The British journal of surgery
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A strategy for accelerating liver regeneration after hepatectomy would offer great benefits in preventing postoperative liver failure and improving surgical outcomes. Transforming growth factor (TGF) β is a potent inhibitor of hepatocyte proliferation. Recently, thrombospondin (TSP) 1 has been identified as a negative regulator of liver regeneration by activation of local TGF-β signals. This study aimed to clarify whether the LSKL (leucine-serine-lysine-leucine) peptide, which inhibits TSP-1-mediated TGF-β activation, promotes liver regeneration after hepatectomy in mice. ⋯ Only two doses of LSKL peptide during the early period after hepatectomy can promote liver regeneration. The transient inhibition of TSP-1/TGF-β signal activation using LSKL peptide soon after hepatectomy may be a promising strategy to promote subsequent liver regeneration. Surgical relevance Although the mechanisms of liver regeneration after hepatectomy have been explored intensively in vivo, no therapeutic tools are thus far available to accelerate liver regeneration after hepatectomy in the clinical setting. Recently, the matricellular protein thrombospondin (TSP) 1, a major activator of latent transforming growth factor (TGF) β1, has been identified as a negative regulator of liver regeneration after hepatectomy. In this study, the inhibition of TSP-1-mediated TGF-β signal activation by LSKL (leucine-serine-lysine-leucine) peptide in the early period after hepatectomy accelerated liver regeneration without any adverse effects. In addition, continuous high plasma TSP-1 levels after hepatectomy were associated with liver damage in humans. The transient inhibition of TSP-1/TGF-β signal activation using LSKL peptide in the early period after hepatectomy could be a novel therapeutic strategy to accelerate liver regeneration after hepatectomy.
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Multicenter Study
Surgeons' and trainees' perceived self-efficacy in operating theatre non-technical skills.
An important factor that may influence an individual's performance is self-efficacy, a personal judgement of capability to perform a particular task successfully. This prospective study explored newly qualified surgeons' and surgical trainees' self-efficacy in non-technical skills compared with their non-technical skills performance in simulated scenarios. ⋯ The results suggest that new surgeons and surgical trainees have poor insight into their non-technical skills. Although it was not possible to correlate participants' self-belief in their abilities directly with their performance in a simulation, in general they became more critical in appraisal of their abilities as a result of the intervention.
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Intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) constitutes a paradigm shift from the conventional 3-5 weeks of whole-breast external beam radiotherapy (EBRT). IORT enables delivery of radiation at the time of excision of the breast tumour, targeting the area at highest risk of recurrence, while minimizing excessive radiation exposure to healthy breast tissue. The rationale for IORT is based on the observation that over 90 per cent of local recurrences after breast-conserving surgery occur at or near the original operation site. ⋯ Longer follow-up data from existing trials, optimization of patient criteria and cost-effectiveness analyses are needed. Based on the current evidence, IORT can be offered as an alternative to EBRT to selected patients within agreed protocols, and outcomes should be monitored within national registries.
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Elderly patients with breast cancer are less likely to be offered surgery, partly owing to co-morbidities and reduced functional ability. However, there is little consensus on how best to assess surgical risk in this patient group. ⋯ The risk of serious complications from breast surgery is low for older patients. Surgical decisions should be based on patient fitness rather than age. Health measures that predict surgical risk were identified in multivariable models, but the effects were weak, with 95 per cent c.i. close to unity.
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Non-palpable breast cancers require localization-guided surgery and axillary staging using sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB). This study investigated the novel technique of magnetic-guided lesion localization and concurrent SLNB, which avoids the need for wire-guided localization and radioisotopes. ⋯ Magnetic lesion localization is feasible, with intratumoral magnetic tracer injection combined with a periareolar injection of blue dye for subsequent SNLB.