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Dive into the research topics where Erick M. Remer is active.

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Featured researches published by Erick M. Remer.


Urology | 1999

Laparoscopic renal cryoablation in 32 patients

Inderbir S. Gill; Andrew C. Novick; Anoop M. Meraney; Roland N. Chen; Michael G. Hobart; Gyung Tak Sung; Jonathan Hale; Dana K. Schweizer; Erick M. Remer

OBJECTIVES Laparoscopic renal cryoablation is a developmental minimally invasive nephron-sparing treatment alternative for highly select patients with small renal tumors. We present our evolving experience with this procedure. METHODS Thirty-two patients (34 tumors) with a mean tumor size of 2.3 cm on preoperative computed tomography underwent laparoscopic renal cryoablation. As dictated by the tumor location, cryoablation was performed by either the retroperitoneal (n = 22) or the transperitoneal (n = 10) laparoscopic approach using real-time ultrasound monitoring. A double freeze-thaw cycle was routinely performed. RESULTS The mean surgical time was 2.9 hours, cryoablation time 15.1 minutes, and blood loss 66.8 mL. For a mean intraoperative ultrasonographic tumor size of 2 cm, the mean cryolesion size was 3.2 cm. The hospital stay was less than 23 hours in 22 (69%) of 32 patients. Sequential magnetic resonance imaging scans demonstrated a gradual contraction in the mean diameter of the cryolesions. Of the 20 patients who underwent a 1-year follow-up magnetic resonance imaging scan, the cryoablated tumor was no longer visible in 5. Of note, 23 patients have now undergone a 3 to 6-month follow-up computed tomography-directed biopsy of the cryoablated tumor site; the biopsy was negative for cancer in all 23 patients. No evidence of local or port-site recurrence was found during a mean follow-up of 16.2 months. CONCLUSIONS Critical long-term data regarding laparoscopic renal cryoablation, a developmental technique, are awaited. However, our initial experience is cautiously optimistic. Despite its significant potential for false-negative results, it is encouraging that the follow-up computed tomography-directed needle biopsies at 3 to 6 months were negative for cancer in 23 of 23 patients.


Urology | 1998

Laparoscopic renal cryoablation: initial clinical series

Inderbir S. Gill; Andrew C. Novick; Jon J Soble; Gyung Tak Sung; Erick M. Remer; Jonathan Hale; Charles O’Malley

OBJECTIVES To present the technique and short-term results of retroperitoneal laparoscopic renal cryoablation. METHODS Ten patients underwent laparoscopic renal cryoablation of 11 exophytic renal tumors ranging in size from 1.5 to 3 cm identified on computed tomography. Tumors were located at the upper (3), middle (5), or lower (3) pole of the kidney. Three patients had a solitary kidney. A 3-port retroperitoneal laparoscopic approach was used to create renal cryolesions. Puncture cryoablation was performed with a 4.8-mm cryoprobe. Real-time, endoscopic, steerable, color Doppler ultrasound was used to monitor the evolving cryolesion. All patients have completed a minimum follow-up of 3 months (mean 5.5, range 3 to 9). RESULTS Cryoablation was technically successful in all 10 patients (11 tumors). Under ultrasound guidance, the ice ball was intentionally created up to 1 cm beyond the tumor edge with the aim of achieving negative margins. Mean surgical time was 2.4 hours, cryoablation (double freeze-thaw) time 12.9 minutes, cryoprobe tip temperature -186 degrees C, and blood loss 75 mL. Systemic temperature remained unaltered. Hospital stay was less than 23 hours in 9 of 10 patients. Follow-up magnetic resonance imaging at 1 day and 1, 2, and 3 months identified the punched-out, nonenhancing, spontaneously resorbing, renal cryolesion. Follow-up biopsies of the cryoablated tumor site were negative for cancer in the 3 patients who have undergone the biopsy. CONCLUSIONS The initial series of laparoscopic renal cryoablation is presented. The retroperitoneoscopic approach, by avoiding the peritoneal cavity, minimizes the chances of the bowel coming in contact with the evolving cryolesion, and the potential sequelae thereof. Laparoscopic renal cryoablation is currently developmental and long-term data are awaited. Nevertheless, it is potentially an attractive addition to available nephron-sparing surgical techniques.


The Journal of Urology | 2008

Correlation of Radiographic Imaging and Histopathology Following Cryoablation and Radio Frequency Ablation for Renal Tumors

Christopher J. Weight; Jihad H. Kaouk; Nicholas J. Hegarty; Erick M. Remer; Charles O’Malley; Brian R. Lane; Inderbir S. Gill; Andrew C. Novick

PURPOSE Followup after radio frequency ablation and cryotherapy for small renal lesions lacks pathological analysis. The definition of successful tumor ablation has been the absence of contrast enhancement on posttreatment magnetic resonance imaging or computerized tomography. We hypothesized that adding post-ablation kidney biopsy would help confirm treatment success. MATERIALS AND METHODS From April 2002 to March 2006 a total of 109 renal lesions in 88 patients were ablated with percutaneous radio frequency ablation and from September 1997 to January 2006 a total of 192 lesions in 176 patients were treated with laparoscopic cryoablation. Patients were followed with radiographic imaging and post-ablation biopsy at 6 months. RESULTS Radiographic success at 6 months was 85% (62 cases) and 90% (125) for radio frequency ablation and cryoablation, respectively. At 6 months 134 lesions (45%) were biopsied and success in the radio frequency ablation cohort decreased to 64.8% (24 cases), while cryoablation success remained high at 93.8% (91). Six of 13 patients (46.2%) with a 6-month positive biopsy after radio frequency ablation demonstrated no enhancement on posttreatment magnetic resonance imaging or computerized tomography. In patients treated with cryoablation all positive biopsies revealed posttreatment enhancement on imaging just before biopsy. CONCLUSIONS We observed a poor correlation between radiographic imaging and pathological analysis. We recommend post-radio frequency ablation followup biopsy due to the significant risk of residual renal cell cancer without radiographic evidence, although to our knowledge the clinical significance of these viable cells remains to be determined. In contrast, radiographic images of renal lesions treated with cryotherapy appeared to correlate adequately with corresponding histopathological findings in our series.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2010

Morphology, Attenuation, Size, and Structure (MASS) Criteria: Assessing Response and Predicting Clinical Outcome in Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma on Antiangiogenic Targeted Therapy

Andrew Dennis Smith; Shetal N. Shah; Brian I. Rini; Michael L. Lieber; Erick M. Remer

OBJECTIVE The objective of our study was to evaluate response assessment and predict clinical outcome in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) receiving antiangiogenic targeted therapy. Target lesions were assessed on routine contrast-enhanced CT (CECT) images obtained during the portal venous phase using new response criteria. MATERIALS AND METHODS Standard CECT examinations of patients with metastatic clear cell RCC on first-line sunitinib or sorafenib therapy (n = 84) were retrospectively evaluated using Mass, Attenuation, Size, and Structure (MASS) Criteria; Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST); Size and Attenuation CT (SACT) Criteria; and modified Choi Criteria. The objective response to therapy was compared with clinical outcomes including time to progression (TTP) and disease-specific survival. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate survival functions. RESULTS A favorable response according to MASS Criteria had a sensitivity of 86% and specificity of 100% in identifying patients with a good clinical outcome (i.e., progression-free survival of > 250 days) versus 17% and 100%, respectively, for RECIST partial response. The objective categories of response used by MASS Criteria-favorable response, indeterminate response, and unfavorable response-differed significantly from one another with respect to TTP (p < 0.0001, log-rank test) and disease-specific survival (p < 0.0001, log-rank test). CONCLUSION Assessment of metastatic RCC target lesions on CECT for changes in morphology, attenuation, size, and structure by MASS Criteria is more accurate than response assessment by SACT Criteria, RECIST, or modified Choi Criteria. Furthermore, the use of MASS Criteria for imaging response assessment showed high interobserver agreement and may predict disease outcome in patients with metastatic RCC on targeted therapy.


Urology | 2013

Parenchymal Volume Preservation and Ischemia During Partial Nephrectomy: Functional and Volumetric Analysis

Maria Carmen Mir; Rebecca Campbell; Nidhi Sharma; Erick M. Remer; Jianbo Li; Sevag Demirjian; Jihad H. Kaouk; Steven C. Campbell

OBJECTIVE To determine the relative effect of type and duration of ischemia and parenchymal volume preservation on renal function after partial nephrectomy (PN). MATERIALS AND METHODS Ninety-two patients with localized renal tumors (2007-2012) managed with PN at our center with necessary studies for analysis were included. This comprised 37 patients with a solitary kidney and 55 with a contralateral kidney. Thirty-five patients were managed with hypothermia and 57 with limited warm ischemia. Volumetric computed tomography was used to measure the volume of functional parenchyma before and after PN in the operated and contralateral kidneys. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was determined by the modification of diet in renal disease 2 equation, along with renal scan data for patients with a contralateral kidney. Regression analysis assessed the relationships between %GFR preserved in the operated kidney and potential predictive factors. All postoperative analyses were performed 4-12 months after surgery. RESULTS Median age was 61 years, median tumor size 3.5 cm, and median RENAL nephrometry score 8. Median cold ischemia time was 28 minutes and median warm ischemia time 21 minutes. Median %GFR preserved in the operated kidney was 79%. Median %parenchymal volume saved was 83%. Function in the contralateral kidney only increased marginally (median increase 6%). On regression analysis, %GFR preserved associated most strongly with %parenchymal volume saved (P <.0001), but also with lower RENAL scores (P = .0457) and the use of hypothermia (P = .0209). In contrast, ischemia time did not correlate with %GFR preserved (P = .5051). CONCLUSION Ultimate function after PN primarily correlated with parenchymal volume preservation, whereas ischemia played a secondary role. Thus, maximal parenchymal preservation with a precise PN should be a priority during PN.


BJUI | 2007

Emphysematous cystitis: a review of 135 cases

Anil A. Thomas; Brian R. Lane; Arun Z. Thomas; Erick M. Remer; Steven C. Campbell; Daniel A. Shoskes

To review recently published data on emphysematous cystitis (EC), a potentially life‐threatening condition characterized by air within the bladder wall, and that most typically affects middle‐aged diabetic women.


The Journal of Urology | 2010

Laparoscopic renal cryoablation: 8-year, single surgeon outcomes.

Monish Aron; Kazumi Kamoi; Erick M. Remer; Andre Berger; Mihir M. Desai; Inderbir S. Gill

PURPOSE We present 5 to 11-year (median 8) oncological outcomes after laparoscopic renal cryoablation. MATERIALS AND METHODS Between September 1997 and October 2008 we performed renal cryoablation in 340 patients, of whom 80 treated laparoscopically by a single surgeon before October 2003 had a minimum 5-year followup. Followup involved magnetic resonance imaging on postoperative day 1, at 3, 6 and 12 months, and annually thereafter. Cryolesion biopsy was performed at 6 months. All data were prospectively accrued. RESULTS In the 80 patients with minimum 5-year followup mean age was 66 years, mean tumor size was 2.3 cm (range 0.9 to 5.0), median American Society of Anesthesiologists score was 3 and mean body mass index was 28 kg/m(2). Five patients had local recurrence, 2 had locoregional recurrence with metastasis and 4 had distant metastasis without locoregional recurrence. Six patients died of cancer. In the 55 patients with biopsy proven renal cell cancer at a median followup of 93 months (range 60 to 132) 5-year overall, disease specific and disease-free survival rates were 84%, 92% and 81%, and 10-year rates were 51%, 83% and 78%, respectively. On multivariate analysis previous radical nephrectomy for RCC was the only significant predictor of disease-free and disease specific survival (p = 0.023 and 0.030, respectively). CONCLUSIONS Laparoscopic renal cryoablation is effective oncological treatment for a renal mass in select patients. A disease specific survival rate of 92% at 5 years and 83% at 10 years is possible. Preceding radical nephrectomy for renal cell carcinoma was the only independent factor predicting disease-free and disease specific survival.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2012

Contrast-to-Noise Ratio and Low-Contrast Object Resolution on Full- and Low-Dose MDCT: SAFIRE Versus Filtered Back Projection in a Low-Contrast Object Phantom and in the Liver

Mark E. Baker; Frank Dong; Andrew N. Primak; Nancy A. Obuchowski; David M. Einstein; Namita Gandhi; Brian R. Herts; Andrei S. Purysko; Erick M. Remer; Neil Vachani

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this article is to evaluate the effect of sinogram-affirmed iterative reconstruction (SAFIRE) on contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) compared with filtered back projection (FBP) and to determine whether SAFIRE improves low-contrast object detection or conspicuity in a low-contrast object phantom and in the liver on full- and low-dose examinations. SUBJECTS AND METHODS A low-contrast object phantom was scanned at 100%, 70%, 50%, and 30% dose using a single-source made of a dual-source MDCT scanner, with the raw data reconstructed with SAFIRE and FBP. Unenhanced liver CT scans in 22 patients were performed using a dual-source MDCT. The raw data from both tubes (100% dose) were reconstructed using FBP, and data from one tube (50% dose) were reconstructed using both FBP and SAFIRE. CNR was measured in the phantom and in the liver. Noise, contrast, and CNR were compared using paired Student t tests. Six readers assessed sphere detection and conspicuity in the phantom and liver-inferior vena cava conspicuity in the patient data. The phantom and patient data were assessed using multiple-variable logistic regression. RESULTS The phantom at 70% and 50% doses with SAFIRE had decreased noise and increased CNR compared with the 100% dose with FBP. In the liver, the mean CNR improvement at 50% dose with SAFIRE compared with FBP was 31.4% and 88% at 100% and 50% doses, respectively (p < 0.001). Sphere object detection and conspicuity improved with SAFIRE (p < 0.001). However, smaller spheres were obscured on both FBP and SAFIRE images at lower doses. Liver-vessel conspicuity improved with SAFIRE over 50%-dose FBP in 67.4% of cases (p < 0.001), and versus 100%-dose FBP, improved in 38.6% of cases (p = 0.085). As a predictor for detection, CNR alone had a discriminatory ability (c-index, 0.970) similar to that of the model that analyzed dose, lesion size, attenuation difference, and reconstruction technique (c-index, 0.978). CONCLUSION Lower dose scans reconstructed with SAFIRE have a higher CNR. The ability of SAFIRE to improve low-contrast object detection and conspicuity depends on the radiation dose level. At low radiation doses, low-contrast objects are invisible, regardless of reconstruction technique.


The Journal of Urology | 2008

Clinical Correlates of Renal Angiomyolipoma Subtypes in 209 Patients: Classic, Fat Poor, Tuberous Sclerosis Associated and Epithelioid

Brian R. Lane; Hakan Aydin; Teresa L. Danforth; Ming Zhou; Erick M. Remer; Andrew C. Novick; Steven C. Campbell

PURPOSE Angiomyolipomas classically present radiographically as fat containing lesions but some fail to demonstrate fat content. Histologically confirmed angiomyolipomas uniformly follow a benign course but rare epithelioid variants of angiomyolipoma can recur and metastasize. We investigated the clinical, radiographic and histological characteristics of each angiomyolipoma subtype. MATERIALS AND METHODS Pertinent data were recorded for 209 patients surgically treated for angiomyolipoma in 219 kidneys from 1981 to 2007. Classic and fat poor angiomyolipomas were classified radiographically based on the presence or absence of fat and classified histologically based on the presence of triphasic, monophasic or epithelioid histology. RESULTS Median radiographic size was 3.2, 4.9 and 10 cm in patients with a single angiomyolipoma (59% of patients), multiple angiomyolipomas and tuberous sclerosis (probable or definite), respectively. In these 3 groups 65%, 47% and 33% of lesions were not suspected radiographically (fat poor angiomyolipoma). Fat poor angiomyolipomas were more commonly single, smaller and in older patients. Triphasic histology was evident in 76% of angiomyolipomas with 16% demonstrating a predominance of 1 component and 8% containing epithelioid features. Despite potentially aggressive findings in 18% (eg presence within the perinephric fat, lymph node involvement) no angiomyolipoma recurred during a mean followup of 3.4 years (range 0 to 24). A total of 28 (13%) patients with angiomyolipoma had concomitant renal cell carcinoma. CONCLUSIONS A surprisingly high number of resected angiomyolipomas was not suspected radiographically indicating the importance of precise radiographic characterization to minimize nephrectomy for fat poor angiomyolipoma, which should remain a research priority. In this sizeable single institution series no triphasic, monophasic or epithelioid angiomyolipoma recurred despite potentially aggressive findings in a substantial proportion of cases.


The Journal of Urology | 2015

Decline in Renal Function after Partial Nephrectomy: Etiology and Prevention

Maria Carmen Mir; Cesar E. Ercole; Toshio Takagi; Zhiling Zhang; Lily Velet; Erick M. Remer; Sevag Demirjian; Steven C. Campbell

PURPOSE Partial nephrectomy is the reference standard for the management of small renal tumors and is commonly used for localized kidney cancer. A primary goal of partial nephrectomy is to preserve as much renal function as possible. New baseline glomerular filtration rate after partial nephrectomy can have prognostic significance with respect to long-term outcomes. Recent studies provide an increased understanding of the factors that determine functional outcomes after partial nephrectomy as well as preventive measures to minimize functional decline. We review these advances, highlight ongoing controversies and stimulate further research. MATERIALS AND METHODS A comprehensive literature review consistent with the PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) criteria was performed from January 2006 to April 2014 using PubMed®, Cochrane and Ovid Medline. Key words included partial nephrectomy, renal function, warm ischemia, hypothermia, nephron mass, parenchymal volume, surgical approaches to partial nephrectomy, preoperative and intraoperative imaging, enucleation, hemostatic agents and energy based resection. Relevant reviews were also examined as well as their cited references. An additional Google Scholar search was conducted to broaden the scope of the review. Only English language articles were included in the analysis. The primary outcomes of interest were the new baseline level of function after early postoperative recovery, percent decline in function, potential etiologies and preventive measures. RESULTS Decline in function after partial nephrectomy averages approximately 20% in the operated kidney, and can be due to incomplete recovery from the ischemic insult or loss of nephron mass related to parenchymal excision or collateral damage during reconstruction. Compensatory hypertrophy in the contralateral kidney after partial nephrectomy in adults is marginal and decline in global renal function for patients with 2 kidneys averages about 10%, although there is some variance based on tumor size and location. Irreversible ischemic injury can be minimized by pharmacological intervention or surgical approaches such as hypothermia, limited warm ischemia, or zero or segmental ischemia. Excessive loss of nephron mass can be minimized by improved preoperative or intraoperative imaging, use of a bloodless field, enucleation and vascular microdissection. Hemostatic agents or energy based resection that minimizes the need for parenchymal and capsular suturing can also optimize preservation of the vascularized nephron mass. CONCLUSIONS Our understanding of the decline in renal function after partial nephrectomy has advanced considerably, including better appreciation of its magnitude and impact in various settings, possible etiologies and potential preventive measures. Many controversies persist and this remains an important area of investigation.

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Inderbir S. Gill

University of Southern California

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