Articles: cations.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Oct 2024
Novel Cancer Therapeutics: Perioperative Implications and Challenges.
Since the introduction of immunotherapy and targeted therapies, patients not only have adequate tumoral response to these treatments, but their quality of life has improved due to milder toxicities. However, due to their wide mechanisms of action, the toxicity profile for these therapies is broad, can have an insidious onset, and their recognition can be challenging. Rarely, some of these toxicities can cause significant morbidity if not diagnosed early and lead to intensive care unit (ICU) admission and death. ⋯ In some cases, they could be the first to make the diagnosis and therefore need to be prepared to rapidly assess, establish differentials, perform a diagnostic workup, and evaluate the impact the toxicity could have on the patients' care during the perioperative period. In this article, we set to review toxicities of novel cancer therapies such as checkpoint inhibitors and targeted therapies, that could present in the perioperative setting. This article will help as a guide for anesthesiologists to recognize their clinical presentation, the approach to their diagnosis, and their impact on patient care.
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To validate the ISGPS definition and grading system of PPAP after pancreatoduodenectomy (PD). ⋯ This first prospective, international validation study of the ISGPS definition and grading system for PPAP highlighted the relevant clinical and financial implications of this condition. These results stress the importance of routine screening for PPAP in patients undergoing PD.
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The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) requires neurosurgery residents to reach a set number of cases in specified procedure types (case minimums) before graduation and mandates completion of Milestones. We used the Surgical Autonomy Program, a validated method of autonomy-based resident evaluation, to determine the number of cases it took for residents to become competent and compared these with the ACGME case minimums. ⋯ We found variation in the case numbers to reach competency and that for some procedures (tumor, ACDF, PCF, discectomy/laminectomy, and PSF), most residents required more cases than the ACGME case minimums to achieve competency. The ACGME case minimums may not accurately reflect the number of cases required for neurosurgical residents to reach competency. To promote trainee-centered education, individualized, competency-based evaluation systems may be better determining readiness for graduation, including a system that builds off the established ACGME Milestones.
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Because of concerns about provider contamination during tracheostomy procedures in a pandemic such as COVID-19, it is essential to objectively evaluate aerosol generation in all tracheostomy approaches, including newly developed tracheostomy procedures. We performed open surgical tracheostomy (OST), conventional percutaneous tracheostomy (CPT), and novel percutaneous tracheostomy (NPT), a modification of CPT designed to reduce contamination spread, in pig models and then compared the degree of contamination to providers using Glo Germ (Glo Germ, Moab, UT, USA). ⋯ Our results suggest that OST causes significantly less aerosol contamination to providers than either CPT or NPT.