4 research outputs found

    Pure laparoscopic formal right hepatectomy versus anatomical posterosuperior segmental resections : a comparative study

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    Background: To analyze the differences in perioperative outcomes between laparoscopic formal right hepatectomies (RH) and laparoscopic anatomical posterosuperior (PS) resections, including segmentectomies in PS segment SVII and right posterior sectionectomies (segment VI and VII resection). Methods: A retrospective analysis of all patients undergoing laparoscopic formal RHs and anatomical PS resections, including segmentectomies in PS segment SVII and right posterior sectionectomies (segment VI and VII resection), between January 2010 and August 2017 was performed. The two groups were compared in terms of patients’ characteristics, intraoperative parameters, and short-term outcomes. Results: Sixty-eight patients were included of which 32 RHs and 36 anatomical PS resections. In the PS resection group, 18 had a segmentectomy of segment VII and 18 had a bisegmentectomy of both segments VI and VII. Patients’ preoperative data were comparable. The lesion size was higher in the RHs (P<0.001). A significant shorter operative time was found in the PS group: 280 [230–315] vs. 357 [300–463] min in the RH group (P<0.001). Blood loss was comparable: 520 [390–906] in the RHs vs. 560 [370–1,030] in the PS group (P=0.595). The overall morbidity rate was comparable being 25% in the RHs and 22.2% in the PS group (P=1.000). A longer length of stay (LOS) {7 [5–8] vs. 5 [4–7] days, P=0.012} and higher readmission rate (12.5% vs. 0%, P=0.044) was observed in the RHs compared to the PS cohort. Concerning surgical margins, the R0 rate was comparable in the two groups; 90.9% in the RHs vs. 95.2% in the PS group (P=1.000). Conclusions: When deemed feasible based on lesion position and size, the laparoscopic parenchyma-preserving approach using anatomical PS segmental resections is associated with shorter hospital stay and a lower readmission rate in respect to formal RH. Overall, short-term surgical parameters indicated that both procedures are safe and feasible in experienced hands, however both demand a great deal of technical expertise

    Effect of treatment sequence on survival in stage IV rectal cancer with synchronous and potentially resectable liver metastases

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    Background and Objectives: The optimal treatment sequence in stage IV rectal cancer (RC) with synchronous liver metastases (SLM) remains undefined. Here, we compared outcomes between patients treated with the bowel-first approach (BFA) or the liver-first approach (LFA). Methods: Consecutive patients diagnosed with stage IV RC with SLM and who underwent complete resection were included. Both groups were matched using propensity scores. Differences in postoperative outcome, local control, and long-term survival were studied. In addition, a decision analysis (DA) model was built using TreeAge Pro to define the approach that results in the highest treatment completion rate. Results: During a 12-year period, 52 patients were identified, 21 and 31 of whom underwent the BFA and the LFA, respectively. Twenty-eight patients were matched; patients treated with the BFA experienced a longer median OS (50.0 vs 33.0 months; P = .40) and higher 5-year OS (42.9% vs 28.6%). The DA defined the BFA to be superior when the failure threshold (ie, no R0 resection, treatment discontinuation regardless of cause) for colectomy is less than 28.6%. Conclusions: In stage IV rectal cancer with SLM, either the BFA or the LFA result in similar long-term outcomes. Treatment should be tailored according to clinicopathological variables

    Autophagy critically controls skin inflammation and apoptosis-induced stem cell activation

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    Macroautophagy/autophagy is a cellular recycling program regulating cell survival and controlling inflammatory responses in a context-dependent manner. Here, we demonstrate that keratinocyte-selective ablation of Atg16l1, an essential autophagy mediator, results in exacerbated inflammatory and neoplastic skin responses. In addition, mice lacking keratinocyte autophagy exhibit precocious onset of hair follicle growth, indicating altered activation kinetics of hair follicle stem cells (HFSCs). These HFSCs also exhibit expanded potencies in an autophagy-deficient context as shown by de novo hair follicle formation and improved healing of abrasion wounds. ATG16L1-deficient keratinocytes are markedly sensitized to apoptosis. Compound deletion of RIPK3-dependent necroptotic and CASP8-dependent apoptotic responses or of TNFRSF1A/TNFR1 reveals that the enhanced sensitivity of autophagy-deficient keratinocytes to TNF-dependent cell death is driving altered activation of HFSCs. Together, our data demonstrate that keratinocyte autophagy dampens skin inflammation and tumorigenesis but curtails HFSC activation by restraining apoptotic responses
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