8 results
Search Results
2. Breast Angiosarcoma Surveillance Study: UK national audit of management and outcomes of angiosarcoma of the breast and chest wall.
- Author
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Banks, J., George, J., Potter, S., Gardiner, M. D., Ives, C., Shaaban, A. M., Singh, J., Sherriff, J., Hallissey, M. T., Horgan, K., Harnett, A., Desai, A., Ferguson, D. J., Tillett, R., Izadi, D., Sadideen, H., Jain, A., Gerrand, C., Holcombe, C., and Hayes, A.
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ANGIOSARCOMA , *BREAST cancer , *SURVIVAL rate , *CANCER invasiveness , *CARCINOMA in situ , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Breast angiosarcomas are rare tumours of vascular origin. Secondary angiosarcoma occurs following radiotherapy for breast cancer. Angiosarcomas have high recurrence and poor survival rates. This is concerning owing to the increasing use of adjuvant radiotherapy for the treatment of invasive breast cancer and ductal cancer in situ (DCIS), which could explain the rising incidence of angiosarcoma. Outcome data are limited and provide a poor evidence base for treatment. This paper presents a national, trainee-led, retrospective, multicentre study of a large angiosarcoma cohort. Methods: Data for patients with a diagnosis of breast/chest wall angiosarcoma between 2000 and 2015 were collected retrospectively from 15 centres. Results: The cohort included 183 patients with 34 primary and 149 secondary angiosarcomas. Median latency from breast cancer to secondary angiosarcoma was 6 years. Only 78.9 per cent of patients were discussed at a sarcoma multidisciplinary team meeting. Rates of recurrence were high with 14 of 28 (50 per cent) recurrences in patients with primary and 80 of 124 (64.5 per cent) in those with secondary angiosarcoma at 5 years. Many patients had multiple recurrences: total of 94 recurrences in 162 patients (58.0 per cent). Median survival was 5 (range 0-16) years for patients with primary and 5 (0-15) years for those with secondary angiosarcoma. Development of secondary angiosarcoma had a negative impact on predicted breast cancer survival, with a median 10-year PREDICT prognostic rate of 69.6 per cent, compared with 54.0 per cent in the observed cohort. Conclusion: A detrimental impact of secondary angiosarcoma on breast cancer survival has been demonstrated. Although not statistically significant, almost all excess deaths were attributable to angiosarcoma. The increased use of adjuvant radiotherapy to treat low-risk breast cancer and DCIS is a cause for concern and warrants further study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Long-term cost-effectiveness analysis of endovascular versus open repair for abdominal aortic aneurysm based on four randomized clinical trials.
- Author
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Epstein, D., Sculpher, M. J., Powell, J. T., Thompson, S. G., Brown, L. C., and Greenhalgh, R. M.
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COST effectiveness , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *ABDOMINAL surgery , *AORTIC aneurysm treatment , *CLINICAL trials , *MARKOV processes - Abstract
Background A number of published economic evaluations of elective endovascular aneurysm repair ( EVAR) versus open repair for abdominal aortic aneurysm ( AAA) have come to differing conclusions about whether EVAR is cost-effective. This paper reviews the current evidence base and presents up-to-date cost-effectiveness analyses in the light of results of four randomized clinical trials: EVAR-1, DREAM, OVER and ACE. Methods Markov models were used to estimate lifetime costs from a UK perspective and quality-adjusted life-years ( QALYs) based on the results of each of the four trials. The outcomes included in the model were: procedure costs, surveillance costs, reintervention costs, health-related quality of life, aneurysm-related mortality and other-cause mortality. Alternative scenarios about complications, reinterventions and deaths beyond the trial were explored. Results Models based on the results of the EVAR-1, DREAM or ACE trials did not find EVAR to be cost-effective at thresholds used in the UK (up to £30 000 per QALY). EVAR seemed cost-effective according to models based on the OVER trial. These results seemed robust to alternative model scenarios about events beyond the trial intervals. Conclusion These analyses did not find that EVAR is cost-effective compared with open repair in the long term in trials conducted in European centres. EVAR did appear to be cost-effective based on the OVER trial, conducted in the USA. Caution must be exercised when transferring the results of economic evaluations from one country to another. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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4. Meta-analysis and systematic review of the relationship between volume and outcome in abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery.
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Holt, P. J. E., Poloniecki, J. D., Gerrard, D., Loftus, I. M., and Thompson, M. M.
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HEALTH outcome assessment , *ABDOMINAL surgery , *ABDOMINAL aortic aneurysms , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *MORTALITY - Abstract
Background: This study investigated the volume-outcome relationship for abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) surgery and quantified critical volume thresholds. Methods: PubMed, EMBASE and the Cochrane library were searched for articles on the operation volume-outcome relationship in elective and ruptured AAA surgery. UK Hospital Episode Statistics data were also considered. Elective and ruptured AAA repairs were dealt with separately. The data were meta-analysed, and the odds ratios (95 per cent confidence interval) for mortality at higher- and lower-volume hospitals were compared. Volume thresholds were identified from each paper. Results: The analysis included 421 299 elective and 45 796 ruptured AAA operations. Significant relationships between mortality and annual volume were noted for both groups. Overall, the weighted odds ratio was 0.66 (0.65 to 0.67) for elective repair at a threshold of 43 AAAs per annum and (0.73 to 0.82) for ruptured aneurysm repair at a threshold of 15 AAAs per annum, both in favour of high-volume institutions. Conclusion: Higher annual operation volumes are associated with significantly lower mortality in both elective and ruptured AAA repair. This suggests that AAA surgery should be performed only at higher-volume centres. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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5. Trials in surgery.
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Lilford, R., Braunholtz, D., Harris, J., and Gill, T.
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CLINICAL trials , *SURGERY , *MEDICAL care , *METHODOLOGY , *CLINICAL medicine research - Abstract
Background: Trials in surgery pose some special problems. This paper examines these with reference to 10 years of methodological research sponsored by the UK National Health Service Research and Development programme. Methods: Solutions to common problems encountered in surgical studies were considered, such as issues of blinding, dependence of results on technical skill and continued evolution of technology. Results: Numerous methodological developments are described, including the tracker trial concept in which trial design can be adapted to take account of technical developments and interim results. The governance of trials, solutions to ethical conundra and the rising importance of databases are also discussed. Conclusion: Like surgery itself, the methodological toolkit for evaluation of surgical procedures continues to evolve. The rules of statistical and scientific probity provide plenty of scope for imaginative design solutions for surgical trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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6. Peripheral parenteral nutrition.
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Anderson, A.D.G., Palmer, D., and MacFie, J.
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PARENTERAL feeding , *INTRAVENOUS catheterization , *GUIDELINES - Abstract
Background: Peripheral parenteral nutrition (PPN) currently accounts for almost 20 per cent of all parenteral nutrition administered in the UK. In the absence of consensus guidelines there is wide variation in practice. Heterogeneity of clinical trials has made direct comparisons difficult and meta-analysis impossible. Methods: Medline, Embase and Cochrane databases were searched for all clinical trials relating to the use of PPN in adults. Relevant papers from the reference lists of these articles and from the authors' personal collections were also reviewed. Results and conclusions: Effective PPN is possible in about 50 per cent of inpatients requiring parenteral nutrition. Evidence relating to optimal feed composition, choice of cannula, infusion technique and pharmacological manipulation is discussed, along with practical recommendations for the administration of PPN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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7. Epilogue: key considerations in surgical publishing.
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Schein, M., Farndon, J. R., and Fingerhut, A.
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MEDICAL publishing , *SURGERY - Abstract
Presents key considerations in surgical publishing in Great Britain. Motives of authors to writing; Efforts to review and write clinical experiences in the department; Use of electronic Pumbed-Medicine research machine; Benefits of reading for writing research papers.
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- 2000
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8. Current practice in the management of acute cholecystitis.
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Cameron, I. C., Chadwick, C., Phillips, J., and Johnson, A. G.
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CHOLECYSTECTOMY , *CHOLECYSTITIS , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Aims: Several recent papers have advocated emergency cholecystectomy for patients with acute cholecystitis, stating that it is safe, cost effective and leads to less time off work. This study was designed to assess current practice in the management of acute cholecystitis in the UK. Methods: A postal questionnaire was sent to 357 consultant surgeons who were thought to be involved in a general surgical on-call rota, to ascertain their current management of patients with acute cholecystitis. Replies were received from 250 consultants (70 per cent) of whom 242 (68 per cent) were involved in a general surgical take. Sixteen of these consultants, however, handed their patients with acute cholecystitis on to a different team the following day for further management. Results: Twenty-seven consultants (12 per cent) routinely treat their patients by emergency cholecystectomy whenever possible, with 24 stating that they would do this within 72 h. Limiting factors to this practice were stated to be availability of surgical staff (15), theatre space (nine) and radiological investigations (four). The remaining consultants (n = 199) routinely manage their patients conservatively initially and providing they settle, either (1) book directly for cholecystectomy (n = 94, 47 per cent), (2) reassess as an outpatient (n = 65, 33 per cent), (3) either of above (n = 21; 11 per cent) or (4) refer on to a colleague (n = 19, 10 per cent). The commonest indications for acute cholecystectomy stated by consultants whose initial treatment policy is conservative are spreading peritonitis due to bile leak (93 per cent), empyema (89 per cent), unexpected space on a theatre list (28 per cent) and failure of an acute episode to settle (21 per cent). The laparoscopic method is the commonest for both elective and emergency cholecystectomy, but the percentage of consultants using an open method rises dramatically from 9 per cent in the elective situation to 48 per cent for emergency cholecys... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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