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Dive into the research topics where Cezary Piwkowski is active.

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Featured researches published by Cezary Piwkowski.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2011

Life-Threatening Aortic Hemorrhage During Pectus Bar Removal

Marek Jemielity; Krystian Pawlak; Cezary Piwkowski; Wojciech Dyszkiewicz

This report presents an unusual case of late, aortic hemorrhage that occurred during the removal of the stabilizing bar 3 years after a Nuss operation. The primary reason for this complication was a rotation of the sternum bar, which caused chronic damage to the aorta and development of an aortomediastinal fistula. Cardiopulmonary bypass and implantation of an aortic prosthesis were required for successful treatment of this complication.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2008

The early and late results of combined off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting and pulmonary resection in patients with concomitant lung cancer and unstable coronary heart disease

Wojciech Dyszkiewicz; Marek Jemielity; Cezary Piwkowski; Mariusz Kasprzyk; Bartøomiej Perek; Lukasz Gasiorowski; Elzúbieta Kaczmarek

OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to analyze the early and long-term results of simultaneous surgical treatment of both coronary heart disease (CHD) and lung cancer. METHODS Twenty-five patients with the diagnoses of both non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and unstable angina were operated on between 2001 and 2006 in the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery at the University of Medical Sciences in Poznań, Poland. Myocardial revascularization was performed simultaneously with the lung resection. The mean patient age was 63 years. The majority (18 patients) were male and the stage of lung cancer was predominantly AJCC II. Most of the patients were classified as stage II or III CCS and the predominant pathology was a two-vessel disease. Fifteen lobectomies, six pneumonectomies and four wedge resections were performed together with the aortocoronary graft implantation (mean: 1.9 graft per patient). RESULTS There were no postoperative deaths or perioperative myocardial infarctions (MI). The most frequent complications were as follows: atrial fibrillation (24%), atelectasis (12%) and residual pneumothorax (12%). All the patients were followed up for 8-60 months. Within this period, eight patients (32%) died, mostly due to the cancer relapse. The local recurrence of lung cancer and distant metastases were the only factors statistically influencing the late survival. No patient in the entire follow-up period had a MI. In three patients, the symptoms of recurrent angina occurred and one of them underwent a coronary stent implantation. CONCLUSIONS Simultaneous off-pump myocardial revascularization and lung resection is a safe and effective treatment when unstable CHD and lung cancer coexist. In selected patients, this combined procedure may be an alternative to the two-stage approach, surgical or non-surgical (cardiologic) interventions preceding the pulmonary resection. The only statistically significant factor having an impact on long-term survival is the recurrence of the cancer.


Videosurgery and Other Miniinvasive Techniques | 2012

Video-assisted thoracic surgery pneumonectomy: the first case report in Poland.

Cezary Piwkowski; Piotr Gabryel; Mariusz Kasprzyk; Wojciech Dyszkiewicz

Minimally invasive video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) lobectomy has proved to be equal and in some aspects superior to open lobectomy in T1 and T2 lung cancers. Indications for VATS pneumonectomy however are still not clearly defined and strictly limited. The minimally invasive VATS pneumonectomy can be undertaken in patients with centrally located tumors without extended invasion of the large pulmonary vessels, chest wall, pericardium, mediastinal structures or proximal part of the main bronchus and when sleeve resection is not feasible (T2). We present a case of a patient who underwent left VATS pneumonectomy due to left lung cancer. Based on the preoperative examinations any kind of less extensive resection than pneumonectomy was excluded. Our VATS technique consisted of three incisions: two ports and a 5-6 cm long utility incision without any kind of rib spreading. The whole of the procedure was controlled on the monitor via a thoracoscope and the technique of resection was described in detail. Total surgery time was 130 min and blood loss was 150 ml. The chest tube was removed on the 2nd post-operative day and the patient was discharged home on the 8th postoperative day. The final histopathological examination confirmed squamous cell lung cancer (T2aN0M0 stage IB). In the authors’ opinion VATS pneumonectomy should be performed only in centers with extensive experience in minimally invasive VATS lobectomy. Despite limited indications for VATS pneumonectomy, if the patients fulfill the VATS pneumonectomy inclusion criteria they may gain from all the advantages of minimally invasive techniques.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2013

Indocyanine green fluorescence in the assessment of the quality of the pedicled intercostal muscle flap: a pilot study

Cezary Piwkowski; Piotr Gabryel; Łukasz Gąsiorowski; Paweł Zieliński; Dawid Murawa; Magdalena Roszak; Wojciech Dyszkiewicz

OBJECTIVES The pedicled intercostal muscle flap (IMF) is a high quality vascularized tissue commonly used to buttress the bronchial stump after pneumonectomy or bronchial anastomosis after sleeve lobectomy in order to prevent bronchopleural fistula formation. The evaluation of the viability of the muscle flap is difficult. The aim of this study was the assessment of the application of indicyanine green fluorescence for the evaluation of IMF perfusion. METHODS The study included 27 patients (10 males and 17 females), mean age 62.6 years (47-77 years). Indocyanine green fluorescence (ICG) was used for objective assessment of the IMF quality by a near-infrared camera system (Photodynamic Eye(®), Hamamatsu Photonics, Japan). The following factors that may have an impact on the quality of the IMF were assessed: age, gender, body mass index, comorbidities, IMF length and thickness and timing of the harvesting during the procedure. RESULTS The following surgical pulmonary resections with IMF harvesting were performed: 12 pneumonectomies, 2 sleeve lobectomies and 13 lobectomies. Intercostal muscle flap (IMF) was harvested before rib spreader insertion in 23 patients (85%) and at the end of the surgery in 4 patients (15%). The mean length and thickness of the harvested intercostal muscle were 19.9 ± 2.9 cm (range 13-24 cm) and 2.4 cm ± 0.7 cm (range 1.0-3.5 cm), respectively. Indocyanine green angiography showed ischaemia in the distal part of the muscle in all cases, despite the lack of obvious macroscopic signs. Median length of the ischaemic part was 4 cm (range 0.5-20 cm). The IMF length and thickness had a significant impact on the length of the ischaemic segment. In 24 patients, the ischaemic part of the muscle flap was severed. In 3 patients with the longest ischaemic segment (11, 13 and 20 cm), an alternative tissue was used to cover the bronchial stump. No major complications occurred. CONCLUSIONS Our preliminary results confirmed the simplicity and high efficacy of ICG in the assessment of intercostal muscle blood perfusion. ICG was superior to macroscopic evaluation and influenced surgical proceeding.


Videosurgery and Other Miniinvasive Techniques | 2013

High costs as a slow down factor of thoracoscopic lobectomy development in Poland - an institutional experience.

Cezary Piwkowski; Piotr Gabryel; Bartłomiej Gałęcki; Magdalena Roszak; Wojciech Dyszkiewicz

Introduction Thoracoscopic (VATS) lobectomy after a decade of criticism is nowadays considered as a technically feasible, safe and oncologically proper operation. This approach has some advantages over conventional thoracotomy like: less postoperative pain, shorter hospitalization, fewer postoperative complications, better tolerance of adjuvant chemotherapy with comparable long-term survival rate. The VATS lobectomy is now generally accepted as an important alternative to open lobectomy in early-stage lung cancer. Aim In the study we analyzed all aspects of introducing video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) lobectomy in our institution with special consideration of the costs of the procedure as a potential limiting factor of its widespread development. Material and methods The data of 212 consecutive patients with early stage lung cancer operated on during 2008-2011 were selected and analyzed. One hundred and eight patients underwent VATS lobectomy (VATS group) and 104 patients antero-lateral thoracotomy (thoracotomy group). Perioperative outcomes including operating time, blood loss during surgery, postoperative complication rate, length of hospital stay, and duration of chest tube drainage were assessed. The cost evaluation included: all direct theater costs, daily hospital costs, intensive care costs, pharmacy and disposable costs with special consideration of stapling device costs. Results The mean hospital stay after VATS lobectomy was significantly shorter than after thoracotomy, mean 7 days vs. 10 days (p < 0.0012). The complication rate and ICU admission rate were almost twice as high after thoracotomy than after VATS and were 46% vs. 23% (p < 0.0006) and 42% vs. 22% (p < 0.0027) respectively. Cost analysis showed significantly higher total costs of VATS lobectomy than after thoracotomy (median €2445 vs. €2047). Considerably higher theater costs for VATS compared to thoracotomy, median €1395 vs. €479, were caused mainly by endostapler costs, median €1069 vs. €161. Significantly higher hospital costs and ICU costs after thoracotomy did not compensate high theater costs of VATS lobectomy. Conclusions In Polish financial reality and potentially in other middle-income countries significantly higher costs of the procedure can limit widespread introduction of VATS lobectomy in clinical practice.


Lung Cancer | 2000

The prognostic value of DNA content analysis in patients with squamous cell lung cancer treated surgically.

Wojciech Dyszkiewicz; Mariusz Kasprzyk; Cezary Piwkowski; Lukasz Gasiorowski; Rodryg Ramlau

The aims of the study were to assess the degree of ploidy and determine whether it had any influence on the remission time and survival of surgically treated patients with squamous cell lung cancer. The results were then related to the clinical staging, grading, size and location of the tumor. Tissue samples of squamous cell lung carcinoma (n=80) resected between 1995 and 1996 in the Department of Thoracic Surgery at University of Medical Sciences in Poznan were prepared using the modified Hedleys method. The measurements were made by means of a Cytoron Absolute flow cytometer. Abnormal (aneuploid) DNA was found in 45% of the tumors. In the 2-year observation period significantly more patients with aneuploid tumors died (75%) than those with diploid tumors (43.2%), P<0.05. No significant correlation was found between the ploidy and frequency of metastasis to regional lymph nodes, tumor size, location or grading. Estimation of the DNA content in cancer cells appears to be a significant prognostic factor. Furthermore measurement of the DNA content can be useful after surgery to estimate the risk of recurrence.


Cancer Epidemiology | 2009

Can the condition of the cell microenvironment of mediastinal lymph nodes help predict the risk of metastases in non-small cell lung cancer?

Paweł Zieliński; Wojciech Dyszkiewicz; Cezary Piwkowski; Grzegorz Dworacki; Lukasz Gasiorowski

BACKGROUND The aim of this study was to analyze the properties of the immune cell microenvironment of regional lymph nodes (LNs) positive for lung cancer. METHODS Twenty-four patients operated on for stages T1 and T2 of the NSCLC, were enrolled in the study. Peripheral blood and LN tissue were obtained from different lymph node sites and levels. As a control, LN tissue was taken from patients diagnosed with emphysema or pneumothorax. The cells from randomly chosen LN were tested by multi-color flow cytometry. Separate portions of LN were snap-frozen and examined for the presence of cytokeratin positive cells (CK). Propensity for apoptosis, level of TCR zeta chain expression of T cells and the number and maturation status of dendritic cells were confronted with the presence of CK-positive cells. RESULTS The presence of metastases correlated with the downregulation of TCR zeta, especially CD8(+) T cells. The most striking feature was the reduction in the number of myeloid CD11c(+) dendritic cells in the LN of patients with LN metastases. This could be a reflection of the immunodeficient state observed in lung cancer patients. Even in the absence of metastases in the regional LN, the same type of changes in the LN microenvironment were observed in those LN located nearer the primary tumor. CONCLUSIONS The preliminary results of this study suggest that this approach may be helpful as an independent tumor staging factor. It is also worth noting that part of the staging process could also be based on features describing the immune cells in the peripheral blood.


Kardiochirurgia i Torakochirurgia Polska/Polish Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2015

Completion pneumonectomy and chemoradiotherapy as treatment options in local recurrence of non-small-cell lung cancer

Mariusz Kasprzyk; Grzegorz Sławiński; Martyna Musik; Łukasz Marciniak; Wojciech Dyszkiewicz; Cezary Piwkowski; Bartłomiej Gałęcki

Introduction The selection of treatment for local recurrence in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) depends on the possibility of performing a radical tumor resection, the patients performance status, and cardiopulmonary efficiency. Compared with chemoradiotherapy, surgical treatment offers a greater chance of long-term survival, but results in completion pneumonectomy and is associated with a relatively high rate of complications. Aim of the study Aim of the study was to evaluate early and long-term results of surgery and conservative treatment (chemoradiotherapy) in patients with local NSCLC recurrence. Material and methods Between 1998 and 2011, 1697 NSCLC patients underwent lobectomy or bilobectomy at the Department of Thoracic Surgery in Poznań. Among them, 137 patients (8.1%) were diagnosed with cancer recurrence; chemotherapy or chemoradiotherapy was provided to 116 patients; 21 patients (15.3%) were treated with completion pneumonectomy. The median time from primary surgery to recurrence was 13.4 months. No metastases to N2 lymph nodes were observed among the patients undergoing surgery; in 7 patients N1 lymph node metastases were confirmed. Results The rate of complications after surgery was significantly higher in comparison with conservative therapy (80.9% vs. 48.3%). Patients treated with surgery were most likely to suffer from complications associated with the circulatory system (80.9%), while hematologic complications were dominant in the group undergoing oncological treatment (41.4%). There were no perioperative deaths after completion pneumonectomy. The age of the patients was the only factor which significantly influenced the incidence of complications in both groups of patients. Analysis of the survival curves demonstrated statistically significant differences in survival between the groups treated with surgery, chemoradiotherapy, and chemotherapy (p = 0.00001). Five-year survival probability was significantly higher among patients treated surgically as compared to patients undergoing systemic therapy. Conclusions Despite the significant rate of postoperative complications (mostly circulatory), the long-term results of the surgical treatment of local NSCLC recurrence are more favorable than those achieved with chemoradiotherapy. The success of surgical treatment is conditioned on the exclusion of metastasis in N2 lymph nodes.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Prognostic significance of DNA ploidy in squamous cell lung carcinoma: is it really worth it?

Wojciech Dyszkiewicz; Mariusz Kasprzyk; Cezary Piwkowski; Lukasz Gasiorowski

BACKGROUND Many previous studies attempted to associate DNA quantification with prognosis for lung cancer, but there is a divergence of opinion about its value. The purpose of the study was to evaluate the frequency of abnormal DNA content in squamous cell cancer (SCC) and analyze its correlation with late survival rates after surgical treatment. METHODS A group of 110 patients surgically treated because of SCC was analyzed. Paraffin-embedded pathologic material underwent cytometric analysis. Postoperative follow-up was performed with standard follow-up visits. The statistical analysis was carried out using Mann-Whitneys U and chi2 tests to compare various variables in both groups. The survival curves were drawn using the Kaplan-Meier method. Clinical staging, regional metastasis, and ploidy, were analyzed with multivariate analysis for having a great impact on survival rates. RESULTS Fifty (45%) tumors were DNA aneuploid. The survival rate in patients with aneuploid cancers was worse than in those with diploid tumors and the most frequent cause of death was local recurrence (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS DNA content abnormalities were found to be an important prognostic factor in patients with SCC. The DNA quantification can select a group of high risk of recurrence even after a radical procedure and set new guidelines for adjuvant therapy.


Advances in Medical Sciences | 2017

Systematic biobanking, novel imaging techniques, and advanced molecular analysis for precise tumor diagnosis and therapy: The Polish MOBIT project

Jacek Niklinski; Adam Kretowski; Marcin Moniuszko; Joanna Reszec; Anna Michalska-Falkowska; Magdalena Niemira; Michal Ciborowski; Radoslaw Charkiewicz; Dorota Jurgilewicz; Miroslaw Kozlowski; Rodryg Ramlau; Cezary Piwkowski; Miroslaw Kwasniewski; Monika M. Kaczmarek; Andrzej Ciereszko; Tomasz Wasniewski; R. M. Mroz; Wojciech Naumnik; Ewa Sierko; Magdalena Paczkowska; Joanna Kisluk; Anetta Sulewska; Adam Cybulski; Zenon Mariak; Bogusław Kędra; Jacek Szamatowicz; Pawel Kurzawa; Lukasz Minarowski; Angelika Edyta Charkiewicz; Barbara Mroczko

Personalized and precision medicine is gaining recognition due to the limitations by standard diagnosis and treatment; many areas of medicine, from cancer to psychiatry, are moving towards tailored and individualized treatment for patients based on their clinical characteristics and genetic signatures as well as novel imaging techniques. Advances in whole genome sequencing have led to identification of genes involved in a variety of diseases. Moreover, biomarkers indicating severity of disease or susceptibility to treatment are increasingly being characterized. The continued identification of new genes and biomarkers specific to disease subtypes and individual patients is essential and inevitable for translation into personalized medicine, in estimating both, disease risk and response to therapy. Taking into consideration the mostly unsolved necessity of tailored therapy in oncology the innovative project MOBIT (molecular biomarkers for individualized therapy) was designed. The aims of the project are: (i) establishing integrative management of precise tumor diagnosis and therapy including systematic biobanking, novel imaging techniques, and advanced molecular analysis by collecting comprehensive tumor tissues, liquid biopsies (whole blood, serum, plasma), and urine specimens (supernatant; sediment) as well as (ii) developing personalized lung cancer diagnostics based on tumor heterogeneity and integrated genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics, and radiomics PET/MRI analysis. It will consist of 5 work packages. In this paper the rationale of the Polish MOBIT project as well as its design is presented. (iii) The project is to draw interest in and to invite national and international, private and public, preclinical and clinical initiatives to establish individualized and precise procedures for integrating novel targeted therapies and advanced imaging techniques.

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Dive into the Cezary Piwkowski's collaboration.

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Wojciech Dyszkiewicz

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Mariusz Kasprzyk

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Piotr Gabryel

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Paweł Zieliński

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Krystian Pawlak

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Magdalena Roszak

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Bartłomiej Gałęcki

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Lukasz Gasiorowski

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Marek Jemielity

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Rodryg Ramlau

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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