16 results on '"Parvaiz, Amjad"'
Search Results
2. Laparoscopic Colorectal Surgery Outcomes Improved After National Training Program (LAPCO) for Specialists in England
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Hanna, George B., Mackenzie, Hugh, Miskovic, Danilo, Ni, Melody, Wyles, Susannah, Aylin, Paul, Parvaiz, Amjad, Cecil, Tom, Gudgeon, Andrew, Griffith, John, Robinson, Jonathan M., Selvasekar, Chelliah, Rockall, Tim, Acheson, Austin, Maxwell-Armstrong, Charles, Jenkins, John T., Horgan, Alan, Cunningham, Chris, Lindsey, Ian, Arulampalam, Tan, Motson, Roger W., Francis, Nader K., Kennedy, Robin H., and Coleman, Mark G.
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- 2022
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3. Short-term clinical outcomes of a European training programme for robotic colorectal surgery
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Panteleimonitis, Sofoklis, Miskovic, Danilo, Bissett-Amess, Rachelle, Figueiredo, Nuno, Turina, Matthias, Spinoglio, Giuseppe, Heald, Richard J., and Parvaiz, Amjad
- Abstract
Background: Despite there being a considerable amount of published studies on robotic colorectal surgery (RCS) over the last few years, there is a lack of evidence regarding RCS training pathways. This study examines the short-term clinical outcomes of an international RCS training programme (the European Academy of Robotic Colorectal Surgery—EARCS). Methods: Consecutive cases from 26 European colorectal units who conducted RCS between 2014 and 2018 were included in this study. The baseline characteristics and short-term outcomes of cases performed by EARCS delegates during training were analysed and compared with cases performed by EARCS graduates and proctors. Results: Data from 1130 RCS procedures were collected and classified into three cohort groups (323 training, 626 graduates and 181 proctors). The training cases conversion rate was 2.2% and R1 resection rate was 1.5%. The three groups were similar in terms of baseline characteristics with the exception of malignant cases and rectal resections performed. With the exception of operative time, blood loss and hospital stay (training vs. graduate vs. proctor: operative time 302, 265, 255 min, p< 0.001; blood loss 50, 50, 30 ml, p< 0.001; hospital stay 7, 6, 6 days, p= 0.003), all remaining short-term outcomes (conversion, 30-day reoperation, 30-day readmission, 30-day mortality, clinical anastomotic leak, complications, R1 resection and lymph node yield) were comparable between the three groups. Conclusions: Colorectal surgeons learning how to perform RCS under the EARCS-structured training pathway can safely achieve short-term clinical outcomes comparable to their trainers and overcome the learning process in a way that minimises patient harm.
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- 2021
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4. A Meta-analysis of Transanal Endoscopic Microsurgery versus Total Mesorectal Excision in the Treatment of Rectal Cancer
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Ahmad, Nasir Zaheer, Abbas, Muhammad Hasan, Abunada, Mohamed H., and Parvaiz, Amjad
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- 2021
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5. Salvage Surgery With Organ Preservation for Patients With Local Regrowth After Watch and Wait: Is It Still Possible?
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Fernandez, Laura M., Figueiredo, Nuno L., Habr-Gama, Angelita, São Julião, Guilherme P., Vieira, Pedro, Vailati, • Bruna B., Nasir, Irfan, Parés, Oriol, Santiago, Inês, Castillo-Martin, Mireia, Carvalho, Carlos, Parvaiz, Amjad, and Perez, Rodrigo Oliva
- Abstract
Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text.
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- 2020
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6. Robotic Surgery for Colorectal Cancer
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Shah, Muhammad Fahd, Nasir, Irfan ul Islam, and Parvaiz, Amjad
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Master-slave manipulators (otherwise known as telemanipulators) were introduced into minimally invasive surgery in the 1990s to overcome the limitations of laparoscopic surgery. This led to the development of the first robotic surgical systems which, over the last 10 years, have rapidly gained acceptance among colorectal surgeons. Advantages of robotic surgical systems such as superior instrumentation and field of vision enable precise dissection in confined spaces such as the pelvis, which make it a particularly attractive tool for rectal surgery. The feasibility and safety of robotic rectal surgery is now well established and there is increasing evidence that it might offer superior peri- and postoperative outcomes when compared to laparoscopic rectal surgery. Robotic rectal surgery is easier to learn than laparoscopic surgery and the creation of a structured training program for robotic rectal surgery in Europe has facilitated the learning of this technique in an environment that promotes patient safety and improved patient outcomes through equipment fidelity and operator skill. It is foreseeable that in the near future robotic systems will become part of routine surgical practice in colorectal surgery.
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- 2019
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7. Minimally invasive colorectal surgery in the morbid obese: does size really matter?
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Panteleimonitis, Sofoklis, Popeskou, Sotirios, Harper, Mick, Kandala, Ngianga, Figueiredo, Nuno, Qureshi, Tahseen, and Parvaiz, Amjad
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As obesity becomes more prevalent, it presents a technical challenge for minimally invasive colorectal resection surgery. Various studies have examined the clinical outcomes of obese surgical patients. However, morbidly obese patients (BMI ≥ 35) are becoming increasingly more common. This study aims to investigate the short-term surgical outcomes of morbidly obese patients undergoing minimal-invasive colorectal surgery and compare them with both obese (30 ≤ BMI < 35) and non-obese patients (BMI < 30). Patients from three centres who received minimally invasive colorectal surgical resections between 2006 and 2016 were identified from prospectively collected databases. The baseline characteristics and surgical outcomes of morbidly obese, obese and non-obese patients were analysed. A total of 1386 patients were identified, 84 (6%) morbidly obese, 246 (18%) obese and 1056 (76%) non-obese. Patients’ baseline characteristics were similar for age, operating surgeon, surgical approach but differed in terms of ASA grade and gender. There was no difference in conversion rate, length of stay, anastomotic leak rate and 30-day readmission, reoperation and mortality rates. Operation time and blood loss were different across the 3 groups (morbidly obese vs obese vs non-obese: 185 vs 188 vs 170 min, p= 0.000; 20 vs 20 vs 10 ml, p= 0.003). In patients with malignant disease there was no difference in lymph node yield or R0 clearance. Univariate and multivariate linear regression analysis showed that for every one-unit increase in BMI operative time increases by roughly 2 min (univariate 2.243, 95% CI 1.524–2.962; multivariate 2.295; 95% CI 1.554–3.036). Univariate and multivariate binary logistic regression analyses showed that BMI does not affect conversion or morbidity and mortality. The increased technical difficulty encountered in obese and morbidly obese patients in minimally invasive colorectal surgery results in higher operative times and blood loss, although this is not clinically significant. However, conversion rate and post-operative short-term outcomes are similar between morbidly obese, obese and non-obese patients.
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- 2018
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8. Prior experience in laparoscopic rectal surgery can minimise the learning curve for robotic rectal resections: a cumulative sum analysis
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Odermatt, Manfred, Ahmed, Jamil, Panteleimonitis, Sofoklis, Khan, Jim, and Parvaiz, Amjad
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The learning curve for robotic colorectal surgery is ill-defined. This study aimed to investigate the learning curve of experienced laparoscopic rectal surgeons when starting with robotic total mesorectal excision (TME) using cumulative sum (CUSUM) charts. This retrospective case series analysed patients who underwent curative and elective laparoscopic or robotic TMEs for rectal cancer performed by two surgeons. The first consecutive robotic TME cases of each surgeon were 1:1 propensity score matched to their laparoscopic TME cases using age, body mass index, American Society of Anesthesiologists grade, T stage (AJCC) and tumour location height. The matched laparoscopic cases defined individual standards for the quality indicators: operating time, R stage, lymph node harvest, length of hospital stay and major complications (Clavien–Dindo grade 3–5). Deviation of more than a quarter of a standard deviation from the mean for the continuous indicators, or exceeding the observed risk for the binary indicators was defined as off-target with an upward inflection in the CUSUM curve. From 2006 to 2015, 384 (294 laparoscopic; 90 robotic) TMEs met the inclusion criteria. Surgeon A performed 206 (70.1%) of the laparoscopic and 43 (47.8%) of the robotic cases. Surgeon B performed 88 (29.9%) of the laparoscopic and 47 (52.2%) of the robotic cases. After matching, no covariate exhibited an absolute standardised mean difference >0.25. For surgeon A, the CUSUM curves showed no apparent learning process compared to his laparoscopic standards. For surgeon B, a learning process for operation time, lymph node harvest and major complications was demonstrated by an initial upward inflection of the CUSUM curves; after 15 cases, all quality indicators were generally on target. For experienced laparoscopic colorectal surgeons, the formal learning process for robotic TME may be short to reach a similar performance level as obtained in conventional laparoscopy.
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- 2017
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9. Cirugía laparoscópica en el tratamiento de la enfermedad de Crohn del área ileocecal: impacto de la obesidad en los resultados postoperatorios inmediatos
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Parés, David, Shamali, Awad, Flashman, Karen, O’Leary, Daniel, Senapati, Asha, Conti, John, Parvaiz, Amjad, and Khan, Jim
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El objetivo de este estudio fue analizar los resultados postoperatorios de la cirugía laparoscópica por enfermedad de Crohn ileocecal en un único centro, en relación con la presencia de obesidad en los pacientes.
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- 2017
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10. Standardization of Laparoscopic Total Mesorectal Excision for Rectal Cancer
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Miskovic, Danilo, Foster, Jake, Agha, Ayman, Delaney, Conor P., Francis, Nader, Hasegawa, Hirotoshi, Karachun, Alexey, Kim, Seon Hahn, Law, Wai Lun, Marks, John, Morino, Mario, Panis, Yves, Uriburu, Juan Carlos Patrón, Wexner, Steven D., and Parvaiz, Amjad
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Supplemental Digital Content is Available in the Text.The aim of this study was to establish an international expert consensus on a detailed technical description of the laparoscopic total mesorectal excision using a structured, scientific process. This may have implications on training, assessment, quality control, and future research.
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- 2015
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11. Step by Step: Demonstration of Robotic Low Anterior Resection With Total Mesorectal Excision and Splenic Flexure Mobilization
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Herrando, Alberto I., Vieira, Pedro F., Fernández, Laura M., and Parvaiz, Amjad
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- 2022
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12. Clinical and educational proficiency gain of supervised laparoscopic colorectal surgical trainees
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Mackenzie, Hugh, Miskovic, Danilo, Ni, Melody, Parvaiz, Amjad, Acheson, Austin, Jenkins, John, Griffith, John, Coleman, Mark, and Hanna, George
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The self-taught learning curve in laparoscopic colorectal surgery (LCS) is between 100 and 150 cases. Supervised training has been shown to shorten the proficiency gain curve of senior specialist surgeons. Little is known about the learning curve of LCS trainees undergoing mentored training. The aim of this study was to analyze the proficiency gain curve and clinical outcomes of English surgical trainees during laparoscopic colorectal surgery fellowships.In 2010 the educational, Web-based platform from the National Training Program in Laparoscopic Colorectal Surgery in England was newly available to surgical trainees undertaking a laparoscopic colorectal fellowship. These fellows were asked to submit clinical outcomes, including patient demographics and case specifications. In addition, self-perceived performance was evaluated using a validated task-specific self-assessment form [global assessment scale (GAS) range 1–6]. Proficiency gain curves and learning rates were evaluated using risk-adjusted (RA) cumulative sum (CUSUM) curves.Of 654 cases 608 were included for analysis. The clinical outcomes included 9.2 % conversions, 16.9 % complications, 4 % reoperations, 2.6 % readmissions and a 0.8 % in-hospital mortality rate. RA CUSUM curves for complications and reoperation do not show a learning effect. However, the RA CUSUM curve for conversion has an inflection point at 24 cases. The GAS CUSUM curves for ‘setup’ and ‘exposure’ have inflection points at case 15 and case 29 respectively. The curves for ‘mobilization of colon,’ ‘vascular pedicle’ and ‘anastomosis’ plateau towards the end of the training period. ‘Flexure’ and ‘mesorectum’ do not of reach a plateau by case 40.Supervised fellowships provide training in LCS without compromising patient safety. Forty cases are required for the fellows to feel confident to perform the majority of tasks except dissection of the mesorectum and flexure, which will require further training.
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- 2013
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13. Urogenital function following laparoscopic and open rectal cancer resection: a comparative study
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McGlone, Emma, Khan, Omar, Flashman, Karen, Khan, Jim, and Parvaiz, Amjad
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Abstract: Background: Sexual and urinary dysfunction is an established risk after pelvic surgery. Studies examining sexual and urinary function following laparoscopic and open rectal surgery give conflicting evidence for outcomes. The purpose of this study was to analyse the impact of the surgical technique on functional outcomes following laparoscopic or open resection for rectal cancer patients in a high-volume laparoscopic unit. Methods: All patients who underwent elective laparoscopic or open surgery for rectal cancer between September 2006 and September 2009 were identified from a prospectively collated database. Validated standardized postal questionnaires were sent to surviving patients to assess their postoperative sexual and urinary function. The functional data were then quantified using previously validated indices of function. Results: A total of 173 patients were identified from the database, of whom 144 (83 %) responded to the questionnaire-based study. Seventy-eight respondents had undergone laparoscopic rectal resection (49 men and 29 women), and 65 had an open procedure (41 men and 24 women). Both open surgery and laparoscopic surgery were associated with deterioration in urinary and sexual function. With regard to urinary function, there was no difference in the deterioration in open and laparoscopic groups in either gender. With regard to sexual function, in males one component of sexual function, namely, the incidence of successful penetration, showed less deterioration in the laparoscopic group (p = 0.04). However, in females, laparoscopic surgery was associated with significantly better outcomes in all aspects of sexual activity, specifically sexual arousal (p = 0.005), lubrication (p = 0.001), orgasm (p = 0.04), and the incidence of dyspareunia (p = 0.02). Conclusion: Laparoscopic total mesorectal excision for rectal cancer is associated with significantly less deterioration in sexual function compared with open surgery. This effect is particularly pronounced in women.
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- 2012
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14. Impact of the English National Training Programme for laparoscopic colorectal surgery on training opportunities for senior colorectal trainees
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Hemandas, Anil, Zeidan, Shady, Flashman, Karen, Khan, Jim, and Parvaiz, Amjad
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Abstract: Background: There is growing concern that the recently introduced National Training Programme for consultants in laparoscopic colorectal surgery will have a negative impact on the training of senior colorectal trainees by minimizing the opportunities available. This study aimed to determine the impact that local implementation of the National Training Programme has had on the operating experience of senior colorectal trainees. Methods: A prospective study was conducted at a designated national training center for laparoscopic colorectal surgery based in a large district general hospital in England, United Kingdom. All patients undergoing laparoscopic colorectal surgery in our unit between October 2006–September 2008 and October 2008–September 2010 were included in the study. The study variables included number and type of procedure, patient demographics, American Society of Anesthesiology grade, body mass index, conversion rates, previous abdominal surgery, and median operating time. The main outcome measure was the number of procedures performed by senior colorectal trainees before and after commencement of National Training Programme training in October 2008. Results: A total of 746 laparoscopic colorectal resections were performed. Senior colorectal trainees performed 175 cases before commencement of the National Training Programme and 184 cases afterward. The difference was not significant. National Training Programme consultants performed 126 cases. Data were analyzed using Fisher’s exact test and the Mann–Whitney U test. The study groups were found to be well matched. The median operating time was significantly longer after commencement of the National Training Programme. The study was limited in terms of ability to extrapolate results to smaller units wishing to participate in training programs. Conclusion: Implementation of the National Training Programme in our hospital has not had a negative impact on the training opportunities for senior colorectal trainees. However, any unit wishing to participate in the National Training Programme must ensure that an adequate operative caseload and extra resources for operative lists are available for training.
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- 2012
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15. Observational clinical human reliability analysis (OCHRA) for competency assessment in laparoscopic colorectal surgery at the specialist level
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Miskovic, Danilo, Ni, Melody, Wyles, Susannah, Parvaiz, Amjad, and Hanna, George
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Abstract: Background: There are no valid and reliable tools to assess competency in advanced laparoscopic surgery at a specialist level. The observational clinical human reliability analysis (OCHRA) may have the required characteristics of such a tool. The aim of this study was to evaluate construct and concurrent validity of OCHRA for competency assessment at a specialist level. Methods: Thirty-two video-recorded laparoscopic colorectal resections, performed by experts and delegates of the National Training Program in England, were evaluated. Each video was analysed using OCHRA by identifying errors enacted during surgery. The number of tissue-handling, instrument-misuse, and consequential errors was recorded using video-rating software. Times spent on dissecting (D) and on exposing (E) tissues were also measured (D/E ratio). In addition, two independent expert surgeons globally assessed each video regarding competency (pass vs. fail). Logistic regression was used to predict outcomes. Results: A total of 399 errors were identified. There was a significant difference when comparing the expert, pass, and fail groups for total errors (median counts for experts = 4, pass = 10, fail = 17; P < 0.001). When comparing the pass and fail groups excluding experts, differences could be found for tissue-handling errors (7 vs. 12; P = 0.005), but not for consequential errors (4 vs. 7; P = 0.059) and instrument-handling errors (4 vs. 5; P = 0.320). The D/E ratio was significantly lower for delegates than for experts (0.6 vs. 1.0; P = 0.001). When all four independent variables were used to predict delegates who passed or failed, the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.867, sensitivity was 71.4%, and specificity was 90.9%. Conclusion: OCHRA is a valid tool for assessing competency at a specialist level in advanced laparoscopic surgery. It has the potential to be used for recertification and revalidation of specialists.
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- 2012
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16. Is Splenic Flexure Mobilization Necessary in Laparoscopic Anterior Resection
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Chand, Manish, Miskovic, Danilo, and Parvaiz, Amjad C.
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- 2012
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