109 results on '"Roberto Montalti"'
Search Results
2. Clinical characteristics, management and health related quality of life in young to middle age adults with COVID-19
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Chiara Temperoni, Stefania Grieco, Zeno Pasquini, Benedetta Canovari, Antonio Polenta, Umberto Gnudi, Roberto Montalti, and Francesco Barchiesi
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COVID-19 ,Young to middle age adults ,SARS-Cov-2 ,Respiratory distress ,Health related quality of life ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background The outbreak of COVID-19 has rapidly spread to Italy, including Pesaro-Urbino province. Data on young to middle age adults with COVID-19 are lacking. We report the characteristics, management and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in patients with COVID-19 aging ≤50 years. Methods A retrospective analysis was performed in all patients ≤50 years with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 admitted to Emergency department (ED) of San Salvatore Hospital in Pesaro from February 28th to April 8th, 2020. Data were collected from electronical medical records. HRQoL was investigated after 1 month from hospital discharge using the SF-36 questionnaire. Outcomes were evaluated between hospitalized and not hospitalized patients. Results Among 673 patients admitted to the ED and diagnosed with COVID-19, 104 (15%) were ≤ 50 years old: 74% were discharged at home within 48 h, 26% were hospitalized. Fever occurred in 90% of the cases followed by cough (56%) and dyspnoea (34%). The most frequent coexisting conditions were hypertension (11%), thyroid dysfunction (8%) and neurological and/or mental disorders [NMDs] (6%). Mean BMI was 27. Hypokalaemia and NMDs were significantly more common in patients who underwent mechanical ventilation. Regardless of hospitalization, there was an impairment in both the physical and mental functioning. Conclusions Overweight and hypertension are frequent conditions in young to middle age adults with COVID-19. Hypokalaemia and NMDs are commonly associated with progressive disease. A significant impact on HRQoL in the early stage of post-discharge is common in this population.
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- 2021
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3. Continuous thoracic spinal anesthesia with local anesthetic plus midazolam and ketamine is superior to local anesthetic plus fentanyl in major abdominal surgery
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Paolo Vincenzi, Roberto Starnari, Lucia Faloia, Riccardo Grifoni, Roberto Bucchianeri, Leonardo Chiodi, Alfredo Venezia, Massimo Stronati, Marina Giampieri, Roberto Montalti, Diletta Gaudenzi, Lesley De Pietri, and Gianfranco Boccoli
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Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Background: Limited studies have applied thoracic continuous spinal anesthesia in abdominal surgery, relying exclusively on opioids. This retrospective study analyzes 2 different schemes of thoracic continuous spinal anesthesia and postoperative analgesia in elderly patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. Methods: A total of 98 patients aged ≥75 years were divided into 2 groups. The control group (60 patients) received bupivacaine plus fentanyl, whereas the study group (38 patients) received bupivacaine plus ketamine and midazolam. Both received analogous postoperative continuous intrathecal analgesia. Several perioperative variables were evaluated. Results: Spinal anesthesia was performed without complications in all patients. Doses of noradrenaline administered, incidence of respiratory depression, need for intraoperative sedation, and time to first flatus were significantly reduced in the bupivacaine plus ketamine and midazolam group. Conclusion: In a population of frail, elderly patients, thoracic continuous spinal anesthesia with local anesthetic plus midazolam and ketamine was superior to local anesthetic plus fentanyl. In the group receiving local anesthetic plus midazolam and ketamine, the incidence of respiratory depression was reduced, and doses of norepinephrine and intraoperative sedating medications were lower. Intraoperative anesthesia and postoperative analgesia were similar in both groups.
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- 2020
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4. Secondary Infections in Critically Ill Patients with COVID-19: A Retrospective Study
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Luca Caiazzo, Chiara Temperoni, Benedetta Canovari, Oriana Simonetti, Roberto Montalti, and Francesco Barchiesi
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COVID-19 ,mechanical ventilation ,hospital-acquired infections ,resistance ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Patients with severe COVID-19, especially those followed in the ICU, are at risk for developing bacterial and fungal superinfections. In this study, we aimed to describe the burden of hospital-acquired superinfections in a cohort of consecutive, severe COVID-19 patients hospitalized between February and May 2021 in the intensive care unit (ICU) department of San Salvatore Hospital in Pesaro, Italy. Among 89 patients considered, 68 (76.4%) acquired a secondary infection during their ICU stay. A total of 46 cases of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP), 31 bloodstream infections (BSIs) and 15 catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) were diagnosed. Overall mortality during ICU stay was 48%. A multivariate analysis showed that factors independently associated with mortality were male gender (OR: 4.875, CI: 1.227–19.366, p = 0.024), higher BMI (OR: 4.938, CI:1.356–17.980, p = 0.015) and the presence of VAP (OR: 6.518, CI: 2.178–19.510, p = 0.001). Gram-negative bacteria accounted for most of the isolates (68.8%), followed by Gram-positive bacteria (25.8%) and fungi (5.3%). Over half of the infections (58%) were caused by MDR opportunistic pathogens. Factors that were independently associated with an increased risk of infections caused by an MDR pathogen were higher BMI (OR: 4.378, CI: 1.467–13.064, p = 0.0008) and a higher Charlson Comorbidity Index (OR: 3.451, 95% CI: 1.113–10.700, p = 0.032). Secondary infections represent a common and life-threatening complication in critically ill patients with COVID-19. Efforts to minimize the likelihood of acquiring such infections, often caused by difficult-to-treat MDR organisms—especially in some subgroups of patients with specific risk factors—must be pursued.
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- 2022
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5. Clinical and epidemiological characteristics of KPC-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae from bloodstream infections in a tertiary referral center in Italy
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Lucia Brescini, Gianluca Morroni, Chiara Valeriani, Sefora Castelletti, Marina Mingoia, Serena Simoni, Annamaria Masucci, Roberto Montalti, Marco Vivarelli, Andrea Giacometti, and Francesco Barchiesi
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Bloodstream infections ,Klebsiella pneumoniae ,KPC ,Colistin resistance ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background Bloodstream infections (BSI) due to Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase (KPC)-producing K. pneumoniae (KPC-Kp) have become an important problem and they are associated with a high mortality rate. The aim of our study was to evaluate the clinical and epidemiological characteristics of KPC-Kp from BSIs. Methods In this retrospective cohort study, conducted in a tertiary referral center in Italy, 112 patients with KPC-Kp BSIs diagnosed between February 2011 and December 2015 were identified. We evaluated the mortality at 30 days from the first positive blood culture. Survivor and non-survivor subgroups were compared to identify predictors of mortality. Results The overall crude mortality was 35%. APACHE II score ≥ 15, septic shock at BSI onset, immunosuppressive therapy during the 30 days before the BSI onset, and the lack of a combination therapy with at least 2 active drugs emerged as independent predictors of mortality. Excluding patients with inadequate therapy, the mortality decreased to 25% while an APACHE II score ≥ 15 and the presence of septic shock remained independently associated with a negative outcome. Two different pulsotypes were identified: pulsotype A belonged to ST512 and carried KPC-3 and pulsotype B belonged to ST307 and carried KPC-2. Conclusions This study confirmed a high mortality rate of KPC-Kp BSIs. The outcome is heavily influenced by the patient’s clinical conditions. A therapeutic approach including a combination with at least two active drugs in vitro can improve the prognosis, unless patients received an appropriate therapy.
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- 2019
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6. A Sentinel-1-based clustering analysis for geo-hazards mitigation at regional scale: a case study in Central Italy
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Roberto Montalti, Lorenzo Solari, Silvia Bianchini, Matteo Del Soldato, Federico Raspini, and Nicola Casagli
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mtinsar ,sentinel-1 ,geohazards mapping and monitoring ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Risk in industry. Risk management ,HD61 - Abstract
In the last decade satellite remote sensing has become an effective tool for monitoring geo-hazard-induced ground motions, and has been increasingly used by the scientific community. Direct and indirect costs due to geo-hazards are currently rising, causing serious socio-economics and casualty losses. Therefore, creating a priority list turns out to be essential to highlight the most relevant ground deformations and to better focus risk management practices at regional scale. The Sentinel-1 constellation, thanks to the 6-days repeatability and the free availability of the data, allows to easily update the geo-hazard-induced ground motions, compared to other kind of satellite sensors. In this work, a hot-spot-like method is presented by filtering a large stack of Sentinel-1 images processed by means of the SqueeSAR algorithm. Three periods, with six months repetitiveness, have been analysed in order to evaluate the behaviour and evolution of deformation clusters. The target area is Tuscany Region, located in the central part of Italy and affected by a wide gamma of geohazards, ranging from landslides to large subsidence areas. The final output is a geo-database of ground motions that can be used by regional authorities to prioritize and to effectively plan local risk reduction actions.
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- 2019
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7. Candidemia in intensive care units over nine years at a large Italian university hospital: Comparison with other wards.
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Sara Mazzanti, Lucia Brescini, Gianluca Morroni, Elena Orsetti, Antonella Pocognoli, Abele Donati, Elisabetta Cerutti, Christopher Munch, Roberto Montalti, and Francesco Barchiesi
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
PurposeCandidemia is an alarming problem in critically ill patients including those admitted in intensive care units (ICUs). We aimed to describe the clinical and microbiological characteristics of bloodstream infections (BSIs) due to Candida spp. in patients admitted to ICUs of an italian tertiary referral university hospital over nine years.MethodsA retrospective observational study of all cases of candidemia in adult patients was carried out from January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2018 at a 980-bedded University Hospital in Ancona, Italy, counting five ICUs. The incidence, demographics, clinical and microbiologic characteristics, therapeutic approaches and outcomes of ICU-patients with candidemia were collected. Non-ICU patients with candidemia hospitalized during the same time period were considered for comparison purposes. Early (7 days from the occurrence of the episode of Candida BSI) and late (30 days) mortality rates were calculated.ResultsDuring the study period, 188/505 (36%) episodes of candidemia occurred in ICU patients. Cumulative incidence was 9.9/1000 ICU admission and it showed to be stable over time. Candida albicans accounted for 52% of the cases, followed by C. parapsilosis (24%), and C. glabrata (14%). There was not a significant difference in species distribution between ICU and non-ICU patients. With the exception of isolates of C. tropicalis which showed to be fluconazole resistant in 25% of the cases, resistance to antifungals was not of concern in our patients. Early and late mortality rates, were 19% and 41% respectively, the latter being significantly higher than that observed in non-ICU patients. At multivariate analysis, factors associated with increased risk of death were septic shock, acute kidney failure, pulmonary embolism and lack of antifungal therapy. The type of antifungal therapy did not influence the outcome. Mortality did not increased significantly over time.ConclusionNeither cumulative incidence nor crude mortality of candidemia in ICU patients increased over time at our institution. However, mortality rate remained high and significantly associated with specific host-related factors in the majority of cases.
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- 2021
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8. Multi-Temporal Satellite Interferometry for Fast-Motion Detection: An Application to Salt Solution Mining
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Lorenzo Solari, Roberto Montalti, Anna Barra, Oriol Monserrat, Silvia Bianchini, and Michele Crosetto
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multi-temporal interferometry ,mining ,salt dissolution ,MTInSAR ,sinkholes ,Science - Abstract
Underground mining is one of the human activities with the highest impact in terms of induced ground motion. The excavation of the mining levels creates pillars, rooms and cavities that can evolve in chimney collapses and sinkholes. This is a major threat where the mining activity is carried out in an urban context. Thus, there is a clear need for tools and instruments able to precisely quantify mining-induced deformation. Topographic measurements certainly offer very high spatial accuracy and temporal repeatability, but they lack in spatial distribution of measurement points. In the past decades, Multi-Temporal Satellite Interferometry (MTInSAR) has become one of the most reliable techniques for monitoring ground motion, including mining-induced deformation. Although with well-known limitations when high deformation rates and frequently changing land surfaces are involved, MTInSAR has been exploited to evaluate the surface motion in several mining area worldwide. In this paper, a detailed scale MTInSAR approach was designed to characterize ground deformation in the salt solution mining area of Saline di Volterra (Tuscany Region, central Italy). This mining activity has a relevant environmental impact, depleting the water resource and inducing ground motion; sinkholes are a common consequence. The MTInSAR processing approach is based on the direct integration of interferograms derived from Sentinel-1 images and on the phase splitting between low (LF) and high (HF) frequency components. Phase unwrapping is performed for the LF and HF components on a set of points selected through a “triplets closure” method. The final deformation map is derived by combining again the components to avoid error accumulation and by applying a classical atmospheric phase filtering to remove the remaining low frequency signal. The results obtained reveal the presence of several subsidence bowls, sometimes corresponding to sinkholes formed in the recent past. Very high deformation rates, up to −250 mm/yr, and time series with clear trend changes are registered. In addition, the spatial and temporal distribution of velocities and time series is analyzed, with a focus on the correlation with sinkhole occurrence.
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- 2020
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9. Impact of Graft Steatosis on Postoperative Complications after Liver Transplantation
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Emad Ali Ahmed, Ashraf Mohammad El-Badry, Federico Mocchegiani, Roberto Montalti, Asem Elsani Ali Hassan, Alaa Ahmed Redwan, and Marco Vivarelli
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graft steatosis ,fatty liver ,liver transplantation ,macrosteatosis ,microsteatosis ,reperfusion injury ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Abstract Background Steatotic grafts are more susceptible to ischemia-reperfusion injury than are normal grafts. Therefore, using steatotic grafts for liver transplantation (LT) is associated with high primary dysfunction and decreased survival rates. The aim of this study is to evaluate the impact of graft steatosis on post LT outcomes. Methods A retrospective cohort analysis of 271 LT recipients from 2005 to 2016 was performed and patients were classified based on two types of steatosis, macrosteatosis (MaS), and microsteatosis (MiS). Each category was subdivided into three groups according to the degree of steatosis: no (< 5%), mild (≥5 to
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- 2018
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10. From ERS 1/2 to Sentinel-1: Subsidence Monitoring in Italy in the Last Two Decades
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Lorenzo Solari, Matteo Del Soldato, Silvia Bianchini, Andrea Ciampalini, Pablo Ezquerro, Roberto Montalti, Federico Raspini, and Sandro Moretti
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subsidence ,DInSAR ,MTInSAR ,urban monitoring ,local and regional scale applications ,satellite monitoring ,Science - Abstract
The use of InSAR (Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar) products has greatly increased in the last years because of the technological advances in terms of both acquisition sensors and processing algorithms. The development of multi-interferogram techniques and the availability of free SAR analysis tools has significantly increased the number of worldwide applications of satellite measurements for mapping and monitoring geohazards. InSAR techniques excel in determining ground deformation in urban areas, where the coherence of the radar images is high, and the obtainable results are particularly reliable. Thus, measuring urban subsidence has always been one of the main targets of the InSAR analysis. In this paper, we present a brief review on the applications, in the last decades, of both single and multi-interferogram techniques to monitor ground lowering in urban areas along the Italian Peninsula. Because of its geological context, Italy is prone to slow natural subsidence phenomena sometimes aggravated and accelerated, especially along the coasts and in urbanized areas, by anthropogenic factors (i.e., groundwater overexploitation, consolidation in recent urban expansion, geothermal activities). The review will show how the interferometric data allowed the scientific community to increase the knowledge of the phenomena, map their spatial distribution, and reconstruct their temporal evolution. The final goal of the review is to demonstrate the added value of InSAR data in supporting groundwater management and urban development in Italy.
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- 2018
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11. Ground Subsidence Susceptibility (GSS) Mapping in Grosseto Plain (Tuscany, Italy) Based on Satellite InSAR Data Using Frequency Ratio and Fuzzy Logic
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Silvia Bianchini, Lorenzo Solari, Matteo Del Soldato, Federico Raspini, Roberto Montalti, Andrea Ciampalini, and Nicola Casagli
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ground subsidence ,susceptibility ,satellite InSAR ,frequency ratio ,fuzzy logic ,GIS ,Science - Abstract
This study aimed at evaluating and mapping Ground Subsidence Susceptibility (GSS) in the Grosseto plain (Tuscany Region, Italy) by exploiting multi-temporal satellite InSAR data and by applying two parallel approaches; a bivariate statistical analysis (Frequency Ratio) and a mathematical probabilistic model (Fuzzy Logic operator). The Grosseto plain experienced subsidence and sinkholes due to natural causes in the past and it is still suffering slow-moving ground lowering. Five conditioning subsidence-related factors were selected and managed in a GIS environment through an overlay pixel-by-pixel analysis. Firstly, multi-temporal ground subsidence inventory maps were prepared in the study area by starting from two inventories referred to distinct temporal intervals (2003−2009 and 2014−2019) derived from Persistent Scatterers Interferometry (PSI) data of ENVISAT and SENTINEL-1 satellites. Then, the susceptibility modelling was performed through the Frequency Ratio (FR) and Fuzzy Logic (FL) approaches. These analyses led to slightly different scenarios which were compared and discussed. Results show that flat areas on alluvial and colluvial deposits with thick sedimentary cover (higher than 20 m) on the bedrock in the central and eastern sectors of the plain are the most susceptible to land subsidence. The obtained FR- and FL-based GSS maps were finally validated with a ROC (Receiver Operating Characteristic) analysis, in order to estimate the overall performance of the models. The AUC (Area Under Curve) values of ROC analysis of the FR model were higher than the ones of FL model, suggesting that the former is a better and more appropriate predictor for subsidence susceptibility analysis in the study area. In conclusion, GSS maps provided a qualitative overview of the subsidence scenarios and may be helpful to predict and preliminarily identify high-risk areas for environmental local authorities and decision makers in charge of land use planning in the study area. Finally, the presented methodologies to derive GSS maps are easily reproducible and could also be applied and tested in other test sites worldwide, in order to check the modeling performance in different environmental settings.
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- 2019
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12. Monitoring Ground Instabilities Using SAR Satellite Data: A Practical Approach
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Matteo Del Soldato, Lorenzo Solari, Federico Raspini, Silvia Bianchini, Andrea Ciampalini, Roberto Montalti, Alessandro Ferretti, Vania Pellegrineschi, and Nicola Casagli
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Sentinel-1 ,InSAR ,satellite monitoring ,landslide ,subsidence ,civil protection ,Geography (General) ,G1-922 - Abstract
Satellite interferometric data are widely exploited for ground motion monitoring thanks to their wide area coverage, cost efficiency and non-invasiveness. The launch of the Sentinel-1 constellation opened new horizons for interferometric applications, allowing the scientists to rethink the way in which these data are delivered, passing from a static view of the territory to a continuous streaming of ground motion measurements from space. Tuscany Region is the first worldwide example of a regional scale monitoring system based on satellite interferometric data. The processing chain here exploited combines a multi-interferometric approach with a time-series data mining algorithm aimed at recognizing benchmarks with significant trend variations. The system is capable of detecting the temporal changes of a wide variety of phenomena such as slow-moving landslides and subsidence, producing a high amount of data to be interpreted in a short time. Bulletins and reports are derived to the hydrogeological risk management actors at regional scale. The final output of the project is a list of potentially hazardous and accelerating phenomena that are verified on site by field campaign by completing a sheet survey in order to qualitatively estimate the risk and to suggest short-term actions to be taken by local entities. Two case studies, one related to landslides and one to subsidence, are proposed to highlight the potential of the monitoring system to early detect anomalous ground changes. Both examples represent a successful implementation of satellite interferometric data as monitoring and risk management tools, raising the awareness of local and regional authorities to geohazards.
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- 2019
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13. Postoperative Insulin-Like Growth Factor 1 Levels Reflect the Graft's Function and Predict Survival after Liver Transplantation.
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Daniele Nicolini, Federico Mocchegiani, Gioia Palmonella, Martina Coletta, Marina Brugia, Roberto Montalti, Giammarco Fava, Augusto Taccaliti, Andrea Risaliti, and Marco Vivarelli
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The reduction of insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) plasma levels is associated with the degree of liver dysfunction and mortality in cirrhotic patients. However, little research is available on the recovery of the IGF-1 level and its prognostic role after liver transplantation (LT).From April 2010 to May 2011, 31 patients were prospectively enrolled (25/6 M/F; mean age±SEM: 55.2±1.4 years), and IGF-1 serum levels were assessed preoperatively and at 15, 30, 90, 180 and 365 days after transplantation. The influence of the donor and recipient characteristics (age, use of extended criteria donor grafts, D-MELD and incidence of early allograft dysfunction) on hormonal concentration was analyzed. The prognostic role of IGF-1 level on patient survival and its correlation with routine liver function tests were also investigated.All patients showed low preoperative IGF-1 levels (mean±SEM: 29.5±2.1), and on postoperative day 15, a significant increase in the IGF-1 plasma level was observed (102.7±11.7 ng/ml; p65 years) or extended criteria donor grafts. An inverse correlation between IGF-1 and bilirubin serum levels at day 15 (r = -0.3924, p = 0.0320) and 30 (r = -0.3894, p = 0.0368) was found. After multivariate analysis, early (within 15 days) IGF-1 normalization [Exp(b) = 3.913; p = 0.0484] was the only prognostic factor associated with an increased 3-year survival rate.IGF-1 postoperative levels are correlated with the graft's quality and reflect liver function. Early IGF-1 recovery is associated with a higher 3-year survival rate after LT.
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- 2015
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14. ALPPS Procedure for Extended Liver Resections: A Single Centre Experience and a Systematic Review.
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Marco Vivarelli, Paolo Vincenzi, Roberto Montalti, Giammarco Fava, Marcello Tavio, Martina Coletta, Andrea Vecchi, Daniele Nicolini, Andrea Agostini, Emad Ali Ahmed, Andrea Giovagnoni, and Federico Mocchegiani
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
AIM:To report a single-centre experience with the novel Associating Liver Partition and Portal vein ligation for Staged hepatectomy (ALPPS) technique and systematically review the related literature. METHODS:Since January 2013, patients with extended primary or secondary liver tumors whose future liver remnant (FLR) was considered too small to allow hepatic resection were prospectively assessed for the ALPPS procedure. A systematic literature search was performed using PubMed, Scopus and the Cochrane Library Central. RESULTS:Until July 2014 ALPPS was completed in 9 patients whose mean age was 60 ± 8 years. Indications for surgical resection were metastases from colorectal cancer in 3 cases, perihilar cholangiocarcinoma in 3 cases, intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma in 2 cases and hepatocellular carcinoma without chronic liver disease in 1 case. The calculated FLR volume was 289 ± 122 mL (21.1 ± 5.5%) before ALPPS-1 and 528 ± 121 mL (32.2 ± 5.7%) before ALLPS-2 (p < 0.001). The increase in FLR between the two procedures was 96 ± 47% (range: 24-160%, p < 0.001). Additional interventions were performed in 4 cases: 3 patients underwent Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomy, and one case underwent wedge resection of a residual tumor in the FLR. The average time between the first and second step of the procedure was 10.8 ± 2.9 days. The average hospital stay was 24.1 ± 13.3 days. There was 1 postoperative death due to hepatic failure in the oldest patient of this series who had a perihilar cholangiocarcinoma and concomitant liver fibrosis; 11 complications occurred in 6 patients, 4 of whom had grade III or above disease. After a mean follow-up of 17.1 ± 8.5 months, the overall survival was 89% at 3-6 and 12 months. The recurrence-free survival was 100%, 87.5% and 75% at 3-6-12 months respectively. The literature search yielded 148 articles, of which 22 articles published between 2012 and 2015 were included in this systematic review. CONCLUSION:The ALPPS technique effectively increased the resectability of otherwise inoperable liver tumors. The postoperative morbidity in our series was high in accordance with the data from the systematic review. Age, liver fibrosis and presence of biliary stenting were predisposing factors for postoperative morbidity and mortality.
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- 2015
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15. Augmenting Collaborative Practices: The Hololiver Case Study.
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Agnese Augello, Giuseppe Caggianese, Luigi Casoria, Luigi Gallo, Roberto Montalti, Pietro Neroni, Gianluca Rompianesi, and Roberto Troisi
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- 2023
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16. InSAR Analysis of Underground Gas Storage.
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Gabriele Fibbi, Roberto Montalti, Matteo Del Soldato, Andrea Uttini, Stefano Cespa, Alessandro Ferretti, and Riccardo Fanti
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- 2023
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17. Propensity-score Matched and Coarsened-exact Matched Analysis Comparing Robotic and Laparoscopic Major Hepatectomies: An International Multicenter Study of 4822 Cases
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Liu, Qu, Zhang, Wanguang, Zhao, Joseph J., Syn, Nicholas L., Cipriani, Federica, Alzoubi, Mohammad, Aghayan, Davit L., Siow, Tiing-Foong, Lim, Chetana, Scatton, Olivier, Herman, Paulo, Coelho, Fabricio Ferreira, Marino, Marco V., Mazzaferro, Vincenzo, Chiow, Adrian K. H., Sucandy, Iswanto, Ivanecz, Arpad, Choi, Sung-Hoon, Lee, Jae Hoon, Prieto, Mikel, Vivarelli, Marco, Giuliante, Felice, Dalla Valle, Bernardo, Ruzzenente, Andrea, Yong, Chee-Chien, Chen, Zewei, Yin, Mengqiu, Fondevila, Constantino, Efanov, Mikhail, Morise, Zenichi, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, Brustia, Raffaele, Dalla Valle, Raffaele, Boggi, Ugo, Geller, David, Belli, Andrea, Memeo, Riccardo, Gruttadauria, Salvatore, Mejia, Alejandro, Park, James O., Rotellar, Fernando, Choi, Gi-Hong, Robles-Campos, Ricardo, Wang, Xiaoying, Sutcliffe, Robert P., Schmelzle, Moritz, Pratschke, Johann, Tang, Chung-Ngai, Chong, Charing C. N., Lee, Kit-Fai, Meurs, Juul, D’Hondt, Mathieu, Monden, Kazuteru, Lopez-Ben, Santiago, Kingham, Thomas Peter, Ferrero, Alessandro, Ettorre, Giuseppe Maria, Levi Sandri, Giovanni Battista, Saleh, Mansour, Cherqui, Daniel, Zheng, Junhao, Liang, Xiao, Mazzotta, Alessandro, Soubrane, Olivier, Wakabayashi, Go, Troisi, Roberto I., Cheung, Tan-To, Kato, Yutaro, Sugioka, Atsushi, D’Silva, Mizelle, Han, Ho-Seong, Nghia, Phan Phuoc, Long, Tran Cong duy, Edwin, Bjørn, Fuks, David, Chen, Kuo-Hsin, Abu Hilal, Mohammad, Aldrighetti, Luca, Liu, Rong, Goh, Brian K. P., Gastaca, Mikel, De Meyere, Celine, Ng, Kelvin K., Salimgereeva, Diana, Alikhanov, Ruslan, Lee, Lip-Seng, Jang, Jae Young, Kojima, Masayuki, Kruger, Jaime Arthur Pirola, Lopez-Lopez, Victor, Casellas I Robert, Margarida, Roberto, Montalti, Giglio, Mariano, Lee, Boram, Wang, Hao-Ping, Pascual, Franco, Yu, Shian, Vani, Simone, Ardito, Francesco, Giustizieri, Ugo, Citterio, Davide, Mocchegiani, Federico, Colasanti, Marco, Guzmán, Yoelimar, Labadie, Kevin P., Conticchio, Maria, Dogeas, Epameinondas, Kauffmann, Emanuele F., Giuffrida, Mario, Sommacale, Daniele, Laurent, Alexis, Magistri, Paolo, Mishima, Kohei, Krenzien, Felix, Kadam, Prashant, Lai, Eric C. H., Ghotbi, Jacob, Fretland, Åsmund Avdem, and Forchino, Fabio
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- 2023
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18. The unhealthy lifestyle in primary biliary cholangitis: An enemy to fight
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Valentina Cossiga, Nora Cazzagon, Roberto Montalti, Stefania Ciminnisi, Maria Rosaria Attanasio, Francesco Pezzato, Marco Giacchetto, Maria Guarino, Vincenza Calvaruso, Annarosa Floreani, Filomena Morisco, Cossiga, Valentina, Cazzagon, Nora, Montalti, Roberto, Ciminnisi, Stefania, Attanasio, Maria Rosaria, Pezzato, Francesco, Giacchetto, Marco, Guarino, Maria, Calvaruso, Vincenza, Floreani, Annarosa, and Morisco, Filomena
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Eating habits ,Lifestyle ,Metabolic syndrome ,Physical activity ,Primary biliary cholangitis ,Hepatology ,Gastroenterology ,Eating habit - Abstract
Background and aim: Metabolic dysfunctions, particularly hyperlipidemia, are a common finding in Primary Biliary Cholangitis (PBC). In presence of metabolic components of fatty-liver-disease (MAFLD), the liver fibrosis progression risk is higher. The aim of this study was to evaluate lifestyle of PBC patients compared to controls. Methods: In a prospective, multicenter study 107 PBC patients were enrolled; among these, 54 subjects were age-and sex-matched with 54 controls with a propensity-score-matching-analysis. Eating habits and physical activity were evaluated, respectively, with a food-frequency-questionnaire and with a short pre-validated-questionnaire. The adherence to Mediterranean diet was assessed with the alternate Mediterranean diet score. Results: The total fat intake was higher in controls than in PBC (p=0.004), unless above the national recommendations in both groups. Moreover, in PBC monounsaturated-fat and polyunsaturated-fatty-acid intakes and the adherence to Mediterranean diet were significantly lower than in controls (p
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- 2023
19. ASO Author Reflections: Major Hepatectomies: Does Robotic Assistance Increase the Feasibility of the Minimally Invasive Approach?
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Roberto Montalti, Mariano Cesare Giglio, Roberto I. Troisi, and Brian K. P. Goh
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Oncology ,Surgery - Published
- 2023
20. Role of preoperative 3D rendering for minimally invasive parenchyma sparing liver resections
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Roberto Montalti, Gianluca Rompianesi, Gianluca Cassese, Francesca Pegoraro, Mariano C. Giglio, Giuseppe De Simone, Nikdokht Rashidian, Pietro Venetucci, and Roberto I. Troisi
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Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2023
21. Impact of neoadjuvant chemotherapy on the difficulty and outcomes of laparoscopic and robotic major liver resections for colorectal liver metastases: A propensity-score and coarsened exact-matched controlled study
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Jacob Ghotbi, Davit Aghayan, Åsmund Fretland, Bjørn Edwin, Nicholas L. Syn, Federica Cipriani, Mohammed Alzoubi, Chetana Lim, Olivier Scatton, Tran Cong duy Long, Paulo Herman, Fabricio Ferreira Coelho, Marco V. Marino, Vincenzo Mazzaferro, Adrian K.H. Chiow, Iswanto Sucandy, Arpad Ivanecz, Sung-Hoon Choi, Jae Hoon Lee, Mikel Prieto, Marco Vivarelli, Felice Giuliante, Andrea Ruzzenente, Chee-Chien Yong, Mengqiu Yin, Constantino Fondevila, Mikhail Efanov, Zenichi Morise, Fabrizio Di Benedetto, Raffaele Brustia, Raffaele Dalla Valle, Ugo Boggi, David Geller, Andrea Belli, Riccardo Memeo, Alejandro Mejia, James O. Park, Fernando Rotellar, Gi-Hong Choi, Ricardo Robles-Campos, Xiaoying Wang, Robert P. Sutcliffe, Johann Pratschke, Chung-Ngai Tang, Charing C.N. Chong, Mathieu D'Hondt, Kazuteru Monden, Santiago Lopez-Ben, T. Peter Kingham, Alessandro Ferrero, Giuseppe Maria Ettorre, Giovanni Battista Levi Sandri, Franco Pascual, Daniel Cherqui, Xiao Liang, Alessandro Mazzotta, Go Wakabayashi, Mariano Giglio, Roberto I. Troisi, Ho-Seong Han, Tan-To Cheung, Atsushi Sugioka, Kuo-Hsin Chen, Rong Liu, Olivier Soubrane, David Fuks, Luca Aldrighetti, Mohammad Abu Hilal, Brian K.P. Goh, Mikel Gastaca, Juul Meurs, Celine De Meyere, Kit-Fai Lee, Kelvin K. Ng, Diana Salimgereeva, Ruslan Alikhanov, Lip-Seng Lee, Jae Young Jang, Yutaro Kato, Masayuki Kojima, Jaime Arthur Pirola Kruger, Victor Lopez-Lopez, Margarida Casellas I Robert, Roberto Montalti, Boram Lee, Mizelle D'Silva, Hao-Ping Wang, Mansour Saleh, Zewei Chen, Shian Yu, Simone Vani, Francesco Ardito, Ugo Giustizieri, Davide Citterio, Federico Mocchegiani, Marco Colasanti, Yoelimar Guzmán, Kevin P. Labadie, Maria Conticchio, Epameinondas Dogeas, Emanuele F. Kauffmann, Mario Giuffrida, Daniele Sommacale, Alexis Laurent, Paolo Magistri, Phan Phuoc Nghia, Kohei Mishima, Bernardo Dalla Valle, Felix Krenzien, Moritz Schmelzle, Prashant Kadam, Qu Liu, Eric C.H. Lai, Junhao Zheng, Tiing Foong Siow, and Fabio Forchino
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Robotic liver resections ,Oncology ,Laparoscopic liver resections ,Major resections ,Settore MED/18 - CHIRURGIA GENERALE ,Surgery ,General Medicine ,Difficulty ,Neoadjuvant chemotherapy - Published
- 2023
22. Impact of body mass index on the difficulty and outcomes of laparoscopic left lateral sectionectomy
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Zewei Chen, Mengqiu Yin, Junhao Fu, Shian Yu, Nicholas L. Syn, Darren W. Chua, T. Peter Kingham, Wanguang Zhang, Tijs J. Hoogteijling, Davit L. Aghayan, Tiing Foong Siow, Olivier Scatton, Paulo Herman, Marco V. Marino, Vincenzo Mazzaferro, Adrian K.H. Chiow, Iswanto Sucandy, Arpad Ivanecz, Sung Hoon Choi, Jae Hoon Lee, Mikel Prieto, Marco Vivarelli, Felice Giuliante, Andrea Ruzzenente, Chee-Chien Yong, Safi Dokmak, Constantino Fondevila, Mikhail Efanov, Zenichi Morise, Fabrizio Di Benedetto, Raffaele Brustia, Raffaele Dalla Valle, Ugo Boggi, David Geller, Andrea Belli, Riccardo Memeo, Salvatore Gruttadauria, Alejandro Mejia, James O. Park, Fernando Rotellar, Gi-Hong Choi, Ricardo Robles-Campos, Xiaoying Wang, Robert P. Sutcliffe, Johann Pratschke, Eric C.H. Lai, Charing C.N. Chong, Mathieu D'Hondt, Kazuteru Monden, Santiago Lopez-Ben, Qu Liu, Rong Liu, Alessandro Ferrero, Giuseppe Maria Ettorre, Federica Cipriani, Daniel Cherqui, Xiao Liang, Olivier Soubrane, Go Wakabayashi, Roberto I. Troisi, Tan-To Cheung, Yutaro Kato, Atsushi Sugioka, Ho-Seong Han, Tran Cong duy Long, David Fuks, Mohammad Abu Hilal, Luca Aldrighetti, Kuo-Hsin Chen, Bjørn Edwin, Brian K.P. Goh, Mikel Gastaca, Juul Meurs, Celine De Meyere, Kit-Fai Lee, Kelvin K. Ng, Diana Salimgereeva, Ruslan Alikhanov, Lip-Seng Lee, Jae-Young Jang, Masayuki Kojima, Jaime Arthur Pirola Kruger, Fabricio Ferreira Coelho, Victor Lopez-Lopez, Margarida Casellas I Robert, Roberto Montalti, Mariano Giglio, Mizelle D'Silva, Boram Lee, Hao-Ping Wang, Franco Pascual, Mansour Saleh, Simone Vani, Francesco Ardito, Ugo Giustizieri, Davide Citterio, Federico Mocchegiani, Giammauro Berardi, Marco Colasanti, Yoelimar Guzmán, Kevin P. Labadie, Maria Conticchio, Epameinondas Dogeas, Emanuele F. Kauffmann, Mario Giuffrida, Daniele Sommacale, Alexis Laurent, Paolo Magistri, Kohei Mishima, Moritz Schmelzle, Felix Krenzien, Prashant Kadam, Jacob Ghotbi, Åsmund Avdem Fretland, Fabio Forchino, Alessandro Mazzotta, Francois Cauchy, Chetana Lim, Bernardo Dalla Valle, Junhao Zheng, Phan Phuoc Nghia, and Graduate School
- Subjects
Minimally-invasive liver ,Oncology ,Left lateral sectionectomy ,Laparoscopic hepatectomy ,Laparoscopic liver ,Minimally-invasive hepatectomy ,Surgery ,General Medicine ,Body mass index - Abstract
Introduction: Currently, the impact of body mass index (BMI) on the outcomes of laparoscopic liver resections (LLR) is poorly defined. This study attempts to evaluate the impact of BMI on the peri-operative outcomes following laparoscopic left lateral sectionectomy (L-LLS). Methods: A retrospective analysis of 2183 patients who underwent pure L-LLS at 59 international centers between 2004 and 2021 was performed. Associations between BMI and selected peri-operative outcomes were analyzed using restricted cubic splines. Results: A BMI of >27kg/m2 was associated with increased in blood loss (Mean difference (MD) 21 mls, 95% CI 5–36), open conversions (Relative risk (RR) 1.13, 95% CI 1.03–1.25), operative time (MD 11 min, 95% CI 6–16), use of Pringles maneuver (RR 1.15, 95% CI 1.06–1.26) and reductions in length of stay (MD -0.2 days, 95% CI -0.3 to −0.1). The magnitude of these differences increased with each unit increase in BMI. However, there was a “U” shaped association between BMI and morbidity with the highest complication rates observed in underweight and obese patients. Conclusion: Increasing BMI resulted in increasing difficulty of L-LLS. Consideration should be given to its incorporation in future difficulty scoring systems in laparoscopic liver resections.
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- 2023
23. Augmented reality (AR) in minimally invasive surgery (MIS) training: where are we now in Italy? The Italian Society of Endoscopic Surgery (SICE) ARMIS survey
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Balla, Andrea, Sartori, Alberto, Botteri, Emanuele, Podda, Mauro, Ortenzi, Monica, Silecchia, Gianfranco, Guerrieri, Mario, Agresta, Ferdinando, Antonino, Agrusa, Daniele, Aguzzi, Mariantonietta, Alagia, Laura, Alberici, Marco Ettore Allaix, Luisa, Ambrosio, Alfonso, Amendola, Michele, Ammendola, Pietro Maria Amodio, Gabriele, Anania, Jacopo, Andreuccetti, Alfredo, Annichiarico, Pietro, Anoldo, Alessandro, Anselmo, Giovanni, Aprea, Giacomo, Arcuri, Alberto, Arezzo, Giulia, Armatura, Giulia, Bagaglini, Francesco, Bagolini, Beatrice, Bailetti, Gianluca, Baiocchi, Edoardo, Baldini, Elisa, Bannone, Mirko, Barone, Gianluca, Baronio, Raffaele, Basile, Bellucci, Marco, Andrea Benedetti Cacciaguerra, Ilaria, Benzoni, Francesco, Bianco, Giuseppe, Boccia, Cristina, Bombardini, Luigi, Boni, Dario, Bono, Luca Domenico Bonomo, Giulia, Bonventre, Andrea, Bottari, Claudio, Botti, Giacomo, Brentegani, Mattia, Buonomo, Umberto, Bracale, Cosimo, Callari, Luca, Calligaris, Pietro Giorgio Calò, Angelo, Cangiano, Lorenzo, Capezzuoli, Gabriella Teresa Capolupo, Marianna, Capuano, Filippo, Carannante, Eugenia, Cardamone, Teresa, Carfora, Chiara, Caricato, Pietro, Carnevali, Francesco Maria Carrano, Lorenzo, Casali, Gianmaria Casoni Pataccini, Gianluca, Cassese, Simone, Castiglioni, Flavia, Cavicchi, Ceccarelli, Graziano, Giovanni, Cestaro, Pasquale, Cianci, Claudio, Cimmino, Marco, Clementi, Coletta, Diego, Riccardo, Conventi, Corallino, Diletta, Maurizio, Costantini, Lorenzo, Crepaz, Diego, Cuccurullo, Curci, FABIO PIO, Giuseppe, Currò, Giorgio, Dalmonte, Giovanni, D'Alterio, Michele, D'Ambra, D'Ambrosio, Giancarlo, Anna, D'Amore, Michele De Capua, Simona, Deidda, Daniele, Delogu, Maurizio De Luca, Nicolò De Manzini, DE STEFANI, Elena, Giuseppe Di Buono, Marcello Di Martino, DI TOMASO, Anna, Ugo, Elmore, CORDOVA HERENCIA, INGRID ELVA, Giovanni, Emiliani, Sofia, Esposito, Fazio, Federico, Federico, Festa, Marcello, Filotico, Fiocca, Fausto, Irene, Fiume, Francesco, Fleres, Giulia, Fontana, Tommaso, Fontana, Edoardo, Forcignanò, Giampaolo, Formisano, Laura, Fortuna, Uberto Fumagalli Romario, Andrea, Galderisi, Raffaele, Galleano, Carlo, Gazia, Alessio, Giordano, Giorgio, Giraudo, Maria Carmela Giuffrida, Simona, Giura, Anna, Guida, Antonio Maria Iannello, Marco, Inama, Sara, Ingallinella, Iossa, Angelo, Livio, Iudici, Laracca, GIOVANNI GUGLIELMO, LARGHI LAUREIRO, Zoe, Saverio, Latteri, Luca, Leonardi, Pasquale, Lepiane, Edelweiss, Licitra, Paolo, Locurto, Sarah Lo Faso, Nicola, Luciani, Luzza, Luigi, Magaletti, Sara, Michele, Manigrasso, Alessandra, Marano, Francesco, Marchetti, Alessandra, Marello, Nicolò, Mariani, Jacopo Nicolò Marin, Gennaro, Martines, Laura, Mastrangelo, Antonio, Matarangolo, Marco, Materazzo, Mazzarella, Gennaro, Giorgio, Mazzarolo, Maria Paola Menna, Meoli, Francesca, Marco, Milone, Elisabetta, Moggia, Davide, Moioli, Sarah, Molfino, Vitantonio, Mongelli, Roberto, Montalti, Giulia, Montori, Luca, Morelli, Gianluigi, Moretto, Muttillo, EDOARDO MARIA, Irnerio, Muttillo, Francesca, Notte, Alessandro, M Paganini, Gianluca, Pagano, Palmieri, Livia, Giuseppe, Palomba, Valentina, Palumbo, Panetta, Cristina, Giulia, Paradiso, Beniamino, Pascotto, Passannanti, Daniele, Renato, Patrone, Francesca, Pecchini, Francesca, Pego, Fabio, Pelle, Perrotta, Nicola, Wanda, Petz, Biagio, Picardi, Picchetto, Andrea, Chiara, Piceni, Pietricola, Giulia, Enrico, Pinotti, Felice, Pirozzi, Paolo, Pizzini, Poillucci, Gaetano, Ilaria, Puccica, Lorenzo, Ramaci, Rapanotti, Eleonora, Daniela, Rega, Angelica, Reggiani, Giorgio, Romano, Gregorio, Romeo, Luigi, Romeo, Gianluca, Rompianesi, Stefano, Rossi, Edoardo, Saladino, Roberto, Santambrogio, Federica, Saraceno, Giuliano, Sarro, Diego, Sasia, Grazia, Savino, Rosa, Scaramuzzo, Antonio, Sciuto, Michela, Scollica, Giovanni, Scudo, Ardit, Seitaj, Carlo, Serra, Francesco, Serra, Pierpaolo, Sileri, Leandro, Siragusa, Carmen, Sorrentino, Giuseppe, Surfaro, Ernesto, Tartaglia, Beatrice, Torre, Andrea, Tufo, Matteo, Uccelli, Alessandro, Ussia, Vaccari, Samuele, Marina, Valente, Sara, Vertaldi, Alessandro, Vitali, Luca, Zaccherini, Luigi, Zorcolo, Noemi, Zorzetti, Balla, A., Sartori, A., Botteri, E., Podda, M., Ortenzi, M., Silecchia, G., Guerrieri, M., Agresta, F., Agrusa, A., Aguzzi, D., Alagia, M., Alberici, L., Allaix, M. E., Ambrosio, L., Amendola, A., Ammendola, M., Amodio, P. M., Anania, G., Andreuccetti, J., Annichiarico, A., Anoldo, P., Anselmo, A., Aprea, G., Arcuri, G., Arezzo, A., Armatura, G., Bagaglini, G., Bagolini, F., Bailetti, B., Baiocchi, G., Baldini, E., Bannone, E., Barone, M., Baronio, G., Basile, R., Bellucci, M., Cacciaguerra, A. B., Benzoni, I., Bianco, F., Boccia, G., Bombardini, C., Boni, L., Bono, D., Bonomo, L. D., Bonventre, G., Bottari, A., Botti, C., Brentegani, G., Buonomo, M., Bracale, U., Callari, C., Calligaris, L., Calo, P. G., Cangiano, A., Capezzuoli, L., Capolupo, G. T., Capuano, M., Carannante, F., Cardamone, E., Carfora, T., Caricato, C., Carnevali, P., Carrano, F. M., Casali, L., Pataccini, G. C., Cassese, G., Castiglioni, S., Cavicchi, F., Ceccarelli, G., Cestaro, G., Cianci, P., Cimmino, C., Clementi, M., Coletta, D., Conventi, R., Corallino, D., Costantini, M., Crepaz, L., Cuccurullo, D., Curci, F. P., Curro, G., Dalmonte, G., D'Alterio, G., D'Ambra, M., D'Ambrosio, G., D'Amore, A., De Capua, M., Deidda, S., Delogu, D., De Luca, M., De Manzini, N., De Stefani, E., Di Buono, G., Di Martino, M., Di Tomaso, A., Elmore, U., Herencia, I. E. C., Emiliani, G., Esposito, S., Fazio, F., Festa, F., Filotico, M., Fiocca, F., Fiume, I., Fleres, F., Fontana, G., Fontana, T., Forcignano, E., Formisano, G., Fortuna, L., Romario, U. F., Galderisi, A., Galleano, R., Gazia, C., Giordano, A., Giraudo, G., Giuffrida, M. C., Giura, S., Guida, A., Iannello, A. M., Inama, M., Ingallinella, S., Iossa, A., Iudici, L., Laracca, G. G., Laureiro, Z. L., Latteri, S., Leonardi, L., Lepiane, P., Licitra, E., Locurto, P., Faso, S. L., Luciani, N., Luzza, L., Magaletti, S., Manigrasso, M., Marano, A., Marchetti, F., Marello, A., Mariani, N., Marin, J. N., Martines, G., Mastrangelo, L., Matarangolo, A., Materazzo, M., Mazzarella, G., Mazzarolo, G., Menna, M. P., Meoli, F., Milone, M., Moggia, E., Moioli, D., Molfino, S., Mongelli, V., Montalti, R., Montori, G., Morelli, L., Moretto, G., Muttillo, E. M., Muttillo, I., Notte, F., Paganini, A. M., Pagano, G., Palmieri, L., Palomba, G., Palumbo, V., Panetta, C., Paradiso, G., Pascotto, B., Passannanti, D., Patrone, R., Pecchini, F., Pego, F., Pelle, F., Perrotta, N., Petz, W., Picardi, B., Picchetto, A., Piceni, C., Pietricola, G., Pinotti, E., Pirozzi, F., Pizzini, P., Poillucci, G., Puccica, I., Ramaci, L., Rapanotti, E., Rega, D., Reggiani, A., Romano, G., Romeo, G., Romeo, L., Rompianesi, G., Rossi, S., Saladino, E., Santambrogio, R., Saraceno, F., Sarro, G., Sasia, D., Savino, G., Scaramuzzo, R., Sciuto, A., Scollica, M., Scudo, G., Seitaj, A., Serra, C., Serra, F., Sileri, P., Siragusa, L., Sorrentino, C., Surfaro, G., Tartaglia, E., Torre, B., Tufo, A., Uccelli, M., Ussia, A., Vaccari, S., Valente, M., Vertaldi, S., Vitali, A., Zaccherini, L., Zorcolo, L., Zorzetti, N., Balla, Andrea, Sartori, Alberto, Botteri, Emanuele, Podda, Mauro, Ortenzi, Monica, Silecchia, Gianfranco, Guerrieri, Mario, Agresta, Ferdinando, de Manzini, Nicolo, and ARMIS (Augmented Reality in Minimally Invasive Surgery) Collaborative, Group
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Virtual reality (VR) ,minimally invasive surgery (MIS) ,Augmented reality (AR) ,Minimally invasive surgery (MIS) ,Mixed reality (MR) ,Survey ,Training ,training ,augmented reality (AR) ,mixed reality (MR) ,survey ,virtual reality (VR) ,Settore MED/18 - Chirurgia Generale ,Surgery - Abstract
Minimally invasive surgery (MIS) is a widespread approach in general surgery. Computer guiding software, such as the augmented reality (AR), the virtual reality (VR) and mixed reality (MR), has been proposed to help surgeons during MIS. This study aims to report these technologies' current knowledge and diffusion during surgical training in Italy. A web-based survey was developed under the aegis of the Italian Society of Endoscopic Surgery (SICE). Two hundred and seventeen medical doctors' answers were analyzed. Participants were surgeons (138, 63.6%) and residents in surgery (79, 36.4%). The mean knowledge of the role of the VR, AR and MR in surgery was 4.9 ± 2.4 (range 1-10). Most of the participants (122, 56.2%) did not have experience with any proposed technologies. However, although the lack of experience in this field, the answers about the functioning of the technologies were correct in most cases. Most of the participants answered that VR, AR and MR should be used more frequently for the teaching and training and during the clinical activity (170, 80.3%) and that such technologies would make a significant contribution, especially in training (183, 84.3%) and didactic (156, 71.9%). Finally, the main limitations to the diffusion of these technologies were the insufficient knowledge (182, 83.9%) and costs (175, 80.6%). Based on the present study, in Italy, the knowledge and dissemination of these technologies are still limited. Further studies are required to establish the usefulness of AR, VR and MR in surgical training.
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- 2023
24. The Role of Intraoperative Indocyanine Green (ICG) and Preoperative 3-Dimensional (3D) Reconstruction in Laparoscopic Adrenalectomy: A Propensity Score-matched Analysis
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Giuseppe Palomba, Vincenza Paola Dinuzzi, Francesca Pegoraro, Roberto Ivan Troisi, Roberto Montalti, Giovanni Domenico De Palma, Giovanni Aprea, Palomba, G., Dinuzzi, V. P., Pegoraro, F., Troisi, R. I., Montalti, R., De Palma, G. D., and Aprea, G.
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Indocyanine Green ,general surgery ,three-dimensional reconstruction ,Blood Loss, Surgical ,Adrenal Gland Neoplasms ,Adrenalectomy ,General Medicine ,preoperative planning ,Postoperative Complications ,indocyanine green fluorescence ,propensity score matching analysi ,Humans ,Laparoscopy ,Propensity Score ,laparoscopic adrenalectomy ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Background: Laparoscopic adrenalectomy (LA) is considered the "gold standard" treatment of adrenal lesions that are often coincidentally diagnosed during the radiologic workup of other diseases. This study aims to evaluate the intraoperative role of indocyanine green (ICG) fluorescence associated with preoperative 3-dimensional reconstruction (3DR) in laparoscopic adrenalectomy in terms of perioperative outcomes. To our knowledge, this is the first prospective case-controlled report comparing these techniques. Materials and Methods: All consecutive patients aged≥18 and undergoing laparoscopic transperitoneal adrenalectomy for all adrenal masses from January 1, 2019 to January 31, 2022 were prospectively enrolled. Patients undertaking standard LA and those undergoing preoperative 3D reconstruction and intraoperative ICG fluorescence were matched through a one-on-one propensity score matching analysis (PSM) for age, gender, BMI, CCI score, ASA score, lesion histology, tumor side, and lesion diameter. Differences in operative time, blood loss, intraoperative and postoperative complications, conversion rate, and length of stay were analyzed. Results: After propensity score matching analysis, we obtained a cohort of 36 patients divided into 2 groups of 18 patients each. The operative time and intraoperative blood loss were shorter in patients of the 3DR group (P=0,004 and P=0,004, respectively). There was no difference in terms of length of stay, conversion rate, and intraoperative and postoperative complications between the 2 groups. Conclusions: The use of intraoperative ICG in LA and preoperative planning with 3DR images is a safe and useful addition to surgery. Furthermore, we observed a reduction in terms of operating time and intraoperative blood loss.
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- 2022
25. An international multicentre propensity score matched analysis comparing between robotic versus laparoscopic left lateral sectionectomy
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Yvette, Chong, Mikel, Prieto, Mikel, Gastaca, Sung-Hoon, Choi, Iswanto, Sucandy, Adrian K H, Chiow, Marco V, Marino, Xiaoying, Wang, Mikhail, Efanov, Henri, Schotte, Mathieu, D'Hondt, Gi-Hong, Choi, Felix, Krenzien, Moritz, Schmelzle, Johann, Pratschke, T Peter, Kingham, Mariano, Giglio, Roberto I, Troisi, Jae Hoon, Lee, Eric C, Lai, Chung Ngai, Tang, David, Fuks, Mizelle, D'Silva, Ho-Seong, Han, Prashant, Kadam, Robert P, Sutcliffe, Kit-Fai, Lee, Charing C, Chong, Tan-To, Cheung, Qiu, Liu, Rong, Liu, Brian K P, Goh, and Roberto, Montalti
- Abstract
Left lateral sectionectomy (LLS) is one of the most commonly performed minimally invasive liver resections. While laparoscopic (L)-LLS is a well-established technique, over traditional open resection, it remains controversial if robotic (R)-LLS provides any advantages of L-LLS.A post hoc analysis of 997 patients from 21 international centres undergoing L-LLS or R-LLS from 2006 to 2020 was conducted. A total of 886 cases (214 R-LLS, 672 L-LLS) met study criteria. 1:1 and 1:2 propensity score matched (PSM) comparison was performed between R-LLSL-LLS. Further subset analysis by Iwate difficulty was also performed. Outcomes measured include operating time, blood loss, open conversion, readmission rates, morbidity and mortality.Comparison between R-LLS and L-LLS after PSM 1:2 demonstrated statistically significantly lower open conversion rate in R-LLS than L-LLS (0.6% versus 5%, p = 0.009) and median blood loss was also statistically significantly lower in R-LLS at 50 (80) versus 100 (170) in L-LLS (p = 0.011) after PSM 1:1 although there was no difference in the blood transfusion rate. Pringle manoeuvre was also found to be used more frequently in R-LLS, with 53(24.8%) cases versus to 84(12.5%) L-LLS cases (p 0.001). There was no significant difference in the other key perioperative outcomes such as operating time, length of stay, postoperative morbidity, major morbidity and 90-day mortality between both groups.R-LLS was associated with similar key perioperative outcomes compared to L-LLS. It was also associated with significantly lower blood loss and open conversion rates compared to L-LLS.
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- 2022
26. Hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with chronic renal disease: Challenges of interventional treatment
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Roberto Ivan Troisi, Gerardo Sarno, Mariano Cesare Giglio, Federico Tomassini, Giovanni Domenico De Palma, Roberto Montalti, Giuseppe De Simone, Emidio Scarpellini, Gianluca Rompianesi, Sarno, Gerardo, Montalti, Roberto, Giglio, Mariano Cesare, Rompianesi, Gianluca, Tomassini, Federico, Scarpellini, Emidio, De Simone, Giuseppe, De Palma, Giovanni Domenico, and Troisi, Roberto Ivan
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Cirrhosis ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Liver transplantation ,Gastroenterology ,Chronic kidney disease ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Liver surgery ,Transcatheter arterial chemoembolization ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,Disease Management ,medicine.disease ,Thermal ablation ,digestive system diseases ,Transplantation ,Oncology ,Surgery ,Liver function ,Liver cancer ,business ,Viral hepatitis ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a common malignancy worldwide, recognized as the fourth most common cause of cancer related death. Many risk factors, leading to liver cirrhosis and associated HCC, have been recognized, among them viral hepatitis infections play an important role worldwide. Patients suffering from chronic kidney disease (CKD), especially those on maintenance dialysis, show a higher prevalence of viral hepatitis than the general population what increases the risk of HCC onset. In addition, renal dysfunction may have a negative prognostic impact on both immediate and long-term outcomes after malignancy treatment. Several interventional procedures for the treatment of HCC are currently available: thermal ablation, transcatheter arterial chemoembolization, liver surgery or even liver transplantation. The Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer system provides an evidence-based treatment algorithm to address different categories of patients to the most-effective treatment in consideration of the extension of disease, liver function and performance status. Liver resection and transplantation are usually reserved to patients with early stage HCC and acceptable performance status, while the other treatments are more indicated in case of impaired liver function or locally advanced or unresectable tumors. However, there is no validated treatment algorithm for HCC in CKD patients, mainly due to the rarity of reports in this cohort of patients. Hereby we discuss the available evidences on interventional HCC treatments in CKD patients, and briefly report up-to-date pharmacological therapy for HCC patients affected by viral hepatitis.
- Published
- 2021
27. Tailings dam monitoring and early warning with InSAR technique
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Ida Svendsen, Luca Piciullo, Malte Vöge, Roberto Montalti, and Emanuele Intrieri
- Abstract
Waste materials produced by mining activities (tailings) can be collected in artificial ponds delimited by earth embankments (tailings dams). In case of tailings dam failure, the consequences are often catastrophic for the surrounding communities and livelihoods as this rupture may release large amounts of tailings and mining wastewater that moves downstream. Furthermore, the mining by-products cause, in many cases, a devastating impact on the surrounding environments and ecosystem. As an increased trend of tailings dam failure has been observed in the last decade, there is an urgent demand from the industry as well as the civil society and the investor community to gain a broader understanding of the risks posed by tailings facilities. Furthermore, efficient techniques to monitor and predict the failure of tailings dams are also crucial. This study investigates how the satellite remote sensing interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) technique can be used to monitor tailings dams and the applicability of the inverse velocity method to predict failures. InSAR data have been used to map surface displacement prior to dam failures in two case studies: the Feijao tailings dam in Brazil and the Cadia tailings dam in Australia. In the case of the Feijao dam, both the SBAS and PS techniques were applied to process displacement time-series from the satellite data. For the Cadia dam, data processing was carried out using the SqueeSAR algorithm.The inverse velocity method uses surface displacement measurement points to predict a time of failure. For the Feijao dam InSAR dataset, the inverse velocity method was applicable to different periods presenting an evident increase in the displacement rate. However, it was difficult to retrieve any reliable indication of failure. Contrary to the Feijao dam, the results from the Cadia dam shows a significantly accelerating deformation with time, and by applying the inverse velocity method a predicted time of failure can be retrieved in good agreement with the actual failure.
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- 2022
28. Intraoperative thromboelastography as a tool to predict postoperative thrombosis during liver transplantation
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Giuliano Bolondi, Lesley De Pietri, Valentina Serra, Roberto Montalti, and Fabrizio Di Benedetto
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cirrhosis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030232 urology & nephrology ,030230 surgery ,Liver transplantation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Thromboelastography ,medicine ,Transplantation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Case Control Study ,medicine.disease ,Portal vein thrombosis ,Thrombosis ,Surgery ,Hepatic artery thrombosis ,surgical procedures, operative ,Risk factors ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND Thromboembolic complications are relatively common causes of increased morbidity and mortality in the perioperative period in liver transplant patients. Early postoperative portal vein thrombosis (PVT, incidence 2%-2.6%) and early hepatic artery thrombosis (HAT, incidence 3%-5%) have a poor prognosis in transplant patients, having impacts on graft and patient survival. In the present study, we attempted to identify the predictive factors of these complications for early detection and therefore monitor more closely the patients most at risk of thrombotic complications. AIM To investigate whether intraoperative thromboelastography (TEG) is useful in detecting the risk of early postoperative HAT and PVT in patients undergoing liver transplantation (LT). METHODS We retrospectively collected thromboelastographic traces, in addition to known risk factors (cold ischemic time, intraoperative requirement for red blood cells and fresh-frozen plasma transfusion, prolonged operating time), in 27 patients, selected among 530 patients (≥ 18 years old), who underwent their first LT from January 2002 to January 2015 at the Liver University Transplant Center and developed an early PVT or HAT (case group). Analyses of the TEG traces were performed before anesthesia and 120 min after reperfusion. We retrospectively compared these patients with the same number of nonconsecutive control patients who underwent LT in the same study period without developing these complications (1:1 match) (control group). The chosen matching parameters were: Patient graft and donor characteristics [age, sex, body mass index (BMI)], indication for transplantation, procedure details, United Network for Organ Sharing classification, BMI, warm ischemia time (WIT), cold ischemia time (CIT), the volume of blood products transfused, and conventional laboratory coagulation analysis. Normally distributed continuous data are reported as the mean ± SD and compared using one-way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA). Non-normally distributed continuous data are reported as the median (interquartile range) and compared using the Mann-Whitney test. Categorical variables were analyzed with Chi-square tests with Yates correction or Fisher’s exact test depending on best applicability. IBM SPSS Statistics version 24 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, United States) was employed for statistical analysis. Statistical significance was set at P < 0.05. RESULTS Postoperative thrombotic events were identified as early if they occurred within 21 d postoperatively. The incidence of early hepatic artery occlusion was 3.02%, whereas the incidence of PVT was 2.07%. A comparison between the case and control groups showed some differences in the duration of surgery, which was longer in the case group (P = 0.032), whereas transfusion of blood products, red blood cells, fresh frozen plasma, and platelets, was similar between the two study groups. Thromboelastographic parameters did not show any statistically significant difference between the two groups, except for the G value measured at basal and 120’ postreperfusion time. It was higher, although within the reference range, in the case group than in the control group (P = 0.001 and P < 0.001, respectively). In addition, clot lysis at 60 min (LY60) measured at 120’ postreperfusion time was lower in the case group than in the control group (P = 0.035). This parameter is representative of a fibrinolysis shutdown (LY60 = 0%-0.80%) in 85% of patients who experienced a thrombotic complication, resulting in a statistical correlation with HAT and PVT. CONCLUSION The end of surgery LY60 and G value may identify those recipients at greater risk of developing early HAT or PVT, suggesting that they may benefit from intense surveillance and eventually anticoagulation prophylaxis in order to prevent these serious complications after LT.
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- 2020
29. Continuous thoracic spinal anesthesia with local anesthetic plus midazolam and ketamine is superior to local anesthetic plus fentanyl in major abdominal surgery
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Roberto Bucchianeri, Paolo Vincenzi, Alfredo Venezia, Roberto Starnari, Roberto Montalti, Gianfranco Boccoli, Leonardo Chiodi, Lesley De Pietri, Massimo Stronati, Marina Giampieri, Riccardo Grifoni, Diletta Gaudenzi, Lucia Faloia, Vincenzi, P., Starnari, R., Faloia, L., Grifoni, R., Bucchianeri, R., Chiodi, L., Venezia, A., Stronati, M., Giampieri, M., Montalti, R., Gaudenzi, D., De Pietri, L., and Boccoli, G.
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Bupivacaine ,Local anesthetic ,medicine.drug_class ,business.industry ,Sedation ,lcsh:Surgery ,Perioperative ,lcsh:RD1-811 ,Article ,Fentanyl ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Midazolam ,Ketamine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Abdominal surgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Limited studies have applied thoracic continuous spinal anesthesia in abdominal surgery, relying exclusively on opioids. This retrospective study analyzes 2 different schemes of thoracic continuous spinal anesthesia and postoperative analgesia in elderly patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. Methods A total of 98 patients aged ≥ 75 years were divided into 2 groups. The control group (60 patients) received bupivacaine plus fentanyl, whereas the study group (38 patients) received bupivacaine plus ketamine and midazolam. Both received analogous postoperative continuous intrathecal analgesia. Several perioperative variables were evaluated. Results Spinal anesthesia was performed without complications in all patients. Doses of noradrenaline administered, incidence of respiratory depression, need for intraoperative sedation, and time to first flatus were significantly reduced in the bupivacaine plus ketamine and midazolam group. Conclusion In a population of frail, elderly patients, thoracic continuous spinal anesthesia with local anesthetic plus midazolam and ketamine was superior to local anesthetic plus fentanyl. In the group receiving local anesthetic plus midazolam and ketamine, the incidence of respiratory depression was reduced, and doses of norepinephrine and intraoperative sedating medications were lower. Intraoperative anesthesia and postoperative analgesia were similar in both groups.
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- 2020
30. Hepatobiliary scintigraphy and kinetic growth rate predict liver failure after ALPPS: a multi-institutional study
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Michael Linecker, Dario Bruzzese, François-René Pruvot, Rimma Axelsson, Ernesto Sparrelid, Yves D'Asseler, René Adam, Federico Tomassini, Pierre-Alain Clavien, Stéphanie Truant, Thomas M. van Gulik, Carlos Castro-Benitez, Valerio Lucidi, Mariano Cesare Giglio, Karen Geboes, Thiery Chapelle, Roberto Troisi, Roberto Montalti, P.B. Olthof, Matteo Serenari, University of Zurich, Troisi, Roberto I, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Surgery, Tomassini, F., D'Asseler, Y., Linecker, M., Giglio, M. C., Castro-Benitez, C., Truant, S., Axelsson, R., Olthof, P. B., Montalti, R., Serenari, M., Chapelle, T., Lucidi, V., Sparrelid, E., Adam, R., Van Gulik, T., Pruvot, F. -R., Clavien, P. -A., Bruzzese, D., Geboes, K., and Troisi, R. I.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,610 Medicine & health ,030230 surgery ,Scintigraphy ,Gastroenterology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Hepatectomy ,Humans ,2715 Gastroenterology ,Stage (cooking) ,Radionuclide Imaging ,Retrospective Studies ,10217 Clinic for Visceral and Transplantation Surgery ,Receiver operating characteristic ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Portal Vein ,Liver Neoplasms ,Liver failure ,Retrospective cohort study ,Liver ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,2721 Hepatology ,Liver function ,Human medicine ,business ,Liver Failure - Abstract
Background: Post hepatectomy liver failure (PHLF) after ALPPS has been related to the discrepancy between liver volume and function. Pre-operative hepatobiliary scintigraphy (HBS) can predict postoperative liver function and guide when it is safe to proceed with major hepatectomy. Aim of this study was to evaluate the role of HBS in predicting PHLF after ALPPS, defining a safe cut-off. Methods: A multicenter retrospective study was approved by the ALPPS Registry. All patients selected for ALPPS between 2012 and 2018, were evaluated. Every patient underwent HBS during ALPPS evaluation. PHLF was reported according to ISGLS definition, considering grade B or C as clinically significant. Results: 98 patients were included. Thirteen patients experienced PHLF grade B or C (14%) following ALPPS-2. The HBS and the daily gain in volume (KGRFLR) of the future liver remnant (FLR) were significantly lower in PHLF B and C (p = .004 and .041 respectively). ROC curves indicated safe cut-offs of 4.1%/day (AUC = 0.68) for KGRFLR, and of 2.7 %/min/m(2) (AUC = 0.75) for HBSFLR. Multivariate analysis confirmed these cut-offs as variables predicting PHLF after ALPPS-2. Conclusion: Patients presenting a KGRFLR
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- 2020
31. Post-operative morbidity following pancreatic duct occlusion without anastomosis after pancreaticoduodenectomy: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Gianluca Cassese, Federico Tomassini, Roberto Montalti, Roberto Troisi, Nikdokht Rashidian, Mariano Cesare Giglio, Giglio, MARIANO CESARE, Cassese, G., Tomassini, F., Rashidian, N., Montalti, R., and Troisi, Roberto
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MEDLINE ,030230 surgery ,Anastomosis ,Pancreaticoduodenectomy ,Pancreatic Fistula ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pancreaticojejunostomy ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Humans ,Medicine ,Abscess ,Hepatology ,Pancreatic duct occlusion ,business.industry ,Anastomosis, Surgical ,Pancreatic Ducts ,Gastroenterology ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Meta-analysis ,Morbidity ,business - Abstract
Background Pancreatic duct occlusion (PDO) without anastomosis is a technique proposed to mitigate the clinical consequences of postoperative pancreatic fistulas (POPF) after pancreaticoduodenectomy. The aim of this study was to appraise the morbidity following PDO through a systematic review and meta-analysis. Methods A systematic search of MEDLINE, Embase, and Web Of Science identified studies reporting outcomes of PDO following pancreaticoduodenectomy. Pooled prevalence rates of postoperative complications and mortality were computed using random-effect modeling. Meta-regression analyses were performed to examine the impact of moderators on the overall estimates. Results Sixteen studies involving 1000 patients were included. Pooled postoperative mortality was 2.7%. A POPF was reported in 29.7% of the patients. Clinically relevant POPFs occurred in 13.5% of the patients, while intra-abdominal abscess and haemorrhages occurred in 6.7% and 5.5% of the patients, respectively. Re-operation was necessary in 7.6% of the patients. Postoperatively new onset diabetes occurred in 15.8% of patients, more frequently after the use of chemical substances for PDO (p = 0.003). Conclusions PDO is associated with significant morbidity including new onset of post-operative diabetes. The risk of new onset post-operative diabetes is associated with the use of chemical substance for PDO. Further evidence is needed to evaluate the potential benefits of PDO in patients at high risk of POPF.
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- 2020
32. Robotic approach to the liver: Open surgery in a closed abdomen or laparoscopic surgery with technical constraints?
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Roberto Ivan Troisi, Giovanni Aprea, Federico Tomassini, Gianluca Rompianesi, Mariano Cesare Giglio, Giammauro Berardi, Giovanni Domenico De Palma, Giuseppe De Simone, Francesca Pegoraro, Roberto Montalti, Troisi, R. I., Pegoraro, F., Giglio, M. C., Rompianesi, G., Berardi, G., Tomassini, F., De Simone, G., Aprea, G., Montalti, R., and De Palma, G. D.
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Laparoscopic surgery ,Liver surgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Postoperative recovery ,030230 surgery ,Cholangiocarcinoma ,Abdominal wall ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Robotic Surgical Procedures ,Hepatectomy ,Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Medicine ,Robotic surgery ,Liver resection ,business.industry ,Open surgery ,General surgery ,Liver Neoplasms ,Robotic liver surgery ,Bile Ducts, Intrahepatic ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Bile Duct Neoplasms ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Abdomen ,Laparoscopy ,Surgery ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business ,Laparoscopic liver surgery ,Klatskin Tumor - Abstract
The application of the minimally invasive approach has shown to be safe and effective for liver surgery and is in constant growth. The indications for laparoscopic surgery are steadily increasing across the field. In the early 2000s, robotic surgery led to some additional improvements, such as tremor filtration, instrument stability, 3D view and more comfort for the surgeon. These techniques bring in some advantages compared to the traditional OLR: less blood loss, shorter admissions, fewer adhesions, and a faster postoperative recovery and better outcomes in case of further hepatectomy for tumor recurrence has been shown. Concerning which is the best minimally invasive approach between laparoscopic and robotic surgery, the evidence is still conflicting. The latter shows good potential, since the endo-wristed instruments work similarly to the surgeon's hands, even with an intact abdominal wall. However, the technique is still under development, burdened by important costs, and limited by the lack of some instruments available for the laparoscopic approach. The paucity of universally accepted and proven data, especially concerning long-term outcomes, hampers drawing univocal acceptance at present. Furthermore, the number of variables related both to the patient and the disease further complicates the decision leading to a treatment tailored to each patient with strict selection. This review aims to explore the main differences between laparoscopic and robotic surgery, focusing on indications, operative technique and current debated clinical issues in recent literature.
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- 2020
33. Factors associated with and impact of open conversion on the outcomes of minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomies: An international multicenter study
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Hao Ping Wang, Chee Chien Yong, Andrew G.R. Wu, Daniel Cherqui, Roberto I. Troisi, Federica Cipriani, Davit Aghayan, Marco V. Marino, Andrea Belli, Adrian K.H. Chiow, Iswanto Sucandy, Arpad Ivanecz, Marco Vivarelli, Fabrizio Di Benedetto, Sung-Hoon Choi, Jae Hoon Lee, James O. Park, Mikel Gastaca, Constantino Fondevila, Mikhail Efanov, Fernando Rotellar, Gi-Hong Choi, Ricardo Robles Campos, Xiaoying Wang, Robert P. Sutcliffe, Johann Pratschke, Chung Ngai Tang, Charing C. Chong, Mathieu D’Hondt, Andrea Ruzzenente, Paolo Herman, T. Peter Kingham, Olivier Scatton, Rong Liu, Alessandro Ferrero, Giovanni Battista Levi Sandri, Olivier Soubrane, Alejandro Mejia, Santiago Lopez-Ben, Jasper Sijberden, Kazuteru Monden, Go Wakabayashi, Atsushi Sugioka, Tan-To Cheung, Tran Cong Duy Long, Bjorn Edwin, Ho-Seong Han, David Fuks, Luca Aldrighetti, Mohamed Abu Hilal, Brian K.P. Goh, Chung-Yip Chan, Nicholas Syn, Mikel Prieto, Henri Schotte, Celine De Meyere, Felix Krenzien, Moritz Schmelzle, Kit-Fai Lee, Diana Salimgereeva, Ruslan Alikhanov, Lip Seng Lee, Jae Young Jang, Kevin P. Labadie, Masayuki Kojima, Yutaro Kato, Asmund Avdem Fretland, Jacob Ghotbi, Fabricio Ferreira Coelho, Jaime Arthur Pirola Kruger, Victor Lopez-Lopez, Paolo Magistri, Bernardo Dalla Valle, Margarida Casellas I Robert, Kohei Mishima, Giuseppe Maria Ettorre, Federico Mocchegiani, Prashant Kadam, Franco Pascual, Mansour Saleh, Alessandro Mazzotta, Roberto Montalti, Mariano Giglio, Boram Lee, Mizelle D’Silva, Phan Phuoc Nghia, Chetana Lim, Qu Liu, Eric C. Lai, Wang, Hao Ping, Yong, Chee Chien, Wu, Andrew G R, Cherqui, Daniel, Troisi, Roberto I, Cipriani, Federica, Aghayan, Davit, Marino, Marco V, Belli, Andrea, Chiow, Adrian K H, Sucandy, Iswanto, Ivanecz, Arpad, Vivarelli, Marco, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, Choi, Sung-Hoon, Lee, Jae Hoon, Park, James O, Gastaca, Mikel, Fondevila, Constantino, Efanov, Mikhail, Rotellar, Fernando, Choi, Gi-Hong, Campos, Ricardo Roble, Wang, Xiaoying, Sutcliffe, Robert P, Pratschke, Johann, Tang, Chung Ngai, Chong, Charing C, D'Hondt, Mathieu, Ruzzenente, Andrea, Herman, Paolo, Kingham, T Peter, Scatton, Olivier, Liu, Rong, Ferrero, Alessandro, Levi Sandri, Giovanni Battista, Soubrane, Olivier, Mejia, Alejandro, Lopez-Ben, Santiago, Sijberden, Jasper, Monden, Kazuteru, Wakabayashi, Go, Sugioka, Atsushi, Cheung, Tan-To, Long, Tran Cong Duy, Edwin, Bjorn, Han, Ho-Seong, Fuks, David, Aldrighetti, Luca, Abu Hilal, Mohamed, Goh, Brian K P, Wang, H. P., Yong, C. C., Wu, A. G. R., Cherqui, D., Troisi, R. I., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D., Marino, M. V., Belli, A., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Vivarelli, M., Di Benedetto, F., Choi, S. -H., Lee, J. H., Park, J. O., Gastaca, M., Fondevila, C., Efanov, M., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Campos, R. R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Tang, C. N., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Ruzzenente, A., Herman, P., Kingham, T. P., Scatton, O., Liu, R., Ferrero, A., Levi Sandri, G. B., Soubrane, O., Mejia, A., Lopez-Ben, S., Sijberden, J., Monden, K., Wakabayashi, G., Sugioka, A., Cheung, T. -T., Long, T. C. D., Edwin, B., Han, H. -S., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Abu Hilal, M., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., Syn, N., Prieto, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. S., Jang, J. Y., Labadie, K. P., Kojima, M., Kato, Y., Fretland, A. A., Ghotbi, J., Coelho, F. F., Pirola Kruger, J. A., Lopez-Lopez, V., Magistri, P., Valle, B. D., Casellas I Robert, M., Mishima, K., Ettorre, G. M., Mocchegiani, F., Kadam, P., Pascual, F., Saleh, M., Mazzotta, A., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Lee, B., D'Silva, M., Nghia, P. P., Lim, C., Liu, Q., Lai, E. C., Graduate School, Surgery, and CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life
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Male ,Operative Time ,Length of Stay ,Conversion to Open Surgery ,Hepatectomy ,Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Postoperative Complications ,Retrospective Studies ,Treatment Outcome ,Hypertension, Portal ,Laparoscopy ,Neoplasms ,Hypertension ,Surgery ,Portal - Abstract
Background: Despite the rapid advances that minimally invasive liver resection has gained in recent decades, open conversion is still inevitable in some circumstances. In this study, we aimed to determine the risk factors for open conversion after minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomy, and its impact on perioperative outcomes. Methods: This is a post hoc analysis of 2,445 of 2,678 patients who underwent minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomy at 45 international centers between 2004 and 2020. Factors related to open conversion were analyzed via univariate and multivariate analyses. One-to-one propensity score matching was used to analyze outcomes after open conversion versus non-converted cases. Results: The open conversion rate was 69/2,445 (2.8%). On multivariate analyses, male gender (3.6% vs 1.8%, P = .011), presence of clinically significant portal hypertension (6.1% vs 2.6%, P = .009), and larger tumor size (50 mm vs 32 mm, P < .001) were identified as independent factors associated with open conversion. The most common reason for conversion was bleeding in 27/69 (39.1%) of cases. After propensity score matching (65 open conversion vs 65 completed via minimally invasive liver resection), the open conversion group was associated with increased operation time, blood transfusion rate, blood loss, and postoperative stay compared with cases completed via the minimally invasive approach. Conclusion: Male sex, portal hypertension, and larger tumor size were predictive factors of open conversion after minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomy. Open conversion was associated with inferior perioperative outcomes compared with non-converted cases.
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- 2022
34. Artificial intelligence in the diagnosis and management of colorectal cancer liver metastases
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Gianluca Rompianesi, Francesca Pegoraro, Carlo DL Ceresa, Roberto Montalti, Roberto Ivan Troisi, Rompianesi, G, Pegoraro, F, Ceresa, Cd, Montalti, R, and Troisi, R
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Artificial intelligence ,Radiomics ,Liver Neoplasms ,Gastroenterology ,Minireviews ,Deep learning ,General Medicine ,Colorectal cancer ,Liver metastases ,Machine learning ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Colorectal cancer, Liver metastases, Artificial intelligence, Machine learning, Deep learning, Neural networks, Radiomics ,Prospective Studies ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Neural networks - Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common malignancy worldwide, with approximately 50% of patients developing colorectal cancer liver metastasis (CRLM) during the follow-up period. Management of CRLM is best achieved via a multidisciplinary approach and the diagnostic and therapeutic decision-making process is complex. In order to optimize patients’ survival and quality of life, there are several unsolved challenges which must be overcome. These primarily include a timely diagnosis and the identification of reliable prognostic factors. Furthermore, to allow optimal treatment options, a precision-medicine, personalized approach is required. The widespread digitalization of healthcare generates a vast amount of data and together with accessible high-performance computing, artificial intelligence (AI) technologies can be applied. By increasing diagnostic accuracy, reducing timings and costs, the application of AI could help mitigate the current shortcomings in CRLM management. In this review we explore the available evidence of the possible role of AI in all phases of the CRLM natural history. Radiomics analysis and convolutional neural networks (CNN) which combine computed tomography (CT) images with clinical data have been developed to predict CRLM development in CRC patients. AI models have also proven themselves to perform similarly or better than expert radiologists in detecting CRLM on CT and magnetic resonance scans or identifying them from the noninvasive analysis of patients’ exhaled air. The application of AI and machine learning (ML) in diagnosing CRLM has also been extended to histopathological examination in order to rapidly and accurately identify CRLM tissue and its different histopathological growth patterns. ML and CNN have shown good accuracy in predicting response to chemotherapy, early local tumor progression after ablation treatment, and patient survival after surgical treatment or chemotherapy. Despite the initial enthusiasm and the accumulating evidence, AI technologies’ role in healthcare and CRLM management is not yet fully established. Its limitations mainly concern safety and the lack of regulation and ethical considerations. AI is unlikely to fully replace any human role but could be actively integrated to facilitate physicians in their everyday practice. Moving towards a personalized and evidence-based patient approach and management, further larger, prospective and rigorous studies evaluating AI technologies in patients at risk or affected by CRLM are needed.
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- 2022
35. Liver growth prediction in ALPPS - A multicenter analysis from the international ALPPS registry
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Victor Lopez‐Lopez, Michael Linecker, Juan Cruz, Roberto Brusadin, Asuncion Lopez‐Conesa, Marcel Autran Machado, Roberto Hernandez‐Alejandro, Alejandro Sergey Voskanyan, Jun Li, Deniz Balci, René Adam, Victoria Ardiles, Eduardo De Santibañes, Federico Tomassini, Roberto I. Troisi, Georg Lurje, Stéphanie Truant, Francois‐René Pruvot, Bergthor Björnsson, Miroslav Stojanovic, Roberto Montalti, Valentin Cayuela, Ivan Kozyrin, Xiujun Cai, Emilio de Vicente, Falk Rauchfuss, Peter Lodge, Francesca Ratti, Luca Aldrighetti, Karl J. Oldhafer, Massimo Malago, Henrik Petrowsky, Pierre‐Alain Clavien, Ricardo Robles‐Campos, Lopez-Lopez, Victor, Linecker, Michael, Cruz, Juan, Brusadin, Roberto, Lopez-Conesa, Asuncion, Machado, Marcel Autran, Hernandez-Alejandro, Roberto, Voskanyan, Alejandro Sergey, Li, Jun, Balci, Deniz, Adam, René, Ardiles, Victoria, De Santibañes, Eduardo, Tomassini, Federico, Troisi, Roberto I, Lurje, Georg, Truant, Stéphanie, Pruvot, Francois-René, Björnsson, Bergthor, Stojanovic, Miroslav, Montalti, Roberto, Cayuela, Valentin, Kozyrin, Ivan, Cai, Xiujun, de Vicente, Emilio, Rauchfuss, Falk, Lodge, Peter, Ratti, Francesca, Aldrighetti, Luca, Oldhafer, Karl J, Malago, Massimo, Petrowsky, Henrik, Clavien, Pierre-Alain, Robles-Campos, Ricardo, Lopez-Lopez, V., Linecker, M., Cruz, J., Brusadin, R., Lopez-Conesa, A., Machado, M. A., Hernandez-Alejandro, R., Voskanyan, A. S., Li, J., Balci, D., Adam, R., Ardiles, V., De Santibanes, E., Tomassini, F., Troisi, R. I., Lurje, G., Truant, S., Pruvot, F. -R., Bjornsson, B., Stojanovic, M., Montalti, R., Cayuela, V., Kozyrin, I., Cai, X., de Vicente, E., Rauchfuss, F., Lodge, P., Ratti, F., Aldrighetti, L., Oldhafer, K. J., Malago, M., Petrowsky, H., Clavien, P. -A., and Robles-Campos, R.
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Male ,Hepatology ,rapid hypertrophy ,Portal Vein ,Liver Neoplasms ,Hypertrophy ,Cohort Studies ,liver cancer ,Humans ,Hepatectomy ,anthropometrics ,Female ,Registries ,ALPPS ,anthropometric ,liver regeneration ,Ligation - Abstract
Background: While ALPPS triggers a fast liver hypertrophy, it is still unclear which factors matter most to achieve accelerated hypertrophy within a short period of time. The aim of the study was to identify patient-intrinsic factors related to the growth of the future liver remnant (FLR). Methods: This cohort study is composed of data derived from the International ALPPS Registry from November 2011 and October 2018. We analyse the influence of demographic, tumour type and perioperative data on the growth of the FLR. The volume of the FLR was calculated in millilitre and percentage using computed-tomography (CT) scans before and after stage 1, both according to Vauthey formula. Results: A total of 734 patients were included from 99 centres. The median sFLR at stage 1 and stage 2 was 0.23 (IQR, 0.18–0.28) and 0.39 (IQR: 0.31–0.46), respectively. The variables associated with a lower increase from sFLR1 to sFLR2 were age˃68 years (p =.02), height ˃1.76 m (p ˂.01), weight ˃83 kg (p ˂.01), BMI˃28 (p ˂.01), male gender (p ˂.01), antihypertensive therapy (p ˂.01), operation time ˃370 minutes (p ˂.01) and hospital stay˃14 days (p ˂.01). The time required to reach sufficient volume for stage 2, male gender accounts 40.3% in group ˂7 days, compared with 50% of female, and female present 15.3% in group ˃14 days compared with 20.6% of male. Conclusions: Height, weight, FLR size and gender could be the variables that most constantly influence both daily growths, the interstage increase and the standardized FLR before the second stage.
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- 2022
36. Systematic review, meta-analysis and single-centre experience of the diagnostic accuracy of intraoperative near-infrared indocyanine green-fluorescence in detecting pancreatic tumours
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Gianluca Rompianesi, Roberto Montalti, Mariano C. Giglio, Carlo D.L. Ceresa, Riccardo A. Nasto, Giuseppe De Simone, Roberto I. Troisi, Rompianesi, Gianluca, Montalti, Roberto, Giglio, Mariano C., Ceresa, Carlo D. L., Nasto, Riccardo A., De Simone, Giuseppe, and Troisi, Roberto
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Indocyanine Green ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared ,Hepatology ,Optical Imaging ,Gastroenterology ,Humans ,Adenocarcinoma - Abstract
Background: During pancreatic resections assessing tumour boundaries and identifying the ideal resection margins can be challenging due to the associated pancreatic gland inflammation and texture. This is particularly true in the context of minimally invasive surgery, where there is a very limited or absent tactile feedback. Indocyanine green (ICG) fluorescence imaging can assist surgeons by simply providing valuable real-time intraoperative information at low cost with minimal side effects. This meta-analysis summarises the available evidence on the use of near-infrared fluorescence imaging with ICG for the intraoperative visualization of pancreatic tumours (PROSPERO ID: CRD42021247203). Methods: MEDLINE, Embase, and Web Of Science electronic databases were searched to identify manuscripts where ICG was intravenously administered prior to or during pancreatic surgery and reporting the prevalence of pancreatic lesions visualised through fluorescence imaging. Results: Six studies with 7 series' reporting data on 64 pancreatic lesions were included in the analysis. MINOR scores ranged from 6 to 10, with a median of 8. The most frequent indications were pancreatic adenocarcinoma and neuroendocrine tumours. In most cases (67.2%) ICG was administered during surgery. ICG fluorescence identified 48/64 lesions (75%) with 81.3% accuracy, 0.788 (95%CI 0.361-0.961) sensitivity, 1 (95%CI 0.072-1) specificity and positive predictive value of 0.982 (95%CI 0.532-1). In line with the literature, ICG fluorescence identified 5/6 (83.3%) of pancreatic lesions during robotic pancreatic resections performed at our Institution. Conclusion: This meta-analysis is the first summarising the results of ICG immunofluorescence in detecting pancreatic tumours during surgery, showing good accuracy. Additional research is needed to define optimal ICG administration strategies and fluorescence intensity cut-offs.
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- 2021
37. The impact of synchronous liver resection on the risk of anastomotic leakage following elective colorectal resection. A propensity score match analysis on behalf of the iCral study group
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C. Di Marco, Gianluca Guercioni, G. Anania, Antonio Sciuto, Felice Pirozzi, P. Marini, Stefano Scabini, Marcello Ceccaroni, Ugo Pace, M. Pavanello, Alessandro Carrara, Elisa Arici, Federico Tomassini, Antonio Martino, Riccardo Angeloni, Alberto Patriti, B. Ruggeri, Lorenzo Pandolfini, A. Sagnotta, Marco Scatizzi, Elisa Bertocchi, R. Macarone Palmieri, Simone Cicconi, Angela Maurizi, D. Zigiotto, Marco Catarci, Gian Luca Baiocchi, G. Tirone, Paolo Delrio, Felice Borghi, Sarah Molfino, Marco Migliore, G. Brisinda, T. di Cesare, Stefano Mancini, M. Clementi, Paolo Ciano, G. Sica, Michele Motter, Vincenzo Alagna, Roberto Campagnacci, Simone Santoni, Andrea Pierre Luzzi, Giacomo Martorelli, Nereo Vettoretto, Andrea Muratore, Desiree Cianflocca, Maddalena Baraghini, S. Guadagni, M.M. Chiarello, Andrea Lucchi, Andrea Liverani, Valerio Sisti, Graziano Longo, Filippo Petrelli, Gianluca Garulli, Michele Benedetti, M. Lambertini, Pietro Maria Amodio, A. Falsetto, Francesco Guerra, Gabriella Teresa Capolupo, Paola Antonella Greco, Roberto Montalti, P. Marsanic, Marco Caricato, Giacomo Ruffo, Irene Marziali, Guerra, F., Petrelli, F., Greco, P. A., Sisti, V., Catarci, M., Montalti, R., Patriti, A., Alagna, V., Amodio, P., Anania, G., Angeloni, R., Arici, E., Baiocchi, G., Baraghini, M., Benedetti, M., Bertocchi, E., Borghi, F., Brisinda, G., Campagnacci, R., Capolupo, G. T., Caricato, M., Carrara, A., Ceccaroni, M., Chiarello, M. M., Cianflocca, D., Ciano, P., Cicconi, S., Clementi, M., Delrio, P., Di Cesare, T., Di Marco, C., Falsetto, A., Garulli, G., Guadagni, S., Guercioni, G., Lambertini, M., Liverani, A., Longo, G., Lucchi, A., Luzzi, A. P., Macarone Palmieri, R., Mancini, S., Marini, P., Marsanic, P., Martino, A., Martorelli, G., Marziali, I., Maurizi, A., Migliore, M., Molfino, S., Motter, M., Muratore, A., Pace, U., Pandolfini, L., Pavanello, M., Pirozzi, F., Ruffo, G., Ruggeri, B., Sagnotta, A., Santoni, S., Scabini, S., Scatizzi, M., Sciuto, A., Sica, G., Tirone, G., Tomassini, F., Vettoretto, N., and Zigiotto, D.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,Settore MED/18 - CHIRURGIA GENERALE ,Anastomotic Leak ,030230 surgery ,Anastomosis ,NO ,Metastasis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Hepatectomy ,Humans ,Risk factor ,Propensity Score ,Colectomy ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Liver Neoplasms ,Simultaneous resection ,Cancer ,General Medicine ,Perioperative ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Settore MED/18 ,Oncology ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Relative risk ,Propensity score matching ,Female ,Synchronous colorectal liver metastasis ,business ,Colorectal Neoplasms - Abstract
Introduction how best to manage patients with colorectal cancer and synchronous liver metastasis is still controversial, with specific concerns of increased risk of postoperative complications following combined resection. We aimed at analyzing the influence of combined liver resection on the risk of anastomotic leak (AL) following colorectal resection. Methods we reviewed the iCral prospectively maintained database to compare the relative risk of AL of patients undergoing colorectal resection for cancer to that of patients receiving simultaneous liver and colorectal resection for cancer with isolated hepatic metastases. The incidence of AL was the primary outcome of the analysis. Perioperative details and postoperative complications were also appraised. Results out of a total of 996 patients who underwent colorectal resection for cancer, 206 receiving isolated colorectal resection were compared with a matched group of 53 patients undergoing simultaneous liver and colorectal resection. Combined surgery had greater operative time and resulted in longer postoperative hospitalization compared to colorectal resection alone. The proportion of overall morbidity following combined resection was significantly higher than after isolated colorectal resection (56.6% vs. 37.9%, p = 0.021). Overall, the two groups of patients did not differ neither on the rate of major postoperative complications, nor in terms of AL (9.4% vs. 6.3%, p = 0.381). At specific multivariate analysis, the duration of surgery was the only risk factor independently associated with the likelihood of AL. Conclusions combining hepatic with colorectal resection for the treatment of synchronous liver metastasis from colorectal cancer does not increase significantly the incidence of AL.
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- 2021
38. Ground motion detection in a salt solution mining area, an application of Multi-Temporal Satellite Interferometry
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Silvia Bianchini, Oriol Monserrat, Roberto Montalti, Lorenzo Solari, Anna Barra, and Michele Crosetto
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Ground motion ,Salt solution ,Interferometry ,Satellite ,Geology ,Remote sensing - Abstract
Subsurface mining is one of the human activities with the highest impact in terms of induced ground motion. The excavation of the mining layers creates a geotechnically and hydrogeologically unstable context. The generation of chimney collapses and sinkholes is the most evident surface consequence of underground mining which, in general, creates the optimal conditions for the development of subsidence bowls. Considering this, the need for ground motion monitoring tools is evident. Topographic measurements have been the obvious choice for many years. Nowadays, the flourishing of Multi-Temporal Satellite Interferometry (MTInSAR) algorithms and techniques offers a new way to measure ground motion in mining areas. MTInSAR fully covers the accuracy requirements asked by mining companies and authorities, adding new potentialities in term of area coverage and number of measurement points. The technique has some intrinsic limitations in mining areas, e.g. coherence loss, but the algorithms are being pushed to their technical limits in order to provide the best coverage and quality of measures.This work presents a detailed scale MTInSAR approach designed to characterize ground deformation in the salt solution mining area of Saline di Volterra (Tuscany Region, central Italy). In summary, salt solution mining consists in the injection at the depth of interest of a dissolving fluid and in the extraction of the resultant saturated brine. In Saline di Volterra, this mining activity created ground motion, sinkholes and groundwater depletion. The MTInSAR processing approach used is based on the direct integration of interferograms derived from Sentinel-1 images and on the phase splitting between low and high frequency components. Phase unwrapping is separately performed for the two components that are then recombined to avoid error accumulation. Before generating the final deformation map, a classical atmospheric phase filtering is applied to remove the residual low frequency signal. The results obtained reveal the presence of several subsidence bowls, sometimes corresponding to sinkholes formed in the recent past. These moving areas register velocities up to -250 mm/yr with different spatial and temporal patterns according to the distribution and age of formation of sinkholes. This is the first time an interferometric analysis is performed here. It is hoped that such information could increase the awareness of local entities on the ground effects induced by this mining activity.
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- 2021
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39. Robotic central pancreatectomy: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Roberto Montalti, Carlo D L Ceresa, Emanuele Caruso, Roberto Troisi, Gianluca Rompianesi, Mariano Cesare Giglio, Rompianesi, G., Montalti, R., Giglio, M. C., Caruso, E., Ceresa, C. D., and Troisi, R.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General surgery ,Gastroenterology ,MEDLINE ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,Pancreatic Fistula ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pancreatectomy ,Postoperative Complications ,Robotic Surgical Procedures ,Pancreatic fistula ,Meta-analysis ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Humans ,Pancreas ,business ,Systematic search - Abstract
Background Central pancreatectomy is usually performed to excise lesions of the neck or proximal body of the pancreas. In the last decade, thanks to the advent of novel technologies, surgeons have started to perform this procedure robotically. This review aims to appraise the results and outcomes of robotic central pancreatectomies (RCP) through a systematic review and meta-analysis. Methods A systematic search of MEDLINE, Embase, and Web Of Science identified studies reporting outcomes of RCP. Pooled prevalence rates of postoperative complications and mortality were computed using random-effect modelling. Results Thirteen series involving 265 patients were included. In all cases but one, RCP was performed to excise benign or low-grade tumours. Clinically relevant post-operative pancreatic fistula (POPF) occurred in 42.3% of patients. While overall complications were reported in 57.5% of patients, only 9.4% had a Clavien-Dindo score ≥ III. Re-operation was necessary in 0.7% of the patients. New-onset diabetes occurred postoperatively in 0.3% of patients and negligible mortality and open conversion rates were observed. Conclusion RCP is safe and associated with low perioperative mortality and well preserved postoperative pancreatic function, although burdened by high overall morbidity and POPF rates.
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- 2021
40. Laparoscopic icg-guided ralpps procedure for hcc on cirrhosis with 3d reconstruction implementation: A case report
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Mariano Cesare Giglio, Gianluca Rompianesi, Francesca Pegoraro, Roberto Troisi, Roberto Montalti, Pegoraro, F., Montalti, R., Rompianesi, G., Giglio, M. C., and Troisi, R.
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ICG ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cirrhosis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Liver resection ,RALPPS ,business.industry ,3D reconstruction ,medicine.disease ,Fluorescence ,medicine ,LiMON test ,Laparoscopy ,Radiology ,HCC ,business - Abstract
We present a fully laparoscopic partial RALPPS (radiofrequency-assisted liver partition with portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy) on a cirrhotic 71-year-old man with a bifocal hepatocellular carcinoma. The patient’s liver was preoperatively studied through a CT-guided 3D-reconstruction. During stage-1, the right portal vein was ligated and injected with alcohol distally; the vascular limit between the right and left anterior sectors was defined through the systemic infusion of indocyanine green for a negative staining. Hence, laparoscopic ablations, guided by luminescence and checked with intraoperative ultrasounds, were performed. After 55 days, the future liver remnant increased from 28.6% to 46.3%, allowing a laparoscopic RALPPS stage-2. Fully laparoscopic RALPPS technique shows several advantages compared to the original procedure, especially in patients with cirrhosis. The avoidance of liver transection during stage-1 reduced blood loss and intraabdominal adhesions, and it eliminated the risk of biliary fistulae and allowed an easier liver transection during stage-2.
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- 2021
41. Effectiveness of remdesivir in patients with COVID-19 under mechanical ventilation in an Italian ICU-authors' response
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Zeno Pasquini, Roberto Montalti, Francesco Barchiesi, Pasquini, Z., Montalti, R., and Barchiesi, F.
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Pharmacology ,Microbiology (medical) ,Mechanical ventilation ,2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Alanine ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Intensive Care Unit ,MEDLINE ,COVID-19 ,Respiration, Artificial ,Adenosine Monophosphate ,Infectious Diseases ,Italy ,Emergency medicine ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,In patient ,business ,Human - Published
- 2021
42. Liquid Biopsy in Cholangiocarcinoma: Current Status and Future Perspectives
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Roberto Montalti, Roberto Troisi, Gianluca Rompianesi, Marcello Di Martino, Alex Gordon-Weeks, Rompianesi, G., Martino, M. D., Gordon-Weeks, A., Montalti, R., and Troisi, R.
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Poor prognosis ,Circulating biomarkers ,Review ,Circulating RNA ,Exosomes ,Cholangiocarcinoma ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tumor Biomarkers ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biliary tumor ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Sampling (medicine) ,Circulating DNA ,Epigenetics ,Liquid biopsy ,Biliary tumors ,Cytokine ,Circulating biomarker ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Microvesicles ,Exosome ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cytokines ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business - Abstract
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) are a heterogeneous group of tumors in terms of aetiology, natural history, morphological subtypes, molecular alterations and management, but all sharing complex diagnosis, management, and poor prognosis. Several mutated genes and epigenetic changes have been detected in CCA, with the potential to identify diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets. Accessing tumoral components and genetic material is therefore crucial for the diagnosis, management and selection of targeted therapies; but sampling tumor tissue, when possible, is often risky and difficult to be repeated at different time points. Liquid biopsy (LB) represents a way to overcome these issues and comprises a diverse group of methodologies centering around detection of tumor biomarkers from fluid samples. Compared to the traditional tissue sampling methods LB is less invasive and can be serially repeated, allowing a real-time monitoring of the tumor genetic profile or the response to therapy. In this review, we analysis the current evidence on the possible roles of LB (circulating DNA, circulating RNA, exosomes, cytokines) in the diagnosis and management of patients affected by CCA.
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- 2021
43. Robotic versus laparoscopic surgery for spleen-preserving distal pancreatectomies: Systematic review and meta-analysis
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Gianluca Rompianesi, Luisa Ambrosio, Roberto Montalti, Roberto Troisi, Rompianesi, G., Montalti, R., Ambrosio, L., and Troisi, R. I.
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Laparoscopic surgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MEDLINE ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Review ,Laparoscopic distal pancreatectomy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Blood loss ,Medicine ,Failure risk ,General Materials Science ,Meta-analysi ,Spleen-preserving distal pancreatectomy ,business.industry ,Perioperative ,Minimally-invasive distal pancreatectomy ,medicine.disease ,Robotic distal pancreatectomy ,Surgery ,meta-analysis ,Pancreatic fistula ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Meta-analysis ,Systematic review ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Spleen preserving ,business - Abstract
Background: When oncologically feasible, avoiding unnecessary splenectomies prevents patients who are undergoing distal pancreatectomy (DP) from facing significant thromboembolic and infective risks. Methods: A systematic search of MEDLINE, Embase, and Web Of Science identified 11 studies reporting outcomes of 323 patients undergoing intended spleen-preserving minimally invasive robotic DP (SP-RADP) and 362 laparoscopic DP (SP-LADP) in order to compare the spleen preservation rates of the two techniques. The risk of bias was evaluated according to the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale. Results: SP-RADP showed superior results over the laparoscopic approach, with an inferior spleen preservation failure risk difference (RD) of 0.24 (95% CI 0.15, 0.33), reduced open conversion rate (RD of −0.05 (95% CI −0.09, −0.01)), reduced blood loss (mean difference of −138 mL (95% CI −205, −71)), and mean difference in hospital length of stay of −1.5 days (95% CI −2.8, −0.2), with similar operative time, clinically relevant postoperative pancreatic fistula (ISGPS grade B/C), and Clavien–Dindo grade ≥3 postoperative complications. Conclusion: Both SP-RADP and SP-LADP proved to be safe and effective procedures, with minimal perioperative mortality and low postoperative morbidity. The robotic approach proved to be superior to the laparoscopic approach in terms of spleen preservation rate, intraoperative blood loss, and hospital length of stay.
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- 2021
44. Sentinel-1 InSAR Data for the Continuous Monitoring of Ground Deformation and Infrastructures at Regional Scale
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Andrea Ciampalini, Monan Shan, Federico Raspini, Nicola Casagli, Pablo Ezquierro, Lorenzo Solari, Roberto Montalti, Matteo Del Soldato, and Silvia Bianchini
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Deformation monitoring ,Synthetic aperture radar ,law ,Radar imaging ,Interferometric synthetic aperture radar ,Continuous monitoring ,Satellite ,Radar ,Scale (map) ,Geology ,law.invention ,Remote sensing - Abstract
A continuous monitoring system of ground deformation, based on radar images acquired by ESA (European Space Agency) Sentinel-1 constellation, is active over the Tuscany Region (Central Italy). The potential of repeat-pass satellite SAR (Synthetic Aperture Radar) interferometry has been exploited to investigate spatial patterns and temporal evolution of regional and local ground deformation that affect man-made infrastructures. With one million of points for each geometry of acquisition, ground deformation maps for Tuscany Region provide information that can be exploited to scan wide areas and to flag ground instabilities. These areas become targets for detailed analysis with high-resolution sensors (e.g., COSMO-SkyMed satellites of the Italian Space Agency) to create a virtual constellation, in which different satellite data sources are synergically used to create a more effective and robust Earth observation system. The results obtained are presented and discussed through the case studies of Pistoia and Guasticce (Livorno), where land subsidence threatens linear and areal strategic infrastructures. The examples highlight the capability of radar satellite missions to provide regularly spatially continuous information, which are of fundamental importance for monitoring ground deformation caused by land subsidence.
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- 2020
45. Robotic pancreaticoduodenectomy with biodegradable ductal stenting (archimedes BPS®)
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Roberto TROISI, Roberto MONTALTI, Mariano GIGLIO, and Gianluca ROMPIANESI
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General Materials Science - Published
- 2022
46. Systematic review, meta-analysis and single-centre experience of the diagnostic accuracy of intraoperative near-infrared indocyanine green-fluorescence in detecting pancreatic tumours
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Gianluca ROMPIANESI, Roberto MONTALTI, Mariano GIGLIO, and Roberto TROISIHPB
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General Materials Science - Published
- 2022
47. Use of real-time mixed reality intraoperative navigation with Microsoft HoloLens 2 in complex liver surgery
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Gianluca ROMPIANESI, Mariano Cesare GIGLIO, Francesca PEGORARO, Roberto MONTALTI, and Roberto Ivan TROISI
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General Materials Science - Published
- 2022
48. Microwave Ablation for Colorectal Liver Metastases: A Systematic Review and Pooled Oncological Analyses
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Antonio Mimmo, Francesca Pegoraro, Rami Rhaiem, Roberto Montalti, Alix Donadieu, Ahmad Tashkandi, Abdul Rahman Al-Sadairi, Reza Kianmanesh, Tullio Piardi, Mimmo, A., Pegoraro, F., Rhaiem, R., Montalti, R., Donadieu, A., Tashkandi, A., Al-Sadairi, A. R., Kianmanesh, R., and Piardi, T.
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Microwave ablation ,Cancer Research ,Liver resection ,Oncology ,Colorectal liver metastasi - Abstract
(1) Background: colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) are the most common extra-lymphatic metastases in colorectal cancer; however, few patients are fit for curative surgery. Microwave ablation (MWA) showed promising outcomes in this cohort of patients. This systematic review and pooled analysis aimed to analyze the oncological results of MWA for CRLM. (2) Methods: Following PRISMA guidelines, PubMed, Scopus, EMBASE, Google Scholar, Science Direct, and the Wiley Online Library databases were searched for reports published before January 2021. We included papers assessing MWA, treating resectable CRLM with curative intention. We evaluated the reported MWA-related complications and oncological outcomes as being recurrence-free (RF), free from local recurrence (FFLR), and overall survival rates (OS). (3) Results: Twelve out of 4822 papers (395 patients) were finally included. Global RF rates at 1, 3, and 5 years were 65.1%, 44.6%, and 34.3%, respectively. Global FFLR rates at 3, 6, and 12 months were 96.3%, 89.6%, and 83.7%, respectively. Global OS at 1, 3, and 5 years were 86.7%, 59.6%, and 44.8%, respectively. A better FFLR was reached using the MWA surgical approach at 3, 6, and 12 months, with reported rates of 97.1%, 92.7%, and 88.6%, respectively. (4) Conclusions: Surgical MWA treatment for CRLM smaller than 3 cm is a safe and valid option. This approach can be safely included for selected patients in the curative intent approaches to treating CRLM.
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- 2022
49. Multi-Temporal Satellite Interferometry for Fast-Motion Detection: An Application to Salt Solution Mining
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Anna Barra, Oriol Monserrat, Roberto Montalti, Lorenzo Solari, Silvia Bianchini, and Michele Crosetto
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010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,salt dissolution ,Science ,Sinkhole ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Underground mining (hard rock) ,Context (language use) ,02 engineering and technology ,Deformation (meteorology) ,mining ,01 natural sciences ,MTInSAR ,021101 geological & geomatics engineering ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,multi-temporal interferometry ,sinkholes ,Subsidence ,Geodesy ,Interferometry ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Scale (map) ,Focus (optics) ,Geology - Abstract
Underground mining is one of the human activities with the highest impact in terms of induced ground motion. The excavation of the mining levels creates pillars, rooms and cavities that can evolve in chimney collapses and sinkholes. This is a major threat where the mining activity is carried out in an urban context. Thus, there is a clear need for tools and instruments able to precisely quantify mining-induced deformation. Topographic measurements certainly offer very high spatial accuracy and temporal repeatability, but they lack in spatial distribution of measurement points. In the past decades, Multi-Temporal Satellite Interferometry (MTInSAR) has become one of the most reliable techniques for monitoring ground motion, including mining-induced deformation. Although with well-known limitations when high deformation rates and frequently changing land surfaces are involved, MTInSAR has been exploited to evaluate the surface motion in several mining area worldwide. In this paper, a detailed scale MTInSAR approach was designed to characterize ground deformation in the salt solution mining area of Saline di Volterra (Tuscany Region, central Italy). This mining activity has a relevant environmental impact, depleting the water resource and inducing ground motion; sinkholes are a common consequence. The MTInSAR processing approach is based on the direct integration of interferograms derived from Sentinel-1 images and on the phase splitting between low (LF) and high (HF) frequency components. Phase unwrapping is performed for the LF and HF components on a set of points selected through a “triplets closure” method. The final deformation map is derived by combining again the components to avoid error accumulation and by applying a classical atmospheric phase filtering to remove the remaining low frequency signal. The results obtained reveal the presence of several subsidence bowls, sometimes corresponding to sinkholes formed in the recent past. Very high deformation rates, up to −250 mm/yr, and time series with clear trend changes are registered. In addition, the spatial and temporal distribution of velocities and time series is analyzed, with a focus on the correlation with sinkhole occurrence.
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- 2020
50. Candidemia in Intensive Care Units Over Nine Years at a Large Italian University Hospital
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Sara Mazzanti, Lucia Brescini, Gianluca Morroni, Elena Orsetti, Antonella Pocognoli, Abele Donati, Elisabetta Cerutti, Christopher Munch, Roberto Montalti, and Francesco Barchiesi
- Abstract
Purpose: Candidemia is an alarming problem in critically ill patients including those admitted in intensive care units (ICUs). We aimed to describe the clinical and microbiological characteristics of bloodstream infections (BSIs) due to Candida spp. in patients admitted to ICUs of an italian tertiary referral university hospital over nine years. Methods: A retrospective observational study of all cases of candidemia in adult patients was carried out from January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2018 at a 980-bedded University Hospital in Ancona, Italy, counting five ICUs. The incidence, demographics, clinical and microbiologic characteristics, therapeutic approaches and outcomes of ICU-patients with candidemia were collected. Early (7 days from the occurrence of the episode of Candida BSI) and late (30 days) mortality rates were calculated. Results: During the study period, 188/505 (36%) episodes of candidemia occurred in ICU patients. Incidence rate was 9.9/1000 ICU admission and it showed to be stable over time. Candida albicans accounted for 52% of the cases, followed by C. parapsilosis (24%), and C. glabrata (14%). With the exception of isolates of C. tropicalis which showed to be fluconazole resistant in 25% of the cases, resistance to antifungals was not of concern in our patients. Early and late mortality rates were 19% and 41%, respectively and did not increased significantly over time. Independent risk factors for higher mortality were septic shock, acute kidney failure, pulmonary embolism and lack of antifungal therapy. The type of antifungal therapy did not influence the outcome. Conclusion: Neither incidence rate nor crude mortality of candidemia in ICU patients increased over time at our institution. However, mortality rate remained high and significantly associated with specific host-related factors.
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- 2020
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