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Dive into the research topics where Claude Smadja is active.

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Featured researches published by Claude Smadja.


Gastroenterology | 1990

Resection of hepatocellular carcinomas: Results in 72 European patients with cirrhosis

Dominique Franco; Lorenzo Capussotti; Claude Smadja; Hedayat Bouzari; Jonathan L. Meakins; François Kemeny; Grange D; Mario Dellepiane

This study was undertaken to determine the results of resection of hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhotic patients in Europe, using the same criteria as in the Orient for detection, surgical management, and pathology of the tumors. Seventy-two patients had a liver resection. One- and 3-yr survival rates were 68% and 51%, respectively. Survival rate was significantly higher in Childs/Pughs class A than in class B-C patients. Patients with a thickly encapsulated tumor lived longer than those with an infiltrating tumor and had in addition a significantly lower incidence of cancer recurrence. Class A patients with a thickly encapsulated hepatocellular carcinoma had a 77% 3-year survival rate. There was no relation between the size of the tumor or the presence of symptoms and survival. These data suggest that good results can be achieved by resection of hepatocellular carcinomas in European cirrhotic patients. A thickly encapsulated tumor and an adequate liver function are the main determinants of low cancer recurrence and high survival. The clinical results in this series are similar to those reported from the Orient.


American Journal of Surgery | 2009

Laparoscopic versus open right hepatectomy: a comparative study

Ibrahim Dagher; Giuseppe Di Giuro; Julien Dubrez; Panagiotis Lainas; Claude Smadja; Dominique Franco

BACKGROUND The safety of laparoscopic major liver resections is still uncertain. The aim of this study was to compare our results for laparoscopic right hepatectomy (LRH) with those for open right hepatectomy (ORH). METHODS Patients undergoing LRH were compared with retrospectively selected patients from our ORH database. The 2 groups were well matched for sex, age, American Society of Anesthesiologists score, body mass index, liver disease, and tumor size. Surgical and postsurgical outcomes were compared. RESULTS Seventy-two patients were analyzed: 22 in the LRH group and 50 in the ORH group. Operating time was similar. Blood loss was significantly less in laparoscopic resections (P = .038). Specific morbidity rates were not different, general morbidity was lower after laparoscopy (P = .04), and the severity of postsurgical complications was not different. Mean hospital stay was significantly shorter after laparoscopy (P = .009). COMMENTS Laparoscopy improved surgical and postsurgical outcomes for ORH in selected patients. This is the first comparative study to demonstrate an advantage of laparoscopy for a major liver resection. Prospective randomized studies with a greater number of cases are needed to confirm the role of laparoscopy in major liver resections.


Anesthesia & Analgesia | 1997

Aprotinin reduces blood loss in patients undergoing elective liver resection.

Claude Lentschener; Dan Benhamou; Frédéric J. Mercier; Catherine Boyer-Neumann; Sylvie Naveau; Claude Smadja; Martine Wolf; Dominique Franco

Ninety-seven patients undergoing elective liver resection through a subcostal incision were assigned to large-dose aprotinin treatment or placebo in a double-blind, prospective, randomized fashion. Randomization was stratified by diagnosis: (a) cancer in cirrhosis, (b) cancer in healthy liver, and (c) benign tumor in healthy liver. Intraoperative blood loss, percentage of transfused patients, and total transfusion requirement per group were significantly lower in the aprotinin group than in the placebo group (1217 +/- 966 mL vs 1653 +/- 1221 mL, P = 0.048; 17% vs 39%, P = 0.02; 30 vs 77 red blood cell packs, P = 0.015, respectively). Assessment of hematological markers (a) prior to surgery, (b) at the end of surgery, and (c) 24 h after surgery showed an identical intraoperative increase in thrombin-antithrombin III complexes in patients of both groups (P = 0.86), which indicates a similar activation of coagulation. Intraoperative hyperfibrinolysis was significantly less pronounced in the aprotinin group than in the placebo group (P = 0.0002 and P = 0.004 for D-dimers and fibrinogen, respectively). No adverse drug effects were detected (circulatory disturbances, deep venous thrombosis, increase in serum creatinine). These results suggest that aprotinin significantly reduces blood loss and transfusion requirement in patients undergoing elective liver resection through a subcostal incision. (Anesth Analg 1997;84:875-81)


Annals of Surgery | 1986

Results of portal systemic shunts in Budd-Chiari syndrome.

C. Vons; Claude Smadja; Edwige Bourstyn; Anne-Marie Szekely; Patrick Bonnet; Dominique Franco

Nine patients with Budd-Chiari syndrome (BCS) were treated by a portal systemic shunt. One had thrombosis of the superior mesenteric vein (SMV) and another had complete obstruction of the retrohepatic inferior vena cava (IVC). All other patients had a marked stenosis of the retrohepatic IVC with caval pressure ranging from 12 to 24 mmHg (mean: 17 mmHg). Seven patients had an interposition mesocaval shunt using an autologous jugular vein. The patient with a thrombosed SMV had a portoatrial shunt. The patient with an obstructed IVC had a cavoatrial shunt after an erroneous portacaval shunt had failed to relieve ascites. There were no operative deaths and no major postoperative complications. One patient died 19 months after operation of acute leukemia complicating polycythemia rubra vera. All other patients were alive and well 8 months to 6 years after operation. None of them had encephalopathy. These results suggest several comments: (1) Portal systemic shunts are a good treatment for BCS and have a low operative risk. (2) The mesocaval shunt is an efficient procedure, even when there is stenosis of the IVC with high caval pressure; shunts to the right atrium should be performed only in the case of complete obstruction or inaccessibility of the IVC. (3) The long-term prognosis is excellent, except in patients with potential malignancies. Therefore, portal systemic shunts should be indicated early in patients with symptomatic BCS.


Annals of Surgery | 1985

The LeVeen shunt in the elective treatment of intractable ascites in cirrhosis. A prospective study on 140 patients.

Claude Smadja; Dominique Franco

One hundred and forty patients with an intractable ascites complicating a chronic liver disease received a peritoneovenous shunt (PVS) using the LeVeen valve. Operative mortality was ten per cent but was 25% in patients with severe liver failure. Intraoperative drainage of ascites sharply decreased postoperative complications and mortality. One-year actuarial survival rate was 81.4%, respectively 77.7%, 61.3%, and 24.7% in patients with good liver function and moderate or severe liver failure. Variceal hemorrhage occurred in 11 patients and late infection in another 11 patients. Thirty-eight patients (30.5%) had recurrence of ascites. This was mostly due to an obstruction on the venous side of the shunt. An elective portacaval shunt had to be done in 23 patients for recurrence of ascites or variceal bleeding. Among the 57 patients still alive at time of writing, 51 were free of ascites. These results suggest that PVS is an efficient operation. This procedure may be largely indicated in the selected and small group of cirrhotic patients with true intractable ascites and moderate or no liver insufficiency.


American Journal of Surgery | 1997

Preoperative predictors of blood transfusion in liver resection for tumor

Dominique Mariette; Claude Smadja; Sylvie Naveau; Giacomo Borgonovo; C. Vons; Dominique Franco

BACKGROUND Hepatic resection remains a hemorrhagic procedure. The purpose of this study was to investigate the preoperative predictive factors of intraoperative blood transfusion. METHODS One hundred consecutive patients who underwent hepatic resection for tumor were included in this retrospective study. Resection was performed for primary malignancies (n = 52), metastases (n = 18), and benign tumors (n = 30). Liver resection was performed under intermittent clamping of the portal triad. Seventeen variables were analyzed. RESULTS The operative blood loss was 1,872 mL (mean 1,104; range 650 to 4500) for the 22 transfused patients. The mean blood transfusion was 5.5 units (mean 3.2; range 2 to 12) of packed red cells. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that the size of liver resection (P <0.001) and the prothrombin rate (P <0.001) were independently correlated with blood transfusion. CONCLUSIONS Patients undergoing extended resection or with abnormal coagulation could be considered for autologous blood transfusion.


Annals of Surgery | 1989

Hepatectomy without abdominal drainage: results of a prospective study in 61 patients

Dominique Franco; Aziz Karaa; Jonathan L. Meakins; Giacomo Borgonovo; Claude Smadja; Grange D

The increasingly simple postoperative course of major surgery has challenged the routine use of drainage after most abdominal surgical procedures. Therefore a prospective study was designed to determine if abdominal drainage could be safely avoided after liver resection and was evaluated in 61 consecutive patients. There was one postoperative death (1.7%) from variceal bleeding. Four other patients (6.7%) developed an abdominal complication: two right subphrenic hematomas requiring reoperation in one case and two incisional ascitic leaks requiring incisional repair in one patient. There was neither a subphrenic abscess nor bile peritonitis. Postoperative hospitalization was 11.5 +/- 3 days in the entire group and 8.5 +/- 1 days in patients without complications. These results suggest that liver resection can be performed safely without abdominal drainage and that the routine use of drains is unnecessary.


The Lancet | 1989

Effect of haemodilution on transfusion requirements in liver resection.

Patrick Sejourne; JonathanL. Meakins; Claude Smadja; Annie Poirier; Fahdi Chamieh; Grange D; Dominique Franco

Between April, 1988, and February, 1989, 22 consecutive patients underwent liver resection (17 hepatectomy, 5 segmentectomy) with intraoperative haemodilution to avoid blood transfusion. The results were compared with those of 22 patients who underwent liver resection without haemodilution between February, 1987, and April, 1988, and who were matched for the nature of the tumour and the type of liver resection. Age, preoperative haematocrit and haemoglobin concentration, and intraoperative blood loss did not differ between the groups who did and did not undergo haemodilution. There was no abnormal bleeding during liver transection in haemodiluted patients. No allogeneic blood products at all were needed in a significantly greater proportion of the group with haemodilution than of the group without (19 [86%] vs 6 [27%]). The two groups also showed significant differences in the total requirements of allogeneic packed red cells (haemodilution 9 units, no haemodilution 84 units) and fresh frozen plasma (9 vs 119 units). Although the haematocrit was slightly but significantly lower in the group who underwent haemodilution than in those who did not on postoperative days 1 and 8, the differences had disappeared by the second postoperative month. Postoperative complication rates, abnormal results in liver biochemical tests, and lengths of hospital stay were the same in patients with and without haemodilution. Intraoperative haemodilution in patients undergoing liver resection reduced requirements for all blood products, further lowering the risks associated with liver resection.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 1998

In vitro inhibition of human colonic motility with SR 59119A and SR 59104A : evidence of a β3-adrenoceptor-mediated effect

Marc Bardou; Bertrand Dousset; Catherine Deneux-Tharaux; Claude Smadja; Emmanuel Naline; Chaput Jc; Sylvie Naveau; Luciano Manara; Tiziano Croci; Charles Advenier

The new beta3-adrenoceptor is present in the gastrointestinal tract of various species. This study aimed to show that this receptor modulates human colonic motility in vitro. We used circular muscle strips from the human colon suspended in single organ baths containing Krebs solution and subjected to an initial 1.5-2 g tension. We measured the effects of different beta3-adrenoceptor agonists, including SR 59104A (N-[(6-hydroxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalen-(2R)-2-yl)methyl]-(2 R)-2-hydroxy-2-(3-chlorophenyl)ethanamine hydrochloride), SR 59119A (N-[(7-methoxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalen-(2R)-2-yl)methyl]-(2R) -2-hydroxy-2-(3-chlorophenyl)ethanamine hydrochloride), BRL 37344 (R,R + S,S) [4-[2-[[2-(3-chlorophenyl)-2-hydroxyethyl]-amino] propyl] phenoxy] acetic acid), and of isoprenaline and salbutamol in the absence or in the presence of propranolol alone or in combination with the beta3-adrenoceptor antagonist SR 59230A (3-(2-ethylphenoxy)-1-[(1S)-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-naphthalen-1- ylamino]-(2S)-2-propanol oxalate) on amplitude of spontaneous contractions. To evaluate a possible beta2-adrenoceptor-mediated effect, we studied the action of these compounds on human isolated bronchi. On the human isolated colon, SR 59119A, SR 59104A and isoprenaline reduced the initial amplitude of spontaneous contractions by 60%. The curves obtained in the presence of antagonists suggested an action mediated by beta3-adrenoceptor stimulation, since propranolol did not antagonize the action of SR 59119A and SR 59104A, whereas the combination of propranolol and SR 59230A significantly displaced the concentration-response curve of these agonists to the right. This study provides pharmacological evidence of modulation of human colonic motility, and especially of the amplitude of spontaneous contractions, by the atypical beta-adrenoceptor, the beta3-adrenoceptor.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1987

Intractable ascites in systemic mastocytosis treated by portal diversion.

Patrick Bonnet; Claude Smadja; Anne-Marie Szekely; Yves Delage; Yvon Calmus; Raoul Poupon; Dominique Franco

SummaryA 50-year-old male presented with intractable ascites due to systemic mastocytosis. The diagnosis of systemic mastocytosis was established by histology of the bone marrow which showed mast cell infiltration and fibrosis. Ascites was related to portal hypertension which was documented by esophageal varices at endoscopy and by an increase of wedged-free hepatic venous pressure gradient. Liver biopsy disclosed dense fibrosis of hepatic arterial and portal venule walls, resulting in complete obstruction of some portal radicles. Peliosis hepatis and fibrous deposits in the walls of hepatic venules were also present. Because of intractable ascites and significant malnutrition, a portacaval shunt was performed which cleared ascites and dramatically improved the general condition of the patient.

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Grange D

University of Paris-Sud

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Franco D

University of Paris-Sud

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Long R. Jiao

Imperial College London

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Nagy Habib

Imperial College London

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