Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Scott T. Goodrich is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Scott T. Goodrich.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2011

Effectiveness of a multivariate index assay in the preoperative assessment of ovarian tumors

Frederick R. Ueland; Christopher P. DeSimone; Leigh G. Seamon; Rachel Miller; Scott T. Goodrich; I. Podzielinski; Lori J. Sokoll; Alan Smith; John R. van Nagell; Zhen Zhang

OBJECTIVE: To compare the effectiveness of physician assessment with a new multivariate index assay in identifying high-risk ovarian tumors. METHODS: The multivariate index assay was evaluated in women scheduled for surgery for an ovarian tumor in a prospective, multi-institutional trial involving 27 primary- care and specialty sites throughout the United States. Preoperative serum was collected, and results for the multivariate index assay, physician assessment, and CA 125 were correlated with surgical pathology. Physician assessment was documented by each physician before surgery. CA 125 cutoffs were chosen in accordance with the referral guidelines of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. RESULTS: The study enrolled 590 women, with 524 evaluable for the multivariate index assay and CA 125, and 516 for physician assessment. Fifty-three percent were enrolled by nongynecologic oncologists. There were 161 malignancies and 363 benign ovarian tumors. Physician assessment plus the multivariate index assay correctly identified malignancies missed by physician assessment in 70% of nongynecologic oncologists, and 95% of gynecologic oncologists. The multivariate index assay also detected 76% of malignancies missed by CA 125. Physician assessment plus the multivariate index assay identified 86% of malignancies missed by CA 125, including all advanced cancers. The performance of the multivariate index assay was consistent in early- and late-stage cancers. CONCLUSION: The multivariate index assay demonstrated higher sensitivity and lower specificity compared with physician assessment and CA 125 in detecting ovarian malignancies. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: III


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2012

Ten-year relative survival for epithelial ovarian cancer.

L.A. Baldwin; Bin Huang; R.W. Miller; Thomas C. Tucker; Scott T. Goodrich; I. Podzielinski; Christopher P. DeSimone; Frederick R. Ueland; John R. van Nagell; Leigh G. Seamon

OBJECTIVE: Most patients with epithelial ovarian cancer who are alive at 5 years have active disease. Thus, 10-year survival rather than 5-year survival may be a more appropriate endpoint. Relative survival adjusts for the general survival of the United States population for that race, sex, age, and date at which the diagnosis was coded. Our objective was to estimate relative survival in epithelial ovarian cancer over the course of 10 years. METHODS: Using the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results 1995–2007 database, epithelial ovarian cancer cases were identified. Using the actuarial life table method, relative survival over the course of 10 years was calculated, stratified by stage, classification of residence, surgery as the first course of treatment, race, and age. RESULTS: There were 40,692 patients who met inclusion criteria. The overall relative survival was 65%, 44%, and 36% at 2, 5, and 10 years, respectively. The slope of decline in relative survival was reduced for years 5–10 as compared with years 1–5 after diagnosis. Relative survival at 5 years was 89%, 70%, 36%, and 17%, and at 10 years relative survival was 84%, 59%, 23%, and 8% for stages I, II III, and IV, respectively. At all stages, patients with nonsurgical primary treatment and those with advanced age had reduced relative survival. CONCLUSIONS: The 10-year relative survival for stage III is higher than expected. This information provides the physician and the patient with more accurate prognostic information. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: III


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2011

Long-term Survival of Women With Epithelial Ovarian Cancer Detected by Ultrasonographic Screening

John Rensselaer; Nagell; R.W. Miller; Christopher P. DeSimone; Frederick R. Ueland; I. Podzielinski; Scott T. Goodrich; Jeff W. Elder; Bin Huang; Richard J. Kryscio; Edward J. Pavlik

OBJECTIVE: To estimate the effect of ultrasonographic screening on stage at detection and long-term disease-specific survival of women with epithelial ovarian cancer. METHODS: Eligibility included all asymptomatic women aged 50 years and older and women aged 25 years and older with a documented family history of ovarian cancer. From 1987 to 2011, 37,293 women received annual ultrasonographic screening. Women with abnormal screens underwent tumor morphology indexing, serum biomarker analysis, and surgery. RESULTS: Forty-seven invasive epithelial ovarian cancers and 15 epithelial ovarian tumors of low malignant potential were detected. No women with low malignant potential tumors experienced recurrent disease. Stage distribution for invasive epithelial cancers was: stage I, 22 (47%); stage II, 11 (23%); stage III, 14 (30%), and stage IV, 0 (0%). Follow-up varied from 2 months to 20.1 years (mean, 5.8 years). The 5-year survival rate for invasive epithelial ovarian cancers detected by screening was: stage I, 95%±4.8%; stage II, 77.1%±14.5%; and stage III, 76.2%±12.1%. The 5-year survival rate for all women with invasive epithelial ovarian cancer detected by screening as well as interval cancers was 74.8%±6.6% compared with 53.7%±2.3% for unscreened women with ovarian cancer from the same institution treated by the same surgical and chemotherapeutic protocols (P<.001). CONCLUSION: Annual ultrasonographic screening of asymptomatic women achieved increased detection of early-stage ovarian cancer cases and an increase in 5-year disease-specific survival rate for women with ovarian cancer. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2010

Predicting risk of malignancy in adnexal masses.

John M. McDonald; Stacey Doran; Christopher P. DeSimone; Frederick R. Ueland; Paul D. DePriest; Rachel A. Ware; Brook A. Saunders; Edward J. Pavlik; Scott T. Goodrich; Richard J. Kryscio; John R. van Nagell

OBJECTIVE: To estimate the accuracy of preoperative ultrasonography, serum CA 125, and patient demographics as a means of predicting risk of malignancy in women with a ultrasonographically confirmed adnexal mass. METHODS: Tumor morphology derived from ultrasonographic images, tumor size, tumor bilaterality, serum CA 125, and patient demographics were evaluated preoperatively in 395 patients undergoing surgery from 2001 to 2008. Tumor morphology was classified as complex, solid, or cystic. Preoperative findings were compared with tumor histologic findings at the time of surgery. Multivariable classification and regression tree analysis were used to identify a group of patients at high risk of ovarian malignancy. RESULTS: One hundred eighteen patients had ovarian cancer, 13 patients had ovarian tumors of borderline malignancy, and 264 had benign ovarian tumors. Multivariable classification and regression tree analysis defined women at high risk of ovarian malignancy as those with an adnexal mass having complex or solid morphology and a serum CA 125 value greater than 35 units/mL. This definition had a positive predictive value of 84.7% and a negative predictive value of 92.4% and correctly identified 77.3% of patients with stage I and stage II ovarian cancer and 98.6% of patients with stage III and stage IV ovarian cancer. CONCLUSION: Patients with solid or complex ovarian tumors and an elevated serum CA 125 level (greater than 35 units/mL) are at high risk of ovarian malignancy. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II


Gynecologic Oncology | 2010

Risk of malignancy in sonographically confirmed septated cystic ovarian tumors

Brook A. Saunders; I. Podzielinski; Rachel A. Ware; Scott T. Goodrich; Christopher P. DeSimone; Frederick R. Ueland; Leigh G. Seamon; Jessalyn M. Ubellacker; Edward J. Pavlik; Richard J. Kryscio; John R. van Nagell

OBJECTIVE To determine the risk of malignancy in septated cystic ovarian tumors. MATERIALS 1319 (4.4%) of 29,829 women were identified by transvaginal sonography (TVS) as having a complex cystic ovarian tumor with septations without solid areas or papillary projections and were placed on long-term ultrasound surveillance for ovarian malignancy. RESULTS These 1319 patients had a total of 2870 septated cystic ovarian tumors. 2288 tumors (79.7%) had a septal width <2 mm and 582 (20.3%) had a septal width >or=2 mm. 2286 tumors (79.6%) were <5 cm in diameter and 584 (20.4%) were>or=5 cm in diameter. 1114 septated cystic tumors (38.8%) resolved spontaneously (mean duration to resolution-12 months) and 1756 (61.2%) tumors persisted. 128 patients underwent surgical tumor removal within 3 months of ultrasound. Most common histopathology was: serous cystadenoma (75), mucinous cystadenoma (13), and endometrioma (10). One patient had an ovarian tumor of borderline malignancy (Stage IB). There were no cases of ovarian cancer. Patients were followed from 4 to 252 months (mean-77 months). One patient developed papillary morphology in the contralateral ovary 3.2 years after detection of a septated ovarian cyst and had epithelial ovarian cancer in that ovary and in the omentum (Stage IIIC disease). The remaining patients are all free of ovarian neoplasia after a total of 7642 follow-up years. CONCLUSIONS Septated cystic ovarian tumors without solid areas or papillary projections have a low risk of malignancy and can be followed sonographically without surgery.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2014

The effect of ovarian imaging on the clinical interpretation of a multivariate index assay

Scott T. Goodrich; Robert E. Bristow; Joseph T. Santoso; R.W. Miller; Alan Smith; Zhen Zhang; Frederick R. Ueland

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between imaging and the multivariate index assay (MIA) in the prediction of the likelihood of ovarian malignancy before surgery. STUDY DESIGN Subjects were recruited in 2 related prospective, multiinstitutional trials that involved 44 sites across the United States. Women had ovarian imaging, biomarker analysis, and surgery for an adnexal mass. Ovarian tumors were classified as high risk for solid or papillary morphologic condition on imaging study. Biomarker and imaging results were correlated with surgical findings. RESULTS Of the 1110 women who were enrolled with an adnexal mass on imaging, 1024 cases were evaluable. There were 255 malignant and 769 benign tumors. High-risk findings were present in 46% of 1232 imaging tests and 61% of 1024 MIA tests. The risk of malignancy increased with rising MIA scores; similarly, the likelihood of malignancy was higher for high-risk, compared with low-risk, imaging. Sensitivity and specificity for the prediction of malignancy were 98% (95% CI, 92-99) and 31% (95% CI, 27-34) for ultrasound or MIA; 68% (95% CI, 58-77) and 75% (95% CI, 72-78) for ultrasound and MIA, respectively. For computed tomography scan or MIA, sensitivity was 97% (95% CI, 92-99) and specificity was 22% (95% CI, 16-28); the sensitivity and specificity for computed tomography scan and MIA were 71% (95% CI, 62-79) and 70% (95% CI, 63-76). Only 1.6% of ovarian tumors were malignant when both tests indicated low risk. A logistic regression model to predict risk of malignancy is presented. CONCLUSION An understanding of how pelvic imaging influences the MIA score can help clinicians better interpret the malignant risk of an ovarian tumor.


Cancer Investigation | 2013

Ovarian cyst fluids are a cache of tumor biomarkers that include calgranulin A and calgranulin B isoforms.

Hollie S. Skaggs; Brook A. Saunders; R.W. Miller; Scott T. Goodrich; Monica S. King; Kimberly D. Kimbler; Adam J. Branscum; Eric T. Fung; Paul D. DePriest; John R. van Nagell; Frederick R. Ueland; Andre T. Baron

SELDI-TOF MS analysis of cyst fluids identified 95 peaks that discriminate malignant, borderline, and benign ovarian tumors. Three prominent peaks, which correspond to calgranulin A (m/z 10847) and two isoforms of calgranulin B (m/z 12717 and 13294), have higher concentrations in borderline and malignant cyst fluids. Together, calgranulin A and B distinguish borderline and malignant tumors from benign tumors with 28.6% and 63.6% sensitivity for early stage disease, respectively, at 95% specificity and with 74.8% accuracy. Ovarian cyst fluids are useful for discovering discriminatory biomarkers, such as calgranulin, which may have utility for detecting, diagnosing, and biochemically classifying ovarian tumors.


Military Medicine | 2014

Endometrial Adenocarcinoma Following Supracervical Hysterectomy Managed With Radiation due to Dabigatran Etexilate

Samit A. Patel; Scott T. Goodrich

BACKGROUND Dabigatran etexilate, a new oral anticoagulant, has been developed for use in atrial fibrillation. This medication does not require therapeutic monitoring and there is no reversal agent in the event of life-threatening bleeding. We present a case of vaginal hemorrhage because of endometrial adenocarcinoma after a supracervical hysterectomy in a patient using dabigatran. CASE 74-year-old woman status after supracervical hysterectomy presented with profuse vaginal bleeding. Biopsy confirmed high-grade adenocarcinoma, suggesting endometrial origin. Because of recent use of dabigatran and vaginal bleeding she underwent treatment with full-dose radiation and brachytherapy. CONCLUSION Adenocarcinoma following supracervical hysterectomy is a rare occurrence. In the presence of profuse bleeding because of an anticoagulant with no reversal agents and extended activity, alternate modalities may be used.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2011

Ten-year relative survival for epithelial ovarian cancer

L.A. Baldwin; Rachel A. Ware; Bin Huang; Thomas C. Tucker; Scott T. Goodrich; I. Podzielinski; Christopher P. DeSimone; Frederick R. Ueland; J.R. van Nagell; Leigh G. Seamon

OBJECTIVE Most patients with epithelial ovarian cancer who are alive at 5 years have active disease. Thus, 10-year survival rather than 5-year survival may be a more appropriate endpoint. Relative survival adjusts for the general survival of the United States population for that race, sex, age, and date at which the diagnosis was coded. Our objective was to estimate relative survival in epithelial ovarian cancer over the course of 10 years. METHODS Using the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results 1995-2007 database, epithelial ovarian cancer cases were identified. Using the actuarial life table method, relative survival over the course of 10 years was calculated, stratified by stage, classification of residence, surgery as the first course of treatment, race, and age. RESULTS There were 40,692 patients who met inclusion criteria. The overall relative survival was 65%, 44%, and 36% at 2, 5, and 10 years, respectively. The slope of decline in relative survival was reduced for years 5-10 as compared with years 1-5 after diagnosis. Relative survival at 5 years was 89%, 70%, 36%, and 17%, and at 10 years relative survival was 84%, 59%, 23%, and 8% for stages I, II III, and IV, respectively. At all stages, patients with nonsurgical primary treatment and those with advanced age had reduced relative survival. CONCLUSIONS The 10-year relative survival for stage III is higher than expected. This information provides the physician and the patient with more accurate prognostic information.


Journal of Robotic Surgery | 2011

Robotic surgery for adnexal masses in pregnancy

L.A. Baldwin; I. Podzielinski; Scott T. Goodrich; Leigh G. Seamon

Adnexal masses are a common finding during pregnancy with an incidence of one in 600 pregnancies [1]. A simple cyst occurs in 76% of cases, compared to a multi-cystic or complex mass in 24% [2]. Simple-appearing cystic masses can be managed expectantly; however, rapid growth, complex ultrasonographic characteristics (papillary projections or solid components), or concerns over complications including ovarian torsion or hemorrhage may lead to surgical intervention [3]. Fortunately, only 1% of adnexal masses in pregnancy are malignant [4]. If surgical exploration is necessary, retrospective studies have demonstrated the feasibility, safety, and advantages of minimally invasive surgery over traditional open techniques [5, 6]. We conducted a literature search using Ovid MEDLINE 1950 to November week 4 2010 using the search terms ‘‘pregnancy, robotics, da Vinci’’ with restrictions to the English language. There were no publications describing the use of robotic surgery for adnexal masses in pregnancy.

Collaboration


Dive into the Scott T. Goodrich's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R.W. Miller

University of Kentucky

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zhen Zhang

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan Smith

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge