4 results on '"Bergamaschi, Roberto"'
Search Results
2. Statistical, Clinical, Methodological Evaluation of Local Recurrence Following Transanal Total Mesorectal Excision for Rectal Cancer: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Wasmuth HH, Gachabayov M, Bokey L, Fingerhut A, Orangio GR, Remzi FH, and Bergamaschi R
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bias, Data Management, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Margins of Excision, Middle Aged, Natural Orifice Endoscopic Surgery methods, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Norway epidemiology, Observational Studies as Topic, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Rectal Neoplasms pathology, Risk Factors, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Proctectomy methods, Rectal Neoplasms surgery, Transanal Endoscopic Surgery methods
- Abstract
Background: A recent Norwegian moratorium challenged the status quo of transanal total mesorectal excision for rectal cancer by reporting increased early multifocal local recurrences., Objective: The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate the local recurrence rates following transanal total mesorectal excision as well as to assess statistical, clinical, and methodological bias in reports published to date., Data Sources: The PubMed and MEDLINE (via Ovid) databases were systematically searched., Study Selection: Descriptive or comparative studies reporting rates of local recurrence at a median follow-up of 6 months (or more) after transanal total mesorectal excision were included., Interventions: Patients underwent transanal total mesorectal excision., Main Outcome Measures: Local recurrence was any recurrence located in the pelvic surgery site. The untransformed proportion method of 1-arm meta-analysis was utilized. Untransformed percent proportion with 95% confidence interval was reported. Ad hoc meta-regression with the Omnibus test was utilized to assess risk factors for local recurrence. Among-study heterogeneity was evaluated: statistically by I2 and τ2, clinically by summary tables, and methodologically by a 33-item questionnaire., Results: Twenty-nine studies totaling 2906 patients were included. The pooled rate of local recurrence was 3.4% (2.7%-4.0%) at an average of 20.1 months with low statistical heterogeneity (I2 = 0%). Meta-regression yielded no correlation between complete total mesorectal excision quality (p = 0.855), circumferential resection margin (p = 0.268), distal margin (p = 0.886), and local recurrence rates. Clinical heterogeneity was substantial. Methodological heterogeneity was linked to the excitement of novelty, loss aversion, reactivity to criticism, indication for transanal total mesorectal excision, nonprobability sampling, circular reasoning, misclassification, inadequate follow-up, reporting bias, conflict of interest, and self-licensing., Limitations: The studies included had an observational design and limited sample and follow-up., Conclusion: This systematic review found a pooled rate of local recurrence of 3.4% at 20 months. However, given the substantial clinical and methodological heterogeneity across the studies, the evidence for or against transanal total mesorectal excision is inconclusive at this time., Competing Interests: Twenty-nine studies totaling 2906 patients were included. The pooled rate of local recurrence was 3.4% (2.7%–4.0%) at an average of 20.1 months with low statistical heterogeneity (I2 = 0%). Meta-regression yielded no correlation between complete total mesorectal excision quality (p = 0.855), circumferential resection margin (p = 0.268), distal margin (p = 0.886), and local recurrence rates. Clinical heterogeneity was substantial. Methodological heterogeneity was linked to the excitement of novelty, loss aversion, reactivity to criticism, indication for transanal total mesorectal excision, nonprobability sampling, circular reasoning, misclassification, inadequate follow-up, reporting bias, conflict of interest, and self-licensing., (Copyright © The ASCRS 2021.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. No news from Norway.
- Author
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Karas JR and Bergamaschi R
- Subjects
- Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Male, Norway, Perineum surgery, Recurrence, Rectal Prolapse surgery
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The impact of sleep deprivation on product quality and procedure effectiveness in a laparoscopic physical simulator: a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Uchal M, Tjugum J, Martinsen E, Qiu X, and Bergamaschi R
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Medical Staff, Hospital, Norway, Nursing Staff, Hospital, Peptic Ulcer Perforation surgery, Reproducibility of Results, Suture Techniques, Clinical Competence, Computer Simulation, Laparoscopy, Sleep Deprivation
- Abstract
Background: To compare the impact of sleep deprivation after 24-hour duty (post-call) with that of 8-hour work (post-work) on product quality (PQ) and procedure effectiveness (PE) in a laparoscopic physical simulator., Methods: Voluntary surgeons and nurses were pretested with the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) and Minimally Invasive Surgical Trainer-Virtual Reality (MIST-VR). Surgical task was suturing perforated ulcer on a foam stomach in a physical simulator. PQ and PE were measured by accuracy error (AE), tissue damage (TD) leak rate (LR), goal- (GDA) non-goal-directed actions (NGDA), and operating time (OT), respectively. Construct validity was assessed comparing measures when surgeons and nurses performed the surgical task. Inter-rater reliability (IRR) was assessed by Kendall's tau b coefficient. An 80% power parallel block randomization design at alpha = .05 required 60 subjects., Results: Thirty-two post-call surgeons and 32 post-work surgeons were well matched for age, gender, practice duration, and ESS and MIST-VR scores. The amount of time slept in the previous 24 hours was 1.5 versus 6.5 hours (P < .05). AE (1.0 mm vs. .5 mm), TD (2.18 mm vs. 2.18 mm), LR (56.2% vs. 65.6%), GDA (33.5 vs. 32.5), NGDA (.56 vs. .31), and OT (381.0 seconds vs. 364.5 seconds) were not significantly different when 32 surgeons in the post-call arm were compared with their 32 counterparts in the post-work arm, respectively. Construct validity was shown by significant improvement in 4 outcome measures (AE 1.0 mm vs. 2.0 mm, P = .00001; GDA 32.5 vs. 39.0, P = .07, NGDA .43 vs. .96, P = .045; and OT 377.5 vs. 557.0, P = .0005) when 64 surgeons performed the task as compared to 64 nurses. Tau b for IRR was 1.0 (P < .0001) for AE, TD, LR, and OT, .75 (P = .325) for GDA, and .77 (P = .305) for NGDA., Conclusions: Sleep deprivation had no impact on the studied outcome measures of a surgical task performed in a laparoscopic simulator.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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