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Featured researches published by Thuy B. Tran.


JAMA Surgery | 2015

Presentation and Clinical Outcomes of Choledochal Cysts in Children and Adults A Multi-institutional Analysis

Kevin C. Soares; Yuhree Kim; Gaya Spolverato; Shishir K. Maithel; Todd W. Bauer; Hugo P. Marques; Mafalda Sobral; Maria Knoblich; Thuy B. Tran; Luca Aldrighetti; Nicolas Jabbour; George A. Poultsides; T. Clark Gamblin; Timothy M. Pawlik

IMPORTANCE Choledochal cysts (CCs) are rare, with risk of infection and cancer. OBJECTIVE To characterize the natural history, management, and long-term implications of CC disease. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A total of 394 patients who underwent resection of a CC between January 1, 1972, and April 11, 2014, were identified from an international multi-institutional database. Patients were followed up through September 27, 2014. Clinicopathologic characteristics, operative details, and outcome data were analyzed from May 1, 2014, to October 14, 2014. INTERVENTION Resection of CC. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Management, morbidity, and overall survival. RESULTS Among 394 patients, there were 135 children (34.3%) and 318 women (80.7%). Adults were more likely to present with abdominal pain (71.8% vs 40.7%; P < .001) and children were more likely to have jaundice (31.9% vs 11.6%; P < .001). Preoperative interventions were more commonly performed in adults (64.5% vs 31.1%; P < .001), including endoscopic retrograde pancreatography (55.6% vs 27.4%; P < .001), percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography (17.4% vs 5.9%; P < .001), and endobiliary stenting (18.1% vs 4.4%; P < .001)). Type I CCs were more often seen in children vs adults (79.7% vs 64.9%; P = .003); type IV CCs predominated in the adult population (23.9% vs 12.0%; P = .006). Extrahepatic bile duct resection with hepaticoenterostomy was the most frequently performed procedure in both age groups (80.3%). Perioperative morbidity was higher in adults (35.1% vs 16.3%; P < .001). On pathologic examination, 10 patients (2.5%) had cholangiocarcinoma. After a median follow-up of 28 months, 5-year overall survival was 95.5%. On follow-up, 13 patients (3.3%), presented with biliary cancer. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Presentation of CC varied between children and adults, and resection was associated with a degree of morbidity. Although concomitant cancer was uncommon, it occurred in 3.0% of the patients. Long-term surveillance is indicated given the possibility of future development of biliary cancer after CC resection.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2015

Factors that influence minority use of high-volume hospitals for colorectal cancer care.

Lyen C. Huang; Thuy B. Tran; Yifei Ma; Justine V. Ngo; Kim F. Rhoads

BACKGROUND: Previous studies suggest that minorities cluster in low-quality hospitals despite living close to better performing hospitals. This may contribute to persistent disparities in cancer outcomes. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this work was to examine how travel distance, insurance status, and neighborhood socioeconomic factors influenced minority underuse of high-volume hospitals for colorectal cancer. DESIGN: The study was a retrospective, cross-sectional, population-based study. SETTINGS: All hospitals in California from 1996 to 2006 were included. PATIENTS: Patients with colorectal cancer diagnosed and treated in California between 1996 and 2006 were identified using California Cancer Registry data. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Multivariable logistic regression models predicting high-volume hospital use were adjusted for age, sex, race, stage, comorbidities, insurance status, and neighborhood socioeconomic factors. RESULTS: A total of 79,231 patients treated in 417 hospitals were included in the study. High-volume hospitals were independently associated with an 8% decrease in the hazard of death compared with other settings. A lower proportion of minorities used high-volume hospitals despite a higher proportion living nearby. Although insurance status and socioeconomic factors were independently associated with high-volume hospital use, only socioeconomic factors attenuated differences in high-volume hospital use of black and Hispanic patients compared with white patients. LIMITATIONS: The use of cross-sectional data and racial and ethnic misclassifications were limitations in this study. CONCLUSIONS: Minority patients do not use high-volume hospitals despite improved outcomes and geographic access. Low socioeconomic status predicts low use of high-volume settings in select minority groups. Our results provide a roadmap for developing interventions to increase the use of and access to higher quality care and outcomes. Increasing minority use of high-volume hospitals may require community outreach programs and changes in physician referral practices.


Annals of Surgery | 2015

Sarcoma Resection With and Without Vascular Reconstruction: A Matched Case-control Study.

George A. Poultsides; Thuy B. Tran; Eduardo Zambrano; Lucas Janson; David G. Mohler; Matthew W. Mell; Raffi Avedian; Brendan C. Visser; Jason T. Lee; Kristen N. Ganjoo; Edmund J. Harris; Jeffrey A. Norton

OBJECTIVE To examine the impact of major vascular resection on sarcoma resection outcomes. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA En bloc resection and reconstruction of involved vessels is being increasingly performed during sarcoma surgery; however, the perioperative and oncologic outcomes of this strategy are not well described. METHODS Patients undergoing sarcoma resection with (VASC) and without (NO-VASC) vascular reconstruction were 1:2 matched on anatomic site, histology, grade, size, synchronous metastasis, and primary (vs. repeat) resection. R2 resections were excluded. Endpoints included perioperative morbidity, mortality, local recurrence, and survival. RESULTS From 2000 to 2014, 50 sarcoma patients underwent VASC resection. These were matched with 100 NO-VASC patients having similar clinicopathologic characteristics. The rates of any complication (74% vs. 44%, P = 0.002), grade 3 or higher complication (38% vs. 18%, P = 0.024), and transfusion (66% vs. 33%, P < 0.001) were all more common in the VASC group. Thirty-day (2% vs. 0%, P = 0.30) or 90-day mortality (6% vs. 2%, P = 0.24) were not significantly higher. Local recurrence (5-year, 51% vs. 54%, P = 0.11) and overall survival after resection (5-year, 59% vs. 53%, P = 0.67) were similar between the 2 groups. Within the VASC group, overall survival was not affected by the type of vessel involved (artery vs. vein) or the presence of histology-proven vessel wall invasion. CONCLUSIONS Vascular resection and reconstruction during sarcoma resection significantly increases perioperative morbidity and requires meticulous preoperative multidisciplinary planning. However, the oncologic outcome appears equivalent to cases without major vascular involvement. The anticipated need for vascular resection and reconstruction should not be a contraindication to sarcoma resection.


Annals of Surgery | 2017

Curative surgical resection of adrenocortical carcinoma: Determining long-term outcome based on conditional disease-free probability

Yuhree Kim; Georgios A. Margonis; Jason D. Prescott; Thuy B. Tran; Lauren M. Postlewait; Shishir K. Maithel; Tracy S. Wang; Jason A. Glenn; Ioannis Hatzaras; Rivfka Shenoy; John E. Phay; Kara Keplinger; Ryan C. Fields; Linda X. Jin; Sharon M. Weber; Ahmed Salem; Jason K. Sicklick; Shady Gad; Adam C. Yopp; John C. Mansour; Quan-Yang Duh; Natalie Seiser; Carmen C. Solorzano; Colleen M. Kiernan; Konstantinos I. Votanopoulos; Edward A. Levine; George A. Poultsides; Timothy M. Pawlik

Objective: To evaluate conditional disease-free survival (CDFS) for patients who underwent curative intent surgery for adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC). Background: ACC is a rare but aggressive tumor. Survival estimates are usually reported as survival from the time of surgery. CDFS estimates may be more clinically relevant by accounting for the changing likelihood of disease-free survival (DFS) according to time elapsed after surgery. Methods: CDFS was assessed using a multi-institutional cohort of patients. Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate factors associated with DFS. Three-year CDFS (CDFS3) estimates at “x” year after surgery were calculated as follows: CDFS3 = DFS(x+3)/DFS(x). Results: One hundred ninety-two patients were included in the study cohort; median patient age was 52 years. On presentation, 36% of patients had a functional tumor and median size was 11.5 cm. Most patients underwent R0 resection (75%) and 9% had N1 disease. Overall 1-, 3-, and 5-year DFS was 59%, 34%, and 22%, respectively. Using CDFS estimates, the probability of remaining disease free for an additional 3 years given that the patient had survived without disease at 1, 3, and 5 years, was 43%, 53%, and 70%, respectively. Patients with less favorable prognosis at baseline demonstrated the greatest increase in CDFS3 over time (eg, capsular invasion: 28%–88%, &Dgr;60% vs no capsular invasion: 51%–87%, &Dgr;36%). Conclusions: DFS estimates for patients with ACC improved dramatically over time, in particular among patients with initial worse prognoses. CDFS estimates may provide more clinically relevant information about the changing likelihood of DFS over time.


Hpb | 2016

Elevated NLR in gallbladder cancer and cholangiocarcinoma – making bad cancers even worse: results from the US Extrahepatic Biliary Malignancy Consortium

Eliza W. Beal; Lai Wei; Cecilia G. Ethun; Sylvester M. Black; Mary Dillhoff; Ahmed Salem; Sharon M. Weber; Thuy B. Tran; George A. Poultsides; Andre Y. Son; Ioannis Hatzaras; Linda X. Jin; Ryan C. Fields; Stefan Buettner; Timothy M. Pawlik; Charles R. Scoggins; Robert C.G. Martin; Chelsea A. Isom; K. Idrees; Harveshp Mogal; Perry Shen; Shishir K. Maithel; Carl Schmidt

BACKGROUND Gallbladder and extrahepatic biliary malignancies are aggressive tumors with high risk of recurrence and death. We hypothesize that elevated preoperative Neutrophil-Lymphocyte Ratios (NLR) are associated with poor prognosis among patients undergoing resection of gallbladder or extrahepatic biliary cancers. METHODS Patients who underwent complete surgical resection between 2000-2014 were identified from 10 academic centers (n=525). Overall (OS) and recurrence-free survival (RFS) were analyzed by stratifying patients with normal (<5) versus elevated (>5) NLR. RESULTS Overall, 375 patients had NLR <5 while 150 patients had NLR >5. Median OS was 24.5 months among patients with NLR<5 versus 17.0 months among patients with NLR>5 (p<0.001). NLR was also associated with OS in subgroup analysis of patients with gallbladder cancer. In fact, on multivariable analysis, NLR>5, dyspnea and preoperative peak bilirubin were independently associated with OS in patients with gallbladder cancer. Median RFS was 26.8 months in patients with NLR<5 versus 22.7 months among patients with NLR>5 (p=0.030). NLR>5 was independently associated with worse RFS for patients with gallbladder cancer. CONCLUSIONS Elevated NLR was associated with worse outcomes in patients with gallbladder and extrahepatic biliary cancers after curative-intent resection. NLR is easily measured and may provide important prognostic information.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2017

Neuroendocrine liver metastasis: The chance to be cured after liver surgery

Fabio Bagante; Gaya Spolverato; Katiuscha Merath; Lauren M. Postlewait; George A. Poultsides; Matthew G. Mullen; Todd W. Bauer; Ryan C. Fields; Jorge Lamelas; Hugo P. Marques; Luca Aldrighetti; Thuy B. Tran; Shishir K. Maithel; Timothy M. Pawlik

Neuroendocrine liver metastasis tumors (NELM) are a heterogeneous group of neoplasms with varied histologic features and a wide range of clinical behaviors. We aimed to identify the fraction of patients cured after liver surgery for NELM.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2016

Actual 10-year survivors following resection of adrenocortical carcinoma

Thuy B. Tran; Lauren M. Postlewait; Shishir K. Maithel; Jason D. Prescott; Tracy S. Wang; Jason A. Glenn; John E. Phay; Kara Keplinger; Ryan C. Fields; Linda X. Jin; Sharon M. Weber; Ahmed Salem; Jason K. Sicklick; Shady Gad; Adam C. Yopp; John C. Mansour; Quan-Yang Duh; Natalie Seiser; Carmen C. Solorzano; Colleen M. Kiernan; Konstantinos I. Votanopoulos; Edward A. Levine; Ioannis Hatzaras; Rivfka Shenoy; Timothy M. Pawlik; Jeffrey A. Norton; George A. Poultsides

Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare and aggressive malignancy with limited therapeutic options beyond surgical resection. The characteristics of actual long‐term survivors following surgical resection for ACC have not been previously reported.


JAMA Surgery | 2016

Nomograms to Predict Recurrence-Free and Overall Survival After Curative Resection of Adrenocortical Carcinoma

Yuhree Kim; Georgios A. Margonis; Jason D. Prescott; Thuy B. Tran; Lauren M. Postlewait; Shishir K. Maithel; Tracy S. Wang; Douglas B. Evans; Ioannis Hatzaras; Rivfka Shenoy; John E. Phay; Kara Keplinger; Ryan C. Fields; Linda X. Jin; Sharon M. Weber; Ahmed Salem; Jason K. Sicklick; Shady Gad; Adam C. Yopp; John C. Mansour; Quan-Yang Duh; Natalie Seiser; Carmen C. Solorzano; Colleen M. Kiernan; Konstantinos I. Votanopoulos; Edward A. Levine; George A. Poultsides; Timothy M. Pawlik

IMPORTANCE Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare but aggressive endocrine tumor, and the prognostic factors associated with long-term outcomes after surgical resection remain poorly defined. OBJECTIVES To define clinicopathological variables associated with recurrence-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) after curative surgical resection of ACC and to propose nomograms for individual risk prediction. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Nomograms to predict RFS and OS after surgical resection of ACC were proposed using a multi-institutional cohort of patients who underwent curative-intent surgery for ACC at 13 major institutions in the United States between March 17, 1994, and December 22, 2014. The dates of our study analysis were April 15, 2015, to May 12, 2015. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The discriminative ability and calibration of the nomograms to predict RFS and OS were tested using C statistics, calibration plots, and Kaplan-Meier curves. RESULTS In total, 148 patients who underwent surgery for ACC were included in the study. The median patient age was 53 years, and 65.5% (97 of 148) of the patients were female. One-third of the patients (35.1% [52 of 148]) had a functional tumor, and the median tumor size was 11.2 cm. Most patients (77.7% [115 of 148]) underwent R0 resection, and 8.8% (13 of 148) of the patients had N1 disease. Using backward stepwise selection of clinically important variables with the Akaike information criterion, the following variables were incorporated in the prediction of RFS: tumor size of at least 12 cm (hazard ratio [HR], 3.00; 95% CI, 1.63-5.70; P < .001), positive nodal status (HR, 4.78; 95% CI, 1.47-15.50; P = .01), stage III/IV (HR, 1.80; 95% CI, 0.95-3.39; P = .07), cortisol-secreting tumor (HR, 2.38; 95% CI, 1.27-4.48; P = .01), and capsular invasion (HR, 1.96; 95% CI, 1.02-3.74; P = .04). Factors selected as predicting OS were tumor size of at least 12 cm (HR, 1.78; 95% CI, 1.00-3.17; P = .05), positive nodal status (HR, 5.89; 95% CI, 2.05-16.87; P = .001), and R1 margin (HR, 2.83; 95% CI, 1.51-5.30; P = .001). The discriminative ability and calibration of the nomograms revealed good predictive ability as indicated by the C statistics (0.74 for RFS and 0.70 for OS). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Independent predictors of survival and recurrence risk after curative-intent surgery for ACC were selected to create nomograms predicting RFS and OS. The nomograms were able to stratify patients into prognostic groups and performed well on internal validation.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2015

Neutrophil‐lymphocyte and platelet‐lymphocyte ratio as predictors of disease specific survival after resection of adrenocortical carcinoma

Fabio Bagante; Thuy B. Tran; Lauren M. Postlewait; Shishir K. Maithel; Tracy S. Wang; Douglas B. Evans; Ioannis Hatzaras; Rivfka Shenoy; John E. Phay; Kara Keplinger; Ryan C. Fields; Linda X. Jin; Sharon M. Weber; Ahmed Salem; Jason K. Sicklick; Shady Gad; Adam C. Yopp; John C. Mansour; Quan-Yang Duh; Natalie Seiser; Carmen C. Solorzano; Colleen M. Kiernan; Konstantinos I. Votanopoulos; Edward A. Levine; George A. Poultsides; Timothy M. Pawlik

The systemic inflammatory response may be associated with tumor progression. We sought to analyze the impact of neutrophil‐lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and platelet‐lymphocyte ratio (PLR) on recurrence‐free survival (RFS) and disease‐specific survival (DSS) among patients who underwent surgery for adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC).


Hpb | 2015

Pancreatectomy with vein reconstruction: technique matters

Monica M. Dua; Thuy B. Tran; Jill Klausner; Kim J. Hwa; George A. Poultsides; Jeffrey A. Norton; Brendan C. Visser

BACKGROUND A variety of techniques have been described for portal vein (PV) and/or superior mesenteric vein (SMV) resection/reconstruction during a pancreatectomy. The ideal strategy remains unclear. METHODS Patients who underwent PV/SMV resection/reconstruction during a pancreatectomy from 2005 to 2014 were identified. Medical records and imaging were retrospectively reviewed for operative details and outcomes, with particular emphasis on patency. RESULTS Ninety patients underwent vein resection/reconstruction with one of five techniques: (i) longitudinal venorrhaphy (LV, n = 17); (ii) transverse venorrhaphy (TV, n = 9); (iii) primary end-to-end (n = 28); (iv) patch venoplasty (PV, n = 17); and (v) interposition graft (IG, n = 19). With a median follow-up of 316 days, thrombosis was observed in 16/90 (18%). The rate of thrombosis varied according to technique. All patients with primary end-to-end or TV remained patent. LV, PV and IG were all associated with significant rates of thrombosis (P = 0.001 versus no thrombosis). Comparing thrombosed to patent, there were no differences with respect to pancreatectomy type, pre-operative knowledge of vein involvement and neoadjuvant therapy. Prophylactic aspirin was used in 69% of the total cohort (66% of patent, 81% of thrombosed) and showed no protective benefit. CONCLUSIONS Primary end-to-end and TV have superior patency than the alternatives after PV/SMV resection and should be the preferred techniques for short (<3 cm) reconstructions.

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Ryan C. Fields

Washington University in St. Louis

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Timothy M. Pawlik

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

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Sharon M. Weber

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Carl Schmidt

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

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Ahmed Salem

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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