Abstract
Background
Recent trauma guidelines recommend non-operative management for grade III splenic injury without contrast extravasation on computed tomography. Nevertheless, such recommendations ...rely on low-quality evidence, and practice variation characterizes clinical management for this type of injury. We aimed to identify the role of eleven selected clinical factors influencing the management of grade III splenic injury without contrast extravasation by expert consensus and a modified Delphi approach.
Methods
A questionnaire was developed with the endorsement of the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES). This was delivered and answered live by acute care surgeons attending the 6
th
WSES congress in Nijmegen in 2019. A dedicated mobile phone application was utilized to collect the answers. All answers were evaluated for areas of discrepancy with an 80% threshold for consensus between respondents.
Results
Three factors generated discrepancy in opinion for managing this pattern of injury: the patients’ injury severity, the presence of a bleeding diathesis, and an associated intra-abdominal injury. Agreement was obtained for the other eight factors.
Conclusion
Researchers should focus their efforts on the identified area of discrepancy. Clinicians should use additional care in the presence of the three factors for which discordant opinions were found.
Primary liver neuroendocrine tumors (PLNETs) are rare tumors of the liver. They share some common characteristics with neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) of the extrahepatic bile ducts, such as slow rise, ...hormonal, and histological features. Nevertheless, they possess some peculiarities and the major feature is the difference in the metastatic potential between PLNETs and NETs. PLNETs have less metastatic potential compared with NETs, which is the main factor based on which differential diagnosis between the two groups is achieved. There exists few reports disease's long-term outcome, especially about the recurrences management. We report the case of a 52-year-old woman admitted to hospital for jaundice and presence of liver mass. She underwent extended right hepatectomy and subsequently, PLNET was revealed. After 9 years, a new mass was discovered in the remnant liver, far from the resection line, and was surgically removed. Histological examination confirmed a PLNET recurrence. The patient is alive and doing well after a year of surgery. We conducted a review of the literature on recurrent PLNETS. Five papers followed our inclusion criteria and included 10 patients. Clinical presentation was mostly nonspecific in included cases and no carcinoid syndrome was reported. Median overall survival and median disease-free survival periods were 22 and 5 months, respectively. The primary disease was treated with surgical resection in all the included cases and recurrent diseases were mostly treated with non-surgical techniques (mainly transarterial chemoembolization). In conclusion, more studies should be conducted in order to have significant data about this uncommon neoplasm. Finally, considering the lack of data on long-term outcome, a long and accurate follow-up should be considered.
The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility of unprotected non-ostial left main (LM) imaging by frequency domain optical coherence tomography (FD-OCT).
We conducted a retrospective analysis ...of OCT studies performed to image lesions located in the non-ostial LM. OCT studies were analysed off-line to detect the number of artefact frames in the different LM/bifurcation segments. OCT cross-sectional images were used to assess area measures. OCT longitudinal reconstructions were used to obtain the LM length. Standard quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) was used as the reference methodology. A total of 54 patients with non-ostial LM disease entered the study. The mean number of LM artefact frames was 8±10, corresponding to 19% of the total number of LM frames analysed. The percentages of artefact frames differed significantly according to the segment analysed: 43.3% proximal LM, 11.4% mid LM and 2.1% distal LM, 2.0% ostial left anterior descending artery and 0% ostial left circumflex artery (p<0.0001). All LM OCT measurements were significantly correlated with QCA measurements.
The results of the present study show that FD-OCT assessment of non-ostial LM disease is feasible and may provide high-quality imaging. OCT assessment of distal LM is more efficient than that of the proximal LM segment.
Bifurcations represent challenging lesions which may benefit from improved understanding of stent-related vessel complications. Since optical coherence tomography (OCT) allows us to detect ...post-stenting vessel injuries, we sought to assess the geographic pattern of stent-related complications occurring during provisional stenting of bifurcated lesions.
Fifty-one patients with bifurcated lesions treated by provisional stenting and undergoing intra-procedural OCT assessment were enrolled. OCT images were acquired with the aim of guiding the percutaneous coronary intervention but were re-analysed off-line for the present study. The stented bifurcation was divided into four segments three in the main vessel (MV) and one in the side branch (SB). The following acute post-stenting vessel injuries/complications at the different bifurcation segments were evaluated: (i) stent under-expansion, (ii) stent malapposition, (iii) stent edge dissection, (iv) side-branch ostium dissection, (v) tissue prolapse, (vi) intracoronary thrombus, and (vii) in-stent dissection. A total of 55 bifurcation lesions undergoing provisional stenting were analysed. At least one OCT complication was detectable in all cases. Across different bifurcation sites, significant differences in the occurrence of stent complications were observed. In particular, stent malapposition was more common at the proximal MV segment (P < 0.001), while tissue prolapse was more common at the distal MV segment (P < 0.001).
In bifurcated interventions, OCT often detects vessel injuries/stent complications, which tend to have a specific geographical distribution. In particular, stent malapposition is more common at the proximal MV and tissue prolapse at the distal MV segment.
The management of patients with angiographically intermediate coronary lesions is a major clinical issue. Fractional flow reserve provides validated functional insights while optical coherence ...tomography provides high resolution anatomic imaging. Both techniques may be applied to guide management in case of angiographically intermediate coronary lesions. Moreover, these techniques may be used to optimize the result of percutaneous coronary intervention. We aim to compare the clinical and economic impact of fractional flow reserve versus optical coherence tomography guidance in patients with angiographically intermediate coronary lesions.
Patients with at least one angiographically intermediate coronary lesion will be randomized (ratio 1:1) to fractional flow reserve or optical coherence tomography guidance. In the fractional flow reserve arm, percutaneous coronary intervention will be performed if fractional flow reserve value is ≤0.80, and will be conducted with the aim of achieving a post-percutaneous coronary intervention fractional flow reserve target value of ≥0.90. In the optical coherence tomography arm, percutaneous coronary intervention will be performed if percentage of area stenosis (AS%) is ≥75% or 50 to 75% with minimal lumen area <2.5 mm2, or if a major plaque ulceration is detected. In case of percutaneous coronary intervention, optical coherence tomography will guide the procedure in order to minimize under-expansion, malapposition, and edge dissections.Cost load and clinical outcome will be prospectively assessed at one and thirteen months. The assessed clinical outcome measures will be: major cardiovascular events and occurrence of significant angina defined as a Seattle Angina Questionnaire score <90 in the angina frequency scale.
The FORZA trial will provide useful guidance for the management of patients with coronary artery disease by prospectively assessing the use of two techniques representing the gold standard for functional and anatomical definition of coronary plaques.
Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01824030.
To analyze the immediate and long-term outcomes of transradial (TR) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) to unprotected left main stem (ULMS) bifurcation and to assess the main aspects affecting ...access-site choice in this specific PCI setting.
TR-PCI to the ULMS is feasible, but data specifically comparing TR and transfemoral (TF) approaches in ULMS-bifurcation PCI are limited.
We set up a two-center (Rome, Italy and Oxford, United Kingdom) retrospective registry aimed at comparing the immediate and 1-year outcomes of consecutive patients who underwent ULMS-bifurcation PCI with drug-eluting stent implantation from 2005 to 2013 using the TF or TR approach. Clinical endpoints were: total mortality; major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular event (MACCE) rate; and net adverse clinical event (NACE) rate.
A total of 467 patients undergoing ULMS-bifurcation PCI were enrolled (221 TF and 244 TR). TR approach was increasingly adopted over time for both simple and complex procedures. No significant differences were observed between the TR and TF groups in terms of 1-year mortality (10.7% vs 9.8%; P=.79) and MACCE (18.2% vs 15.2%; P=.44). TR patients, as compared with TF, had significantly fewer access-site complications (2.0% vs 6.3% in TF; P=.02), resulting in a significant reduction of NACE rate (6.9% vs 15.7;%; P=.01).
In patients undergoing ULMS-bifurcation PCI, the selection of TR instead of TF approach is associated with similar early and long-term ischemic complications and with a significant reduction of access-site complications, resulting in lower NACE rate.