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Dive into the research topics where Moritz Hansen is active.

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Featured researches published by Moritz Hansen.


BJUI | 2010

Robot‐assisted radical prostatectomy: learning rate analysis as an objective measure of the acquisition of surgical skill

Jesse D. Sammon; Andrew Perry; Lisa Beaule; Thomas Kinkead; David E. Clark; Moritz Hansen

Study Type – Therapy (case series)
Level of Evidence 4


BMJ Open | 2013

The value of personalised risk information: a qualitative study of the perceptions of patients with prostate cancer

Paul K. J. Han; Norbert Hootsmans; Michael Neilson; Bethany Roy; Terence Kungel; Caitlin Gutheil; Michael A. Diefenbach; Moritz Hansen

Objective To explore the experiences of patients with prostate cancer with risk information and their perceptions of the value of personalised risk information in treatment decisions. Design A qualitative study was conducted using focus groups. Semistructured interviews explored participants’ experiences with using risk information, and their perceptions of the potential value of personalised risk information produced by clinical prediction models. Participants English-speaking patients, ages 54–82, diagnosed with prostate cancer within the past 3 years, residing in rural and non-rural geographic locations in Maine (USA), and attending prostate cancer patient support groups. Setting 6 focus groups were conducted with 27 patients; separate groups were held for patients with low-risk, medium-risk and high-risk disease defined by National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines. Results Several participants reported receiving risk information that was imprecise rather than precise, qualitative rather than quantitative, indirect rather than direct and focused on biomarker values rather than clinical outcomes. Some participants felt that personalised risk information could be useful in helping them make better informed decisions, but expressed scepticism about its value. Many participants favoured decision-making strategies that were heuristic-based and intuitive rather than risk-based and deliberative, and perceived other forms of evidence—emotions, recommendations of trusted physicians, personal narratives—as more reliable and valuable in treatment decisions. Conclusions Patients with prostate cancer appear to have little experience using personalised risk information, may favour heuristic-based over risk-based decision-making strategies and may perceive personalised risk information as less valuable than other types of evidence. These decision-making approaches and perceptions represent potential barriers to the clinical use of personalised risk information. Overcoming these barriers will require providing patients with greater exposure to risk information, education about the nature and value of personalised risk information and training in deliberative decision-making strategies. More research is needed to confirm these findings and address these needs.


World journal of nephrology | 2016

Use of percutaneous nephrostomy and ureteral stenting in management of ureteral obstruction.

Linda Hsu; Hanhan Li; Daniel Pucheril; Moritz Hansen; Raymond Littleton; James O. Peabody; Jesse D. Sammon

The management options for ureteral obstruction are diverse, including retrograde ureteral stent insertion or antegrade nephrostomy placement, with or without eventual antegrade stent insertion. There is currently no consensus on the ideal treatment or treatment pathway for ureteral obstruction owing, in part, to the varied etiologies of obstruction and diversity of institutional practices. Additionally, different clinicians such as internists, urologists, oncologists and radiologists are often involved in the care of patients with ureteral obstruction and may have differing opinions concerning the best management strategy. The purpose of this manuscript was to review available literature that compares percutaneous nephrostomy placement vs ureteral stenting in the management of ureteral obstruction from both benign and malignant etiologies.


International Journal of Urology | 2014

Development of clinical models for predicting erectile function after localized prostate cancer treatment.

Amy Haskins; Paul K. J. Han; Frances Leslie Lucas; Ian J. Bristol; Moritz Hansen

To develop clinical prediction models estimating the probability of maintaining erections adequate for intercourse 2 years after prostate cancer treatment, based on pretreatment characteristics.


Urology | 2003

Identification of common themes from after-hour telephone calls made to urology residents

John T. Stoffel; Moritz Hansen

OBJECTIVES To characterize the content and sources of after-hour telephone calls from a general urology practice so that common themes can be identified and incorporated into the education of urology residents. METHODS After-hour telephone calls were prospectively assessed for 6 months by a single senior urology resident. Calls occurring on weekends/holidays and between 5 PM and 8 AM on weekdays were directly referred to the on-call resident. The day of week, time, source, initiating event, and required action from each call was recorded. Exclusion criteria included calls regarding established hospital urology in-patients and duplicate calls from individual patients calling more than once within 24 hours. RESULTS Eighty-seven calls were collected. Seventy percent occurred on weekends, primarily between 8 AM and 5 PM. The most common source was from outpatients (56%) followed by emergency room physicians (30%). In general, 61% and 26% of all calls regarded new urologic symptoms and postoperative issues, respectively. Urinary calculi were the most common specific reason for a call, followed by lower urinary tract symptoms and hematuria. An acute urologic evaluation was required for 27% of all telephone calls. Nine patients (10%) required admission within 48 hours of calling. CONCLUSIONS The education of urology residents should emphasize telephone evaluations of patients who present with urinary calculi and common postoperative issues. The number of after-hour calls may be able to be reduced if patients and nonurologist physicians are also educated in the management of nonacute urologic problems.


Urology | 2003

Effect of urinary tract infection on ureteropelvic junction obstruction in a rat model.

Moritz Hansen; Bingyin Wang; Naveed Afzal; Frank G. Boineau; John E. Lewy; Linda D. Shortliffe

OBJECTIVES When a partially obstructed kidney becomes infected, more rapid and extreme renal parenchymal damage appears to occur than might result from either infection or obstruction alone. Previously, we showed that either bacteriuria or partial obstruction in congenital unilateral hydronephrosis causes elevated renal pelvic pressures in a rat model. In this same model, we examined the combined effects of partial upper tract obstruction and bacteriuria on renal pelvic and bladder pressures. METHODS Female rats from an inbred colony in which more than one half are born with unilateral obstructive hydronephrosis were studied. Type 1 piliated Escherichia coli was instilled into the bladder. Two to 6 days later, the bladder and renal pelvic pressures were measured during varying urinary flows (less than 2 to more than 30 mL/kg/hr). All animals were killed and the kidneys and bladder grossly and histologically assessed. Hydronephrosis was determined at pathologic examination. RESULTS Eight rats had congenital unilateral hydronephrosis; five were normal. Acute inflammation was found in all bladder and renal specimens. In hydronephrotic, infected kidneys, the renal pelvic pressures exceeded those in nonhydronephrotic, infected kidneys at all urinary flow rates. Bladder capacity and pressures did not differ between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS This model demonstrates that the combination of infection and obstructive hydronephrosis in this model causes renal pelvic pressure elevation that is higher than that associated with either infection or obstructive hydronephrosis alone. These data demonstrate the compound effect that infection and obstruction may have on the kidney and offers an explanation for why this clinical situation is more likely to be associated with greater renal parenchymal injury than either alone.


The Journal of Urology | 2018

The Association between Mortality and Distance to Treatment Facility in Patients with Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer

Stephen Ryan; Emily C. Serrell; Patrick Karabon; Gregory Mills; Moritz Hansen; Matthew H. Hayn; Mani Menon; Quoc-Dien Trinh; Firas Abdollah; Jesse D. Sammon

Purpose: Regionalization of bladder cancer treatment is suggested to improve quality of care. As an unintended consequence some patients travel farther for care with unknown implications on outcomes. We characterized the relationship between distance and overall mortality in patients with invasive bladder cancer and those who underwent radical cystectomy. Materials and Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study using NCDB (National Cancer Database) from 2004 to 2012 to identify patients with muscle invasive bladder cancer (cT2a‐T4 N0 M0). We also extracted a subgroup of patients who underwent radical cystectomy. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards and multinomial logistic regression analyses were performed in each group, controlling for demographic, clinical, hospital and geographic factors. Results: For 34,729 patients with muscle invasive bladder cancer traveling farther for treatment was associated with a lower probability of overall mortality (referent less than 12.5 miles, 12.5 to 49.9 miles HR 0.96, 95% CI 0.92–0.99 and 50 to 249.9 miles HR 0.91, 95% CI 0.86–0.96). This was significant for patients with cT2 disease and those treated at academic centers (p ≤0.05). For 11,059 patients who underwent radical cystectomy this trend did not reach significance. However, longer distance was associated with surgery at a high volume institution and receipt of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (each p <0.001). Conclusions: Patients who traveled farther for bladder cancer treatment did not experience inferior survival outcomes and traveling to academic institutions was associated with reduced mortality. For patients who undergo cystectomy this relationship was equivocal, although longer distance was associated with receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy or surgery at a high volume facility. These findings may reflect a complex association of regionalization of bladder cancer care with patient individual health and health care seeking behavior.


Urologic Oncology-seminars and Original Investigations | 2017

Review of the comparative effectiveness of radical prostatectomy, radiation therapy, or expectant management of localized prostate cancer in registry data

Emily C. Serrell; Daniel Pitts; Matthew H. Hayn; Lisa Beaule; Moritz Hansen; Jesse D. Sammon

Evidence regarding the effectiveness of treatment for prostate cancer is primarily based on randomized controlled trials. Long-term outcomes are generally difficult to evaluate within experimental studies and may benefit from large pools of observational data. We conducted a systematic review of administrative and registry studies to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of treatment for clinically localized prostate cancer on overall and prostate-cancer specific mortality. MATERIALS AND METHODS In accordance with the preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analysis protocols (PRISMA-P, 2015), we conducted a systematic search of Ovid Medline and Embase (1946-February 2017) and identified studies that evaluated the relationship between types of treatment for localized prostate cancer and mortality. Additional articles were identified through manual search. Randomized, prospective, and single institution studies were excluded. The risk of bias for each study was evaluated with the Newcastle Ottawa scale. Multivariable adjusted hazard ratios were reported to evaluate overall and cancer-specific mortality. RESULTS We screened 4,721 studies and included for review, 19 that were published between 2001 and 2015. The pooled population included 228,444 patients. Countries of origin included the United States, Canada, China, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and Sweden, and the sources included administrative (n = 6) and cancer registry or prostate databases (n = 11). Overall and cancer-specific mortality were lowest among definitive treatment arms as compared to conservative therapy with no treatment, observation, or active surveillance. Radiotherapy was associated with worse overall and cancer-specific mortality than radical prostatectomy. CONCLUSION Although observational studies using large, population-based cohorts have the potential for bias, we found consistent evidence that high-quality observational studies may be used to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of prostate cancer treatment. Methodologic limitations of observational data should be considered.


Surgical Clinics of North America | 2016

The Use of Bowel in Urologic Reconstructive Surgery

Moritz Hansen; Matthew H. Hayn; Patrick Murray

Intestinal surgery involves an operative space shared by both general surgeons and urologists and is a border region where these 2 surgical disciplines often intersect. Urologists routinely use both small and large bowel for reconstructive procedures and surgeons often encounter such reconstructions of the urinary tract. It is essential for surgeons to understand the urologic indications for using intestinal segments for reconstructive procedures, the variety of such reconstructions, the anatomic landmarks and potential pitfalls that should be considered when intraoperatively encountering such reconstructions, and the potential metabolic consequences of the incorporation of bowel segments into the urinary collecting system.


The Journal of Urology | 2018

Prostate Cancer Screening in Early Medicaid Expansion States

Jesse D. Sammon; Emily C. Serrell; Patrick Karabon; Jeffrey J. Leow; Firas Abdollah; Joel S. Weissman; Paul K. J. Han; Moritz Hansen; Mani Menon; Quoc-Dien Trinh

Purpose The PPACA (Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act) of 2010 included a provision to expand Medicaid by 2014. Six states and jurisdictions elected to expand Medicaid early before 2012. This provided a natural experiment to test the association between expanded insurance coverage and preventive service utilization, including prostate cancer screening. Materials and Methods Using the 2012 and 2014 BRFSS (Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System) surveys we identified men 40 to 64 years old who reported prostate specific antigen testing in the preceding 12 months. Sociodemographic and access to care variables were extracted. Income was stratified by the relationship to Medicaid eligibility and the federal poverty level (less than 138%, 138% to 400% and greater than 400%). The weighted prevalence of prostate specific antigen was estimated. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to evaluate factors associated with prostate specific antigen screening. Interaction analysis for Medicaid expansion was performed. Results Among 158,103 respondents individuals in nonexpansion states had the highest incidence of prostate specific antigen screening. Nationally screening decreased between 2011 and 2013 (OR 0.87, 95% CI 0.83–0.91). In only early expansion states there was a 3% absolute increase in screening among men in the less than 138% federal poverty level, which was associated with expansion status (pinteraction = 0.04). Increased screening in early expansion states was also seen in men who were 55 to 59 years old, nonHispanic African American, Hispanic, previously married, not high school graduates and current smokers. Conclusions Between 2011 and 2013 there were national declines in prostate cancer screening. However, there was significant narrowing of the gap in prostate specific antigen screening between higher and low income men in Medicaid early expansion states. This may reflect improved access to preventive services among populations with historic barriers to care.

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Firas Abdollah

Henry Ford Health System

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Quoc-Dien Trinh

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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