Annals of surgery
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To assess the relevance of the International Study Group of Liver Surgery (ISGLS) definition of posthepatectomy liver failure compared with 2 well-established criteria, 50-50 and PeakBili>7, as early predictors of posthepatectomy outcome. ⋯ ISGLS definition was less discriminatory than 50-50 and PeakBili>7 criteria in identifying patients at risk of posthepatectomy major complications or death.
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To study new-onset postoperative atrial fibrillation in patients with esophageal and junctional cancer. ⋯ A total of 473 patients (mean age: 63 years; 73% male) underwent resection, 51% 2-stage, 18% 3-stage, 12% transhiatal, and 19% extended total gastrectomy. Ninety-six (20%) patients developed new-onset AF, in 18%, 27%, 29%, and 14% of 2-, 3-, transhiatal, and extended total gastrectomy cohorts, respectively (P=0.05). Age, diabetes, neoadjuvant therapy, and cardiac history predisposed (P<0.05) to AF, and AF was significantly (P<0.0001) associated with pneumonia, pleural effusions requiring drainage, and maximum postoperative C-reactive protein (CRP) (P<0.05) but not with anastomotic leak/conduit necrosis or mortality. Amiodarone was the primary treatment in 63% of cases, 1% underwent cardioversion, and 92% were in sinus rhythm on discharge. At a median follow-up of 40 months (7-109 months), the median survival was 40 months versus 53 months in the AF and non-AF cohorts, respectively (P=0.353) CONCLUSIONS: New-onset AF is common, linked to age, diabetes, cardiac disease, and neoadjuvant therapy. It is strongly associated with complications, principally respiratory sepsis, and systemic inflammation. For most, it resolves, with no impact on oncologic outcomes.
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Because neural invasion (NI) is still inconsistently reported and not well characterized within gastrointestinal malignancies (GIMs), our aim was to determine the exact prevalence and severity of NI and to elucidate the true impact of NI on patient's prognosis. ⋯ NI prevalence and NI severity strongly vary within GIMs. Determination of NI severity in GIMs is a more precise tool than solely recording the presence of NI and revealed dismal prognostic impact on patients with AEG-II/III and PC. Evidently, NI is not a concomitant side feature in GIMs and, therefore, deserves special attention for improved patient stratification and individualized therapy after surgery.
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After rectal resection for adenocarcinoma, pathological examination may reveal invasion of the distal margin (DM) and/or a circumferential resection margin of the tumor (CRM-T) or of involved nodes (CRM-N) less than or equal to 1 mm. Such findings transform a planned R0 resection to R1. ⋯ R1 resection is associated with a worse prognosis, but local recurrence rate does not differ significantly from matched R0 resections. The difference was observed for distant recurrences, especially lung, favoring the use of chemotherapy and close surveillance of the thorax.
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To evaluate the histopathologic response to neoadjuvant therapy in esophageal adenocarcinoma according to impact on prognosis and to suggest a classification for clinical routine. ⋯ A combined classification of primary tumor regression and lymph node status in 3 grades represents a simple and reproducible prognostic classification of the effect of neoadjuvant treatment in esophageal adenocarcinoma.