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Predicting recurrence of papillary thyroid cancer using the eighth edition of the AJCC/UICC staging system.
BackgroundThe AJCC/UICC classification is widely used for predicting survival in papillary thyroid cancer (PTC), but has not been evaluated as a predictor of recurrence. The hypothesis of this study was that the eighth edition of the AJCC system can be used in this novel way.MethodsAll patients in the study underwent surgery for PTC at a high-volume endocrine surgery centre in France between 1985 and 2015. The seventh and eighth editions of the AJCC/UICC staging system for PTC were employed to predict recurrence and disease-specific survival using the Kaplan-Meier and log rank tests.ResultsAmong 4124 patients (79路7 per cent female), median age was 50 (i.q.r. 38-60)鈥墆ears; 3906 patients (94路7 per cent) underwent total thyroidectomy, with lymph node dissection in 2495 (60路5 per cent). The eighth edition of the AJCC/UICC staging system placed 91路8, 7路1, 0路4 and 0路7 per cent of patients in stages I-IV respectively. After reclassifying patients from the seventh to the eighth AJCC/UICC edition, the disease was downstaged in 23路8 per cent. Over a median follow-up of 7鈥墆ears, 260 patients (6路4 per cent) developed recurrent disease, including 5路2 per cent of patients with stage I, 19路6 per cent with stage II, 59 per cent with stage III and 50 per cent with stage IV disease, according to the eighth edition. The eighth edition was a better predictor of recurrence than the seventh edition.ConclusionThe eighth edition of the AJCC/UICC staging system appears to be a novel tool for predicting PTC recurrence, which is a meaningful outcome for this indolent disease. The eighth edition can be used to risk-stratify patients, keeping in mind that other molecular and pathological predictive factors must be integrated into the assessment of recurrence risk
Factors influencing outcomes in laparoscopic adrenal surgery.
This study aims to recognize factors affecting operative and postoperative outcomes in patients undergoing unilateral laparoscopic adrenalectomy performed by using the transabdominal approach.
From a prospectively collected adrenal database, we performed a retrospective analysis of all patients undergoing unilateral adrenalectomy from July 2002 to December 2011. The outcome measures considered were the following: conversion rate, intra- and postoperative complications, duration of surgery, length of hospital stay, and return-to-work time. Demographic data, American Society of Anesthesiologists score, characteristics of adrenal tumor, and operative and postoperative variables were analyzed to assess their influence on the outcome variables.
A total of 163 laparoscopic adrenalectomies were included. Intraoperative complications, conversion to laparotomy, and postoperative complications were observed in 6.7, 6.1, and 1.8 % of cases, respectively. Conversion to open surgery, intraoperative complications, metastasis, and pheochromocytoma were found to be predictive factors for operative time of > 140 min. An operative duration of > 140 min was associated with intraoperative complications. Tumor size, intraoperative complications, and adrenalectomy for metastasis significantly increased conversion rate. Hospital stay was extended by operative time of > 140 min, conversion to laparotomy, and postoperative complications.
Our study highlights that simple clinical variables, long procedures, and operative complications have a negative impact on procedural outcomes. Based on this, it may be possible to predict cases requiring collaboration with experienced surgeons in order to minimize perioperative morbidity