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Dive into the research topics where Majed Refai is active.

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Featured researches published by Majed Refai.


Chest | 2009

Peak Oxygen Consumption During Cardiopulmonary Exercise Test Improves Risk Stratification in Candidates to Major Lung Resection

Alessandro Brunelli; Romualdo Belardinelli; Majed Refai; Michele Salati; Laura Socci; Cecilia Pompili; Armando Sabbatini

BACKGROUND The objective of this investigation was to assess the association of peak oxygen consumption (Vo(2)) with postoperative outcome in a prospective cohort of patients undergoing major lung resection for the treatment of lung cancer. METHODS Preoperative symptom-limited cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) performed using cycle ergometry was conducted in 204 consecutive patients who had undergone pulmonary lobectomy or pneumonectomy. Peak Vo(2) was tested for possible association with postoperative cardiopulmonary complications and mortality. Logistic regression analysis, validated by a bootstrap analysis, was used to adjust for the effect of other perioperative factors. The role of peak Vo(2) in stratifying the surgical risk was further assessed in different groups of patients subdivided according to their cardiorespiratory status. RESULTS Logistic regression showed that peak Vo(2) was an independent and reliable predictor of pulmonary complications (p = 0.04). All six deaths occurred in patients with a peak Vo(2) of < 20 mL/kg/min (four deaths in patients with a peak Vo(2) of < 12 mL/kg/min). The mortality rate in this high-risk group was 10-fold higher (4 of 30 patients; 13%) compared to those with higher peak Vo(2) (p = 0.006). Compared to patients with a peak Vo(2) of > 20 mL/kg/min, those with a peak Vo(2) of < 12 mL/kg/min had 5-fold, 8-fold, 5-fold, and 13-fold higher rates, respectively, of total cardiopulmonary complications pulmonary complications, cardiac complications, and mortality. CONCLUSIONS The present study supports a more liberal use of CPET before lung resection compared to the current guidelines since this test can help in stratifying the surgical risk and optimizing perioperative care.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2010

Evaluation of a new chest tube removal protocol using digital air leak monitoring after lobectomy: a prospective randomised trial

Alessandro Brunelli; Michele Salati; Majed Refai; Luca Di Nunzio; Francesco Xiumé; Armando Sabbatini

BACKGROUND The objective of this randomised trial was to assess the effectiveness of a new fast-track chest tube removal protocol taking advantage of digital monitoring of air leak compared to a traditional protocol using visual and subjective assessment of air leak (bubbles). METHODS One hundred and sixty-six patients submitted to pulmonary lobectomy for lung cancer were randomised in two groups with different chest tube removal protocols: (1) in the new protocol, chest tube was removed based on digitally recorded measurements of air leak flow; (2) in the traditional protocol, the chest tube removal was based on an instantaneous assessment of air leak during daily rounds. The two groups were compared in terms of chest tube duration, hospital stay and costs. RESULTS The two groups were well matched for several preoperative and operative variables. Compared to the traditional protocol, the new digital recording protocol showed mean reductions in chest tube duration (p=0.0007), hospital stay (p=0.007) of 0.9 day, and a mean cost saving of euro 476 per patient (p=0.008). In the new chest tube removal protocol, 51% of patients had their chest tube removed by the second postoperative day versus only 12% of those in the traditional protocol. CONCLUSIONS The application of a chest tube removal protocol using a digital drainage unit featuring a continuous recording of air leak was safe and cost effective. Although future studies are warranted to confirm these results in other settings, the use of this new protocol is now routinely applied in our practice.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2004

Stair climbing test as a predictor of cardiopulmonary complications after pulmonary lobectomy in the elderly

Alessandro Brunelli; Marco Monteverde; Majed Refai; Aroldo Fianchini

BACKGROUND The objective of this study was to assess the role of a symptom-limited stair climbing test in predicting postoperative cardiopulmonary complications in elderly candidates for lung resection. METHODS A consecutive series of 109 patients more than 70 years of age who underwent pulmonary lobectomy for lung carcinoma from January 2000 through May 2003 formed the prospective database of this study. All patients in the analysis performed a preoperative symptom-limited stair climbing test. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to identify predictors of postoperative cardiopulmonary complications. RESULTS At univariate analysis, the patients with complications had a lower forced expiratory capacity percentage of predicted (p = 0.048), predicted postoperative forced expiratory volume in 1 second percentage of predicted (p = 0.049), climbed a lower height at preoperative stair climbing test (p = 0.0004), and presented a greater proportion of cardiac comorbiditiy with respect to the patients without complications (p = 0.02). After logistic regression analysis, significant predictors of postoperative complications resulted in the presence of a concomitant cardiac disease (p = 0.04) and a low height climbed preoperatively (p = 0.0015). CONCLUSIONS A symptom-limited stair climbing test was a safe and simple instrument capable of predicting cardiopulmonary complications in the elderly after lung resection.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Pleural tent after upper lobectomy: a randomized study of efficacy and duration of effect

Alessandro Brunelli; Majed Refai; Marco Monteverde; Alessandro Borri; Michele Salati; Armando Sabbatini; Aroldo Fianchini

BACKGROUND The object of this study was to assess the efficay and maximum duration of effect of the pleural tent in reducing the incidence of air leak after upper lobectomy. METHODS Two hundred patients who underwent upper lobectomy were prospectively randomized into two groups: 100 patients who underwent an upper lobectomy and a pleural tent procedure (group 1; tented patients) and 100 patients who underwent only an upper lobectomy and not a pleural tent procedure (group 2; untented patients). The preoperative, operative, and postoperative characteristics of both groups were compared. Then multivariate analyses were used to identify factors predictive of prolonged air leaks and their duration. The reduction of incidences of air leak in the two groups was subsequently compared during successive postoperative periods. RESULTS No differences were detected between the two groups in terms of preoperative and operative characteristics. A significant reduction occurred in group 1 patients for the mean duration of air leak in days (2.5 vs 7.2 days; p < 0001), the number of days a chest tube was required (7.0 vs 11.2 days; p < 0.0001), the length of postoperative hospital stay in days (8.2 vs 11.6 days; p < 0.0001), and the hospital stay cost per patient (4,110 dollars vs 5,805 dollars; p < 0.0001). Logistic regression analyses showed that not having undergone a pleural tent procedure was the most significant predictive factor of the occurrence and duration of prolonged air leaks. A greater reduction in the duration of air leaks was observed before postoperative day 4 in group 1, and logistic regression analysis showed that having undergone a pleural tent procedure was the most significant predictive factor of air leaks that persisted for less than 4 days. CONCLUSIONS Pleural tenting after upper lobectomy was a safe procedure that reduced the duration of air leaks and the hospital stay costs. The benefit from that procedure was achieved before postoperative day 4.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Predictors of early morbidity after major lung resection in patients with and without airflow limitation

Alessandro Brunelli; Majed Refai; Marco Monteverde; Armando Sabbatini; Francesco Xiumé; Aroldo Fianchini

BACKGROUND The aim of the present study was to identify predictors of morbidity after major lung resection for non-small cell lung carcinoma in patients with forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) greater than or equal to 70% of predicted and in those with FEV1 less than 70% of predicted. METHODS Five hundred forty-four patients who underwent lobectomy or pneumonectomy from 1993 through 2000 were retrospectively analyzed. The patients were divided into two groups: group A (450 cases), with FEV1 greater than or equal to 70%, and group B (94 cases), with FEV1 less than 70%. Differences between complicated and uncomplicated patients were tested within each group. RESULTS Morbidity rate was not significantly different between group A and group B (20.4% and 24.5%, respectively; p = 0.4). In group A, multivariate analysis showed that predicted postoperative FEV1 was the only significant independent predictor of complications. In group B, no significant predictor was identified. CONCLUSIONS In patients with preoperative FEV1 less than 70% of predicted, predicted postoperative FEV1 was not predictive of postoperative morbidity. Thus, predicted postoperative FEV1 should not be used alone as a selection criteria for operation in these high-risk patients.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2010

A Scoring System to Predict the Risk of Prolonged Air Leak After Lobectomy

Alessandro Brunelli; Gonzalo Varela; Majed Refai; Marcelo F. Jiménez; Cecilia Pompili; Armando Sabbatini; José Luis Aranda

BACKGROUND Prolonged air leak (PAL) remains a frequent complication after lung resection. Perioperative preventative strategies have been tested, but their efficacy is often difficult to interpret due to heterogeneous inclusion criteria. The objective of this study was to develop and validate a practical score to stratify the risk of PAL after lobectomy. METHODS Six hundred fifty-eight consecutive patients were submitted to pulmonary lobectomy (2000 to 2008) in center A and were used to develop the risk-adjusted score predicting the incidence of PAL (> 5 days). Exclusion criteria were chest wall resection and postoperative assisted mechanical ventilation. No sealants, pleural tent, or buttressing material were used. To build the aggregate score numeric variables were categorized by receiver operating curve analysis. Variables were screened by univariate analysis and then used in stepwise logistic regression analysis (validated by bootstrap). The scoring system was developed by proportional weighing of the significant predictor estimates and was validated on patients operated on in a different center (center B). RESULTS The incidence of PAL in the derivation set was 13% (87 of 658 cases). Predictive variables and their scores were the following: age greater than 65 years (1 point); presence of pleural adhesions (1 point); forced expiratory volume in one second less than 80% (1.5 points); and body mass index less than 25.5 kg/m(2) (2 points). Patients were grouped into 4 risk classes according to their aggregate scores, which were significantly associated with incremental risk of PAL in the validation set of 233 patients. CONCLUSIONS The developed scoring system reliably predicts incremental risk of PAL after pulmonary lobectomy. Its use may help in identifying those high-risk patients in whom to adopt intraoperative prophylactic strategies; in developing inclusion criteria for future randomized clinical trials on new technologies aimed at reducing or preventing air leak; and for patient counseling.


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2008

Quality of life in the elderly after major lung resection for lung cancer

Michele Salati; Alessandro Brunelli; Francesco Xiumé; Majed Refai; Armando Sabbatini

The objective of this study was to assess the residual quality of life (QoL) in elderly patients submitted to major lung resection for lung cancer. From July 2004 through August 2007 a total of 218 patients, 85 of whom were elderly (70 years), had complete preoperative and postoperative (3 months) quality of life measures assessed by the Short Form 36v2 health survey. QoL scales were compared between elderly and younger patients. Furthermore, limited to the elderly group, we compared the preoperative with the postoperative SF36v2 measures and the physical component summary (PCS) and mental component summary (MCS) scores between high-risk patients and low-risk counterparts. The postoperative SF36 PCS (50.3 vs. 50, P=0.7) and MCS (50.6 vs. 49, P=0.2) and all SF36 domains did not differ between elderly and younger patients. Within the elderly, the QoL returns to the preoperative values three months after the operation. Moreover, we did not find any significant differences between elderly higher-risk patients and their lower-risk counterparts postoperatively. The information that residual QoL in elderly patients will be similar to the one experienced by younger and fitter individuals may help them in their decision to proceed with surgery.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Pleural tent after upper lobectomy: a prospective randomized study

Alessandro Brunelli; Majed Refai; Mauro Muti; Armando Sabbatini; Aroldo Fianchini

BACKGROUND The aim of the present study was to assess the cost/efficacy of the pleural tent procedure after upper lobectomy. METHODS A prospective randomized analysis was performed on 50 patients submitted to upper lobectomy and divided into two groups: group 1 (25 patients) with pleural tent; group 2 (25 patients) without pleural tent. RESULTS The univariate comparison between the two groups did not show any significant difference in terms of age, gender, spirometry, smoking history, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease index, side of tumor, arterial oxygen tension, arterial carbon dioxide tension, size and location of tumor, presence of pleural adhesions, length of the stapled parenchyma, and operative time. Pleural tent significantly reduced the days of postoperative air leak (1.2 versus 5.8, p = 0.01), chest tubes (5.4 versus 10.4, p = 0.01), and hospital stay (6.9 versus 10.8, p = 0.01). Moreover, no difference was noted between the two groups in terms of pleural effusion in the first postoperative 48 hours, need of postoperative blood transfusion, and occurrence of other complications. CONCLUSIONS Pleural tenting after upper lobectomy is a safe and effective procedure and its routine use is warranted.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2010

Does chronic obstructive pulmonary disease affect postoperative quality of life in patients undergoing lobectomy for lung cancer? A case-matched study

Cecilia Pompili; Alessandro Brunelli; Majed Refai; Francesco Xiumé; Armando Sabbatini

BACKGROUND The objective of this investigation was to assess the quality of life (QoL) before and after pulmonary lobectomy in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and to compare these values with a case-matched population of patients with normal respiratory function. METHODS This is an observational analysis performed on a prospective dataset of 220 consecutive patients submitted to pulmonary lobectomy for lung cancer (2006-2008). Patients submitted to extended procedures (chest wall resection and superior sulcus) were excluded from the analysis. Pre- and postoperative (3 months) QoL were assessed in all patients through the administration of the Short Form 36v2 (SF36v2) health survey, a generic QoL instrument assessing eight health physical and mental concepts. Propensity score was used to match COPD patients (according to the NHLBI/WHO Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) criteria: forced expiratory volume in 1s/forced expiratory vital capacity (FEV1/FVC) ratio <0.7 and FEV1 <80%) with counterparts without COPD. QoL scales were compared between the two matched groups by means of the Mann-Whitney test. RESULTS Propensity score yielded 50 well-matched pairs of patients with and without COPD. Compared with non-COPD patients, those with COPD had a threefold higher rate of cardiopulmonary morbidity (14 cases vs 5 cases, 28% vs 10%, p=0.04), lower reduction in FEV1 (6% vs 13%, p=0.0002), but lower residual postoperative FEV1 values (62% vs 74%, p<0.0001). Postoperative carbon monoxide lung diffusion capacity (DLCO) (69% vs 65%, p=0.1) and VO(2 max) (15.3 ml kg(-1)min(-1) vs 14.3 ml kg(-1)min(-1)p=0.4) values were similar between the groups. Although most of the preoperative and postoperative QoL domains in both groups were reduced compared with normal population (<50), we were not able to find differences between the groups in any of the preoperative and postoperative physical and mental QoL scales. CONCLUSIONS The evidence of an acceptable QoL in COPD patients may help both patients and physicians in the surgical decision-making process in the face of high rates of complications.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2012

Minute Ventilation-to-Carbon Dioxide Output ( V ˙e/ V ˙co2) Slope Is the Strongest Predictor of Respiratory Complications and Death After Pulmonary Resection

Alessandro Brunelli; Romualdo Belardinelli; Cecilia Pompili; Francesco Xiumé; Majed Refai; Michele Salati; Armando Sabbatini

BACKGROUND This study assessed whether the minute ventilation-to-carbon dioxide output (VE/VCO2) slope, a measure of ventilatory efficiency routinely measured during cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET), is an independent predictor of respiratory complications after major lung resections. METHODS Prospective observational analysis was performed on 225 consecutive candidates after lobectomy (197 patients) or pneumonectomy (28 patients) from 2008 to 2010. Inoperability criteria were peak oxygen consumption (VO2) of less than 10 mL/kg/min in association with predicted postoperative forced expiratory volume in 1 second of less than 30% and diffusion capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide of less than 30%. All patients performed a symptom-limited CPET on cycle ergometer. Respiratory complications (30 days or in-hospital) were prospectively recorded: pneumonia, atelectasis requiring bronchoscopy, respiratory failure on mechanical ventilation exceeding 48 hours, adult respiratory distress syndrome, pulmonary edema, and pulmonary embolism. Univariable and multivariable regression analyses were used to identify independent predictors of respiratory complications. RESULTS Cardiopulmonary morbidity and mortality rates were 23% (51 patients) and 2.2% (5 patients). The 25 patients with respiratory complications had a significantly higher VE/VCO2 slope than those without complications (34.8 vs 30.9, p=0.001). Peak VO2 was not associated with respiratory complications. Logistic regression and bootstrap analyses showed that, after adjusting for other baseline and perioperative variables, the strongest predictor of respiratory complications was VE/VCO2 slope (regression coefficient, 0.09; bootstrap frequency, 89%; p=0.004). Patients with a VE/VCO2 slope exceeding 35 had a higher incidence of respiratory complications (22% vs 7.6%, p=0.004) and mortality (7.2% vs. 0.6%, p=0.01). CONCLUSIONS VE/VCO2 slope is a better predictor of respiratory complications than peak VO2. This inexpensive and operator-independent variable should be considered in the clinical practice to refine operability selection criteria.

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Alessandro Brunelli

St James's University Hospital

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Cecilia Pompili

St James's University Hospital

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Aroldo Fianchini

Marche Polytechnic University

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Michela Tiberi

Marche Polytechnic University

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Rita Marasco

Marche Polytechnic University

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Laura Socci

Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust

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Alessandro Borri

European Institute of Oncology

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