Annals of surgery
-
Patients who have a bowel resection for mesenteric infarction may require parenteral nutrition (PN). This study primarily aimed to determine the aetiological factors for a mesenteric infarction and the effects of restoring bowel continuity on the long-term PN requirements. ⋯ A thrombotic tendency is the main etiological factor in most patients younger than 60 years. An anastomosis of the remaining jejunum to the colon can allow PN to be stopped.
-
To evaluate the association of tumor-associated neutrophils (TANs) with malignant progression in intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs) and to study the cyst fluid from these lesions for biomarkers of the inflammation-carcinogenesis association. ⋯ In this study, TANs were strongly associated with malignant progression in IPMNs. Measurement of CFIMs may be a surrogate marker for IPMN progression and allow for the identification of high-risk disease.
-
We aimed to investigate the optimal cutoff value of circumferential resection margin (CRM) of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) in patients who underwent radical esophagectomy. ⋯ In patients with ESCC, we developed new, 3-tiered CRM criteria providing more detailed prognostic information than the 2-tiered criteria.
-
Evaluate the current status of Hepatopancreatobiliary (HPB) Surgery workforce in North America. ⋯ A cohesive strategy for responsibly responding to the HPB surgical workforce requirements of North America is needed. Elevation of training standards, standardization of requirements for certification, and careful modeling that accounts for regionalization of care should be pursued to prevent overtraining and decentralization of HPB surgical care in the future.
-
To investigate the legitimacy of 90-day mortality as a measure of hepatopancreatobiliary quality. ⋯ The 99- and 118-day definitions of postoperative mortality optimally reflected surgery-related mortality after hepatobiliary and pancreatic operations, respectively. However, among commonly reported metrics, the 90-day overall mortality rate represents a legitimate measure of surgical quality.