617 results on '"Fugazzola P."'
Search Results
52. Management of hypertension during lenvatinib for advanced thyroid cancer: a suggested diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm
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Carla Colombo, Daniele Ceruti, Simone De Leo, Grzegorz Bilo, Matteo Trevisan, Noemi Giancola, Claudia Moneta, Gianfranco Parati, Luca Persani, and Laura Fugazzola
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thyroid cancer ,lenvatinib ,hypertension ,adverse event ,treatment ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
Background: Hypertension (HTN) is the most frequent adverse event during treatment with lenvatinib (LEN), but data on its best management are limited. Aim: The objective of this study was to assess incidence, features and best management of LEN-related HTN in a consecutive single tertiary-care centre cohort. Methods: Twenty-nine patients were followed up for a mean time of 29.8 months (6–77 months). Results: After a mean follow-up of 6.8 months, HTN was recorded in 76% of cases, as a de novo occurrence in half of them. HTN significantly correlated with L EN dose and was of grade 1, grade 2 and grade 3 in 5%, 50% and 45% of patients, respectively. The majority (77%) of patients with HTN developed proteinuria. There was no correlation between HTN and proteinuria or clinical features or best morphological response or any other adverse event (AE), with the exception of diarrhoea. Patients with or without pre-existing HTN or any other cardiovascular disease had a similar incidence of HTN during LEN, thus excluding the impact of this potential predisposing factor. After evaluation by a dedicated cardiologist, medical treatment was introduced in 21/22 patients (polytherapy in 20 of them). The most frequently used drugs were calcium channel blockers (CCBs) due to their effect on vasodilation. In case of poor control, CC Bs were associated with one or more anti-hypertensive drug. Conclusion: HTN is a frequent and early AE in patients on LEN treatment. We suggest a diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm to be applied in clinical practice to allow efficient HTN control and improve patient compliance, reducing LEN discontinuation.
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- 2023
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53. Hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) as adjuvant and therapeutic options for patients with advanced gastric cancer at high risk of recurrence or established peritoneal metastases: a single-centre experience
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Allievi, Niccolò, Bianco, Federica, Pisano, Michele, Montori, Giulia, Fugazzola, Paola, Coccolini, Federico, Lotti, Marco, Mosconi, Stefania, Merelli, Barbara, Campanati, Luca, Lucianetti, Alessandro, Ansaloni, Luca, and Magnone, Stefano
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- 2023
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54. Current need for guidelines in emergency surgery in peritoneal carcinomatosis
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Melissa Nardecchia, Carlo Vallicelli, Mauro Stefano, Vanni Agnoletti, Luca Ansaloni, Paola Fugazzola, Federico Coccolini, Marco Vaira, Massimo Sartelli, and Fausto Catena
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Peritoneal carcinomatosis ,emergency surgery ,oncologic surgery ,intestinal obstruction ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Abstract
Malignant bowel obstruction caused by peritoneal carcinomatosis is a common complication that affects a large proportion of gastrointestinal and ovarian oncology patients and predicts poor longterm survival. The management strategy for these patients includes a variety of medical therapies and surgical options; however, how to choose the best treatment strategy remains a mystery. The purpose of this narrative review was to summarize the most recent evidence on multimodal malignant bowel obstruction treatment and determine whether or not progress had been made. We should work to establish consensus guidelines, where possible, to ensure that this unique patient group receives the appropriate treatment or compassionate care during this often terminal event.
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- 2023
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55. Prediction of morbidity and mortality after early cholecystectomy for acute calculous cholecystitis: results of the S.P.Ri.M.A.C.C. study
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Paola Fugazzola, Lorenzo Cobianchi, Marcello Di Martino, Matteo Tomasoni, Francesca Dal Mas, Fikri M. Abu-Zidan, Vanni Agnoletti, Marco Ceresoli, Federico Coccolini, Salomone Di Saverio, Tommaso Dominioni, Camilla Nikita Farè, Simone Frassini, Giulia Gambini, Ari Leppäniemi, Marcello Maestri, Elena Martín-Pérez, Ernest E. Moore, Valeria Musella, Andrew B. Peitzman, Ángela de la Hoz Rodríguez, Benedetta Sargenti, Massimo Sartelli, Jacopo Viganò, Andrea Anderloni, Walter Biffl, Fausto Catena, Luca Ansaloni, and the S.P.Ri.M.A.C.C. Collaborative Group
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Cholecystectomy ,Acute cholecystitis ,Surgical risk ,POSSUM ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Less invasive alternatives than early cholecystectomy (EC) for acute calculous cholecystitis (ACC) treatment have been spreading in recent years. We still lack a reliable tool to select high-risk patients who could benefit from these alternatives. Our study aimed to prospectively validate the Chole-risk score in predicting postoperative complications in patients undergoing EC for ACC compared with other preoperative risk prediction models. Method The S.P.Ri.M.A.C.C. study is a World Society of Emergency Surgery prospective multicenter observational study. From 1st September 2021 to 1st September 2022, 1253 consecutive patients admitted in 79 centers were included. The inclusion criteria were a diagnosis of ACC and to be a candidate for EC. A Cochran-Armitage test of the trend was run to determine whether a linear correlation existed between the Chole-risk score and a complicated postoperative course. To assess the accuracy of the analyzed prediction models—POSSUM Physiological Score (PS), modified Frailty Index, Charlson Comorbidity Index, American Society of Anesthesiologist score (ASA), APACHE II score, and ACC severity grade—receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were generated. The area under the ROC curve (AUC) was used to compare the diagnostic abilities. Results A 30-day major morbidity of 6.6% and 30-day mortality of 1.1% were found. Chole-risk was validated, but POSSUM PS was the best risk prediction model for a complicated course after EC for ACC (in-hospital mortality: AUC 0.94, p
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- 2023
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56. Time for a paradigm shift in shared decision-making in trauma and emergency surgery? Results from an international survey
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Lorenzo Cobianchi, Francesca Dal Mas, Vanni Agnoletti, Luca Ansaloni, Walter Biffl, Giovanni Butturini, Stefano Campostrini, Fausto Catena, Stefano Denicolai, Paola Fugazzola, Jacopo Martellucci, Maurizio Massaro, Pietro Previtali, Federico Ruta, Alessandro Venturi, Sarah Woltz, Haytham M. Kaafarani, Tyler J. Loftus, and the Team Dynamics Study Group
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Shared decision-making ,Clinical decision-making ,Patient-centric care ,Trauma and emergency surgery ,Survey ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Shared decision-making (SDM) between clinicians and patients is one of the pillars of the modern patient-centric philosophy of care. This study aims to explore SDM in the discipline of trauma and emergency surgery, investigating its interpretation as well as the barriers and facilitators for its implementation among surgeons. Methods Grounding on the literature on the topics of the understanding, barriers, and facilitators of SDM in trauma and emergency surgery, a survey was created by a multidisciplinary committee and endorsed by the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES). The survey was sent to all 917 WSES members, advertised through the society’s website, and shared on the society’s Twitter profile. Results A total of 650 trauma and emergency surgeons from 71 countries in five continents participated in the initiative. Less than half of the surgeons understood SDM, and 30% still saw the value in exclusively engaging multidisciplinary provider teams without involving the patient. Several barriers to effectively partnering with the patient in the decision-making process were identified, such as the lack of time and the need to concentrate on making medical teams work smoothly. Discussion Our investigation underlines how only a minority of trauma and emergency surgeons understand SDM, and perhaps, the value of SDM is not fully accepted in trauma and emergency situations. The inclusion of SDM practices in clinical guidelines may represent the most feasible and advocated solutions.
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- 2023
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57. Training curriculum in minimally invasive emergency digestive surgery: 2022 WSES position paper
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Nicola de’Angelis, Francesco Marchegiani, Carlo Alberto Schena, Jim Khan, Vanni Agnoletti, Luca Ansaloni, Ana Gabriela Barría Rodríguez, Paolo Pietro Bianchi, Walter Biffl, Francesca Bravi, Graziano Ceccarelli, Marco Ceresoli, Osvaldo Chiara, Mircea Chirica, Lorenzo Cobianchi, Federico Coccolini, Raul Coimbra, Christian Cotsoglou, Mathieu D’Hondt, Dimitris Damaskos, Belinda De Simone, Salomone Di Saverio, Michele Diana, Eloy Espin‐Basany, Stefan Fichtner‐Feigl, Paola Fugazzola, Paschalis Gavriilidis, Caroline Gronnier, Jeffry Kashuk, Andrew W. Kirkpatrick, Michele Ammendola, Ewout A. Kouwenhoven, Alexis Laurent, Ari Leppaniemi, Mickaël Lesurtel, Riccardo Memeo, Marco Milone, Ernest Moore, Nikolaos Pararas, Andrew Peitzmann, Patrick Pessaux, Edoardo Picetti, Manos Pikoulis, Michele Pisano, Frederic Ris, Tyler Robison, Massimo Sartelli, Vishal G. Shelat, Giuseppe Spinoglio, Michael Sugrue, Edward Tan, Ellen Van Eetvelde, Yoram Kluger, Dieter Weber, and Fausto Catena
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Emergency surgery ,Minimally invasive surgery ,Robotic surgery ,Laparoscopy ,Training curriculum in surgery ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Minimally invasive surgery (MIS), including laparoscopic and robotic approaches, is widely adopted in elective digestive surgery, but selectively used for surgical emergencies. The present position paper summarizes the available evidence concerning the learning curve to achieve proficiency in emergency MIS and provides five expert opinion statements, which may form the basis for developing standardized curricula and training programs in emergency MIS. Methods This position paper was conducted according to the World Society of Emergency Surgery methodology. A steering committee and an international expert panel were involved in the critical appraisal of the literature and the development of the consensus statements. Results Thirteen studies regarding the learning curve in emergency MIS were selected. All but one study considered laparoscopic appendectomy. Only one study reported on emergency robotic surgery. In most of the studies, proficiency was achieved after an average of 30 procedures (range: 20–107) depending on the initial surgeon’s experience. High heterogeneity was noted in the way the learning curve was assessed. The experts claim that further studies investigating learning curve processes in emergency MIS are needed. The emergency surgeon curriculum should include a progressive and adequate training based on simulation, supervised clinical practice (proctoring), and surgical fellowships. The results should be evaluated by adopting a credentialing system to ensure quality standards. Surgical proficiency should be maintained with a minimum caseload and constantly evaluated. Moreover, the training process should involve the entire surgical team to facilitate the surgeon’s proficiency. Conclusions Limited evidence exists concerning the learning process in laparoscopic and robotic emergency surgery. The proposed statements should be seen as a preliminary guide for the surgical community while stressing the need for further research.
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- 2023
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58. Surgeons’ perspectives on artificial intelligence to support clinical decision-making in trauma and emergency contexts: results from an international survey
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Lorenzo Cobianchi, Daniele Piccolo, Francesca Dal Mas, Vanni Agnoletti, Luca Ansaloni, Jeremy Balch, Walter Biffl, Giovanni Butturini, Fausto Catena, Federico Coccolini, Stefano Denicolai, Belinda De Simone, Isabella Frigerio, Paola Fugazzola, Gianluigi Marseglia, Giuseppe Roberto Marseglia, Jacopo Martellucci, Mirko Modenese, Pietro Previtali, Federico Ruta, Alessandro Venturi, Haytham M. Kaafarani, Tyler J. Loftus, and Team Dynamics Study Group
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Artificial intelligence ,Clinical decision-making ,Decision aids ,Trauma and emergency surgery ,Survey ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Artificial intelligence (AI) is gaining traction in medicine and surgery. AI-based applications can offer tools to examine high-volume data to inform predictive analytics that supports complex decision-making processes. Time-sensitive trauma and emergency contexts are often challenging. The study aims to investigate trauma and emergency surgeons’ knowledge and perception of using AI-based tools in clinical decision-making processes. Methods An online survey grounded on literature regarding AI-enabled surgical decision-making aids was created by a multidisciplinary committee and endorsed by the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES). The survey was advertised to 917 WSES members through the society’s website and Twitter profile. Results 650 surgeons from 71 countries in five continents participated in the survey. Results depict the presence of technology enthusiasts and skeptics and surgeons' preference toward more classical decision-making aids like clinical guidelines, traditional training, and the support of their multidisciplinary colleagues. A lack of knowledge about several AI-related aspects emerges and is associated with mistrust. Discussion The trauma and emergency surgical community is divided into those who firmly believe in the potential of AI and those who do not understand or trust AI-enabled surgical decision-making aids. Academic societies and surgical training programs should promote a foundational, working knowledge of clinical AI.
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- 2023
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59. Impact of thyroid function screening in a large cohort of patients admitted to an emergency department
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Campi, Irene, Perego, Giovanni Battista, Ravogli, Antonella, Santafede, Francesca, Sileo, Federica, Dubini, Antonella, Parati, Gianfranco, Persani, Luca, and Fugazzola, Laura
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- 2022
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60. Selpercatinib nel trattamento del carcinoma tiroideo RET-mutato
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Trevisan, Matteo, Fugazzola, Laura, and de Leo, Simone
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- 2022
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61. Lenvatinib-induced hypocalcaemia due to transient primary hypoparathyroidism
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Trevisan, Matteo, Colombo, Carla, Giancola, Noemi, Moneta, Claudia, Dionigi, Gianlorenzo, Fugazzola, Laura, and De Leo, Simone
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- 2022
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62. Management of intra-abdominal infections: recommendations by the Italian council for the optimization of antimicrobial use
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Sartelli, M, Tascini, C, Coccolini, F, Dellai, F, Ansaloni, L, Antonelli, M, Bartoletti, M, Bassetti, M, Boncagni, F, Carlini, M, Cattelan, A, Cavaliere, A, Ceresoli, M, Cipriano, A, Cortegiani, A, Cortese, F, Cristini, F, Cucinotta, E, Dalfino, L, De Pascale, G, De Rosa, F, Falcone, M, Forfori, F, Fugazzola, P, Gatti, M, Gentile, I, Ghiadoni, L, Giannella, M, Giarratano, A, Giordano, A, Girardis, M, Mastroianni, C, Monti, G, Montori, G, Palmieri, M, Pani, M, Paolillo, C, Parini, D, Parruti, G, Pasero, D, Pea, F, Peghin, M, Petrosillo, N, Podda, M, Rizzo, C, Rossolini, G, Russo, A, Scoccia, L, Sganga, G, Signorini, L, Stefani, S, Tumbarello, M, Tumietto, F, Valentino, M, Venditti, M, Viaggi, B, Vivaldi, F, Zaghi, C, Labricciosa, F, Abu-Zidan, F, Catena, F, Viale, P, Sartelli M., Tascini C., Coccolini F., Dellai F., Ansaloni L., Antonelli M., Bartoletti M., Bassetti M., Boncagni F., Carlini M., Cattelan A. M., Cavaliere A., Ceresoli M., Cipriano A., Cortegiani A., Cortese F., Cristini F., Cucinotta E., Dalfino L., De Pascale G., De Rosa F. G., Falcone M., Forfori F., Fugazzola P., Gatti M., Gentile I., Ghiadoni L., Giannella M., Giarratano A., Giordano A., Girardis M., Mastroianni C., Monti G., Montori G., Palmieri M., Pani M., Paolillo C., Parini D., Parruti G., Pasero D., Pea F., Peghin M., Petrosillo N., Podda M., Rizzo C., Rossolini G. M., Russo A., Scoccia L., Sganga G., Signorini L., Stefani S., Tumbarello M., Tumietto F., Valentino M., Venditti M., Viaggi B., Vivaldi F., Zaghi C., Labricciosa F. M., Abu-Zidan F., Catena F., Viale P., Sartelli, M, Tascini, C, Coccolini, F, Dellai, F, Ansaloni, L, Antonelli, M, Bartoletti, M, Bassetti, M, Boncagni, F, Carlini, M, Cattelan, A, Cavaliere, A, Ceresoli, M, Cipriano, A, Cortegiani, A, Cortese, F, Cristini, F, Cucinotta, E, Dalfino, L, De Pascale, G, De Rosa, F, Falcone, M, Forfori, F, Fugazzola, P, Gatti, M, Gentile, I, Ghiadoni, L, Giannella, M, Giarratano, A, Giordano, A, Girardis, M, Mastroianni, C, Monti, G, Montori, G, Palmieri, M, Pani, M, Paolillo, C, Parini, D, Parruti, G, Pasero, D, Pea, F, Peghin, M, Petrosillo, N, Podda, M, Rizzo, C, Rossolini, G, Russo, A, Scoccia, L, Sganga, G, Signorini, L, Stefani, S, Tumbarello, M, Tumietto, F, Valentino, M, Venditti, M, Viaggi, B, Vivaldi, F, Zaghi, C, Labricciosa, F, Abu-Zidan, F, Catena, F, Viale, P, Sartelli M., Tascini C., Coccolini F., Dellai F., Ansaloni L., Antonelli M., Bartoletti M., Bassetti M., Boncagni F., Carlini M., Cattelan A. M., Cavaliere A., Ceresoli M., Cipriano A., Cortegiani A., Cortese F., Cristini F., Cucinotta E., Dalfino L., De Pascale G., De Rosa F. G., Falcone M., Forfori F., Fugazzola P., Gatti M., Gentile I., Ghiadoni L., Giannella M., Giarratano A., Giordano A., Girardis M., Mastroianni C., Monti G., Montori G., Palmieri M., Pani M., Paolillo C., Parini D., Parruti G., Pasero D., Pea F., Peghin M., Petrosillo N., Podda M., Rizzo C., Rossolini G. M., Russo A., Scoccia L., Sganga G., Signorini L., Stefani S., Tumbarello M., Tumietto F., Valentino M., Venditti M., Viaggi B., Vivaldi F., Zaghi C., Labricciosa F. M., Abu-Zidan F., Catena F., and Viale P.
- Abstract
Intra-abdominal infections (IAIs) are common surgical emergencies and are an important cause of morbidity and mortality in hospital settings, particularly if poorly managed. The cornerstones of effective IAIs management include early diagnosis, adequate source control, appropriate antimicrobial therapy, and early physiologic stabilization using intravenous fluids and vasopressor agents in critically ill patients. Adequate empiric antimicrobial therapy in patients with IAIs is of paramount importance because inappropriate antimicrobial therapy is associated with poor outcomes. Optimizing antimicrobial prescriptions improves treatment effectiveness, increases patients’ safety, and minimizes the risk of opportunistic infections (such as Clostridioides difficile) and antimicrobial resistance selection. The growing emergence of multi-drug resistant organisms has caused an impending crisis with alarming implications, especially regarding Gram-negative bacteria. The Multidisciplinary and Intersociety Italian Council for the Optimization of Antimicrobial Use promoted a consensus conference on the antimicrobial management of IAIs, including emergency medicine specialists, radiologists, surgeons, intensivists, infectious disease specialists, clinical pharmacologists, hospital pharmacists, microbiologists and public health specialists. Relevant clinical questions were constructed by the Organizational Committee in order to investigate the topic. The expert panel produced recommendation statements based on the best scientific evidence from PubMed and EMBASE Library and experts’ opinions. The statements were planned and graded according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) hierarchy of evidence. On November 10, 2023, the experts met in Mestre (Italy) to debate the statements. After the approval of the statements, the expert panel met via email and virtual meetings to prepare and revise the definitive document. This document represents
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- 2024
63. Textbook outcome in urgent early cholecystectomy for acute calculous cholecystitis: results post hoc of the S.P.Ri.M.A.C.C study
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Fugazzola, P, Carbonell-Morote, S, Cobianchi, L, Coccolini, F, Rubio-Garcia, J, Sartelli, M, Biffl, W, Catena, F, Ansaloni, L, Ramia, J, Augustin, G, Moric, T, Awad, S, Alzahrani, A, Elbahnasawy, M, Massalou, D, De Simone, B, Demetrashvili, Z, Kimpizi, A, Schizas, D, Balalis, D, Tasis, N, Papadoliopoulou, M, Georgios, P, Lasithiotakis, K, Ioannidis, O, Bains, L, Magnoli, M, Cianci, P, Conversano, N, Pasculli, A, Andreuccetti, J, Arici, E, Pignata, G, Tiberio, G, Podda, M, Murru, C, Veroux, M, Distefano, C, Centonze, D, Favi, F, Agnoletti, V, Bova, R, Convertini, G, Balla, A, Sasia, D, Giraudo, G, Gabriele, A, Tartaglia, N, Pavone, G, D'Acapito, F, Fabbri, N, Ferrara, F, Cimbanassi, S, Ferrario, L, Ciof, S, Ceresoli, M, Fumagalli, C, Degrate, L, Degiuli, M, Sofa, S, Licari, L, Tomasoni, M, Dominioni, T, Fare, C, Maestri, M, Vigano, J, Sargenti, B, Anderloni, A, Musella, V, Frassini, S, Gambini, G, Improta, M, Patriti, A, Coletta, D, Conti, L, Malerba, M, Andrea, M, Calabro, M, De Zolt, B, Bellio, G, Giordano, A, Luppi, D, Corbellini, C, Sampietro, G, Marafante, C, Rossi, S, Mingoli, A, Lapolla, P, Cicerchia, P, Siragusa, L, Grande, M, Arcudi, C, Antonelli, A, Vinci, D, De Martino, C, Armellino, M, Bisogno, E, Visconti, D, Santarelli, M, Montanari, E, Biloslavo, A, Germani, P, Zaghi, C, Oka, N, Fathi, M, Rios-Cruz, D, Hernandez, E, Garzali, I, Duarte, L, Negoi, I, Litvin, A, Chowdhury, S, Alshahrani, S, Moreira, C, Ponce, I, Mendoza-Moreno, F, Campana, A, Bayo, H, Serra, A, Landaluce, A, Estraviz-Mateos, B, Markinez-Gordobil, I, Serradilla-Martin, M, Cano-Paredero, A, Dobon-Rascon, M, Hamid, H, Baraket, O, Gonullu, E, Leventoglu, S, Turk, Y, Buyukkasap, C, Aday, U, Kara, Y, Kabuli, H, Atici, S, Colak, E, Chooklin, S, Chuklin, S, Ruta, F, Di Martino, M, Dal Mas, F, Abu-Zidan, F, Di Saverio, S, Leppaniemi, A, Martin-Perez, E, de la Hoz Rodriguez, A, Moore, E, Peitzman, A, Fugazzola P., Carbonell-Morote S., Cobianchi L., Coccolini F., Rubio-Garcia J. J., Sartelli M., Biffl W., Catena F., Ansaloni L., Ramia J. M., Augustin G., Moric T., Awad S., Alzahrani A. M., Elbahnasawy M., Massalou D., De Simone B., Demetrashvili Z., Kimpizi A. -D., Schizas D., Balalis D., Tasis N., Papadoliopoulou M., Georgios P., Lasithiotakis K., Ioannidis O., Bains L., Magnoli M., Cianci P., Conversano N. I., Pasculli A., Andreuccetti J., Arici E., Pignata G., Tiberio G. A. M., Podda M., Murru C., Veroux M., Distefano C., Centonze D., Favi F., Agnoletti V., Bova R., Convertini G., Balla A., Sasia D., Giraudo G., Gabriele A., Tartaglia N., Pavone G., D'Acapito F., Fabbri N., Ferrara F., Cimbanassi S., Ferrario L., Ciof S., Ceresoli M., Fumagalli C., Degrate L., Degiuli M., Sofa S., Licari L., Tomasoni M., Dominioni T., Fare C. N., Maestri M., Vigano J., Sargenti B., Anderloni A., Musella V., Frassini S., Gambini G., Improta M., Patriti A., Coletta D., Conti L., Malerba M., Andrea M., Calabro M., De Zolt B., Bellio G., Giordano A., Luppi D., Corbellini C., Sampietro G. M., Marafante C., Rossi S., Mingoli A., Lapolla P., Cicerchia P. M., Siragusa L., Grande M., Arcudi C., Antonelli A., Vinci D., De Martino C., Armellino M. F., Bisogno E., Visconti D., Santarelli M., Montanari E., Biloslavo A., Germani P., Zaghi C., Oka N., Fathi M. A., Rios-Cruz D., Hernandez E. E. L., Garzali I. U., Duarte L., Negoi I., Litvin A., Chowdhury S., Alshahrani S. M., Moreira C. C. L., Ponce I. A., Mendoza-Moreno F., Campana A. M., Bayo H. L., Serra A. C., Landaluce A., Estraviz-Mateos B., Markinez-Gordobil I., Serradilla-Martin M., Cano-Paredero A., Dobon-Rascon M. A., Hamid H., Baraket O., Gonullu E., Leventoglu S., Turk Y., Buyukkasap C., Aday U., Kara Y., Kabuli H. A., Atici S. D., Colak E., Chooklin S., Chuklin S., Ruta F., Di Martino M., Dal Mas F., Abu-Zidan F. M., Di Saverio S., Leppaniemi A., Martin-Perez E., de la Hoz Rodriguez A., Moore E. E., Peitzman A. B., Fugazzola, P, Carbonell-Morote, S, Cobianchi, L, Coccolini, F, Rubio-Garcia, J, Sartelli, M, Biffl, W, Catena, F, Ansaloni, L, Ramia, J, Augustin, G, Moric, T, Awad, S, Alzahrani, A, Elbahnasawy, M, Massalou, D, De Simone, B, Demetrashvili, Z, Kimpizi, A, Schizas, D, Balalis, D, Tasis, N, Papadoliopoulou, M, Georgios, P, Lasithiotakis, K, Ioannidis, O, Bains, L, Magnoli, M, Cianci, P, Conversano, N, Pasculli, A, Andreuccetti, J, Arici, E, Pignata, G, Tiberio, G, Podda, M, Murru, C, Veroux, M, Distefano, C, Centonze, D, Favi, F, Agnoletti, V, Bova, R, Convertini, G, Balla, A, Sasia, D, Giraudo, G, Gabriele, A, Tartaglia, N, Pavone, G, D'Acapito, F, Fabbri, N, Ferrara, F, Cimbanassi, S, Ferrario, L, Ciof, S, Ceresoli, M, Fumagalli, C, Degrate, L, Degiuli, M, Sofa, S, Licari, L, Tomasoni, M, Dominioni, T, Fare, C, Maestri, M, Vigano, J, Sargenti, B, Anderloni, A, Musella, V, Frassini, S, Gambini, G, Improta, M, Patriti, A, Coletta, D, Conti, L, Malerba, M, Andrea, M, Calabro, M, De Zolt, B, Bellio, G, Giordano, A, Luppi, D, Corbellini, C, Sampietro, G, Marafante, C, Rossi, S, Mingoli, A, Lapolla, P, Cicerchia, P, Siragusa, L, Grande, M, Arcudi, C, Antonelli, A, Vinci, D, De Martino, C, Armellino, M, Bisogno, E, Visconti, D, Santarelli, M, Montanari, E, Biloslavo, A, Germani, P, Zaghi, C, Oka, N, Fathi, M, Rios-Cruz, D, Hernandez, E, Garzali, I, Duarte, L, Negoi, I, Litvin, A, Chowdhury, S, Alshahrani, S, Moreira, C, Ponce, I, Mendoza-Moreno, F, Campana, A, Bayo, H, Serra, A, Landaluce, A, Estraviz-Mateos, B, Markinez-Gordobil, I, Serradilla-Martin, M, Cano-Paredero, A, Dobon-Rascon, M, Hamid, H, Baraket, O, Gonullu, E, Leventoglu, S, Turk, Y, Buyukkasap, C, Aday, U, Kara, Y, Kabuli, H, Atici, S, Colak, E, Chooklin, S, Chuklin, S, Ruta, F, Di Martino, M, Dal Mas, F, Abu-Zidan, F, Di Saverio, S, Leppaniemi, A, Martin-Perez, E, de la Hoz Rodriguez, A, Moore, E, Peitzman, A, Fugazzola P., Carbonell-Morote S., Cobianchi L., Coccolini F., Rubio-Garcia J. J., Sartelli M., Biffl W., Catena F., Ansaloni L., Ramia J. M., Augustin G., Moric T., Awad S., Alzahrani A. M., Elbahnasawy M., Massalou D., De Simone B., Demetrashvili Z., Kimpizi A. -D., Schizas D., Balalis D., Tasis N., Papadoliopoulou M., Georgios P., Lasithiotakis K., Ioannidis O., Bains L., Magnoli M., Cianci P., Conversano N. I., Pasculli A., Andreuccetti J., Arici E., Pignata G., Tiberio G. A. M., Podda M., Murru C., Veroux M., Distefano C., Centonze D., Favi F., Agnoletti V., Bova R., Convertini G., Balla A., Sasia D., Giraudo G., Gabriele A., Tartaglia N., Pavone G., D'Acapito F., Fabbri N., Ferrara F., Cimbanassi S., Ferrario L., Ciof S., Ceresoli M., Fumagalli C., Degrate L., Degiuli M., Sofa S., Licari L., Tomasoni M., Dominioni T., Fare C. N., Maestri M., Vigano J., Sargenti B., Anderloni A., Musella V., Frassini S., Gambini G., Improta M., Patriti A., Coletta D., Conti L., Malerba M., Andrea M., Calabro M., De Zolt B., Bellio G., Giordano A., Luppi D., Corbellini C., Sampietro G. M., Marafante C., Rossi S., Mingoli A., Lapolla P., Cicerchia P. M., Siragusa L., Grande M., Arcudi C., Antonelli A., Vinci D., De Martino C., Armellino M. F., Bisogno E., Visconti D., Santarelli M., Montanari E., Biloslavo A., Germani P., Zaghi C., Oka N., Fathi M. A., Rios-Cruz D., Hernandez E. E. L., Garzali I. U., Duarte L., Negoi I., Litvin A., Chowdhury S., Alshahrani S. M., Moreira C. C. L., Ponce I. A., Mendoza-Moreno F., Campana A. M., Bayo H. L., Serra A. C., Landaluce A., Estraviz-Mateos B., Markinez-Gordobil I., Serradilla-Martin M., Cano-Paredero A., Dobon-Rascon M. A., Hamid H., Baraket O., Gonullu E., Leventoglu S., Turk Y., Buyukkasap C., Aday U., Kara Y., Kabuli H. A., Atici S. D., Colak E., Chooklin S., Chuklin S., Ruta F., Di Martino M., Dal Mas F., Abu-Zidan F. M., Di Saverio S., Leppaniemi A., Martin-Perez E., de la Hoz Rodriguez A., Moore E. E., and Peitzman A. B.
- Abstract
Introduction: A textbook outcome patient is one in which the operative course passes uneventful, without complications, readmission or mortality. There is a lack of publications in terms of TO on acute cholecystitis. Objetive: The objective of this study is to analyze the achievement of TO in patients with urgent early cholecystectomy (UEC) for Acute Cholecystitis. and to identify which factors are related to achieving TO. Materials and methods: This is a post hoc study of the SPRiMACC study. It ́s a prospective multicenter observational study run by WSES. The criteria to define TO in urgent early cholecystectomy (TOUEC) were no 30-day mortality, no 30-day postoperative complications, no readmission within 30 days, and hospital stay ≤ 7 days (75th percentile), and full laparoscopic surgery. Patients who met all these conditions were taken as presenting a TOUEC. Outcomes: 1246 urgent early cholecystectomies for ACC were included. In all, 789 patients (63.3%) achieved all TOUEC parameters, while 457 (36.6%) failed to achieve one or more parameters and were considered non-TOUEC. The patients who achieved TOUEC were younger had significantly lower scores on all the risk scales analyzed. In the serological tests, TOUEC patients had lower values for in a lot of variables than non-TOUEC patients. The TOUEC group had lower rates of complicated cholecystitis. Considering operative time, a shorter duration was also associated with a higher probability of reaching TOUEC. Conclusion: Knowledge of the factors that influence the TOUEC can allow us to improve our results in terms of textbook outcome.
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- 2024
64. Correction: ECLAPTE: Effective Closure of LAParoTomy in Emergency—2023 World Society of Emergency Surgery guidelines for the closure of laparotomy in emergency settings
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Simone Frassini, Lorenzo Cobianchi, Paola Fugazzola, Walter L. Biffl, Federico Coccolini, Dimitrios Damaskos, Ernest E. Moore, Yoram Kluger, Marco Ceresoli, Raul Coimbra, Justin Davies, Andrew Kirkpatrick, Isidoro Di Carlo, Timothy C. Hardcastle, Arda Isik, Massimo Chiarugi, Kurinchi Gurusamy, Ronald V. Maier, Helmut A. Segovia Lohse, Hans Jeekel, Marja A. Boermeester, Fikri Abu-Zidan, Kenji Inaba, Dieter G. Weber, Goran Augustin, Luigi Bonavina, George Velmahos, Massimo Sartelli, Salomone Di Saverio, Richard P. G. Ten Broek, Stefano Granieri, Francesca Dal Mas, Camilla Nikita Farè, Jacopo Peverada, Simone Zanghì, Jacopo Viganò, Matteo Tomasoni, Tommaso Dominioni, Enrico Cicuttin, Andreas Hecker, Giovanni D. Tebala, Joseph M. Galante, Imtiaz Wani, Vladimir Khokha, Michael Sugrue, Thomas M. Scalea, Edward Tan, Mark A. Malangoni, Nikolaos Pararas, Mauro Podda, Belinda De Simone, Rao Ivatury, Yunfeng Cui, Jeffry Kashuk, Andrew Peitzman, Fernando Kim, Emmanouil Pikoulis, Gabriele Sganga, Osvaldo Chiara, Michael D. Kelly, Ingo Marzi, Edoardo Picetti, Vanni Agnoletti, Nicola De’Angelis, Giampiero Campanelli, Marc de Moya, Andrey Litvin, Aleix Martínez-Pérez, Ibrahima Sall, Sandro Rizoli, Gia Tomadze, Boris Sakakushev, Philip F. Stahel, Ian Civil, Vishal Shelat, David Costa, Alain Chichom-Mefire, Rifat Latifi, Mircea Chirica, Francesco Amico, Amyn Pardhan, Vidya Seenarain, Nikitha Boyapati, Basil Hatz, Travis Ackermann, Sandun Abeyasundara, Linda Fenton, Frank Plani, Rohit Sarvepalli, Omid Rouhbakhshfar, Pamela Caleo, Victor Ho-Ching Yau, Kristenne Clement, Erasmia Christou, Ana María González Castillo, Preet K. S. Gosal, Sunder Balasubramaniam, Jeremy Hsu, Kamon Banphawatanarak, Michele Pisano, Adriana Toro, Altomare Michele, Stefano P. B. Cioffi, Andrea Spota, Fausto Catena, and Luca Ansaloni
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Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Published
- 2023
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65. Postoperative pain management in non-traumatic emergency general surgery: WSES-GAIS-SIAARTI-AAST guidelines
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Federico Coccolini, Francesco Corradi, Massimo Sartelli, Raul Coimbra, Igor A. Kryvoruchko, Ari Leppaniemi, Krstina Doklestic, Elena Bignami, Giandomenico Biancofiore, Miklosh Bala, Ceresoli Marco, Dimitris Damaskos, Walt L. Biffl, Paola Fugazzola, Domenico Santonastaso, Vanni Agnoletti, Catia Sbarbaro, Mirco Nacoti, Timothy C. Hardcastle, Diego Mariani, Belinda De Simone, Matti Tolonen, Chad Ball, Mauro Podda, Isidoro Di Carlo, Salomone Di Saverio, Pradeep Navsaria, Luigi Bonavina, Fikri Abu-Zidan, Kjetil Soreide, Gustavo P. Fraga, Vanessa Henriques Carvalho, Sergio Faria Batista, Andreas Hecker, Alessandro Cucchetti, Giorgio Ercolani, Dario Tartaglia, Joseph M. Galante, Imtiaz Wani, Hayato Kurihara, Edward Tan, Andrey Litvin, Rita Maria Melotti, Gabriele Sganga, Tamara Zoro, Alessandro Isirdi, Nicola De’Angelis, Dieter G. Weber, Adrien M. Hodonou, Richard tenBroek, Dario Parini, Jim Khan, Giovanni Sbrana, Carlo Coniglio, Antonino Giarratano, Angelo Gratarola, Claudia Zaghi, Oreste Romeo, Michael Kelly, Francesco Forfori, Massimo Chiarugi, Ernest E. Moore, Fausto Catena, and Manu L. N. G. Malbrain
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Morbidity ,Acute ,Pain ,Treatment ,Emergency ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Non-traumatic emergency general surgery involves a heterogeneous population that may present with several underlying diseases. Timeous emergency surgical treatment should be supplemented with high-quality perioperative care, ideally performed by multidisciplinary teams trained to identify and handle complex postoperative courses. Uncontrolled or poorly controlled acute postoperative pain may result in significant complications. While pain management after elective surgery has been standardized in perioperative pathways, the traditional perioperative treatment of patients undergoing emergency surgery is often a haphazard practice. The present recommended pain management guidelines are for pain management after non-traumatic emergency surgical intervention. It is meant to provide clinicians a list of indications to prescribe the optimal analgesics even in the absence of a multidisciplinary pain team. Material and methods An international expert panel discussed the different issues in subsequent rounds. Four international recognized scientific societies: World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES), Global Alliance for Infection in Surgery (GAIS), Italian Society of Anesthesia, Analgesia Intensive Care (SIAARTI), and American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST), endorsed the project and approved the final manuscript. Conclusion Dealing with acute postoperative pain in the emergency abdominal surgery setting is complex, requires special attention, and should be multidisciplinary. Several tools are available, and their combination is mandatory whenever is possible. Analgesic approach to the various situations and conditions should be patient based and tailored according to procedure, pathology, age, response, and available expertise. A better understanding of the patho-mechanisms of postoperative pain for short- and long-term outcomes is necessary to improve prophylactic and treatment strategies.
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- 2022
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66. Diversity and ethics in trauma and acute care surgery teams: results from an international survey
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Lorenzo Cobianchi, Francesca Dal Mas, Maurizio Massaro, Walter Biffl, Fausto Catena, Federico Coccolini, Beatrice Dionigi, Paolo Dionigi, Salomone Di Saverio, Paola Fugazzola, Yoram Kluger, Ari Leppäniemi, Ernest E. Moore, Massimo Sartelli, George Velmahos, Sarah Woltz, Peter Angelos, Luca Ansaloni, and the Team Dynamics Study Group
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Trauma surgery ,Ethics ,Acute care surgery ,Diversity ,Team dynamics ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Investigating the context of trauma and acute care surgery, the article aims at understanding the factors that can enhance some ethical aspects, namely the importance of patient consent, the perceptiveness of the ethical role of the trauma leader, and the perceived importance of ethics as an educational subject. Methods The article employs an international questionnaire promoted by the World Society of Emergency Surgery. Results Through the analysis of 402 fully filled questionnaires by surgeons from 72 different countries, the three main ethical topics are investigated through the lens of gender, membership of an academic or non-academic institution, an official trauma team, and a diverse group. In general terms, results highlight greater attention paid by surgeons belonging to academic institutions, official trauma teams, and diverse groups. Conclusions Our results underline that some organizational factors (e.g., the fact that the team belongs to a university context or is more diverse) might lead to the development of a higher sensibility on ethical matters. Embracing cultural diversity forces trauma teams to deal with different mindsets. Organizations should, therefore, consider those elements in defining their organizational procedures. Level of evidence Trauma and acute care teams work under tremendous pressure and complex circumstances, with their members needing to make ethical decisions quickly. The international survey allowed to shed light on how team assembly decisions might represent an opportunity to coordinate team member actions and increase performance.
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- 2022
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67. Microsatellite and RAS/RAF Mutational Status as Prognostic Factors in Colorectal Peritoneal Metastases Treated with Cytoreductive Surgery and Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy (HIPEC)
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Tonello, Marco, Baratti, Dario, Sammartino, Paolo, Di Giorgio, Andrea, Robella, Manuela, Sassaroli, Cinzia, Framarini, Massimo, Valle, Mario, Macrì, Antonio, Graziosi, Luigina, Coccolini, Federico, Lippolis, Piero Vincenzo, Gelmini, Roberta, Deraco, Marcello, Biacchi, Daniele, Santullo, Francesco, Vaira, Marco, Di Lauro, Katia, D’Acapito, Fabrizio, Carboni, Fabio, Giuffrè, Giuseppe, Donini, Annibale, Fugazzola, Paola, Faviana, Pinuccia, Sorrentino, Lorena, Scapinello, Antonio, Del Bianco, Paola, and Sommariva, Antonio
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- 2022
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68. FAM83B is involved in thyroid cancer cell differentiation and migration
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Valentina Cirello, Elisa Stellaria Grassi, Gabriele Pogliaghi, Viola Ghiandai, Laura Ermellino, Marina Muzza, Giacomo Gazzano, Luca Persani, Carla Colombo, and Laura Fugazzola
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract FAM83B has been recently identified as an oncogene, but its role in thyroid cancers (TC) is still unclear. We examined the expression of FAM83B and its possible involvement in cell migration and differentiation, in neoplastic/normal thyroid tissues and in TC human cell lines. FAM83B expression in TC varies according to the tumor histotype, being significantly downregulated in more aggressive and metastatic tissues. FAM83B levels in cell lines recapitulate patients’ samples variations, and its total and cytoplasmic levels decrease upon the induction of migration, together with an increase in its nuclear localization. Similar variations were detected in the primary tumor and in the metastatic tissues from a follicular TC. FAM83B knock down experiments confirmed its role in thyroid differentiation and cell migration, as demonstrated by the reduction of markers of thyroid differentiation and the increase of the mesenchymal marker vimentin. Moreover, the silencing of FAM83B significantly increased cells migration abilities, while not affecting the oncogenic RAS/MAPK/PI3K pathways. Our data indicate for the first time a role for FAM83B in TC cell differentiation and migration. Its expression is reduced in dedifferentiated tumors and its nuclear re-localization could favour distant migration, suggesting that FAM83B should be considered a possible diagnostic and prognostic biomarker.
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- 2022
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69. Correction: Fetal cell microchimerism and susceptibility to COVID-19 disease in women
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Cirello, Valentina, Lugaresi, Marina, Manzo, Alessandro, Balla, Eva, Fratianni, Gerardina, Solari, Francesca, Persani, Luca, Fugazzola, Laura, and Campi, Irene
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- 2023
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70. Image-guided thermal ablation in autonomously functioning thyroid nodules. A retrospective multicenter three-year follow-up study from the Italian Minimally Invasive Treatment of the Thyroid (MITT) Group
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Mauri, Giovanni, Papini, Enrico, Bernardi, Stella, Barbaro, Daniele, Cesareo, Roberto, De Feo, Pierpaolo, Deandrea, Maurilio, Fugazzola, Laura, Gambelunghe, Giovanni, Greco, Gabriele, Messina, Carmelo, Monti, Salvatore, Mormile, Alberto, Negro, Roberto, Offi, Chiara, Palermo, Andrea, Persani, Luca, Presciuttini, Federica, Solbiati, Luigi Alessandro, Spiezia, Stefano, Stacul, Fulvio, Viganò, Marco, and Sconfienza, Luca Maria
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- 2022
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71. WSES/GAIS/WSIS/SIS-E/AAST global clinical pathways for patients with skin and soft tissue infections
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Massimo Sartelli, Federico Coccolini, Yoram Kluger, Ervis Agastra, Fikri M. Abu-Zidan, Ashraf El Sayed Abbas, Luca Ansaloni, Abdulrashid Kayode Adesunkanmi, Goran Augustin, Miklosh Bala, Oussama Baraket, Walter L. Biffl, Marco Ceresoli, Elisabetta Cerutti, Osvaldo Chiara, Enrico Cicuttin, Massimo Chiarugi, Raul Coimbra, Daniela Corsi, Francesco Cortese, Yunfeng Cui, Dimitris Damaskos, Nicola de’Angelis, Samir Delibegovic, Zaza Demetrashvili, Belinda De Simone, Stijn W. de Jonge, Stefano Di Bella, Salomone Di Saverio, Therese M. Duane, Paola Fugazzola, Joseph M. Galante, Wagih Ghnnam, George Gkiokas, Carlos Augusto Gomes, Ewen A. Griffiths, Timothy C. Hardcastle, Andreas Hecker, Torsten Herzog, Aleksandar Karamarkovic, Vladimir Khokha, Peter K. Kim, Jae Il Kim, Andrew W. Kirkpatrick, Victor Kong, Renol M. Koshy, Kenji Inaba, Arda Isik, Rao Ivatury, Francesco M. Labricciosa, Yeong Yeh Lee, Ari Leppäniemi, Andrey Litvin, Davide Luppi, Ronald V. Maier, Athanasios Marinis, Sanjay Marwah, Cristian Mesina, Ernest E. Moore, Frederick A. Moore, Ionut Negoi, Iyiade Olaoye, Carlos A. Ordoñez, Mouaqit Ouadii, Andrew B. Peitzman, Gennaro Perrone, Tadeja Pintar, Giuseppe Pipitone, Mauro Podda, Kemal Raşa, Julival Ribeiro, Gabriel Rodrigues, Ines Rubio-Perez, Ibrahima Sall, Norio Sato, Robert G. Sawyer, Vishal G. Shelat, Michael Sugrue, Antonio Tarasconi, Matti Tolonen, Bruno Viaggi, Andrea Celotti, Claudio Casella, Leonardo Pagani, Sameer Dhingra, Gian Luca Baiocchi, and Fausto Catena
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Skin and soft-tissue infections ,Necrotizing soft-tissue infections ,Necrotizing infections ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Skin and soft-tissue infections (SSTIs) encompass a variety of pathological conditions that involve the skin and underlying subcutaneous tissue, fascia, or muscle, ranging from simple superficial infections to severe necrotizing infections. Together, the World Society of Emergency Surgery, the Global Alliance for Infections in Surgery, the Surgical Infection Society-Europe, The World Surgical Infection Society, and the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma have jointly completed an international multi-society document to promote global standards of care in SSTIs guiding clinicians by describing reasonable approaches to the management of SSTIs. An extensive non-systematic review was conducted using the PubMed and MEDLINE databases, limited to the English language. The resulting evidence was shared by an international task force with different clinical backgrounds.
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- 2022
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72. The WSES/SICG/ACOI/SICUT/AcEMC/SIFIPAC guidelines for diagnosis and treatment of acute left colonic diverticulitis in the elderly
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Paola Fugazzola, Marco Ceresoli, Federico Coccolini, Francesco Gabrielli, Alessandro Puzziello, Fabio Monzani, Bruno Amato, Gabriele Sganga, Massimo Sartelli, Francesco Menichetti, Gabriele Adolfo Puglisi, Dario Tartaglia, Paolo Carcoforo, Nicola Avenia, Yoram Kluger, Ciro Paolillo, Mauro Zago, Ari Leppäniemi, Matteo Tomasoni, Lorenzo Cobianchi, Francesca Dal Mas, Mario Improta, Ernest E. Moore, Andrew B. Peitzman, Michael Sugrue, Vanni Agnoletti, Gustavo P. Fraga, Dieter G. Weber, Dimitrios Damaskos, Fikri M. Abu-Zidan, Imtiaz Wani, Andrew W. Kirkpatrick, Manos Pikoulis, Nikolaos Pararas, Edward Tan, Richard Ten Broek, Ronald V. Maier, R. Justin Davies, Jeffry Kashuk, Vishal G. Shelat, Alain Chicom Mefire, Goran Augustin, Stefano Magnone, Elia Poiasina, Belinda De Simone, Massimo Chiarugi, Walt Biffl, Gian Luca Baiocchi, Fausto Catena, and Luca Ansaloni
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Acute diverticulitis ,Elderly ,Surgery in elderly ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Acute left colonic diverticulitis (ALCD) in the elderly presents with unique epidemiological features when compared with younger patients. The clinical presentation is more nuanced in the elderly population, having higher in-hospital and postoperative mortality. Furthermore, geriatric comorbidities are a risk factor for complicated diverticulitis. Finally, elderly patients have a lower risk of recurrent episodes and, in case of recurrence, a lower probability of requiring urgent surgery than younger patients. The aim of the present work is to study age-related factors that may support a unique approach to the diagnosis and treatment of this problem in the elderly when compared with the WSES guidelines for the management of acute left-sided colonic diverticulitis. During the 1° Pisa Workshop of Acute Care & Trauma Surgery held in Pisa (Italy) in September 2019, with the collaboration of the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES), the Italian Society of Geriatric Surgery (SICG), the Italian Hospital Surgeons Association (ACOI), the Italian Emergency Surgery and Trauma Association (SICUT), the Academy of Emergency Medicine and Care (AcEMC) and the Italian Society of Surgical Pathophysiology (SIFIPAC), three panel members presented a number of statements developed for each of the four themes regarding the diagnosis and management of ALCD in older patients, formulated according to the GRADE approach, at a Consensus Conference where a panel of experts participated. The statements were subsequently debated, revised, and finally approved by the Consensus Conference attendees. The current paper is a summary report of the definitive guidelines statements on each of the following topics: diagnosis, management, surgical technique and antibiotic therapy.
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- 2022
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73. Hybrid gastroenterostomy using a lumen-apposing metal stent: a case report focusing on misdeployment and systematic review of the current literature
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Carlo Fabbri, Cecilia Binda, Paola Fugazzola, Monica Sbrancia, Matteo Tomasoni, Chiara Coluccio, Carlo Felix Maria Jung, Enrico Prosperi, Vanni Agnoletti, and Luca Ansaloni
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Lumen-apposing metal stent ,EUS-guided gastroenterostomy ,Gastric outlet obstruction ,Gastroenterostomy ,Complications ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Gastric outlet obstruction can result from several benign and malignant diseases, in particular gastric, duodenal or pancreatic tumors. Surgical gastroenterostomy and enteral endoscopic stenting have represented effective therapeutic options, although recently endoscopic ultrasound-guided gastroenterostomy using lumen-apposing metal stent (LAMS) is spreading improving the outcome of this condition. However, this procedure, although mini-invasive, is burdened with not negligible complications, including misdeployment. Main body We report the case of a 60-year-old male with gastric outlet obstruction who underwent ultrasound-guided gastroenterostomy using LAMS. The procedure was complicated by LAMS misdeployment being managed by laparoscopy-assisted placement of a second LAMS. We performed a systematic review in order to identify all reported cases of misdeployment in EUS-GE and their management. The literature shows that misdeployment occurs in up to 10% of all EUS-GE procedures with a wide spectrum of possible strategies of treatment. Conclusion The here reported hybrid technique may offer an innovative strategy to manage LAMS misdeployment when this occurs. Moreover, a hybrid approach may be valuable to overcome this complication, especially in early phases of training of EUS-guided gastroenterostomy.
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- 2022
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74. The open abdomen in trauma and non-trauma patients: WSES guidelines
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Coccolini, Federico, Roberts, Derek, Ansaloni, Luca, Ivatury, Rao, Gamberini, Emiliano, Kluger, Yoram, Moore, Ernest E, Coimbra, Raul, Kirkpatrick, Andrew W, Pereira, Bruno M, Montori, Giulia, Ceresoli, Marco, Abu-Zidan, Fikri M, Sartelli, Massimo, Velmahos, George, Fraga, Gustavo Pereira, Leppaniemi, Ari, Tolonen, Matti, Galante, Joseph, Razek, Tarek, Maier, Ron, Bala, Miklosh, Sakakushev, Boris, Khokha, Vladimir, Malbrain, Manu, Agnoletti, Vanni, Peitzman, Andrew, Demetrashvili, Zaza, Sugrue, Michael, Di Saverio, Salomone, Martzi, Ingo, Soreide, Kjetil, Biffl, Walter, Ferrada, Paula, Parry, Neil, Montravers, Philippe, Melotti, Rita Maria, Salvetti, Francesco, Valetti, Tino M, Scalea, Thomas, Chiara, Osvaldo, Cimbanassi, Stefania, Kashuk, Jeffry L, Larrea, Martha, Hernandez, Juan Alberto Martinez, Lin, Heng-Fu, Chirica, Mircea, Arvieux, Catherine, Bing, Camilla, Horer, Tal, De Simone, Belinda, Masiakos, Peter, Reva, Viktor, DeAngelis, Nicola, Kike, Kaoru, Balogh, Zsolt J, Fugazzola, Paola, Tomasoni, Matteo, Latifi, Rifat, Naidoo, Noel, Weber, Dieter, Handolin, Lauri, Inaba, Kenji, Hecker, Andreas, Kuo-Ching, Yuan, Ordoñez, Carlos A, Rizoli, Sandro, Gomes, Carlos Augusto, De Moya, Marc, Wani, Imtiaz, Mefire, Alain Chichom, Boffard, Ken, Napolitano, Lena, and Catena, Fausto
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Rare Diseases ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Abdomen ,Abdominal Cavity ,Abdominal Wound Closure Techniques ,Guidelines as Topic ,Humans ,Intra-Abdominal Hypertension ,Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy ,Postoperative Complications ,Prophylactic Surgical Procedures ,Resuscitation ,Open abdomen ,Laparostomy ,Non-trauma ,Trauma ,Peritonitis ,Pancreatitis ,Vascular emergencies ,Intra-abdominal infection ,Fistula ,Nutrition ,Re-exploration ,Reintervention ,Closure ,Biological ,Synthetic ,Mesh ,Technique ,Timing ,Guidelines ,Surgery - Abstract
Damage control resuscitation may lead to postoperative intra-abdominal hypertension or abdominal compartment syndrome. These conditions may result in a vicious, self-perpetuating cycle leading to severe physiologic derangements and multiorgan failure unless interrupted by abdominal (surgical or other) decompression. Further, in some clinical situations, the abdomen cannot be closed due to the visceral edema, the inability to control the compelling source of infection or the necessity to re-explore (as a "planned second-look" laparotomy) or complete previously initiated damage control procedures or in cases of abdominal wall disruption. The open abdomen in trauma and non-trauma patients has been proposed to be effective in preventing or treating deranged physiology in patients with severe injuries or critical illness when no other perceived options exist. Its use, however, remains controversial as it is resource consuming and represents a non-anatomic situation with the potential for severe adverse effects. Its use, therefore, should only be considered in patients who would most benefit from it. Abdominal fascia-to-fascia closure should be done as soon as the patient can physiologically tolerate it. All precautions to minimize complications should be implemented.
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- 2018
75. Diversity and ethics in trauma and acute care surgery teams: results from an international survey
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Cobianchi, Lorenzo, Dal Mas, Francesca, Massaro, Maurizio, Biffl, Walter, Catena, Fausto, Coccolini, Federico, Dionigi, Beatrice, Dionigi, Paolo, Di Saverio, Salomone, Fugazzola, Paola, Kluger, Yoram, Leppäniemi, Ari, Moore, Ernest E., Sartelli, Massimo, Velmahos, George, Woltz, Sarah, Angelos, Peter, and Ansaloni, Luca
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- 2022
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76. FAM83B is involved in thyroid cancer cell differentiation and migration
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Cirello, Valentina, Grassi, Elisa Stellaria, Pogliaghi, Gabriele, Ghiandai, Viola, Ermellino, Laura, Muzza, Marina, Gazzano, Giacomo, Persani, Luca, Colombo, Carla, and Fugazzola, Laura
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- 2022
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77. Hybrid gastroenterostomy using a lumen-apposing metal stent: a case report focusing on misdeployment and systematic review of the current literature
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Fabbri, Carlo, Binda, Cecilia, Fugazzola, Paola, Sbrancia, Monica, Tomasoni, Matteo, Coluccio, Chiara, Jung, Carlo Felix Maria, Prosperi, Enrico, Agnoletti, Vanni, and Ansaloni, Luca
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- 2022
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78. The WSES/SICG/ACOI/SICUT/AcEMC/SIFIPAC guidelines for diagnosis and treatment of acute left colonic diverticulitis in the elderly
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Fugazzola, Paola, Ceresoli, Marco, Coccolini, Federico, Gabrielli, Francesco, Puzziello, Alessandro, Monzani, Fabio, Amato, Bruno, Sganga, Gabriele, Sartelli, Massimo, Menichetti, Francesco, Puglisi, Gabriele Adolfo, Tartaglia, Dario, Carcoforo, Paolo, Avenia, Nicola, Kluger, Yoram, Paolillo, Ciro, Zago, Mauro, Leppäniemi, Ari, Tomasoni, Matteo, Cobianchi, Lorenzo, Dal Mas, Francesca, Improta, Mario, Moore, Ernest E., Peitzman, Andrew B., Sugrue, Michael, Agnoletti, Vanni, Fraga, Gustavo P., Weber, Dieter G., Damaskos, Dimitrios, Abu-Zidan, Fikri M., Wani, Imtiaz, Kirkpatrick, Andrew W., Pikoulis, Manos, Pararas, Nikolaos, Tan, Edward, Broek, Richard Ten, Maier, Ronald V., Davies, R. Justin, Kashuk, Jeffry, Shelat, Vishal G., Mefire, Alain Chicom, Augustin, Goran, Magnone, Stefano, Poiasina, Elia, De Simone, Belinda, Chiarugi, Massimo, Biffl, Walt, Baiocchi, Gian Luca, Catena, Fausto, and Ansaloni, Luca
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- 2022
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79. Massive aspiration syndrome: a possible indication for 'emergent' veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation?: a case report
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Emiliano Gamberini, Venerino Poletti, Emanuele Russo, Alessandro Circelli, Marco Benni, Giovanni Scognamiglio, Domenico Pietro Santonastaso, Costanza Martino, Linda Domenichini, Romina Biondi, Giorgia Bastoni, Etrusca Brogi, Luca Ansaloni, Federico Coccolini, Paola Fugazzola, Martina Spiga, and Vanni Agnoletti
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ECMO ,Massive aspiration ,Shock ,ICU ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO) is usually performed in cases of severe respiratory failure in which conventional and advanced mechanical ventilation strategies are ineffective in achieving true lung-protective ventilation, thus triggering ventilatory-induced lung injury. If circulatory failure coexists, veno-arterial ECMO (VA-ECMO) may be preferred over VV-ECMO because of its potential for circulatory support. In VA-ECMO, the respiratory contribution is less effective and the complication rate is higher than in the VV configuration. Case presentation The authors present a case in which VV-ECMO was performed in an emergency setting to treat a 68-year-old White male patient who experienced acute respiratory failure after massive aspiration. Despite intubation and intensive care unit admission, multiple organ failure occurred suddenly, thus prompting referral to a level-1 trauma center with an ECMO facility. The patient’s condition slowly improved with VV-ECMO support along with standard treatment for hemodynamic impairment. VV-ECMO was discontinued on day 8. The patient was extubated on day 14 and discharged home fully recovered 34 days after the event. Conclusions Attention was focused on the decision to initiate VV-ECMO support even in the presence of severe hemodynamic derangement, although VA-ECMO could have provided better hemodynamic support but less effective respiratory support.
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- 2021
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80. Cytoreductive Surgery and Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy for Gastric Cancer with Synchronous Peritoneal Metastases: Multicenter Study of ‘Italian Peritoneal Surface Malignancies Oncoteam—S.I.C.O.’
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Marano, Luigi, Marrelli, Daniele, Sammartino, Paolo, Biacchi, Daniele, Graziosi, Luigina, Marino, Elisabetta, Coccolini, Federico, Fugazzola, Paola, Valle, Mario, Federici, Orietta, Baratti, Dario, Deraco, Marcello, Di Giorgio, Andrea, Macrì, Antonio, Pasqual, Enrico Maria, Framarini, Massimo, Vaira, Marco, and Roviello, Franco
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- 2021
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81. The value of trauma patients’ centralization: an analysis of a regional Italian Trauma System performance with TMPM-ICD-9
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Fugazzola, Paola, Agnoletti, Vanni, Bertoni, Silvia, Martino, Costanza, Tomasoni, Matteo, Coccolini, Federico, Gamberini, Emiliano, Russo, Emanuele, and Ansaloni, Luca
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- 2021
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82. Association of COVID-19 mortality with serum selenium, zinc and copper: Six observational studies across Europe
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Kamil Demircan, Thilo Samson Chillon, Tommy Bracken, Ilaria Bulgarelli, Irene Campi, Gijs Du Laing, Samira Fafi-Kremer, Laura Fugazzola, Alejandro Abner Garcia, Raban Heller, David J. Hughes, Louis Ide, Georg Jochen Klingenberg, Pawel Komarnicki, Zbigniew Krasinski, Alain Lescure, Patrick Mallon, Arash Moghaddam, Luca Persani, Mirko Petrovic, Marek Ruchala, Morgane Solis, Linos Vandekerckhove, and Lutz Schomburg
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trace elements ,SARS-CoV-2 ,mortality ,biomarker ,nutrition ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
IntroductionCertain trace elements are essential for life and affect immune system function, and their intake varies by region and population. Alterations in serum Se, Zn and Cu have been associated with COVID-19 mortality risk. We tested the hypothesis that a disease-specific decline occurs and correlates with mortality risk in different countries in Europe.MethodsSerum samples from 551 COVID-19 patients (including 87 non-survivors) who had participated in observational studies in Europe (Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, and Poland) were analyzed for trace elements by total reflection X-ray fluorescence. A subset (n=2069) of the European EPIC study served as reference. Analyses were performed blinded to clinical data in one analytical laboratory.ResultsMedian levels of Se and Zn were lower than in EPIC, except for Zn in Italy. Non-survivors consistently had lower Se and Zn concentrations than survivors and displayed an elevated Cu/Zn ratio. Restricted cubic spline regression models revealed an inverse nonlinear association between Se or Zn and death, and a positive association between Cu/Zn ratio and death. With respect to patient age and sex, Se showed the highest predictive value for death (AUC=0.816), compared with Zn (0.782) or Cu (0.769).DiscussionThe data support the potential relevance of a decrease in serum Se and Zn for survival in COVID-19 across Europe. The observational study design cannot account for residual confounding and reverse causation, but supports the need for intervention trials in COVID-19 patients with severe Se and Zn deficiency to test the potential benefit of correcting their deficits for survival and convalescence.
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- 2022
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83. A pandemic recap: lessons we have learned
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Federico Coccolini, Enrico Cicuttin, Camilla Cremonini, Dario Tartaglia, Bruno Viaggi, Akira Kuriyama, Edoardo Picetti, Chad Ball, Fikri Abu-Zidan, Marco Ceresoli, Bruno Turri, Sumita Jain, Carlo Palombo, Xavier Guirao, Gabriel Rodrigues, Mahir Gachabayov, Fernando Machado, Lostoridis Eftychios, Souha S. Kanj, Isidoro Di Carlo, Salomone Di Saverio, Vladimir Khokha, Andrew Kirkpatrick, Damien Massalou, Francesco Forfori, Francesco Corradi, Samir Delibegovic, Gustavo M. Machain Vega, Massimo Fantoni, Demetrios Demetriades, Garima Kapoor, Yoram Kluger, Shamshul Ansari, Ron Maier, Ari Leppaniemi, Timothy Hardcastle, Andras Vereczkei, Evika Karamagioli, Emmanouil Pikoulis, Mauro Pistello, Boris E. Sakakushev, Pradeep H. Navsaria, Rita Galeiras, Ali I. Yahya, Aleksei V. Osipov, Evgeni Dimitrov, Krstina Doklestić, Michele Pisano, Paolo Malacarne, Paolo Carcoforo, Maria Grazia Sibilla, Igor A. Kryvoruchko, Luigi Bonavina, Jae Il Kim, Vishal G. Shelat, Jacek Czepiel, Emilio Maseda, Sanjay Marwah, Mircea Chirica, Giandomenico Biancofiore, Mauro Podda, Lorenzo Cobianchi, Luca Ansaloni, Paola Fugazzola, Charalampos Seretis, Carlos Augusto Gomez, Fabio Tumietto, Manu Malbrain, Martin Reichert, Goran Augustin, Bruno Amato, Alessandro Puzziello, Andreas Hecker, Angelo Gemignani, Arda Isik, Alessandro Cucchetti, Mirco Nacoti, Doron Kopelman, Cristian Mesina, Wagih Ghannam, Offir Ben-Ishay, Sameer Dhingra, Raul Coimbra, Ernest E. Moore, Yunfeng Cui, Martha A. Quiodettis, Miklosh Bala, Mario Testini, Jose Diaz, Massimo Girardis, Walter L. Biffl, Matthias Hecker, Ibrahima Sall, Ugo Boggi, Gabriele Materazzi, Lorenzo Ghiadoni, Junichi Matsumoto, Wietse P. Zuidema, Rao Ivatury, Mushira A. Enani, Andrey Litvin, Majdi N. Al-Hasan, Zaza Demetrashvili, Oussama Baraket, Carlos A. Ordoñez, Ionut Negoi, Ronald Kiguba, Ziad A. Memish, Mutasim M. Elmangory, Matti Tolonen, Korey Das, Julival Ribeiro, Donal B. O’Connor, Boun Kim Tan, Harry Van Goor, Suman Baral, Belinda De Simone, Davide Corbella, Pietro Brambillasca, Michelangelo Scaglione, Fulvio Basolo, Nicola De’Angelis, Cino Bendinelli, Dieter Weber, Leonardo Pagani, Cinzia Monti, Gianluca Baiocchi, Massimo Chiarugi, Fausto Catena, and Massimo Sartelli
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Pandemia ,International ,Thoughts ,Reflection ,Ethics ,Biology ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract On January 2020, the WHO Director General declared that the outbreak constitutes a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. The world has faced a worldwide spread crisis and is still dealing with it. The present paper represents a white paper concerning the tough lessons we have learned from the COVID-19 pandemic. Thus, an international and heterogenous multidisciplinary panel of very differentiated people would like to share global experiences and lessons with all interested and especially those responsible for future healthcare decision making. With the present paper, international and heterogenous multidisciplinary panel of very differentiated people would like to share global experiences and lessons with all interested and especially those responsible for future healthcare decision making.
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- 2021
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84. Team dynamics in emergency surgery teams: results from a first international survey
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Lorenzo Cobianchi, Francesca Dal Mas, Maurizio Massaro, Paola Fugazzola, Federico Coccolini, Yoram Kluger, Ari Leppäniemi, Ernest E. Moore, Massimo Sartelli, Peter Angelos, Luca Ansaloni, and the Team Dynamics Study Group
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Trauma teams ,Knowledge translation ,Team dynamics ,Non-technical skills ,Trauma leaders ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Emergency surgery represents a unique context. Trauma teams are often multidisciplinary and need to operate under extreme stress and time constraints, sometimes with no awareness of the trauma’s causes or the patient’s personal and clinical information. In this perspective, the dynamics of how trauma teams function is fundamental to ensuring the best performance and outcomes. Methods An online survey was conducted among the World Society of Emergency Surgery members in early 2021. 402 fully filled questionnaires on the topics of knowledge translation dynamics and tools, non-technical skills, and difficulties in teamwork were collected. Data were analyzed using the software R, and reported following the Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys (CHERRIES). Results Findings highlight how several surgeons are still unsure about the meaning and potential of knowledge translation and its mechanisms. Tools like training, clinical guidelines, and non-technical skills are recognized and used in clinical practice. Others, like patients’ and stakeholders’ engagement, are hardly implemented, despite their increasing importance in the modern healthcare scenario. Several difficulties in working as a team are described, including the lack of time, communication, training, trust, and ego. Discussion Scientific societies should take the lead in offering training and support about the abovementioned topics. Dedicated educational initiatives, practical cases and experiences, workshops and symposia may allow mitigating the difficulties highlighted by the survey’s participants, boosting the performance of emergency teams. Additional investigation of the survey results and its characteristics may lead to more further specific suggestions and potential solutions.
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- 2021
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85. WSES/GAIS/SIS-E/WSIS/AAST global clinical pathways for patients with intra-abdominal infections
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Massimo Sartelli, Federico Coccolini, Yoram Kluger, Ervis Agastra, Fikri M. Abu-Zidan, Ashraf El Sayed Abbas, Luca Ansaloni, Abdulrashid Kayode Adesunkanmi, Boyko Atanasov, Goran Augustin, Miklosh Bala, Oussama Baraket, Suman Baral, Walter L. Biffl, Marja A. Boermeester, Marco Ceresoli, Elisabetta Cerutti, Osvaldo Chiara, Enrico Cicuttin, Massimo Chiarugi, Raul Coimbra, Elif Colak, Daniela Corsi, Francesco Cortese, Yunfeng Cui, Dimitris Damaskos, Nicola de’ Angelis, Samir Delibegovic, Zaza Demetrashvili, Belinda De Simone, Stijn W. de Jonge, Sameer Dhingra, Stefano Di Bella, Francesco Di Marzo, Salomone Di Saverio, Agron Dogjani, Therese M. Duane, Mushira Abdulaziz Enani, Paola Fugazzola, Joseph M. Galante, Mahir Gachabayov, Wagih Ghnnam, George Gkiokas, Carlos Augusto Gomes, Ewen A. Griffiths, Timothy C. Hardcastle, Andreas Hecker, Torsten Herzog, Syed Mohammad Umar Kabir, Aleksandar Karamarkovic, Vladimir Khokha, Peter K. Kim, Jae Il Kim, Andrew W. Kirkpatrick, Victor Kong, Renol M. Koshy, Igor A. Kryvoruchko, Kenji Inaba, Arda Isik, Katia Iskandar, Rao Ivatury, Francesco M. Labricciosa, Yeong Yeh Lee, Ari Leppäniemi, Andrey Litvin, Davide Luppi, Gustavo M. Machain, Ronald V. Maier, Athanasios Marinis, Cristina Marmorale, Sanjay Marwah, Cristian Mesina, Ernest E. Moore, Frederick A. Moore, Ionut Negoi, Iyiade Olaoye, Carlos A. Ordoñez, Mouaqit Ouadii, Andrew B. Peitzman, Gennaro Perrone, Manos Pikoulis, Tadeja Pintar, Giuseppe Pipitone, Mauro Podda, Kemal Raşa, Julival Ribeiro, Gabriel Rodrigues, Ines Rubio-Perez, Ibrahima Sall, Norio Sato, Robert G. Sawyer, Helmut Segovia Lohse, Gabriele Sganga, Vishal G. Shelat, Ian Stephens, Michael Sugrue, Antonio Tarasconi, Joel Noutakdie Tochie, Matti Tolonen, Gia Tomadze, Jan Ulrych, Andras Vereczkei, Bruno Viaggi, Chiara Gurioli, Claudio Casella, Leonardo Pagani, Gian Luca Baiocchi, and Fausto Catena
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Intra-abdominal infections ,Peritonitis ,Sepsis ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Intra-abdominal infections (IAIs) are common surgical emergencies and have been reported as major contributors to non-trauma deaths in hospitals worldwide. The cornerstones of effective treatment of IAIs include early recognition, adequate source control, appropriate antimicrobial therapy, and prompt physiologic stabilization using a critical care environment, combined with an optimal surgical approach. Together, the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES), the Global Alliance for Infections in Surgery (GAIS), the Surgical Infection Society-Europe (SIS-E), the World Surgical Infection Society (WSIS), and the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) have jointly completed an international multi-society document in order to facilitate clinical management of patients with IAIs worldwide building evidence-based clinical pathways for the most common IAIs. An extensive non-systematic review was conducted using the PubMed and MEDLINE databases, limited to the English language. The resulting information was shared by an international task force from 46 countries with different clinical backgrounds. The aim of the document is to promote global standards of care in IAIs providing guidance to clinicians by describing reasonable approaches to the management of IAIs.
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- 2021
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86. Acute abdomen in the immunocompromised patient: WSES, SIS-E, WSIS, AAST, and GAIS guidelines
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Federico Coccolini, Mario Improta, Massimo Sartelli, Kemal Rasa, Robert Sawyer, Raul Coimbra, Massimo Chiarugi, Andrey Litvin, Timothy Hardcastle, Francesco Forfori, Jean-Louis Vincent, Andreas Hecker, Richard Ten Broek, Luigi Bonavina, Mircea Chirica, Ugo Boggi, Emmanuil Pikoulis, Salomone Di Saverio, Philippe Montravers, Goran Augustin, Dario Tartaglia, Enrico Cicuttin, Camilla Cremonini, Bruno Viaggi, Belinda De Simone, Manu Malbrain, Vishal G. Shelat, Paola Fugazzola, Luca Ansaloni, Arda Isik, Ines Rubio, Itani Kamal, Francesco Corradi, Antonio Tarasconi, Stefano Gitto, Mauro Podda, Anastasia Pikoulis, Ari Leppaniemi, Marco Ceresoli, Oreste Romeo, Ernest E. Moore, Zaza Demetrashvili, Walter L. Biffl, Imitiaz Wani, Matti Tolonen, Therese Duane, Sameer Dhingra, Nicola DeAngelis, Edward Tan, Fikri Abu-Zidan, Carlos Ordonez, Yunfeng Cui, Francesco Labricciosa, Gennaro Perrone, Francesco Di Marzo, Andrew Peitzman, Boris Sakakushev, Michael Sugrue, Marja Boermeester, Ramiro Manzano Nunez, Carlos Augusto Gomes, Miklosh Bala, Yoram Kluger, and Fausto Catena
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Infections ,Intra-abdominal ,Peritonitis ,Cholecystitis ,Appendicitis ,Diverticulitis ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Immunocompromised patients are a heterogeneous and diffuse category frequently presenting to the emergency department with acute surgical diseases. Diagnosis and treatment in immunocompromised patients are often complex and must be multidisciplinary. Misdiagnosis of an acute surgical disease may be followed by increased morbidity and mortality. Delayed diagnosis and treatment of surgical disease occur; these patients may seek medical assistance late because their symptoms are often ambiguous. Also, they develop unique surgical problems that do not affect the general population. Management of this population must be multidisciplinary. This paper presents the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES), Surgical Infection Society Europe (SIS-E), World Surgical Infection Society (WSIS), American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST), and Global Alliance for Infection in Surgery (GAIS) joined guidelines about the management of acute abdomen in immunocompromised patients.
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- 2021
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87. Splenic trauma: WSES classification and guidelines for adult and pediatric patients
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Coccolini, Federico, Montori, Giulia, Catena, Fausto, Kluger, Yoram, Biffl, Walter, Moore, Ernest E, Reva, Viktor, Bing, Camilla, Bala, Miklosh, Fugazzola, Paola, Bahouth, Hany, Marzi, Ingo, Velmahos, George, Ivatury, Rao, Soreide, Kjetil, Horer, Tal, ten Broek, Richard, Pereira, Bruno M, Fraga, Gustavo P, Inaba, Kenji, Kashuk, Joseph, Parry, Neil, Masiakos, Peter T, Mylonas, Konstantinos S, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Gomes, Carlos Augusto, Benatti, Simone Vasilij, Naidoo, Noel, Salvetti, Francesco, Maccatrozzo, Stefano, Agnoletti, Vanni, Gamberini, Emiliano, Solaini, Leonardo, Costanzo, Antonio, Celotti, Andrea, Tomasoni, Matteo, Khokha, Vladimir, Arvieux, Catherine, Napolitano, Lena, Handolin, Lauri, Pisano, Michele, Magnone, Stefano, Spain, David A, de Moya, Marc, Davis, Kimberly A, De Angelis, Nicola, Leppaniemi, Ari, Ferrada, Paula, Latifi, Rifat, Navarro, David Costa, Otomo, Yashuiro, Coimbra, Raul, Maier, Ronald V, Moore, Frederick, Rizoli, Sandro, Sakakushev, Boris, Galante, Joseph M, Chiara, Osvaldo, Cimbanassi, Stefania, Mefire, Alain Chichom, Weber, Dieter, Ceresoli, Marco, Peitzman, Andrew B, Wehlie, Liban, Sartelli, Massimo, Di Saverio, Salomone, and Ansaloni, Luca
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Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Childhood Injury ,Emergency Care ,Patient Safety ,Pediatric ,Hematology ,Injuries and accidents ,Abdominal Injuries ,Adult ,Conservative Treatment ,Guidelines as Topic ,Hemodynamics ,Humans ,Spleen ,Wounds and Injuries ,Trauma ,Classification ,Guidelines ,Embolization ,Surgery ,Non-operative ,Conservative - Abstract
Spleen injuries are among the most frequent trauma-related injuries. At present, they are classified according to the anatomy of the injury. The optimal treatment strategy, however, should keep into consideration the hemodynamic status, the anatomic derangement, and the associated injuries. The management of splenic trauma patients aims to restore the homeostasis and the normal physiopathology especially considering the modern tools for bleeding management. Thus, the management of splenic trauma should be ultimately multidisciplinary and based on the physiology of the patient, the anatomy of the injury, and the associated lesions. Lastly, as the management of adults and children must be different, children should always be treated in dedicated pediatric trauma centers. In fact, the vast majority of pediatric patients with blunt splenic trauma can be managed non-operatively. This paper presents the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES) classification of splenic trauma and the management guidelines.
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- 2017
88. Total Thyroidectomy Versus Lobectomy for Thyroid Cancer: Single-Center Data and Literature Review
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Colombo, Carla, De Leo, Simone, Di Stefano, Marta, Trevisan, Matteo, Moneta, Claudia, Vicentini, Leonardo, and Fugazzola, Laura
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- 2021
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89. Correction: Surgeons’ perspectives on artificial intelligence to support clinical decision-making in trauma and emergency contexts: results from an international survey
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Lorenzo Cobianchi, Daniele Piccolo, Francesca Dal Mas, Vanni Agnoletti, Luca Ansaloni, Jeremy Balch, Walter Biffl, Giovanni Butturini, Fausto Catena, Federico Coccolini, Stefano Denicolai, Belinda De Simone, Isabella Frigerio, Paola Fugazzola, Gianluigi Marseglia, Giuseppe Roberto Marseglia, Jacopo Martellucci, Mirko Modenese, Pietro Previtali, Federico Ruta, Alessandro Venturi, Haytham M. Kaafarani, Tyler J. Loftus, and Team Dynamics Study Group
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Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Published
- 2023
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90. Thyroid cancer harboring PTEN and TP53 mutations: A peculiar molecular and clinical case report
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Carla Colombo, Gabriele Pogliaghi, Delfina Tosi, Marina Muzza, Gaetano Bulfamante, Luca Persani, Laura Fugazzola, and Valentina Cirello
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aggressive follicular thyroid cancer ,PTEN ,TP53 ,mismatch repair proteins ,microsatellite instability ,tyrosine kinase inhibitor ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
To date, the molecular mechanisms that underline aggressiveness and resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors in some thyroid carcinomas (TCs) are not known yet. We report the case of a young patient with a metastatic poorly differentiated (PDTC) and follicular thyroid carcinoma (FTC) refractory to conventional therapies and to Sorafenib. The patient, despite an initial partial response, died of progressive disease 21 months after diagnosis. The genetic analysis performed on the primary tumor and on lymph nodes and distant metastases allowed to identify a frameshift mutation (p.P248Tfs*5) in the PTEN gene, never described in TC. This mutation was present in the primary tumor and, with a lower allelic frequency, in metastases diagnosed after treatment with Sorafenib. Mutations in TP53 (p.C135Y and c.920-2A>G previously detected in anaplastic carcinomas and p.M133R never found in TC) were also detected in the primary tissue together with a mono-allelic expression of the p.C135Y mutant at RNA level. At metastatic sites level, we found only the TP53 splicing mutation c.920-2A>G. The presence of defects in mismatch repair (MMR) proteins and genomic instability was also evaluated. The primary tumor showed a partial expression of MMR proteins together with a strong genomic instability. In conclusion, we demonstrated that the rare combination of somatic PTEN and TP53 mutations in a patient with a metastatic FTC, together with the presence of tumor heterogeneity and genomic instability, might be associated with a high tumor aggressiveness and resistance to treatments.
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- 2022
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91. Daily Management of Patients on Multikinase Inhibitors’ Treatment
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Carla Colombo, Simone De Leo, Matteo Trevisan, Noemi Giancola, Anna Scaltrito, and Laura Fugazzola
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MKI ,thyroid cancer ,QoL ,Lenvatinib ,Vandetanib ,Cabozantinib ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
In a minority of differentiated thyroid cancer (TC) cases and in a large percentage of poorly differentiated TCs (PDTCs) and anaplastic TCs (ATCs), the prognosis is poor due to the lack of response to conventional treatments. In the last two decades, multikinase inhibitor (MKI) compounds have been developed and demonstrated to be very effective in these aggressive cases. Besides the great efficacy, several adverse events (AEs) have been reported in virtually all patients treated with MKIs, largely overlapping between different compounds and including hypertension, diarrhea, anorexia, decreased weight, fatigue, and proteinuria. Most grade 3–4 adverse reactions occur during the first 6 months of treatment and require dosage reduction and/or drug discontinuation. Due to severity of the AEs related to the treatment with MKIs, a multidisciplinary team is definitely required for the daily management of these patients, for the evaluation of the disease status, and the psychophysical condition. Moreover, it is crucial that the patients could have a facilitated access to reach either specialist doctors or nurses who must have been trained to follow them for their individual clinical complications. The follow-up visits should take place at monthly intervals until the sixth month and then every 1–2 months until the completion of the first year of treatment. The flow chart followed at our tertiary center is reported in the present review as a real-life-based example for the follow-up of patients with advanced TC on MKI treatment.
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- 2022
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92. Unilateral Surgery for Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma: Seeking for Clinical Practice Guidelines
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Daqi Zhang, Carla Colombo, Hui Sun, Hoon Yub Kim, Antonella Pino, Simone De Leo, Giacomo Gazzano, Luca Persani, Gianlorenzo Dionigi, and Laura Fugazzola
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medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) ,lobectomy ,calcitonin ,surgery ,thyroid cancer ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
Optimized preoperative diagnostic tools with calcitonin tests, ultrasound features, functional imaging modalities, and genetic testing to detect hereditary forms have led to an increased rate of earlier diagnosis and surgery for medullary thyroid cancer (MTC). This helps to adapt the primary surgery to the tumor stage and avoid surgical overtreatment for localized tumor growth, i.e., deviating from the regularly recommended thyroidectomy with bilateral central lymph node dissection in favor of a limited unilateral approach. To limit primary surgical therapy, it is crucial that the MTC is clinically unifocal, sporadic, and confined to the thyroid, and that calcitonin levels indicate biochemical recovery after surgery. The main requirement for such a limited approach is the availability of frozen section studies that reliably indicate (i) R0 resection of the MTC, (ii) absence of infiltration of the organ capsule, (iii) lack of desmoplasia (i.e., evidence of the metastatic potential of the MTC), (iiii) absence of contralateral disease or precancerous lesions. Informed consent is mandatory from the patient, who has been fully informed of the advantages, disadvantages, and potential risks of not undergoing the “classic” surgical procedure. The aim of this article is to review the guidelines for the management of early-stage MTC.
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- 2022
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93. Lenvatinib as first-line treatment for advanced thyroid cancer: long progression-free survival
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De Leo, Simone, Di Stefano, Marta, Persani, Luca, Fugazzola, Laura, and Colombo, Carla
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- 2021
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94. Extra-nuclear TERT counteracts oxidative stress and promotes progression in papillary thyroid carcinoma.
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Muzza, Marina, Pogliaghi, Gabriele, Colombo, Carla, Grassi, Elisa Stellaria, Carbone, Erika, Palazzo, Sonia, Frattini, Francesco, Gazzano, Giacomo, Persani, Luca, and Fugazzola, Laura
- Abstract
The reactivation of TERT is associated with poor outcome in papillary thyroid cancer (PTC). Extra-telomeric functions of TERT were reported, with a protective role against oxidative stress (OS). The aim of the present study was to explore the extra-nuclear TERT localization in PTC and its role in cancer progression. TERT nuclear export under OS were analyzed in K1 PTC cell line. We investigated the role of different TERT localizations using specific TERT constructs that limit its localization to the nucleus or to the mitochondria. The effect of SRC kinase inhibitor PP2, which reduces TERT nuclear export, was investigated as well. Moreover, TERT localization was analyzed in 39 PTC tissues and correlated with the genetic profile and the level of OS, DNA damage and apoptosis in the tumors and with the clinical characteristics of the patients. We demonstrated that TERT is exported from the nucleus in response to OS induced either from H2O2 or the BRAF inhibitor PLX4720. We proved that extra-nuclear TERT reduces mitochondrial OS and induces mitochondrial fragmentation. Moreover, limiting mitochondrial TERT localization reduced proliferation, migration, AKT phosphorylation and glycolysis and increased DNA damage and p21 expression. Finally, in PTC tissues the fraction of mitochondrial/nuclear TERT resulted inversely correlated with OS and p21 expression and associated with tumor persistence. In conclusion, our data indicate that extra-nuclear TERT is involved in reducing the effect of excessive OS, thus promoting cancer cell survival. Extra-nuclear TERT may thus represent a marker of cancer progression and a possible therapeutic target in PTC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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95. Usefulness of fluorescence imaging with indocyanine green for evaluation of bowel perfusion in the urgency setting: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Rizzo, Roberta, Vallicelli, Carlo, Ansaloni, Luca, Coccolini, Federico, Fugazzola, Paola, Sartelli, Massimo, Agnoletti, Vanni, Baiocchi, Gian Luca, and Catena, Fausto
- Abstract
Introduction: Fluorescence imaging with indocyanine green (ICG) has been extensively utilized to assess bowel perfusion in oncologic surgery. In the emergency setting, there are many situations in which bowel perfusion assessment is required. Large prospective studies or RCTs evaluating feasibility, safety and utility of ICG in the emergency setting are lacking. The primary aim is to assess the usefulness of ICG for evaluation of bowel perfusion in the emergency setting. Materials and methods: The manuscript was drafted following the recommendations of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses statement (PRISMA). A systematic literature search was carried out through Pubmed, Scopus, and the ISI Web of Science. Assessment of included study using the methodological index for nonrandomized studies (MINORS) was calculated. The meta-analysis was carried out in line with recommendations from the Cochrane Collaboration and Meta-analysis of Observational Studies in Epidemiology guidelines, and the Mantel-Haenszel random effects model was used to calculate effect sizes. Results: 10 093 papers were identified. Eighty-four were reviewed in full-text, and 78 were excluded: 64 were case reports; 10 were reviews without original data; 2 were letters to the editor; and 2 contained unextractable data. Finally, six studies22-27 were available for quality assessment and quantitative synthesis. The probability of reoperation using ICG fluorescence angiography resulted similar to the traditional assessment of bowel perfusion with a RD was -0.04 (95% CI: -0.147 to 0.060). The results were statistically significant P=0.029, although the heterogeneity was not negligible with a 59.9% of the I2 index. No small study effect or publication bias were found. Conclusions: This first metanalysis on the use of IGC fluorescence for ischemic bowel disease showed that this methodology is a safe and feasible tool in the assessment of bowel perfusion in the emergency setting. This topic should be further investigated in highquality studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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96. Reporting of anaesthesia and pain management in preclinical large animal models of articular cartilage repair - A long way to go
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Maria C. Fugazzola, Kimberley E. Wever, Chris van de Lest, Janny de Grauw, and Daniela Salvatori
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Cartilage repair ,Large animal models ,Pain management ,Reporting quality ,ARRIVE guidelines ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Abstract
Animal models continue to be used to investigate cartilage repair strategies. Adequate anaesthesia and pain management are essential in order to guarantee acceptable animal welfare as well as reproducible experimental results. This systematic review evaluates reporting of anaesthesia and pain management in surgical large animal models (horse, pig, dog, goat and sheep) of (osteo)chondral repair. Manuscripts published between 2015 and 2020 were included after a comprehensive search strategy. Data were evaluated using descriptive statistics and qualitative review. Out of 223 eligible studies, 220 studies contained incomplete information on anaesthetic and pain management. Pre-, intra- and post-operative analgesia were not mentioned in 68%, 94%, and 64% of manuscripts respectively. A total of 176 studies reported that animals underwent general anaesthesia during surgery. Surprisingly, 30% of these articles did not provide any detail on anaesthetic management, while 37% reported using inhalant, hypnotic or sedative drugs only, without mention of analgesics. Pain monitoring was not reported in 87% of manuscripts. The vast majority of preclinical large animal studies on cartilage repair did not meet veterinary clinical standards for anaesthesia and analgesia, and failed to report according to the ARRIVE international guidelines. In light of serious welfare, ethical and translational validity concerns, improvement is urgently needed.
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- 2022
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97. New genetics in congenital hypothyroidism
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Stoupa, Athanasia, Kariyawasam, Dulanjalee, Muzza, Marina, de Filippis, Tiziana, Fugazzola, Laura, Polak, Michel, Persani, Luca, and Carré, Aurore
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- 2021
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98. Basal and stimulated calcitonin for the diagnosis of medullary thyroid cancer: updated thresholds and safety assessment
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Fugazzola, L., Di Stefano, M., Censi, S., Repaci, A., Colombo, C., Grimaldi, F., Magri, F., Pagotto, U., Iacobone, M., Persani, L., and Mian, C.
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- 2021
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99. Transcatheter arterial embolization in abdominal blunt trauma with active mesenteric bleeding: case series and review of literature
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Bertelli, Riccardo, Fugazzola, Paola, Zaghi, Claudia, Taioli, Andrea, Giampalma, Emanuela, Agnoletti, Vanni, and Ansaloni, Luca
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- 2021
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100. 2020 World Society of Emergency Surgery updated guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute calculus cholecystitis
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Michele Pisano, Niccolò Allievi, Kurinchi Gurusamy, Giuseppe Borzellino, Stefania Cimbanassi, Djamila Boerna, Federico Coccolini, Andrea Tufo, Marcello Di Martino, Jeffrey Leung, Massimo Sartelli, Marco Ceresoli, Ronald V. Maier, Elia Poiasina, Nicola De Angelis, Stefano Magnone, Paola Fugazzola, Ciro Paolillo, Raul Coimbra, Salomone Di Saverio, Belinda De Simone, Dieter G. Weber, Boris E. Sakakushev, Alessandro Lucianetti, Andrew W. Kirkpatrick, Gustavo P. Fraga, Imitaz Wani, Walter L. Biffl, Osvaldo Chiara, Fikri Abu-Zidan, Ernest E. Moore, Ari Leppäniemi, Yoram Kluger, Fausto Catena, and Luca Ansaloni
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Acute cholecystitis ,Early and delayed cholecystectomy ,Surgery ,Antibiotics ,Gallbladder Drainage ,High-risk patients ,RD1-811 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Acute calculus cholecystitis (ACC) has a high incidence in the general population. The presence of several areas of uncertainty, along with the availability of new evidence, prompted the current update of the 2016 WSES (World Society of Emergency Surgery) Guidelines on ACC. Materials and methods The WSES president appointed four members as a scientific secretariat, four members as an organization committee and four members as a scientific committee, choosing them from the expert affiliates of WSES. Relevant key questions were constructed, and the task force produced drafts of each section based on the best scientific evidence from PubMed and EMBASE Library; recommendations were developed in order to answer these key questions. The quality of evidence and strength of recommendations were reviewed using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) criteria (see https://www.gradeworkinggroup.org/ ). All the statements were presented, discussed and voted upon during the Consensus Conference at the 6th World Congress of the World Society of Emergency Surgery held in Nijmegen (NL) in May 2019. A revised version of the statements was voted upon via an online questionnaire until consensus was reached. Results The pivotal role of surgery is confirmed, including in high-risk patients. When compared with the WSES 2016 guidelines, the role of gallbladder drainage is reduced, despite the considerable technical improvements available. Early laparoscopic cholecystectomy (ELC) should be the standard of care whenever possible, even in subgroups of patients who are considered fragile, such as the elderly; those with cardiac disease, renal disease and cirrhosis; or those who are generally at high risk for surgery. Subtotal cholecystectomy is safe and represents a valuable option in cases of difficult gallbladder removal. Conclusions, knowledge gaps and research recommendations ELC has a central role in the management of patients with ACC. The value of surgical treatment for high-risk patients should lead to a distinction between high-risk patients and patients who are not suitable for surgery. Further evidence on the role of clinical judgement and the use of clinical scores as adjunctive tools to guide treatment of high-risk patients and patients who are not suitable for surgery is required. The development of local policies for safe laparoscopic cholecystectomy is recommended.
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- 2020
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