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Dive into the research topics where Robert D. Becher is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert D. Becher.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2010

Late erosion of a prophylactic Celect IVC filter into the aorta, right renal artery, and duodenal wall

Robert D. Becher; Matthew A. Corriere; Matthew S. Edwards; Christopher J. Godshall

We present the case of a patient with retrievable inferior vena cava (IVC) filter-related pseudoaneurysms of the infrarenal aorta and right renal artery, with associated erosion into the duodenal wall. The patient was seen 10 months following multiorgan trauma and placement of a prophylactic retrievable IVC filter (R-IVCF). Management required autogenous aortic reconstruction, caval repair, and subsequent right nephrectomy. This case demonstrates that R-IVCFs may be associated with significant risks, which is concerning, as a majority of prophylactic R-IVCFs placed after multisystem trauma are not removed.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2012

Creation and Implementation of an Emergency General Surgery Registry Modeled after the National Trauma Data Bank

Robert D. Becher; J. Wayne Meredith; Michael C. Chang; J. Jason Hoth; H. Randall Beard; Preston R. Miller

BACKGROUND As emergency general surgery (EGS) evolves, an EGS patient-tracking database (EGS registry [EGSR]) similar to the National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB) will be essential to study outcomes and improve care. The goal of this study was to establish diagnostic ICD-9 codes to define EGS patients. The hypothesis was that creating standardized ICD-9-based inclusion criteria would facilitate patient identification for an EGSR and aid in its ongoing development. STUDY DESIGN We conducted a retrospective review of EGS admissions over a 9-month period to define ICD-9 diagnostic codes of patients admitted to our EGS service. Subsequently, prospective data were collected into the EGSR by testing ICD-9-based inclusion criteria over 1 month. Patient, hospital, and severity scoring variables, as well as quality assurance information, were identified. RESULTS We identified 959 admissions to the EGS service over 9 months with 306 ICD-9 diagnosis codes that define EGS patients; the prospective population of the EGSR confirmed feasibility of ICD-9-based inclusion criteria. The EGSR captures 107 data points and 33 comorbidities per patient over 11 categories, akin to the 10 NTDB categories. CONCLUSIONS Following the model of the NTDB, we have successfully completed creation and initial implementation of an EGSR by using ICD-9-based inclusion criteria. Our comprehensive EGSR creates a prospective data-collection modality to capture and define EGS patients. A uniform patient-tracking EGSR, akin to the NTDB, will advance the science of acute care surgery, improve EGS patient outcomes, and facilitate multi-institutional collaboration.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2012

An innovative approach to predict the development of adult respiratory distress syndrome in patients with blunt trauma.

Robert D. Becher; Colonna Al; Toby Enniss; Ashley A. Weaver; Crane Dk; R. S. Martin; Nathan T. Mowery; Preston R. Miller; Joel D. Stitzel; J. Jason Hoth

BACKGROUND Pulmonary contusion (PC) is a common injury associated with blunt chest trauma. Complications such as pneumonia and adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) occur in up to 50% of patients with PC. The ability to predict which PC patients are at increased risk of developing complications would be of tremendous clinical utility. In this study, we test the hypothesis that a novel method that objectively measures percent PC can be used to identify patients at risk to develop ARDS after injury. METHODS Patients with unilateral or bilateral PC with an admission chest computed tomographic angiogram were identified from the trauma registry. Demographic, infectious, and outcome data were collected. Percent PC was determined on admission chest computed tomography using our novel semiautomated, attenuation-defined computer-based algorithm, in which the lung was segmented with minimal manual editing. Factors contributing to the development of ARDS were identified by both univariate and multivariable logistic regression analyses. ARDS was defined as PaO2/FiO2 ratio of less than 200 with diffuse bilateral infiltrates on chest radiograph with no evidence of congestive heart failure. RESULTS Quantifying percent PC from our objective computer-based approach proved successful. We found that a contusion size of 24% of total lung volume or greater was most significant at predicting ARDS, which occurred in 78% of these patients. Such patients also had a significantly higher incidence of pneumonia when compared with those with contusions less than 24%. The specificity of contusion size of 24% or greater was 94%, although sensitivity was 37%; positive predictive value was 78%, and negative predictive value was 72%. CONCLUSION We developed and describe a software-based methodology to accurately measure the size of lung contusion in patients of blunt trauma. In our analyses, contusions of 24% or greater most significantly predict the development of ARDS. Such an objective approach can identify patients with PC who are at increased risk for developing respiratory complications before they happen. Further research is needed to use this novel methodology as a means to prevent posttraumatic lung injury in patients with blunt trauma. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Prognostic/epidemiologic study, level III; diagnostic study, level IV.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2012

Systemic inflammation worsens outcomes in emergency surgical patients.

Robert D. Becher; J. Jason Hoth; Preston R. Miller; Meredith Jw; Michael C. Chang

BACKGROUND: Acute care surgeons are uniquely aware of the importance of systemic inflammatory response and its influence on postoperative outcomes; concepts like damage control have evolved from this experience. For surgeons whose practice is mostly elective, the significance of such systemic inflammation may be underappreciated. This study sought to determine the influence of preoperative systemic inflammation on postoperative outcome in patients requiring emergent colon surgery. METHODS: Emergent colorectal operations were identified in the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program 2008 dataset. Four groups were defined by the presence and magnitude of the inflammatory response before operation: no inflammation, systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), sepsis, or severe sepsis/septic shock. Thirty-day survival was analyzed by Kaplan-Meier method. RESULTS: A total of 3,305 patients were identified. Thirty-day survival was significantly different (p < 0.0001) among the four groups; increasing magnitudes of preoperative inflammation had increasing probability of mortality (p < 0.0001). Hazard ratios indicated that, compared with patients without preoperative systemic inflammation, the relative risk of death from SIRS was 1.9 (p < 0.0001), from sepsis was 2.5 (p < 0.0001), and from severe sepsis/septic shock was 6.7 (p < 0.0001). Operative time of <150 minutes was associated with decreased risk of morbidity (odds ratio = 0.64; p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Upregulation of the systemic inflammatory response is the primary contributor to death in emergency surgical patients. In SIRS or sepsis patients, operations <2.5 hours are associated with fewer postoperative complications. These results further reinforce the concept of timely surgical intervention and suggest a potential role for damage control operations in emergency general surgery. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II, prognostic study.


Surgical Infections | 2012

Locally derived versus guideline-based approach to treatment of hospital-acquired pneumonia in the trauma intensive care unit.

Robert D. Becher; J. Jason Hoth; Jerry J. Rebo; Jennifer L. Kendall; Preston R. Miller

BACKGROUND Appropriate initial antibiotic therapy for presumed pneumonia in critically ill patients decreases the mortality rate. To achieve this goal, treatment guidelines developed by groups such as the American Thoracic Society (ATS) have been stressed. However, often overlooked is the importance of incorporating local microbiologic data into an empiric algorithm. Our hypothesis was that an empiric algorithm supported by our locally-driven analysis would predict more accurate coverage than one defined strictly by an unmodified guideline-driven approach. METHODS Retrospective review of all first hospital-acquired (HAP) and ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) pathogens in consecutive trauma intensive care unit (TICU) patients over 18 months. Microbiologic data were analyzed to update our TICU-specific empiric algorithm. The ATS guidelines define patients at risk for multidrug-resistant (MDR) organisms on the basis of standardized criteria and time since admission (early <5 days; late ≥5 days). RESULTS A total of 164 pathogens caused 117 pneumonias. For early coverage, ATS guidelines stress identification of MDR risks; these criteria failed to identify 8 of 13 (62%) early MDR pneumonias. For early HAP/VAP with no MDR risks, the ATS guidelines recommend monotherapy; susceptibility differed (49% to ciprofloxacin, 68% to ampicillin-sulbactam, 83% to ceftriaxone). A total of 15% of early pathogens were MDR gram-positive, so addition of vancomycin resulted in adequate predicted coverage of 100%, 79%, and 95% for ciprofloxacin, ampicillin-sulbactam, and ceftriaxone, respectively. For late HAP/VAP, ATS recommends regimens based on broad-spectrum drugs. Vancomycin with ciprofloxacin, cefepime, or piperacillin-tazobactam had predicted coverage of 95%, 94%, and 93%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS The empiric algorithm derived from analysis of local microbiologic data predicted significantly better coverage than one defined by an unmodified guideline-driven approach for early HAP/VAP. Our locally-derived TICU algorithm of ceftriaxone+vancomycin for early pneumonia and piperacillin-tazobactam+vancomycin for late pneumonia optimizes the adequacy of initial therapy. Understanding local patterns of pneumonia ensures the creation and maintenance of empiric algorithms that achieve the best clinical outcomes.


Surgical Infections | 2011

Multidrug-Resistant Pathogens and Pneumonia: Comparing the Trauma and Surgical Intensive Care Units

Robert D. Becher; J. Jason Hoth; Lucas P. Neff; Jerry J. Rebo; R. Shayn Martin; Preston R. Miller

BACKGROUND As acute care surgery evolves, more trauma surgeons are caring for critically ill general surgery as well as trauma patients. However, these two populations are unique, and infectious complications may need to be addressed differently, as the causative organisms may not be the same in the two groups. To study this, we evaluated ventilator-associated (VAP) and hospital-acquired (HAP) pneumonia in the trauma (TICU) and general surgical (SICU) intensive care units to investigate differences in the causative pathogens. Our hypothesis was that SICU patients would have a higher incidence of multi-drug-resistant (MDR) organisms causing VAP/HAP, possibly contributing to inadequate empiric antibiotic (IEA) coverage. METHODS Retrospective review of 116 patients admitted with VAP or HAP over a one-year period to the TICU (n = 72) or SICU (n = 44) at a tertiary medical center. Culture was followed by initiation of empiric antibiotics on the basis of an antibiotic algorithm derived from trauma patients. Demographics, illness, and pneumonia characteristics were assessed; MDR organisms were identified. RESULTS Multi-drug-resistant organisms caused 30.6% of first pneumonias in the TICU vs. 65.9% in the SICU (p = 0.0002). Subsequent pneumonias were seen in 31.8% of SICU patients and 16.7% of TICU patients (p = 0.0576). Inadequate empiric antibiotic coverage was documented in 38.6% of SICU pneumonias vs. 26.4% in the TICU (p = 0.12). CONCLUSIONS Multiply-resistant pathogens cause a significantly greater number of VAP/HAPs in the SICU than in the TICU. Associated with this, when using an antibiotic algorithm based on TICU bacterial pathogens, there is a trend toward a greater likelihood of subsequent pneumonias and toward more IEA coverage in the SICU population compared with TICU patients. Our results indicate that these distinct patient populations have different pathogens causing VAP/HAP and affirm the necessity for population-specific algorithms to tailor empiric coverage for presumed VAP/HAP.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2017

Surgical rescue: The next pillar of acute care surgery

Matthew E. Kutcher; Jason L. Sperry; Matthew R. Rosengart; Deepika Mohan; Marcus K. Hoffman; Matthew D. Neal; Louis H. Alarcon; Gregory A. Watson; Juan Carlos Puyana; Graciela Bauzá; Vaishali D. Schuchert; Anisleidy Fombona; Tianhua Zhou; Samuel J. Zolin; Robert D. Becher; Timothy R. Billiar; Raquel M. Forsythe; Brian S. Zuckerbraun; Andrew B. Peitzman

BACKGROUND The evolving field of acute care surgery (ACS) traditionally includes trauma, emergency general surgery, and critical care. However, the critical role of ACS in the rescue of patients with a surgical complication has not been explored. We here describe the role of “surgical rescue” in the practice of ACS. METHODS A prospective, electronic medical record-based ACS registry spanning January 2013 to May 2014 at a large urban academic medical center was screened by ICD-9 codes for acute surgical complications of an operative or interventional procedure. Long-term outcomes were derived from the Social Security Death Index. RESULTS Of 2,410 ACS patients, 320 (13%) required “surgical rescue”: most commonly, from wound complications (32%), uncontrolled sepsis (19%), and acute obstruction (15%). The majority of complications (85%) were related to an operation; 15% were related to interventional procedures. The most common rescue interventions required were bowel resection (23%), wound debridement (18%), and source control of infection (17%); 63% of patients required operative intervention, and 22% required surgical critical care. Thirty-six percent of complications occurred in ACS primary patients (“local”), whereas 38% were referred from another surgical service (“institutional”) and 26% referred from another institution (“regional”). Hospital length of stay was longer, and in-hospital and 1-year mortalities were higher in rescue patients compared with those without a complication. Outcomes were equivalent between “local” and “institutional” patients, but hospital length of stay and discharge to home were significantly worse in “institutional” referrals. CONCLUSION We here describe the distinct role of the acute care surgeon in the surgical management of complications; this is an additional pillar of ACS. In this vital role, the acute care surgeon provides crucial support to other providers as well as direct patient care in the “surgical rescue” of surgical and procedural complications. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Epidemiological study, level III; therapeutic/care management study, level IV.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2017

Ongoing Evolution of Emergency General Surgery as a Surgical Subspecialty

Robert D. Becher; Kimberly A. Davis; Michael F. Rotondo; Raul Coimbra

Over the past 10 years, acute care surgery has become widely accepted as a distinct surgical specialty and practice paradigm, encompassing 3 areas of surgical practice: trauma surgery, emergency general surgery, and surgical critical care. The recognition and formalization of the specialty continue to grow (Fig. 1), as evidenced by the increasing number of acute care surgery services at institutions throughout the US. There are currently 20 nonACGME, American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST)-approved acute care surgery training fellowship programs, up from 7 just 5 years ago. Acute care surgeons provide time-sensitive care for both trauma and nontrauma surgical emergencies. There are multiple challenges in caring for these patients, including around-the-clock readiness for the provision of comprehensive care across a spectrum of disciplines, the constrained time for preoperative optimization of the patient, and the greater potential for intraoperative and postoperative complications due to the often-emergent, high-complexity, and high-acuity nature of care. Although the morbidity and mortality of acute care surgery patients, especially in themoremature disciplines of trauma and surgical critical care, have steadily improved, ensuring optimal outcomes of all patients continues to evolve. Improving outcomes will require an ongoing commitment from a diverse range of health care services, professionals, and organizations, and an emphasis on high-quality, comprehensive contemporary research. Over the past 45 years, there has been a tremendous improvement in the outcomes of injured trauma patients in the US. Since the 1970s, when injury was recognized as a widespread public health problem, 2 interrelated


Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open | 2018

When should screening of pediatric trauma patients for adult behaviors start

Adrian A. Maung; Robert D. Becher; Kevin M. Schuster; Kimberly A. Davis

Background Care of patients with trauma is not only limited to the sustained physical injuries but also requires addressing social issues, such as substance abuse and interpersonal violence, which are responsible for trauma-related recidivism. This study investigates whether there are age-related variations in these problematic social behaviors to analyze whether there is an age cut-off at which point adolescents should be screened for adult social behaviors. Methods Retrospective review of patients with trauma aged 12–21 admitted to an urban Level 1 adult and pediatric trauma center between February 2013 and April 2016. Demographics, mechanisms of injury, Injury Severity Score, outcomes, toxicology and social history evaluations were abstracted from the electronic medical record. Results 756 patients were admitted during the 39-month period. Most patients were male (73.9%) without significant variation by age. The mechanisms of injury varied by age (p<0.001) with the incidence of sports and bicycle injuries decreasing and the incidence of motor vehicle/motorcycle crashes, assaults and gunshot injuries increasing with increasing patient age. In a logistic regression, risks of positive toxicology tests, injuries due to violence as well as overall use of drugs, tobacco and alcohol also significantly increased with age starting with the youngest age included in the study. Conclusions As pediatric trauma patients get older, they have increasing risks of social issues typically associated with adults. Our study underscores the need to evaluate and address these issues even in young adolescents. Level of evidence Level IV—epidemiological.


Surgery | 2018

The effect of insurance type on access to inguinal hernia repair under the Affordable Care Act

Walter Hsiang; Catherine McGeoch; Sarah Lee; William K.C. Cheung; Robert D. Becher; Kimberly A. Davis; Kevin M. Schuster

Background: The expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act extended coverage to any individual with an income up to 138% of the federal poverty level. Our study of surgeon practice management investigated the impact of the type of insurance on access to elective inguinal hernia repair and the disparities in access between Medicaid expansion and nonexpansion states. Methods: Practices of 240 hernia repair surgeons across 8 states were randomly selected from the American College of Surgeons Find a Surgeon Database. Investigators posed as simulated patients seeking an evaluation for an inguinal hernia. Physician offices were contacted using a standardized script on separate occasions to assess appointment success rates and waiting periods for 3 different insurance types (BlueCross, Medicaid, Medicare). Results: Of 240 surgical practices contacted, 75.4% scheduled appointments for Medicaid patients, compared to 98.8% for Medicare patients and 98.3% for those with private insurance. In states that expanded Medicaid, fewer offices accepted Medicaid patients compared to those in nonexpanded states. No differences in wait times between expanded and nonexpanded states were observed. Surgeons in either solo practices or urban settings were less likely to accept Medicaid patients than those in either group practices or non‐urban offices. Conclusions: Simulated Medicaid patients were less successful at scheduling appointments for surgical consultation than BlueCross or Medicare patients. Fewer surgical practices in expansion states accepted Medicaid patients despite increased coverage due to Medicaid expansion. These findings should be further investigated amidst future changes in Medicaid to understand their impact on access to surgical care.

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Lucas P. Neff

United States Air Force Academy

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