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Dive into the research topics where Sanziana A. Roman is active.

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Featured researches published by Sanziana A. Roman.


Annals of Surgery | 2002

Virtual Reality Training Improves Operating Room Performance: Results of a Randomized, Double-Blinded Study

Neal E. Seymour; Anthony G. Gallagher; Sanziana A. Roman; Michael O’Brien; Vipin K. Bansal; Dana K. Andersen; Richard M. Satava

ObjectiveTo demonstrate that virtual reality (VR) training transfers technical skills to the operating room (OR) environment. Summary Background DataThe use of VR surgical simulation to train skills and reduce error risk in the OR has never been demonstrated in a prospective, randomized, blinded study. MethodsSixteen surgical residents (PGY 1–4) had baseline psychomotor abilities assessed, then were randomized to either VR training (MIST VR simulator diathermy task) until expert criterion levels established by experienced laparoscopists were achieved (n = 8), or control non-VR-trained (n = 8). All subjects performed laparoscopic cholecystectomy with an attending surgeon blinded to training status. Videotapes of gallbladder dissection were reviewed independently by two investigators blinded to subject identity and training, and scored for eight predefined errors for each procedure minute (interrater reliability of error assessment r > 0.80). ResultsNo differences in baseline assessments were found between groups. Gallbladder dissection was 29% faster for VR-trained residents. Non-VR-trained residents were nine times more likely to transiently fail to make progress (P < .007, Mann-Whitney test) and five times more likely to injure the gallbladder or burn nontarget tissue (chi-square = 4.27, P < .04). Mean errors were six times less likely to occur in the VR-trained group (1.19 vs. 7.38 errors per case;P < .008, Mann-Whitney test). ConclusionsThe use of VR surgical simulation to reach specific target criteria significantly improved the OR performance of residents during laparoscopic cholecystectomy. This validation of transfer of training skills from VR to OR sets the stage for more sophisticated uses of VR in assessment, training, error reduction, and certification of surgeons.


Cancer | 2006

Prognosis of medullary thyroid carcinoma: demographic, clinical, and pathologic predictors of survival in 1252 cases.

Sanziana A. Roman; Rong Lin; Julie Ann Sosa

Medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) is a rare cancer. There is a relative paucity of data over the last decade with regard to the prognosis of these patients. Therefore, the authors used the population‐based Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) registry to update what to their knowledge is one of the largest series of patients with MTC reported to date.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

Clinical and Economic Outcomes of Thyroid and Parathyroid Surgery in Children

Julie Ann Sosa; Charles T. Tuggle; Tracy S. Wang; Daniel C. Thomas; Leon Boudourakis; Scott A. Rivkees; Sanziana A. Roman

CONTEXT Clinical and economic outcomes after thyroidectomy/parathyroidectomy in adults have demonstrated disparities based on patient age and race/ethnicity; there is a paucity of literature on pediatric endocrine outcomes. OBJECTIVE The objective was to examine the clinical and demographic predictors of outcomes after pediatric thyroidectomy/parathyroidectomy. DESIGN This study is a cross-sectional analysis of Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project-National Inpatient Sample hospital discharge information from 1999-2005. All patients who underwent thyroidectomy/parathyroidectomy were included. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were performed to identify independent predictors of patient outcomes. SUBJECTS Subjects included 1199 patients 17 yr old or younger undergoing thyroidectomy/parathyroidectomy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Outcome measures included in-hospital patient complications, length of stay (LOS), and inpatient hospital costs. RESULTS The majority of patients were female (76%), aged 13-17 yr (71%), and White (69%). Whites were more often in the highest income group (80% vs. 8% for Hispanic and 6% for Black; P < 0.01) and had private/HMO insurance (76% vs. 10% for Hispanic and 5% for Black; P < 0.001) rather than Medicaid (13% vs. 32% for Hispanic and 41% for Black; P < 0.001). Ninety-one percent of procedures were thyroidectomies and 9% parathyroidectomies. Children aged 0-6 yr had higher complication rates (22% vs. 15% for 7-12 yr and 11% for 13-17 yr; P < 0.01), LOS (3.3 d vs. 2.3 for 7-12 yr and 1.8 for 13-17 yr; P < 0.01), and higher costs. Compared with children from higher-income families, those from lower-income families had higher complication rates (11.5 vs. 7.7%; P < 0.05), longer LOS (2.7 vs. 1.7 d; P < 0.01), and higher costs. Children had higher endocrine-specific complication rates than adults after parathyroidectomy (15.2 vs. 6.2%; P < 0.01) and thyroidectomy (9.1 vs. 6.3%; P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS Children undergoing thyroidectomy/parathyroidectomy have higher complication rates than adult patients. Outcomes were optimized when surgeries were performed by high-volume surgeons. There appears to be disparity in access to high-volume surgeons for children from low-income families, Blacks, and Hispanics.


Thyroid | 2011

American Thyroid Association Design and Feasibility of a Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial of Prophylactic Central Lymph Node Dissection for Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma

Tobias Carling; Sally E. Carty; Maria M. Ciarleglio; David S. Cooper; Gerard M. Doherty; Lawrence T. Kim; Richard T. Kloos; Ernest L. Mazzaferri; Peter Peduzzi; Sanziana A. Roman; Rebecca S. Sippel; Julie Ann Sosa; Brendan C. Stack; David L. Steward; Ralph P. Tufano; R. Michael Tuttle

BACKGROUND The role of prophylactic central lymph node dissection in papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) is controversial in patients who have no pre- or intraoperative evidence of nodal metastasis (clinically N0; cN0). The controversy relates to its unproven role in reducing recurrence rates while possibly increasing morbidity (permanent hypoparathyroidism and unintentional recurrent laryngeal nerve injury). METHODS AND RESULTS We examined the design and feasibility of a multi-institutional prospective randomized controlled trial of prophylactic central lymph node dissection in cN0 PTC. Assuming a 7-year study with 4 years of enrollment, 5 years of average follow-up, a recurrence rate of 10% after 7 years, a 25% relative reduction in the rate of the primary endpoint (newly identified structural disease; i.e., persistent, recurrent, or distant metastatic disease) with central lymph node dissection and an annual dropout rate of 3%, a total of 5840 patients would have to be included in the study to achieve at least 80% statistical power. Similarly, given the low rates of morbidity, several thousands of patients would need to be included to identify a significant difference in rates of permanent hypoparathyroidism and unintentional recurrent laryngeal nerve injury. CONCLUSION Given the low rates of both newly identified structural disease and morbidity after surgery for cN0 PTC, prohibitively large sample sizes would be required for sufficient statistical power to demonstrate significant differences in outcomes. Thus, a prospective randomized controlled trial of prophylactic central lymph node dissection in cN0 PTC is not readily feasible.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

Calcitonin Measurement in the Evaluation of Thyroid Nodules in the United States: A Cost-Effectiveness and Decision Analysis

Kevin Cheung; Sanziana A. Roman; Tracy S. Wang; Hugh Walker; Julie Ann Sosa

CONTEXT European studies have shown that the use of routine calcitonin screening for detection of medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) in patients with thyroid nodules increases the detection of occult MTC and may improve patient outcomes. Calcitonin screening for MTC has not been recommended in recent U.S. practice guidelines. OBJECTIVE Our objective was to determine the cost-effectiveness (C/E) of routine calcitonin screening in adult patients with thyroid nodules in the United States. SETTINGS/SUBJECTS A decision model was developed for a hypothetical group of adult patients presenting for evaluation of thyroid nodules in the United States. Patients were screened using current American Thyroid Association guidelines only, or American Thyroid Association guidelines with routine serum calcitonin screening. Input data were obtained from the literature, the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results and Healthcare Cost and Utilization Projects Nationwide Inpatient Sample databases, and the Medicare Reimbursement Schedule. Sensitivity analyses were performed for a number of input variables. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES C/E, measured in dollars per life years saved (LYS), was calculated. RESULTS Addition of calcitonin screening to current American Thyroid Association guidelines for the evaluation of thyroid nodules would cost


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2012

A Meta-analysis of Preoperative Localization Techniques for Patients with Primary Hyperparathyroidism

Kevin Cheung; Tracy S. Wang; Forough Farrokhyar; Sanziana A. Roman; Julie Ann Sosa

11,793 per LYS (


Archives of Surgery | 2009

Outcomes From 3144 Adrenalectomies in the United States Which Matters More, Surgeon Volume or Specialty?

Henry S. Park; Sanziana A. Roman; Julie Ann Sosa

10,941-


Annals of Surgery | 2009

Evolution of the Surgeon Volume / Patient Outcome Relationship

Leon Boudourakis; Tracy S. Wang; Sanziana A. Roman; Rani A. Desai; Julie Ann Sosa

12,646). When extrapolated to the national level, calcitonin screening for MTC in the United States would yield an additional 113,000 life years at a cost increase of 5.3%. Calcitonin screening C/E is sensitive to patient age and gender, and to changes in disease prevalence, specificity of fine needle aspiration and calcitonin testing, calcitonin screening level, costs of testing, and length of follow-up. CONCLUSION Routine serum calcitonin screening in patients undergoing evaluation for thyroid nodules appears to be cost effective in the United States, with C/E comparable to the measurement of thyroid stimulating hormone, colonoscopy, and mammography screening.


Annals of Surgery | 2014

Extent of Surgery for Papillary Thyroid Cancer Is Not Associated with Survival: An Analysis of 61,775 Patients

Mohamed A. Adam; John Pura; Lin Gu; Michaela A. Dinan; Douglas S. Tyler; Shelby D. Reed; Randall P. Scheri; Sanziana A. Roman; Julie Ann Sosa

BackgroundReported accuracy of preoperative localization imaging for primary hyperparathyroidism (pHPT) varies. The purpose of this study is to determine the accuracy of ultrasound, sestamibi-single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), and four-dimensional computed tomography (4D-CT) as preoperative localization strategies.MethodsA meta-analysis was performed of studies investigating the accuracy of ultrasound, sestamibi-SPECT, and 4D-CT for preoperative localization in pHPT. Electronic databases were systematically searched, and two independent reviewers reviewed results using specific criteria. Study quality was assessed using a validated measure for diagnostic imaging studies. Study heterogeneity and pooled results were calculated.Results43 studies met criteria for inclusion, and data were available for extraction in 19 ultrasound, 9 sestamibi-SPECT, and 4 4D-CT studies. Ultrasound had pooled sensitivity and positive predictive value (PPV) of 76.1% (95% CI 70.4–81.4%) and 93.2% (90.7–95.3%), respectively. Sestamibi-SPECT had pooled sensitivity and PPV of 78.9% (64–90.6%) and 90.7% (83.5–96.0%), respectively. Only two 4D-CT studies investigated patients undergoing initial parathyroidectomy. Results suggested sensitivity and PPV of 89.4% and 93.5%, respectively.ConclusionsUltrasound and sestamibi-SPECT are similar in ability to preoperatively localize abnormal parathyroid glands in pHPT. Accuracy may be improved with 4D-CT; however, further investigation is required. Choice of preoperative imaging strategy depends on numerous patient, institutional, and economic factors of which the surgeon must be aware.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2008

A Population-Based Study of Outcomes from Thyroidectomy in Aging Americans: At What Cost?

Julie Ann Sosa; Pritesh Mehta; Tracy S. Wang; Leon Boudourakis; Sanziana A. Roman

OBJECTIVE To assess the effect of surgeon volume and specialty on clinical and economic outcomes after adrenalectomy. DESIGN Population-based retrospective cohort analysis. SETTING Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Nationwide Inpatient Sample. PARTICIPANTS Adults (>or=18 years) undergoing adrenalectomy in the United States (1999-2005). Patient demographic and clinical characteristics, surgeon specialty (general vs urologist), surgeon adrenalectomy volume, and hospital factors were assessed. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The chi(2) test, analysis of variance, and multivariate linear and logistic regression were used to assess in-hospital complications, mean hospital length of stay (LOS), and total inpatient hospital costs. RESULTS A total of 3144 adrenalectomies were included. Mean patient age was 53.7 years; 58.8% were women and 77.4% white. A higher proportion of general surgeons were high-volume surgeons compared with urologists (34.1% vs 18.2%, P < .001). Low-volume surgeons had more complications (18.2% vs 11.3%, P < .001) and their patients had longer LOS (5.5 vs 3.9 days, P < .001) than did high-volume surgeons; urologists had more complications (18.4% vs 15.2%, P = .03) and higher costs (

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Tracy S. Wang

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Paolo Goffredo

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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