Ricardo L. Rossi
Lahey Hospital & Medical Center
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ricardo L. Rossi.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1988
Kevin S. Hughes; Rebecca B. Rosenstein; Sate Songhorabodi; Martin A. Adson; Duane M. Ilstrup; Joseph G. Fortner; Barbara J. Maclean; James H. Foster; John M. Daly; Diane Fitzherbert; Paul H. Sugarbaker; Shunzaboro Iwatsuki; Thomas E. Starzl; Kenneth P. Ramming; William P. Longmire; Kathy O'toole; Nicholas J. Petrelli; Lemuel Herrera; Blake Cady; William V. McDermott; Thomas Nims; Warren E. Enker; Gene Coppa; Leslie H. Blumgart; Howard Bradpiece; Marshall M. Urist; Joaquin S. Aldrete; Peter M. Schlag; Peter Hohenberger; Glenn Steele
In this review of a collected series of patients undergoing hepatic resection for colorectal metastases, 100 patients were found to have survived greater than five years from the time of resection. Of these 100 long-term survivors, 71 remain disease-free through the last follow-up, 19 recurred prior to five years, and ten recurred after five years. Patient characteristics that may have contributed to survival were examined. Procedures performed included five trisegmentectomies, 32 lobectomies, 16 left lateral segmentectomies, and 45 wedge resections. The margin of resection was recorded in 27 patients, one of whom had a positive margin, nine of whom had a less than or equal to 1-cm margin, and 17 of whom had a greater than 1-cm margin. Eighty-one patients had a solitary metastasis to the liver, 11 patients had two metastases, one patient had three metastases, and four patients had four metastases. Thirty patients had Stage C primary carcinoma, 40 had Stage B primary carcinoma, and one had Stage A primarycarcinoma. The disease-free interval from the time of colon resection to the time of liver resection was less than one year in 65 patients, and greater than one year in 34 patients. Three patients had bilobar metastases. Four of the patients had extrahepatic disease resected simultaneously with the liver resection. Though several contraindications to hepatic resection have been proposed in the past, five-year survival has been found in patients with extrahepatic disease resected simultaneously, patients with bilobar metastases, patients with multiple metastases, and patients with positive margins. Five-year disease-free survivors are also present in each of these subsets. It is concluded that five-year survival is possible in the presence of reported contraindications to resection, and therefore that the decision to resect the liver must be individualized.
Annals of Surgery | 1986
John W. Braasch; Daniel J. Deziel; Ricardo L. Rossi; Elton Watkins; Peter F. Winter
Eighty-seven patients with neoplasm (57 cases), pancreatitis (28 cases), or benign biliary obstruction (2 cases) were treated with pyloric preserving pancrcatectomy with two postoperative deaths, neither due to abdominal complications. About 50% of patients had delay in recovery of gastrointestinal function. Six and seven patients had clinically significant biliary and pancreatic fistulas, respectively, with some patients having both. Complications required 16 reoperations. Marginal ulcer was suggested by endoscopy or barium study in five patients, three of whom were successfully managed by a medical regimen. In the other two patients, exploration failed to demonstrate an ulcer or jejunitis. In most patients, long-term gastrointestinal function was judged to be excellent based on weight gain and lack of digestive symptoms. Pyloric function and gastric motility were evaluated by abdominal scanning using indium 111 and technetium 99m. Gastric emptying of liquids and solids was normal. Estimations of enterogastric reflux showed a moderate difference between normal subjects and pancreatectomy patients. Cancer-free survival was comparable to that after the standard Whipple procedure.
Annals of Surgery | 2000
Jane I. Tsao; Yuji Nimura; Junichi Kamiya; Naokazu Hayakawa; Satoshi Kondo; Masato Nagino; Masahiko Miyachi; Michio Kanai; Katsuhiko Uesaka; Koji Oda; Ricardo L. Rossi; John W. Braasch; John M. Dugan
ObjectiveTo compare the experience and outcome in the management of hilar cholangiocarcinoma at one American and one Japanese medical center. Summary Background DataControversies surround the issues of extent of resection for hilar cholangiocarcinoma and whether the histopathology of such cancers are similar between patients treated in America and in Japan. MethodsRecords were reviewed of 100 patients treated between 1980 and 1995 at the Lahey Clinic in the United States, and of 155 patients treated between 1977 and 1995 at Nagoya University Hospital in Japan. Selected pathologic slides of resected cancers were exchanged between the two institutions and reviewed for diagnostic concordance. ResultsIn the Lahey cohort, there were 25 resections, 53 cases of surgical exploration with biliary bypass or intubation, and 22 cases of percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage or endoscopic biliary drainage without surgery. In the Nagoya cohort, the respective figures were 122, 10, and 23. The overall 5-year survival rate of all patients treated (surgical and nonsurgical) during the study periods was 7% in the Lahey cohort and 16% in the Nagoya cohort. The overall 10-year survival rates were 0% and 12%, respectively. In patients who underwent resection with negative margins, the 5- and 10-year survival rates were 43% and 0% for the Lahey cohort and 25% and 18% for the Nagoya cohort. The surgical death rate for patients undergoing resection was 4% for Lahey patients and 8% for Nagoya patients. Of the patients who underwent resection, en bloc caudate lobectomy was performed in 8% of the Lahey patients and 89% of the Nagoya patients. Histopathologic examination of resected cancers showed that the Nagoya patients had a higher stage of disease than the Lahey patients. ConclusionsIn both Lahey and Nagoya patients, survival was most favorable when resection of hilar cholangiocarcinoma was accomplished with margin-negative resections. Combined bile duct and liver resection with caudate lobectomy contributed to a higher margin-negative resection rate in the Nagoya cohort.
American Journal of Surgery | 1994
Michael S. Woods; L. William Traverso; Richard A. Kozarek; Jane Tsao; Ricardo L. Rossi; David Gough; John H. Donohue
We collected the records of 81 patients with biliary tract injuries occurring during laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) who were referred to 3 referral centers during a 33-month (May 1990 to March 1993) period. All records were reviewed to provide data concerning the anatomy of the lesion induced, method of injury, timing of injury detection, role of intraoperative cholangiography (IOC), methods of treatment, and outcome of these injuries. Injuries were classified by our own method as follows: (1) cystic duct leaks (n = 15), (2) bile leaks and/or ductal strictures (n = 27), and (3) ductal transections or excisions (n = 39). Peak occurrence by quarter of the year was 4th quarter, 1990 (Lahey), and 3rd quarter, 1991 (Mason), and 1st quarter, 1992 (Mayo). The majority (62%) of the injuries were recognized after LC. At the time of LC, 31 of 81 (38%) injuries were recognized and converted to open procedures. Data regarding IOC were available in 63 of 81 (78%) cases. In patients in whom IOC was not performed, 14 of 38 (37%) operations were converted; if an IOC was obtained and interpreted correctly, 13 of 21 (62%) operations were converted. Primary repair was attempted in 11 leaks and/or strictures, but 36% required additional treatment. Primary repair was used in six transections or excisions, and 17% have required further intervention. In patients who had biliary-enteric bypass (BEB) performed outside (17) versus at the referral institution (29), 94% (16 patients) versus 0%, respectively, required additional operative (e.g., revision of a hepaticojejunostomy) or nonoperative (e.g., radiologic or endoscopic stenting or balloon dilation) procedures. When used as initial therapy or after a primary ductal repair, stents (with or without balloon dilation) resolved 100% of simple cystic duct leaks and 91% of leaks and/or strictures. In conclusion, the peak incidence of LC-related biliary injuries appears to have passed. A completed and correctly interpreted IOC increases the chance of detection of biliary injuries intraoperatively and should assist surgeons who use routine IOC. Nonsurgical techniques allow treatment of most simple cystic duct leaks, major ductal leaks and/or strictures, and postoperative BEB strictures, although follow-up is limited. The poor results of pre-referral BEB is not surprising since all of these patients were selected for referral because their treatments had not been successful.
American Journal of Surgery | 1984
Frederick Alexander; Ricardo L. Rossi; Michael O'Bryan; Urmila Khettry; John W. Braasch; Elton Watkins
One hundred nine patients operated on for bile duct carcinoma were reviewed. Herein, we reported 83 proximal duct tumors, 12 mid-duct tumors, and 14 distal third tumors. Resectability was 10 percent, 33 percent, and 100 percent, respectively, with an operative mortality of 0 percent, 25 percent, and 23 percent. The median survival time and 5 year survival rate for these resected groups were 21 months and 25 percent for proximal duct tumors, 8 months and 0 percent for mid-duct tumors, and 16 months and 20 percent for distal third tumors. Eighty-three patients were treated with strictly palliative procedures with an operative mortality of 19 percent, an adjusted median survival rate of 10.9 months, and a 5 year survival rate of 0. The 2 and 5 year survival rates of patients with well-differentiated tumors were 73 percent and 15 percent, respectively, whereas for patients with poorly differentiated lesions, it was 6 percent and 0. Although most patients require palliative decompressive procedures, resection should be attempted whenever possible. It is expected that nonoperative techniques will have an increased role in the treatment of poor-risk patients or those who have unresectable disease.
American Journal of Surgery | 1991
Herminio Sanchez; Michel Gagner; Ricardo L. Rossi; Roger L. Jenkins; W. David Lewis; J. Lawrence Munson; John W. Braasch
We report clinical features, surgical management, recurrences, and follow-up study of 12 patients with simple hepatic cyst, 11 patients with polycystic liver disease, and 19 patients with cystadenoma who were surgically treated over a 25-year period. The median age of patients was 48 years, and 37 women and 5 men were in the series. The most common presenting symptom and physical finding were chronic abdominal pain and tenderness in the right upper quadrant. The most commonly associated disease was polycystic kidney disease, which was an associated finding in 5 of the 11 patients with polycystic liver disease (45%). The most valuable diagnostic studies in all groups were computed tomography and ultrasonography. The location of the disease was bilobar in patients with polycystic liver disease, with a right lobe predominance in 18% of patients. The right lobe was also predominant in 83% of patients with simple hepatic cyst and 58% of patients with cystadenoma. Of all solitary cystic lesions in the left lobe, 75% of them were cystadenomas. Of the 66 surgical procedures performed, aspiration was associated with a failure rate of 100%; partial excision, a failure rate of 61%; and total excision and liver resection, a failure rate of 0%. Orthotopic liver transplantation was performed in three patients and was associated with two early deaths. Partial excision relieved symptoms in three patients (43%) with polycystic liver disease. Total excision, enucleation, or liver resection with cyst(s) is the treatment of choice for non-parasitic cystic lesions of the liver.
Annals of Surgery | 1987
Ricardo L. Rossi; Mark L. Silverman; John W. Braasch; J L Munson; S G ReMine
Thirty patients with cystic disease of the bile ducts operated on between 1965 and 1985 were reviewed. Three patients (10%) had a synchronous adenocarcinoma, and in three patients (10%) a metachronous carcinoma developed for a total incidence of malignancy of 20%. All patients died within 1 year of the diagnosis of malignancy. Of 19 benign cysts available for pathologic examination, one third had proliferative epithelial changes, and in two of these patients a metachronous carcinoma developed. Goblet cell metaplasia was prominent in four patients. This suggests the possibility that dysplastic changes and metaplasia of the epithelium could give rise to carcinoma. Resection of benign cysts of the bile ducts is favored, when feasible, in an attempt to decrease the incidence of malignancy.
Annals of Surgery | 1981
John W. Braasch; John S. Bolton; Ricardo L. Rossi
Forty-four consecutive stricture repairs by one surgeon with long-term follow-up study are reported. Sutured anastomoses were performed in 39 patients. Essentials of the sutured repair include minimal dissection of the proximal duct, a one-layer anastomosis, mucosa-to-mucosa apposition, and a preference for hepaticojejunostomy with a T-tube stent. Eighty-six per cent of the patients treated by this technique achieved satisfactory results. This technique is the procedure of choice for repair of biliary stricture
American Journal of Surgery | 1983
Kurt D. Newman; John W. Braasch; Ricardo L. Rossi; Saul O'Campo-Gonzales
Pyloric and gastric-preserving pancreatic resection was performed in 35 patients with no mortality. Twenty-seven patients were followed for at least 8 months postoperatively and are reported herein in detail. This variation in the Whipple procedure is associated with a satisfactory weight gain after operation for benign disease, does not produce the usual postgastrectomy digestive symptoms, and so far jejunal or anastomotic ulceration has not been a problem. We believe this variation of the Whipple procedure is the operation of choice for benign disease and for certain types of periampullary malignant growth.
American Journal of Surgery | 1980
Ricardo L. Rossi; Blake Cady; William A. Meissner; Marvin S. Wool; Cornelius E. Sedgwick; Joan Werber
Abstract On the basis of this report and the current literature, we conclude that the familial type of medullary thyroid carcinoma can be diagnosed early using basal and poststimulation levels of calcitonin. However, most of the patients with sporadic disease present with a neck mass later in life. The tumor has a tendency to invade locally and metastasize to lymph nodes early in its course. Prognosis is negatively influenced by the extent of disease, lymph node involvement and elderly age. The surgical procedures of choice should be total thyroidectomy with clearance of central nodes of the neck as well as neck dissection when indicated. All parathyroid glands should be inspected. For patients treated for cure, the determinant 10 year survival is 48 percent, and 20 year survival is 33 percent. Recurrence of local disease should be treated aggressively, as important palliation and prolongation of life can be achieved. Radiotherapy may be helpful in the management of residual tumor or recurrent disease. Basal calcitonin assays and poststimulation studies are useful in diagnosing residual or recurrent disease. In the familial cases, the existence of other endocrinopathies has to be considered in the management of the patients.