Annals of surgical oncology
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Preoperative/neoadjuvant therapy (NT) is increasingly utilized for the treatment of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). However, little data exist regarding information on the use of additional postoperative therapy following NT. The lymph node ratio (LNR) is a prognostic marker of oncologic outcomes after NT and resection. In this study, we evaluated the effectiveness of postoperative therapy following NT, stratified by LNR. ⋯ Postoperative chemotherapy after NT in patients with low LNR is associated with improved oncologic outcomes.
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A significant proportion of women who have breast-conserving surgery (BCS) subsequently undergo re-excision or proceed to mastectomy. This study aimed to identify factors associated with residual disease after repeat surgery and to determine their effect on ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR) and survival. ⋯ A higher risk of IBTR seen after re-excision was associated with residual disease. Overall survival was similar regardless of repeat surgery and residual findings.
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Circumferential resection margins (CRM) for esophageal cancer (EC), defined by the College of American Pathologists (CAP; >0 mm) or the Royal College of Pathologists (RCP; >1 mm) as tumor-free (R0), are based on a surgery-alone approach. We evaluated the usefulness of both definitions in current practice with neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (nCRT). ⋯ nCRT affected the CRM cutoff values. After nCRT, the CRM R0 according to the CAP was only prognostic for 2-year LRFS. However, in the surgery-alone group, it was prognostic for both the 2-year DFS and LRFS.
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Lung cancers in patients with combined pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema (CPFE) are increasing. Objective of this investigation was to identify which clinicopathological features significantly affected surgical outcome of these patients. ⋯ Patients with lung cancer and CPFE had poor prognoses regardless of apparently good pulmonary function and showed quite high postoperative mortality rates. A lower %VC that might reflect the severity of pulmonary fibrosis was associated with poor prognoses.
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Observational analysis of percutaneous repositioning of displaced port-catheters in patients with dysfunctional central-venous port-systems. ⋯ Repositioning of dysfunctional displaced central-venous port-catheters with appropriate catheter-length is safe and effective. Even challenging conditions, e.g., wall-adherent port-catheter tip or a thrombosed catheter-bearing vein are feasible. Repositioning of too short port-catheters is ineffective.