1,108 results match your criteria: "American College of Surgeons.[Affiliation]"

Background: Prescription opioids are responsible for a significant proportion of opioid-related deaths in the United States. Approximately 6% of opioid-naïve patients who receive opioid prescriptions after surgery become chronic opioid users. However, chronic opioid use after bariatric surgery may be twice as common.

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Background: Gastrostomy tube (GT) placement is one of the most common procedures performed by pediatric surgeons; however, no current national clinical data registry exists to assess GT-specific care processes and morbidity. The American College of Surgeons (ACS) National Surgical Quality Improvement Program-Pediatric (NSQIPPed) GT Pilot was created to provide participants with these data. This study aims to analyze these data to identify variability in perioperative practices and post-operative morbidity in pediatric GT operations and to provide targets for future quality improvement (QI) interventions.

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Background: This study evaluated the quality of cancer recurrence data in the National Cancer Database (NCDB) to determine if missingness and reporting consistency have improved enough to support national research.

Methods: This multi-methods study included NCDB analyses and a cancer registry staff survey. Trends in recurrence data missingness from 2004 to 2021 and multivariable analyses of factors associated with missingness from 2017 to 2021 were evaluated for 4,568,927 patients with non-metastatic cancer.

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Primary care follow-up improves outcomes in older adults following emergency general surgery admission.

J Trauma Acute Care Surg

October 2024

From the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Division of General Surgery (M.P.G.), Toronto Ontario, Canada; Institute of Health Policy, Management, and Evaluation (M.P.G., B.W.T., A.B.N., S.E.B., B.H.), Department of Surgery (M.P.G., A.B.N., B.H.), and Interdepartmental Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine (B.W.T., B.H.), University of Toronto; Sunnybrook Research Institute (A.B.N., S.E.B., L.J., B.H., M.P.G.), Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Trauma Quality Improvement Program, American College of Surgeons (A.B.N.), Chicago, Illinois; and ICES (A.B.N., S.E.B., R.S., L.J., A.H., B.H.), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Background: While preoperative optimization improves outcomes for older adults undergoing major elective surgery, no such optimization is possible in the emergent setting. Surgeons must identify postoperative interventions to improve outcomes among older emergency general surgery (EGS) patients. The objective of this cohort study was to examine the association between early follow-up with a primary care physician (PCP) and the risk of nursing home acceptance or death in the year following EGS admission among older adults.

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Background: Current American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging for colorectal cancer utilizes TNM framework groups disease based on extent and provides prognostic information, ideally with a hierarchical logic. We sought to evaluate survival as a function of stage within the 8 edition AJCC staging system for colon and rectal cancer.

Methods: Patients with primary colon or rectal cancer diagnosed 2010-2016 were identified from the National Cancer Database (NCDB).

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Introduction: A growing need exists for language-concordant healthcare for Spanish speakers in the United States. More than three-quarters of American medical schools provide Spanish language instruction, but little data exists on best practices. The purpose of this retrospective study was to examine whether an online medical Spanish course is effective at improving medical students' Spanish proficiency.

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Background: Addressing equity in healthcare is necessary to improve population health outcomes. In doing so, a requisite level of foundational resources, organization, and processes are needed. Although increasing attention is being devoted to addressing health inequities, the current landscape supporting these efforts remains unknown.

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DEI and social responsibility.

Curr Probl Surg

December 2024

Department of Surgery, Boston Medical Center, Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston, MA; Boston University School of Medicine, Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, Boston, MA. Electronic address:

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The National Cancer Database (NCDB) collects data from approximately 1,500 Commission on Cancer (CoC) facilities and represent 73.7% of newly diagnosed cancers nationwide. The American College of Surgeons Cancer Program developed it first annual report from the NCDB 2021 participant user file reporting new observations and recent trends of cancer diagnoses, patient demographics, and treatments as well as an in-depth report on treatment and outcomes in breast, pancreas, and colon cancers.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The National Accreditation Program for Breast Centers (NAPBC) initiated a quality collaborative to evaluate the time between breast cancer screening and treatment, analyzing data from 2019 to 2021.
  • - A total of 373 accredited centers participated, with 311 providing complete metrics, revealing that the actual treatment time exceeded expectations across various intervals, from screening to diagnosis and biopsy to treatment.
  • - Findings indicated discrepancies in treatment timing, with factors like higher case volumes and dedicated breast surgeons linked to longer intervals, highlighting the need for further investigation into quality measures across different centers.
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American College of Surgeons survival calculator for biliary tract cancers: using machine learning to individualize predictions.

Surgery

November 2024

American College of Surgeons Cancer Programs, Chicago, IL; Department of Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN. Electronic address:

Background: Although cancer prognosis is most commonly estimated by tumor stage, survival is multifactorial. Our objective was to develop an American College of Surgeons "Biliary Tract Cancer Survival Calculator" prototype using machine learning to generate personalized survival estimates based on patient, tumor, and treatment factors.

Methods: The National Cancer Database was used to identify all patients with biliary tract malignancies between 2010 and 2017 including intrahepatic bile duct, extrahepatic bile duct, and gallbladder cancers.

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The purpose of this editorial is to illustrate how the Operative Standards for Cancer Surgery can be used as a tool to support education of surgical trainees. The three-volume text is a valuable resource not only for learning the scientific principles related to surgical oncology, but also as a technical guide for critical aspects of performing operations and a primer for quality assurance going forward in a surgical career.

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Importance: The American College of Surgeons (ACS) operative standards were established to detail critical elements of cancer surgery, reduce technical variation, and improve outcomes. Two of the 6 operative standards target adequate axillary surgery for breast cancer. The potential association of the operative standards with short-term oncologic outcomes, such as nodal yield and nodal positivity rates, is currently unknown.

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The high success rate of current dental implant protocols makes studies of catastrophic failures a rarity; however, this article presents a case study in which faulty medical intervention was the direct cause of traumatic implant failure. The patient, who had been treated with implants that successfully osseointegrated, ultimately experienced a life-threatening medical incident due to an ill-fitting definitive prosthesis. This case report includes a detailed narrative of how this patient, who began his dental journey with compromised and missing teeth, became edentulous and then, following an arduous recovery, was restored to full function with a meticulously planned revision treatment.

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Purpose: Persistent smoking after cancer diagnosis causes adverse outcomes while smoking cessation can improve survival. Thus, integration of smoking assessment and cessation assistance into routine cancer care is critical. Aiming for incremental practice change that could be sustained and built upon through future quality improvement (QI) projects, the American College of Surgeons initiated Just ASK in 2022 to increase implementation of smoking assessment among its accredited Cancer Programs.

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Background: Guideline-concordant care (GCC) is associated with improved survival for patients with cancer; however, variations in receipt of GCC remain a concern. The objective of this study was to evaluate the association of Commission on Cancer (CoC) hospital accreditation status with receipt of GCC and survival among patients with colon cancer.

Methods: This retrospective observational study identified patients diagnosed with stage I-IV colon cancer from 2018 to 2020 from the National Program of Cancer Registries and Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program Database.

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Background: Structured preparation is necessary to conduct quality improvement (QI) strategies that are relevant to the problem, feasible, appropriately resourced, and potentially effective. Recent work suggests that improvement efforts are suboptimally conducted. Our goal was to determine how well preparation for surgical QI is undertaken, including detailing the problem, setting project goals, and planning an intervention.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study investigated the effects of posttreatment surveillance intensity on overall survival in men with localized prostate cancer treated by radical prostatectomy or radiation therapy.
  • Data from over 10,000 patients showed no significant differences in overall survival related to the number of PSA tests conducted in the first year after treatment.
  • While higher surveillance intensity didn't improve overall survival, it was linked to more procedures and salvage treatments, particularly showing worse recurrence-free survival in patients who had radical prostatectomy.
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One of the primary concerns associated with open fractures is the development of a fracture-related infection (FRI). To minimize the risk of developing an FRI and subsequent morbidity, prophylactic antibiotics should be administered to patients with open fractures as soon as possible. While the antibiotic recommendations for severe open fractures are somewhat debatable, the use of a cephalosporin remains a mainstay of prophylactic treatment.

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Introduction: Regionalizing hepatic resections to high-volume hospitals (HVH) has improved outcomes, yet widened disparities in access. We sought to evaluate the association of hospital volume with quality care outcomes and overall survival (OS) between minor and major hepatectomy for primary liver cancer.

Methods: The National Cancer Database identified patients with primary liver cancer who underwent minor/major hepatectomy (2009-2019).

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Objective: To determine the extent to which within-hospital temporal clustering of postoperative complications is observed in the American College of Surgeons, National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP).

Background: ACS-NSQIP relies on periodic and on-demand reports for quality benchmarking. However, if rapid increases in postoperative complication rates (clusters) are common, other reporting methods might be valuable additions to the program.

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