M
Marcello Pagano
Researcher at Harvard University
Publications - 201
Citations - 10145
Marcello Pagano is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Lot quality assurance sampling. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 198 publications receiving 9633 citations. Previous affiliations of Marcello Pagano include Boston Children's Hospital & Boston University.
Papers
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Book
Principles of biostatistics
TL;DR: 1. INTRODUCTION Overview / Review Exercises / Bibliography 2. DATA PRESENTATION Types of Numerical Data / Tables / Graphs / Further Applications / Review exercises/ Bibliography
Journal ArticleDOI
Viral Load and Disease Progression in Infants Infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1
William T. Shearer,Thomas C. Quinn,Philip LaRussa,Judy F. Lew,Lynne M. Mofenson,Susan Almy,Kenneth C. Rich,Edward Handelsman,Clemente Diaz,Marcello Pagano,Vincent L. Smeriglio,Leslie A. Kalish +11 more
TL;DR: In perinatally infected infants, HIV-1 RNA levels are high and decline only slowly during the first two years of life, which suggests that early treatment with antiretroviral agents may be indicated for these infants.
Journal ArticleDOI
Do Clinical Markers of Barotrauma and Oxygen Toxicity Explain Interhospital Variation in Rates of Chronic Lung Disease
Linda J. Van Marter,Linda J. Van Marter,Linda J. Van Marter,Elizabeth N. Allred,Elizabeth N. Allred,Marcello Pagano,Marcello Pagano,Ulana Sanocka,Ulana Sanocka,Richard B. Parad,Richard B. Parad,Richard B. Parad,Marianne Moore,Marianne Moore,Marianne Moore,Mervyn Susser,Nigel Paneth,Alan Leviton,Alan Leviton +18 more
TL;DR: A number of specific measures of respiratory care practice during the first postnatal week were associated with the risk of a very low birth weight infant developing CLD, and after adjusting for baseline risk, most of the increased risk of CLD among veryLow birth weight infants hospitalized at 2 Boston NICUs, compared with those at Babies' Hospital was explained simply by the initiation of mechanical ventilation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Maternal infection, fetal inflammatory response, and brain damage in very low birth weight infants
Alan Leviton,Alan Leviton,Nigel Paneth,M.Lynne Reuss,Mervyn Susser,Elizabeth N. Allred,Olaf Dammann,Olaf Dammann,Karl C K Kuban,Karl C K Kuban,Linda J. Van Marter,Marcello Pagano,Thomas Hegyi,Mark Hiatt,Ulana Sanocka,Farrokh Shahrivar,Farrokh Shahrivar,Michael M. Abiri,Michael M. Abiri,Donald N. DiSalvo,Donald N. DiSalvo,Peter M. Doubilet,Peter M. Doubilet,Ram Kairam,Ram Kairam,Elias Kazam,Elias Kazam,Elias Kazam,Madhuri Kirpekar,Madhuri Kirpekar,David Rosenfeld,Steven Schonfeld,Jane Share,Margaret H. Collins,David R. Genest,David R. Genest,Debra S. Heller,Susan Shen-Schwarz +37 more
TL;DR: Echolucent images of cerebral white matter, seen on cranial ultrasonographic scans of very low birth weight newborns, predict motor and cognitive limitations and indicators of maternal infection and of a fetal inflammatory response are strongly and independently associated with EL.
Journal ArticleDOI
Chorioamnionitis, mechanical ventilation, and postnatal sepsis as modulators of chronic lung disease in preterm infants.
Linda J. Van Marter,Olaf Dammann,Elizabeth N. Allred,Alan Leviton,Marcello Pagano,Marianne Moore,Camilia R. Martin +6 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that prolonged mechanical ventilation or postnatal infection increases the risk of CLD among surviving preterm infants and that these 2 factors interact with antenatal infection to further increase the riskof CLD.