K
Koen Boussery
Researcher at Ghent University
Publications - 162
Citations - 2834
Koen Boussery is an academic researcher from Ghent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pharmacist & Population. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 149 publications receiving 2289 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Potentially inappropriate prescribing in community-dwelling older people across Europe: a systematic literature review
Eline Tommelein,Els Mehuys,Mirko Petrovic,Annemie Somers,Annemie Somers,Pieter Colin,Koen Boussery +6 more
TL;DR: Polypharmacy, poor functional status, and depression were identified as the most common risk factors for PIP and it appears that only PIP prevalence calculated from insurance data significantly differs from the other data collection method categories.
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Vitreous : A barrier to nonviral ocular gene therapy
Liesbeth Peeters,Niek N. Sanders,Kevin Braeckmans,Koen Boussery,Johan Van de Voorde,Stefaan C. De Smedt,Joseph Demeester +6 more
TL;DR: Whether vitreous is a barrier for the LPXs and to find strategies to overcome this barrier, and how to modify the surfaces ofLPXs with hydrophilic PEG chains prevents them from aggregating in vitreOUS.
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Effectiveness of pharmaceutical care for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ( PHARMACOP): a randomized controlled trial
Eline Tommelein,Els Mehuys,Thierry Van Hees,Els Adriaens,Lucas Van Bortel,Thierry Christiaens,Inge Van Tongelen,Jean Paul Remon,Koen Boussery,Guy Brusselle,Guy Brusselle +10 more
TL;DR: Pragmatic pharmacist care programmes improve the pharmacotherapeutic regimen in patients with COPD and could reduce hospitalization rates.
Journal ArticleDOI
Tablet‐splitting: a common yet not so innocent practice
TL;DR: Large dose deviations or weight losses can occur while splitting tablets, which could have serious clinical consequences for medications with a narrow therapeutic-toxic range and is recommended to use of a splitting device when splitting cannot be avoided.
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Development and validation of a fast and uniform approach to quantify β-lactam antibiotics in human plasma by solid phase extraction-liquid chromatography-electrospray-tandem mass spectrometry
TL;DR: A fast and uniform ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) method with tandem mass spectrometric detection (MS/MS) has been developed and qualified for the simultaneous quantification of β-lactam antibiotics in human plasma and was proven to be free of (relative) matrix effects and reliable for the quantification.