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  1. Article ; Online: Real-life long-term outcomes of upfront surgery in patients with resectable stage I-IIIA non-small cell lung cancer

    Bitenc Marko / Cufer Tanja / Kern Izidor / Miklavcic Martina / Petrovic Sabrina / Groznik Vida / Sadikov Aleksander

    Radiology and Oncology, Vol 56, Iss 3, Pp 346-

    2022  Volume 354

    Abstract: Treatment of early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is rapidly evolving. When introducing novelties, real-life data on effectiveness of currently used treatment strategies are needed. The present study evaluated outcomes of stage I–IIIA NSCLC ... ...

    Abstract Treatment of early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is rapidly evolving. When introducing novelties, real-life data on effectiveness of currently used treatment strategies are needed. The present study evaluated outcomes of stage I–IIIA NSCLC patients treated with upfront radical surgery in everyday clinical practice, between 2010–2017.
    Keywords resectable nsclc ; upfront surgery ; real-life data ; overall survival ; prognostic factors ; Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ; R895-920
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-08-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Sciendo
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  2. Article ; Online: Real-life long-term outcomes of upfront surgery in patients with resectable stage I-IIIA non-small cell lung cancer.

    Bitenc, Marko / Cufer, Tanja / Kern, Izidor / Miklavcic, Martina / Petrovic, Sabrina / Groznik, Vida / Sadikov, Aleksander

    Radiology and oncology

    2022  Volume 56, Issue 3, Page(s) 346–354

    Abstract: Background: Treatment of early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is rapidly evolving. When introducing novelties, real-life data on effectiveness of currently used treatment strategies are needed. The present study evaluated outcomes of stage I- ... ...

    Abstract Background: Treatment of early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is rapidly evolving. When introducing novelties, real-life data on effectiveness of currently used treatment strategies are needed. The present study evaluated outcomes of stage I-IIIA NSCLC patients treated with upfront radical surgery in everyday clinical practice, between 2010-2017.
    Patients and methods: Data of 539 consecutive patients were retrieved from a prospective hospital-based registry. All diagnostic, treatment and follow-up procedures were performed at the same thoracic oncology centre according to the valid guidelines. The primary outcome was overall survival (OS) analysed by clinical(c) and pathological(p) TNM (tumour, node, metastases) stage. The impact of clinicopathological characteristics on OS was evaluated using univariable (UVA) and multivariable regression analysis (MVA).
    Results: With a median follow-up of 53.9 months, median OS and 5-year OS rate in the overall population were 90.4 months and 64.4%. Five-year OS rates by pTNM stage I, II and IIIA were 70.2%, 60.21%, and 49.9%, respectively. Both cTNM and pTNM stages were associated with OS; but only pTNM retained its independent prognostic value (p = 0.003) in MVA. Agreement between cTNM and pTNM was 69.0%. Next to pTNM, age (p = 0.001) and gender (p = 0.004) retained their independent prognostic value for OS.
    Conclusions: The study showed favourable outcomes of resectable stage I-IIIA NSCLC treated with upfront surgery in real-life. Relatively low agreement between cTNM and pTNM stages and independent prognostic value of only pTNM, observed in real-life data, suggest that surgery remains the most accurate provider of the anatomical stage of disease and important upfront therapy.
    MeSH term(s) Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung/drug therapy ; Humans ; Lung Neoplasms/drug therapy ; Neoplasm Staging ; Prognosis ; Prospective Studies
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-08-14
    Publishing country Poland
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 1128829-2
    ISSN 1581-3207 ; 0485-893X ; 1318-2099
    ISSN (online) 1581-3207
    ISSN 0485-893X ; 1318-2099
    DOI 10.2478/raon-2022-0030
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on surgery for indeterminate thyroid nodules (THYCOVID): a retrospective, international, multicentre, cross-sectional study.

    Medas, Fabio / Dobrinja, Chiara / Al-Suhaimi, Ebtesam Abdullah / Altmeier, Julia / Anajar, Said / Arikan, Akif Enes / Azaryan, Irina / Bains, Lovenish / Basili, Giancarlo / Bolukbasi, Hakan / Bononi, Marco / Borumandi, Farzad / Bozan, Mehmet Buğra / Brenta, Gabriela / Brunaud, Laurent / Brunner, Maximilian / Buemi, Antoine / Canu, Gian Luigi / Cappellacci, Federico /
    Cartwright, Sara Burchfield / Castells Fusté, Ignasi / Cavalheiro, Beatriz / Cavallaro, Giuseppe / Chala, Andres / Chan, Shun Yan Bryant / Chaplin, John / Cheema, Mustafa Sajjad / Chiapponi, Costanza / Chiofalo, Maria Grazia / Chrysos, Emmanuel / D'Amore, Annamaria / de Cillia, Michael / De Crea, Carmela / de Manzini, Nicolò / de Matos, Leandro Luongo / De Pasquale, Loredana / Del Rio, Paolo / Demarchi, Marco Stefano / Dhiwakar, Muthuswamy / Donatini, Gianluca / Dora, Jose Miguel / D'Orazi, Valerio / Doulatram Gamgaram, Viyey Kishore / Eismontas, Vitalijus / Kabiri, El Hassane / El Malki, Hadj Omar / Elzahaby, Islam / Enciu, Octavian / Eskander, Antoine / Feroci, Francesco / Figueroa-Bohorquez, David / Filis, Dimitrios / François, Gorostidi / Frías-Fernández, Pedro / Gamboa-Dominguez, Armando / Genc, Volkan / Giordano, Davide / Gómez-Pedraza, Antonio / Graceffa, Giuseppa / Griffin, James / Guerreiro, Sofia Cuco / Gupta, Karan / Gupta, Keshav Kumar / Gurrado, Angela / Hajiioannou, Jiannis / Hakala, Tommi / Harahap, Wirsma Arif / Hargitai, Lindsay / Hartl, Dana / Hellmann, Andrzej / Hlozek, Jiri / Hoang, Van Trung / Iacobone, Maurizio / Innaro, Nadia / Ioannidis, Orestis / Jang, J H Isabelle / Xavier-Junior, Jose Candido / Jovanovic, Milan / Kaderli, Reto Martin / Kakamad, Fahmi / Kaliszewski, Krzysztof / Karamanliev, Martin / Katoh, Hiroshi / Košec, Andro / Kovacevic, Bozidar / Kowalski, Luiz Paulo / Králik, Robert / Yadav, Sanjay Kumar / Kumorová, Adriána / Lampridis, Savvas / Lasithiotakis, Konstantinos / Leclere, Jean-Christophe / Leong, Eugene Kwong Fei / Leow, Melvin Khee-Shing / Lim, James Y / Lino-Silva, Leonardo S / Liu, Shirley Yuk Wah / Llorach, Núria Perucho / Lombardi, Celestino Pio / López-Gómez, Javier / Lori, Eleonora / Quintanilla-Dieck, Lourdes / Lucchini, Roberta / Madani, Amin / Manatakis, Dimitrios / Markovic, Ivan / Materazzi, Gabriele / Mazeh, Haggi / Mercante, Giuseppe / Meyer-Rochow, Goswin Yason / Mihaljevic, Olgica / Miller, Julie A / Minuto, Michele / Monacelli, Massimo / Mulita, Francesk / Mullineris, Barbara / Muñoz-de-Nova, José Luis / Muradás Girardi, Fábio / Nader, Saki / Napadon, Tangjaturonrasme / Nastos, Constantinos / Offi, Chiara / Ronen, Ohad / Oragano, Luigi / Orois, Aida / Pan, Yongqin / Panagiotidis, Emmanouil / Panchangam, Ramakanth Bhargav / Papavramidis, Theodosios / Parida, Pradipta Kumar / Paspala, Anna / Pérez, Òscar Vidal / Petrovic, Sabrina / Raffaelli, Marco / Ramacciotti, Constanza Fernanda / Ratia Gimenez, Tomas / Rivo Vázquez, Ángel / Roh, Jong-Lyel / Rossi, Leonardo / Sanabria, Alvaro / Santeerapharp, Alena / Semenov, Arseny / Seneviratne, Sanjeewa / Serdar, Altinay / Sheahan, Patrick / Sheppard, Sean C / Slotcavage, Rachel L / Smaxwil, Constantin / Kim, Soo Young / Sorrenti, Salvatore / Spartalis, Eleftherios / Sriphrapradang, Chutintorn / Testini, Mario / Turk, Yigit / Tzikos, George / Vabalayte, Kristina / Vargas-Osorio, Kelly / Vázquez Rentería, Rafael Sebastián / Velázquez-Fernández, David / Vithana, Sanura Malinda Pallegoda / Yücel, Levent / Yulian, Erwin Danil / Zahradnikova, Petra / Zarogoulidis, Paul / Ziablitskaia, Evgeniia / Zolotoukho, Anna / Calò, Pietro Giorgio

    The lancet. Diabetes & endocrinology

    2023  Volume 11, Issue 6, Page(s) 402–413

    Abstract: Background: Since its outbreak in early 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic has diverted resources from non-urgent and elective procedures, leading to diagnosis and treatment delays, with an increased number of neoplasms at advanced stages worldwide. The aims ... ...

    Abstract Background: Since its outbreak in early 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic has diverted resources from non-urgent and elective procedures, leading to diagnosis and treatment delays, with an increased number of neoplasms at advanced stages worldwide. The aims of this study were to quantify the reduction in surgical activity for indeterminate thyroid nodules during the COVID-19 pandemic; and to evaluate whether delays in surgery led to an increased occurrence of aggressive tumours.
    Methods: In this retrospective, international, cross-sectional study, centres were invited to participate in June 22, 2022; each centre joining the study was asked to provide data from medical records on all surgical thyroidectomies consecutively performed from Jan 1, 2019, to Dec 31, 2021. Patients with indeterminate thyroid nodules were divided into three groups according to when they underwent surgery: from Jan 1, 2019, to Feb 29, 2020 (global prepandemic phase), from March 1, 2020, to May 31, 2021 (pandemic escalation phase), and from June 1 to Dec 31, 2021 (pandemic decrease phase). The main outcomes were, for each phase, the number of surgeries for indeterminate thyroid nodules, and in patients with a postoperative diagnosis of thyroid cancers, the occurrence of tumours larger than 10 mm, extrathyroidal extension, lymph node metastases, vascular invasion, distant metastases, and tumours at high risk of structural disease recurrence. Univariate analysis was used to compare the probability of aggressive thyroid features between the first and third study phases. The study was registered on ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05178186.
    Findings: Data from 157 centres (n=49 countries) on 87 467 patients who underwent surgery for benign and malignant thyroid disease were collected, of whom 22 974 patients (18 052 [78·6%] female patients and 4922 [21·4%] male patients) received surgery for indeterminate thyroid nodules. We observed a significant reduction in surgery for indeterminate thyroid nodules during the pandemic escalation phase (median monthly surgeries per centre, 1·4 [IQR 0·6-3·4]) compared with the prepandemic phase (2·0 [0·9-3·7]; p<0·0001) and pandemic decrease phase (2·3 [1·0-5·0]; p<0·0001). Compared with the prepandemic phase, in the pandemic decrease phase we observed an increased occurrence of thyroid tumours larger than 10 mm (2554 [69·0%] of 3704 vs 1515 [71·5%] of 2119; OR 1·1 [95% CI 1·0-1·3]; p=0·042), lymph node metastases (343 [9·3%] vs 264 [12·5%]; OR 1·4 [1·2-1·7]; p=0·0001), and tumours at high risk of structural disease recurrence (203 [5·7%] of 3584 vs 155 [7·7%] of 2006; OR 1·4 [1·1-1·7]; p=0·0039).
    Interpretation: Our study suggests that the reduction in surgical activity for indeterminate thyroid nodules during the COVID-19 pandemic period could have led to an increased occurrence of aggressive thyroid tumours. However, other compelling hypotheses, including increased selection of patients with aggressive malignancies during this period, should be considered. We suggest that surgery for indeterminate thyroid nodules should no longer be postponed even in future instances of pandemic escalation.
    Funding: None.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Male ; Female ; Thyroid Nodule/epidemiology ; Thyroid Nodule/surgery ; Thyroid Nodule/diagnosis ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; Pandemics ; Retrospective Studies ; Lymphatic Metastasis ; COVID-19/epidemiology ; Thyroid Neoplasms/epidemiology ; Thyroid Neoplasms/surgery ; Thyroid Neoplasms/pathology
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-04-28
    Publishing country England
    Document type Multicenter Study ; Journal Article
    ISSN 2213-8595
    ISSN (online) 2213-8595
    DOI 10.1016/S2213-8587(23)00094-3
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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