Santiago González-Moreno
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Santiago González-Moreno.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012
Terence C. Chua; Brendan J. Moran; Paul H. Sugarbaker; Edward A. Levine; Olivier Glehen; François Noël Gilly; Dario Baratti; Marcello Deraco; Dominique Elias; Armando Sardi; Winston Liauw; Tristan D. Yan; Pedro Barrios; Alberto Gomez Portilla; Ignace H. de Hingh; Wim Ceelen; Joerg Pelz; Pompiliu Piso; Santiago González-Moreno; Kurt Van der Speeten; David L. Morris
PURPOSE Pseudomyxoma peritonei (PMP) originating from an appendiceal mucinous neoplasm remains a biologically heterogeneous disease. The purpose of our study was to evaluate outcome and long-term survival after cytoreductive surgery (CRS) and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) consolidated through an international registry study. PATIENTS AND METHODS A retrospective multi-institutional registry was established through collaborative efforts of participating units affiliated with the Peritoneal Surface Oncology Group International. RESULTS Two thousand two hundred ninety-eight patients from 16 specialized units underwent CRS for PMP. Treatment-related mortality was 2% and major operative complications occurred in 24% of patients. The median survival rate was 196 months (16.3 years) and the median progression-free survival rate was 98 months (8.2 years), with 10- and 15-year survival rates of 63% and 59%, respectively. Multivariate analysis identified prior chemotherapy treatment (P < .001), peritoneal mucinous carcinomatosis (PMCA) histopathologic subtype (P < .001), major postoperative complications (P = .008), high peritoneal cancer index (P = .013), debulking surgery (completeness of cytoreduction [CCR], 2 or 3; P < .001), and not using HIPEC (P = .030) as independent predictors for a poorer progression-free survival. Older age (P = .006), major postoperative complications (P < .001), debulking surgery (CCR 2 or 3; P < .001), prior chemotherapy treatment (P = .001), and PMCA histopathologic subtype (P < .001) were independent predictors of a poorer overall survival. CONCLUSION The combined modality strategy for PMP may be performed safely with acceptable morbidity and mortality in a specialized unit setting with 63% of patients surviving beyond 10 years. Minimizing nondefinitive operative and systemic chemotherapy treatments before definitive cytoreduction may facilitate the feasibility and improve the outcome of this therapy to achieve long-term survival. Optimal cytoreduction achieves the best outcomes.
Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2007
Jesus Esquivel; Robert P. Sticca; Paul H. Sugarbaker; Edward A. Levine; Tristan D. Yan; Richard B. Alexander; Dario Baratti; David L. Bartlett; R. Barone; P. Barrios; S. Bieligk; P. Bretcha-Boix; C. K. Chang; Francis Chu; Quyen D. Chu; Steven A. Daniel; E. De Bree; Marcello Deraco; L. Dominguez-Parra; Dominique Elias; R. Flynn; J. Foster; A. Garofalo; François Noël Gilly; Olivier Glehen; A. Gomez-Portilla; L. Gonzalez-Bayon; Santiago González-Moreno; M. Goodman; Vadim Gushchin
Cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy in the management of peritoneal surface malignancies of colonic origin : a consensus statement
Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2007
Jesus Esquivel; Robert P. Sticca; Paul H. Sugarbaker; Edward A. Levine; Tristan D. Yan; Richard B. Alexander; Dario Baratti; David L. Bartlett; R. Barone; Pedro Barrios; S. Bieligk; P. Bretcha-Boix; C. K. Chang; Frank Chu; Quyen D. Chu; Steven A. Daniel; de Bree E; Marcello Deraco; L. Dominguez-Parra; Dominique Elias; R. Flynn; J. Foster; A. Garofalo; François Noël Gilly; Olivier Glehen; A. Gomez-Portilla; L. Gonzalez-Bayon; Santiago González-Moreno; M. Goodman; Gushchin
Cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy in the management of peritoneal surface malignancies of colonic origin : a consensus statement
Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2010
Jesus Esquivel; Terence Chua; Alexander Stojadinovic; J. Torres Melero; Edward A. Levine; M. Gutman; Robin S. Howard; Pompiliu Piso; Aviram Nissan; A. Gomez-Portilla; L. Gonzalez-Bayon; Santiago González-Moreno; Perry Shen; John H. Stewart; Paul H. Sugarbaker; R.M. Barone; R. Hoefer; David L. Morris; Armando Sardi; Robert P. Sticca
Evaluation of peritoneal metastases by computed tomography (CT) scans is challenging and has been reported to be inaccurate.
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2016
Norman J. Carr; Thomas D. Cecil; Faheez Mohamed; Leslie H. Sobin; Paul H. Sugarbaker; Santiago González-Moreno; Panos Taflampas; Sara Chapman; Brendan Moran
Pseudomyxoma peritonei (PMP) is a complex disease with unique biological behavior that usually arises from appendiceal mucinous neoplasia. The classification of PMP and its primary appendiceal neoplasia is contentious, and an international modified Delphi consensus process was instigated to address terminology and definitions. A classification of mucinous appendiceal neoplasia was developed, and it was agreed that “mucinous adenocarcinoma” should be reserved for lesions with infiltrative invasion. The term “low-grade appendiceal mucinous neoplasm” was supported and it was agreed that “cystadenoma” should no longer be recommended. A new term of “high-grade appendiceal mucinous neoplasm” was proposed for lesions without infiltrative invasion but with high-grade cytologic atypia. Serrated polyp with or without dysplasia was preferred for tumors with serrated features confined to the mucosa with an intact muscularis mucosae. Consensus was achieved on the pathologic classification of PMP, defined as the intraperitoneal accumulation of mucus due to mucinous neoplasia characterized by the redistribution phenomenon. Three categories of PMP were agreed—low grade, high grade, and high grade with signet ring cells. Acellular mucin should be classified separately. It was agreed that low-grade and high-grade mucinous carcinoma peritonei should be considered synonymous with disseminated peritoneal adenomucinosis and peritoneal mucinous carcinomatosis, respectively. A checklist for the pathologic reporting of PMP and appendiceal mucinous neoplasms was also developed. By adopting the classifications and definitions that were agreed, different centers will be able to use uniform terminology that will allow meaningful comparison of their results.
Cancer Investigation | 2012
Björn L D M Brcher; Pompiliu Piso; Vic Verwaal; Jesus Esquivel; Marcello Derraco; Yutaka Yonemura; Santiago González-Moreno; Jörg Pelz; Alfred Königsrainer; Michael Alfred Ströhlein; Edward A. Levine; David L. Morris; David L. Bartlett; Olivier Glehen; Alfredo Garofalo; Aviram Nissan
Tumor involvement of the peritoneum—peritoneal carcinomatosis—is a heterogeneous form of cancer that had been generally regarded as a sign of systemic tumor disease and as a terminal condition. The multimodal treatment approach for patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis, which had been conceived and developed, consists of what is known as cytoreductive surgery, followed by hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC). Depending on the tumor mass as assessed intraoperatively and the histopathological differentiation, patients who undergo cytoreductive surgery and HIPEC have a significant survival benefit. Mean increases in the survival period ranging from six months to up to four years have now been reported. In view of the substantial logistic effort and the extent of the surgery involved, this treatment approach represents a major challenge both for patients and for surgical oncologists, as well as for the members of the overall interdisciplinary structure required, which includes oncology, anesthesiology and intensive care, psycho-oncology, and patient management. The surgical procedures alone may take 8–14 hr. The present paper provides an overview of the basis for the approach and the use of specialized classifications and quantitative prognostic indicators.
Cancer Journal | 2009
Santiago González-Moreno; Luis González-Bayón; Gloria Ortega-Pérez; Concepción González-Hernando
Imaging studies are crucial in the evaluation of patients with suspected or known peritoneal cancerous dissemination. Despite the major progress that has occurred in radiological technology in the last few years, adequate and early detection of peritoneal surface disease remains a challenge. Improvements in spatial resolution are still insufficient to detect small volume peritoneal implants, often resulting in an underestimation of peritoneal disease burden, as assessed at subsequent surgical exploration. Cytoreductive surgery combined with perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy has provided unprecedented results in the management of peritoneal-based neoplasms, provided that a complete (adequate) cytoreduction is achieved. Diagnostic imaging tests are used to select patients who may benefit from this combined treatment by ruling out extraperitoneal involvement and signs of unresectable peritoneal disease. Furthermore, a careful assessment of the disease distribution within the peritoneal cavity, guided by a deep knowledge of the disease’s clinical and biological behavior helps in planning the surgical procedure. Close interaction and cooperation between surgeons and radiologists is of utmost importance in this regard, and dedicated, motivated radiologists are required. Contrast-enhanced, multidetector computed tomography scan remains the standard imaging modality in the assessment of peritoneal carcinomatosis. Magnetic resonance imaging may offer complementary valuable data. Positron emission tomography (PET) has a more limited role, its main indication being the detection of unsuspected extraperitoneal involvement in nonmucinous neoplasms.
Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2014
Arancha Prada-Villaverde; Jesus Esquivel; Andrew M. Lowy; Maurie Markman; Terence Chua; Joerg Pelz; Dario Baratti; Joel M. Baumgartner; Richard Berri; Pedro Bretcha-Boix; Marcello Deraco; Guillermo Flores-Ayala; Olivier Glehen; Alberto Gomez-Portilla; Santiago González-Moreno; Martin D. Goodman; Evgenia Halkia; Shigeki Kusamura; Mecker Moller; Guillaume Passot; Marc Pocard; George I. Salti; Armando Sardi; Maheswari Senthil; John Spiliotis; Juan Torres-Melero; Kiran K. Turaga; Richard Trout
Cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) are gaining acceptance as treatment for selected patients with colorectal cancer with peritoneal carcinomatosis (CRCPC). Tremendous variations exist in the HIPEC delivery.
Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2008
Santiago González-Moreno; Shigeki Kusamura; Dario Baratti; Marcello Deraco
The maximum size of the residual lesions left behind after cytoreductive surgery for peritoneal surface malignancy has consistently been shown to be the main prognostic factor in this setting. However, a uniform assessment method and categorization for this paramount prognostic indicator is lacking.
Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2014
Jesus Esquivel; Pompiliu Piso; Vic J. Verwaal; Thomas Bachleitner-Hofmann; Olivier Glehen; Santiago González-Moreno; Marcello Deraco; Joerg Pelz; Richard B. Alexander; Gabriel Glockzin
JESUS ESQUIVEL, MD,* POMPILIU PISO, MD, VIC VERWAAL, MD, THOMAS BACHLEITNER-HOFMANN, MD, OLIVIER GLEHEN, MD, SANTIAGO GONZÁLEZ-MORENO, MD, MARCELLO DERACO, MD, JOERG PELZ, MD, RICHARD ALEXANDER, MD, AND GABRIEL GLOCKZIN, MD Department of Surgical Oncology, Cancer Treatment Centers of America, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Division of Surgical Oncology, Hospital Barmherzige, Regensburg, Germany National Cancer Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Vienna University Hospital, Vienna, Australia Department of Surgical Oncology, Centre Hospitalier Lyon-Sud, Pierre-Benite, France Department of Surgical Oncology, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Madrid, Spain Department of Surgery, National Cancer Institute, Milan, Italy Department of Surgery, University of Wuerzburg, Wuerzburg, Germany Department of Surgical Oncology, University of Maryland, Baltimore, Maryland Department of Surgical Oncology, Regensburg University Hospital, Regensburg, Germany