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Dive into the research topics where Antoine Eskander is active.

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Featured researches published by Antoine Eskander.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2014

Volume–outcome associations in head and neck cancer treatment: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Antoine Eskander; Mazin Merdad; Jonathan C. Irish; Stephen F. Hall; Patti A. Groome; Jeremy L. Freeman; David R. Urbach; David P. Goldstein

Because of the relative rarity of head and neck malignancies and their complex treatment, some groups have advocated for regionalized care. Studies comparing high‐ and low‐volume centers have demonstrated mixed results.


Thyroid | 2016

An International Multi-Institutional Validation of Age 55 Years as a Cutoff for Risk Stratification in the AJCC/UICC Staging System for Well-Differentiated Thyroid Cancer

Iain J. Nixon; Laura Y. Wang; Jocelyn C. Migliacci; Antoine Eskander; Michael J. Campbell; Ahmad Aniss; Lilah F. Morris; Fernanda Vaisman; Rossana Corbo; Denise Momesso; Mario Vaisman; André Lopes Carvalho; Diana L. Learoyd; William D. Leslie; Richard W. Nason; Deborah Kuk; Volkert B. Wreesmann; Luc G. T. Morris; Frank L. Palmer; Ian Ganly; Snehal G. Patel; Bhuvanesh Singh; R. Michael Tuttle; Ashok R. Shaha; Mithat Gonen; K. Alok Pathak; Wen T. Shen; Mark S. Sywak; L. P. Kowalski; Jeremy L. Freeman

BACKGROUND Age is a critical factor in outcome for patients with well-differentiated thyroid cancer. Currently, age 45 years is used as a cutoff in staging, although there is increasing evidence to suggest this may be too low. The aim of this study was to assess the potential for changing the cut point for the American Joint Committee on Cancer/Union for International Cancer Control (AJCC/UICC) staging system from 45 years to 55 years based on a combined international patient cohort supplied by individual institutions. METHODS A total of 9484 patients were included from 10 institutions. Tumor (T), nodes (N), and metastasis (M) data and age were provided for each patient. The group was stratified by AJCC/UICC stage using age 45 years and age 55 years as cutoffs. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to calculate outcomes for disease-specific survival (DSS). Concordance probability estimates (CPE) were calculated to compare the degree of concordance for each model. RESULTS Using age 45 years as a cutoff, 10-year DSS rates for stage I-IV were 99.7%, 97.3%, 96.6%, and 76.3%, respectively. Using age 55 years as a cutoff, 10-year DSS rates for stage I-IV were 99.5%, 94.7%, 94.1%, and 67.6%, respectively. The change resulted in 12% of patients being downstaged, and the downstaged group had a 10-year DSS of 97.6%. The change resulted in an increase in CPE from 0.90 to 0.92. CONCLUSIONS A change in the cutoff age in the current AJCC/UICC staging system from 45 years to 55 years would lead to a downstaging of 12% of patients, and would improve the statistical validity of the model. Such a change would be clinically relevant for thousands of patients worldwide by preventing overstaging of patients with low-risk disease while providing a more realistic estimate of prognosis for those who remain high risk.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2011

BODE index and quality of life in advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease before and after lung transplantation

Antoine Eskander; Thomas K. Waddell; Marie E. Faughnan; Noori A. Chowdhury; Lianne G. Singer

BACKGROUND The BODE index (Body mass index, Obstruction, Dyspnea, Exercise), predicts the risk of death in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and is used to identify candidates for lung transplantation. We hypothesized that a higher BODE index would be associated with worse health-related quality of life (HRQL) in advanced COPD, and with larger improvements in HRQL after transplantation. METHODS In this cohort study (n = 112), we administered the St. Georges Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), 36-Item Short Form (SF-36), Visual Analog Scale, Standard Gamble and EuroQol Group 5-Dimension (EQ-5D) index to otherwise healthy COPD patients with a FEV(1) <50% predicted. We compared mean HRQL values across BODE score groups, and tested for linear trends. In patients who received lung transplants during the study period, we compared SGRQ scores before and early (mean 4 months) after transplantation. RESULTS BODE was directly associated with SGRQ and inversely related to all other HRQL measures (p < 0.05). Early post-transplant improvements in HRQL were also seen across the spectrum of BODE scores from 5 to 10. CONCLUSIONS The BODE score is a significant predictor of HRQL in patients with severe COPD. We noted dramatic improvements in HRQL after transplantation, which appeared similar in magnitude for patients with pre-transplant BODE scores of 5 or 6 and 7 to 10, despite the difference in expected survival between these two groups. The association of the BODE score with HRQL further supports its use in identifying potential candidates for lung transplantation.


Thyroid | 2015

Survival from Differentiated Thyroid Cancer: What Has Age Got to Do with It?

Ian Ganly; Iain J. Nixon; Laura Y. Wang; Frank L. Palmer; Jocelyn C. Migliacci; Ahmad Aniss; Mark S. Sywak; Antoine Eskander; Jeremy L. Freeman; Michael J. Campbell; Wen T. Shen; Fernanda Vaisman; Denise Momesso; Rossana Corbo; Mario Vaisman; Ashok R. Shaha; R. Michael Tuttle; Jatin P. Shah; Snehal G. Patel

BACKGROUND In most staging systems, 45 years of age is used to differentiate low risk thyroid cancer from high risk thyroid cancer. However, recent studies have questioned both the precise 45 year age point and the concept of using a binary cut off as accurate predictors of disease specific mortality. METHODS A cohort of 3664 thyroid cancer patients that received surgery and adjuvant treatment at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) from the years 1985 to 2010 were analyzed to determine the significance of age at diagnosis as a categorical variable at a variety of age cutoffs (5 year intervals between 30 and 70 years of age). The unadjusted and adjusted hazard ratio for the association between disease-specific survival and age was determined using a Cox proportional hazards model adjusted for other predictive variables sex, histology, and pathological T, N, and M status. Furthermore, predictive nomograms of disease-specific mortality were created and validated on an external dataset of 4551 patients to evaluate the impact of age at diagnosis as both a categorical and continuous variable. RESULTS In the MSKCC cohort, with a median follow-up time of 54 months (range 1-332), there were 59 deaths from thyroid cancer with a 10 year disease-specific survival of 96%. Adjusted hazard ratios for all age cutoffs from age 30 to age 70 years were significant. There was no specific cutoff age which risk stratifies patients with differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC). Categorizing age into five strata (<40, 40-49, 50-59, 60-69 and >70 years) showed a 37-fold increase in hazard ratio from age <40 years to age >70 years. A predictive nomogram using age as a continuous variable with other predictive variables had a high concordance index of 96%. Validation on the external cohort had a concordance index of 73%. CONCLUSIONS Mortality from DTC increases progressively with advancing age. There is no specific cutoff age which risk stratifies patients with DTC. A predictive nomogram using age as a continuous variable may be a more appropriate tool for stratifying patients with DTC and for predicting outcome.


Thyroid | 2013

Pattern of Spread to the Lateral Neck in Metastatic Well-Differentiated Thyroid Cancer: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Antoine Eskander; Mazin Merdad; Jeremy L. Freeman; Ian J. Witterick

BACKGROUND There remains controversy surrounding the extent of lateral neck dissection required in patients with papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) and suspicious or confirmed metastatic lateral neck lymphadenopathy. The evidence for this clinical dilemma has never been reviewed systematically nor has there been an attempt to meta-analyze the data by lymph node levels to better characterize the pattern of spread. METHODS This meta-analysis used MEDLINE and EMBASE including all cohort studies reporting the pattern of lateral neck disease in patients who underwent a neck dissection for clinically, radiographically, or cytologically suspicious or confirmed metastatic lymphadenopathy for PTC. Our main outcome was the number of patients with positive involvement at a given level as a percentage of the cohort of patients with positive lateral neck disease, each level being measured separately. RESULTS Eighteen studies with a total of 1145 patients and 1298 neck dissections were included in our meta-analysis. Levels IIa and IIb had disease in 53.1% [95% confidence interval (CI) 46.6-59.5%] and 15.5% [CI 8.2-27.2%], respectively. Studies that did not distinguish between level IIa and IIb or in which both were collapsed into one category showed a total level II involvement of 53.4% [CI 49.7-57.1%]. Level III and level IV were involved in 70.5% [CI 67.0-73.9%] and 66.3% [CI 61.4-70.9%] of specimens. Studies that did not distinguish between level Va and Vb or in which both were collapsed into one category showed a total level V involvement of 25.3% [CI 20.0-31.5%]. Levels Va and Vb had positivity in 7.9% [CI 2.8-20.0%] and 21.5% [CI 7.7-47.6%], respectively, but had only three studies that could be meta-analyzed. CONCLUSIONS This systematic review of the literature and meta-analysis of the pattern of spread indicates significant rates of lymph node metastasis to all lateral neck levels in patients with PTC with regional involvement. This evidence leads us to recommend a comprehensive selective neck dissection of levels IIa, IIb, III, IV, and Vb in patients with lateral neck disease from PTC. The evidence for level Va is lacking, as most studies did not distinguish between levels Va and Vb, and the border between the two levels was inconsistent. Future studies will need to address these sublevels separately.


Archives of Otolaryngology-head & Neck Surgery | 2011

Low pediatric cochlear implant failure rate: contributing factors in large-volume practice.

Antoine Eskander; Karen A. Gordon; Latif Kadhim; Vicky Papaioannou; Sharon L. Cushing; Adrian L. James; Blake C. Papsin

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the rate of cochlear implant (CI) failure and CI reimplantation (CIri) in our population of children receiving implants by means of a technique that includes device fixation with suture to cortical bone. DESIGN Retrospective analysis from January 1990 to June 2010. SETTING Tertiary pediatric hospital. PATIENTS A total of 971 devices were provided to 738 children (5575 implant-years). INTERVENTIONS Cochlear implant explants and CIri. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Surgical findings at CIri were assessed by device model. The Pediatric Ranked Order Speech Perception score and the Phonetically Balanced Kindergarten score were used to make comparisons of hearing ability before and after CIri. RESULTS Thirty-four patients have undergone CIri in our pediatric center during the past 20 years. Excluding 7 of these patients who received their initial implant at other centers, our rate of CIri was 2.9%. Mean (SD) time to device failure was 61 (43) months. A disproportionately high number of patients (7 of 35 [20%]) requiring CIri had meningitis before implantation. After CIri, children maintained or improved their best speech performance measured before device failure, with only 2 children showing a significant reduction in speech perception after CIri. CONCLUSIONS A very low rate of failure occurs in children who receive CI devices, and several factors may account for this low rate. Children who develop meningitis before CI appear to be at an increased risk of device failure.


Laryngoscope | 2014

Assessment of the Clavien-Dindo classification system for complications in head and neck surgery

Eric Monteiro; Michael C. Sklar; Antoine Eskander; John R. de Almeida; Mark G. Shrime; Patrick J. Gullane; Jonathan C. Irish; Ralph W. Gilbert; Dale H. Brown; Kevin Higgins; Danny Enepekides; David P. Goldstein

The importance of reporting and grading surgical complications is central to quality improvement in head and neck surgery. The purpose of this study is to assess the interobserver reliability, content validity, and construct validity of the Clavien‐Dindo classification system for use in grading complications related to head and neck surgery.


Laryngoscope | 2013

Outcome predictors in squamous cell carcinoma of the maxillary alveolus and hard palate

Antoine Eskander; Babak Givi; Patrick J. Gullane; Jonathan C. Irish; Dale H. Brown; Ralph W. Gilbert; Andrew Hope; Ilan Weinreb; Wei Xu; David P. Goldstein

Hard palate and maxillary alveolus are two commonly grouped oral cavity subsites due to their anatomic contiguity and oncologic disease behavior. Few studies have been conducted investigating clinical presentation, staging, prevalence of cervical metastases, and outcomes in this population. The primary objective of this study was to analyze predictors of disease‐free survival (DFS) in surgically treated patients, particularly as it relates to the role of neck dissection.


Laryngoscope | 2014

Volume-outcome relationships for head and neck cancer surgery in a universal health care system.

Antoine Eskander; Jonathan C. Irish; Patti A. Groome; Jeremy L. Freeman; Patrick J. Gullane; Ralph W. Gilbert; Stephen F. Hall; David R. Urbach; David P. Goldstein

We aimed to assess whether surgeon and/or institution resection volume predicts long‐term overall survival in head and neck cancer in a publicly funded healthcare system.


Laryngoscope | 2013

Waiting for thyroid surgery: A study of psychological morbidity and determinants of health associated with long wait times for thyroid surgery†

Antoine Eskander; Gerald M. Devins; Jeremy L. Freeman; Alice C. Wei; Lorne Rotstein; Nitin Chauhan; Anna M. Sawka; Dale H. Brown; Jonathan C. Irish; Ralph W. Gilbert; Patrick J. Gullane; Kevin Higgins; Danny Enepekides; David Goldstein

Patients with thyroid pathology tend have longer surgical wait times. Uncertainty during this wait can have negative psychologically impact. This study aims to determine the degree of psychological morbidity in patients waiting for thyroid surgery.

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David P. Goldstein

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Patrick J. Gullane

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Ralph W. Gilbert

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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John R. de Almeida

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Dale H. Brown

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Danny Enepekides

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

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