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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Resilience Of Patients Undergoing Knee And Shoulder Arthroscopy Procedures, Jillian Mazzocca, Natalie Lowenstein, Connor Crutchfield, Jamie Collins, Elizabeth Matzkin Nov 2023

Resilience Of Patients Undergoing Knee And Shoulder Arthroscopy Procedures, Jillian Mazzocca, Natalie Lowenstein, Connor Crutchfield, Jamie Collins, Elizabeth Matzkin

Student Papers, Posters & Projects

INTRODUCTION: Resilience is a person's capacity to overcome adversity. The purpose was to determine what patient factors correlate with resilience using the Brief Resilience Score. We hypothesize that characteristics of female sex, younger age, Workers' Compensation status, and preoperative opioid use are predictors of a lower preoperative resilience score and that patients with positive psychosocial factors would have higher resilience scores.

METHODS: Eight hundred nine patients undergoing knee or shoulder arthroscopy were preoperatively categorized into low, normal, and high-resilience groups. Preoperative patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and demographics were assessed. Statistical analyses evaluated differences in demographics and PROMs between resilience groups. …


Neurologic Outcomes For Adult Spinal Cord Ependymomas Stratified By Tumor Location: A Retrospective Cohort Study And 2-Year Outlook, Keanu Chee, Grégoire P Chatain, Michael W Kortz, Stephanie Serva, Keshari Shrestha, Timothy H Ung, Jens-Peter Witt, Michael Finn Sep 2023

Neurologic Outcomes For Adult Spinal Cord Ependymomas Stratified By Tumor Location: A Retrospective Cohort Study And 2-Year Outlook, Keanu Chee, Grégoire P Chatain, Michael W Kortz, Stephanie Serva, Keshari Shrestha, Timothy H Ung, Jens-Peter Witt, Michael Finn

Department of Neurosurgery Faculty Papers

Determine whether craniocaudal spinal cord tumor location affects long-term neurologic outcomes in adults diagnosed with spinal ependymomas (SE). A retrospective cohort analysis of patients aged ≥ 18 years who underwent surgical resection for SE over a ten-year period was conducted. Tumor location was classified as cervical, thoracic, or lumbar/conus. Primary endpoints were post-operative McCormick Neurologic Scale (MNS) scores at < 3 days, 6 weeks, 1 year, and 2 years. One-way ANOVA was performed to detect significant differences in MNS scores between tumor locations. Twenty-eight patients were identified. The average age was 44.2 ± 15.4 years. Sixteen were male, and 13 were female. There were 10 cervical-predominant SEs, 13 thoracic-predominant SEs, and 5 lumbar/conus-predominant SEs. No significant differences were observed in pre-operative MNS scores between tumor locations (p = 0.73). One-way ANOVA testing demonstrated statistically significant differences in post-operative MNS scores between tumor locations at < 3 days (p = 0.03), 6 weeks (p = 0.009), and 1 year (p = 0.003); however, no significant difference was observed between post-operative MNS scores at 2 years (p = 0.13). The mean MNS score for patients with thoracic SEs were higher at all follow-up time points. Tumors arising in the thoracic SE are associated with worse post-operative neurologic outcomes in comparison to SEs arising in other spinal regions. This is likely multifactorial in etiology, owing to both anatomical differences including spinal cord volume as well as variations in tumor characteristics. No significant differences in 2-year MNS scores were observed, suggesting that patients ultimately recover from neurological insult sustained at the time of surgery.


Ninety-Day Mortality Following Transoral Robotic Surgery Or Radiation At Commission On Cancer-Accredited Facilities, James R Janopaul-Naylor, Manali Rupji, Rachel A Tobillo, Joshua W Lorenz, Jeffrey M Switchenko, Sibo Tian, Azeem S Kaka, David C Qian, Ashley J Schlafstein, Conor E Steuer, Jill S Remick, Soumon Rudra, Mark W Mcdonald, Nabil F Saba, William A Stokes, Mihir R Patel, James E Bates Mar 2023

Ninety-Day Mortality Following Transoral Robotic Surgery Or Radiation At Commission On Cancer-Accredited Facilities, James R Janopaul-Naylor, Manali Rupji, Rachel A Tobillo, Joshua W Lorenz, Jeffrey M Switchenko, Sibo Tian, Azeem S Kaka, David C Qian, Ashley J Schlafstein, Conor E Steuer, Jill S Remick, Soumon Rudra, Mark W Mcdonald, Nabil F Saba, William A Stokes, Mihir R Patel, James E Bates

Journal Articles

BACKGROUND: Postoperative mortality for oropharynx squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) with transoral robotic surgery (TORS) varies from 0.2% to 6.5% on trials; the real-world rate is unknown.

METHODS: NCDB study from 2010 to 2017 for patients with cT1-2N0-2M0 OPSCC with Charleson-Deyo score 0-1. Ninety-day mortality assessed from start and end of treatment at Commission on Cancer-accredited facilities.

RESULTS: 3639 patients were treated with TORS and 1937 with radiotherapy. TORS cohort had more women and higher income, was younger, more often treated at academic centers, and more likely to have private insurance (all p < 0.05). Ninety-day mortality was 1.3% with TORS and 0.7% or 1.4% from start or end of radiotherapy, respectively. From end of therapy, there was no significant difference on MVA between treatment modality.

CONCLUSIONS: There is minimal difference between 90-day mortality …