PS01.216: INTRODUCING MINIMAL INVASIVE OESOPHAGECTOMY AT A DEPARTMENT

2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 111-111
Author(s):  
Alan Ainsworth ◽  
Michael Larsen ◽  
Claus Fristrup

Abstract Background Minimal invasive oesophagectomy has gained increasing popularity. This study reports the results of the first two years after introducing the technique at our department. Methods All procedures have been prospectively registered in a database. All patients were followed until death, 2 years after surgery, or end of the inclusion period. Results 140 procedures were performed (23 November 2015 to 1 February 2018). There were 19 women and 121 men. Median age was 67 years (range 16–83 years). Pathologic T-and N-stage is shown in table 1. Patients were divided into the first 70 patients and the last 70 patients. The mean procedure time was 352 minutes for the ‘first patients’ and 331 minutes for the ‘last patients’ (P < 0.001). The risk for conversion to open surgery in the abdominal procedure was 6% for the ‘first patients’ and 9% for the ‘last patients’ (NS). For the thoracic procedure the corresponding figures were 11% and 6% (NS), respectively. Median length of postoperative stay was 9 days for both groups. The risk of anastomotic leakage was 16% (‘first patients’) and 11% (‘last patients’) (NS). However, in only 4% and 7%, respectively, endoscopic or surgical treatment was required. For all 140 patients, pulmonary complications were observed in 26 cases (18%) and cardiac complications were registered in 15 cases (11%).The 30 day mortality rate was 3% (131 patients) and the 1 year survival rate was 83% (53 patients). Table 1: Pathologic T-and N-stage Conclusion Minimal invasive oesophagectomy can be introduced at a department with acceptable short time morbidity. Disclosure All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 109-110
Author(s):  
Temisanren Akitikori ◽  
Bruno Lorenzi ◽  
Kanatheepan Shanmuganathan ◽  
Oluwasunmisola Soile ◽  
Aadil Hussain ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Totally minimally invasive oesophagectomy although challenging to perform has garnered popularity in the surgical treatment of oesophageal cancer. Advanced laparoscopic surgical skills are needed with the construction of the intra-thoracic anastomosis in the case of a 2-stage procedure being the rate-limiting step. We aim to report our initial experience and short-term outcomes of totally minimally invasive 3-stage and 2-stage oesophagectomies for cancer. Methods From January 2016 when the minimally invasive oesophagectomy programme was implemented in our Unit, to December 2017, 65 consecutive cases underwent either a 2-stage or a 3-stage oesophagectomy for cancer. In all cases a radical 2-field lymph node dissection was performed. All were performed in a prone position and in the 3-stage oesophagectomies, superior mediastinal lympadenectomy was additionally performed. In the 2-stage cases an end-to-side esophago-gastric anastomosis was constructed in two layers with barbed knotless suture (V-LocTM). Results Male: female was 4:1 with a mean age of 66.44 years (IQR, 43–82). n = 53 were 2-stage and 12 were 3-stage oesophagectomies. Thirty five (53.8%) had neoadjuvant chemotherapy and 30(46.2%) went straight to surgery. There were no open conversions. No feeding jejunostomies were placed routinely. Complete resection (R0) rate was 61.54% (40/65) with a mean lymph node harvest of 28 (IQR, 11–68). Five (7.6%) anastomotic leaks were diagnosed (4 in 2-stage and 1 in 3-stage oesophagectomies), with 1(1.5%) of them (in the 2-stage group) being subclinical requiring no intervention. Furthermore, 1(1.5%) chyle leak and 1(1.5%) gastric staple line leak were also observed. Pulmonary complications were reported in 13.8% of cases and cardiac complications arose in 1.5%. Seven (10.8%) anastomotic strictures were also noted that were treated with endoscopic balloon dilatation. Mean hospital stay was 13 days and 30-day mortality rate was 4.62%. Conclusion Implementation of a minimally invasive oesophagectomy program in our high-volume tertiary centre is yielding good initial results. Vast previous experience in the field is of paramount importance. Hand-sewn intrathoracic anastomosis during 2-stage procedures is feasible and with repetitively good outcomes. Disclosure All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.


2019 ◽  
Vol 32 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
B F Kingma ◽  
P P Grimminger ◽  
M J van Det ◽  
Y K Chao ◽  
P Chiu ◽  
...  

Abstract Aim The aim of this study was to gain insight in the techniques and outcomes of RAMIE worldwide. Background & Methods Although robot-assisted minimally invasive esophagectomy (RAMIE) is increasingly adopted. The current literature on RAMIE mainly consists of single-center case series with considerable variation in reported techniques and outcomes. To gain an overview of the worldwide practice in RAMIE, an online registry was established by the Upper GI International Robotic Association (UGIRA). The collected data involve patient- and treatment characteristics, as well as postoperative outcomes that include complications as defined by the Esophageal Complications Consensus Group, length of stay, re-admissions (i.e. <30 days after discharge), mortality (i.e. in-hospital or <30 days after surgery), and pathological results. The outcomes were descriptively analyzed for this interim report. Results A total of 434 patients who underwent RAMIE for esophageal cancer between 2016-2019 were included in this interim analysis. The mean age was 63 years (SD ±9.7), the majority was male (n=359, 83%), and nearly all patients had an ASA score ≥2 (n=398, 92%). Adenocarcinoma (n=253, 58%) and squamous cell carcinoma (n=162, 37%) were most prevalent. The usual surgical approach was transthoracic (n=428, 99%) with the patient in semiprone position (n=393, 91%). Gastric conduit reconstruction was performed in all except one patient, who received a colonic interposition. The anastomosis was created by hand-sewing (n=207, 48%), circular stapling (n=142, 32%), or linear stapling (n=85, 20%). The median intraoperative blood loss was 120 milliliters (IQR 70-280) and the median operating time was 392 minutes (IQR 353-455). Postoperative complications occurred in 251 patients (59%) and mainly involved pulmonary complications (n=138, 32%), anastomotic leakage (n=80, 18%), and cardiac complications (n=55, 13%). Mortality occurred in 9 patients (2%) and re-admission because of complications was required in 57 patients (14%). A median of 28 lymph nodes (IQR 21-35) were removed and a radical resection was achieved in 400 patients (92%). Conclusion The presented results are the first to provide an overview of the techniques that are commonly used in RAMIE. By demonstrating results that are in line with recent benchmarking literature, this study demonstrates the safety and feasibility of RAMIE.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 562-562
Author(s):  
Antonella Meloni ◽  
Cristina Tassi ◽  
Maria Grazia Batzella ◽  
Francesca Valeria Commendatore ◽  
Giorgio Giannotti ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Cardiac complications are the main cause of death in thalassemia major (TM) patients. Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (CMR) plays a key role in their management, assessing myocardial iron overload (MIO), biventricular function, atrial dimensions, and myocardial fibrosis. We evaluated the predictive value of CMR parameters for cardiac complications, including heart failure (HF), arrhythmias and pulmonary hypertension (PH). Methods We followed prospectively 537 white TM patients enrolled in the MIOT network. Fifty patients were excluded from the analysis because a cardiac complication was present at the time of the first CMR. All prognostic variables associated with the outcome at the univariate Cox model were placed in the multivariate model and were ruled out if they did not significantly improve the adjustment. Results At baseline the mean age was 29.5±9.0 years and 222 patients were males. The mean follow-up time was 58±18 months. After the first CMR only the 37.8% of the patients did not change the chelation regimen or the frequency/dosage. Conclusions We detected few cardiac events thanks to a MR-guided, patient-specific adjustment of the chelation therapy. Severe and homogeneous MIO, myocardial fibrosis and ventricular dysfunction identify patients at high risk of heart failure. Heart T2* doesn’t have any power in predicting arrhythmias while male sex and atrial dilation are independent prognosticators. Male sex, severe and homogeneous MIO, myocardial fibrosis and ventricular dysfunction identify patients at high risk of cardiac complications globally considered. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 188-188
Author(s):  
Tina Maghsoudi ◽  
Anke Wilhelm ◽  
Michael Beumer ◽  
Karl Oldhafer

Abstract Background Postoperative pulmonary complications are a common course of serious morbidity after esophageal resection. In literature rates of pneumonia are quoted up to 38%. Recent studies showed that minimally invasive esophagectomy could reduce this to 9 to 15%, but is this the only approach to lower the incidence of postoperative pneumonia? Methods We analysed our data from esophagectomies performed in our department between 2014 to 2017. Only procedures with thoracotomy due to malignancies were included. All patients received a single shot dose of piperacillin/tazobactam repeated after 4 hours during operation. Bronchoscopy was performed intraoperatively with bronchial toilet. Patients at risk (COPD or viscous secretion) recieved antibiotics for further 7 days. If postoperatively elevation of CRP or leucocytes ocurred, thorax CT scan was performed. Only when pulmonary infiltrates were visible pneumonia was diagnosed. Results 151 operations due to esophageal cancer were performed. Extended gastrectomies, minimal invasive esophagectomies with thoracoscopy and transhiatal resections were excluded. Only Ivor-Lewis resectios (108), McKeown resections (8) and colon interpositions (2) were analysed. The all over pneumonia rate was 13,6% (16 patients). The 30 day mortality was 2,5%. None of the patients died due to pneumonia. Conclusion To reduce postoperative pneumonia rates is an important aim in esophageal surgery. Latest data showed that minimally invasive surgery is adequate to achieve this. But not every patient is suitable for this procedure. From our single center experience we could show that also intraopereative bronchial toilet together with prophylactic antibiotic therapy could achieve good results. Disclosure All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.


2017 ◽  
pp. 103-106
Author(s):  
Minh Duc Pham

Background: Conventional three–port laparoscopic appendectomy is becoming popular for the treatment of acute appendicitis. In this report, we present the early results of a new technique of laparoscopic appendectomy conducted through a single-port. Patients and Methods: From March 2011 to October 2013, we have performed 86 operations Single Port Laparoscopic Appendectomy at Hue University Hospital and Hue Central Hospital. SILS Port (Covidien) is used, it can be performed with basic laparoscopic instruments. Results: In this study, 86 patients underwent Single-Port laparoscopic appendectomy, among them 52.33% were femele, 47.67% were male, female/male ratio was 1.09. The mean age was 33.09. An orther trocar insertion was required in 2 patients (2.33%). The mean operation time was 42.03 minutes and mean postoperative hospital stay 3.37 days. Postoperative complication occurred in 2 case (2.33%) was of omphalitis. During 2 weeks follow up, 2 case (2.33%) was of omphalitis. Conclusions: Single - port intracorporeal appendectomy is a safe, minimal invasive procedure with excellent cosmetic results. Key words: Single Port Laparoscopic Appendectomy, appendectomy


BJS Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rohan R Gujjuri ◽  
Muhammed Elhadi ◽  
Hamza Umar ◽  
Manjunath S Subramanya ◽  
Richard P T Evans ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Oesophagectomy is being increasingly performed in an ageing population that is observing a concomitant growth in the life expectancy. However, the risks are poorly quantified, and this study aims to review current evidence to further quantify the postoperative of oesophagectomy in the elderly population compared to younger patients. Methods A systematic electronic search was conducted for studies reporting oesophagectomy in the elderly population. Meta-analysis was performed using random-effects modelling to compute odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI). Primary outcome was overall complications and secondary outcomes included anastomotic leaks, cardiac complications, pulmonary complications, overall and disease-free survival. Meta-regression was performed to identify study-, hospital- and patient-level factors confounding study findings. Results This review included 37 eligible studies involving 61,723 patients. Increasing age was significantly associated with increased rates of overall complications (OR: 1.67, CI 95%: 1.42 – 1.97), cardiac complications (OR: 1.62, CI 95%: 1.10 – 2.40), pulmonary complications (OR: 1.44, CI 95%: 1.11 – 1.87) and decreased 5-year overall survival (OR: 1.36, CI 95%: 1.11 – 1.66) and 5-year disease-free survival (OR: 1.66, CI 95%: 1.40 – 1.97). Rates of anastomotic leaks showed no difference between elderly and younger patients (OR: 1.06, CI 95%: 0.71 – 1.59). Conclusion Postoperative outcomes such as overall complications, 5-year overall survival and disease-free survival appear to significantly worse in all age cut-offs in this meta-analysis. Sarcopenia and frailty act as better predictors of postoperative outcomes than chronological age. This study confirms the preconceived suspicions of increased risks in elderly patients following oesophagectomy and will aid future pre-operative counselling and informed consent.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Chu ◽  
Lu Wang ◽  
Xin Liu ◽  
Chengbin Chu ◽  
Yang Sui

Ambulance location problem is a key issue in Emergency Medical Service (EMS) system, which is to determine where to locate ambulances such that the emergency calls can be responded efficiently. Most related researches focus on deterministic problems or assume that the probability distribution of demand can be estimated. In practice, however, it is difficult to obtain perfect information on probability distribution. This paper investigates the ambulance location problem with partial demand information; i.e., only the mean and covariance matrix of the demands are known. The problem consists of determining base locations and the employment of ambulances, to minimize the total cost. A new distribution-free chance constrained model is proposed. Then two approximated mixed integer programming (MIP) formulations are developed to solve it. Finally, numerical experiments on benchmarks (Nickel et al., 2016) and 120 randomly generated instances are conducted, and computational results show that our proposed two formulations can ensure a high service level in a short time. Specifically, the second formulation takes less cost while guaranteeing an appropriate service level.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 3827-3827
Author(s):  
Francesca Ferraro ◽  
Christopher A Miller ◽  
Amy Abdalla ◽  
Nichole Helton ◽  
Nathan Salomonis ◽  
...  

Currently, it is not clear why some patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) can be "cured" with chemotherapy alone; are they living with small amounts of disease that is held in check by immunologic (or other) mechanisms, or is their disease really eradicated? The percentage of cytogenetically normal AML patients who have long (>5 years) first remissions (LFRs) after chemotherapy alone is low (about 9.1% in patients <60 years and 1.6% in >60 years1). For this reason, most intermediate risk patients are offered allogeneic transplantation to decrease their risk for relapse. To better understand mechanisms of chemotherapy sensitivity in AML, we performed an analysis of the mutation landscape and persistence, using samples from 8 normal karyotype LFR patients (without CEBPA mutations) who received standard "7+3" induction and high dose cytarabine consolidation as their only therapy. The mean age at diagnosis was 43.5 years, and the mean follow up in first remission is 7.6 years; none of these patients has relapsed to date. For each case, we performed enhanced exome sequencing at diagnosis (235x coverage of the entire exome, and ~1008x coverage of recurrently mutated AML genes). Each case had at least one documented AML driver mutation, with a median of 29 somatic mutations in the exome space. We created probes for 225 mutations (mean 28 per case), and performed error-corrected sequencing (Haloplex) for all available remission samples. The mean depth of Haloplex coverage was 1607x, and each sample had at least one AML-specific mutation assayed, with a sensitivity of 1 cell in 1,750 (0.06%). 7/8 patients demonstrated complete clearance of all mutations in all remission samples tested, which was confirmed with digital droplet PCR for 5 cases, with a sensitivity of detection of 1 cell in 100,000. In one case, we detected a persistent ancestral clone harboring DNMT3AR882H, which can be associated with long first remissions for some patients2. Strikingly, the founding clone in all 8 cases had one or more somatic mutations in genes known to drive cell proliferation (e.g. MYC, FLT3, NRAS, PTPN11, Figure 1 top panel). These are usually subclonal mutations that occur late during leukemic progression, suggesting that the presence of a "proliferative hit" in the founding clone might be important for chemotherapy clearance of all the AML cells in a given patient. To support this hypothesis, we analyzed the mutational clearance of 82 AML cases with paired diagnosis and day 30 post-chemotherapy bone marrow samples. We observed that, whether present in the founding clone or in subclones, mutations in MYC, CEBPA, FLT3, NRAS, and PTPN11 cleared after induction chemotherapy in all samples, while other mutations were often persistent at day 30 (e.g. DNMT3A, IDH1, IDH2, NPM1, TET2; Figure 1 bottom panel). Compared to other published sequencing studies of AML, MYC and NRAS mutations were significantly enriched in this small cohort (MYC p= 0.002, and NRAS p= 0.034), with MYC enrichment being particularly striking (37.5% versus 1.8%). All MYC mutations were canonical single base substitutions occurring in the highly conserved MYC Box 2 domain at the N-terminus of MYC (p.P74Q or p.T73N). Overexpression of MYCP74Q in murine hematopoietic progenitors prolonged MYC half life (89 min vs. 44 min for wild type), and enhanced cytarabine sensitivity at all concentrations tested (range 10-1000 nM, p=0.0003), both in vitro and in a MYC-driven leukemia model in vivo. MYC expression measured with flow cytometry in the blasts of the LFR samples was significantly higher (p=0.045) compared to unfavorable risk (complex karyotype) or other intermediate risk categories, but similar to good risk AML (biallelic CEBPA mutations, core binding factor fusion-associated AML, and AML with isolated NPMc), suggesting that activation of the MYC pathway may represent a shared feature of chemosensitive patients. Taken together, these data suggest that some intermediate patients who are effectively "cured" with chemotherapy alone may not have persistent subclinical disease, nor retained ancestral clones that could potentially contribute to relapse. Importantly, these patients often have mutations driving cell proliferation in the founding clone, indicating that the presence of specific mutations in all malignant cells may be critical for complete AML cell clearance with chemotherapy. 1. Blood Adv. 2018 Jul 10; 2(13): 1645-1650 2. N Engl J Med 2018; 378:1189-1199 Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 5164-5164
Author(s):  
Emilia Jaskula ◽  
Janusz Lange ◽  
Monika Mordak-Domagala ◽  
Mariola Sedzimirska ◽  
Marta Lemieszewska ◽  
...  

In our previous study (Jaskula et al., Blood 2017 130:1420) we reported that the number of CNVs within the KANSL1 gene was associated with the phenotype of AML. In the present study we looked at the presence of CNV across the whole genome. One hundred and twenty seven AML patients (diagnosed according to the FAB/WHO criteria, F/M=62/65, age median: 57, range: 21 - 84 years) were included to the present study. The patients were genetically analysed including GTG karyotyping and/or FISH for X or Y deletion, inv (3), -5/5q-, -7/7q-,+8, MLL, RUNX1, PML/RARA or RARA, inv(16). In all patients the microarray analysis of the bone marrow cells having blasts cells (median value 56%) at diagnosis Agilent - Catalog Agilent Cancer CGH+SNP 180K (74 patients) or Roche - WG Catalog NimbleGene 12x270K (53 patients) microarrays were employed and the results were analysed with the use the Partek software employing the Partek Hidden Markov Model (HMM) and segmentation algorithms. Results: The number of CNV in M0 AML marrow cells was significantly lower (median: 0 aberration), as compared to secondary to MDS AML (median: 4.5 aberrations, p=0.006). Patients with AML subtypes from M1 to M6 had higher number of CNV amplifications (median: 2) as compared to the patients with minimally differentiated blasts (M0, median: 0 amplifications, p=0.030). Knowing that (i) changes in the chromatin structure may be associated with the CNV prevalence within the genome (Gheldof et al., PLoS One. 2013 Nov 12;8(11):e79973) and (ii) the aberrant expression of CD19 in AML blasts results from the chromatin structure variations (Walter et al., Oncogene. 2010 May 20;29(20):2927-37) we looked at the presence of association between the numbers of CNV and the presence of the aberrant CD19 expression in the leukemic blasts. It appeared that 11 AML patients having aberrant expression of CD19 (within whom 4 had t(8:21)) had more frequently CNV deletions than those lacking this aberrant expression (median: 2 vs 1 deletions, p=0.018, HMM algorithm). Having the survival curves of the patients plotted accordingly to the high and low numbers of CNV, the situation is more complex and shows that: the patients having higher numbers of CNV aberrations (exceeding the mean of the whole group +SD) enjoyed better survival (20% vs 11%, p=0.090) when segmentation algorithm was employed. HMM analysis also suggested that the higher values of CNV (amplifications, exceeding the mean of the whole group +SD) was associated with better 5-year survival as compared to those with low numbers (42% vs 20%, ns). The aberrant expression of CD19 analysis was associated with higher numbers of deletions (see above) and with better 5-year survival than those lacking this aberrant expression (45% vs 20%, p=0.064). In conclusion, the prevalence of CNV within the genome shapes the phenotype of the leukemia and facilitates the survival. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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