The Annals of thoracic surgery
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Minimally invasive esophagectomy (MIE) is accepted for resection of early esophageal cancers. The optimal surgical approach for more advanced disease is unknown. An evaluation of MIE in patients with advanced tumors having undergone neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (nCRT) is presented. ⋯ Minimally invasive esophagectomy is an acceptable surgical therapy for advanced-stage esophageal malignancies after nCRT without evidence for increased morbidity or mortality.
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Chylothorax associated with pulmonary resection for lung cancer, although rare, must be considered as a potential complication during thoracic surgery. In the present study, we investigated the effectiveness of a conservative approach (diet or pleurodesis) to the management of chylothorax. ⋯ Conservative treatment, including pleurodesis, should be the first choice of treatment for chylothorax complicating pulmonary resection.
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Despite modern advances in surgical care, triple-valve surgery (TVS) remains a challenge and carries a mortality of 10% to 20%. No validated risk score is available for TVS, and the effect of advanced age is unknown. This study examined our results in the modern era with the aim of identifying perioperative predictors of adverse outcomes. ⋯ TVS remains a surgical challenge in the modern era. Despite a trend of increasing age and surgical risk, the early mortality rate and long-term survival remain respectable. Advanced age is associated with increased perioperative risk, but age per se should not be a contraindication for TVS.
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Forty-four percent of patients with pathologic node negative (pN0) non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) die within 5 years of curative-intent surgical procedures. Heterogeneity in pathologic nodal examination practice raises concerns about the accuracy of nodal staging in these patients. We hypothesized a reciprocal relationship between the number of lymph nodes examined and the probability of missed lymph node metastasis and sought to identify the number of lymph nodes associated with the lowest mortality risk in pN0 NSCLC. ⋯ Lymph node evaluation falls far short of optimal in patients with resected pN0 NSCLC, raising the odds of underestimation of long-term mortality risk and failure to identify candidates for postoperative adjuvant therapy. This represents a major quality gap for which corrective intervention is warranted.