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Featured researches published by Marc Miserez.


Hernia | 2009

European Hernia Society guidelines on the treatment of inguinal hernia in adult patients

M. P. Simons; T. J. Aufenacker; M. Bay-Nielsen; J. L. Bouillot; Giampiero Campanelli; J. Conze; D. H. de Lange; R. Fortelny; T. Heikkinen; Andrew Kingsnorth; J. Kukleta; S. Morales-Conde; Pär Nordin; V. Schumpelick; Sam Smedberg; M. Smietanski; G. Weber; Marc Miserez

The European Hernia Society (EHS) is proud to present the EHS Guidelines for the Treatment of Inguinal Hernia in Adult Patients. The Guidelines contain recommendations for the treatment of inguinal hernia from diagnosis till aftercare. They have been developed by a Working Group consisting of expert surgeons with representatives of 14 country members of the EHS. They are evidence-based and, when necessary, a consensus was reached among all members. The Guidelines have been reviewed by a Steering Committee. Before finalisation, feedback from different national hernia societies was obtained. The Appraisal of Guidelines for REsearch and Evaluation (AGREE) instrument was used by the Cochrane Association to validate the Guidelines. The Guidelines can be used to adjust local protocols, for training purposes and quality control. They will be revised in 2012 in order to keep them updated. In between revisions, it is the intention of the Working Group to provide every year, during the EHS annual congress, a short update of new high-level evidence (randomised controlled trials [RCTs] and meta-analyses). Developing guidelines leads to questions that remain to be answered by specific research. Therefore, we provide recommendations for further research that can be performed to raise the level of evidence concerning certain aspects of inguinal hernia treatment. In addition, a short summary, specifically for the general practitioner, is given. In order to increase the practical use of the Guidelines by consultants and residents, more details on the most important surgical techniques, local infiltration anaesthesia and a patient information sheet is provided. The most important challenge now will be the implementation of the Guidelines in daily surgical practice. This remains an important task for the EHS. The establishment of an EHS school for teaching inguinal hernia repair surgical techniques, including tips and tricks from experts to overcome the learning curve (especially in endoscopic repair), will be the next step. Working together on this project was a great learning experience, and it was worthwhile and fun. Cultural differences between members were easily overcome by educating each other, respecting different views and always coming back to the principles of evidence-based medicine. The members of the Working Group would like to thank the EHS board for their support and especially Ethicon for sponsoring the many meetings that were needed to finalise such an ambitious project.


Hernia | 2014

Update with level 1 studies of the European Hernia Society guidelines on the treatment of inguinal hernia in adult patients

Marc Miserez; E. Peeters; T. J. Aufenacker; J. L. Bouillot; Giampiero Campanelli; J. Conze; R. Fortelny; T. Heikkinen; Lars N. Jorgensen; J. Kukleta; Salvador Morales-Conde; Pär Nordin; V. Schumpelick; Sam Smedberg; M. Smietanski; G. Weber; M. P. Simons

Purpose In 2009, the European Hernia Society published the EHS Guidelines for the Treatment of Inguinal Hernia in Adult Patients. The Guidelines contain recommendations for the treatment of inguinal hernia from diagnosis till aftercare. The guidelines expired January 1, 2012. To keep them updated, a revision of the guidelines was planned including new level 1 evidence.MethodsThe original Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine ranking was used. All relevant level 1A and level 1B literature from May 2008 to June 2010 was searched (Medline and Cochrane) by the Working Group members. All chapters were attributed to the two responsible authors in the initial guidelines document. One new chapter on fixation techniques was added. The quality was assessed by the Working Group members during a 2-day meeting and the data were analysed, especially with respect to any change in the level and/or text of any of the conclusions or recommendations of the initial guidelines. In the end, all relevant references published until January 1, 2013 were included. The final text was approved by all Working Group members.ResultsFor the following topics, the conclusions and/or recommendations have been changed: indications for treatment, treatment of inguinal hernia, day surgery, antibiotic prophylaxis, training, postoperative pain control and chronic pain. The addendum contains all current level 1 conclusions, Grade A recommendations and new Grade B recommendations based on new level 1 evidence (with the changes in bold).ConclusionsDespite the fact that the Working Group responsible for it tried to represent most kinds of surgeons treating inguinal hernias, such general guidelines inevitably must be fitted to the daily practice of every individual surgeon treating his/her patients. There is no doubt that the future of guideline implementation will strongly depend on the development of easy to use decision support algorithms tailored to the individual patient and on evaluating the effect of guideline implementation on surgical outcome. At the 35th International Congress of the EHS in Gdansk, Poland (May 12–15, 2013), it was decided that the EHS, IEHS and EAES will collaborate from now on with the final goal to publish new joint guidelines, most likely in 2015.


Hernia | 2007

The European hernia society groin hernia classication: simple and easy to remember

Marc Miserez; J.H. Alexandre; G. Campanelli; F. Corcione; D. Cuccurullo; M. Hidalgo Pascual; A. Hoeferlin; Andrew Kingsnorth; V. Mandala; J.P. Palot; V. Schumpelick; R.K.J. Simmermacher; R. Stoppa; J.B. Flament

After reviewing the available classifications for groin hernias, the European Hernia Society (EHS) proposes an easy and simple classification based on the Aachen classification. The EHS will promote the general and systematic use of this classification for intraoperative description of the type of hernia and to increase the comparison of results in the literature.


Neonatology | 2007

Use of Tissue Oxygenation Index and Fractional Tissue Oxygen Extraction as Non-Invasive Parameters for Cerebral Oxygenation

Gunnar Naulaers; Bart Meyns; Marc Miserez; Veerle Leunens; Sabine Van Huffel; Paul Casaer; Michael Weindling; Hugo Devlieger

Objective: To evaluate the relation between cerebral tissue oxygenation index (TOI), measured with spatially resolved spectroscopy (SRS), and the different oxygenation parameters. To evaluate the relation between a new parameter named fractional tissue oxygen extraction (FTOE) and the cerebral fractional oxygen extraction (FOE). Methods: Six newborn piglets were measured at 33, 35, and 37°C and in hypocapnia. Mean arterial blood pressure (MABP), haemoglobin (Hb), peripheral oxygen saturation (S<sub>a</sub>O<sub>2</sub>) and P<sub>a</sub>CO<sub>2</sub> were measured at each step. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured by injection of coloured microspheres into the left atrium. Jugular bulb oxygen saturation (JVS), cerebral arterial and venous oxygen content (C<sub>a</sub>O<sub>2</sub> and C<sub>v</sub>O<sub>2</sub>) and FOE were calculated. TOI of the brain was calculated and FTOE was introduced as (S<sub>a</sub>O<sub>2</sub> – TOI)/S<sub>a</sub>O<sub>2</sub>. The correlation was calculated with an ANCOVA test. Results: There was a positive correlation (R = 0.4 and p = 0.011) between TOI and JVS. No correlation was found with CBF, MABP or Hb. There was a positive correlation between P<sub>a</sub>CO<sub>2</sub> and cerebral TOI (R = 0.24 and p = 0.03). FTOE correlated well with FOE (R = 0.4 and p = 0.016) and there was a negative correlation between FTOE and P<sub>a</sub>CO<sub>2</sub> (R = 0.24, p = 0.03). Conclusion: The measurement of TOI and FTOE by SRS correlated well with the cerebral venous saturation and FOE, respectively.


Hernia | 2012

EuraHS: the development of an international online platform for registration and outcome measurement of ventral abdominal wall hernia repair

Filip Muysoms; Giampiero Campanelli; G. Champault; A. C. Debeaux; U. A. Dietz; Johannes Jeekel; U. Klinge; F. Köckerling; Vincenzo Mandalà; Agneta Montgomery; S. Morales Conde; Frank Puppe; R.K.J. Simmermacher; Maciej Śmietański; Marc Miserez

BackgroundAlthough the repair of ventral abdominal wall hernias is one of the most commonly performed operations, many aspects of their treatment are still under debate or poorly studied. In addition, there is a lack of good definitions and classifications that make the evaluation of studies and meta-analyses in this field of surgery difficult.Materials and methodsUnder the auspices of the board of the European Hernia Society and following the previously published classifications on inguinal and on ventral hernias, a working group was formed to create an online platform for registration and outcome measurement of operations for ventral abdominal wall hernias. Development of such a registry involved reaching agreement about clear definitions and classifications on patient variables, surgical procedures and mesh materials used, as well as outcome parameters. The EuraHS working group (European registry for abdominal wall hernias) comprised of a multinational European expert panel with specific interest in abdominal wall hernias. Over five working group meetings, consensus was reached on definitions for the data to be recorded in the registry.ResultsA set of well-described definitions was made. The previously reported EHS classifications of hernias will be used. Risk factors for recurrences and co-morbidities of patients were listed. A new severity of comorbidity score was defined. Post-operative complications were classified according to existing classifications as described for other fields of surgery. A new 3-dimensional numerical quality-of-life score, EuraHS-QoL score, was defined. An online platform is created based on the definitions and classifications, which can be used by individual surgeons, surgical teams or for multicentre studies. A EuraHS website is constructed with easy access to all the definitions, classifications and results from the database.ConclusionAn online platform for registration and outcome measurement of abdominal wall hernia repairs with clear definitions and classifications is offered to the surgical community. It is hoped that this registry could lead to better evidence-based guidelines for treatment of abdominal wall hernias based on hernia variables, patient variables, available hernia repair materials and techniques.


Surgical Endoscopy and Other Interventional Techniques | 2013

EAES Consensus Development Conference on endoscopic repair of groin hernias

M. M. Poelman; B. van den Heuvel; J. D. Deelder; G. S. A. Abis; N. Beudeker; Reinhard Bittner; Giampiero Campanelli; D. van Dam; Boudewijn J. Dwars; H. H. Eker; A. Fingerhut; I. Khatkov; F. Koeckerling; J. Kukleta; Marc Miserez; Agneta Montgomery; R. M. Munoz Brands; S. Morales Conde; F. Muysoms; M. Soltes; W. Tromp; Y. Yavuz; H. J. Bonjer

Groin hernia repair is one of the most common surgeries,performed globally in more than 20 million people per year[1, 2]. Historically, the first surgeries for groin hernias wereperformed by the end of the 16th century [3, 4]. Repairsthat involved reduction and resection of the hernial sac andenforcement of the posterior wall of the inguinal canal byapproximating its muscular and fascial components wereperformed by the end of the 19th century. Utilization ofprosthetic material was introduced in the 1960s, initiallyonly in elderly patients with recurrent inguinal hernias.Favorable long-term results of these mesh repairs allowedadoption of mesh repair in a larger group of patients. At thepresent time, the majority of surgeons prefer mesh repair ofinguinal hernias.In the early 1980s, minimally invasive techniques forgroin hernia repair were first reported, adding anothermodality to the management of these hernias [4]. Trans-peritoneal laparoscopic and extraperitoneal endoscopictechniques, collectively known as endoscopic surgery, havebeen developed. There is considerable variation of surgical


Annals of Surgery | 2012

Randomized, controlled, blinded trial of Tisseel/Tissucol for mesh fixation in patients undergoing Lichtenstein technique for primary inguinal hernia repair: results of the TIMELI trial.

Giampiero Campanelli; Manuel Hidalgo Pascual; Andreas Hoeferlin; Jacob Rosenberg; Gérard Champault; Andrew Kingsnorth; Marc Miserez

Objective:Test the hypothesis that fibrin sealant mesh fixation can reduce the incidence of postoperative pain/numbness/groin discomfort by up to 50% compared with sutures for repair of inguinal hernias using the Lichtenstein technique. Background:Inguinal hernia repair is the most common procedure in general surgery, thus improvements in surgical techniques, which reduce the burden of undesirable postoperative outcomes, are of clinical importance. Methods:A randomized, controlled, patient- and evaluator-blinded study (Tissucol/Tisseel for MEsh fixation in LIchtenstein hernia repair [TIMELI]; trial NCT00306839) was conducted among patients eligible for Lichtenstein repair of uncomplicated unilateral primary inguinal small–medium sized hernia. Patients were subject to mesh fixation with either fibrin sealant or sutures. Main outcome measures were visual analogue scale (VAS) assessments for “pain,” “numbness,” and “groin discomfort” on a scale of 0 = best and 100 = worst outcome. The primary endpoint was a composite that evaluated the prevalence of chronic disabling complications (VAS score >30 for pain/numbness/groin discomfort) at 12 months after surgery. Results:In total, 319 patients were randomized between January 2006 and April 2007 (159 fibrin sealant, 160 sutures). At 12 months, the prevalence of 1 or more disabling complication was significantly lower in the fibrin sealant group than in the sutures group (8.1% vs 14.8%; P = 0.0344). Less pain was reported in the fibrin sealant group than in the sutures group at 1 and 6 months (P = 0.0132; P = 0.0052), as reflected by a lower proportion of patients using analgesics in the fibrin group over the study duration (65.2% vs 79.7%; P = 0.0009). Only 3 of 316 patients (0.9%) experienced recurrence. The incidences of wound-healing complications and other adverse events were comparable between groups. Conclusions:Fibrin sealant for mesh fixation in Lichtenstein repair of small–medium sized inguinal hernias is well tolerated and reduces the rate of pain/numbness/groin discomfort by 45% relative to sutures without increasing hernia recurrence (NCT00306839).


Hernia | 2013

Recommendations for reporting outcome results in abdominal wall repair

Filip Muysoms; E. B. Deerenberg; E. Peeters; F. Agresta; Frederik Berrevoet; Giampiero Campanelli; Wim Ceelen; G. Champault; F. Corcione; D. Cuccurullo; A. C. Debeaux; U. A. Dietz; Robert J. Fitzgibbons; J. F. Gillion; R.-D. Hilgers; Johannes Jeekel; I. Kyle-Leinhase; F. Köckerling; Vincenzo Mandalà; Agneta Montgomery; Salvador Morales-Conde; R.K.J. Simmermacher; V. Schumpelick; Maciej Śmietański; M. Walgenbach; Marc Miserez

BackgroundThe literature dealing with abdominal wall surgery is often flawed due to lack of adherence to accepted reporting standards and statistical methodology.Materials and methodsThe EuraHS Working Group (European Registry of Abdominal Wall Hernias) organised a consensus meeting of surgical experts and researchers with an interest in abdominal wall surgery, including a statistician, the editors of the journal Hernia and scientists experienced in meta-analysis. Detailed discussions took place to identify the basic ground rules necessary to improve the quality of research reports related to abdominal wall reconstruction.ResultsA list of recommendations was formulated including more general issues on the scientific methodology and statistical approach. Standards and statements are available, each depending on the type of study that is being reported: the CONSORT statement for the Randomised Controlled Trials, the TREND statement for non randomised interventional studies, the STROBE statement for observational studies, the STARLITE statement for literature searches, the MOOSE statement for metaanalyses of observational studies and the PRISMA statement for systematic reviews and meta-analyses. A number of recommendations were made, including the use of previously published standard definitions and classifications relating to hernia variables and treatment; the use of the validated Clavien-Dindo classification to report complications in hernia surgery; the use of “time-to-event analysis” to report data on “freedom-of-recurrence” rather than the use of recurrence rates, because it is more sensitive and accounts for the patients that are lost to follow-up compared with other reporting methods.ConclusionA set of recommendations for reporting outcome results of abdominal wall surgery was formulated as guidance for researchers. It is anticipated that the use of these recommendations will increase the quality and meaning of abdominal wall surgery research.


American Journal of Surgery | 2011

Treatment of small-bowel fistulae in the open abdomen with topical negative-pressure therapy.

Mathieu D'Hondt; Dirk Devriendt; Frank Van Rooy; Franky Vansteenkiste; André D'Hoore; Marc Miserez

BACKGROUND An open abdomen (OA) can result from surgical management of trauma, severe peritonitis, abdominal compartment syndrome, and other abdominal emergencies. Enteroatmospheric fistulae (EAF) occur in 25% of patients with an OA and are associated with high mortality. METHODS We report our experience with topical negative pressure (TNP) therapy in the management of EAF in an OA using the VAC (vacuum asisted closure) device (KCI Medical, San Antonio, TX). Nine patients with 17 EAF in an OA were treated with topical TNP therapy from January 2006 to January 2009. Surgery with enterectomy and abdominal closure was planned 6 to 10 weeks later. RESULTS Three EAF closed spontaneously. The median time from the onset of fistulization to elective surgical management was 51 days. No additional fistulae occurred during VAC therapy. One patient with a short bowel died as a result of persistent leakage after surgery. CONCLUSIONS Although previously considered a contraindication to TNP therapy, EAF can be managed successfully with TNP therapy. Surgical closure of EAFs is possible after several weeks.


Gynecological Surgery | 2008

Feasibility and construct validity of a novel laparoscopic skills testing and training model

Carlos Roger Molinas; Gunter De Win; Ortrun Ritter; J. Keckstein; Marc Miserez; Rudi Campo

The apprentice–tutor model was useful for training surgeons for many years, but the complexity of surgical technology in the 21st century, especially endoscopic surgery, has exponentially increased the demands for surgical education. Therefore, more and more people now accept that endoscopic surgery, demanding as it requires specific skills, should also be taught outside the operating theatre. Although many systems, including animal models and simulators, have been proposed, an in-house structured and validated method for testing and training laparoscopic skills is missing in gynaecology. We have developed a laparoscopic skills testing and training (LASTT) model and performed two studies evaluating its feasibility and the construct validity of three different exercises (camera navigation, camera navigation and forceps handling, and forceps handling and bi-manual coordination), specifically selected to test and train laparoscopic psychomotor skills (LPS). In the first study, ten experts and 14 novices repeated each exercise between 20 and 30 times. The results demonstrated that the model is useful for testing and training laparoscopic skills. Clear learning curves were observed for both experts and novices, with better scores for the former at the beginning and the end of the study, proving the construct validity of the model. In the second study, 42 experts and 241 novices repeated each exercise three times during skill evaluation workshops organised by the European Academy of Gynaecological Surgery. The results confirmed the construct validity of the model. In conclusion, the LASTT model seems a cost-effective tool for providing an in-house program for continuous training and evaluation of LPS in all surgical disciplines in which laparoscopic procedures are, or might be, performed.

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Hugo Devlieger

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Siska Van Bruwaene

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Gunnar Naulaers

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Gunter De Win

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Gert De Hertogh

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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