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Featured researches published by Pascal Berna.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2013

Nutritional Status and Postoperative Outcome After Pneumonectomy for Lung Cancer

Patrick Bagan; Pascal Berna; Florence De Dominicis; João Carlos das Neves Pereira; Pierre Mordant; Bertrand De La Tour; Françoise Le Pimpec-Barthes; Marc Riquet

BACKGROUND The influence of nutritional status on outcome after major lung resection remains controversial. Nutritional assessment is not included as a major recommendation in lung cancer guidelines. The purpose of this study was to assess the nutritional status of patients referred for pneumonectomy and to assess the predictive value of malnutrition in determining the surgical outcome. METHODS This study was a multicenter observational trial. The eligibility criterion for participants was pneumonectomy for lung cancer. Criteria for group classification according to nutritional status were albumin and transthyretin levels. Predicted outcomes were major infectious and noninfectious complications and 90-day mortality. Univariate analysis identified independent variables for the predictive model of age, sex, induction chemotherapy, extended resections, treatment side, smoking, and malnutrition. Predictive variables were then included in a logistic regression model. RESULTS Between January 2010 and December 2011, 86 (mean age, 61.5 years) consecutive patients referred for pneumonectomy (left side, n = 58; right side, n = 28) at 4 thoracic surgery centers were included. The malnutrition group included 33 patients (39%) and the normal nutritional status group included 53 patients. Univariate analysis elected malnutrition, recent active smoking, and extended resection to be included in a multivariate analysis. Multivariate analysis identified malnutrition, recent smoking, and extended resection as predictive variables for major complications and mortality. CONCLUSIONS The frequency of malnutrition detected by biological markers was dramatically high. Malnutrition, as well as recent active smoking and extended resection, is a predictive factor for infectious complications and mortality after pneumonectomy. Nutritional assessment with appropriate markers should be considered before pneumonectomy.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2011

Aortic endostent followed by extended pneumonectomy for T4 lung cancer.

Pascal Berna; Patrick Bagan; Florence De Dominicis; C. Dayen; Y. Douadi; Marc Riquet

Pulmonary and aortic en bloc resection may be performed with cardiopulmonary bypass support, but is associated with high surgical morbidity and mortality. A 59-year-old man with left lower lobe cancer invading the aorta was considered to be unsuitable for such an extended operation because of previous myocardial infarction, coronary bypass grafts, and subsequent multiple coronary artery stenting. Pneumonectomy with en bloc resection of aortic adventitia and media was accomplished after thoracic aorta endovascular stent graft placement. The aortic defect was reinforced with an extrathoracic muscle flap. The postoperative course was uneventful, and the patient was faring well at the 23-month follow-up. An endovascular stent may be an alternative in selected patients with aortic involvement, avoiding the need for cardiopulmonary bypass.


Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases | 2014

Management of gastrobronchial fistula after laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy

Lionel Rebibo; Abdennaceur Dhahri; Pascal Berna; Thierry Yzet; Pierre Verhaeghe; Jean-Marc Regimbeau

BACKGROUND Gastric fistula (GF) is a serious complication after laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG). Furthermore, gastrobronchial fistula (GBF) may appear some time after a primary LSG. The objective of this study was to characterize GBF after LSG and establish standardized treatment procedures. METHODS All patients undergoing surgery for GBF after LSG at a public university medical center in France between November 2004 and January 2013 were included in this study. Surgical and perioperative care was standardized. The primary efficacy criterion was the complication rate. Secondary efficacy criteria were the mortality rate, surgical data, types of complications, and the length of stay (LOS) in hospital. RESULTS Six patients were treated for GBF after LSG: 2 presented GBF after primary LSG performed in our institution and 4 had been referred by tertiary centers. The median (range) time to onset of GBF after LSG was 136 days (99-238 d). Preoperative refeeding was performed in 5 cases. The median time interval between the discovery of GBF and its surgical treatment was 31 days (7-137 d). Five patients underwent simultaneous abdominal and thoracic procedures. The abdominal procedures consisted of total gastrectomy (n = 1) and 60-cm Roux-en-Y gastrojejunal anastomosis (n = 6). There were no postoperative mortalities. Four postoperative complications occurred (66.6%), 2 of which were postoperative fistulas (33.3%) requiring revisional surgery. The median time to oral refeeding was 10 days (8-65 d) and the median LOS was 14 days (13-25 d). CONCLUSIONS Our treatment of GBF is based on effective drainage with endoscopic procedures, allowing optimal preoperative refeeding before combined abdominal and thoracic surgery. For the abdominal procedure, we prefer a 60-cm Roux-en-Y gastrojejunal anastomosis to total gastrectomy, because the former is simpler and minimizes the long-term risk of postoperative malabsorption.


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2014

Complete thoracoscopic lobectomy for cancer: comparative study of three-dimensional high-definition with two-dimensional high-definition video systems

Patrick Bagan; Florence De Dominicis; Jacques Hernigou; Bassel Dakhil; Rym Zaimi; C. Pricopi; Françoise Le Pimpec Barthes; Pascal Berna

OBJECTIVES Common video systems for video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) provide the surgeon a two-dimensional (2D) image. This study aimed to evaluate performances of a new three-dimensional high definition (3D-HD) system in comparison with a two-dimensional high definition (2D-HD) system when conducting a complete thoracoscopic lobectomy (CTL). METHODS This multi-institutional comparative study trialled two video systems: 2D-HD and 3D-HD video systems used to conduct the same type of CTL. The inclusion criteria were T1N0M0 non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) in the left lower lobe and suitable for thoracoscopic resection. The CTL was performed by the same surgeon using either a 3D-HD or 2D-HD system. Eighteen patients with NSCLC were included in the study between January and December 2013: 14 males, 4 females, with a median age of 65.6 years (range: 49-81). The patients were randomized before inclusion into two groups: to undergo surgery with the use of a 2D-HD or 3D-HD system. We compared operating time, the drainage duration, hospital stay and the N upstaging rate from the definitive histology. RESULTS The use of the 3D-HD system significantly reduced the surgical time (by 17%). However, chest-tube drainage, hospital stay, the number of lymph-node stations and upstaging were similar in both groups. CONCLUSIONS The main finding was that 3D-HD system significantly reduced the surgical time needed to complete the lobectomy. Thus, future integration of 3D-HD systems should improve thoracoscopic surgery, and enable more complex resections to be performed. It will also help advance the field of endoscopically assisted surgery.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2009

Induction chemotherapy before sleeve lobectomy for lung cancer: immediate and long-term results.

Patrick Bagan; Pascal Berna; Emmanuel Brian; Flora Crockett; Françoise Le Pimpec-Barthes; Antoine Dujon; Marc Riquet

BACKGROUND Induction chemotherapy does not increase the morbidity and mortality rates of bronchoplastic procedures, but the long-term efficiency remains unclear. The purpose of this retrospective study was to analyze the impact of chemotherapy on resectability and long-term survival. METHODS From 1984 to 2005, 159 consecutive patients with non-small cell lung cancer underwent sleeve lobectomy without (n = 117) or with induction chemotherapy (n = 42). Indications for chemotherapy were N2 lymph node involvement (n = 15), T3 or T4 tumor invasion with doubtful resectability (n = 13), need for tumor size reduction (n = 8), lung function precluding pneumonectomy (n = 4), and brain metastasis (n = 2). None of the patients received induction radiation therapy. We studied tumor characteristics and immediate and long-term results in both groups. RESULTS Clinical stage III was predominant in the induction chemotherapy group whereas stage II was predominant in the surgery-only group. Complication rates in the induction chemotherapy group and in the surgery-only group were 23.8% and 24.7%, respectively. We observed a greater rate of 1-month-delay smoking cessation before surgery in the induction chemotherapy group (40% versus 22%). The 5-year survival rates were 65.4% in the surgery-only group and 73.4% in the induction chemotherapy group (p = 0.5). The tumor size in the induction chemotherapy group was lower (17.5 versus 30.6 mm; p = 0.01), which reflected the positive impact of chemotherapy on sleeve resection feasibility. CONCLUSIONS Induction chemotherapy before sleeve lobectomy achieves good long-term results. Tumor reduction and limited resection feasibility seemed to be increased, which justify further prospective trials.


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2011

Right pulmonary artery agenesis and coronary-to-bronchial artery aneurysm

Florence De Dominicis; Laurent Leborgne; Alexandre Raymond; Pascal Berna

Isolated unilateral pulmonary artery agenesis is a rare congenital anomaly that may be complicated with hemoptysis, recurrent pulmonary infections or pulmonary hypertension. To our knowledge the occurrence of a coronary syndrome associated with a coronary-to-bronchial artery saccular aneurysmal collateralization has never been described before. A 44-year-old female presented a congenital right pulmonary artery agenesis associated with a hypotrophic and multicystic right lung complicated with recurrent bronchitis. This patient had a coronary syndrome for which the coronary artery imaging showed a coronary-to-bronchial artery collateralization with an aneurysm at this level. It gives rise to a coronary syndrome by coronary steal. Two bronchial collaterals arising from a diaphragmatic artery and the subclavian artery were also found on the computed tomography (CT)-scan. This last collateral also showed another saccular aneurysm. We first performed an embolization of those two aneurysms in order to decrease the risk of hemorrhage and coronary steal, before performing a right pneumonectomy. In this case, the surgery was indicated because of the pathological lung and the risk of postembolization ischaemia. The postoperative course was uneventful and the patient was doing well six months later.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2012

A New Option for Autologous Anterior Chest Wall Reconstruction: The Composite Thoracodorsal Artery Perforator Flap

Sandy Dast; Pascal Berna; Quentin Qassemyar; R. Sinna

Sternal chondrosarcoma is rare and often requires total or subtotal sternectomy. The authors describe the case of a 70-year-old man with sternoclavicular joint chondrosarcoma who underwent subtotal sternectomy with partial resection of the two clavicles and anterior arches of first to third right ribs. Anterior chest wall reconstruction was performed with a composite thoracodorsal artery perforator free flap with sixth and seventh ribs vascularized on serratus muscle. The postoperative course was uneventful. Seven months after surgery, the patient was doing well. This surgical procedure is a new option for autologous reconstruction without prosthetic material after extensive sternectomy.


Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery | 2010

Isolated rib metastases from renal cell carcinoma

Jalal Assouad; Hicham Masmoudi; Pascal Berna; Camille Steltzlen; Dana M. Radu; Marc Riquet; Dominique Grunenwald

Osseous metastases of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) are the second most frequent location after lung metastases. They rarely present as isolated location. When isolated, resection may offer five-year survival rates of 30-60%. The purpose of the current study is to focus on a particular subset, the isolated rib metastases (IRM). The files of six patients who underwent radical resection for IRM were reviewed. All had previous radical nephrectomy for clear-cell renal cancer. The mean age of these six men was 55.3 years. Preoperative evaluation included in all patients a conventional chest radiograph and thoracic computed tomography (CT) scanning. Chest wall resections were wide and curative. The mean disease-free interval (DFI) after renal cancer treatment was 25 months. There was no postoperative death. Two patients had synchronous disease. One of them developed two recurrences operated on by large resections. They survived for 77 and 81 months. The overall five and ten-year survival rates were respectively, 83 and 66.7%. IRM of RCC are rare and remain not well-known. Surgical wide resection is a safe and effective treatment.


Revue De Pneumologie Clinique | 2007

Cancer du poumon avant 40 ans et après 80 ans.

Christophe Foucault; Pascal Berna; Patrick Bagan; A Mostapha; J.-C. Das Neves-Pereira; Marc Riquet

Lung cancer rarely affects patients at the extreme ages of life. However, changes in epidemiology and therapy led us to review characteristics of both these younger and older populations. We retrospectively reviewed epidemiologic, clinical and pathological characteristics of patients aged 40 years or less (group 1, n=113) and 80 years or more (group 2, n=78) who underwent surgery between 1983 and 2003. Carcinoid tumors were more frequent in the group 1 (n=59 vs 5). Non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) occurrence rates decreased with time in group 1, whereas increasing rates were observed in group 2 (p=0.0017). Concomitant diseases were significantly more frequent in group 2. The pneumonectomy rates of non small cell lung cancer were the same in each group (group 1, 35.5%; group 2, 34.8%). Five-year survival rates were better in group 1 (58.9% vs 30%, p=0.0048). No 5-year survival was observed for N2 disease in group 2 and mortality unrelated to cancer was more frequent in this group. Otherwise, both groups were similar except for higher rates of adenocarcinomas in group 1. Lung cancer is more and more frequent in the octogenarians. Surgery remains the best treatment in this population except in case of stage III due to N2 involvement.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2012

Use of Macrolane to Treat Pectus Excavatum

R. Sinna; David Perignon; Nizar Assaf; Pascal Berna

The use of subcutaneous hyaluronic acid injection in cosmetic surgery is a popular and well-accepted technique. A new highly reticulated, nonanimal, stabilized hyaluronic acid has been recently developed for high-volume enhancement, especially breast augmentation. We describe this technique for funnel chest treatment.

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A. Badia

Paris Descartes University

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Claire Danel

National Institutes of Health

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E. Havet

University of Picardie Jules Verne

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