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Featured researches published by Henry Hoffmann.


European Surgical Research | 2012

Fast-Track Surgery – Conditions and Challenges in Postsurgical Treatment: A Review of Elements of Translational Research in Enhanced Recovery after Surgery

Henry Hoffmann; Christoph Kettelhack

Background: Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) or fast-track surgery is a perioperative and postoperative care concept initiated in the early 1990s aiming to reduce the length of hospital stays following elective abdominal surgery. Twenty treatment items defined in the Consensus Guidelines established in 2009 were included in this concept. The success of ERAS depends highly on multidisciplinary teamwork and patient compliance. Several ERAS items and their impact on perioperative and postoperative care have recently been discussed. In this connection, translational research topics triggered increasing interest in ERAS and new impulses aimed at improving the ERAS concept. We thus reviewed the surgical literature to highlight the role of translational research items in ERAS. Methods: A literature search of Medline®, PubMed® and the Cochrane Database was performed. Two investigators independently reviewed the abstracts and appropriate articles were included in this review. Results: Articles have been selected. The advantages of the ERAS concept over conventional postoperative care were established by four meta-analyses and several reviews. But, due to the lack of standardization of the protocols, the level of evidence is still low. The implementation of ERAS into clinical practice is furthermore hampered by the poor compliance with ERAS protocols and remains a challenge for the future. Moreover, recent trials challenge the role of some ERAS items, e.g. epidural anesthesia. Translational research trials investigating stress, immune and inflammatory response after surgery, new analgesic concepts, goal-directed fluid therapy and new drugs and substances to improve the outcome of ERAS provide first promising data but still need to be integrated in the ERAS concept. Conclusion: The Consensus Guidelines for ERAS are subject to the constant evolution of treatment strategies and implementation of translational research findings. Improvement of the compliance with ERAS protocols in surgical clinics and updating of ERAS items taking into account recent findings in translational research may improve the outcomes of ERAS but remain a long-term challenge in surgery for the next years.


Swiss Medical Weekly | 2012

Prevention and control of surgical site infections: review of the Basel Cohort Study.

Till Andrin Junker; Edin Mujagic; Henry Hoffmann; Rachel Rosenthal; Heidi Misteli; Marcel Zwahlen; Daniel Oertli; Sarah Tschudin-Sutter; Andreas F. Widmer; Walter R. Marti; Walter P. Weber

INTRODUCTION Surgical site infections (SSI) are the most common hospital-acquired infections among surgical patients, with significant impact on patient morbidity and health care costs. The Basel SSI Cohort Study was performed to evaluate risk factors and validate current preventive measures for SSI. The objective of the present article was to review the main results of this study and its implications for clinical practice and future research. SUMMARY OF METHODS OF THE BASEL SSI COHORT STUDY The prospective observational cohort study included 6,283 consecutive general surgery procedures closely monitored for evidence of SSI up to 1 year after surgery. The dataset was analysed for the influence of various potential SSI risk factors, including timing of surgical antimicrobial prophylaxis (SAP), glove perforation, anaemia, transfusion and tutorial assistance, using multiple logistic regression analyses. In addition, post hoc analyses were performed to assess the economic burden of SSI, the efficiency of the clinical SSI surveillance system, and the spectrum of SSI-causing pathogens. REVIEW OF MAIN RESULTS OF THE BASEL SSI COHORT STUDY The overall SSI rate was 4.7% (293/6,283). While SAP was administered in most patients between 44 and 0 minutes before surgical incision, the lowest risk of SSI was recorded when the antibiotics were administered between 74 and 30 minutes before surgery. Glove perforation in the absence of SAP increased the risk of SSI (OR 2.0; CI 1.4-2.8; p <0.001). No significant association was found for anaemia, transfusion and tutorial assistance with the risk of SSI. The mean additional hospital cost in the event of SSI was CHF 19,638 (95% CI, 8,492-30,784). The surgical staff documented only 49% of in-hospital SSI; the infection control team registered the remaining 51%. Staphylococcus aureus was the most common SSI-causing pathogen (29% of all SSI with documented microbiology). No case of an antimicrobial-resistant pathogen was identified in this series. CONCLUSIONS The Basel SSI Cohort Study suggested that SAP should be administered between 74 and 30 minutes before surgery. Due to the observational nature of these data, corroboration is planned in a randomized controlled trial, which is supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation. Routine change of gloves or double gloving is recommended in the absence of SAP. Anaemia, transfusion and tutorial assistance do not increase the risk of SSI. The substantial economic burden of in-hospital SSI has been confirmed. SSI surveillance by the surgical staff detected only half of all in-hospital SSI, which prompted the introduction of an electronic SSI surveillance system at the University Hospital of Basel and the Cantonal Hospital of Aarau. Due to the absence of multiresistant SSI-causing pathogens, the continuous use of single-shot single-drug SAP with cefuroxime (plus metronidazole in colorectal surgery) has been validated.


International Journal of Surgery Case Reports | 2016

Large ovarian cystadenofibroma causing large bowel obstruction in a patient with Klippel–Feil syndrome—A case report

Robert Mechera; Thomas Menter; Daniel Oertli; Henry Hoffmann

Highlights • MR imaging may help to determine origin and dignity before surgery.• Explorative laparotomy is the appropriate surgical approach for masses of unclear origin and dignity.• Intraoperative frozen-sections can avoid extensive fertility impairing surgery.• Interdisciplinary management is mandatory in patients with Klippel–Feil syndrome.


Surgical Innovation | 2015

A Promising New Device for the Prevention of Parastomal Hernia

Henry Hoffmann; Daniel Oertli; Savas D. Soysal; Urs Zingg; Dieter Hahnloser; Philipp Kirchhoff

Parastomal hernia (PSH) is the most frequent long-term stoma complication with serious negative effects on quality of life. Surgical revision is often required and has a substantial morbidity and recurrence rate. The development of PSH requires revisional surgery with a substantial perioperative morbidity and high failure rate in the long-term follow-up. Prophylactic parastomal mesh insertion during stoma creation has the potential to reduce the rate of PSH, but carries the risk of early and late mesh-related complications such as infection, fibrosis, mesh shrinkage, and/or bowel erosion. We developed a new stomaplasty ring (KORING), which is easy to implant, avoids potential mesh-related complications, and has a high potential of long-term prevention of PSH. Here we describe the technique and the first use.


International Journal of Surgery Case Reports | 2014

Obstructing adenocarcinoma of the descending colon in a 31-year-old pregnant woman.

Marko Kraljević; Henry Hoffmann; Alexandra Knipprath; Urs von Holzen

INTRODUCTION Colon cancer in pregnant women is rare and tends to produce unspecific symptoms until advanced stage. Therefore common manifestations during pregnancy must be properly evaluated to avoid delayed diagnosis. PRESENTATION OF CASE A 31-year-old pregnant woman presented with nausea, vomiting and obstipation. An obtained magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed distended colon and the consecutive colonoscopy with biopsies confirmed the diagnosis of stenosing carcinoma of the descending colon. Left sided hemicolectomy was performed 10 days after initial presentation. Tumor histology confirmed the diagnosis of adenocarcinoma of the descendo-sigmoidal junction. Adjuvant chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil was started in the 29th gestational week. The patient had an uneventful delivery of a healthy baby in her 39th gestational week. DISCUSSION Colorectal carcinoma during pregnancy is a rare event and its diagnosis is often delayed because symptoms are unspecific until the disease is advanced. Although constipation in pregnancy is a common symptom differential diagnosis of a mechanical stenosis should always be contemplated, especially when conservative treatment of constipation fails. MRI is the imaging tool of choice as abdominal computed tomography (CT) is contraindicated in pregnancy. Endoscopic confirmation should be obtained to gain pathological diagnosis of colorectal carcinoma. Surgery is the gold standard of treatment. In relation to the stage of the disease chemotherapy is of great importance. CONCLUSION Obstructing colorectal cancer can be a rare reason for the common problem of constipation in pregnancy. Beside clinical examination, MRI scan and colonoscopy will reveal the tumor in most cases and should be followed by surgical treatment and chemotherapy according to the stage of disease.


Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2018

Does coagulopathy, anticoagulant or antithrombotic therapy matter in incisional hernia repair? Data from the Herniamed Registry

Ralph F. Staerkle; Henry Hoffmann; Ferdinand Köckerling; Daniela Adolf; Reinhard Bittner; Philipp Kirchhoff

BackgroundA considerable number of patients undergoing incisional hernia repair are on anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy or have existing coagulopathy which may put them at higher risk for postoperative bleeding complications. Data about the optimal treatment of these patients are sparse. This analysis attempts to determine the rate of postoperative bleeding complications following incisional hernia repair and the consecutive rate of reoperation among patients with coagulopathy or receiving antiplatelet and anticoagulant therapy (higher risk group) compared to patients who do not have a higher risk (normal risk group).MethodsOut of the 43,101 patients documented in the Herniamed Registry who had an incisional hernia repair, 6668 (15.5%) were on anticoagulant or antithrombotic therapy or had existing coagulopathy. The implication of that higher risk profile for onset of postoperative bleeding was investigated in multivariable analysis. Hence, other influential variables were identified.ResultsThe rate of postoperative bleeding in the higher risk group was 3.9% (n = 261) and significantly higher compared to the normal risk group at 1.6% (n = 564) (OR 2.001 [1.699; 2.356]; p < 0.001). Additionally, male gender, use of drains, larger defect size, open incisional hernia repair, lower BMI, and higher ASA score significantly increased the risk of postoperative bleeding. The rate of reoperations due to postoperative bleeding was significantly increased in the higher risk group compared to the normal risk group (2.4 vs. 1.0%; OR 1.217 [1.071; 1.382]; p = 0.003). Likewise, the postoperative general complication rate (6.04 vs. 3.66%; p < 0.001) as well as the mortality rate (0.46 vs. 0.17%; p < 0.001) were significantly higher in the higher risk group.ConclusionsPatients with anticoagulant or antiplatelet therapy or existing coagulopathy who undergo incisional hernia repair have a significantly higher risk for onset of postoperative bleeding. The risk of bleeding complications and complication-related reoperations seems to be lower after laparoscopic intraperitoneal onlay mesh.


Colorectal Disease | 2017

Surgical treatment of uncomplicated diverticulitis in Switzerland: comparison of population‐based data over two time periods

M. von Strauss und Torney; S. Thommen; Salome Dell-Kuster; Henry Hoffmann; Rachel Rosenthal; J. Young; Christoph Kettelhack

The standard of care for acute uncomplicated diverticulitis used to be an elective colon resection after the second or third episode. This practice was replaced by a more conservative and individualized approach. This study investigates current surgical practice in the treatment of acute uncomplicated diverticulitis in Switzerland.


Journal of Surgical Education | 2015

Effect of different warm-up strategies on simulated laparoscopy performance: a randomized controlled trial.

Enrico Brönnimann; Henry Hoffmann; Juliane Schäfer; Dieter Hahnloser; Rachel Rosenthal

OBJECTIVE The objective of this trial was to assess which type of warm-up has the highest effect on virtual reality (VR) laparoscopy performance. The following warm-up strategies were applied: a hands-on exercise (group 1), a cognitive exercise (group 2), and no warm-up (control, group 3). DESIGN This is a 3-arm randomized controlled trial. SETTING The trial was conducted at the department of surgery of the University Hospital Basel in Switzerland. PARTICIPANTS A total of 94 participants, all laypersons without any surgical or VR experience, completed the study. RESULTS A total of 96 participants were randomized, 31 to group 1, 31 to group 2, and 32 to group 3. There were 2 postrandomization exclusions. In the multivariate analysis, we found no evidence that the intervention had an effect on VR performance as represented by 6 calculated subscores of accuracy, time, and path length for (1) camera manipulation and (2) hand-eye coordination combined with 2-handed maneuvers (p = 0.795). Neither the comparison of the average of the intervention groups (groups 1 and 2) vs control (group 3) nor the pairwise comparisons revealed any significant differences in VR performance, neither multivariate nor univariate. VR performance improved with increasing performance score in the cognitive exercise warm-up (iPad 3D puzzle) for accuracy, time, and path length in the camera navigation task. CONCLUSIONS We were unable to show an effect of the 2 tested warm-up strategies on VR performance in laypersons. We are currently designing a follow-up study including surgeons rather than laypersons with a longer warm-up exercise, which is more closely related to the final task.


European Surgery-acta Chirurgica Austriaca | 2015

How to report multiple outcome metrics in virtual reality simulation

Rachel Rosenthal; M.W. von Websky; Henry Hoffmann; Martina Vitz; Dieter Hahnloser; Heiner C. Bucher; Juliane Schäfer

SummaryBackgroundVirtual reality (VR) simulation is increasingly used in surgical disciplines. Since VR simulators measure multiple outcomes, standardized reporting is needed.MethodsWe present an algorithm for combining multiple VR outcomes into dimension summary measures, which are then integrated into a meaningful total score. We reanalyzed the data of two VR studies applying the algorithm.ResultsThe proposed algorithm was successfully applied to both VR studies.ConclusionsThe algorithm contributes to standardized and transparent reporting in VR-related research.


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2011

Contralateral recurrence of a malignant solitary fibrous tumor of the pleura

Henry Hoffmann; Olivier Thierry Giger; Lukas Bubendorf; Didier Lardinois

We present an unusual case of a contralateral recurrence of malignant solitary fibrous tumor of the pleura (SFTP) nine years after a complete resection. Recurrence of malignant SFTP has already been described, but is usually localized. In our case the patient underwent surgical resection for a malignant SFTP of the left upper lobe in 2000. Nine years later computed tomography (CT)-scans showed lesions that were suspicious of tumor recurrence in the right lung. Thoracoscopy, wedge-resections and pathological findings revealed four nodules of a malignant SFTP of the right middle and lower lobe, histopathologically identical to the tumor, which had been resected nine years ago. A coincidental mucinous bronchioloalveolar carcinoma of the left lower lobe was resected by thoracotomy. To our knowledge this is the first report of contralateral recurrence of a malignant SFTP years after complete resection in the literature. The possibility of a new primary tumor on the right with local metastasis could not be excluded in the clinical and histopathological examinations. Therefore, contralateral recurrence of malignant SFTP should be considered in the postoperative follow-up even years after complete resection.

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