sided endocarditis. In the subgroup of fungal endocarditis due to Candida species, binary logistic regression analysis was performed to determine variables related to in-hospital mortality. Results: Seventy-eight patients with fungal endocarditis were studied. Their median age was 50 years; 55% were male and 19 patients (24%) had isolated right-sided endocarditis. Overall, cardiac surgery was performed in 46 patients (59%), and in-hospital mortality was 54%. Compared to patients with left-side fungal endocarditis, patients with isolated right-sided endocarditis had lower mortality (32% vs. 61%; p = 0.025) and were less often submitted to cardiac surgery (37% vs. 66%; p = 0.024). The most frequent etiology was Candida spp (85%). In this subgroup, acute heart failure (odds ratio 5.0; p = 0.027) and exclusive medical treatment (odds ratio 11.1; p = 0.004) were independent predictors of in-hospital death, whereas isolated right-sided endocarditis was related to a lower risk of mortality (odds ratio 0.13; p = 0.023). Conclusions: Patients with isolated right-sided fungal endocarditis have particular clinical and epidemiological features. They were submitted to cardiac surgery less often and had better survival than patients with left-sided fungal endocarditis. Isolated right-sided endocarditis was also a marker of a less harmful illness in the subgroup of Candida sp endocarditis. (c) 2018 The Authors.
  • conferenceObject
    Multicenter study in patients with fungal endocarditis
    (2016) SICILIANO, R. F.; SEJAS, O. N. E.; GUALANDRO, D. M.; STRABELLI, T. M. V.; IGNOTTO, B. G.; LAMAS, C.; FORTES, C. Q.; PIERROTTI, L.; CARAMELLI, B.; TARASOUTCHI, F.; MANSUR, A. J.
  • article 40 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Environmental Clonal Spread of Azole-Resistant Candida parapsilosis with Erg11-Y132F Mutation Causing a Large Candidemia Outbreak in a Brazilian Cancer Referral Center
    (2021) THOMAZ, Danilo Y.; ALMEIDA, Joao N. de; SEJAS, Odeli N. E.; NEGRO, Gilda M. B. Del; CARVALHO, Gabrielle O. M. H.; GIMENES, Viviane M. F.; SOUZA, Maria Emilia B. de; ARASTEHFAR, Amir; CAMARGO, Carlos H.; MOTTA, Adriana L.; ROSSI, Flavia; PERLIN, David S.; FREIRE, Maristela P.; ABDALA, Edson; BENARD, Gil
    Clonal outbreaks due to azole-resistant Candida parapsilosis (ARCP) isolates have been reported in numerous studies, but the environmental niche of such isolates has yet to be defined. Herein, we aimed to identify the environmental niche of ARCP isolates causing unremitting clonal outbreaks in an adult ICU from a Brazilian cancer referral center. C. parapsilosis sensu stricto isolates recovered from blood cultures, pericatheter skins, healthcare workers (HCW), and nosocomial surfaces were genotyped by multilocus microsatellite typing (MLMT). Antifungal susceptibility testing was performed by the EUCAST (European Committee for Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing) broth microdilution reference method and ERG11 was sequenced to determine the azole resistance mechanism. Approximately 68% of isolates were fluconazole-resistant (76/112), including pericatheter skins (3/3, 100%), blood cultures (63/70, 90%), nosocomial surfaces (6/11, 54.5%), and HCW's hands (4/28, 14.2%). MLMT revealed five clusters: the major cluster contained 88.2% of ARCP isolates (67/76) collected from blood (57/70), bed (2/2), pericatheter skin (2/3), from carts (3/7), and HCW's hands (3/27). ARCP isolates were associated with a higher 30 day crude mortality rate (63.8%) than non-ARCP ones (20%, p = 0.008), and resisted two environmental decontamination attempts using quaternary ammonium. This study for the first time identified ARCP isolates harboring the Erg11-Y132F mutation from nosocomial surfaces and HCW's hands, which were genetically identical to ARCP blood isolates. Therefore, it is likely that persisting clonal outbreak due to ARCP isolates was fueled by environmental sources. The resistance of Y132F ARCP isolates to disinfectants, and their potential association with a high mortality rate, warrant vigilant source control using effective environmental decontamination.