George E. Block
University of Chicago
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by George E. Block.
Annals of Surgery | 1979
Warren E. Enker; Urban Th. Laffer; George E. Block
From 1966 through 1970 we performed resections in 216 patients with carcinoma of the large bowel. The relative five year survival for all patients was 65.5%. The relative five year survival for all potentially curable patients was 80.4%. Patients with positive lymph nodes and full-thickness penetration of their tumors had a five year survival of 70.5% and a 10 year survival of 60.5%. In performing this study we have tested the principles of wide anatomical resection and radical lymphadenectomy. For their specific influences on survival we have also examined stage, site, age, sex, race, margins, local recurrence, hypogastric lymph node dissection, serosal penetration and various aspects of nodal status. The information derived from these parameters has confirmed our hypothesis that survival is directly related to radical anatomical resection and lymphadenectomy. For rectal cancer, extensive resection also reduces the incidence of local recurrence. We are persuaded that the principles of operation for large-bowel cancer are valid and that they merit universal adoption.
Annals of Surgery | 1991
Fabrizio Michelassi; Tommaso Balestracci; Rick Chappell; George E. Block
Between 1970 and 1988, 1379 patients with Crohns disease were treated at the University of Chicago. Of these, 639 (mean age, 32.5 years; 322 men, 317 women) required at least one surgical procedure. The most common indications for operation were failure of medical treatment (n = 215, 33%), presence of a fistula (n = 154, 24%), and bowel obstruction (n = 141, 22%). A fistula was the most common intraoperative Crohns-related complication. In 582 patients (92%), a resection was necessary, with primary anastomosis in 416 (65%), a temporary stoma in 124 (20%), and a permanent stoma in 42 (7%). The remaining 57 patients underwent diverse procedures (stricturoplasty, bypass, and so on). Two patients (0.3%) died. Follow-up data was obtained in 95%. One hundred eighteen patients developed recurrence requiring reoperation. The recurrence rate was 20% at 5 years and 34% at 10 years. The recurrence involved a permanent stoma or a previous anastomosis in 62 patients (afferent limb in 46, efferent in 16). In the 391 patients without previous surgery for Crohns disease, a covariate analysis was performed to determine those variables significantly associated with recurrence. Variables included demographic data, findings at operation, surgical procedures, and histopathologic characteristics. The analysis revealed that the number of sites involved was the only variable that was significantly associated with the intra-abdominal recurrence rate (p less than 0.001). The annualized risk of recurrence was 1.6% for patients with single-site involvement and 4% for those with multiple-site involvement. Perineal disease was associated with a significantly higher risk of local recurrence than any other site (p less than 0.02). A subanalysis of 236 patients with single-site involvement but no previous operation allowed us to study the influence of site on indications for surgery and type of operative procedure. Failure of medical treatment was the most common indication for all sites. In contrast the site involved influenced the procedure: resection and primary anastomosis was feasible in 88% of jejunoileal and terminal ileal cases and a temporary ileostomy was necessary in only 12%. No patients with small bowel localization required a permanent stoma. A resection with primary anastomosis was feasible in only 32% of patients with colonic disease. The remaining two thirds of patients required either a temporary or a permanent stoma. It is concluded that multisite involvement is associated with 2.5 times the rate of recurrence of single-site disease, while the presence of perineal disease has a significantly higher incidence of local recurrence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Annals of Surgery | 1989
Fabrizio Michelassi; F. Erroi; Peter J. Dawson; Andrea Pietrabissa; Seiichi Noda; Mark Handcock; George E. Block
Between 1946 and 1987, 647 patients with periampullary tumors were diagnosed at the University of Chicago Medical Center. These included 549 tumors located in the head of the pancreas, 40 in the distal common bile duct, 29 in the duodenum, and 29 at the ampulla of Vater. Ninety-eight per cent of all tumors were adenocarcinoma, with 93% of the remaining being duodenal carcinoid or sarcoma. Operability rate ranged from 81% to 97%, according to the tumor location and histologic type. A combination of laparotomy, biopsy, and bypass was performed in 433 patients and only one survived 5 years (0.2%). Resectability rate ranged from 16.5% for pancreatic adenocarcinoma to 89.3% for ampullary tumors. Of the 133 resections, 80 were pancreatoduodenectomies, 29 total pancreatectomies, 7 duodenectomies, 2 gastrectomies, 8 common bile duct resections, and 7 local excisions. Overall 19% of patients who underwent radical resection died in the immediate postoperative period, although mortality has decreased to 5% since 1981. Mortality was 20% after a standard pancreatoduodenectomy and 24.1% after a total pancreatectomy. Five-year actuarial survival rates, including perioperative deaths, were 8.8%, 20%, and 32% for pancreatic, duodenal, and ampullary adenocarcinoma, respectively. One half of patients with sarcoma and two-thirds with carcinoid of the duodenum survived 5 years. No patient with distal common bile duct adenocarcinoma achieved a 5-year survival rate. Multivariate analysis on all patients operated on (n = 566) revealed that the 5-year survival rate was significantly related to intent of operation (palliative 0.2%, curative 12%; p less than 0.001), histologic type (adenocarcinoma 2%, carcinoid and sarcoma 31%; p less than 0.0001), and site (ampullary and duodenal 21%, biliary and pancreatic 0.9%; p less than 0.001). A second multivariate analysis, evaluating only those patients with adenocarcinoma who survived the perioperative period of the radical resection (n = 97) analyzed the influence of tumor size and differentiation, lymphatic, capillary, and perineural microinvasion, lymph node status, and type of procedure (pancreatoduodenectomy vs. total pancreatectomy) on 5-year survival. None of these additional variables was significantly associated with long-term survival rates. In addition we evaluated the presence of local or distant recurrence after resection by analyzing the findings from all autopsies performed on these patients (n = 49): 29.4% of patients died with local recurrence alone, 23.5% with distant recurrence alone, and 47.1% had both local and distant recurrences.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Annals of Surgery | 1993
Fabrizio Michelassi; Marco Stella; Tommaso Balestracci; Felice Giuliante; Pietro Marogna; George E. Block
OBJECTIVE The authors review their experience, evaluating the incidence and examining the various modalities employed in the diagnosis and treatment of patients with Crohns disease complicated by fistulae. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA Although common, internal and external fistulae in Crohns disease may pose challenging problems to the surgeon. METHODS Of 639 patients who underwent surgical treatment at the University of Chicago between 1970 and 1988 for complications of Crohns disease, 222 patients (34.7%) were found to have 290 intra-abdominal fistulae. RESULTS A fistula was diagnosed preoperatively in 154 patients (69.4%), intraoperatively in 60 (27%), and only after examination of the specimen in 8 (3.6%). The fistula represented the primary or single indication for surgical treatment in 14 patients (6.3%) and one of several indications in the remaining patients. Of 165 patients with an abdominal mass or abscess, 69 (41.8%) had a fistula. All patients underwent resection of the diseased intestinal segment; 160 (73.1%) with primary anastomosis and the remaining 62 with a temporary or permanent stoma. The fistula was directly responsible for a stoma in only 16 patients (7.2%) and was never responsible for a permanent stoma. Resection of the diseased bowel achieved en bloc removal of the fistula in 145 cases. Removal of 93 additional fistulae required resection of the diseased bowel segment along with closure of a fistulous opening on the stomach or duodenum (n = 14), bladder (n = 35), or rectosigmoid (n = 44). When the fistula drained through a vaginal cuff (n = 4), the opening was left to close by secondary intention; when the fistula opened through the abdominal wall (n = 46), the fistulous tract was debrided. In the remaining two entero-salpingeal fistulae, en bloc resection of the involved salpinx accomplished complete removal of the fistula. There was a dehiscence of one duodenal and one bladder repair; 14 patients (6%) experienced postoperative septic complications and one patient died. CONCLUSIONS Fistulae are diagnosed preoperatively in 69% of cases and can be suspected in as many as 42% of patients with an abdominal mass. Fistulae are the primary or single indication for surgical treatment and are directly responsible for a stoma only in a few patients. Treatment, based on resection of the diseased bowel and extirpation of the fistula, can be accomplished with minimal morbidity and mortality.
Cancer | 1983
Wolfgang H. Schraut; Chen-Hwu Wang; Peter J. Dawson; George E. Block
Review of 47 patients with carcinoma of the anus demonstrated that perianal squamous cell carcinoma (16 patients) occurred as a small, in situ/microinvasive lesion more often than did squamous/cloacogenic carcinoma of the anal canal (31 patients). Metastatic lymph node involvement was associated only with anal‐canal lesions (13 of 31 patients). When survival time was examined as a function of tumor extent (depth of invasion, size), however, the prognosis was the same for both types of lesions. Grouping of the anal‐canal lesions into those of the squamous cell and the cloacogenic variety did not demonstrate any differences in outcome. Local excision was successful in each instance for in situ/microinvasive tumors (all were 2 cm or less in diameter), but failed for invasive lesions, even if they were small. Abdominoperineal resection for invasive (26 patients) and for larger microinvasive lesions (three patients) was followed by a 59% five‐ to ten‐year survival. When lesions with lymph node involvement were excluded, the survival rates for perianal (80%) and anal‐canal carcinoma (82%) were similar. The addition of hypogastric lymph node dissection to abdominoperineal resection is indicated for invasive anal‐canal carcinomas; we attribute the long‐term survival of three patients with hypogastric‐node involvement to this extended procedure. The presence of metastatic deposits in inguinal lymph nodes was a grave prognostic sign; all six patients with this finding died within five years. The study concludes that the operative treatment of anal carcinoma can be based on the size and, in particular, the depth of invasion of the lesion and that the histologic type is of limited significance. If local excision is considered, its choice must be guided, for technical reasons, by the location and size of the tumor.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1993
Fabrizio Michelassi; Giuliano Testa; William J. Pomidor; Bret A. Lashner; George E. Block
We report on 14 cases of intestinal adenocarcinoma complicating Crohns disease, seven occurring in the small bowel and seven in the large bowel. In both locations, two-thirds of patients were male. The average ages at the time of diagnosis of Crohns disease and of cancer were similar between the two groups of patients: 28 and 48 years, respectively. The diagnosis of cancer was suspected or obtained preoperatively in only four cases of large bowel cancer; in two patients with large bowel cancer and five with small bowel cancer, the diagnosis was made at laparotomy. In the remaining cases, only careful histologic examination revealed the carcinoma. Six small bowel cancers were located in the ileum, and five colonic cancers were distal to the splenic flexure. Two small bowel and one large bowel cancer were multifocal and had surrounding mucosal dysplasia. All tumors, except one small bowel cancer, underwent resection. Survival correlated with stage of tumor at resection; no patient with regional or distant metastasis survived five years, in comparison with an 83 percent five-year actuarial survival rate of patients with tumor confined to the intestinal wall. Mean survival was six months for patients with small bowel cancer in comparison with 65 months for patients with large bowel cancer, reflecting a tendency toward more advanced lesions in the small bowel cancer group.
Annals of Surgery | 1975
George E. Block; Elwood V. Jensen; Theodore Z. Polley
The estrogen receptor protein (estrophilin) was determined in specimens from 359 primary breast cancers and from metastatic tumors of 214 patients. Ninety-eight patients were eventually treated by some form of endocrine therapy: 82 patients were treated by ablative therapy, and 16 by hormonal additive treatment. The records of 81 of the 98 patients whose tumors were characterized for estrogen receptor content and who had received some type of endocrine therapy were reviewed by a peer review group that assessed the objective data for these patients regarding objective remission or failure to treatment. A positive estrophilin determination was defined as receptor content greater than 250 fmole per gram of tumor for premenopausal females and greater than 750 fmole per gram of tumor for postmenopausal and previously castrated patients. Estrogen receptor determinations may be made from tumor specimens as small as 200 mg. Sixty-nine patients underwent some form of ablative therapy. Twenty-seven of these patients were found to have significant receptor determinations. Of those patients in whom a definite determination was made of their post-treatment response, roughly two-thirds experienced objective remissions. None of the 42 patients with negative estrogen receptor detemination experienced an objective remission to ablative endocrine therapy. Only one of 6 patients with negative determinations benefited from additive hormonal therapy; 4 of 6 patients with positive determinations benefited from additive therapy. Not all women with receptor containing mammary cancer will respond favorably to endocrine therapy, but those patients whose tumors lack a critical amount of estrophilin have little chance of benefit from either endocrine ablation or hormone administration. The estrogen receptor content of the primary tumor indicates the hormonal dependency of the tumor and may be used to predict the response to endocrine treatment when recurrent disease appears.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1988
Fabrizio Michelassi; Anthony G. Montag; George E. Block
Three adenosquamous carcinomas and 2813 adenocarcinomas of the colon proximal to a line 7 cm craniad to the dentate line were treated between 1946 and 1986. Of these, one adenosquamous carcinoma and 42 adenocarcinomas were associated with ulcerative colitis. Therefore it was calculated that adenosquamous carcinoma occurs 0.07 percent as frequently as adenocarcinoma of the colon in the general hospital population and 2.4 percent as frequently in patients with ulcerative colitis, a 33-fold increase. It is concluded that, although adenosquamous-cell carcinoma of the colon is a rare tumor, its frequency in relation to adenocarcinoma increases in the presence of ulcerative colitis.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1992
Fabrizio Michelassi; George E. Block
This retrospective study was aimed at defining the morbidity and mortality of a radical resection for adenocarcinoma of the rectum complemented by a wide pelvic lymphadenectomy. Twenty-seven consecutive patients with rectal carcinoma who underwent a surgical resection with conventional (Group I) or wide (Group II) pelvic lymphadenectomy were analyzed. Group I consisted of 10 patients (three women and seven men; mean age, 71 years) with tumors between 6 and 14 cm (mean, 10.6 cm) from the anal verge. Group II consisted of 17 patients (eight women and nine men; mean age, 67 years) with tumors between 3 and 14 cm (mean, 9 cm) from the anal verge. The choice of lymphadenectomy in association with colorectal resection was left at the discretion of the surgeon. There were no deaths within 60 days of operation. Mean intraoperative blood loss was the same in the two groups, although three patients (18 percent) required blood transfusions of over two liters during the performance of a wide pelvic lymphadenectomy in comparison with only one (10 percent) during conventional pelvic lymphadenectomy. The rate of early postoperative complications and the average length of postoperative hospital study were each similar between the two groups. After a wide pelvic lymphadenectomy, three (18 percent) patients developed a neurogenic bladder, requiring intermittent self-catheterization, and they all recovered within one, four, and eight months, respectively. Of the 16 males, three from Group I and four from Group II were sexually active and potent before surgical treatment; after recovering from surgery, only two patients from Group I regained their sexual potency. We conclude that the performance of a wide pelvic lymphadenectomy did not increase the intraoperative or early postoperative complication rate, the mean intraoperative blood loss, or the length of postoperative hospital stay. Technical refinements are currently under study to obviate the neurologic long-term complications.
American Journal of Surgery | 1968
Harvey B. Pollard; George E. Block
Abstract The rapid dissolution of a phytobezoar occurring after partial gastrectomy by an enzyme mixture rich in cellulase is reported. The results of this course of treatment are documented with upper gastrointestinal roentgenograms and gastroscopy. This is the first reported successful nonoperative treatment for a clinical entity that is increasing in frequency.