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Camille Moreno

Camille Moreno

· Assistant Professor (Clinical)

University of Utah · Obstetrics & Gynecology

Active 2007–2023

h-index8
Citations282
Papers217 last 5y
Funding
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About

Dr. Camille Moreno specializes in the care of midlife women, addressing conditions including perimenopause, menopause, and related syndromes with a focus on individualized hormone therapy, bone health, and sexual wellness. She is specialty trained in the management of menopausal symptoms for patients and survivors with high-risk breast cancer. Her clinical focus extends to osteoporosis management, treatment of vulvar dermatoses, and genitourinary syndrome of menopause. Originally from the Philippines and having moved to the U.S. at age 11, Dr. Moreno's cultural background informs her empathetic patient care. After earning her Bachelor of Sciences in Biology with a minor in Chemistry from Virginia Tech, she pursued her Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine at the Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine. She completed her family medicine residency and served as Chief Resident at The Ohio State University College of Medicine, followed by a fellowship in Specialized Women’s Health at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine. Dr. Moreno serves as the Medical Director of the Midlife Women’s Health and Menopausal Medicine program at her institution. She actively contributes to the medical community as an associate editor for the Utah Women's Health Review and as a reviewer for the American Family Physician journal, underscoring her commitment to evidence-based practices in women's health care.

Research topics

  • Computer Science
  • Medicine
  • Surgery
  • Psychology
  • Dermatology
  • World Wide Web

Selected publications

  • Cross-sectional evaluation of outcome comparison methodology in dermatologic clinical trials and a simulation-based discussion of why outcome comparison technique matters

    Research Square · 2023-02-10

    preprintOpen access

    Abstract Clinical trial outcome comparison methodology can affect trial efficiency and interpretation. Our goal was to describe current trends in clinical trial outcome comparison methods among high-impact dermatology trials and perform simulations comparing direct comparison (DC), change-score based (CS), and baseline-adjusted analyses (BAA) to demonstrate the more subtle differences in these methods. We performed a cross-sectional examination of top-cited dermatology clinical trials over five years. Trials were retrieved from journal websites and extracted from PubMed. All clinical trials published in The Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology (JAAD), JAMA Dermatology , Journal of Investigative Dermatology (JID), The British Journal of Dermatology (BJD), and The Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (JEADV) from 2015–2019. Clinical trial analysis type including DC, CS, BAA, percent change from baseline (PoB), and responder analysis (RA). We evaluated the proportion of trials reporting each endpoint were reported and simulations assessing impact of analysis type on outcomes. Among 252 eligible trials, outcome comparison techniques included DC (75/252), CS (40/252), PoB (36/252), RA (98/252), and BAA (3/252). Among trials using CS, PoB, or RA, 25/174 adjusted for baseline score. No trials discussed relationship between baseline and final values; 85/252 selected patients based on baseline score; 8/85 gathered a post-randomization baseline score; 20/85 used a pre-randomization run-in period. Simulations demonstrated that BAA maximized trial efficiency for continuous outcomes. CS, PoB, and RA were common; however, when trials have continuous or ordinal outcomes, BAA is most efficient. PoB and RA are particularly inefficient. RA can promote misleading inference. Use of BAA optimizes inference, trial efficiency, and resource utilization.

  • Methods Reporting Quality and its Association with Methods Section Length: A Cross-sectional Assessment of STROBE and CONSORT Reporting Adherence in Top-cited Dermatology Journals.

    PubMed · 2023-07-01

    articleOpen access

    Background: Adequate methods reporting in observational and trial literature is critical to interpretation and implementation. Objective: Evaluate methodology reporting adherence in the dermatology literature and compare this to internal medicine (IM) literature. Methods: We performed a cross-sectional review of randomly-selected dermatology and IM manuscripts published between 2014-2018. Observational and trial articles were retrieved from PubMed. The primary outcome was percent adherence to STROBE or CONSORT methods-related checklist items (methods reporting score, MRS). Secondary outcomes included the relationship between methods section length (MSL) and MRS. We additionally compared these with IM literature. MRS and MSL were compared by overall article length, checklist type, field, journal, study topic, and funding source. Comparisons were assessed using univariable and multivariable linear regression. Results: , with government funding, and having supplemental methods had higher mean MRS's. Conclusion: Methods reporting quality was low in dermatology. A weak relationship between MRS and MSL was observed. These data support enhancing researcher emphasis on methods reporting, editorial staff, and peer reviewers that more strictly enforce checklist reporting.

  • A Single-Institution Cohort Study With Nevi of Special Site: Recurrence, Progression to Melanoma, and Patterns of Management

    American Journal of Dermatopathology · 2022-11-02 · 4 citations

    article

    ABSTRACT: Nevi of specialized sites (NOSS) occur on the scalp, ears, flexural, acral, and genital areas and display atypical clinical and histologic features. We assessed NOSS recurrence and progression to melanoma, management patterns, and associations between histologic features and treatment recommendations. We queried all histologic diagnoses of NOSS (n = 275) from 2012 to 2017 from a large U.S. academic medical center with reference dermatopathology laboratory and matched these to clinical records. A blinded panel of dermatopathologists re-evaluated lesions, catalogued histologic findings, and gave management recommendation. Associations with dermatopathologist decision and concordance between new and original recommendations were assessed. Of 117 cases with follow-up, 2 locally recurred (1.46%) and none eventuated in melanoma. Clinical features were not associated with original treatment recommendations. After histopathologic review, large melanocytes [odds ratio ratio (ORR) = 8.00, 95% CI, 1.35-47.4] and junctional mitotic figures (ORR = 65.0, 6.5-650) predicted excision recommendation. Likewise, accumulation of many (>9) high-risk features was associated with excision recommendation. Panel review changed treatment recommendation in 27% of cases. Fair concordance existed between original and panel recommendations (κ = 0.29, 0.15-0.44). The low rate of recurrence and lack of melanoma occurrence suggest that despite an atypical clinical and histopathologic appearance, these nevi have limited potential for malignant transformation. Histopathologic findings seem to be principal drivers behind the recommendation for excision in this analysis. Variability existed in treatment recommendations; the panel's consensus recommendation tended to downgrade treatment. This highlights the importance of further outcomes-based studies to identify true high-risk features and refine management guidelines.

  • 16192 Dermatology’s quest for brevity and its effect on research reporting quality: A comparative analysis between dermatology and internal medicine literature

    Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology · 2020-11-27

    article
  • Influence of Social Media on Cosmetic Procedure Interest.

    PubMed · 2020 · 61 citations

    • Computer Science
    • Medicine
    • Dermatology

    Online interest in noninvasive cosmetic procedures is increasing, potentially driven, in part, by social media. Interest in dermatology is also increasing, creating a need for dermatologists to respond to these shifts in market trends.

  • Melanoma prognosis in the United States: Identifying barriers for improved care

    Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology · 2019-01-16 · 24 citations

    article
  • A Case for Building Conservation in a Modern Society: Bear Down Gym

    UA Campus Repository (The University of Arizona) · 2015-12-04

    article1st authorCorresponding

    Sustainable Built Environments Senior Capstone Project

  • Marine-space assemblages: Towards a different praxis of fisheries policy and management

    Applied Geography · 2015-01-08 · 19 citations

    article
  • Introducing Traditional Cultural Properties (In Need of Critical Geographies)

    Human Geography · 2014-07-01 · 2 citations

    articleSenior author
  • Toward a (New) Materialist Politics of Traditional Cultural Properties (TCPS), OR Encountering the Rubber-Bands of Space-Time and Capacities of Place

    Human Geography · 2014-07-01 · 1 citations

    articleSenior author

    In this paper, we explore how an injection of new materialist understandings and insights related to culture, bodies and assemblages offer creative— and much needed— modes of engagement with Traditional Cultural Properties (TCPs) as “capacities of place.” We do this by intersecting the formal purpose and intent of TCPs with some of the perspectives and practices of the different Indigenous and cultural communities with whom we have worked over the years. Ultimately, our goal with this paper is to demonstrate how a focus on what TCPs do inclusive of Indigenous worldviews and parallel new materialist insights hold significant political implications and empowering possibilities for different communities by expanding understandings of the ways tangibility and integrity relate to TCPs through embodied practices of culture-place assemblages and the rubber-bands of space-time.

Frequent coauthors

  • Zachary Hopkins

    University of Utah

    15 shared
  • Aaron M. Secrest

    University of Utah

    14 shared
  • Giorgio Hadi Curti

    San Diego State University

    6 shared
  • Ryan Carlisle

    University of Utah

    4 shared
  • Steven L. Warner

    2 shared
  • Jeremy J. Bearss

    United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases

    2 shared
  • Jessica Forbes Kaprive

    Rivergate Dermatology Clinical Research Center

    2 shared
  • Kanthi Bommareddy

    Holy Cross Hospital

    2 shared

Education

  • B.S., Biology

    Virginia Tech

  • M.D.

    Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine

  • Other, Family Medicine

    The Ohio State University College of Medicine

  • Other, Specialized Women’s Health

    Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine

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