A. Farkas
Semmelweis University
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Featured researches published by A. Farkas.
Orvosi Hetilap | 2018
A. Farkas; Ákos Kocsis; Judit Andi; István Sinkovics; László Agócs; László Mészáros; Klára Török; Levente Bogyó; Péter Radecky; Áron K. Ghimessy; Balázs Gieszer; György Lang; Ferenc Rényi-Vámos
INTRODUCTION Nowadays ever smaller, sub-centimetre lung nodules are screened and diagnosed. For these, minimally invasive resection is strongly recommended both with diagnostic and therapeutic purpose. AIM Despite many advantages of minimally invasive thoracic surgery, thorough palpation of the lung lobes and thus the localization of lung nodules are still limited. There are several options to solve this problem. From the possibilities we have chosen and tried wire- and isotope-guided lung nodule localization. MATERIALS AND METHODS In 2017, at the Thoracic Surgery Department of the National Institute of Oncology we performed wire- and isotope-guided minimally invasive pulmonary nodule resection in five patients. The diameter of the lung nodules was between 0.5 and 1.2 cm. The age of the patients was between 44 and 65 years and none of them had severe comorbidities, which meant low risk for complications. RESULTS We successfully performed the minimally invasive atypical resection in all cases. After the wire and isotope placement we found a 2-3 mm pneumothorax in one patient that did not need urgent drainage. In another patient we found that high amount of intraparenchymal bleeding surrounded the channel of the wire. During the operation, two wires were displaced when the lung collapsed, and in another case the mentioned bleeding got into the thoracic cavity and made it difficult to detect the nodule. In one case we resected the wire-guided lung tissue, but the isotope-guided lung nodule was below the resection line. CONCLUSION Both techniques could help to localize the non-palpable lung nodules. Based on our initial experiences, the isotope-guided method provides more details to estimate the exact depth of the nodule from the visceral surface of the pleura and we can avoid the unpleasantness of wire displacement. On the other hand, the production of the isotope requires a more developed infrastructure and the exact timing of the operation after the isotope injection is more strict. Orv Hetil. 2018; 159(34): 1399-1404.INTRODUCTION Nowadays ever smaller, sub-centimetre lung nodules are screened and diagnosed. For these, minimally invasive resection is strongly recommended both with diagnostic and therapeutic purpose. AIM Despite many advantages of minimally invasive thoracic surgery, thorough palpation of the lung lobes and thus the localization of lung nodules are still limited. There are several options to solve this problem. From the possibilities we have chosen and tried wire- and isotope-guided lung nodule localization. MATERIALS AND METHODS In 2017, at the Thoracic Surgery Department of the National Institute of Oncology we performed wire- and isotope-guided minimally invasive pulmonary nodule resection in five patients. The diameter of the lung nodules was between 0.5 and 1.2 cm. The age of the patients was between 44 and 65 years and none of them had severe comorbidities, which meant low risk for complications. RESULTS We successfully performed the minimally invasive atypical resection in all cases. After the wire and isotope placement we found a 2-3 mm pneumothorax in one patient that did not need urgent drainage. In another patient we found that high amount of intraparenchymal bleeding surrounded the channel of the wire. During the operation, two wires were displaced when the lung collapsed, and in another case the mentioned bleeding got into the thoracic cavity and made it difficult to detect the nodule. In one case we resected the wire-guided lung tissue, but the isotope-guided lung nodule was below the resection line. CONCLUSION Both techniques could help to localize the non-palpable lung nodules. Based on our initial experiences, the isotope-guided method provides more details to estimate the exact depth of the nodule from the visceral surface of the pleura and we can avoid the unpleasantness of wire displacement. On the other hand, the production of the isotope requires a more developed infrastructure and the exact timing of the operation after the isotope injection is more strict. Orv Hetil. 2018; 159(34): 1399-1404.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Bahil Ghanim; Sebastian Hess; Pietro Bertoglio; Ali Çelik; Aynur Bas; Felicitas Oberndorfer; Franca Melfi; Alfredo Mussi; Walter Klepetko; Christine Pirker; Walter Berger; Imrich Harmati; A. Farkas; Hendrik Jan Ankersmit; Balazs Dome; Janos Fillinger; Clemens Aigner; Balazs Hegedus; Ferenc Rényi-Vámos; Gyã¶rgy Lang
Intrathoracic solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) is a rare disease. Radical resection is the standard of care. However, estimating prognosis and planning follow-up and treatment strategies remains challenging. Data were retrospectively collected by five international centers to explore outcome and biomarkers for predicting event-free-survival (EFS). 125 histological proven SFT patients (74 female; 59.2%; 104 benign; 83.2%) were analyzed. The one-, three-, five- and ten-year EFS after curative-intent surgery was 98%, 90%, 77% and 67%, respectively. Patients age (≥59 vs. <59 years hazard ratio (HR) 4.23, 95 confidence interval (CI) 1.56–11.47, p = 0.005), tumor-dignity (malignant vs. benign HR 6.98, CI 3.01–16.20, p <0.001), tumor-size (>10 cm vs. ≤10 cm HR 2.53, CI 1.10–5.83, p = 0.030), de Perrot staging (late vs. early HR 3.85, CI 1.65–8.98, p = 0.002) and resection margins (positive vs. negative HR 4.17, CI 1.15–15.17, p = 0,030) were associated with EFS. Furthermore, fibrinogen (elevated vs. normal HR 4.00, CI 1.49–10.72, p = 0.006) and the neutrophil–to-lymphocyte-ratio (NLR > 5 vs. < 5 HR 3.91, CI 1.40–10.89, p = 0.009) were prognostic after univariate analyses. After multivariate analyses tumor-dignity and fibrinogen remained as independent prognosticators. Besides validating the role of age, tumor-dignity, tumor-size, stage and resection margins, we identified for the first time inflammatory markers as prognosticators in SFT.
Acta Horticulturae | 2002
A. Farkas; Zs. Orosz-Kovács; L. Gy. Szabó
Acta Horticulturae | 2002
A. Farkas; L. Gy. Szabó; Zsuzsanna Orosz-Kovács
The Journal of horticultural science | 2004
Zs. Orosz-Kovács; A. Farkas; T. Bubán; P. Bukovics; E. Nagy Tóth; H. Déri
Acta Horticulturae | 2004
A. Farkas; Zs. Orosz-Kovács
Acta Horticulturae | 2006
A. Farkas; Zs. Orosz-Kovács; T. Bubán
Acta Horticulturae | 2006
Zs. Orosz-Kovács; P. Bukovics; A. Farkas; L. Gy. Szabó; Arnold Horváth; H. Déri; T. Bubán
Acta Botanica Hungarica | 2006
P. Bukovics; L. Gy. Szabó; Zs. Orosz-Kovács; A. Farkas
Proceedings of the EUCARPIA Symposium on Fruit Breeding and Genetics, volume 2, Dresden, Germany, 6-10 September, 1999. | 2000
Zs. Orosz-Kovács; A. Farkas; Gábor Katona; E. Nagy Tóth; T. Bubán; Tamás Szabó; M. Geibel; Michael M. J. Fischer; C. Fischer