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Dive into the research topics where Dah-Cherng Yeh is active.

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Featured researches published by Dah-Cherng Yeh.


Surgery | 1999

Liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma in octogenarians.

Cheng-Chung Wu; Jung-Ta Chen; William-Lin Ho; Dah-Cherng Yeh; Jiun-Sheng Tang; Tse-Jia Liu; Fang-Ku P'eng

BACKGROUND Liver resection is risky in patients aged > or = 80 years. Because of short life expectancies and improved nonoperative modalities, the role of liver resection in octogenarians with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is unclear. METHODS A retrospective review of the operative results of 260 patients with HCC between 1991 and 1997 was performed. According to the age at the time of operation, these patients were divided into 2 groups. Group 1 comprised 21 patients aged > or = 80 years, and group 2 comprised the other 239 younger patients. The backgrounds, pathologic features of the tumor, and operative results of the patients were compared. RESULTS Octogenarians had a higher incidence of associated medical diseases, a higher incidence of negative serum hepatitis B surface antigen, a lower alpha-fetoprotein level, and a higher indocyanine green retention rate. Although octogenarians had a longer postoperative hospital stay, there were no significant differences between the 2 groups regarding operative morbidity and mortality. The 5-year disease-free and actuarial survival rates for octogenarians and younger patients were 50.6% and 35.3% (P = .15) and 40.9% and 59.3% (P = .46), respectively. CONCLUSION Under meticulous preoperative assessments and postoperative care, liver resection for HCC is justified in selected octogenarians, with short- and long-term results comparable to those of younger patients.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 1999

Mesohepatectomy for centrally located hepatocellular carcinoma: an appraisal of a rare procedure

Cheng-Chung Wu; William-Lin Ho; Jung-Ta Chen; Chun-Sheng Tang; Dah-Cherng Yeh; Tse-Jia Liu; Fang-Ku P’eng

BACKGROUND For centrally located hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), extended major hepatectomy is usually recommended, but the risk of postoperative liver failure is high when liver function is not sound. Mesohepatectomy (en bloc resection of Goldsmith and Woodburnes left medial and right anterior segments or Couinauds segments IV, V, and VIII) is a rare procedure, so its role in treating HCC is unclear. STUDY DESIGN We retrospectively reviewed 364 patients who underwent a curative resection for HCC. Among them, 15 patients were treated by mesohepatectomy. Their nontumorous liver revealed cirrhosis in 11 and chronic hepatitis in 4. The mean tumor diameter was 12.8 cm. In 10 of the 15 patients, HCC also invaded adjacent organs. The operative results of another 25 patients with different disease extent who underwent extended major hepatectomy were compared. RESULTS The hepatic inflow occlusion time for mesohepatectomy was longer than for extended hepatectomy (p = 0.01). The mean operative blood loss, amount of blood transfusion, operating time, and postoperative hospital stay in the mesohepatectomy group were 2,450 mL, 1,100 mL, 7.9 hours, and 14.9 days, respectively. In the extended-hepatectomy group, the values were 1,863mL, 768mL, 5.8 hours, and 16.8 days, respectively (all p>0.05 compared with mesohepatectomy). No patient died after mesohepatectomy, but after extended hepatectomy there was one death from liver failure. The Union Internationale contre le cancer (UICC) TNM stages of patients who underwent mesohepatectomy were as follows: stage II in 1, stage III in 4, and stage IVA in 10. All patients who underwent extended hepatectomy presented with stage IVA disease. The 6-year disease-free and actuarial survival rates after mesohepatectomy were 21% and 30%, respectively. The 6-year disease-free survival rate after extended hepatectomy was 9% (p = 0.11 compared with mesohepatectomy). CONCLUSION Although mesohepatectomy is time-consuming, it is justified for selected patients with centrally located large HCC in a diseased liver.


Surgery | 1998

Hepatic resection for bilobar multicentric hepatocellular carcinoma: Is it justified?

Cheng-Chung Wu; William-Lin Ho; Min-Che Lin; Dah-Cherng Yeh; Hurng-Sheng Wu; Chih-Jen Hwang; Tse-Jia Liu; Fang-Ku P'eng

BACKGROUND Hepatic resection for multiple hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) involving both lobes of the liver is rarely recommended because of high operative risks and low radicality. Thus the justification of hepatic resection for bilobar multicentric HCC remains undefined. METHODS Two hundred eleven patients with HCC, who underwent curative hepatic resection, were studied retrospectively. The patients were divided into two groups. Group A consisted of 39 patients with bilobar (both sides of Cantlies line) multicentric HCCs. Group B consisted of 172 patients with HCC with solitary or unilobar lesions. The backgrounds and resectional results of patients in groups A and B were compared. RESULTS Patients in group A usually required multiple separate liver resections and a longer operative time. However, the operative blood loss, amount of blood transfused, and operative morbidity and mortality rates were not significantly different. Patients in group A showed higher incidences of associated satellite nodules, microscopic vascular invasion, and a lack of capsules. The 6-year disease-free and actuarial survival rates of patients in groups A and B were 30.5% and 41.8% (p = 0.17) and 42.9% and 51.4% (p = 0.12), respectively. For patients in group A the presence of satellite nodules in any resected tumor was the only independent unfavorable feature that influenced the actuarial survival rate after multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS Liver resection is justified for bilobar multicentric HCCs in selected patients, if the tumors can be totally resected. Postoperative adjuvant therapies should be considered when satellite nodules are present in any resected tumor.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2003

Bacterial translocation after cirrhotic liver resection: a clinical investigation of 181 patients

Dah-Cherng Yeh; Cheng-Chung Wu; Wai-Meng Ho; Shao-Bin Cheng; I-Yin Lu; Tse-Jia Liu; Fang-Ku P’eng

BACKGROUND Cirrhotic patients are usually associated with a high susceptibility to infection. Although bacterial translocation from gut mucosa to mesenteric lymph node (MLN) and systemic circulation is a well-known phenomenon after hepatectomy, its role in cirrhotic patients remains unclear. MATERIALS AND METHODS MLN was harvested for bacterial culture before and after liver resection in 181 cirrhotic patients. The characteristics and postoperative courses of patients with positive and negative bacterial culture for MLN after hepatectomy were compared. Postoperative systemic antibiotics were administered if infectious complications occurred. RESULTS No bacteria were cultured in MLN before hepatectomy. Bacterial translocation (BT) to MLN after hepatectomy occurred in 36 patients (BT group). After multivariate analysis, intraoperative blood transfusion was the only independent factor that influenced bacterial translocation rates after cirrhotic liver resection. BT group patients also had higher infectious and overall complication rates, with a longer postoperative hospital stay. Among the cultured bacteriae from infected sites in BT group patients with infectious complications, only 2 patients (12.5%) had totally different bacterial species to those cultured from MLNs. CONCLUSIONS Bacterial translocation more often occurred after liver resection in cirrhotic patients who received intraoperative blood transfusion. Such patients had higher postoperative infectious and overall complication rates. Thus, avoidance of intraoperative blood transfusion is mandatory for cirrhotic liver resection.


Surgery Today | 2006

Large Cell Neuroendocrine Carcinoma of the Ampulla of Vater : Report of a Case

So-Sen Huang; Yee-Jee Jan; Shao-Bin Cheng; Dah-Cherng Yeh; Cheng-Chung Wu; Tse-Jia Liu; Fang-Ku P'eng

Large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma in the ampulla of Vater is rare and very different from the common ampullary adenocarcinoma. A 59-year-old man was admitted with obstructive jaundice. Gastroendoscopy showed a swollen ampulla of Vater and pathological examination of an ampullary biopsy revealed findings of a carcinoid tumor. After endoscopic biliary drainage, he underwent pancreaticoduodenectomy. A diagnosis of large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma was confirmed by immunohistochemical examination of the resected specimen. Despite adjuvant chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide and cisplatin, liver and peritoneal metastasis developed within 5 months and he survived for only 10 months after the operation. Thus, further investigations are needed to find a more effective postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy agent to treat patients with this aggressive tumor.


Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology | 1997

Primary coexistent adenocarcinoma and choriocarcinoma of the stomach : A case report and review of the literature

Yee-Jee Jan; Jung-Ta Chen; William L. Ho; Cheng-Chung Wu; Dah-Cherng Yeh

We report a case of primary gastric choriocarcinoma with liver metastasis. The mixed histologic patterns included adenocarcinoma, undifferentiated carcinoma, and choriocarcinoma. Immunohistologic staining for the beta-subunit of human chorionic gonadotrophin (beta-HCG) showed positive results in the choriocarcinoma, adenocarcinoma, and normal mucosal gland. However, positive HCG cells were present at different intensities in the choriocarcinoma, adenocarcinoma, and normal mucosal gland. The level of HCG was significantly increased in serum. This unusual tumor probably resulted from dedifferentiation of a primary adenocarcinoma or developed directly from the mucosal glands.


Surgery | 2012

The necessity of hepatic vein reconstruction after resection of cranial part of the liver and major hepatic veins in cirrhotic patients

Cheng-Chung Wu; Cheng-Ming Peng; Shao-Bin Cheng; Dah-Cherng Yeh; Wing-Yiu Lui; Tse-Jia Liu; Fang-Ku P’eng

BACKGROUND The necessity of hepatic vein reconstruction (HVR) after resection of cranial part of the liver and major hepatic vein(s) in cirrhotic patients when residual liver is insufficient for a major hepatectomy remains unclear. METHODS Fifty-two cirrhotic patients who underwent resection of cranial part of the liver and hepatic vein(s) for liver neoplasms were divided retrospectively into 3 groups based on the volume of the congestive area of the remnant liver after hepatectomy: group A, 28 patients, the volume of the congestive area was ≤20% of the residual liver volume and underwent no HVR; group B, 7 patients, the volume of the congestive area was >20% of residual liver volume and underwent no HVR; and group C, 17 patients, in whom HVR was performed (the volume of the congestive area was >20% of residual liver volume in 16 and <20% in 1). Background characteristics and postoperative results were compared between the groups. RESULTS Although group C patients had a significantly longer operative time, their postoperative courses were similar to group A patients. Group B patients had a significantly longer postoperative hospital stay and a greater postoperative morbidity and 90-day mortality. No 90-day mortality ensued in the group A and C patients. CONCLUSION In selected cirrhotic patients whose remnant liver is insufficient for major hepatectomy, HVR appears to be safe and desirable after resection of the cranial part of liver and hepatic vein when the volume of congestive area of liver remnant exceeds 20% of future residual liver volume.


Surgical Clinics of North America | 2000

SELECTIVE SENTINEL LYMPH NODE DISSECTION IN BREAST CANCER: Experiences from Taiwan

Tse-Jia Liu; Dah-Cherng Yeh; Cheng-Chung Wu; Shyh-Jen Wang; William L. Ho

The significance of the sentinel lymph node (SLN) was examined in 58 Chinese breast cancer patients. The method of technetium-99m sulfur colloid injection and the intraoperative gamma probe was found to be very useful for identifying the SLN. The positive predictive value was 64.5%, and the negative predictive value was 93.2%. Findings suggest that lymph node dissection is not necessary in breast cancer patients with a negative SLN.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2015

Unroofing hepatectomy: a facilitating approach for resection of deep-seated hepatocellular carcinoma adjacent to major intrahepatic vessels in cirrhotic patients.

Cheng-Chung Wu; Ching-Hui Shen Md; Hsiao-Tien Liu; Chia-Yu Lai; Shao-Bin Cheng; Cheng-Chan Yu; John Wang; Dah-Cherng Yeh; Facs Fang-Ku P'eng Md

Unroofing hepatectomy, an alternative approach to remove a deep‐seated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) adjacent to major intrahepatic vessels by peel‐off technique after sacrificing the overlying noncancerous liver, may result in tumor exposure without resection margin. The aim of the study was to examine the value of this approach in cirrhotic patients.


Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2006

Role of glucocorticoid receptor in serosa-involved gastric carcinoma after gastrectomy

Dah-Cherng Yeh; Shao-Bin Cheng; Cheng-Chan Yu; William-Lin Ho; Cheng-Chung Wu; Tse-Jia Liu; Fang-Ku P'eng

Glucocorticoid receptor (GR) was first found in the cytosol of gastric cancer tissue more than 15 years ago. At present, most gastric cancers are diagnosed at the advanced stage. To elucidate the role of GR in gastric cancer, the GR levels of the cancer tissue of 75 consecutive patients with grossly serosa-involved gastric carcinoma were determined by the dextran-coated charcoal method. The clinicopathologic characteristics and long-term survival duration were compared in patients with GR-positive and GR-negative cancer cells. We found that GR could be detected in the cytosol of cancer cells in 31 (41.3%) of the gastric cancer patients with a median concentration of 18.5 (range, 1.03–73.9) fmol/mg protein. No significant differences could be found in any clinicopathologic characteristic between the patients with GR-positive and GR-negative cancers. After multivariate analysis, gross Borrmann’s type, metastatic lymph node number, and GR positivity were the independent prognostic factors after gastrectomy for serosa-involved gastric carcinoma. GR-positive gastric cancer had a worse survival rate than GR-negative gastric cancer. Multimodality adjuvant therapies should be considered in patients with GR-positive serosa-involved gastric carcinoma.

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Cheng-Chung Wu

National Yang-Ming University

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Tse-Jia Liu

National Yang-Ming University

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Fang-Ku P'eng

National Yang-Ming University

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Shao-Bin Cheng

National Yang-Ming University

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William-Lin Ho

National Yang-Ming University

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Jung-Ta Chen

National Yang-Ming University

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Fang-Ku P’eng

National Yang-Ming University

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Cheng-Chan Yu

National Yang-Ming University

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Facs Fang-Ku P'eng Md

National Yang-Ming University

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