Articles: treatment.
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The modern generation of trials evaluating the role of adjuvant radiation have turned to genomic profiling as a further risk stratification tool. The LUMINA trial by Whelan et al, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, applied Ki67 testing to identify those with luminal A disease and evaluated locoregional outcomes with Breast Conserving Surgery (BCS) and endocrine therapy (ET) alone. This paper was reviewed at the Canadian Association of General Surgeons' "Evidence-Based Reviews in Surgery" (EBRS) webinar series. ⋯ While the LUMINA study was rigorously designed and executed, there are significant pragmatic limitations to the implementation of the proposed approach using their protocol. We advocate that there is no "one size fits all" approach to early ER+ breast cancer. Choice of treatment strategy should strongly consider patient goals and preferences, with need for incorporation of Quality of Life and patient-reported endpoints into future studies evaluating this population to help guide these nuanced decisions.
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Radiofrequency ablation is a treatment for facetogenic low back pain that targets medial branches of lumbar dorsal rami to denervate facet joints. Clinical outcomes vary; optimizing cannula placement to better capture the medial branch may improve clinical outcomes. A novel parasagittal technique was proposed from an anatomical model; this technique was proposed to optimize capture of the medial branch. The anatomical feasibility of the novel technique has not been evaluated. ⋯ In this cadaveric simulation study, the feasibility of performing the parasagittal technique for lumbar radiofrequency ablation was evaluated. This study suggests the parasagittal technique is a feasible option for lumbar medial branch radiofrequency ablation.
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Pediatric emergency care · Nov 2024
Assessment of Facility Readiness for Pediatric Emergency and Critical Care Utilizing a 2-Phase Survey Conducted in Six Hospitals in Uganda and Cameroon: A Quality Improvement Study.
Each year, 5.3 million children under 5 years of age die in low-resource settings, often due to delayed recognition of disease severity, inadequate treatment, or a lack of supplies. We describe the use of a comprehensive digital facility-readiness survey tool, recently developed by the Pediatric Sepsis Data CoLaboratory, which aims to identify target areas for quality improvement related to pediatric emergency and critical care. ⋯ These pilot findings indicate that facilities are partially equipped and ready to provide pediatric emergency and critical care. This facility-readiness tool can be utilized in low-resource settings to assist hospital administrators and policymakers to determine priority areas to improve quality of care for the critically ill child.
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In prolonged care scenarios, where medical evacuations are significantly delayed, the treatment and transport of casualties with extremity musculoskeletal injuries will drain combat units' human resources. Developing enhanced splinting techniques to restore casualty mobility and function can alleviate this drain. To guide this development, a panel of tactical combat and wilderness medicine experts was assembled to determine which extremity musculoskeletal injuries had the greatest impact on unit capabilities, and the materials available for splinting these injuries. ⋯ Although the combined impact of knee and ankle ligamentous injuries were ranked the highest, limitations in relative rankings and the existence of effective low-cost treatments for these injuries suggest that greater gains in unit effectiveness would come from focusing on developing solutions for fractures with higher human resource cost, such as leg and arm fractures. This information can be used to develop enhanced splints that can preserve unit readiness in the field.