47 results on '"Ivanecz A."'
Search Results
2. Abandonment of surveillance, followed by emergency surgery for a second spontaneous rupture of hepatocellular carcinoma: A case report and review of the literature
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Irena Plahuta, Mihael Jelenko, Stojan Potrč, and Arpad Ivanecz
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bleeding ,emergency liver resection ,hepatocellular carcinoma ,metabolic syndrome ,spontaneous rupture ,surveillance ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Key Clinical Message Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) develops in the presence of chronic liver disease, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is becoming a frequent cause of HCC in developed regions. Spontaneous rupture of HCC (rHCC) is a potentially life‐threatening complication of a tumor. The patient's compliance with surveillance after liver resection is vital for the prevention of rHCC.
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- 2019
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3. Laparoscopic versus open right posterior sectionectomy: an international, multicenter, propensity score-matched evaluation
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Mehmet F Can, Mohammed Abu Hilal, Paolo Magistri, Luca Aldrighetti, Mathieu D'Hondt, Francesca Ratti, Fabrizio Di Benedetto, M. Papoulas, Arpad Ivanecz, Marc G. Besselink, Marco Vivarelli, Andrea Benedetti Cacciaguerra, Krishna Menon, Nicky van der Heijde, van der Heijde, N., Ratti, F., Aldrighetti, L., Benedetti Cacciaguerra, A., Can, M. F., D'Hondt, M., Di Benedetto, F., Ivanecz, A., Magistri, P., Menon, K., Papoulas, M., Vivarelli, M., Besselink, M. G., Abu Hilal, M., Graduate School, Surgery, CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life, and Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
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Laparoscopic surgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Surgical procedure ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Operative Time ,Malignancy ,Article ,Postoperative Complications ,Minimally invasive surgery ,Internal medicine ,Propensity score matching ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Hepatectomy ,Humans ,Propensity Score ,Liver surgery ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,Retrospective cohort study ,Hepatology ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,Operative outcomes ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Right posterior ,Laparoscopy ,business ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
Background Although laparoscopic liver resection has become the standard for minor resections, evidence is lacking for more complex resections such as the right posterior sectionectomy (RPS). We aimed to compare surgical outcomes between laparoscopic (LRPS) and open right posterior sectionectomy (ORPS). Methods An international multicenter retrospective study comparing patients undergoing LRPS or ORPS (January 2007—December 2018) was performed. Patients were matched based on propensity scores in a 1:1 ratio. Primary endpoint was major complication rate defined as Accordion ≥ 3 grade. Secondary endpoints included blood loss, length of hospital stay (LOS) and resection status. A sensitivity analysis was done excluding the first 10 LRPS patients of each center to correct for the learning curve. Additionally, possible risk factors were explored for operative time, blood loss and LOS. Results Overall, 399 patients were included from 9 centers from 6 European countries of which 150 LRPS could be matched to 150 ORPS. LRPS was associated with a shorter operative time [235 (195–285) vs. 247 min (195–315) p = 0.004], less blood loss [260 (188–400) vs. 400 mL (280–550) p = 0.009] and a shorter LOS [5 (4–7) vs. 8 days (6–10), p = 0.002]. Major complication rate [n = 8 (5.3%) vs. n = 9 (6.0%) p = 1.00] and R0 resection rate [144 (96.0%) vs. 141 (94.0%), p = 0.607] did not differ between LRPS and ORPS, respectively. The sensitivity analysis showed similar findings in the previous mentioned outcomes. In multivariable regression analysis blood loss was significantly associated with the open approach, higher ASA classification and malignancy as diagnosis. For LOS this was the open approach and a malignancy. Conclusion This international multicenter propensity score-matched study showed an advantage in favor of LRPS in selected patients as compared to ORPS in terms of operative time, blood loss and LOS without differences in major complications and R0 resection rate.
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- 2021
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4. The learning curve of laparoscopic liver resection utilising a difficulty score
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Irena Plahuta, Stojan Potrč, Arpad Ivanecz, Tomislav Magdalenić, Iztok Peruš, Matej Mencinger, and Spela Turk
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Retrospective review ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,Liver resections ,Single surgeon ,Outcome (probability) ,Resection ,Oncology ,Blood loss ,Learning curve ,Statistics ,Hepatectomy ,Humans ,Medicine ,Laparoscopy ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business ,Learning Curve ,Regression curve - Abstract
Background This study aimed to quantitatively evaluate the learning curve of laparoscopic liver resection (LLR) of a single surgeon. Patients and methods A retrospective review of a prospectively maintained database of liver resections was conducted. 171 patients undergoing pure LLRs between April 2008 and April 2021 were analysed. The Halls difficulty score (HDS) for theoretical predictions of intraoperative complications (IOC) during LLR was applied. IOC was defined as blood loss over 775 mL, unintentional damage to the surrounding structures, and conversion to an open approach. Theoretical association between HDS and the predicted probability of IOC was utilised to objectify the shape of the learning curve. Results The obtained learning curve has resulted from thirteen years of surgical effort of a single surgeon. It consists of an absolute and a relative part in the mathematical description of the additive function described by the logarithmic function (absolute complexity) and fifth-degree regression curve (relative complexity). The obtained learning curve determines the functional dependency of the learning outcome versus time and indicates several local extreme values (peaks and valleys) in the learning process until proficiency is achieved. Conclusions This learning curve indicates an ongoing learning process for LLR. The proposed mathematical model can be applied for any surgical procedure with an existing difficulty score and a known theoretically predicted association between the difficulty score and given outcome (for example, IOC).
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- 2021
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5. Laparoscopic liver resection for colorectal metastases – treatment results
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Arpad Ivanecz, Vid Pivec, Irena Plahuta, Bojan Krebs, Tomaž Jagrič, and Stojan Potrč
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laparoscopic liver resection ,colorectal liver metastases ,morbidity ,mortality ,survival analysis ,Medicine - Abstract
Background: In many referral centers, laparoscopic liver resection (LLR) is a well-established method for the management of colorectal liver metastases (CLM). The aim of this study is to review a single institution experience.Methods: Between April 2008 and September 2016, 58 patients underwent LLR for various benign and malignant liver tumors. The analysis included 12 patients operated on for CLM. The primary outcomes of this prospective non-randomized study included operative procedure and operating time (minutes), estimated blood loss (mL), conversion rate, R0 resections, resection margins (mm), length of hospital stay (days), post-operative morbidity, and mortality. The secondary outcome of the study was survival analysis.Results: Eight patients (67 %) had atypical LLR. The average operating time was 130 minutes (range 60–210 minutes). The mean estimated blood loss was 140 mL (range < 50–600 mL). In one patient LLR was converted to open procedure (conversion rate 8 %). Seven patients (58 %) had one liver metastasis. The mean metastasis size was 3.6 cm (range 1–9 cm). R0 resection was achieved in all cases. The mean resection margin was 6.8 mm (range 2–15 mm). Te mean length of hospital stay was 6 days (range 3–12 days). Morbidity and mortality rates were 0 %. The median follow-up for surviving patients was 13 months. Nine patients are alive with no evidence of disease, two patients are alive with disease and one patient died of disease.Conclusion: LLR is a feasible and safe method for the treatment of CLM and there is no compromise of oncological surgical principles.
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- 2017
6. Electrochemotherapy – An effective method for treatment of tumors with combination of chemotherapeutic agent and electric field
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Tina Stepišnik, Tomaž Jarm, Aleš Grošelj, Ibrahim Edhemović, Mihajlo Djokić, Arpad Ivanecz, Blaž Trotovšek, Erik Brecelj, Stojan Potrč, Maja Čemažar, Nebojša Glumac, Tjaša Pečnik, Biserka Veberič, Eldar Gadžijev, Primož Strojan, Marko Snoj, Damijan Miklavčič, and Gregor Serša
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electrochemotherapy ,electroporation ,chemotherapeutic agent ,tumor ,cancer treatment ,Medicine - Abstract
Electrochemotherapy is a local treatment for skin tumors and also deep seated tumors and metastases. Electrochemotherapy is based on enhanced cytotoxic effectiveness of bleomycin or cisplatin by electroporation, which increases drug delivery into cells in tumors. Electrochemotherapy is an ablative technique of high effectiveness with over 80% objective responses of electrochemotherapy treated tumors. Its advantage is the simplicity of the procedure that can be utilized in treatment of different tumor histiotypes. Currently it is predominantly used in palliative intent when the other treatment options have been exhausted. For the translation of electrochemotherapy into the clinics also the technological development that is now focusing into the treatment of deep-seated tumors was important. In Slovenia we are at the forefront in the treatment of liver tumors and head and neck tumors, while the others are developing electrochemotherapy for treatment of bone and brain metastases as well as endoluminal tumors.
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- 2016
7. Evaluation of the Iwate Model for Predicting the Difficulty of Laparoscopic Liver Resection: Does Tumor Size Matter?
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Iztok Peruš, Irena Plahuta, Arpad Ivanecz, Tomislav Magdalenić, Bojan Ilijevec, Stojan Potrč, and Matej Mencinger
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Tumor size ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Gastroenterology ,030230 surgery ,Liver resections ,Surgery ,Resection ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Risk curves ,Hepatectomy ,business ,Laparoscopy - Abstract
This study aimed to externally validate the Iwate scoring model and its prognostic value for predicting the risks of intra- and postoperative complications of laparoscopic liver resection. Consecutive patients who underwent pure laparoscopic liver resection between 2008 and 2019 at a single tertiary center were included. The Iwate scores were calculated according to the original proposition (four difficulty levels based on six indices). Intra- and postoperative complications were compared across difficulty levels. Fitting the obtained data to the cumulative density function of the Weibull distribution and a linear function provided the mean risk curves for intra- and postoperative complications, respectively. The difficulty levels of 142 laparoscopic liver resections were scored as low, intermediate, advanced, and expert level in 41 (28.9%), 53 (37.3%), 32 (22.5%), and 16 (11.3%) patients, respectively. Intraoperative complications were detected in 26 (18.3%) patients and its rates (2.4%, 7.5%, 34.3%, and 62.5%) increased gradually with statistically significant values among difficulty levels (P ˂ 0.001). Major postoperative complications occurred in 21 (14.8%) patients and its rates (4.8%, 5.6%, 28.1%, 43.7%; P ˂ 0.001) showed the same trend as for intraoperative complications. Then, the mean risk curves of both complications were obtained. Due to outliers, a new threshold for a tumor size index was proposed at 38 mm. The repeated analysis showed improved results. The Iwate scoring model predicts the probability of complications across difficulty levels. Our proposed tumor size threshold (38 mm) improves the quality of the prediction. The model is upgraded by a probability of complications for every difficulty score.
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- 2020
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8. Diagnosis and treatment in chronic pancreatitis: an international survey and case vignette study
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Yama Issa, Hjalmar C. van Santvoort, Paul Fockens, Marc G. Besselink, Thomas L. Bollen, Marco J. Bruno, Marja A. Boermeester, Frank G. Moody, Claude Bertrand, Colin Johnson, Aude van Lander, Ross Carter, John B. Conneely, Frederik Berrevoet, Donzília Sousa Silva, Zong-Fang Li, Philippe Lévy, Kofi Oppong, Timothy B. Gardner, C. Mel Wilcox, Jeremy French, Michael Steer, Edward L. Bradley, Peter Layer, Bertrand Napoleon, Jorge Antonio Mosquera, D.J. Gouma, Roland Andersson, Antonio Manzelli, J.M. Klaase, Massimo Falconi, Enrique de-Madaria, Riccardo Casadei, Giuseppe Malleo, Raffaele Pezzilli, Ewa Malecka-Panas, Matthias Lohr, Julia Mayerle, Erik A.J. Rauws, Martin L. Freeman, Affirul Chairil Ariffin, Bhavin Vasavada, Paul Bo-San Lai, Jose Luis Beristain-Hernandez, Álvarez Juan, Haralds Plaudis, Dionisios Vrochides, Vincenzo Neri, Vimalraj Velayutham, Aleksey Andrianov, Joan Figueras, Kjetil Soreide, Aliaksei Shcherba, Mahir Gachabayov, Roger G. Keith, Georgios Tsoulfas, Michael Anthony Fink, Stefano Crippa, Mehrdad Nikfarjam, Dibyajyoti Bora, Rajendra Desai, Marcello Donati, Jan Jin Bong, Emma Martínez Moneo, Gareth Morris-Stiff, Ahmet Coker, Alexandre Prado de Resende, Suryabhan Sakhahari Bhalerao, Sadiq S. Sikora, Dezső Kelemen, László Czakó, Hariharan Ramesh, Oleg Rummo, Aliaksei Fedaruk, Alexey Hlinnik, Madhusudhan Chinthakindi, Traian Dumitrascu, Vyacheslav Egorov, Vincent Bettschart, Michele Molinari, E. Aldana D. Guillermo, Susan L. Orloff, Daniel Vasilev Kostov, Laurent Sulpice, Brett Knowles, Yasutoshi Kimura, Gabriele Marangoni, Rajeev Joshi, Tibor Gyökeres, null Bedin, V. Vladimir, Arpad Ivanecz, Adelmo Antonucci, Jones A.O. Omoshoro-Jones, Richard Nakache, Marco Del Chiaro, Marianne Johnstone, Tomoaki Saito, Gianpaolo Balzano, Serge Chooklin, Piero Boraschi, Walter Park, Pedro Nuno Valente Reis Pereira, Nico Pagano, Pavlos Lykoudis, Lars Ivo Partecke, Aliaksandr Siatkouski, Rosa Jorba Martín, Yasunari Kawabata, Luís Carvalho Lourenço, Carlos Marra-Lopez, Jun Kyu Lee, Nils Habbe, Robert C. Verdonk, Yliya Rabotyagova, Rupjyoti Talukdar, Luca Frulloni, Shamil Galeev, Zoltán Berger, Takeo Yasuda, Thilo Hackert, Ziyovuddin Saatov, Dimitri Aristotle Raptis, Jaume Boadas, Francesco Vitali, Livia Archibugi, Miroslav Ryska, Balazs Tihanyi, Vikesh K. Singh, Atsushi Masamune, Paul Yeaton, Kerrington D. Smith, Shrey Modi, Laura Cosen-Binker, Savio George Barreto, Eugenio Morandi, Sergio Valeri, Cintia Yoko Morioka, Luis F. Lara, Yoshifumi Takeyama, Frank G. Gress, Young-Dong Yu, Ezio Gaia, Sorin Traian Barbu, Ali Tüzün İnce, Akkraporn Deeprasertvit, Yu-Ting Chang, Stephen Olusola Abiola, Sabite Kacar, Peter Muscarella, Henri Braat, Samuel Han, Ali A. Aghdassi, Jean-Louis Frossard, Jill P. Smith, M.P. Schwartz, H.M. van Dullemen, N.G. Venneman, B.W.M. Spanier, Sjoerd Kuiken, Erwin van Geenen, Greg Beilman, Georgios Papachristou, Oscar Chapa Azuela, P. van der Schaar, Nevin Oruc, Marie-Paule Anten, William H. Nealon, Jesús García-Cano, Manol Jovani, Ziad Melki, Mustafa Mohammed Ahmed Ibrahim, M.U. Awajdarip, Mohammad Azam, K.G. Sabu, Igor Ermolaev, Shiran Shetty, Belei Oana, Juris Pokrotnieks, Malgorzata Lazuchiewicz-Kot, Riadh Bouali, Marek Winiarski, Marcus Schmitt, Mihai Rimbas, Alexander Meining, Bories Erwan, Peter N. Meier, Rainer Schoefl, Ahmed Youssef Altonbary, Igor Marsteller, Ingo Wallstabe, Skerdi Prifti, Arnaud Lemmers, M. Horvath, Ajay Kumar, Joseph J. Palermo, Issa, Y., van Santvoort, H. C., Fockens, P., Besselink, M. G., Bollen, T. L., Bruno, M. J., Boermeester, M. A., Moody, F. G., Bertrand, C., Johnson, C., van Lander, A., Carter, R., Conneely, J. B., Berrevoet, F., Sousa Silva, D., Li, Z. -F., Levy, P., Oppong, K., Gardner, T. B., Wilcox, C. M., French, J., Steer, M., Bradley, E. L., Layer, P., Napoleon, B., Mosquera, J. A., Gouma, D. J., Andersson, R., Manzelli, A., Klaase, J. M., Falconi, M., de-Madaria, E., Casadei, R., Malleo, G., Pezzilli, R., Malecka-Panas, E., Lohr, M., Mayerle, J., Rauws, E. A. J., Freeman, M. L., Ariffin, A. C., Vasavada, B., Lai, P. B. -S., Beristain-Hernandez, J. L., Juan, A., Plaudis, H., Vrochides, D., Neri, V., Velayutham, V., Andrianov, A., Figueras, J., Soreide, K., Shcherba, A., Gachabayov, M., Keith, R. G., Tsoulfas, G., Fink, M. A., Crippa, S., Nikfarjam, M., Bora, D., Desai, R., Donati, M., Bong, J. J., Martinez Moneo, E., Morris-Stiff, G., Coker, A., de Resende, A. P., Bhalerao, S. S., Sikora, S. S., Kelemen, D., Czako, L., Ramesh, H., Rummo, O., Fedaruk, A., Hlinnik, A., Chinthakindi, M., Dumitrascu, T., Egorov, V., Bettschart, V., Molinari, M., Guillermo, E. A. D., Orloff, S. L., Kostov, D. V., Sulpice, L., Knowles, B., Kimura, Y., Marangoni, G., Joshi, R., Gyokeres, T., Bedin, Vladimir, V., Ivanecz, A., Antonucci, A., Omoshoro-Jones, J. A. O., Nakache, R., Del Chiaro, M., Johnstone, M., Saito, T., Balzano, G., Chooklin, S., Boraschi, P., Park, W., Pereira, P. N. V. R., Pagano, N., Lykoudis, P., Partecke, L. I., Siatkouski, A., Martin, R. J., Kawabata, Y., Lourenco, L. C., Marra-Lopez, C., Lee, J. K., Habbe, N., Verdonk, R. C., Rabotyagova, Y., Talukdar, R., Frulloni, L., Galeev, S., Berger, Z., Yasuda, T., Hackert, T., Saatov, Z., Raptis, D. A., Boadas, J., Vitali, F., Archibugi, L., Ryska, M., Tihanyi, B., Singh, V. K., Masamune, A., Yeaton, P., Smith, K. D., Modi, S., Cosen-Binker, L., Barreto, S. G., Morandi, E., Valeri, S., Morioka, C. Y., Lara, L. F., Takeyama, Y., Gress, F. G., Yu, Y. -D., Gaia, E., Barbu, S. T., Ince, A. T., Deeprasertvit, A., Chang, Y. -T., Abiola, S. O., Kacar, S., Muscarella, P., Braat, H., Han, S., Aghdassi, A. A., Frossard, J. -L., Smith, J. P., Schwartz, M. P., van Dullemen, H. M., Venneman, N. G., Spanier, B. W. M., Kuiken, S., van Geenen, E., Beilman, G., Papachristou, G., Chapa Azuela, O., van der Schaar, P., Oruc, N., Anten, M. -P., Nealon, W. H., Garcia-Cano, J., Jovani, M., Melki, Z., Ibrahim, M. M. A., Awajdarip, M. U., Azam, M., Sabu, K. G., Ermolaev, I., Shetty, S., Oana, B., Pokrotnieks, J., Lazuchiewicz-Kot, M., Bouali, R., Winiarski, M., Schmitt, M., Rimbas, M., Meining, A., Erwan, B., Meier, P. N., Schoefl, R., Altonbary, A. Y., Marsteller, I., Wallstabe, I., Prifti, S., Lemmers, A., Horvath, M., Kumar, A., Palermo, J. J., Surgery, Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Gastroenterology and Hepatology, CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life, CCA - Imaging and biomarkers, AGEM - Digestive immunity, AGEM - Re-generation and cancer of the digestive system, Cancer Center Amsterdam, APH - Methodology, AII - Infectious diseases, Issa, Yama, van Santvoort, Hjalmar C., Fockens, Paul, Besselink, Marc G., Bollen, Thomas L., Bruno, Marco J., Boermeester, Marja A., Moody, Frank G., Bertrand, Claude, Johnson, Colin, van Lander, Aude, Carter, Ro, Conneely, John B., Berrevoet, Frederik, Sousa Silva, Donzãlia, Zong-Fang, Li, Lã©vy, Philippe, Oppong, Kofi, Gardner, Timothy B., Wilcox, C. Mel, French, Jeremy, Steer, Michael, Bradley, Edward L., Layer, Peter, Napoleon, Bertrand, Mosquera, Jorge Antonio, Andersson, Roland, Manzelli, Antonio, Falconi, Massimo, de-Madaria, Enrique, Casadei, Riccardo, Malleo, Giuseppe, Pezzilli, Raffaele, Malecka-Panas, Ewa, Lohr, Matthia, Mayerle, Julia, Rauws, Erik A. J., Freeman, Martin L., Ariffin, Affirul Chairil, Vasavada, Bhavin, Lai, Paul Bo-San, Beristain-Hernandez, Jose Lui, Juan, à lvarez, Plaudis, Harald, Vrochides, Dionisio, Neri, Vincenzo, Velayutham, Vimalraj, Andrianov, Aleksey, Figueras, Joan, Soreide, Kjetil, Shcherba, Aliaksei, Gachabayov, Mahir, Keith, Roger G., Tsoulfas, Georgio, Fink, Michael Anthony, Crippa, Stefano, Nikfarjam, Mehrdad, Bora, Dibyajyoti, Desai, Rajendra, Donati, Marcello, Bong, Jan Jin, MartÃnez Moneo, Emma, Morris-Stiff, Gareth, Coker, Ahmet, de Resende, Alexandre Prado, Bhalerao, Suryabhan Sakhahari, Sikora, Sadiq S., Kelemen, Dezså, Czakã³, Lã¡szlã³, Ramesh, Hariharan, Rummo, Oleg, Fedaruk, Aliaksei, Hlinnik, Alexey, Chinthakindi, Madhusudhan, Dumitrascu, Traian, Egorov, Vyacheslav, Bettschart, Vincent, Molinari, Michele, Guillermo, E. Aldana D., Orloff, Susan L., Kostov, Daniel Vasilev, Sulpice, Laurent, Knowles, Brett, Kimura, Yasutoshi, Marangoni, Gabriele, Joshi, Rajeev, Gyã¶keres, Tibor, Bedin, Null, Ivanecz, Arpad, Antonucci, Adelmo, Omoshoro-Jones, Jones A. O., Nakache, Richard, Del Chiaro, Marco, Johnstone, Marianne, Saito, Tomoaki, Balzano, Gianpaolo, Chooklin, Serge, Boraschi, Piero, Park, Walter, Pereira, Pedro Nuno Valente Rei, Pagano, Nico, Lykoudis, Pavlo, Partecke, Lars Ivo, Siatkouski, Aliaksandr, Martãn, Rosa Jorba, Kawabata, Yasunari, Lourenã§o, LuÃs Carvalho, Marra-Lopez, Carlo, Lee, Jun Kyu, Habbe, Nil, Verdonk, Robert C., Rabotyagova, Yliya, Talukdar, Rupjyoti, Frulloni, Luca, Galeev, Shamil, Berger, Zoltã¡n, Yasuda, Takeo, Hackert, Thilo, Saatov, Ziyovuddin, Raptis, Dimitri Aristotle, Boadas, Jaume, Vitali, Francesco, Archibugi, Livia, Ryska, Miroslav, Tihanyi, Balaz, Singh, Vikesh K., Masamune, Atsushi, Yeaton, Paul, Smith, Kerrington D., Modi, Shrey, Cosen-Binker, Laura, Barreto, Savio George, Morandi, Eugenio, Valeri, Sergio, Morioka, Cintia Yoko, Lara, Luis F., Takeyama, Yoshifumi, Gress, Frank G., Young-Dong, Yu, Gaia, Ezio, Barbu, Sorin Traian, Ä°nce, Ali Tüzün, Deeprasertvit, Akkraporn, Chang, Yu-Ting, Abiola, Stephen Olusola, Kacar, Sabite, Muscarella, Peter, Braat, Henri, Han, Samuel, Aghdassi, Ali A., Frossard, Jean-Loui, Smith, Jill P., Kuiken, Sjoerd, van Geenen, Erwin, Beilman, Greg, Papachristou, Georgio, Chapa Azuela, Oscar, Oruc, Nevin, Anten, Marie-Paule, Nealon, William H., GarcÃa-Cano, Jesãº, Jovani, Manol, Melki, Ziad, Ibrahim, Mustafa Mohammed Ahmed, Azam, Mohammad, Ermolaev, Igor, Shetty, Shiran, Oana, Belei, Pokrotnieks, Juri, Lazuchiewicz-Kot, Malgorzata, Bouali, Riadh, Winiarski, Marek, Schmitt, Marcu, Rimbas, Mihai, Meining, Alexander, Erwan, Borie, Meier, Peter N., Schoefl, Rainer, Altonbary, Ahmed Youssef, Marsteller, Igor, Wallstabe, Ingo, Prifti, Skerdi, Lemmers, Arnaud, Kumar, Ajay, Palermo, Joseph J., and Gastroenterology & Hepatology
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Endoscopic ultrasound ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Islets of Langerhans Transplantation ,Practice Patterns ,Diagnosis, treatment, chronic pancreatitis, survey ,Bioinformatics ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Lithotripsy ,Diagnosis ,03.02. Klinikai orvostan ,Endoscopy, Digestive System ,Chronic ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Tomography ,Digestive System Surgical Procedures ,treatment ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Gastroenterology ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,X-Ray Computed ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Predictive value of tests ,Pancreatectomy ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Autologous ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Clinical Decision-Making ,Transplantation, Autologous ,Decision Support Techniques ,chronic pancreatitis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Pancreatitis, Chronic ,medicine ,Humans ,survey ,Pancreatic duct ,Transplantation ,Physicians' ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Gastroenterologists ,Endoscopy ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Pancreatitis ,Health Care Surveys ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Digestive System - Abstract
Background The aim of the study was to evaluate the current opinion and clinical decision-making process of international pancreatologists, and to systematically identify key study questions regarding the diagnosis and treatment of chronic pancreatitis (CP) for future research. Methods An online survey, including questions regarding the diagnosis and treatment of CP and several controversial clinical case vignettes, was send by e-mail to members of various international pancreatic associations: IHPBA, APA, EPC, ESGE and DPSG. Results A total of 288 pancreatologists, 56% surgeons and 44% gastroenterologists, from at least 47 countries, participated in the survey. About half (48%) of the specialists used a classification tool for the diagnosis of CP, including the Mayo Clinic (28%), Mannheim (25%), or Buchler (25%) tools. Overall, CT was the preferred imaging modality for evaluation of an enlarged pancreatic head (59%), pseudocyst (55%), calcifications (75%), and peripancreatic fat infiltration (68%). MRI was preferred for assessment of main pancreatic duct (MPD) abnormalities (60%). Total pancreatectomy with auto-islet transplantation was the preferred treatment in patients with parenchymal calcifications without MPD abnormalities and in patients with refractory pain despite maximal medical, endoscopic, and surgical treatment. In patients with an enlarged pancreatic head, 58% preferred initial surgery (PPPD) versus 42% initial endoscopy. In patients with a dilated MPD and intraductal stones 56% preferred initial endoscopic ± ESWL treatment and 29% preferred initial surgical treatment. Conclusion Worldwide, clinical decision-making in CP is largely based on local expertise, beliefs and disbeliefs. Further development of evidence-based guidelines based on well designed (randomized) studies is strongly encouraged.
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- 2017
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9. Factors affecting the morbidity and mortality of diverting stoma closure: retrospective cohort analysis of twelve-year period
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Bojan Krebs, Matjaz Horvat, Arpad Ivanecz, and Stojan Potrč
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,R895-920 ,morbidity ,Anastomosis ,digestive system ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ileus ,Postoperative Complications ,Stoma (medicine) ,Colostomy ,medicine ,Humans ,Surgical Wound Infection ,risk factors ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Closure (psychology) ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Ileostomy ,Rectal Neoplasms ,Mortality rate ,Age Factors ,Retrospective cohort study ,Abdominal Wound Closure Techniques ,Middle Aged ,low anterior resection ,surgical stoma closure ,Wound infection ,mortality ,digestive system diseases ,Surgery ,Diverting stoma ,surgical procedures, operative ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Rectal cancer surgery ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Diverting stoma is often performed in rectal cancer surgery for reducing the consequences of possible anastomotic failure. Closing of stoma follows in most cases after a few months. The aim of our study was to evaluate morbidity and mortality after diverting stoma closure and to identify risk factors for complications of this procedure. Patients and methods At our department, we have performed a retrospective cohort analysis of data for 260 patients with diverting stoma closure from 2003 to 2015. Age, stoma type, patient’s preoperative ASA score, surgical technique and time to stoma closure were investigated as factors which could influence the complication rate. Results 218 patients were eligible for investigation. Postoperative complications developed in 54 patients (24.8%). Most common complications were postoperative ileus (10%) and wound infection (5%). Four patients died (1.8%). There was no effect on complication rate regarding type of stoma, closing technique, patient’s ASA status and patient age. The only factor influencing the complication rate was the time to stoma closure. We found that patients which had the stoma closed prior to 8 months after primary surgery had lower overall complication rate (p Conclusions To reduce overall complication rate, our data suggest a shorter period than 8 months after primary surgery before closure of diverting stoma. As diverting stoma closure is not a simple operation, all strategies should be taken to reduce significant morbidity and mortality rate.
- Published
- 2019
10. Abandonment of surveillance, followed by emergency surgery for a second spontaneous rupture of hepatocellular carcinoma: A case report and review of the literature
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Arpad Ivanecz, Irena Plahuta, Mihael Jelenko, and Stojan Potrč
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Spontaneous rupture ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Medicine ,Case Report ,Case Reports ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Chronic liver disease ,metabolic syndrome ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Emergency surgery ,Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease ,medicine ,neoplasms ,lcsh:R5-920 ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,General Medicine ,hepatocellular carcinoma ,medicine.disease ,bleeding ,emergency liver resection ,digestive system diseases ,Surgery ,spontaneous rupture ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,Abandonment (emotional) ,surveillance ,Metabolic syndrome ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,Complication ,business - Abstract
Key Clinical Message Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) develops in the presence of chronic liver disease, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is becoming a frequent cause of HCC in developed regions. Spontaneous rupture of HCC (rHCC) is a potentially life‐threatening complication of a tumor. The patient's compliance with surveillance after liver resection is vital for the prevention of rHCC.
- Published
- 2019
11. Intraoperative electrochemotherapy of colorectal liver metastases:a prospective phase II study
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Erik Brecelj, Mihajlo Djokic, Bostjan Markelc, Masa Bosnjak, Stojan Potrč, Maja Cemazar, Blaz Trotovsek, Damijan Miklavčič, Gregor Sersa, Nina Boc, Ibrahim Edhemovic, Bor Kos, Gorana Gasljevic, Arpad Ivanecz, and Rok Dezman
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Electrochemotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Phases of clinical research ,Bleomycin ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Metastasis ,Remnant liver ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,rak debelega črevesa in danke, elektrokemoterapija, elektroporacija, bleomicin ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,colorectal cancer, electroporation, electrochemotherapy, bleomycin ,Objective response ,Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,udc:616-006 ,Antibiotics, Antineoplastic ,Intraoperative Care ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Progression-Free Survival ,Tumor Burden ,Oncology ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Surgery ,Radiology ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business ,Progressive disease - Abstract
Background and objectives A previous pilot study proved the feasibility, safety and efficacy of electrochemotherapy in the treatment of colorectal liver metastases. The aim of this study was to evaluate long-term effectiveness and safety of electrochemotherapy in the treatment of unresectable colorectal liver metastases. Patients and methods In this prospective phase II study, patients with metachronous colorectal liver metastases were included. In all patients, at least one metastasis was unresectable due to its central location or a too-small future remnant liver volume. Patients were treated by electrochemotherapy using intravenously administered bleomycin during open surgery. Treated were 84 metastases in 39 patients. Local tumor control, progression-free survival and overall survival were evaluated. Results The objective response was 75% (63% CR, 12% PR). The median duration of the response was 20.8 months for metastases in CR and 9.8 months for metastases in PR. The therapy was significantly more effective for metastases smaller than 3 cm in diameter than for larger ones. There was no difference in response according to the metastatic location, i.e., metastases in central vs. peripheral locations. Progression-free survival was better in patients who responded well to electrochemotherapy compared to those metastases that had a partial response or progressive disease. However, there was no difference in overall survival, with a median of 29.0 months. Conclusions Electrochemotherapy has proven to be safe and effective in the treatment of colorectal liver metastases, with a durable response. It provides local tumor control that enables patients with unresectable metastases to receive further treatments.
- Published
- 2020
12. The prognostic value of micrometastases found intraoperatively in the first drainig lymph node in gastric cancer patients
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Tomaž Jagrič, Mojca Plankl, Arpad Ivanecz, Matjaž Horvat, Borut Gajzer, Zoran Grubič, Stojan Potrč, and Tomaž Marš
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Medicine - Abstract
Background: The concept of sentinel lymph node screening has been recently introduced in gastric cancer treatment. Even through micrometastases can be shown reliably by imunohystochemistry, such staining methods are lengthy and laborious, which precludes its intraoperative use. In this study, the clinical and prognostic implications of a new single sentinel lymph node screening for micrometastases concept were evaluated on a small study group. Methods: Twenty-three patients were included in our study. Nine were selected as a control group. The first stained lymph node was defined as the true sentinel lymph node. This lymph node was sent separately for RT-qPCR analysis to determine CEA and CK-20 expression as markers of micrometastases. Patient and tumor characteristics were analysed and possible correlations with micrometastatic involvement were determined. Results: Fourteen patients were found to be N0. Four patients (28.6 %) had micrometastases. Micrometastases were more prominent in patients with diffuse gastric cancer, with higher CA 19–9 values. Patients with micrometastases were also found to be older than those without them. Conclusions: Even through these results indicate the potential use of a single SNL in intraoperative decision making, the sensitivity and specificity of our method has to be evaluated on a larger series, supported by long-term recurrence and survival results.
- Published
- 2012
13. Characteristics and prognosis of young patients with gastric cancer in Slovenia
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Arpad Ivanecz, Tomaž Jagrič, Marko Hazabent, Matjaž Horvat, and Stojan Potrč
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Medicine - Abstract
Background: The relationship between prognosis and age of patients with gastric carcinoma is controversial. The purpose of this study was to define the clinicopathological features and prognosis of gastric cancer in young Slovenian adults. Methods: Between January 1992 and January 2009, 772 patients with resected gastric cancer were enrolled in a prospective database. The findings for 58 (7.5 %) patients aged 45 years or less were compared with those of 714 patients aged between 46 and 86 years. Results: We found significant differences in their ASA scores (p < 0.001): the majority of patients in the younger group scored ASA I (93 %), while most of the patients in the older group scored ASA II or III (72 %). In the younger group there were significantly more Lauren diffuse-type carcinomas (63 % versus 36 %; P = 0.007), total gastrectomies (79 % versus 55 %; P = 0.003), and harvested lymph nodes (26 ± 19 versus 21 ± 14; P = 0.02). There were no statistically significant differences in curative resections (86 % versus 85 %), TNM stage distribution and in the rate of perioperative surgical and non-surgical morbidity and mortality. Actuarial 5-year survival rates for the younger and the older groups were 43.8 % and 34.1 % respectively (P = 0.05). Actuarial 10-year survival rates for the younger and the older groups were 37 % and 23.7 % respectively (P = 0.05). The factors associated with adverse 5-year survival in multivariate analysis were higher TNM UICC stage, non-curative resection, higher ASA scores, and N2–3 lymph node metastases. Conclusions: Differences in the ASA scores between the two groups were expected. A second feature was the predominance of the Lauren diffuse type in the younger group. A higher portion of total gastrectomies and harvested lymph nodes were the consequences of the more aggressive surgical approach in younger patients. Survival was better in the younger group of patients, although the outcome is probably more related to stage of the disease at diagnosis than to age.
- Published
- 2011
14. Proteinaceous Inflammatory Markers in the Liverpool Score Predicting Survival after Surgical Therapy of Colorectal Liver Metastases – Preliminary Results
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I. Plahuta, Stojan Potrč, Š. Turk, T. Magdalenić, and Arpad Ivanecz
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Surgical therapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,business - Published
- 2021
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15. Evaluation of Iwate Criteria Model to Predict Difficulty of Laparoscopic Liver Resection
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M. Mencinger, T. Magdalenić, I. Peruš, Stojan Potrč, Arpad Ivanecz, and I. Plahuta
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,business ,Surgery ,Resection - Published
- 2021
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16. The treatment of patients with colorectal liver metastases at the department of abdominal surgery in the general hospital Marribor
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Arpad Ivanecz, Stojan Potrč, Matjaž Horvat, and Eldar Gadžijev
- Subjects
liver metastases ,colorectal cancer ,surgery ,5-year survival ,Medicine - Abstract
Background: Liver resection, in collaboration with new diagnostic tools and chemotherapeutic agents, is the only potentially curative therapy for colorectal liver metastases (CRLM).Methods: In the period from January 1, 1996 to December 31, 2004, 94 patients with CRLM were treated in our departement. Liver resection was possible for 84 patients. 110 procedures were performed in these patients.Results: At the end of the study (December 31, 2005), 22 patients were alive with no evidence of disease, 20 patients were alive with disease and 42 patients died of disease. The median follow-up for surviving patients was 33.8 months (from 13 to 123). The overall 5-year survival rate of the whole group of patients (R0 and R1 resections together) was 38 % with median survival 29.3 months. The overall 5-year survival of patients with R0 resection was 42 % with median survival of 32.3 months. The overall 5-year survival of patients with R1 resection was 29 % with median survival of 25.7 months. The postoperative complication rate was 23.8 % mortality was 2.3 %.Conclusions: Providing that decisions regarding the therapeutic approach are carried out in a multidisciplinary manner in specialized centers in collaboration with surgeons, oncologists and radiologists, we can offer a cure to some patients with CRLM.
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- 2007
17. Ischemic lesion of the colon as a complication of severe acute pancreatitis
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Manca Godec, Arpad Ivanecz, Stojan Potič, Matjaž Horvat, and Eldar M. Gadžijev
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acute pancreatitis ,pancreatic necrosis ,colonic complications ,colonic resection ,Medicine - Abstract
Background: Colonic involvement is an uncommon complication of severe acute pancreatitis. Several pathogenic mechanisms have been proposed. Diagnosis of colonic pathology is difficult. The definitive diagnosis depends on the surgeon and has to be made intraoperatively. The treatment of choice is resection of the affected segment with forming of a (temporary) coloor ileostomy and a distal mucous fistula.Material and methods: The paper presents a case study of two middle-aged patients, who were initially treated conservatively due to the acute pancreatitis. The spread of the necrotic pancreatic tissue caused the infiltration and necrosis of the transverse mesocolon. They were treated operatively.Conclusions: Colonic pathology complicating acute pancreatitis is known to be associated with high mortality. In two case studies we are presenting that the necrosis and perforation of the transverse mesocolon appeared after some time, however, the cause and the extent of the involvement were discovered not earlier than before the operation. A year after the resection of the affected segment we decided for the continual operation considering the age of the patient, good health condition and better quality of life.
- Published
- 2006
18. WHAT DID WE LEARN IN SURGICAL TREATMENT OF GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA: COMPARISON OF TWO PERIODS
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Stojan Potrč, Rajko Kavalar, Tine Hajdinjak, Matjaž Horvat, Damjan Vidovič, Maja Šturm, Arpad Ivanecz, and Eldar Gadžijev
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gastric cancer ,gastrectomy ,learning curve ,Medicine - Abstract
Background. In January 1992 a standardized and more radical surgical approach in gastric cancer treatment as well as standardized pathohistological workup of specimens was started in our institution. The aim of our retrospectively designed study was to evaluate results of this work for the 10 year period.Methods. We compared the results of two chronologically subsequent groups of altogether 402 patients who underwent a total or subtotal gastrectomy for gastric cancer (period A: 166 patients operated in a period between 1992 and 1996; period B: 236 patients operated in a period between 1997 and 2001).Results. The two groups of patients were comparable with regard to age, gender, general condition of the patient and proportion of potentially curable (R0) resections. There was significant difference between the groups with regard to type of operation (more total gastrectomies in period B), extend of lymphadenectomy (more D2 and D3 in period B), average number of examined nodes (higher in period B) and to the UICC stage (less stage II in period B). Incidence of surgical complications (15.6% vs. 18.7%) and average hospital stay were not significantly different between the two groups (14.72 days vs. 14.70 days). The 5-year survival calculated according to Kaplan-Meier for all patients with R0 and R2 resections together was 30.3% and was 39.1% for the group of R0 resected patients. In patients with UICC stage I–IIIa and R0 resection the 5-year survival was significantly higher in period B (59.9%) than in period A (40.6%) (p = 0.0197).Conclusions. Comparison of two chronologically subsequent groups of patients shows that after a definite period of systematical surgical work improvements of results set in, and are reflecting in the present study in higher number of extracted lymph nodes, in higher number of total gastrectomies and in higher 5-year survival for stages Ia, Ib, II and IIIa in the period B.
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- 2004
19. Simultaneous pure laparoscopic resection of primary colorectal cancer and synchronous liver metastases: a single institution experience with propensity score matching analysis
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Andraz Stozer, Arpad Ivanecz, Bojan Krebs, Irena Plahuta, Tomaz Jagric, and Stojan Potrč
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,R895-920 ,laparoscopy ,colorectal cancer ,030230 surgery ,Single Center ,synchronous liver metastases ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Laparoscopic resection ,Single institution ,Laparoscopy ,colorectal resection ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,liver resection ,Propensity score matching ,Resection margin ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Background The aim of the study was to compare the outcome of pure laparoscopic and open simultaneous resection of both the primary colorectal cancer and synchronous colorectal liver metastases (SCLM). Patients and methods From 2000 to 2016 all patients treated by simultaneous resection were assessed for entry in this single center, clinically nonrandomized trial. A propensity score matching was used to compare the laparoscopic group (LAP) to open surgery group (OPEN). Primary endpoints were perioperative and oncologic outcomes. Secondary endpoints were overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS). Results Of the 82 patients identified who underwent simultaneous liver resection for SCLM, 10 patients underwent LAP. All these consecutive patients from LAP were matched to 10 comparable OPEN. LAP reduced the length of hospital stay (P = 0.044) and solid food oral intake was faster (P = 0.006) in this group. No patient undergoing the laparoscopic procedure experienced conversion to the open technique. No difference was observed in operative time, blood loss, transfusion rate, narcotics requirement, clinical risk score, resection margin, R0 resections rate, morbidity, mortality and incisional hernias rate. The two groups did not differ significantly in terms of the 3-year OS rate (90 vs. 75%; P = 0.842) and DFS rate (60 vs. 57%; P = 0.724). Conclusions LAP reduced the length of hospital stay and offers faster solid food oral intake. Comparable oncologic and survival outcomes can be achieved. LAP is beneficial for well selected patients in high volume centers with appropriate expertise.
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- 2017
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20. Impact factors for perioperative morbidity and mortality and repercussion of perioperative morbidity and long-term survival in pancreatic head resection
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Tomaz Jagric, Stojan Potrč, Sasa Rudolf, Vid Pivec, Urska Marolt, Bojan Iljevec, and Arpad Ivanecz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,complications ,R895-920 ,030230 surgery ,Anastomosis ,Pancreatic head ,Resection ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,Long term survival ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,impact factors ,pancreatic resections ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Retrospective cohort study ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Oncology ,Pancreatic fistula ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
BackgroundThe focus of the present study was to reveal any impact factors for perioperative morbidity and mortality as well as repercussion of perioperative morbidity on long-term survival in pancreatic head resection.Patients and methodsIn a retrospective study, clinic-pathological factors of 240 patients after pancreatic head (PD) or total resection were analyzed for correlations with morbidity, 30- and 90-day mortality, and long-term survival. According to Clavien–Dindo classification, all complications with grade II and more were defined as overall complications (OAC). OAC, all surgical (ASC), general (AGC) and some specific types of complications like leaks from the pancreatoenteric anastomosis (PEA) or pancreatic fistula (PF, type A, B and C), leaks from other anastomoses (OL), bleeding (BC) and abscesses (AA) were studied for correlation with clinic-pathological factors.ResultsIn the 9-year period, altogether 240 patients had pancreatic resection. The incidence of OAC was 37.1%, ASC 29.2% and AGC 15.8%. ASC presented themselves as PL, OL, BC and AA in 19% (of 208 PD), 5.8%, 5.8%, and 2.5% respectively. Age, ASA score, amylase on drains, and pancreatic fistulas B and C correlated significantly with different types of complications. Overall 30- and 90-day mortalities were 5 and 7.9% and decreased to 3.5 and 5% in P2.ConclusionsHigh amylase on drains and higher mean age were independent indicators of morbidity, whereas PL and BC revealed as independent predictor for 30-day mortality, and physical status, OAC and PF C for 90-day mortality.
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- 2017
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21. INGUINAL HERNIA SURGERY AT DEPARTMENT OF ABDOMINAL SURGERY, GENERAL HOSPITAL MARIBOR IN THE YEARS 2000 AND 2001 AND COMPARISON WITH THE YEARS 1996 AND 1997
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Bojan Krebs, Marko Novak, Damijan Vidovič, and Arpad Ivanecz
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surgery ,inguinal ,hernia ,tension-free technique, anaesthezia ,reoperation ,Medicine - Abstract
Background. Inguinal hernia repair is one of the most common surgical procedures performed in the world and as that represents a huge socio-economic problem. Today, surgeon can significantly improve outcome for many patients with proper patients selection, proper anaesthesia and surgical technique. In this article two different time intervals are reviewed. Between those intervals surgeons began to change their attitudes about hernia surgery approach and »tensionfree« concept became widely accepted. We also operated many patients under local anaesthesia, which has many advantages between which is lesser need for preoperative investigations and faster mobilisation.Methods. In article charts from all patients operated for inguinal hernia in years 1996, 1997, 2000 and 2001 at the Department for abdominal surgery in Maribor.Results. 1602 patients were operated for inguinal hernia in four years. We noticed that less patients were operated in years 2000/2001 then in the earlier interval. Number of the patients operated under general anaesthesia was relatively high in first period but in the second interval majority of the patients were operated under subarachnoidal and local anaesthesia. While most patients in years 1996 and 1997 were operated with original Bassini’s technique and its modifications, majority of patients in years 2000 and 2001 were treated with tension-free technique.Conclusions. Our experiences with tension free techniques are very good. There are many advantages for patients, operated this way: less pooperative pain, faster recovery and earlier return to normal activities and work. We couldn’t prove any benefits considering recurrences in our study yet, probably because of two short observation period.
- Published
- 2003
22. SURGICAL TREATMENT OF COLORECTAL CANCER AT THE DEPARTMENT OF ABDOMINAL SURGERY IN THE GENERAL HOSPITAL MARIBOR IN THE YEAR 2000
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Arpad Ivanecz, Miran Koželj, Bojan Krebs, Borut Gajzer, Mirjana Brvar, and Rajko Kavalar
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colorectal cancer ,surgical treatment ,results ,Medicine - Abstract
Background. To obtain information on the surgical treatment of patients with colorectal cancer at the Department of Abdominal Surgery, in the General Hospital Maribor, in the year 2000.Methods. Using a computerized protocol, we prospectivelly collect and registrate data about patients with colorectal cancer. Our data contains preoperative diagnostic investigations, intraoperative findings, pathohistological examinations after surgery, operative morbidity and mortality and alterations, found during follow up examinations.Results. In the year 2000, 135 patients (72 male and 63 female) with colorectal cancer underwent surgery. The average age was 66.4 years, spanning from 39 to 90 years. 15% were presented as emergencies. The general operability rate was 99%, the resectability rate was 92%, and the portion of potentially curative resections was 69%. Cases were localised into right-sided (23%), transverse (2%), left-sided (32%) and rectal (43%). The stage distribution according to the TNM classification was as follows: Stage 0: 1 patient, Stage I: 17%, Stage II: 42%, Stage III: 19%, Stage IV: 22%, 5 patients were undefined. The portion of different surgical procedures is presented in the text. The postoperative mortality rate was 6%, 7 patients died after urgent procedures and 1 died after elective surgery. The rate of surgical complications, which required reoperation was 4.4%. The rate of conservativelly treated surgical complications was 6.6%. The average hospital stay was 12.8 days and ranged from 6 to 36 days.Conclusions. The number of surgically treated patients with colorectal cancer in our institution is growing every year like in other departments in Slovenia and western countries. The rate of potentially curative resections can be expanded by early detection of the disease, as well as with more accurate pre- and intraoperative staging of the tumor, and consideration of the modern principles of management.
- Published
- 2003
23. The external validation of a difficulty score to predict intraoperative complications during laparoscopic liver resection
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T. Magdalenić, Stojan Potrč, B. Krebs, I. Plahuta, L. Oblak, and Arpad Ivanecz
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,External validation ,Medicine ,business ,Resection ,Surgery - Published
- 2020
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24. The external validation of a difficulty scoring system for predicting the risk of intraoperative complications during laparoscopic liver resection
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Iztok Peruš, Tomislav Magdalenić, Irena Plahuta, Stojan Potrč, Matej Mencinger, Bojan Krebs, and Arpad Ivanecz
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Adult ,Male ,Artificial neural network ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Intraoperative Complication ,Scoring system ,Operative Time ,lcsh:Surgery ,Resection ,Predictive score ,Young Adult ,Postoperative Complications ,Blood loss ,Cumulative distribution function ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Hepatectomy ,Humans ,Laparoscopy ,Intraoperative Complications ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Liver resection ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,External validation ,Intraoperative complication ,General Medicine ,lcsh:RD1-811 ,Middle Aged ,Surgery ,Cohort ,Operative time ,Female ,business ,Mean risk curve ,Research Article - Abstract
BackgroundThis study aimed to externally validate and upgrade the recent difficulty scoring system (DSS) proposed by Halls et al. to predict intraoperative complications (IOC) during laparoscopic liver resection (LLR).MethodsThe DSS was validated in a cohort of 128 consecutive patients undergoing pure LLRs between 2008 and 2019 at a single tertiary referral center. The validated DSS includes four difficulty levels based on five risk factors (neoadjuvant chemotherapy, previous open liver resection, lesion type, lesion size and classification of resection). As established by the validated DSS, IOC was defined as excessive blood loss (> 775 mL), conversion to an open approach and unintentional damage to surrounding structures. Additionally, intra- and postoperative outcomes were compared according to the difficulty levels with usual statistic methods. The same five risk factors were used for validation done by linear and advanced nonlinear (artificial neural network) models. The study was supported by mathematical computations to obtain a mean risk curve predicting the probability of IOC for every difficulty score.ResultsThe difficulty level of LLR was rated as low, moderate, high and extremely high in 36 (28.1%), 63 (49.2%), 27 (21.1%) and 2 (1.6%) patients, respectively. IOC was present in 23 (17.9%) patients. Blood loss of >775 mL occurred in 8 (6.2%) patients. Conversion to open approach was required in 18 (14.0%) patients. No patients suffered from unintentional damage to surrounding structures. Rates of IOC (0, 9.5, 55.5 and 100%) increased gradually with statistically significant value among difficulty levels (P P ConclusionThis external validation proved this DSS based on patient’s, tumor and surgical factors enables us to estimate the risk of intra- and postoperative complications. A surgeon should be aware of an increased risk of complications before starting with more complex procedures.
- Published
- 2019
25. PERFORATION OF THE COLON AS A RESULT OF BLUNT ABDOMINAL TRAUMA: A CASE REPORTS
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Arpad Ivanecz, Miran Koželj, Zvonko Borovšak, Gregor Pivec, Stojan Potrč, and Mirjana Brvar
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abdominal injuries ,large intestine ,intestinal perforation ,associated injuries ,diagnosis ,Medicine - Abstract
Background. Blunt trauma to the abdomen is more likely to damage solid organs. Blunt injuries to the colon are uncommon and usually they follows a direct blow to the abdomen. Physical findings suggesting peritoneal iritation can be present early in the postinjury period but there is usually a delay in the manifestation of colonic injury. If the colonic perforation is present as a solitary injury, signs of peritoneal iritation are easier to recognize and they lead to further evaluation and operation. Because of the force required to injure the colon, associated injuries often coexist, consequently physical findings may be masked, diagnosis delayed, and outcome compromised.Conclusions. Additionaly, the recent trend for conservative management of blunt abdominal trauma may lead to delay in diagnosis. Perioperative antibiotics and early laparotomy with complete intra-abdominal exploration and primary repair of the colon injury usually provide excellent results.
- Published
- 2002
26. Outcomes and Risk Score for Distal Pancreatectomy with Celiac Axis Resection (DP-CAR) : An International Multicenter Analysis
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Klompmaker, S., Peters, N. A., van Hilst, J., Bassi, C., Boggi, U., Busch, O. R., Niesen, W., Van Gulik, T. M., Javed, A. A., Kleeff, J., Kawai, M., Lesurtel, M., Lombardo, C., Moser, A. J., Okada, K. -I., Popescu, I., Prasad, R., Salvia, R., Sauvanet, A., Sturesson, C., Weiss, M. J., Zeh, H. J., Zureikat, A. H., Yamaue, H., Wolfgang, C. L., Hogg, M. E., Besselink, M. G., Gerritsen, S. L., Adham, M., Albiol Quer, M. T., Berrevoet, F., Cesaretti, M., Dalla Valle, R., Darnis, B., Diener, M. K., Del Chiaro, M., Hackert, T. H., Grutzmann, R., Dumitrascu, T., Friess, H., Hirono, S., Ivanecz, A., Karayiannakis, A., Fusai, G. K., Labori, K. J., Lopez-Ben, S., Mabrut, J. -Y., Miyazawa, M., Pardo, F., Perinel, J., Roeyen, G., Graduate School, CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life, AGEM - Digestive immunity, AGEM - Re-generation and cancer of the digestive system, AGEM - Endocrinology, metabolism and nutrition, Surgery, CCA - Cancer biology and immunology, AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, and E-AHPBA DP-CAR Study Grp
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pancreatic Neoplasms/pathology ,SURGERY ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pancreatectomy/mortality ,Pancreatectomy ,Celiac artery ,Celiac Artery ,Pancreatic cancer ,medicine.artery ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Aged ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,Retrospective Studies ,Survival Rate ,Treatment Outcome ,Patient Selection ,Journal Article ,Medicine ,Survival rate ,ARTERY ,Framingham Risk Score ,business.industry ,Mortality rate ,Celiac Artery/surgery ,ADENOCARCINOMA ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,ddc ,MODEL ,Multicenter Study ,DEFINITION ,Oncology ,Hepatobiliary Tumors ,VOLUME ,Adenocarcinoma ,Human medicine ,business - Abstract
Background Distal pancreatectomy with celiac axis resection (DP-CAR) is a treatment option for selected patients with pancreatic cancer involving the celiac axis. A recent multicenter European study reported a 90-day mortality rate of 16%, highlighting the importance of patient selection. The authors constructed a risk score to predict 90-day mortality and assessed oncologic outcomes. Methods This multicenter retrospective cohort study investigated patients undergoing DP-CAR at 20 European centers from 12 countries (model design 2000–2016) and three very-high-volume international centers in the United States and Japan (model validation 2004–2017). The area under receiver operator curve (AUC) and calibration plots were used for validation of the 90-day mortality risk model. Secondary outcomes included resection margin status, adjuvant therapy, and survival. Results For 191 DP-CAR patients, the 90-day mortality rate was 5.5% (95 confidence interval [CI], 2.2–11%) at 5 high-volume (≥ 1 DP-CAR/year) and 18% (95 CI, 9–30%) at 18 low-volume DP-CAR centers (P = 0.015). A risk score with age, sex, body mass index (BMI), American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score, multivisceral resection, open versus minimally invasive surgery, and low- versus high-volume center performed well in both the design and validation cohorts (AUC, 0.79 vs 0.74; P = 0.642). For 174 patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, the R0 resection rate was 60%, neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapies were applied for respectively 69% and 67% of the patients, and the median overall survival period was 19 months (95 CI, 15–25 months). Conclusions When performed for selected patients at high-volume centers, DP-CAR is associated with acceptable 90-day mortality and overall survival. The authors propose a 90-day mortality risk score to improve patient selection and outcomes, with DP-CAR volume as the dominant predictor. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1245/s10434-018-07101-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2019
27. Surgery for Synchronous Colorectal Liver Metastases in 233 Consecutive Patients: Which One of the Three Different Strategies?
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Stojan Potrč, Arpad Ivanecz, B. Krebs, I. Plahuta, A. Stožer, and T. Magdalenić
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 2021
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28. Laparoscopic anatomical liver resection after complex blunt liver trauma: a case report
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Sasa Rudolf, Vid Pivec, Bojan Ilijevec, Arpad Ivanecz, and Stojan Potrč
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Percutaneous ,Complications ,lcsh:Surgery ,Blunt liver trauma ,Case Report ,Abdominal cavity ,030230 surgery ,Resection ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Blunt ,Laparoscopic ,medicine ,Bile leak ,Anatomical liver resection ,business.industry ,Biliary fistula ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,lcsh:RD1-811 ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blunt trauma ,Concomitant ,business - Abstract
Background Various minimally invasive therapies are important adjuncts to management of hepatic injuries. However, there is a certain subset of patients who will benefit from liver resection, but there are no reports in the literature on laparoscopic anatomical liver resection for the management of complications after blunt liver trauma. Case presentation A 20-year-old male was admitted to the Emergency Unit of a tertiary referral center following a car accident. The patient was hemodynamically stable, and a radiologic workup demonstrated an isolated grade 3 injury of the left hemiliver. Initially, a nonoperative management was indicated, but during days following the injury, a high-volume biliary fistula complicated the clinical course. Despite percutaneous drainage, the development of devastating consequences of biliary peritonitis was imminent. A pure laparoscopic anatomical liver resection was performed. Left lateral sectionectomy eliminated the source of bile leak, and the surgery was completed with abdominal cavity lavage. Postoperative outcome was uneventful, and the patient was discharged on day 9 after injury and day 4 after surgery returning to his normal activity. Conclusions In highly selected, hemodynamically stable patients with no other life-threatening concomitant injuries, laparoscopic liver resection in elective setting is feasible and safe for the management of complications after complex blunt trauma of the left liver. Extensive experience with hepatic surgery is needed, and surgeons should understand the increased risk they assume by taking on more complex surgical techniques.
- Published
- 2018
29. Outcomes After Distal Pancreatectomy with Celiac Axis Resection for Pancreatic Cancer: A Pan-European Retrospective Cohort Study
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Klompmaker, Sjors, van Hilst, Jony, Gerritsen, Sarah L, Adham, Mustapha, Teresa Albiol Quer, M, Bassi, Claudio, Berrevoet, Frederik, Boggi, Ugo, Busch, Olivier R, Cesaretti, Manuela, Dalla Valle, Raffaele, Darnis, Benjamin, De Pastena, Matteo, Del Chiaro, Marco, Grützmann, Robert, Diener, Markus K, Dumitrascu, Traian, Friess, Helmut, Ivanecz, Arpad, Karayiannakis, Anastasios, Fusai, Giuseppe K, Labori, Knut J, Lombardo, Carlo, López-Ben, Santiago, Mabrut, Jean-Yves, Niesen, Willem, Pardo, Fernando, Perinel, Julie, Popescu, Irinel, Roeyen, Geert, Sauvanet, Alain, Prasad, Raj, Sturesson, Christian, Lesurtel, Mickael, Kleeff, Jorg, Salvia, Roberto, Besselink, Marc G, Lykoudis, P., Hackert, T. H., Ateeb, Z., E-AHPBA DP-Car Study Grp, Graduate School, AGEM - Endocrinology, metabolism and nutrition, AGEM - Re-generation and cancer of the digestive system, CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life, AGEM - Digestive immunity, and Surgery
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Male ,FOLFIRINOX ,medicine.medical_treatment ,INTERNATIONAL STUDY-GROUP ,030230 surgery ,Gastroenterology ,THERAPY ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hepatic Artery ,Postoperative Complications ,Celiac Artery ,SURGERY ISGPS ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,pancreatic surgery ,Neoadjuvant therapy ,Western multicenter studies ,Celiac axis resection ,ASO Author Reflections ,Middle Aged ,Embolization, Therapeutic ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,ddc ,Europe ,Survival Rate ,Oncology ,Pancreatic fistula ,Chemotherapy, Adjuvant ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pancreatectomy ,Preoperative Period ,Female ,Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,CONSENSUS STATEMENT ,Antineoplastic Agents ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Pancreatic cancer ,medicine ,Humans ,Hepatic artery embolization ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,ARTERY ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,ADENOCARCINOMA ,Chemoradiotherapy, Adjuvant ,medicine.disease ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,DEFINITION ,Appleby procedure ,Surgery ,Human medicine ,business ,Hospitals, High-Volume - Abstract
Background Western multicenter studies on distal pancreatectomy with celiac axis resection (DP-CAR), also known as the Appleby procedure, for locally advanced pancreatic cancer are lacking. We aimed to study overall survival, morbidity, mortality and the impact of preoperative hepatic artery embolization (PHAE). Methods Retrospective cohort study within the European-African Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary-Association, on DP-CAR between 1-1-2000 and 6-1-2016. Primary endpoint was overall survival. Secondary endpoints were radicality (R0-resection), 90-day mortality, major morbidity, and pancreatic fistulae (grade B/C). Results We included 68 patients from 20 hospitals in 12 countries. Postoperatively, 53% of patients had R0-resection, 25% major morbidity, 21% an ISGPS grade B/C pancreatic fistula, and 16% mortality. In total, 82% received (neo-)adjuvant chemotherapy and median overall survival in 62 patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma patients was 18 months (CI 10–37). We observed no impact of PHAE on ischemic complications. Conclusions DP-CAR combined with chemotherapy for locally advanced pancreatic cancer is associated with acceptable overall survival. The 90-day mortality is too high and should be reduced. Future studies should investigate to what extent increasing surgical volume or better patient selection can improve outcomes.
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- 2018
30. Outcomes of the surgical treatment for adenocarcinoma of the cardia: single institution experience
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Bojan Krebs, Urska Marolt, Bojan Iljevec, Tomaz Jagric, Arpad Ivanecz, and Stojan Potrč
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medicine.medical_specialty ,complications ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Splenectomy ,R895-920 ,survival ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Single institution ,Esophagus ,Surgical treatment ,proximal gastric cancer ,D2 lymphadenectomy ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,transhiatal resection ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Resection margin ,Adenocarcinoma ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
BackgroundAdenocarcinomas at the cardia are biologically aggressive tumors with poor long-term survival following curative resection. For resectable adenocarcinoma of the cardia, mostly esophagus extended total gastrectomy or esophagus extended proximal gastric resection is performed; however, the surgical approach, transhiatal or transthoracic, is still under discussion. Postoperative morbidity, mortality and long-term survival were analyzed to evaluate the potential differences in clinically relevant outcomes.Patients and methodsOf altogether 844 gastrectomies performed between January 2000 and December 2016, 166 were done for the adenocarcinoma of the gastric cardia, which we analyzed with using the Cox proportional hazards model.Results136 were esophagus extended total gastrectomy and 125 esophagus extended proximal gastric resection. A D2 lymphadenectomy was performed in 88.2%, splenectomy in 47.2%, and multivisceral resections in 12.4% of patients. R0 resection rate was 95.7%. The mean proximal resection margin on the esophagus was 42.45 mm. It was less than 21 mm in 9 patients. Overall morbidity regarding Clavien-Dindo classification (> 1) was altogether 28.6%. 15.5% were noted as surgical and 21.1% as medical complications. The 30-day mortality was 2.2%. The 5-year survival for R0 resections was 33.4%. Multivisceral resection, depth of tumor infiltration, nodal stage, and curability of the resection were identified as independent prognostic factors.ConclusionsTranshiatal approach for resection of adenocarcinoma of the cardia is a safe procedure for patients with Siewert II and III regarding the postoperative morbidity and mortality; moreover, long-term survival is comparable to transthoracic approach. The complications associated with thoracoabdominal approach can therefore be avoided with no impact on the rate of local recurrence.
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- 2018
31. Correction to: Outcomes After Distal Pancreatectomy with Celiac Axis Resection for Pancreatic Cancer: A Pan-European Retrospective Cohort Study
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Claudio Bassi, Geert Roeyen, Knut Jørgen Labori, Jony van Hilst, Arpad Ivanecz, Jean-Yves Mabrut, Mickael Lesurtel, Traian Dumitrascu, M. Teresa Albiol Quer, Sjors Klompmaker, Carlo Lombardo, Robert Grützmann, Anastasios J. Karayiannakis, Jörg Kleeff, Irinel Popescu, Roberto Salvia, Julie Perinel, Frederik Berrevoet, Olivier R. Busch, Raj Prasad, Raffaele Dalla Valle, Benjamin Darnis, Helmut Friess, Willem Niesen, Marco Del Chiaro, Mustapha Adham, Sarah L. Gerritsen, Manuela Cesaretti, Christian Sturesson, Matteo De Pastena, Fernando Pardo, Marc G. Besselink, Giuseppe Fusai, Alain Sauvanet, Ugo Boggi, Santiago López-Ben, Markus K. Diener, Graduate School, AGEM - Endocrinology, metabolism and nutrition, AGEM - Re-generation and cancer of the digestive system, CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life, AGEM - Digestive immunity, and Surgery
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Celiac axis ,Correction ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Resection ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,Pan european ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pancreatic cancer ,Medicine ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Distal pancreatectomy ,business - Abstract
In the original article, the institutional author the E-AHPBA DP-CAR study group was misspelled. It is correct as reflected here. The original article has also been corrected.
- Published
- 2018
32. Can we improve the clinical risk score? The prognostic value of p53, Ki-67 and thymidylate synthase in patients undergoing radical resection of colorectal liver metastases
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Vid Pivec, Matjaž Horvat, Marko Sremec, Arpad Ivanecz, Stojan Potrč, Miroslav Palfy, and Rajko Kavalar
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Adult ,Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Time Factors ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Risk Assessment ,Thymidylate synthase ,Disease-Free Survival ,Decision Support Techniques ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Hepatectomy ,Humans ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Retrospective Studies ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Tissue microarray ,Hepatology ,biology ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,Gastroenterology ,food and beverages ,Retrospective cohort study ,Thymidylate Synthase ,Middle Aged ,Immunohistochemistry ,Ki-67 Antigen ,Treatment Outcome ,Tissue Array Analysis ,Predictive value of tests ,Ki-67 ,Multivariate Analysis ,biology.protein ,Female ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business ,Chi-squared distribution - Abstract
Objectives The aim of this study was to assess whether biological markers can provide prognostic information additional to that supplied by the clinical risk score (CRS) in patients with colorectal liver metastases. Methods A retrospective review of a prospectively maintained database was conducted. Patients selected for this study were treated between 1996 and 2011 with potentially curative liver surgery. Expressions of p53, Ki-67 and thymidylate synthase were assayed using immunohistochemical techniques on tissue microarrays. Results A total of 98 (24%) of 406 patients met the inclusion criteria. The median follow-up was 103 months. Analysis revealed a correlation between p53 protein overexpression and high CRS ( P = 0.058). Following multivariate analysis, only high CRS remained as an independent negative prognostic predictor of survival ( P = 0.018), as well as an indicator of early recurrence of disease ( P = 0.010). Of the biological markers investigated, only Ki-67 overexpression was identified as a positive predictor of survival on multivariate analysis ( P = 0.038). Conclusions Ki-67 overexpression was a positive predictor of survival. Only high CRS remained an independent negative prognostic predictor.
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- 2014
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33. The learning curve of laparoscopic liver resection: smooth and idealized with continuous improvement or true?
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Stojan Potrč, A. Stožer, Arpad Ivanecz, B. Krebs, and B. Ilijevec
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Learning curve ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,Radiology ,business ,Resection - Published
- 2018
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34. One-stage pure laparoscopic resection of primary colorectal cancer and synchronous hepatic metastases: a single institution experience
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Arpad Ivanecz, Stojan Potrč, B. Krebs, and I. Plahuta
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Colorectal cancer ,General surgery ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,One stage ,Laparoscopic resection ,Single institution ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2019
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35. Injury severity score is an important determinant of outcome of blunt liver trauma
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T. Jagric, Arpad Ivanecz, Matjaž Horvat, Stojan Potrč, and Marko Sremec
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Blunt ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,Injury Severity Score ,business ,Outcome (game theory) - Published
- 2016
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36. Electrochemotherapy of Colorectal Liver Metastases – Trial Update
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Erik Brecelj, Gorana Gasljevic, M. Marolt Music, Tomaz Jarm, Eldar M. Gadzijev, Gregor Sersa, Maja Cemazar, Ibrahim Edhemović, Arpad Ivanecz, Stojan Potrč, M. Bosnjak, Bor Kos, and Damijan Miklavčič
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Electrochemotherapy ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Treatment modality ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Electroporation ,medicine ,Bleomycin ,Prospective cohort study ,business - Abstract
Introduction: Electrochemotherapy was eveluated as a treatment modality for treatment of colorectal liver metastases. Prospective studies were designed to evaluate the feasibility, safety and efficacy.
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- 2016
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37. Pancreaticoduodenectomy for ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreatic head with venous resection
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Arpad Ivanecz, Stojan Potrč, Nina Kobilica, and Vojko Flis
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medicine.medical_specialty ,vein resection ,medicine.medical_treatment ,pancreatic cancer ,R895-920 ,030230 surgery ,Anastomosis ,Mesenteric Vein ,03 medical and health sciences ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Superior mesenteric vein ,Vein ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Pancreaticoduodenectomy ,Thrombosis ,Surgery ,Portal vein thrombosis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Splenic vein ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,cardiovascular system ,Radiology ,pancreaticoduodenectomy ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Recent reports have shown that patients with vascular tumour invasion who undergo concurrent vascular resection can achieve long-term survival rates equivalent to those without vascular involvement requiring pancreaticoduodenectomy alone. There is no consensus about which patients benefit from the portal-superior mesenteric vein resection and there is no consensus about the best surgical technique of vessel reconstruction (resection with or without graft reconstruction). As published series are small the aim of this study was to evaluate our experience in pancreatectomies with en bloc vascular resection and reconstruction of vessels. Methods Review of database at University Clinical Centre Maribor identified 133 patients (average age 65.4 ± 8.6 years, 69 female patients) who underwent pancreatoduodenectomy between January 2006 and August 2014. Clinical data, operative results, pathological findings and postoperative outcomes were collected prospectively and analyzed. Current literature and our experience in pancreatectomies with en bloc vascular resection and reconstruction of portal vein are reviewed. Results Twenty-two patients out of 133 (16.5%) had portal vein-superior mesenteric vein resection and portal vein reconstruction (PVR) during pancreaticoduodenectomy. In fourteen patients portal vein was reconstructed without the use of synthetic vascular graft. In these series two types of venous reconstruction were performed. When tumour involvement was limited to the superior mesenteric vein (SPV) or portal vein (PV) such that the splenic vein could be preserved, and vessels could be approximated without tension a primary end-to-end anastomosis was performed. When tumour involved the SMV-splenic vein confluence, splenic vein ligation was necessary. In the remaining eight procedures interposition graft was needed. Dacron grafts with 10 mm diameter were used. There was no infection after dacron grafting. One patient had portal vein thrombosis after surgery: it was thrombosis after primary reconstruction. There were no thromboses in patients with synthetic graft interposition. There were no significant differences in postoperative morbidity, mortality or grades of complication between groups of patients with or without a PVR. Median survival time in months was in a group with vein resection 16.13 months and in a group without vein resection 15.17 months. Five year survival in the group without vein resection was 19.5%. Comparison of survival curves showed equal hazard rates with log-rank p = 0.090. Conclusions Survival of patients with pancreatic cancer who undergo an R0 resection with reconstruction was comparable to those who have a standard pancreaticoduodenectomy with no added mortality or morbidity. Synthetic graft appeared to be an effective and safe option as an interposition graft for portomesenteric venous reconstruction after pancreaticoduodenectomy.
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- 2016
38. Preoperative synbiotic bowel conditioning for elective colorectal surgery
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Lidija Kompan, Matjaž Horvat, Stojan Potrč, Bojan Krebs, and Arpad Ivanecz
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Synbiotics ,Lymphocyte ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Administration, Oral ,Anthraquinones ,Adenocarcinoma ,Preoperative care ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Electrolytes ,Leukocyte Count ,Postoperative Complications ,Double-Blind Method ,Preoperative Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Large intestine ,Prospective Studies ,Therapeutic Irrigation ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,biology ,Cathartics ,Interleukin-6 ,business.industry ,Probiotics ,Prebiotic ,C-reactive protein ,Fibrinogen ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Colorectal surgery ,Surgery ,C-Reactive Protein ,Prebiotics ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,biology.protein ,Female ,Inflammation Mediators ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preoperative bowel cleaning for elective colorectal surgery is a routine procedure. Synbiotics (probiotics plus prebiotics) are known for their beneficial effects on gut immune function and maintenance of the gut barrier. The main purpose of this study was to replace preoperative mechanical bowel cleaning with synbiotics and to assess the systemic inflammatory response and clinical outcome in patients undergoing colorectal surgery. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A prospective double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trial was conducted in 68 patients. The first group of 20 patients received synbiotics, the second group of 28 patients prebiotics and heat-deactivated probiotics, and the third (control) group of 20 patients mechanical bowel cleaning prior to the operation. RESULTS: Significantly higher values of interleukin 6 (IL-6) were detected 72 h after the operation in the synbiotic group (P = 0.025), as well as an increase of fibrinogen at 24 h postoperatively (P = 0.030). No statistical differences were found in leukocytes count, C-reactive protein or the lymphocyte/granulocyte ratio. There were no differences in postoperative complications between the groups. Mean hospital stay was 9.2 days in the prebiotic group, 9.5 days in the control group, and 10.95 days in the synbiotic group. CONCLUSIONS: Preoperative administration of prebiotics in elective colorectal surgery appears to have the same protective effect in preventing a postoperative inflammatory response as mechanical bowel cleaning. Further prospective studies are needed to verify the effects of synbiotics.
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- 2010
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39. Liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma beyond BCLC recommendations
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Arpad Ivanecz, Matjaž Horvat, S. PotrÄ, T. JagriÄ, and Marko Sremec
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,General surgery ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Resection - Published
- 2016
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40. Surgical treatment of pancreatic cancer: Did we make any steps forward?
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V. Flis, Stojan Potrč, T. Jagric, Matjaž Horvat, and Arpad Ivanecz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Pancreatic cancer ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,business ,Surgical treatment ,Surgery - Published
- 2016
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41. Thoracobiliary fistulas: literature review and a case report of fistula closure with omentum majus
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Vid Pivec, Arpad Ivanecz, and Anton Crnjac
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medicine.medical_specialty ,thoracobiliary fistula ,bronchobiliary fistula ,treatment ,business.industry ,Radiofrequency ablation ,omentum majus ,Case Report ,Fistula closure ,Greater omentum ,Surgery ,law.invention ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,law ,Biliary tract ,Etiology ,medicine ,Bronchobiliary fistula ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Clinical case ,business - Abstract
Background. Thoracobiliary fistulas are pathological communications between the biliary tract and the bronchial tree (bronchobiliary fistulas) or the biliary tract and the pleural space (pleurobiliary fistulas). Review of the literature. We have reviewed aetiology, pathogenesis, predilection formation points, the clinical picture, diagnostic possibilities, and therapeutic options for thoracobiliary fistulas. Case report. A patient with an iatrogenic bronchobiliary fistula which developed after radiofrequency ablation of a colorectal carcinoma metastasis of the liver is present. We also describe the closure of the bronchobiliary fistula with the greater omentum as a possible manner of fistula closure, which was not reported previously according to the knowledge of the authors. Conclusions. Newer papers report of successful non-surgical therapy, although the bulk of the literature advocates surgical therapy. Fistula closure with the greater omentum is a possible method of the thoracobiliary fistula treatment.
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- 2012
42. P15 Morbidity, mortality, and survival of patients with proximal gastric adenocarcinoma after proximal subtotal gastrectomy – A comparative study
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T. Jagric, S. Potrc, and A. Ivanecz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cancer Research ,business.industry ,Stomach ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Quality of life ,Oncology ,medicine ,Morbidity mortality ,Adenocarcinoma ,Gastrectomy ,Lymphadenectomy ,Lymph ,business - Abstract
Background: The advantages of proximal resection with jejunal interposition and modified D2 lymphadenectomy, for elderly patients, could outweigh the higher risk of recurrence with this less radical lymphadenectomy. The aim of our study was to evaluate proximal resection with modified D2 lymphadenectomy as an alternative in selected patients. Methods: Between 1993 and 2009, 161 patients at our centre had surgery for adenocarcinoma of the proximal third of the stomach. Patients were divided into three groups: (1) PG, proximal resection with jejunal interposition and modified D2 lymphadenectomy (19.3%, 31 patients); (2) TH, transhiatal extended total gastrectomy with resection of the distal oesophagus and D2 lymphadenectomy (23.6%, 38 patients); (3) GT, total gastrectomy with D2 lymphadenectomy (57.1%, 92 patients). We analysed postoperative morbidity, 30-day mortality, and survival. Quality of life was evaluated with the gastrointestinal quality-of-life index (GIQLI) questionnaire. Findings: Patients in the PG group (79.4 ± 9 years) were significantly older than the patients in the GT (63.9 ± 11 years) or TH group (60.1 ± 12 years; p < 0.0001), and in worse general condition. Fewer lymph nodes were harvested in the PG group (17.2 ± 11) than in the GT and TH groups (24.05 ± 13 and 26.3 ± 13). There were no significant differences in the distribution of pathohistological characteristics and tumour TNM stages between groups. An R0 resection could be done in 77.2–86.8% of cases. 30-day mortality was 9.7% in the PG group, 6.5% in GT, and 5.3% in TH. There were no differences in morbidity and 5-year survival between groups (25.3% in PG, 26.3% in GT, and 28.9% in TH). No differences were found in the total scores of the GIQLI questionnaire (p = 0.893). Patients in the PG group had the lowest scores in digestive functions. Interpretation: Proximal resection should be reserved for highrisk elderly patients with proximal gastric cancer, who have shorter expected long-term survival. These resections carry acceptable morbidity and mortality; however, reconstruction with jejunal interposition does not bring the desired functional benefits. Funding: None. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.
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- 2011
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43. Does endoscopic ultrasound staging already allow individual treatment regimens in gastric cancer
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Marjan Skalicky, Stojan Potrč, and Arpad Ivanecz
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Endoscopic ultrasound ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Risk Assessment ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Endosonography ,Gastrectomy ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Preoperative Care ,Medicine ,Humans ,Tumor growth ,Stage (cooking) ,Lymph node ,Neoplasm Staging ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Treatment regimen ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Prognosis ,digestive system diseases ,Early Gastric Cancer ,Clinical trial ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Treatment Outcome ,Female ,Radiology ,business - Abstract
AIM: The aim of our study was to evaluate the accuracy of preoperative TNM staging with endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) in gastric cancer patients in comparison with the pathohistological stage of the resected specimen, and to determine the possible implications of EUS for individualized treatment of gastric cancer patients at our institution. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The study included 82 patients operated for resectable gastric cancer between January 1st 2001 and July 1st 2003 at the Maribor Teaching Hospital Department of Abdominal and General Surgery. The EUS stage was assessed preoperatively at the Endoscopical Unit, and the pathohistological stage in the resected specimen was determined postoperatively at the Department of Pathologic Morphology according to recommended standards. RESULTS: Comparison of EUS and pathohistological assessments revealed accuracy of EUS staging for locoregional tumor infiltration (category T) in 68% of patients. The accuracy of EUS staging was 68% for T1, 69% for T2, 69% for T3 and 60% for T4. Lymph nodes (category N) were correctly staged with EUS in 57% of cases. The EUS stage was correct for lymph nodes with no metastases (N−) in 40% of cases, and for lymph nodes with metastases (N+) in 90%. There was no significant difference in accuracy of EUS staging with regard to tumor site (P = 0.768) or tumor size (P = 0.766). CONCLUSIONS: According to our results the accuracy of EUS staging matched pathohistological staging with regard to tumor infiltration and lymph node stage in 68% and 57% of cases respectively. Underestimation of the final T2 and T3 stages as T1 stage by EUS presents a problem regarding the consistency of EUS examination at our institution, particularly with respect to individual treatment for early gastric cancer. The present uncertainty in EUS stage reliability makes it necessary to have a strategy of radical resection with D2 lymphadenectomy in patients within EUS stages T1–T3, with additional CT examinations in more advanced EUS stages in order to visualize the circumstances of tumor growth. Nevertheless, EUS provides an opportunity for the surgeon to gain more insight into the loco-regional circumstances of the gastric tumor process. For development of individual modes of treatment based on EUS staging, a more reliable assessment of EUS stage is mandatory.
- Published
- 2006
44. Life threatening bleeding from duodenal ulcer after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass: Case report and review of the literature
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Davorin Ćeranić, Marko Sremec, Pavel Skok, Arpad Ivanecz, and Stojan Potrč
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Gastrointestinal bleeding ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Gastric bypass surgery ,General surgery ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Stomach ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Case Report ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Roux-en-Y anastomosis ,digestive system diseases ,Endoscopy ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Laparotomy ,medicine ,Gastrectomy ,Upper gastrointestinal bleeding ,business - Abstract
Acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding is a rare, but serious complication of gastric bypass surgery. The inaccessibility of the excluded stomach restrains postoperative examination and treatment of the gastric remnant and duodenum, and represents a major challenge, especially in the emergency setting. A 59-year-old patient with previous history of peptic ulcer disease had an upper gastrointestinal bleeding from a duodenal ulcer two years after having a gastric bypass procedure for morbid obesity. After negative upper endoscopy finding, he was urgently evaluated for gastrointestinal bleeding. At emergency laparotomy, the bleeding duodenal ulcer was identified by intraoperative endoscopy through gastrotomy. The patient recovered well after surgical hemostasis, excision of the duodenal ulcer and completion of the remnant gastrectomy. Every general practitioner, gastroenterologist and general surgeon should be aware of growing incidence of bariatric operations and coherently possible complications after such procedures, which modify patient’s anatomy and physiology.
- Published
- 2014
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45. PP097-SUN PREOPERATIVE BOWEL CONDITIONING WITH SYNBIOTICS FOR ELECTIVE COLORECTAL SURGERY
- Author
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S. Potrc, L. Kompan, M. Horvat, and A. Ivanecz
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Synbiotics ,medicine ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,business ,Colorectal surgery ,Surgery - Published
- 2012
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46. Evaluation of focused sentinel lymph node RT-qPCR screening for micrometastases with the use of the Maruyama computer program
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M. Horvat, A. Ivanecz, Tomaž Marš, S. Potrc, T. Jagric, and Mojca Plankl
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,business.industry ,RT-qPCR ,Sentinel lymph node ,Micrometastasis ,Maruyama computer program ,Reverse transcriptase ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Original Article ,Surgery ,Gastric cancer ,business ,Lymph node - Abstract
Summary Background In this preliminary study, we investigated the sensitivity and specificity of reverse transcriptase (RT)-qPCR lymph node (LN) metastases detection, the accuracy of intraoperative dye navigation, and the incidence of micrometastasis (MM) detection with this protocol, compared to other published studies. Methods A total of 23 patients were enrolled in the study. The first stained LN was analyzed using RT-qPCR for carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and cytokeratin 20 (CK-20) expression, as markers for MM involvement. The Maruyama computer program was used to determine the most likely first metastatic site. These results were compared with the actual staining patterns to evaluate whether the first draining LN was extracted. We analyzed the correlations between MM and tumor characteristics. The incidence of MM detected with the present method was compared to other studies, as markers of the accuracy of the present protocol. Results At 35 threshold cycles, the RT-qPCR had a negative predictive value of 100 % and a positive predictive value of 83.3 %. MM were detected in 4 out of 14 node-negative patients (28.6 %). The extracted sentinel LN coincided in 76.9 % of cases with the most probable first metastatic LN predicted by the Maruyama program. MM were found more frequently in these ‘high-risk’ LNs. Significant differences were found in the Lauren’s histological type distribution and the age distribution among the MM-positive and MM-negative groups. Conclusion Our preliminary results confirm that RT-qPCR is an accurate method of MM detection, that the dye navigation enables the determination of the first draining LN, and that the incidence of MM detection with this focused sentinel LN protocol is comparable to other studies.
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47. P14 Screening for gastric-cancer micrometastases in a single sentinel lymph node with real-time PCR – A preliminary study with the Maruyama computer simulation
- Author
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Tomaž Marš, M. Horvat, Mojca Plankl, T. Jagric, S. Potrc, and A. Ivanecz
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Sentinel lymph node ,medicine ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,business - Full Text
- View/download PDF
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