13 results on '"Matthew R. Woeste"'
Search Results
2. Optimizing Patient Selection for Irreversible Electroporation of Locally Advanced Pancreatic Cancer: Analyses of Survival
- Author
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Matthew R. Woeste, Khaleel D. Wilson, Edward J. Kruse, Matthew J. Weiss, John D. Christein, Rebekah R. White, and Robert C. G. Martin
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locally advanced pancreatic cancer ,irreversible electroporation (IRE) ,overall survival ,patient selection ,recurrence ,progression free survival ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
BackgroundIrreversible electroporation (IRE) has emerged as a viable consolidative therapy after induction chemotherapy, in which this combination has improved overall survival of locally advanced pancreatic cancer (LAPC). Optimal timing and patient selection for irreversible electroporation remains a clinically unmet need. The aim of this study was to investigate preoperative factors that may assist in predicting progression-free and overall survival following IRE.MethodsA multi-institutional, prospectively maintained database was reviewed for patients with LAPC treated with induction chemotherapy followed by open-technique irreversible electroporation from 7/2015-5/2019. RECIST 1.1 criteria were used to assess tumor response and radiological progression. Overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) were recorded. Survival analyses were performed using Kaplan Meier and Cox multivariable regression analyses.Results187 LAPC patients (median age 62 years range, 21 – 91, 65% men, 35% women) were treated with IRE. Median PFS was 21.7 months and median OS from diagnosis was 25.5 months. On multivariable analysis, age ≤ 61 (HR 0.41, 95%CI 0.21-0.78, p
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A multi-institutional study from the US ROPE Consortium examining factors associated with directly entering practice upon residency graduation
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Austin C. Hammaker, Shah-Jahan M. Dodwad, Christen E. Salyer, Sasha D. Adams, Darci C. Foote, Felicia A. Ivascu, Sarah Kader, Jonathan S. Abelson, Motaz Al Yafi, Jeffrey M. Sutton, Savannah Smith, Lauren M. Postlewait, Stephen J. Stopenski, Jeffry T. Nahmias, Jalen Harvey, Deborah Farr, Zachary M. Callahan, Joshua A. Marks, Ali Elsaadi, Samuel J. Campbell, Christopher C. Stahl, Dennis J. Hanseman, Purvi Patel, Matthew R. Woeste, Robert C.G. Martin, Jitesh A. Patel, Melissa R. Newcomb, Kathriena Greenwell, Katherine M. Meister, James C. Etheridge, Nancy L. Cho, Carol R. Thrush, Mary K. Kimbrough, Bilal Waqar Nasim, Ross E. Willis, Brian C. George, Ralph C. Quillin, and Alexander R. Cortez
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Career Choice ,Education, Medical, Graduate ,Humans ,Internship and Residency ,Surgery ,Fellowships and Scholarships ,United States ,Accreditation - Abstract
There is concern regarding the competency of today's general surgery graduates as a large proportion defer independent practice in favor of additional fellowship training. Little is known about the graduates who directly enter general surgery practice and if their operative experiences during residency differ from graduates who pursue fellowship.Nineteen Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education-accredited general surgery programs from the US Resident OPerative Experience Consortium were included. Demographics, career choice, and case logs from graduates between 2010 to 2020 were analyzed.There were 1,264 general surgery residents who graduated over the 11-year period. A total of 248 (19.6%) went directly into practice and 1,016 (80.4%) pursued fellowship. Graduates directly entering practice were more likely to be a high-volume resident (43.1% vs 30.5%, P.01) and graduate from a high-volume program (49.2% vs 33.0%, P.01). Direct-to-practice graduates performed 53 more cases compared with fellowship-bound graduates (1,203 vs 1,150, P.01). On multivariable analysis, entering directly into practice was positively associated with total surgeon chief case volume (odds ratio = 1.47, 95% confidence interval 1.18-1.84, P.01) and graduating from a US medical school (odds ratio = 2.54, 95% confidence interval 1.45-4.44, P.01) while negatively associated with completing a dedicated research experience (odds ratio = 0.31, 95% confidence interval 0.22-0.45, P.01).This is the first multi-institutional study exploring resident operative experience and career choice. These data suggest residents who desire immediate practice can tailor their experience with less research time and increased operative volume. These data may be helpful for programs when designing their experience for residents with different career goals.
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- 2022
4. Disparities in the Operative Experience Between Female and Male General Surgery Residents
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Leah K. Winer, Sarah Kader, Jonathan S. Abelson, Austin C. Hammaker, Chukwuma N. Eruchalu, James C. Etheridge, Nancy L. Cho, Darci C. Foote, Felicia A. Ivascu, Savannah Smith, Lauren M. Postlewait, Kathriena Greenwell, Katherine M. Meister, Kelsey B. Montgomery, Polina Zmijewski, Samuel E. Byrd, Mary K. Kimbrough, Stephen J. Stopenski, Jeffry T. Nahmias, Jalen Harvey, Deborah Farr, Zachary M. Callahan, Joshua A. Marks, Christopher C. Stahl, Motaz Al Yafi, Jeffrey M. Sutton, Ali Elsaadi, Samuel J. Campbell, Shah-Jahan M. Dodwad, Sasha D. Adams, Matthew R. Woeste, Robert C. G. Martin, Purvi Patel, Michael J Anstadt, Bilal Waqar Nasim, Ross E. Willis, Jitesh A. Patel, Melisa R. Newcomb, Brian C. George, Ralph C. Quillin, and Alexander R. Cortez
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Surgery - Published
- 2023
5. Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Operative Experience Among General Surgery Residents
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Chukwuma N. Eruchalu, James C. Etheridge, Austin C. Hammaker, Sarah Kader, Jonathan S. Abelson, Jalen Harvey, Deborah Farr, Stephen J. Stopenski, Jeffry T. Nahmias, Ali Elsaadi, Samuel J. Campbell, Darci C. Foote, Felicia A. Ivascu, Kelsey B. Montgomery, Polina Zmijewski, Samuel E. Byrd, Mary K. Kimbrough, Savannah Smith, Lauren M. Postlewait, Shah-Jahan M. Dodwad, Sasha D. Adams, Katherine C. Markesbery, Katherine M. Meister, Matthew R. Woeste, Robert C. G. Martin, Zachary M. Callahan, Joshua A. Marks, Purvi Patel, Michael J. Anstadt, Bilal Waqar Nasim, Ross E. Willis, Jitesh A. Patel, Melissa R. Newcomb, Christopher C. Stahl, Motaz Al Yafi, Jeffrey M. Sutton, Brian C. George, Ralph C. Quillin, Nancy L. Cho, and Alexander R. Cortez
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Surgery - Published
- 2023
6. Hepatopancreatobiliary readmission score out performs administrative LACE+ index as a predictive tool of readmission
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Matthew R. Woeste, Phillip Strothman, Robert C.G. Martin, Kelly M. McMasters, Charles R. Scoggins, Michael E. Egger, Prejesh Philips, and Kevin Jacob
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Retrospective review ,business.industry ,Cancer ,General Medicine ,Perioperative ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,Patient Readmission ,Increased risk ,Risk Factors ,Unit increase ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Surgery ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,business ,Readmission risk ,Retrospective Studies ,Surgical patients - Abstract
BACKGROUND This study aims to compare the LACE + readmission index to a novel hepatopancreatobiliary readmission risk score (HRRS) in predicting post-operative hepatopancreatobiliary (HPB) cancer patient readmissions. METHODS A retrospective review of 104 postoperative HPB cancer patients from January 2017 to July of 2019 was performed. Univariable and multivariable analyses were utilized. RESULTS The LACE + index did not predict 30-day (OR 1.01, 95% CI, 0.97-1.05, p = 0.81, c-statistic = 0.52) or 90-day (OR 1.02, 95% CI, 0.98-1.05, p = 0.43) readmission. Patients readmitted within 30 days had significantly increased HRRS scores compared to those who were not (0 vs 34, p
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- 2022
7. Do General Surgery Residents Begin Specializing Before Fellowship? A Multi-Institutional Study from the US ROPE Consortium
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Matthew R, Woeste, Christen E, Salyer, Austin C, Hammaker, Shah-Jahan, Dodwad, Darci C, Foote, Jeffry T, Nahmias, Zachary M, Callahan, Ralph C, Quillin, Alexander R, Cortez, and Brian C, George
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Education, Medical, Graduate ,General Surgery ,Humans ,Internship and Residency ,Clinical Competence ,Fellowships and Scholarships ,Accreditation ,Specialties, Surgical - Abstract
Single-center data suggest that general surgery residents perform more cases related to their future fellowship compared with their peers. This study aimed to determine whether this experience was true for residents across multiple programs.Data from graduates of 18 Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)-accredited general surgery residency programs in the US Resident OPerative Experience (ROPE) Consortium were analyzed. Residents were categorized as entering 1 of 12 fellowships or entering directly into general surgery practice. Case log operative domains were mapped to each fellowship, and analyses were performed between groups.Of 1,192 graduated general surgery residents, 955 (80%) pursued fellowship training whereas 235 (20%) went directly into general surgery practice. The top 3 fellowships pursued were trauma/surgical critical care (18%), vascular surgery (13%), and minimally invasive surgery (12%). Residents entering minimally invasive surgery performed the most total cases, whereas residents pursuing breast performed the least (1,209 [1,056-1,325] vs 1,091 [1,006-1,171], plt; 0.01). For each fellowship type, graduates completed more total fellowship-specific cases in their future specialty compared with their peers (all plt; 0.05). This association was observed for all 12 fellowships at the surgeon chief level (all plt; 0.05) and for 10 of 12 fellowships at the surgeon junior level (all plt; 0.05).General surgery residents perform more cases related to their future specialty choice compared with their peers. These data suggest that the specialization process begins during residency. This tendency among residents should be considered as general surgery residency undergoes structural redesign in the future.
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- 2022
8. Irreversible electroporation augments β-glucan induced trained innate immunity for the treatment of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma
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Matthew R Woeste, Rejeena Shrestha, Anne E Geller, Shu Li, Diego Montoya-Durango, Chuanlin Ding, Xiaoling Hu, Hong Li, Aaron Puckett, Robert A Mitchell, Traci Hayat, Min Tan, Yan Li, Kelly M McMasters, Robert C G Martin, and Jun Yan
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Pharmacology ,Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Immunology ,Molecular Medicine ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
BackgroundPancreatic cancer (PC) is a challenging diagnosis that is yet to benefit from the advancements in immuno-oncologic treatments. Irreversible electroporation (IRE), a non-thermal method of tumor ablation, is used in treatment of select patients with locally-advanced unresectable PC and has potentiated the effect of certain immunotherapies. Yeast-derived particulate β-glucan induces trained innate immunity and successfully reduces murine PC tumor burden. This study tests the hypothesis that IRE may augment β-glucan induced trained immunity in the treatment of PC.Methodsβ-Glucan-trained pancreatic myeloid cells were evaluated ex vivo for trained responses and antitumor function after exposure to ablated and unablated tumor-conditioned media. β-Glucan and IRE combination therapy was tested in an orthotopic murine PC model in wild-type and Rag−/−mice. Tumor immune phenotypes were assessed by flow cytometry. Effect of oral β-glucan in the murine pancreas was evaluated and used in combination with IRE to treat PC. The peripheral blood of patients with PC taking oral β-glucan after IRE was evaluated by mass cytometry.ResultsIRE-ablated tumor cells elicited a potent trained response ex vivo and augmented antitumor functionality. In vivo, β-glucan in combination with IRE reduced local and distant tumor burden prolonging survival in a murine orthotopic PC model. This combination augmented immune cell infiltration to the PC tumor microenvironment and potentiated the trained response from tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells. The antitumor effect of this dual therapy occurred independent of the adaptive immune response. Further, orally administered β-glucan was identified as an alternative route to induce trained immunity in the murine pancreas and prolonged PC survival in combination with IRE. β-Glucan in vitro treatment also induced trained immunity in peripheral blood monocytes obtained from patients with treatment-naïve PC. Finally, orally administered β-glucan was found to significantly alter the innate cell landscape within the peripheral blood of five patients with stage III locally-advanced PC who had undergone IRE.ConclusionsThese data highlight a relevant and novel application of trained immunity within the setting of surgical ablation that may stand to benefit patients with PC.
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- 2023
9. Identifying Factors Predicting Margin Positivity After Mastectomy
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Matthew R Woeste, Michelle Walgren, Kevin Jacob, Matthew Peters, Marilyn A Donaldson, Jeremy Gaskins, Kelly M McMasters, and Nicolas Ajkay
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Surgery - Published
- 2022
10. Inducing trained immunity in pro-metastatic macrophages to control tumor metastasis
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Chuanlin Ding, Rejeena Shrestha, Xiaojuan Zhu, Anne E. Geller, Shouzhen Wu, Matthew R. Woeste, Wenqian Li, Haomin Wang, Fang Yuan, Raobo Xu, Julia H. Chariker, Xiaoling Hu, Hong Li, David Tieri, Huang-Ge Zhang, Eric C. Rouchka, Robert Mitchell, Leah J. Siskind, Xiang Zhang, Xiaoji G. Xu, Kelly M. McMasters, Yan Yu, and Jun Yan
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Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
Metastasis is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths and myeloid cells are critical in the metastatic microenvironment. Here, we explore the implications of reprogramming pre-metastatic niche myeloid cells by inducing trained immunity with whole beta-glucan particle (WGP). WGP-trained macrophages had increased responsiveness not only to lipopolysaccharide but also to tumor-derived factors. WGP in vivo treatment led to a trained immunity phenotype in lung interstitial macrophages, resulting in inhibition of tumor metastasis and survival prolongation in multiple mouse models of metastasis. WGP-induced trained immunity is mediated by the metabolite sphingosine-1-phosphate. Adoptive transfer of WGP-trained bone marrow-derived macrophages reduced tumor lung metastasis. Blockade of sphingosine-1-phosphate synthesis and mitochondrial fission abrogated WGP-induced trained immunity and its inhibition of lung metastases. WGP also induced trained immunity in human monocytes, resulting in antitumor activity. Our study identifies the metabolic sphingolipid-mitochondrial fission pathway for WGP-induced trained immunity and control over metastasis.
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- 2022
11. Impact of routine expert breast pathology consultation and factors predicting discordant diagnosis
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Matthew R. Woeste, Kevin Jacob, Maxwell B. Duff, Marilyn Donaldson, Mary Ann G. Sanders, Kelly M. McMasters, and Nicolás Ajkay
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Oncology ,Biopsy ,Neoplasms ,Humans ,Female ,Breast Neoplasms ,Surgery ,Breast ,Diagnostic Errors ,Referral and Consultation ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the impact of expert breast pathology consultation on operative management and predictive factors of discordant diagnosis.A retrospective review of patients referred with breast biopsies and subsequent expert pathology consultation from 2014 to 2019. Discordance in diagnosis and documented changes in therapy were recorded. Univariate and multivariable analyses were performed.Ninety-one (91/263, 35%) patients had discordant findings after expert pathology consultation. No benign or in situ diagnoses were upgraded to invasive cancer. Tumor subtype changed in 10% while change in invasive cancer grade was most common (45%). Clinical management was altered in 3/263 (1%) with one change in surgical plan. Benign lesions without atypia (7.5% vs. 1.1%, p = 0.03) and excisional biopsies (8.7% vs. 2.2%, p = 0.04) were more often associated with non-discordant pathology. No independent predictors of discordance were observed.Discordant diagnoses after expert pathology consultation are common despite few changes in operative management. Excisional biopsy and benign lesions without atypia may be associated with less pathologic discordance after expert review.
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- 2022
12. Impact of Routine Expert Breast Pathology Consultation and Factors Predicting Discordant Diagnosis
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Matthew R. Woeste, Nicolas Ajkay, Kevin Jacob, Kelly M. McMasters, Marilyn Donaldson, and Maxwell B. Duff
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine ,Surgery ,Breast pathology ,Intensive care medicine ,business - Published
- 2021
13. Irreversible electroporation augments β-glucan induced trained innate immunity for the treatment of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma
- Author
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Hong Li, Yan Li, Min Tan, Shu Li, Jun Yan, Robert A Mitchell, Matthew R Woeste, Rejeena Shrestha, Anne E Geller, Diego Montoya-Durango, Chuanlin Ding, Xiaoling Hu, Aaron Puckett, Traci Hayat, Kelly M McMasters, and Robert C G Martin
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background Pancreatic cancer (PC) is a challenging diagnosis that is yet to benefit from the advancements in immuno-oncologic treatments. Irreversible electroporation (IRE), a non-thermal method of tumor ablation, is used in treatment of select patients with locally-advanced unresectable PC and has potentiated the effect of certain immunotherapies. Yeast-derived particulate β-glucan induces trained innate immunity and successfully reduces murine PC tumor burden. This study tests the hypothesis that IRE may augment β-glucan induced trained immunity in the treatment of PC.Methods β-Glucan-trained pancreatic myeloid cells were evaluated ex vivo for trained responses and antitumor function after exposure to ablated and unablated tumor-conditioned media. β-Glucan and IRE combination therapy was tested in an orthotopic murine PC model in wild-type and Rag−/− mice. Tumor immune phenotypes were assessed by flow cytometry. Effect of oral β-glucan in the murine pancreas was evaluated and used in combination with IRE to treat PC. The peripheral blood of patients with PC taking oral β-glucan after IRE was evaluated by mass cytometry.Results IRE-ablated tumor cells elicited a potent trained response ex vivo and augmented antitumor functionality. In vivo, β-glucan in combination with IRE reduced local and distant tumor burden prolonging survival in a murine orthotopic PC model. This combination augmented immune cell infiltration to the PC tumor microenvironment and potentiated the trained response from tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells. The antitumor effect of this dual therapy occurred independent of the adaptive immune response. Further, orally administered β-glucan was identified as an alternative route to induce trained immunity in the murine pancreas and prolonged PC survival in combination with IRE. β-Glucan in vitro treatment also induced trained immunity in peripheral blood monocytes obtained from patients with treatment-naïve PC. Finally, orally administered β-glucan was found to significantly alter the innate cell landscape within the peripheral blood of five patients with stage III locally-advanced PC who had undergone IRE.Conclusions These data highlight a relevant and novel application of trained immunity within the setting of surgical ablation that may stand to benefit patients with PC.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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