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Featured researches published by Michael E. Barfield.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2012

Staged total abdominal debranching and thoracic endovascular aortic repair for thoracoabdominal aneurysm

G. Chad Hughes; Michael E. Barfield; Asad A. Shah; Judson B. Williams; Maragatha Kuchibhatla; Jennifer M. Hanna; Nicholas D. Andersen; Richard L. McCann

OBJECTIVE Thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms (TAAAs) occur most commonly in elderly individuals, who are often suboptimal candidates for open repair because of significant comorbidities. The availability of a hybrid option, including open visceral debranching with endovascular aneurysm exclusion, may have advantages in these patients who are at high-risk for conventional repair. This report details the evolution of our technique and results with complete visceral debranching and endovascular aneurysm exclusion for TAAA repair in high-risk patients. METHODS Between March 2005 and June 2011, 47 patients (51% women) underwent extra-anatomic debranching of all visceral vessels, followed by aneurysm exclusion by endovascular means at a single institution. A median of four visceral vessels were bypassed. The debranching procedure was initially performed through a partial right medial visceral rotation approach, leaving the left kidney posterior in the first 22 patients, and in the last 25 by a direct anterior approach to the visceral vessels. The debranching and endovascular portions of the procedure were performed in a single operation in the initial 33 patients and as a staged procedure during a single hospital stay in the most recent 14. RESULTS Median patient age was 71.0 ± 9.8 years. All had significant comorbidity and were considered suboptimal candidates for conventional repair: 55% had undergone previous aortic surgery, 40% were American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) class 4, and baseline serum creatinine was 1.5 ± 1.3 mg/dL. The 30-day/in-hospital rates of death, stroke, and permanent paraparesis/plegia were 8.5%, 0%, and 4.3%, respectively, but 0% in the most recent 14 patients undergoing staged repair. These patients had significantly shorter combined operative times (314 vs 373 minutes), decreased intraoperative red blood cell transfusions (350 vs 1400 mL), and were more likely to be extubated in the operating room (50% vs 12%) compared with patients undergoing simultaneous repair. Over a median follow-up of 19.3 ± 18.5 months, visceral graft patency was 97%; all occluded limbs were to renal vessels and clinically silent. There have been no type I or III endoleaks or reinterventions. Kaplan-Meier overall survival is 70.7% at 2 years and 57.9% at 5 years. CONCLUSIONS Hybrid TAAA repair through complete visceral debranching and endovascular aneurysm exclusion is a good option for elderly high-risk patients less suited to conventional repair in centers with the requisite surgical expertise with visceral revascularization. A staged approach to debranching and endovascular aneurysm exclusion during a single hospitalization appears to yield optimal results.


Academic Medicine | 2012

Handoffs in the era of duty hours reform: A focused review and strategy to address changes in the accreditation council for graduate medical education common program requirements

Christopher M. Derienzo; Karen S. Frush; Michael E. Barfield; Priya R. Gopwani; Brian Griffith; Xiaoyin Sara Jiang; Ankit I. Mehta; Paulie Papavassiliou; Kristy L. Rialon; Alyssa Stephany; Tian Zhang; Kathryn M. Andolsek

With changes in the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Common Program Requirements related to transitions in care effective July 1, 2011, sponsoring institutions and training programs must develop a common structure for transitions in care as well as comprehensive curricula to teach and evaluate patient handoffs. In response to these changes, within the Duke University Health System, the resident-led Graduate Medical Education Patient Safety and Quality Council performed a focused review of the handoffs literature and developed a plan for comprehensive handoff education and evaluation for residents and fellows at Duke. The authors present the results of their focused review, concentrating on the three areas of new ACGME expectations--structure, education, and evaluation--and describe how their findings informed the broader initiative to comprehensively address transitions in care managed by residents and fellows. The process of developing both institution-level and program-level initiatives is reviewed, including the development of an interdisciplinary minimal data set for handoff core content, training and education programs, and an evaluation strategy. The authors believe the final plan fully addresses both Dukes internal goals and the revised ACGME Common Program Requirements and may serve as a model for other institutions to comprehensively address transitions in care and to incorporate resident and fellow leadership into a broad, health-system-level quality improvement initiative.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2012

Results of Thoracic Endovascular Aortic Repair 6 Years After United States Food and Drug Administration Approval

Asad A. Shah; Michael E. Barfield; Nicholas D. Andersen; Judson B. Williams; Julie Shah; Jennifer M. Hanna; Richard L. McCann; G. Chad Hughes

BACKGROUND Since United States Food and Drug Administration approval in 2005, the short-term safety and efficacy of thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) have been established. However, longer-term follow-up data remain lacking. The objective of this study is to report 6-year outcomes of TEVAR in clinical practice. METHODS A prospective cohort review was performed of all patients undergoing TEVAR at a single referral institution between March 2005 and May 2011. Rates of reintervention were noted. Overall and aortic-specific survival were determined using Kaplan-Meier methods. Log-rank tests were used to compare survival between groups. RESULTS During the study interval, 332 TEVAR procedures were performed in 297 patients. Reintervention was required after 12% of procedures at a mean of 8 ± 14 months after initial TEVAR and was higher in the initial tercile of patients (15.0% vs 9.9%). The 6-year freedom from reintervention was 84%. Type I endoleak was the most common cause of reintervention (5%). Six-year overall survival was 54%, and aorta-specific survival was 92%. Long-term survival was significantly lower than that of an age- and sex-matched United States population (p < 0.001). Survival was similar between patients requiring a reintervention vs those not (p = 0.26). Survival was different based on indication for TEVAR (p = 0.007), and patients with degenerative aneurysms had the lowest survival (47% at 6 years). Cardiopulmonary pathologies were the most common cause of death (27 of 93 total deaths). CONCLUSIONS Long-term aortic-related survival after TEVAR is high, and the need for reintervention is infrequent. However, overall long-term survival is low, particularly for patients with degenerative aneurysms, and additional work is needed to identify patients unlikely to derive a survival benefit from TEVAR.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2014

Predictors of electrocerebral inactivity with deep hypothermia

Michael L. James; Nicholas D. Andersen; Madhav Swaminathan; Barbara Phillips-Bute; Jennifer M. Hanna; Gregory Smigla; Michael E. Barfield; Syamal D. Bhattacharya; Judson B. Williams; Jeffrey G. Gaca; Aatif M. Husain; G. Chad Hughes

OBJECTIVE Cooling to electrocerebral inactivity (ECI) by electroencephalography (EEG) remains the gold standard to maximize cerebral and systemic organ protection during deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (DHCA). We sought to determine predictors of ECI to help guide cooling protocols when EEG monitoring is unavailable. METHODS Between July 2005 and July 2011, 396 patients underwent thoracic aortic operation with DHCA; EEG monitoring was used in 325 (82%) of these patients to guide the cooling strategy, and constituted the study cohort. Electroencephalographic monitoring was used for all elective cases and, when available, for nonelective cases. Multivariable linear regression was used to assess predictors of the nasopharyngeal temperature and cooling time required to achieve ECI. RESULTS Cooling to a nasopharyngeal temperature of 12.7°C or for a duration of 97 minutes was required to achieve ECI in >95% of patients. Only 7% and 11% of patients achieved ECI by 18°C or 50 minutes of cooling, respectively. No independent predictors of nasopharyngeal temperature at ECI were identified. Independent predictors of cooling time included body surface area (18 minutes/m(2)), white race (7 minutes), and starting nasopharyngeal temperature (3 minutes/°C). Low complication rates were observed (ischemic stroke, 1.5%; permanent paraparesis/paraplegia, 1.5%; new-onset dialysis, 2.2%; and 30-day/in-hospital mortality, 4.3%). CONCLUSIONS Cooling to a nasopharyngeal temperature of 12.7°C or for a duration of 97 minutes achieved ECI in >95% of patients in our study population. However, patient-specific factors were poorly predictive of the temperature or cooling time required to achieve ECI, necessitating EEG monitoring for precise ECI detection.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2012

Outcomes After Surgical Management of Synchronous Bilateral Primary Lung Cancers

Asad A. Shah; Michael E. Barfield; Chris R. Kelsey; Mark W. Onaitis; Betty C. Tong; David H. Harpole; Thomas A. D'Amico; Mark F. Berry

BACKGROUND Distinguishing between synchronous primary lung cancers and metastatic disease in patients with bilateral lung masses is often difficult. The objective of this study is to examine outcomes associated with a strategy of performing staged bilateral resections in patients without N2 disease based on invasive mediastinal staging and without distant metastases. METHODS Patients undergoing resections of bilateral synchronous primary lung cancer at our institution between 1997 and 2010 were reviewed. Perioperative complications were graded according to National Cancer Institute guidelines. Survival was estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method and compared using a log-rank test. End points included overall survival, disease-free survival, operative death, cancer recurrence, and postoperative complications. RESULTS Resections of bilateral synchronous primary lung cancers were performed in 47 patients. Forty-five patients (96%) had at least a unilateral thoracoscopic approach; 28 (60%) had bilateral thoracoscopic approaches. The median postresection length of stay was 3 days. Thirteen patients (28%) had a postoperative complication; only 3 (6%) were grade 3 or higher. There was 1 perioperative death (2%). Eleven patients received adjuvant therapy; only 3 patients in whom adjuvant therapy was indicated did not receive the recommended treatment. The overall 3-year survival was 35%. Survival of patients whose bilateral tumors had identical histology did not differ from patients whose histology was different (p = 0.57). Three-year disease-free survival was 24%. CONCLUSIONS Aggressive surgical treatment of apparent synchronous bilateral primary lung cancer can be performed with low morbidity. Most patients tolerate the bilateral surgeries and adjuvant therapy. Overall survival is sufficiently high to support this aggressive approach.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2013

Intrathoracic subclavian artery aneurysm repair in the thoracic endovascular aortic repair era.

Nicholas D. Andersen; Michael E. Barfield; Jennifer M. Hanna; Asad A. Shah; Cynthia K. Shortell; Richard L. McCann; G. Chad Hughes

OBJECTIVE Intrathoracic subclavian artery aneurysms (SAAs) are rare aneurysms that often occur in association with congenital aortic arch anomalies and/or concomitant thoracic aortic pathology. The advent of thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) methods may complement or replace conventional open SAA repair. Herein, we describe our experience with SAA repair in the TEVAR era. METHODS A retrospective review was performed of all intrathoracic SAAs repaired at a single institution since United States Food and Drug Administration approval of TEVAR in 2005. RESULTS Nineteen patients underwent 20 operations to repair 22 (13 native, nine aberrant) SAAs with an intrathoracic component. Mean SAA diameter was 3.1 cm (range, 1.6-6.0 cm). Mean patient age was 57 years (range, 24-80 years). Twenty-one percent (n = 4) of patients had a connective tissue disorder (two Loeys-Dietz, two Marfan). Thirty-six percent (n = 8) of SAAs were repaired by open techniques and 64% (n = 14) via a TEVAR-based approach. All TEVAR cases required proximal landing zone in the aortic arch (zone 0-2), and revascularization of at least one arch vessel was required in 83% (10/12) of patients. Concomitant repair of associated aortic pathology was performed in 50% (n = 10) of operations. Thirty-day/in-hospital rates of death, stroke, and permanent paraplegia/paraparesis were 5% (n = 1), 5% (n = 1), and 0%, respectively. Over mean (standard deviation) follow-up of 24 (21) months, 16% (n = 3) of patients required reintervention for subclavian artery bypass graft revision (n = 2) or type II endoleak (n = 1). CONCLUSIONS This is the largest single-institution series to date of TEVAR for SAA repair. Modern endovascular techniques expand SAA repair options with excellent results. The majority of SAAs and nearly all aberrant SAAs (Kommerells diverticulum) can now be repaired using a TEVAR-based approach without the need for sternotomy or thoracotomy.


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2007

Minimally Invasive Radio-guided Surgery for Primary Hyperparathyroidism

Brian R. Untch; Michael E. Barfield; Joe Bason; John A. Olson

BackgroundMinimally invasive parathyroidectomy can reduce operative morbidity and operative time.1,2 Radio-guided parathyroidectomy utilizing Tc-99m Sestamibi is one approach to minimally invasive parathyroidectomy.3,4 Here, we report a multimedia case study of minimally invasive radio-guided parathyroidectomy.MethodsA 60-year-old African American female was found to have total calcium of 11.1 mg/dl, intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH) of 175 pg/ml, and a 24-h urine calcium of 620 mg/24 h. A Tc-99 Sestamibi scan (23.5 mCi of Tc-99 Sestamibi injected i.v.) and ultrasound localized a candidate adenoma to the right upper position. The patient was injected with 5.3 mCi Tc-99m Sestamibi 3 h before incision.ResultsA gamma probe (C-Trak Automatic System, Care Wise Medical Products) recorded in vivo counts of the right upper parathyroid (3,465) that were 160% of the background. Background counts were recorded from the resected tumor bed (2,224). A 1.4-g adenoma was identified in this location; ex vivo counts (3,226) were 150% of the background.5 Intra-operative iPTH baseline values were 176 pg/ml and 148 pg/ml, and 5- and 10-min post-resection levels were 17 pg/ml (90% drop) and 18 pg/ml (90% drop), respectively. The patient’s recovery was uncomplicated. At 1 week postoperatively, total calcium was 8.9 mg/dl and iPTH was 16 pg/ml. At 1 year, the calcium and iPTH levels were 8.7 mg/dl and 53 pg/ml, respectively.ConclusionsRadio-guided minimally invasive parathyroidectomy using Tc-99 Sestamibi localization is an effective approach to hyperparathyroidism. For patients without localization, exposure of all four parathyroid glands is preferable.6,7 Surgeons should be familiar with both techniques.


Journal of Surgical Education | 2013

Resident Designed Intern Orientation to Address the New ACGME Common Program Requirements for Resident Supervision

Kristy L. Rialon; Michael E. Barfield; Dawn M. Elfenbein; Keri E. Lunsford; Elisabeth T. Tracy; John Migaly

OBJECTIVE To design an orientation for surgical interns to meet the new Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education Common Program Requirements regarding supervision, to test patient-management competencies, and to assess confidence on skills and tasks pre-orientation and post-orientation. DESIGN Twenty-seven incoming surgical interns participated in a two-day orientation to clinical duties. Activities included a pre-test, lectures, simulation, oral examination, intern shadowing, and a post-test. Incoming interns were surveyed before and after orientation and two months later for confidence in patient-management and surgical intern skills. Paired t-tests were used to determine if confidence improved pre-orientation and post-orientation, and two months following orientation. SETTING The study took place at an academic training hospital. PARTICIPANTS All (n = 27) postgraduate year-1 (PGY-1) surgical residents at our institution, which included the categorical and nondesignated preliminary general surgery, urology, orthopedic surgery, otolaryngology, and neurosurgery programs. RESULTS All interns passed the oral and written examinations, and were deemed able to be indirectly supervised, with direct supervision immediately available. They reported increased confidence in all areas of patient management addressed during orientation, and this confidence was retained after two months. In surgical and floor-related tasks and skills, interns reported no increase in confidence directly following orientation. However, after two months, they reported a significant increase in confidence, particularly in those tasks that are performed often. CONCLUSIONS New requirements for resident supervision require creative ways of verifying resident competency in basic skills. This type of orientation is an effective way to address the new requirements of supervision and teach interns the tasks and skills that are necessary for internship.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2018

Gore Iliac Branch Endoprosthesis for treatment of bilateral common iliac artery aneurysms

Thomas S. Maldonado; Nilo J. Mosquera; Peter Lin; Raffaello Bellosta; Michael E. Barfield; Albeir Moussa; Robert Rhee; Marc L. Schermerhorn; Jeffrey Weinberger; Marald Wikkeling; Jan M.M. Heyligers; Frank J. Veith; Ross Milner; M.M.P.J. Reijnen; Jerome P. van Brussel; Thomas C. Naslund; Amir-Farzin Azarbal; Marc A. Camacho; Hue Tai; Edward Y. Woo; Gustavo S. Oderich; Mark Randon; Daniel Eefting; Marc R.H.M. van Sambeek; Nicola Mangialardi; Rabih A. Chaer; Danielle N. Campbell; Khanjan H. Nagarsheth

Objective: The Gore Iliac Branch Endoprosthesis (IBE; W. L. Gore & Associates, Flagstaff, Ariz) has recently been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treatment of common iliac artery (CIA) aneurysms. Despite early excellent results in clinical trial, none of 63 patients were treated for bilateral iliac aneurysms. The goal of this study was to examine real‐world experience using the Gore IBE for bilateral CIA aneurysms. Methods: A retrospective review of an international multicenter (16 U.S., 8 European) experience using the Gore IBE to treat bilateral CIA aneurysms was performed. Cases were limited to those occurring after Food and Drug Administration approval (February 2016) in the United States and after CE mark approval (November 2013) in Europe. Demographics of the patients, presentation, anatomic characteristics, and procedural details were captured. Results: There were 47 patients (45 men; mean age, 68 years; range, 41‐84 years) treated with bilateral Gore IBEs (27 U.S., 20 European). Six patients (12.7%) were symptomatic and 12 (25.5%) patients were treated primarily for CIA aneurysm (aorta <5.0 cm). Mean CIA diameter was 40.3 mm. Four patients had aneurysmal internal iliac arteries (IIAs). Two of these were sealed proximally at the IIA aneurysm neck and two required coil embolization of IIA branches to achieve seal in the largest first‐order branches. Technical success was achieved in 46 patients (97.9%). No type I or type III endoleaks were noted. There was no significant perioperative morbidity or mortality. IIA branch adjunctive stenting was required in four patients (one IIA distal dissection, three kinks). On follow‐up imaging available for 40 patients (85.1%; mean, 6.5 months; range, 1‐36 months), 12 type II endoleaks (30%) and no type I or type III endoleaks were detected. Two of 80 (2.5%) IIA branches imaged were occluded; one was intentionally sacrificed perioperatively. Conclusions: Preservation of bilateral IIAs in repair of bilateral CIA aneurysms can be performed safely with excellent technical success and short‐term patency rates using the Gore IBE device. Limb and branch occlusions are rare, usually are due to kinking, and can almost always be treated successfully with stenting.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2008

QS25. Preoperative Imaging and Intraoperative Parathyroid Hormone Measurement Contribute Little To The Surgical Management of Secondary Hyperparathyroidism

Michael E. Barfield; Brian R. Untch; Darshana Dixit; George S. Leight; John A. Olson

Background: It is our hypothesis that the extent of thyroid resection for benign nodular thyroid disease (NTD) should be based on the extent of disease. Methods: Patients operated on for benign NTD from 1990-2007 were divided into three groups, those who underwent lobectomy for unilateral NTD (Group 1), near-total or total thyroidectomy for bilateral NTD (Group 2), and reoperation for NTD initially treated at other institutions (Group 3). The incidence of recurrence was determined for Groups 1 and 2 and the timing of diagnosis was compared to Group 3. Potential risk factors for recurrent disease were examined. Results: 511 patients were operated on for benign NTD. Contralateral disease was excluded in Group 1 patients using ultrasound (45%) and/or intraoperative palpation. Five (2%) of 246 patients in Group 1 and one (0.4%) of 230 patients in Group 2 developed recurrent NTD after 8 / 5 and 4 yrs compared to a mean 19 / 11 yrs for the 35 patients in Group 3 following one to three previous thyroidectomies. Recurrent disease was diagnosed by physical exam in 22 (54%) and imaging in 19 (46%) patients. Thyroid hormone was required for post-surgical hypothyroidism in 70 (28%) patients in Group 1. Patients with recurrent disease were younger (38 / 18 yrs vs. 50 / 15 yrs, p 0.05), had a higher body mass index (BMI) (33.3 / 7.3 kg/m vs. 30.6 / 8.0 kg/m, p 0.05) and were more often African American (42.5% versus 34.7%, p 0.05). Conclusion: Thyroid lobectomy is optimal therapy when benign NTD is limited to one lobe, as evidenced by a 2% recurrence rate and maintenance of euthyroidism in 72% of patients. When NTD is bilateral, total thyroidectomy is indicated to eliminate recurrence, underscoring the importance of routine preoperative ultrasound. Young age, African American race and increased BMI are risk factors for recurrent NTD and warrant more aggressive follow up.

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Brian R. Untch

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Douglas S. Tyler

University of Texas Medical Branch

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