2019
Hepatic resection of solitary HCC in the elderly: A unique disease in a growing population
Zarour LR, Billingsley KG, Walker BS, Enestvedt CK, Orloff SL, Maynard E, Mayo SC. Hepatic resection of solitary HCC in the elderly: A unique disease in a growing population. The American Journal Of Surgery 2019, 217: 899-905. PMID: 30819401, DOI: 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2019.01.030.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsSolitary hepatocellular carcinomaPrognostic nutritional indexHepatic resectionElderly patientsUnique diseaseLow prognostic nutritional indexMedian Child-Pugh scoreTumor size 5Child-Pugh scoreGrade III complicationsHalf of patientsRecurrence-free survivalSolitary HCCExtrahepatic recurrenceProspective databaseR0 resectionIntrahepatic recurrenceMajor hepatectomyMedian survivalOverall survivalViral hepatitisLow morbidityMedian ageClinicopathologic dataClinicopathologic differences
2018
Cell fusion potentiates tumor heterogeneity and reveals circulating hybrid cells that correlate with stage and survival
Gast CE, Silk AD, Zarour L, Riegler L, Burkhart JG, Gustafson KT, Parappilly MS, Roh-Johnson M, Goodman JR, Olson B, Schmidt M, Swain JR, Davies PS, Shasthri V, Iizuka S, Flynn P, Watson S, Korkola J, Courtneidge SA, Fischer JM, Jaboin J, Billingsley KG, Lopez CD, Burchard J, Gray J, Coussens LM, Sheppard BC, Wong MH. Cell fusion potentiates tumor heterogeneity and reveals circulating hybrid cells that correlate with stage and survival. Science Advances 2018, 4: eaat7828. PMID: 30214939, PMCID: PMC6135550, DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aat7828.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAnimalsBiomarkers, TumorCarcinoma, Pancreatic DuctalCell FusionCell Line, TumorCell SurvivalEpithelial CellsFemaleGreen Fluorescent ProteinsHumansHybrid CellsKaryotypingMacrophagesMaleMice, Inbred C57BLMice, TransgenicNeoplastic Cells, CirculatingPancreatic NeoplasmsTumor MicroenvironmentXenograft Model Antitumor AssaysConceptsNeoplastic cellsNumerous neoplastic cellsHuman cancer patientsUrgent medical needPotential therapeutic targetTumor-bearing miceLate-stage progressionHigh lethality rateFuels tumor progressionIdentification of biomarkersOverall survivalDisease stagePeripheral bloodCancer patientsTumor stagingMetastatic spreadNovel biomarkersTherapeutic targetBiologic mechanismsSolid tumorsMedical needMetastatic behaviorTumor progressionCancer highlightLethality rate
2006
Outcome Following Surgical Therapy for Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors
Gupta M, Sheppard B, Corless C, MacDonell K, Blanke C, Billingsley K. Outcome Following Surgical Therapy for Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors. Journal Of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2006, 10: 1099-1105. PMID: 16966028, DOI: 10.1016/j.gassur.2006.05.014.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsGastrointestinal stromal tumorsMultivisceral resectionStromal tumorsMetastatic diseaseSurgical resectionImatinib mesylateDuodenal gastrointestinal stromal tumorKIT-positive gastrointestinal stromal tumoursCox proportional hazards modelPercent of patientsComplete surgical resectionKaplan-Meier methodLog-rank analysisPresence of metastasesLimits of resectionProportional hazards modelMitotic indexHigh mitotic indexActuarial survivalPostoperative survivalIncomplete resectionSurgical therapyComplete resectionImproved survivalIndependent predictors