10 results on '"van Hooft, Jeanin E"'
Search Results
2. Implementation of an evidence-based management algorithm for patients with chronic pancreatitis (COMBO trial): study protocol for a stepped-wedge cluster-randomized controlled trial
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de Rijk, Florence E. M., van Veldhuisen, Charlotte L., Besselink, Marc G., van Hooft, Jeanin E., van Santvoort, Hjalmar C., van Geenen, Erwin J. M., van Werkhoven, Cornelis H., de Jonge, Pieter Jan F., Bruno, Marco J., and Verdonk, Robert C.
- Published
- 2023
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3. Microscopic tumor spread beyond (echo)endoscopically determined tumor borders in esophageal cancer
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Machiels, Melanie, van Montfoort, Maurits L., Thuijs, Nikki B., van Berge Henegouwen, Mark I., Alderliesten, Tanja, Meijer, Sybren L., van Hooft, Jeanin E., and Hulshof, Maarten C. C. M.
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- 2019
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4. Comparison of carina-based versus bony anatomy-based registration for setup verification in esophageal cancer radiotherapy
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Machiels, Mélanie, Jin, Peng, van Gurp, Christianne H., van Hooft, Jeanin E., Alderliesten, Tanja, and Hulshof, Maarten C. C. M.
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- 2018
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5. Early biliary decompression versus conservative treatment in acute biliary pancreatitis (APEC trial) : Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
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Schepers, Nicolien J., Bakker, Olaf J., Besselink, Marc G H, Bollen, Thomas L., Dijkgraaf, Marcel G W, van Eijck, Casper H J, Fockens, Paul, van Geenen, Erwin J M, van Grinsven, Janneke, Hallensleben, Nora D L, Hansen, Bettina E., van Santvoort, Hjalmar C., Timmer, Robin, Anten, Marie Paule G F, Bolwerk, Clemens J M, van Delft, Foke, van Dullemen, Hendrik M., Erkelens, G. Willemien, van Hooft, Jeanin E., Laheij, Robert, van der Hulst, René W M, Jansen, Jeroen M., Kubben, Frank J G M, Kuiken, Sjoerd D., Perk, Lars E., de Ridder, Rogier J J, Rijk, Marno C M, Römkens, Tessa E H, Schoon, Erik J., Schwartz, Matthijs P., Spanier, B. W Marcel, Tan, Adriaan C I T L, Thijs, Willem J., Venneman, Niels G., Vleggaar, Frank P., van de Vrie, Wim, Witteman, Ben J., Gooszen, Hein G., Bruno, Marco J., Schepers, Nicolien J., Bakker, Olaf J., Besselink, Marc G H, Bollen, Thomas L., Dijkgraaf, Marcel G W, van Eijck, Casper H J, Fockens, Paul, van Geenen, Erwin J M, van Grinsven, Janneke, Hallensleben, Nora D L, Hansen, Bettina E., van Santvoort, Hjalmar C., Timmer, Robin, Anten, Marie Paule G F, Bolwerk, Clemens J M, van Delft, Foke, van Dullemen, Hendrik M., Erkelens, G. Willemien, van Hooft, Jeanin E., Laheij, Robert, van der Hulst, René W M, Jansen, Jeroen M., Kubben, Frank J G M, Kuiken, Sjoerd D., Perk, Lars E., de Ridder, Rogier J J, Rijk, Marno C M, Römkens, Tessa E H, Schoon, Erik J., Schwartz, Matthijs P., Spanier, B. W Marcel, Tan, Adriaan C I T L, Thijs, Willem J., Venneman, Niels G., Vleggaar, Frank P., van de Vrie, Wim, Witteman, Ben J., Gooszen, Hein G., and Bruno, Marco J.
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- 2016
6. Sedation with propofol during ERCP: is the combination with esketamine more effective and safer than with alfentanil? Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Eberl, Susanne, Koers, Lena, van Hooft, Jeanin E., de Jong, Edwin, Schneider, Thomas, Hollmann, Markus W., and Preckel, Benedikt
- Subjects
PROPOFOL ,DRUG efficacy ,ENDOSCOPIC retrograde cholangiopancreatography ,BILIARY tract radiography ,PANCREATIC duct radiography ,INTRAVENOUS anesthetics - Abstract
Background: Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is a gastrointestinal procedure that requires a relatively motionless patient during the intervention. Deep sedation by intravenous propofol combined with an opioid has recently become the preferred sedation technique. However, when high doses of propofol are used, side effects, namely respiratory depression, may occur. Esketamine has hypnotic, analgesic, and sympathomimetic effects. Our assumption is that a combination of propofol with esketamine reduces the dosage of individual drugs, thereby minimizing sedation side effects while keeping the same satisfaction level of patients and endoscopists.Methods/design: The study will be performed as a randomized controlled multicenter trial. Patients undergoing ERCP, ≥ 18 years old, with American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) classification I-III will be randomized after written informed consent to group K (propofol/esketamine) or to group A (propofol/alfentanil). The primary outcome, reflecting effectiveness of sedation, is the total dose of propofol. Secondary outcome parameters are patients' and endoscopists' satisfaction with the procedure and the number of sedation-related pulmonary and cardiovascular events. Data on sedation-related events are collected by recording of oxygen saturation (SpO2), respiratory rate (RR), end-tidal CO2 (etCO2), heart rate (HR), arrhythmias (electrocardiogram (ECG)), and non-invasive blood pressure (NIBP) measurements. Satisfaction parameters are collected by means of questionnaires before and after the procedure and on the following day.Discussion: Esketamine is known for its effective anesthetic and analgesic effects maintaining spontaneous breathing and airway reflexes. Due to an increase in sympathetic tone, hypotension and cardiac depression is less common. Unfortunately esketamine is also known for its psychotomimetic effects. We aim to demonstrate that the combination of esketamine with propofol for sedation in patients subjected to ERCP interventions is nevertheless superior to a combination of propofol with an opioid.Trial Registration: Nederland's Trial Register, NTR5486 . Registered on 17 September 2015. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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7. Early surgery versus optimal current step-up practice for chronic pancreatitis (ESCAPE): design and rationale of a randomized trial.
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Ali1, Usama Ahmed, Issa, Yama, Bruno, Marco J., van Goor, Harry, van Santvoort, Hjalmar, Busch, Olivier R. C., Dejong, Cornelis H. C., Nieuwenhuijs, Vincent B., van Eijck, Casper H., van Dullemen, Hendrik M., Fockens, Paul, Siersema, Peter D., Gouma, Dirk J., van Hooft, Jeanin E., Keulemans, Yolande, Poley, Jan W., Timmer, Robin, Besselink, Marc G., Vleggaar, Frank P., and Wilder-Smith, Oliver H.
- Subjects
PANCREATITIS ,CHRONIC diseases ,ENDOSCOPY ,JEJUNOSTOMY ,OPIOIDS ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Background: In current practice, patients with chronic pancreatitis undergo surgical intervention in a late stage of the disease, when conservative treatment and endoscopic interventions have failed. Recent evidence suggests that surgical intervention early on in the disease benefits patients in terms of better pain control and preservation of pancreatic function. Therefore, we designed a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the benefits, risks and costs of early surgical intervention compared to the current stepwise practice for chronic pancreatitis. Methods/design: The ESCAPE trial is a randomized controlled, parallel, superiority multicenter trial. Patients with chronic pancreatitis, a dilated pancreatic duct (= 5 mm) and moderate pain and/or frequent flare-ups will be registered and followed monthly as potential candidates for the trial. When a registered patient meets the randomization criteria (i.e. need for opioid analgesics) the patient will be randomized to either early surgical intervention (group A) or optimal current step-up practice (group B). An expert panel of chronic pancreatitis specialists will oversee the assessment of eligibility and ensure that allocation to either treatment arm is possible. Patients in group A will undergo pancreaticojejunostomy or a Frey-procedure in case of an enlarged pancreatic head (= 4 cm). Patients in group B will undergo a step-up practice of optimal medical treatment, if needed followed by endoscopic interventions, and if needed followed by surgery, according to predefined criteria. Primary outcome is pain assessed with the Izbicki pain score during a follow-up of 18 months. Secondary outcomes include complications, mortality, total direct and indirect costs, quality of life, pancreatic insufficiency, alternative pain scales, length of hospital admission, number of interventions and pancreatitis flare-ups. For the sample size calculation we defined a minimal clinically relevant difference in the primary endpoint as a difference of at least 15 points on the Izbicki pain score during follow-up. To detect this difference a total of 88 patients will be randomized (alpha 0.05, power 90%, drop-out 10%). Discussion: The ESCAPE trial will investigate whether early surgery in chronic pancreatitis is beneficial in terms of pain relief, pancreatic function and quality of life, compared with current step-up practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Colonic stenting as bridge to surgery versus emergency surgery for management of acute left-sided malignant colonic obstruction: a multicenter randomized trial (Stent-in 2 study).
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van Hooft, Jeanin E., Bemelman, Willem A., Breumelhof, Ronald, Siersema, Peter D., Kruyt, Philip M., van der Linde, Klaas, Veenendaal, Roeland A., Verhulst, Marie-Louise, Marinelli, Andreas W., Gerritsen, Josephus J. G. M., van Berkel, Anne-Marie, Timmer, Robin, Grubben, Marina J. A. L., Scholten, Pieter, Geraedts, Alfons A. M., Oldenburg, Bas, Sprangers, Mirjam A. G., Bossuyt, Patrick M. M., and Fockens, Paul
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COLON surgery ,BOWEL obstructions ,SURGICAL stents ,SURGICAL emergencies ,SURGERY ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
Background: Acute left-sided colonic obstruction is most often caused by malignancy and the surgical treatment is associated with a high mortality and morbidity rate. Moreover, these operated patients end up with a temporary or permanent stoma. Initial insertion of an enteral stent to decompress the obstructed colon, allowing for surgery to be performed electively, is gaining popularity. In uncontrolled studies stent placement before elective surgery has been suggested to decrease mortality, morbidity and number of colostomies. However stent perforation can lead to peritoneal tumor spill, changing a potentially curable disease in an incurable one. Therefore it is of paramount importance to compare the outcomes of colonic stenting followed by elective surgery with emergency surgery for the management of acute left-sided malignant colonic obstruction in a randomized multicenter fashion. Methods/design: Patients with acute left-sided malignant colonic obstruction eligible for this study will be randomized to either emergency surgery (current standard treatment) or colonic stenting as bridge to elective surgery. Outcome measurements are effectiveness and costs of both strategies. Effectiveness will be evaluated in terms of quality of life, morbidity and mortality. Quality of life will be measured with standardized questionnaires (EORTC QLQ-C30, EORTC QLQ-CR38, EQ-5D and EQ-VAS). Morbidity is defined as every event leading to hospital admission or prolonging hospital stay. Mortality will be analyzed as total mortality as well as procedure-related mortality. The total costs of treatment will be evaluated by counting volumes and calculating unit prices. Including 120 patients on a 1:1 basis will have 80% power to detect an effect size of 0.5 on the EORTC QLQ-C30 global health scale, using a two group t-test with a 0.05 two-sided significance level. Differences in quality of life and morbidity will be analyzed using mixed-models repeated measures analysis of variance. Mortality will be compared using Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank statistics. Discussion: The Stent-in 2 study is a randomized controlled multicenter trial that will provide evidence whether or not colonic stenting as bridge to surgery is to be performed in patients with acute left-sided colonic obstruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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- View/download PDF
9. Early surgery versus optimal current step-up practice for chronic pancreatitis (ESCAPE): design and rationale of a randomized trial.
- Author
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Ahmed Ali, Usama, Issa, Yama, Bruno, Marco J, van Goor, Harry, van Santvoort, Hjalmar, Busch, Olivier Rc, Dejong, Cornelis Hc, Nieuwenhuijs, Vincent B, van Eijck, Casper H, van Dullemen, Hendrik M, Fockens, Paul, Siersema, Peter D, Gouma, Dirk J, van Hooft, Jeanin E, Keulemans, Yolande, Poley, Jan W, Timmer, Robin, Besselink, Marc G, Vleggaar, Frank P, and Wilder-Smith, Oliver H
- Abstract
Background: In current practice, patients with chronic pancreatitis undergo surgical intervention in a late stage of the disease, when conservative treatment and endoscopic interventions have failed. Recent evidence suggests that surgical intervention early on in the disease benefits patients in terms of better pain control and preservation of pancreatic function. Therefore, we designed a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the benefits, risks and costs of early surgical intervention compared to the current stepwise practice for chronic pancreatitis.Methods/design: The ESCAPE trial is a randomized controlled, parallel, superiority multicenter trial. Patients with chronic pancreatitis, a dilated pancreatic duct (≥5 mm) and moderate pain and/or frequent flare-ups will be registered and followed monthly as potential candidates for the trial. When a registered patient meets the randomization criteria (i.e. need for opioid analgesics) the patient will be randomized to either early surgical intervention (group A) or optimal current step-up practice (group B). An expert panel of chronic pancreatitis specialists will oversee the assessment of eligibility and ensure that allocation to either treatment arm is possible. Patients in group A will undergo pancreaticojejunostomy or a Frey-procedure in case of an enlarged pancreatic head (≥4 cm). Patients in group B will undergo a step-up practice of optimal medical treatment, if needed followed by endoscopic interventions, and if needed followed by surgery, according to predefined criteria. Primary outcome is pain assessed with the Izbicki pain score during a follow-up of 18 months. Secondary outcomes include complications, mortality, total direct and indirect costs, quality of life, pancreatic insufficiency, alternative pain scales, length of hospital admission, number of interventions and pancreatitis flare-ups. For the sample size calculation we defined a minimal clinically relevant difference in the primary endpoint as a difference of at least 15 points on the Izbicki pain score during follow-up. To detect this difference a total of 88 patients will be randomized (alpha 0.05, power 90%, drop-out 10%).Discussion: The ESCAPE trial will investigate whether early surgery in chronic pancreatitis is beneficial in terms of pain relief, pancreatic function and quality of life, compared with current step-up practice.Trial Registration: ISRCTN: ISRCTN45877994. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Early biliary decompression versus conservative treatment in acute biliary pancreatitis (APEC trial): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Schepers NJ, Bakker OJ, Besselink MG, Bollen TL, Dijkgraaf MG, van Eijck CH, Fockens P, van Geenen EJ, van Grinsven J, Hallensleben ND, Hansen BE, van Santvoort HC, Timmer R, Anten MP, Bolwerk CJ, van Delft F, van Dullemen HM, Erkelens GW, van Hooft JE, Laheij R, van der Hulst RW, Jansen JM, Kubben FJ, Kuiken SD, Perk LE, de Ridder RJ, Rijk MC, Römkens TE, Schoon EJ, Schwartz MP, Spanier BW, Tan AC, Thijs WJ, Venneman NG, Vleggaar FP, van de Vrie W, Witteman BJ, Gooszen HG, and Bruno MJ
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Cholangiography, Humans, Sample Size, Sphincterotomy, Endoscopic, Biliary Tract Surgical Procedures methods, Clinical Protocols, Decompression, Surgical methods, Pancreatitis surgery
- Abstract
Background: Acute pancreatitis is mostly caused by gallstones or sludge. Early decompression of the biliary tree by endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) with sphincterotomy may improve outcome in these patients. Whereas current guidelines recommend early ERC in patients with concomitant cholangitis, early ERC is not recommended in patients with mild biliary pancreatitis. Evidence on the role of routine early ERC with endoscopic sphincterotomy in patients without cholangitis but with biliary pancreatitis at high risk for complications is lacking. We hypothesize that early ERC with sphincterotomy improves outcome in these patients., Methods/design: The APEC trial is a randomized controlled, parallel group, superiority multicenter trial. Within 24 hours after presentation to the emergency department, patients with biliary pancreatitis without cholangitis and at high risk for complications, based on an Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE-II) score of 8 or greater, Modified Glasgow score of 3 or greater, or serum C-reactive protein above 150 mg/L, will be randomized. In 27 hospitals of the Dutch Pancreatitis Study Group, 232 patients will be allocated to early ERC with sphincterotomy or to conservative treatment. The primary endpoint is a composite of major complications (that is, organ failure, pancreatic necrosis, pneumonia, bacteremia, cholangitis, pancreatic endocrine, or exocrine insufficiency) or death within 180 days after randomization. Secondary endpoints include ERC-related complications, infected necrotizing pancreatitis, length of hospital stay and an economical evaluation., Discussion: The APEC trial investigates whether an early ERC with sphincterotomy reduces the composite endpoint of major complications or death compared with conservative treatment in patients with biliary pancreatitis at high risk of complications., Trial Registration: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN97372133 (date registration: 17-12-2012).
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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