Publications by authors named "M A Vollebergh"

Purpose: This study aimed to evaluate the added benefit of body MRI (covering the chest, abdomen, and pelvis) to detect the primary tumour in patients with adenocarcinoma of unknown primary (ACUP) and a suspected abdominal malignancy in whom previous diagnostic work-up with CT and/or FDG-PET/CT did not yield a primary tumour diagnosis.

Methods: Thirty ACUP patients with a suspected primary tumour in the abdomen/pelvis (based on pathology and/or pattern of disease) underwent MRI (T2-weighted, DWI, pre- and post-contrast T1-weighted) after completion of their initial diagnostic work-up with CT and/or PET/CT. Effects of MRI to establish a primary tumour diagnosis (and to detect additional metastatic sites) were documented.

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Article Synopsis
  • - This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated how effective [F]FDG PET/CT scans are in identifying the primary tumors in patients with cancer of unknown primary (CUP) based on the location of their predominant metastatic sites.
  • - The study analyzed 1865 patients from 32 studies, finding that the detection rates for primary tumors varied by metastatic site, with brain metastases showing the highest detection rate of 74%, while soft tissue metastases had the lowest at 35%.
  • - The results indicate that the performance of [F]FDG PET/CT is influenced by where the metastases are located, suggesting a need for customized diagnostic strategies and further exploration of alternative imaging techniques.
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Background: Since 2016, staging laparoscopy has been implemented in the diagnostic workup of patients with gastric cancer. Staging laparoscopy aims to detect incurable disease (peritoneal metastases and irresectable tumors) and to prevent futile laparotomies.

Methods: In this population-based nationwide study, we sought patient- and tumor characteristics associated with undergoing a staging laparoscopy.

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Introduction: The OligoMetastatic Esophagogastric Cancer (OMEC) project aims to provide clinical practice guidelines for the definition, diagnosis, and treatment of esophagogastric oligometastatic disease (OMD).

Methods: Guidelines were developed according to AGREE II and GRADE principles. Guidelines were based on a systematic review (OMEC-1), clinical case discussions (OMEC-2), and a Delphi consensus study (OMEC-3) by 49 European expert centers for esophagogastric cancer.

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Detection of peritoneal dissemination (PD) in gastric cancer (GC) patients remains challenging. The feasibility of tumor-guided cell-free DNA (cfDNA) detection in prospectively collected peritoneal fluid (ascites and peritoneal lavage) was investigated and compared to conventional cytology in 28 patients. Besides conventional cytology, next generation sequencing was performed on primary tumor DNA and cell-free DNA from peritoneal fluid.

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