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AMERICAS HEPATO-PANCREATO-BILIARY ASSOCIATION
FEBRuARY 20-24, 2013
Eden Roc Renaissance M i a M i B e ac h , F l o r i da
Annual Meeting 2013
Improving Patient Outcomes in H P B
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President’s Welcome letterI am delighted to welcome you to the Eden Roc for the 13th annual Congress of the Americas Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association. We return to our traditional Miami Beach home on the heels of a fabulously successful 2012 meeting, and we expect the 2013 meeting to bring us to new heights.
Our society is thriving, and the membership continues to grow, now numbering over 1,000. These changes speak volumes about the quality of the educational program offered at our annual meeting and other AHBPA sponsored events, but they also reflect the hard work and dedication of many of our members and our Executive Director, Kim O’Dell, and her staff.
We have also actively engaged our colleagues in Central and South America, and their greater participation in our meetings and their involvement in the AHPBA have made us much stronger.
Todd Bauer and his committee, with input from others, have created an outstanding program, with a wide array of educational opportunities. William Chapman, our President-Elect, has organized a superb Postgraduate Course that combines lectures on selected topics and case presentations. This year’s meeting will see the continuation of several events that were very successful at last year’s meeting: the Ultrasound and Advanced HPB Technology course on Wednesday (directed by Ellen Hagopian), the Fellows’ Symposium, (thanks to the efforts of Rohan Jeyarajah and Paul Hansen), and the AHPBA historical lecture (this year’s speaker: Howard Reber). New this year is a session organized by Sharon Weber that will explore how the AHPBA can promote and support the performance of clinical trials, a focus of activity that we hope will become increasingly important for our society. Leslie H. Blumgart will offer colorful insights into the evolution of our specialty as this year’s invited presidential lecturer. The social program, including the annual golf and fishing tournaments and the members’ banquet, will afford attendees an opportunity to interact in more informal settings.
Over the years, Kim O’Dell’s diligent management of every detail of our annual meeting has been reflected in the high quality of the final product, and this year is no exception - I thank her for her dedicated efforts. I extend thanks also to the Development Committee and other members who participated in continuing medical education grant writing and recruitment of sponsors for the meeting this year. My deep personal gratitude goes to the AHPBA officers and all the members of the Executive Council who have given selflessly of their time during the past year to conduct the association’s affairs and ensure its continued success. Our past presidents and others in leadership roles deserve special recognition for the strong foundation they created, on which our current success is built. Please be sure to offer all of the hard working members of our organization your thanks. Finally, we are all indebted to our corporate partners who have graciously and generously provided their support. Please visit the Exhibit Hall throughout the meeting to learn about our sponsors and personally thank them for participating and supporting our efforts.
As the AHPBA continues to grow and mature as an organization, we are now positioned to take a leading role in the field of HPB surgery, from setting standards for clinical care and providing CME to our members, to the training and education of residents and fellows and support of ground-breaking research. In order for us to achieve this goal, our members must be engaged and active. Your participation is vital to the ongoing success of the society, and I hope that this meeting provides the spark of inspiration for you to become more involved in helping shape the AHPBA’s future.
It has been a pleasure and privilege to serve the AHPBA this year and in the past.
Enjoy the meeting.
William R. Jarnagin, M.D.
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
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2013 sPonsorsThe AHPBA wishes to thank the following organizations for their support of the 2013 Annual Meeting.
Former ly Sa l ient Surg ica l Technolog ies
educational Grant Provided by
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executive council officersPresident: William R. Jarnagin, MDPresident-Elect: William C. Chapman, MDSecretary: Javier Lendoire, MDTreasurer: Elijah Dixon, MD
members at larGeJeffrey Barkun, MDCarlos Chan, MDMichael A. Choti MD, MBASean P. Cleary, MDFelipe Jose Fernandez Coimbra, MDMichael D’Angelica, MDXabier Ander de Aretxabala, MDMichael B. Farnell, MDCraig Fischer, MD, MPH, FACSDavid A. Iannitti, MD, FACSRobert C.G. Martin, MDSusan L. Orloff, MD
Past PresidentsImmediate Past President: Jean-Nicolas Vauthey, MD
Past President: Reid B. Adams, MD
committee chairsCETAT Jim Moser, MD
DevelopmentHoracio Asbun, MD
Education & TrainingRebecca Minter, MD
Finance Elijah Dixon, MD
HPB Program Directors D. Rohan Jeyarajah, MD FACS
International Relations Gazi B. Zibari, MD
MembershipFelipe José Fernández Coimbra, MD
Professional DevelopmentJohn Christein, MD
ProgramTodd Bauer, MD
PublicationsTimothy M. Pawlik, MD, MPH, FACS
Research CommitteeSharon Weber, MD
ex-officio Foundation President: W. Scott Helton, MD
ahPba Past PresidentsJean-Nicolas Vauthey, MD 2011 - 2012 Reid B. Adams, MD 2010 - 2011 W. Scott Helton, MD 2009 - 2010 Mark P. Callery, MD 2008 - 2009 Bruce D. Schirmer, MD 2007 - 2008 Sean J. Mulvihill, MD 2006 - 2007 Theodore Pappas, MD 2005 - 2006
C. Wright Pinson, MD, MBA 2003 - 2005 Steven M. Strasberg, MD 2001 - 2003 Henry A. Pitt, MD 1999 - 2001 William C. Meyers, MD 1997 - 1999 J. Michael Henderson, MD 1995 - 1997
ahPba leadershiP
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ahPba officeExecutive Director: Kim O’Dell, CMP - [email protected]/Database: Mindy Hoo - [email protected]/Sponsorship/Advertising: Latisha Moore - [email protected]: Debbie Batchelor - [email protected]
staff committee liaisons Publications, Research, HPB Program Directors: Lyn Henderson, CMPDevelopment, Membership: Latisha MooreEducation & Training, Finance, Program, Development: Kim O’Dell, CMPProfessional Development, Publications: Lane WadsworthCETAT, International Relations: Bobby Davis
ProGram committee
Todd W. Bauer, MD2013 Program Chair
Todd W. Bauer, MD - ChairBryan Clary, MD - Vice/Co-Chair Chad G. Ball, MDStephen W. Behrman, MD, FACSNicholas Jarupe Cassis, MDClifford Cho, MDQuyen Chu, MDYun Shin Chun, MDThomas E. Clancy, MDRobert E. Glasgow, MDWilliam G. Hawkins, MDPamela Joy Hodul, MDEugene Paul Kennedy, MDMilan Kinkhabwala, MDSean Kumer, MD, PhDJennifer Lafemina, MDAjay Maker, MDSatish N. Nadig MD, PhDAttila Nakeeb, MDPurvi Parikh, MDFlavio Rocha, MD
Sharona Ross, MD Norberto J. Sanchez, MDCourtney Scaife, MDThomas Schnelldorfer MD, FACSCharles R. Scoggins, MDMargo C. Shoup, MDConrad Simpfendorfer, MDChristopher Sonnenday, MD Kevin F. Staveley-O’Carroll, MD, PhDLee Thompson, MD Allan Tsung, MDBrendan C. Visser, MDCharles M. Vollmer, MD Emly R. Winslow, MDNicholas J. Zyromski, MD
Ex-OfficioWilliam Jarnagin, MDKim O’Dell, CMP
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ahPba foundation donorsWe are proud to recognize our donors and would like to thank all of the Organizations and Individual Supporters whose continued generosity allows us to promote the research on diseases of the liver, pancreas and biliary tract.
DIAMONDAHPBA
GOlDReid AdamsMark Callery
William ChapmanSean Cleary
Michael D’AngelicaElijah Dixon
O James GardenPaul Greig
William Helton
David IannittiWilliam JarnaginMichael JacobsKeith LillemoeAndrew Lowy
Rebecca MinterMichele Molinari
Sean MulvihillSusan Orloff
C. Wright PinsonHenry Pitt
Charles Burke RosenBruce Schirmer
Roderich SchwarzJean-Nicolas Vauthey
Charles Vollmer Gazi Zibari
SIlverJohn Christein
Alessandro DinizDaniel Kleiner
Charles Vollmer
BrONzeJeffrey BarkunFelipe Coimbra
Purvi ParikhJuan Pekolj
Ponnandia SomasundarSteven StrasbergKevin Watkins
Thomas A. AloiaTodd Bauer
Yun Shin ChunBryan Clary
Wilson Luiz Costa Jr Douglas Evans Riad Haddad
D. Ryan Hall Ruth Haynes
Paulo HermanOscar Imventarza
D. Rohan Jeyarajah Javier LendoireMariano Moro
Attila NakeebMayank Roy
Margo Shoup Atsushi SugiokaRebekah White
Randall Zuckerman
CONtrIButOrS
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2013 ahPba distinGuished service aWard reciPient: henry a. Pitt, mdThe AHPBA Executive Council has voted to give the 2013 AHPBA Distinguished Service Award to Henry A. Pitt, MD, a founder of the association. Dr. Pitt is Vice Chairman of the Department of Surgery at the Indiana University School of Medicine. He not only helped the AHPBA and IHPBA get off the ground, but he is still heavily involved in activities that are moving the field to the next level.
“I am extremely honored to be appreciated by my peers for the work I have done to help people more broadly, which is why we do research and participate in societies,” Dr. Pitt said. “Research has the potential to help more than one person at a time, and AHPBA’s broad efforts in education and training can help many, many people in our region and beyond.”
Dr. Pitt grew up Union, NJ, and went to Cornell University for his undergraduate degree and medical school. He then trained in surgery at Johns Hopkins. His first academic job was at UCLA in 1979-85, where he focused on hepato-pancreato-biliary surgery with Bill Longmire as his mentor.
“When I was a resident in the 1970s, the type of surgery we do today—pancreatectomies and hepatectomies--were not being done that often,” he said. “But I was exposed to patients with bad pancreatitis, and the occasional patient who needed the kind of surgery we do today. I could see that the superspecialty of HPB was going to emerge. At that time, the only two places to train were with Henri Bismuth in Paris and with Dr. Longmire in Los Angeles. I didn’t speak French, so going to UCLA made more sense.”
Dr. Pitt is also a historian of the field of HPB and is writing a book on the subject. He witnessed and participated in the coalescence of today’s leading organizations in the field of HPB surgery.
“In early ‘80s at UCLA, the whole HPB movement was just beginning, and the first thing that happened was the creation of the International Biliary Association in 1979. Cardiac surgery had evolved into a superspecialty, vascular surgery was evolving, surgical oncology was beginning, and so was HPB. The first president of the IBA was Ronald Tompkin, a surgeon at UCLA with whom I worked. He suggested that I attend the first international meeting in Paris in 1980. At that meeting I met Henri Bismuth. Drs. Longmire and Tomkins also introduced me to other leaders in the field, many of whom were European, for example, Les Blumgart, from England at that time, and Stig Bengmark from Sweden.
“The IBA became the IHBPA in late ‘80s, and then in 1994, it became the IHPBA. We then began to work to create the AHPBA. Three people were the “founders” of the AHPBA: Bill Meyers, at Duke at the time; Mike Henderson of the Cleveland Clinic; and me. I was at Johns Hopkins having moved back there as Vice Chair of the Surgery Department in 1985. To get the AHPBA off the ground, we had some preliminary meetings in the mid-1990s, which were associated with the AASLD—the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, and the American Pancreatic Association. Initially we put on postgraduate courses during the AASLD meetings.
“The first meeting of the AHPBA took place in 1997, and Mike Henderson was the first president. Bill Meyers was President-Elect, and I was Secretary. We met at The Doral Golf Resort and Spa in Miami. Wes Harrington served as our first meeting organizer and was the Congress Secretariat. Ted Pappas was the first Chairman of the Scientific Program Committee, and Bill Meyers was chair of the Organizing Committee. Mike, Bill, Ted, Wes and I organized the first meeting with no money in the bank. However, we raised money from industry, and invited a lot of faculty from the Americas. From the very beginning, we tried to make this a regional association. We started out having congresses every other year, and now we meet annually. When Ted Pappas was president, he decided that we should have an annual Americas Congress, which was a great decision.”
Henry A. Pitt, MD
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Dr. Pitt could not be more pleased at how extensively the association has developed from its humble beginnings. “It’s fabulous the way the AHPBA has evolved in just 18 years. It’s wonderful. I was president of the AHPBA in 2001, and subsequently president of IHPBA in 2006. The idea of developing the three regions within the IHPBA was something that Joseph Lau from Hong Kong and Jim Toouli from Australia and I worked on. Joseph was president of the IHPBA, followed by Jim, followed by me. The idea of the AHPBA being a regional association was a goal from the beginning, though the Association evolved initially, primarily in North America. As some of us worked to build the regions through the IHPBA, others got involved to make the AHPBA a regional association. As AHPBA president, Sean Mulvihill oversaw the decision to support the IHPBA meeting in Argentina, and Scott Helton and Mark Callery as presidents of the AHPBA really reached out further to Central and South America.”
Dr. Pitt is president of the IHPBA Kenneth Warren Foundation, and heavily involved in the ACS-NSQIP initiative. “Ken Warren was a surgeon from Boston, and the goal of the IHPBA foundation is to foster HPB research at an international level. The person who receives the Warren Fellowship needs to be from one country, but does research in another country. Quite a few of the mentors for the Warren Fellows have come from the AHPBA, and several recipients have come from Central and South America. We have supported the Fellows for more than a decade and given out more than $200,000.
Dr. Pitt is very proud of the role the AHPBA has taken in fostering research, overseeing training and improving surgical outcomes across the profession.
“We’ve always had HPB research as a stated goal for the AHPBA. Clearly, the main mission of the association is education. However, fostering research has been another major mission. Something that has evolved in the last seven or eight years has been for the AHPBA to foster HPB training. As the super-specialty of HPB has emerged, training our successors has become a very important mission, which has evolved very nicely.
“The other area that always has been a goal, but has never come fully to fruition, is for the AHPBA to oversee multi-center trials and to create registries. The role of improving quality in HPB surgery is another emerging goal. I have been working with the American College of Surgeons on the National Surgery Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP). This past year we have worked on the Pancreatectomy Demonstration Project within NSQIP. The AHPBA Research Committee has developed HPB-specific variables to add to NSQIP. Our Pancreatectomy Demonstration Project has implemented those variables at 48 hospitals this past year, including most of the major pancreatectomy centers. We are gathering data on about 25% of all the pancreatectomies performed in the US. The goal is to feed back data to improve outcomes via NSQIP-HPB,” he said.
“Multi-center randomized trials could use NSQIP-HPB as a data repository. A clinical question could be asked to test two different ways of doing an operation to determine which is the best. A group of us published a paper regarding NSQIP-HPB in HPB in 2009. This position paper included Mike Henderson, Sean Mulvihill, Steve Strasburg, Past-Presidents of the AHPBA, as well as members of the AHPBA Research Committee, including Tom Aloia, Elijah Dixon, Tim Pawlik and Nick Zyromski.
“Over the time I have been an HPB surgeon, the mortality of our operations has come down very nicely, though morbidity remains very high. With NSQIP-HPB the goal is to reduce the complications associated with pancreatectomies and hepatectomies. The mortality is less than 5%, but the morbidity remains 40-50%, and we should be able to reduce morbidity over the next decade. A marriage between the AHPBA and ACS-NSQIP would be a great next step for our Association.”
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ahPba 2012 travelinG felloWshiP reciPientsthomas a. aloia, mdDestination: Chile
I was very fortunate to be awarded one of the AHPBA 2012-13 Travelling Fellowships. With this generous award I planned a trip to Southern Chile. The education focus of the trip was to study the epidemiology, staging, and multidisciplinary treatment of gallbladder cancer. Although rare in North America, it has been well documented that the incidence of this devastating disease in Southern Chile is the highest in the world. To accomplish
this goal I was able to partner with several of the outstanding HPB units in Santiago and the surrounding area.
During the two week trip, in Santiago, I visited Clinica Alemana, Catholic University, and the HC San Borja Arriaran public hospital. In a side trip to Temuco, Chile (the gallbladder cancer capital of the world) I visited the Clinica Alemana Hospital and the Universidad de la Frontera. I attended multiple tumor boards, operations, trainee rounds, and lectures. Combined this exposure gave me many new insights into the management of this disease and future ideas for investigation regarding both systemic and surgical therapies.
I am indebted to my hosts who gave so much of their time and energy to this trip. Many welcomed me into their homes and gave me a true sense of the vibrant life of Santiago and Chile in general. Many thanks to Xabier de Arexabala, Nicolas Jarufe, Juan Hepp, Jorge Leon, Carlos Benevides, Hector Losada, Luis Fonseca, Jorge Silva, Luis Borgos, Juan Francisco Guerra and many others. Thanks are also due to the AHPBA Research Committee, Executive Committee, and Executive Directors for supporting this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
flavio G. rocha, mdDestination: Hospital das Clinicas Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brasil
It was a sincere pleasure to visit the Liver Unit at the Hospital das Clinicas in Sao Paulo headed by Dr. Paulo Herman. As a Brazilian trained exclusively in the United States, the purpose of my visit was two-fold. First, I wanted to observe the training and delivery of specialized hepatobiliary surgery in one of the major referral centers in my native land. Second, I had the
opportunity to learn the open and minimally invasive techniques for intrahepatic Glissonian pedicle control during major hepatectomy popularized by Dr. Herman’s group. During my visit, I met with the staff from the hepatobiliary, pancreatic and transplant divisions at both HC/USP and Hospital Sirio-Libanes, observed a variety of complex HPB procedures, discussed cases at their tumor board and toured their laboratory facilities. I was impressed with the breadth of their cases, the integration of trainees at all levels and the dedication to research throughout the medical center. I am indebted to the AHPBA Research Committee and Executive Council for sponsoring this wonderful opportunity. I would also like to thank Drs. Paulo Herman, Luiz Carneiro, Marcos Perini, Fabricio Coelho, and Jaime Kruger who generously took time away from their busy academic practice to host me during this visit to the metropolis of Sao Paulo.
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SuPPoRTED In PART By AHPBA FounDATIon
the ahPba foundation is proud to support three international travel
exchange awards each year.
the 2013 travel exchange application deadline is april 1, 2013.
lucas mccormack, mdDestination: Toronto General Hospital, Canada.
I am very honored by the AHPBA Research Committee after being selected as a candidate for the 2012-2013 Travelling Fellowship award. As a consequence of this generous support, I had the opportunity to visit the multi-disciplinary HPB and Liver Transplant Program at the Toronto General Hospital in Toronto, Canada. Hosted by the superb surgeon, excellent musician and wonderful person, Dr. Paul Greig, I had the pleasure to observe “from inside” how a first class HPB unit works in a multidisciplinary
manner and exports excellent surgeon to all over the world.
Over the course of my visit, I had a very strict schedule! I attended to many educational regular activities (transplant rounds, tumor boards, seminars, conferences), complex operations and transplants, and also many social events (dinners & drinks). As an important goal of my visit was “HPB and surgical education,” I enjoyed visiting the famous Wilson Center for Education Research hosted by Carol Anne Moulton and the Surgical Skills Center form the University of Toronto to train residents and fellows. I was able to spend many hours with each HPB and transplant fellow and with each of the staff members talking with them about their goals and plans for the future. It was incredibly rewarding to be able to discuss common issues regarding how to improve patient care and education in HPB and transplantation.
I truly appreciate the confidence that Paul Greig showed in me by accepting me for this visit and by opening the doors of his program and house during my stay. I also acknowledge the HPB surgical team composed by “his international fellows” and all the other staff-partners, especially to Markus and Nazia Selzner, Alice Wei, Sean Cleary, Carol Anne Moulton, Steven Gallinger, Anand Ghanekar and Ian McGilvray. Each person’s advice and experience has been tremendously helpful throughout this one-week visit in Toronto.
I am convinced that this was a wonderful experience, and made me even surer that we should develop further our HPB & Transplant fellowship to try to mimic in Argentina the Toronto experience on building excellent surgeons in the HPB field.
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michele babicky, 2011 reciPient From the laboratory of andy lowy, University of california San diego
TarGeTiNG The roN TYroSiNe KiNaSe recePTor iN PaNcreaTic caNcer
Research Synopsis: Our laboratory focuses on the role of the RON Receptor Tyrosine Kinase in pancreatic carcinogenesis. We have previously demonstrated that RON overexpression confers apoptotic resistance in pancreatic cancer, and that down-regulation of this receptor can sensitize cancer cells to gemcitabine treatment. In this project, I have evaluated the effect of a novel RON inhibitor on tumor growth using a patient-derived orthotopic xenograft model. The inhibitor, RON-8, is a human monoclonal antibody directed against the RON receptor that is currently in Phase I clinical trials. We compared the efficacy of this agent, both alone and in combination with gemcitabine.
We screened eleven unique patient-derived xenografts for sensitivity to RON-directed therapy. In this model, one tumor treated with RON8 exhibited significant growth inhibition compared with IgG control. A phospho-RTK array revealed that the RON8 sensitive tumor expressed phosphorylated RON receptor. The PDX model is highly sensitive to Gemcitabine therapy, a result that is not observed in cell line injection models.
The PDX model can be used to screen human tumors for sensitivity to targeted therapies. Tumors that demonstrate growth inhibition after treatment with targeted agents may be used to identify potential biomarkers that may be predictive of therapeutic response. This approach may help guide patient selection for clinical trials in the future, thus providing a more accurate evaluation of the potential efficacy of new therapeutic agents. Patient-derived xenografts appear to be highly sensitive to Gemcitabine, thereby limiting the predictive value of this model in determining potential synergy with targeted agents.
ahPba research aWard uPdate
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kevin c. soares, 2012 reciPient
Combinatorial Immunotherapy And The Manipulation of Tumor Microenvironment In The Treatment of Pancreatic Cancer
Research Synopsis: It is my pleasure to present an outline and update of my research project entitled “Combinatorial immunotherapy and the manipulation of tumor microenvironment in the treatment of pancreatic cancer.” Our phase I/II human clinical trials utilizing a GM-CSF secreting allogeneic pancreas tumor
vaccine (GVAX) have been shown to be safe and effective in inducing anti-tumor immune response in pancreatic adenocarcinoma patients. GVAX treated patients have demonstrated infiltration of PD-1+ T cells, which is a major immunosuppressive mechanism in the tumor microenvironment. We hypothesized that the use of a PD-1 blocking antibody and GVAX will improve vaccine therapy and pancreatic cancer survival. The primary objective of this study was to determine if manipulation of the tumor microenvironment by the blockade of the programmed cell death 1 receptor used with a GM-CSF secreting pancreatic tumor vaccine will enhance Annexin specific T cell responses and survival in a novel murine hepatic metastasis pancreatic cancer model.
Mice were orthotopically transplanted with Panc02 pancreatic tumor cells to form liver metastases by a hemisplenectomy technique followed by treatment with a mouse GM-CSF secreting pancreatic tumor vaccine (mouse GVAX) in combination with anti- PD-1 antibodies or IgG isotype control. Survival analysis demonstrated a statistically significant survival advantage with both anti-PD-1 alone (p=0.008) or in combination with vaccine (p<0.0001) versus IgG controls (Fig. 1). Murine GVAX has been demonstrated to induce mesothelin specific CD8+ T cells in the peripheral blood and the exact epitopes have been identified. We conducted mesothelin specific intracellular staining on CD8+ tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) with these known mesothelin epitopes and demonstrated a higher percentage of mesothelin-specific cytotoxic CD8+ TILs in the combination treatment group (GVAX and anti-PD1 therapy) versus GVAX alone (13.4% vs 5.29%).
PD-1 blockade through monoclonal antibodies in combination with vaccine result in a synergistic anti-tumor effect in a preclinical model of pancreatic cancer versus treatment with anti-PD1 alone. Additionally, anti-PD1 treatment facilitates tumor infiltration of functionally activated mesothelin specific CD8+ T cells. Our future directions include identification of the annexin epitope and annexin specific intracellular staining demonstrating enhanced infiltration of annexin specific cytotoxic CD8+ TILs. Additionally, programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1) antibodies will be tested in combination with GVAX and/or PD-1 antibodies and assessed for improved anti-tumor effect.
Thank you very much for recognizing my research project and the 2012 AHPBA Research Fellowship Grant. The AHPBA’s support has been instrumental in helping me to achieve this project’s goal and I look forward to presenting my final summary at the AHPBA annual meeting in 2014.
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ahPba chaPtersarGentina
The Argentinian Chapter of the IHPBA was formed on April 24, 1995, led by Eduardo de Santibanes. The chapter currently has 337 members. Ricardo Bracco, MD, is the chapter President for 2013.
The Argentinian Chapter holds an Annual Meeting, which will next take place on April 25-28, 2014. The association provides educational opportunities via active support of HPB courses, educational meetings, and fellowships. In April 2010, the IHPBA held its ninth World Congress in Buenos Aires, a very successful event despite a volcanic eruption in Iceland keeping some speakers
and attendees from participating.
brazilThe Brazilian Chapter of International Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association (CB-IHPBA), founded in 2001, has approximately 300 members and is currently reorganizing its membership list. CB-IHPBA has organized a biannual meeting in years alternating with the year of the World Congress since 2003. The association helps to provide any educational opportunity in its member hospitals, but is working to get this program fully operational. The current president is Carlos Eduardo R. Santos, MD, PhD.
chileThe HPB Department of the Chilean Surgical Society was created in 2006. This association has more than 50 active members, many of them AHPBA members. The chapter is committed to disseminating the best treatment practices between its members and the Chilean surgical community, and encourages a multidisciplinary approach to HPB diseases. The chapter maintains several academic activities during the year, including keynote lectures, video sessions, roundtables, and case discussions. At the Annual Congress of the Chilean Surgical Society, held in November of each year, the chapter organizes and leads a workshop of the specialty that helps
participants gain advanced education, share experiences, and promote the best standard of care for HPB patients. The current president is Hernan de la Fuente, MD. The chapter website can be found at www.cirujanosdechile.cl.
ecuadorIn June 2004, Dr. Nestor Gomez talked to Dr. Wright Pinson in Washington DC, about the possibility of founding an AHPBA Ecuadorian chapter. After further studies and deliberations, the chapter was founded with nine members on May 24, 2006. Today, the Ecuadorian chapter has 15 active members.
The association has conducted a meeting every two years in the Galapagos Islands. The first Congress was held September 12-15, 2007, under the chairmanship of Dr. Nestor Gomez. The second Congress was held from September 8-10, 2011 under the chairmanship of Dr. Pedro Barberán. That
year, Dr. Gomez hosted a very successful AHPBA charity mission of HPB surgeons led by Dr. Gazi Zibari. This year’s Congress will be held on September 12-15, 2013 under the chairmanship of Dr. Eduardo Rivas.
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ahPba reGistration desk hoursLocation: Ocean Tower I Foyer
Wednesday 6:30 – 8:30 pmThursday 6:30 am – 6:00 pmFriday 6:30 am – 5:00 pmSaturday 7:00 am – 5:00 pmSunday 7:30 – 11:00 am
sPeaker ready room hoursLocation: San Marco (lower conference rooms of the hotel)
Wednesday 6:00 – 8:00 pmThursday 6:30 am – 6:30 pmFriday 6:30 am – 5:30 pmSaturday 7:00 am – 5:00 pmSunday 7:30 – 11:00 am
ahPba foundationStop by the registration desk and donate to the Foundation today!
meetinG videos available for PurchaseMEDCALDTV will be on-site video taping the meeting. If you would like to order a copy, you may do so onsite or take an order form with you.
a Gentle reminderEvery precaution to assure the safety and security of our attendees and their guests has been taken. However, we urge you to be aware and take simple steps to guard your possessions. • Do not leave your purse or briefcase unattended. • Do not leave your laptop, phone or PDAs on the floor or out of your sight. • Be aware of your surroundings.
If you do misplace or lose something, please let someone at the Registration Desk know immediately.
cme certificates & conference evaluationsAll attendees will receive their CME and Attendance Certificates by completing the evaluations online. You will receive an email (using the email that you registered with for the conference and listed on your registration envelope) explaining how to complete your evaluation. If you have not received this email by the end of the meeting, please let someone at the AHPBA Registration Desk know. You will not need to contact anyone to send you your certificate, as you will be able to print your own as soon as you complete your online evaluation. However, should you experience any problems with the evaluation either during or after the Congress, please contact Kristi at [email protected] or 407-647-8839.
Onsite registrants: Your email will come at a later date.
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cme accreditation statementThis activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the Essential Areas and policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education through the joint sponsorship of CMI Education Institute, Inc. and the Americas Hepato Pancreato Billiary Association (AHPBA). CMI Education Institute, Inc. is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
ama Pra desiGnation statementThe CMI Education Institute, Inc. designates this educational activity for a maximum of 39.75 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Physician assistantsAAPA accepts Category 1 credit from AOACCME, Prescribed credit from AAFP, and AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ for the PRA from organizations accredited by ACCME. Physician assistants may receive a maximum of 1.5 hours of Category 1 credit for completing the Allied Heath Symposium.
ada statementIn accordance with the ADA, the CMI Education Institute, Inc. and the AHPBA will accommodate requests of special needs made in advance of the meeting, in writing.
allied health symPosium AAPA accepts certificates of participation for educational activities certified for AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ from organizations accredited by ACCME or a recognized state medical society. Physician assistants may receive a maximum of 1.5 hours of Category 1 Credit for completing this program.
ama Pra desiGnation statementThe CMI Education Institute, Inc. and the joint sponsor, AHPBA, will maintain full control of all aspects of the accredited CME activity titled: “the Americas Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association 2013 Annual Meeting” in accordance with ACCME.
learninG objectives and outcomesThe AHPBA 2013 Annual Meeting has been structured around six tracks. These represent the liver, pancreas, biliary system, liver transplantation, imaging and biomedical engineering, and general hepatobiliary (HPB) surgical disease. At the conclusion of the 2013 Annual Meeting of the AHPBA, the Association expects its attendees to have gained knowledge and skills that will lead to changes or enhancements in their own practices and improve physician training. The AHPBA expects that the 2013 Scientific Program’s educational interventions will result in measurable improvements in patient care.
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
AHPBA 2013
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exhibit hallhoursThursday, February 21 5:15 - 6:45 pmFriday, February 22 9:30 am - 7:15 pmSaturday, February 23 6:30 am - 12:00 pm
Poster session hoursFriday, February 22 5:00 - 6:30 pmSaturday, February 23 6:15 - 7:45 pm
scheduled events in the exhibit hallTHuRSDAy, FEBRuARy 21
5:15 - 6:45 pm Welcome Reception
FRIDAy, FEBRuARy 22
10:10 - 10:45 am Morning Break1:15 - 2:15 pm Lunch4:45 - 5:00 pm Afternoon Break6:30 - 7:15 pm Cocktail Reception
SATuRDAy, FEBRuARy 23
6:30 - 8:00 am Breakfast with the Exhibitors
exhibit hall video PresentationsFri, Feb 22, 10:10-10:45 amEddie Abdalla, MD“ Left Hepatectomy With Caudate Lobectomy And Extrahepatic Bile Duct Resection.”
Fri, Feb 22, 1:15-1:45 pmHoracio Asbun, MD“Laparoscopic Distal Pancreatectomy: Tips, Tricks and Pitfalls.”
Fri, Feb 22, 1:45-2:15 pmPeter Kingham, MD“Laparoscopic Liver Resection: Tips, Tricks, and Pitfalls.”
Fri, Feb 22, 6:30-7:15 pmWill Chapman, MD“Use Of Transplant Techniques For Complex Hepatic Resection.”
Sat, Feb 23, 7:00-7:30 amAlan Hemming, MD“Minimally Invasive To Maximally Invasive Liver Surgery - From Robotics To Vascular Reconstruction.”
Sat, Feb 23, 10:45-11:15 amIan McGilvray, MD“Hepatic Resection With Hepatic Vein Reconstruction: How And When?”
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PROOF 4
maintenance of certification MOC Maintenance of Certification offered for the following sessions. The post test will be available online after the course.
THuRSDAy, FEBRuARy 21, 2013 - PoST GRADuATE CouRSE - 4.5 HouRS ToTAl
9:30 - 11:00 AM Liver/Biliary - 1.5 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM Transplant - 1.52:00 - 3:30 PM Pancreas - 1.5
FRIDAy, FEBRuARy 22, 2013 - 4.5 HouRS ToTAl
10:45 - 11:15 AM Parallel State of the Art Lectures .5 hours 11:15 AM - 1:15 PM Parallel Symposia - 2 hours2:45 - 3:15 PM Historical Lecture - .5 hours3:15 - 4:45 PM Parallel Symposia - 1.5 hours
SATuRDAy, FEBRuARy 23, 2013 - 8 HouRS ToTAl
10:00 -10:45 AM Parallel Update - .75 hours11:15 AM - 12:00 PM Parallel Debate - .75 hours12:00 - l:00 PM Sequential State of the Art Lectures - 1 hourl:00 - 2:00 PM Educational Lunch Symposia - 1 hour2:45 - 3:45 PM Volunteerism and Humanitarian Outreach Symposium - 1 hour3:45 - 4:30 PM Parallel Debates - .75 hours4:30 - 5:15 PM Parallel Update Lectures - .75 hours7:30 - 9:30 PM Educational Dinner Symposia - 2 hours
SunDAy, FEBRuARy 24, 2013 - 3 HouRS
7:30 - 8:30 AM Parallel Competitive Videos - 1 hour8:30 - 9:30 AM Committee on Surgical Innovation (CSI) Symposium - 1 hour9:30 - 10:30 AM Special Lecture - How Many HPB Surgeons Do We Need? Results of
a National Workforce Survey - 1 hour
audience resPonse ARThis interactive feature will be available out of the Ocean Tower I Ballroom. Handsets will be distributed throughout the room.
THuRSDAy … EnTIRE PoST-GRAD CouRSE
FRIDAy
10:45 am State of Art Lecture 11:15 am Social Media Symposium 3:15 pm AHPBA-led Clinical Trials Symposium
SATuRDAy
10:00 am Update Lecture 11:15 am Debate 12:00 pm SOA Lecture2:45 pm Volunteerism/Outreach Symposium 3:45 pm Debate 4:30 pm Update Lectures
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
AHPBA 2013
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13th Annual Meeting
2012 HPB CertIFICAteS OF COMPletION reCIPIeNtSCongratulations to the following members who have successfully completed their fellowship training and have fulfilled the surgical curriculum requirements, as set forth by the AHPBA and Fellowship Council.
These individuals will be recognized at the beginning of the President’s Plenary session.
Jon Cardinal University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Sabini Zani Duke University Medical Center
Clancy Clark Mayo Clinic
Eugene Ceppa Indiana University
Osama Hamed Penn State College of Medicine
Ray Wong Medical College of Wisconsin
Kamran Idrees Washington University School of Medicine
Yiing Lin Washington University School of Medicine
HPB/ASTS Joint Certificate
Mohammad Jamal McGill University
Peter Kim The University of Toronto
Jean-Francois Ouellet University of Calgary
Ryan Swan Carolinas Medical Center
Pippa Newell Providence Portland Medical Center
Veerajah Siripurapu Methodist Dallas Medical Center
Charles R. St. Hill University of Louisville
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sPeakers & facultyDavid AdamsMedical University of South Carolina
Reid AdamsUniversity of Virginia Health System
Syed AhmadUniversity of Cincinnati
Peter AllenMemorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Thomas Aloia The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Christopher AndersonUniversity of Mississippi Medical Center
Horacio AsbunMayo Clinic Florida
Jean Francois AubryUniversity of Virginia
Chad BallUniversity of Calgary
Jeffrey BarkunMcGill University
Stephen BehrmanUniversity of Tennessee Health Science Center - Memphis
Kevin BehrnsUniversity of Florida
Jacques BelghitiHospital Beaujon
Eren BerberThe Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Trey BlazerDuke University
leslie BlumgartMemorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
luiz Carneiro D’AlbuquerqueUniversity of Sao Paulo
Eugene CeppaIndiana University School of Medicine
Carlos ChanInsituto Nacional de la Nutricion Salvador Zubiran
William ChapmanWashington University School of Medicine
Kevin CharpentierBrown University
Clifford ChoUniversity of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health
John Christein University of Alabama at Birmingham
Christopher ChristophiAustin Hospital
Quyen ChuLouisiana State University Health Sciences Center - Shreveport
yun Shin ChunFox Chase Cancer Center
Thomas ClancyBrigham & Women’s Hospital
Bryan ClaryDuke University Medical Center
natalie CoburnUniversity of Toronto
Felipe CoimbraHospital Ac Camargo
Carlos CorveraUniversity of California San Francisco
James CostelloUniversity of Arizona
Gregory CoteIndiana University Hospital
Michael D’Angelica Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Xabier de AretxabalaUniversidad De Chile
Sebastian de la FuenteUniversity of Central Florida, Florida Hospital
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
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13th Annual Meeting
Eduardo de SantibanesHospital Italiano De Buenos Aires
Carlos Fernandez del CastilloMassachusetts General Hospital
Meghan DierksMassachusetts Institute of Technology
Elijah DixonUniversity of Calgary
M.B. Majella DoyleWashington University School of Medicine
Ariel DuboseLouisiana State University n. Joseph EspatRoger Williams Hospital
Douglas Evans Medical College of Wisconsin
Stan FinkelsteinMassachusetts Institute of Technology
James FrazierNorton Healthcare
Steven Gallinger University of Toronto / University Health Network
T. Clark GamblinMedical College of Wisconsin
o. James GardenUniversity of Edinburgh
Jenna GatesHospital of the University of Pennsylvania
David GellerUniversity of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Robert GlasgowThe University of Utah
nestor GomezUniversity of Guayaquil
Gregory GoresMayo Clinic
Vijaya Gottumukkala MD Anderson Cancer Center
Dirk GoumaAMC
Paul GreigUniversity of Toronto
niraj GusaniPennsylvania State College of Medicine
Ellen HagopianJersey Shore University Medical Center
Chet HammillProvidence Portland Medical Center
Arik Hananel Focused Ultrasound Surgery Foundation
Steven HanishEmory University
Paul HansenThe Oregon Clinic, Providence Medical Center
William HawkinsWashington University School of Medicine
Julie HeimbachMayo Clinic
W. Scott HeltonVirginia Mason Medical Center
Alan HemmingUniversity of San Diego at California
Paulo HermanUniversity of Sao Paulo Medical School
Pamela HodulMoffitt Cancer Center
Michael HouseIndiana University
Herbert HurwitzDuke University Medical Center
oscar ImventarzaHospital Argerich
Palepu JagannathLilavati Hospital
William JarnaginMemorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
sPeakers & faculty
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D. Rohan JeyarajahSurgical Associates
Heather JonesUniversity of Pittsburgh Cancer Pavilion
Bobby KalbThe University of Arizona Medical Center
Ihab KamelJohns Hopkins Hospital
T. Peter KinghamMemorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Milan Kinkhabwala Montefiore Medical Center
David Kooby Emory University School of Medicine
Sean KumerUniversity of Kansas
Jennifer lafeminaUniversity of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center
Javier lendoireHospital Dr. Cosme Argerich
David linehanWashington University School of Medicine
Shishir MaithelEmory University
Ajay MakerUniversity of Illinois at Chicago/Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical
lindsey Manos Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Robert MartinUniversity of Louisville
John MartinieCarolinas Medical Center
lucas McCormackHospital Aleman
Brian McGowanArcheMedx Inc.
Miguel-Angel MercadoInstituto Nacional De La Nutricion
Rebecca MinterUniversity of Michigan
Michele Molinari QEII Medical Centre
Katherine Morgan Medical University of South Carolina
A. James MoserBeth Israel Deaconess Medical Centre
Satish nadigUniversity of Michigan
David nagorneyMayo Clinic College of Medicine
Attila nakeebIndiana University Medical Center
Susan orloffOregon Health and Science University
Purvi ParikhAlbany Medical Center
Rowan Parks The University of Edinburgh
Timothy PawlikJohns Hopkins University
Juan PekoljHospital Italiano Buenos Aires Argentina
C. Wright PinsonVanderbilt University Medical Center
Henry PittIndiana University School of Medicine
Ronnie Tung-Ping PoonThe University of Hong Kong
Mitchell PosnerUniversity of Chicago
Kadiyala RavindraDuke University
Howard ReberUniversity of California, Los Angeles
sPeakers & faculty
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
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13th Annual Meeting
Srinevas ReddyUniversity of Maryland School of Medicine
Flavio RochaVirginia Mason Medical Center
Charles RosenMayo Clinic
Sharona RossFlorida Hospital Tampa
Courtney Scaife Huntsman Cancer Institute
Max SchmidtIndiana University School of Medicine
Beth SchropeColumbia University
Roderich Schwarz UT Southwestern Medical Center
Charles ScogginsUniversity of Louisville
Ketan ShethCambridge Health Alliance
Shailesh ShrikhandeTata Memorial Centre
Conrad SimpfendorferCleveland Clinic Florida
David SindramCarolinas Medical Center
Christopher SonnendayUniversity of Michigan
Kevin Staveley-o’CarrollPenn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center
Ryan Swan Carolinas Medical Center
Melanie ThomasMedical University of South Carolina
lee ThompsonCancer Surgery of Mobile, P.C.
Mark Truty Mayo Clinic
Jennifer TsengBeth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Allan TsungUniversity of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Kiran TuragaMedical College of Wisconsin
Jean-nicolas VautheyMD Anderson Cancer Center
Brendan VisserStanford University
Kevin WatkinsStony Brook School of Medicine
Sharon WeberUniversity of Wisconsin Hospital
Alice WeiUniversity Health Network, University of Toronto
Rebekah WhiteDuke University Medical Center
Emily WinslowUniversity of Wisconsin
Christopher WolfgangJohns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Gazi ZibariLouisiana State University Health Sciences Center-Shreveport
nicholas ZyromskiIndiana University
sPeakers & faculty
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Optimal PatientCare through:education,
training,
research,
Innovation,
& Collaboration
MEMBERSHIP HAS ITS PRIVILEDGES
Join the AHPBA
PROOF 4
GoalsThe AHPBA is incorporated as a nonprofit organization and was created with vision of devoting itself to relieving the human suffering caused by HPB disorders throughout the world, by improving education, training, innovation, research and patient care.
1 Promote understanding of the causes of disorders of the liver, pancreas and biliary tree and to investigate and treat these diseases.
2 Encourage the exchange of clinical and scientific knowledge among surgeons and members of related disciplines working in the field.
3 Study any relevant problems that affect the liver, pancreas and biliary tract.
4 Facilitate collaborative research into the factors that lead to disease in these organs and into ways of preventing it.
5 Foster friendships among clinicians and scientists involved in the hepatic, pancreatic and biliary disciplines.
6 Strive towards the highest ethical standards in the Association’s fields of endeavor.
7 Foster education and career development in the field through an identifiable funding mechanism.
Membership BenefitsWe invite you to take part in our growing organization by becoming a member of the AHPBA. Membership in AHPBA connects you to a national and global network of medical professionals specializing in the liver, pancreas and biliary system. AHPBA boasts a diverse membership of more than 950 physicians, not only surgeons, but leading specialists within the fields of medical and radiation oncology, interventional/diagnostic radiology, gastroenterology, pathology, transplantation and basic/ translational science. The AHPBA also welcomes Allied Health Care professionals as members. Together we meet, learn, collaborate and have fun. Besides ourselves, our patients are the ultimate beneficiaries of our endeavors.
With an array of key membership benefits, it is easy to see why so many HPB medical professionals have made the decision to join this prestigious organization.
• Membership in a large professional network of your peers
• Certificate of membership
• Discount on member mailing purchases
• Research Fellowship Grants
• AHPBA News Bulletin
• AHPBA Travel Exchange Program
• Participation in future HPB trials
• Influential fellowship match programs
• Surgical guidelines
• Annual subscription to the official journal, HPB
• Reduced registration fees to national and international meetings
• And much more...
HPB: the Official IHPBA/
Join more than 950 medical professionals in North, South and Central America specializing
in the liver, pancreas and biliary system by becoming an AHPBA member today!
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
Join AHPBA
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13th Annual Meeting
AHPBA Journal HPB, the official journal of the International Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association and its regional associations, was launched in 1999 as an international forum for scientific and social communication. Monthly issues offer readers original research, reviews, HPB images, editorials, case reports and reader correspondence connected with the various scientific and clinical interests involved in hepatic, pancreatic and biliary disease, along with the latest news from the Association. Members in good standing can access the journal online, while Active and Candidate members may also receive it by mail. HPB has been accepted for indexing in Medline. This is a great achievement for HPB and has a significant impact on the journal’s profile and discoverability. HPB aims to help its readers - surgeons, physicians, radiologists and other scientists - to develop their knowledge and practice.
AHPBA Annual traveling Fellowship AHPBA offers two annual fellowship grants to members to encourage interaction, exchange of ideas and collaboration between HPB surgeons in North and South America. The North American Fellowship is open to members residing in North America and supports travel to South America (vice versa for the South American Fellowship).
Each fellowship is allotted $5,000 and is to be used to offset the cost of travel and accommodation for the Traveling Fellow. Successful applicants are to travel for one week to an HPB center in South, Central or North America.
Annual Meeting Each year, the AHPBA holds its Annual Meeting for the presentation and discussion of the latest findings in the sciences of the liver, pancreas and biliary tract, as well as the management of conditions that affect these organs.
the Program Includes: Plenary sessions
Oral papers
Poster sessions
Keynote lectures
Update lectures
Symposia
Face-to-face debates
Trade exhibition
Video symposium
Poster sessions on unique topics
Social and athletic events
Who should attend?HPB Surgeons
Surgical Oncologists
Transplant Surgeons
Laparoscopic Surgeons
General Surgeons
Gastroenterologists
Hepatologists
Radiologists
Endoscopists
Scientists
Pathologists
Surgical trainees
Nurses involved in HPB surgery, gastroenterology, hepatology, and transplantation
AHPBA executive Offices
kim o’dell, cmP, executive director
341 north maitland avenue, suite 130
maitland, florida 32751 usa
email: [email protected]
tel.: +01 407 647-8839 • fax: +01 407 629 2502
JOIN TODAY
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PROOF 4
OBJetIvOSEl AHPBA se incorpora como una organización sin fines de lucro y fue creada con la visión de dedicarse a aliviar el sufrimiento humano causado por trastornos HPB en todo el mundo, mediante la mejora de la educación, la formación, la innovación, la investigación y la atención al paciente.
1 Promover el entendimiento de las causas de los trastornos del hígado, el páncreas y el árbol biliar y para investigar y tratar estas enfermedades.
2 Promover el intercambio de conocimientos clínicos y científicos entre los cirujanos y miembros de disciplinas afines que trabajan en el mismo campo.
3 Estudiar los problemas relevantes que afectan al hígado, páncreas y el tracto biliar.
4 Facilitar la colaboración para la investigación sobre los factores que conducen a la enfermedad en estos órganos y métodos para prevenirlas.
5 Fomentar la amistad entre los médicos y los científicos involucrados en las disciplinas hepática, pancreática y biliar.
6 Trabajar para alcanzar los más altos estándares éticos en los campos de las actividades de la asociación.
7 Fomentar la educación y el desarrollo profesional en el campo a través de un mecanismo de apoyo financiero identificado.
Beneficios para los miembrosTe invitamos a formar parte de nuestra organización en crecimiento, mediante la membrecía a la AHPBA. La membrecía en AHPBA te conecta a una red nacional y mundial de profesionales de la medicina que se especializa en el hígado, el páncreas y el sistema biliar. La AHPBA cuenta con una membrecía diversa de más de 950 médicos, no solamente cirujanos, pero también los principales especialistas en los campos de la radioterapia y oncología médica, intervención / radiodiagnóstico, gastroenterología, patología, trasplante y ciencias básicas y translacionales. El AHPBA también abre sus puertas a otros profesionales del cuidado de la salud como miembros asociados. Juntos podemos reunirnos, aprender, colaborar y divertirnos. Además de nosotros mismos, nuestros pacientes son los beneficiarios principales de nuestros esfuerzos.
Con una amplia gama de beneficios claves al ser miembro, es fácil entender por qué muchos profesionales médicos de enfermedades HPB han tomado la decisión de unirse a esta prestigiosa organización.
• Pertenecer a una gran red de profesionales
• Certificado de membrecía
• Descuento a los miembros en compras que requieran correo
• Becas de investigación
• Boletín de Noticias de la AHPBA
• Programas de viaje/intercambio de la AHPBA
• La participación en futuros ensayos clínicos del patología HPB
• Programas de sub-especialización (fellowships)
• Guías de manejo clínicas
• Suscripción anual a la revista oficial de la AHPBA: HPB
• Reducción de cuotas de inscripción para los congresos nacionales e internacionales
• Y mucho mas….
Únete a más de 950 profesionales de la medicina del Norte, Centro y Sur América especializados en el manejo de las enfermedades del hígado, el páncreas y el sistema biliar al convertirte en un miembro AHPBA hoy!
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
Join AHPBA
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13th Annual Meeting
HPB: la revista oficial de la AHPBA y la IHPBA HPB, la revista oficial de la International Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Asociation y de sus asociaciones regionales, se inició en 1999 como un foro internacional para la comunicación científica y social. Mensualmente ofrece a los lectores temas de investigación originales, comentarios, imágenes HPB, editoriales, informes de casos y correspondencia relacionada con distintos intereses científicos y clínicos en el campo de las enfermedades hepáticas, pancreáticas y biliares, junto con las últimas noticias de la Asociación. Todos los miembros al día con la Asociación tienen acceso a la revista en línea. Asimismo, los miembros Activos y Candidatos también pueden recibir la revista por correo. HPB acaba de ser aceptado para la indexación en Medline. Este es un gran logro para HPB y tiene un impacto significativo en el perfil de la revista y su exposición. HPB tiene como objetivo ayudar a sus lectores - cirujanos, médicos, radiólogos y otros científicos - a desarrollar sus propios conocimientos y práctica.
Beca/Fellowship Anual de Intercambio/viajeLa AHPBA ofrece dos becas anuales a los miembros para fomentar la interacción, el intercambio de ideas y la colaboración entre cirujanos HPB en América del Norte y Suramérica. Las Becas de América del Norte están abiertas a los miembros que residen en América del Norte y apoya los viajes a América del Sur (y viceversa para la Comunidad de América del Sur).
Cada beca es por un valor de USD $ 5.000 y se utiliza para compensar los gastos de viaje y alojamiento de la persona becada. Los candidatos elegidos serán los afortunados y viajaran durante una semana a un centro de HPB en America del Sur, América Central o América del Norte.
reunión AnualCada año, el AHPBA celebra su reunión anual para la presentación y discusión de los últimos descubrimientos en las ciencias del hígado, páncreas y vías biliares, así como el tratamiento de las enfermedades que afectan a estos órganos.
el programa incluye:Sesión plenaria
Presentaciones orales
Sesiones de posters
Conferencias magistrales
Conferencias sobre actualización de temas
Simposios
Debates cara a cara
Simposio de videos
Sesiones de posters sobre temas únicos
Exposiciones comerciales
Eventos deportivos y Sociales
A quién va dirigido?Cirujanos HPB
Cirujanos Oncólogos
Cirujanos de Trasplantes
Cirujanos de Laparoscopia
Cirujanos Generales
Gastroenterólogos
Hepatólogos
Radiólogos
Endoscopistas
Científicos
Patólogos
Estudiantes de cirugía
Las enfermeras que participan en la cirugía HPB, gastroenterología, hepatología y trasplante
AHPBA - Oficinas ejecutivas:
kim o’dell, cmP, director ejecutivo 341 n. maitland avenue, suite 130
maitland, florida 32751 usa.
correo electrónico: [email protected]
tel:. 01 407 647-8839
fax: +01 407 629 2502
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PROOF 4
HIBISCUS
BAYSHORE
STAR
PALM
LIL GORCE
KEY BISCAYNE
A
KEY BISCAYNE
B
FISHER A
FISHER B
BELLE
SAN MARCO
SAN MARINO
EX
EC
UT
IVE
B
OA
RD
RO
OM
RIVO ALTO
PALLADIIUM
BUSINESS CENTER
GROUP OFFICE
Lower Lobby Level
Conference Level
Mezzanine Level
hotel floor Plan
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POMPEII BALLROOM
PROMENADE ROOM
MONA LISA FOYER
MONA LISA
RECEPTION
LOBBY
RESTAURANT
PROMENADE FOYER
Lobby Level
A B
hotel floor Plan
OCEAN BALLROOM
IIA
OCEAN BALLROOM
IIB
OCEAN BALLROOM
IIC
LAPIDUS
WATSON
OCEAN BALLROOM
IA
OCEAN BALLROOM
IB
OCEAN BALLROOM
IC
Penthouse FloorOcean Tower
SUNNY ISLES BAL
HARBOUR
WATER VEIW
TERRACE
Annual Meeting
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AHPBABooth#1
© 2013, Medtronic, Inc. All rights reserved. Aquamantys® and Transcollation® are registered trademarks of Medtronic, Inc.SLA-13-002182 2.13
13th Annual Meeting
8:00 - 11:30 AM CoMMITTEE MEETInGS
room: Fischer a/B room: Belle executive Boardroom room: Sunny isles7:00 - 8:00 am Fellows Sub-committee Allied
Healthcare Professionals
Foundation Board
8:00 - 9:00 am HPB Program Directors Membership Research Finance9:15 - 10:15 am Education & Training CETAT Development10:30 - 11:30 am Professional
DevelopmentProgram Publications International
Relations
7:30 am hPB Ultrasound course registration & continental BreakfastLocation: Lapidus Foyer
8:00 AM - 5:00 PM HPB ulTRASounD AnD ADVAnCED TECHnoloGy CouRSE - DIDACTIC PoRTIonModerator and Course Organizer: Ellen HagopianRoom: Lapidus
8:00 - 8:05 am Welcome & introduction - Ellen Hagopian
8:05 - 8:10 am importance of Ultrasound in hPB Surgery - Ellen Hagopian
8:10 - 8:30 am US Principles & instrumentation - Beth Schrope.
8:30 - 8:55 am liver US: Normal anatomy and Pathologic Findings - Paul Hansen
8:55 - 9:25 am Pancreas US: Normal anatomy and Pathologic Findings - D. Rohan Jeyarajah
9:205 - 9:40 am refreshment Break
9:40 - 10:00 am Gallbladder & Bile duct US: Normal anatomy and Pathology - Reid Adams
10:00 - 10:20 am US Scanning Techniques: TaUS, ioUS & laP - Eren Berber
10:20 - 10:30 am introduction to hands-on Sessions - Ellen Hagopian
10:30 am -12:00 pmHands-on Session I: hBP anatomy and Technique : TaUS Using Human Models - All FacultyRoom: Key Biscayne A/B
12:00 -1:00 pm lunchOutside in the Spa Garden
1:00 pmHPB ulTRASounD AnD ADVAnCED TECHnoloGy CouRSE - DIDACTIC PoRTIon - ContinuesRoom: Lapidus
1:00 - 1:20 pm Techniques in Ultrasound Guidance : TaUS, ioUS & laP - John Martinie
1:20 - 1:40 pm Methods in Tumor ablation in hPB Surgery - Robert Martin
1:40 - 2:00 pm advanced Techniques in US imaging - Beth Schrope
2:00 - 2:15 pm Panel discussion - All faculty
2:15 - 2:30 pm refreshment Break
2:30 - 5:00 pm
Hands-on Session II Scanning Methods and Ultrasound Guidance: ioUS & laP Using Inanimate and Phantom Models - All FacultyRoom: Key Biscayne A/B
WEDNESDAY MOC icon denotes Maintenance of Certification.
AR icon denotes Audience Response.
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11:50 AM - 6:00 PM PRE ConFEREnCE SPoRTInG EVEnTS
11:50 am Golf & Fishing transportation pick up outside hotel entrance
12:30 - 6:00 pm 5th annual Golf TournamentMiami Beach Golf CourseAttendees & Exhibitors Invited
4th annual Fishing TournamentAttendees & Exhibitors Invited
2:00 - 4:00 pm ihPBa executive committee MeetingRoom: Executive Board Room
4:00 - 6:00 PM AllIED HEAlTH CARE SyMPoSIuM Moderators: Timothy Pawlik, Lindsey ManosRoom: Belle
Management of the complex hPB Patient: an allied health Perspective - Jenna Gates
developing a Pancreatic cyst Program: lessons learned - Lindsey Manos
Managing a Busy Surgery Practice: autonomy Based on Scope of Practice - Heather Jones
integration of Mid-level Providers into a Busy Surgical Practice: a Surgeon’s Practice - Douglas Evans
6:00 - 8:00 pm Speaker ready room Room: San Marco
6:30 - 8:00 pm registration desk open Ocean Tower I Foyer
7:15 - 9:00 pm executive council MeetingRoom: Lapidus/Watson
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
WEDNESDAY
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13th Annual Meeting
6:30 am - 6:00 pm registration desk open Ocean Tower I Foyer
7:00 am - 6:30 pm Speaker ready room Room: San Marco
7:00 - 9:00 am executive council MeetingRoom: Lapidus/Watson
9:30 AM - 5:00 PM
MOC AR
AHPBA PoST GRADuATE CouRSE:controversies in hPB and Transplant SurgeryCourse Coordinator: William ChapmanRoom: Ocean Tower I A-Cexclusive Support Provided by ethicon endo-Surgery
9:30 - 11:00 AM lIVER/BIlIARyModerator: William R. Jarnagin
9:30 - 9:45 am alPPS vs PVe/Staged resections: Novel Surgical development or Unnecessary intervention. - David Nagorney
9:45 - 10:00 am laparoscopic vs open right hepatectomy: What are the Benefits and Who is Using This approach? - David Geller
10:00 - 10:15 am Neoadjuvant chemotherapy For colorectal Metastases to the liver - What are the data? - Bryan Clary
10:15 - 10:30 am current Management Strategies For Gallbladder cancer - Javier Lendoire
10:30 - 11:00 am Panel discussion11:00 AM - 12:30 PM TRAnSPlAnT
Moderator: William Chapman
11:00 - 11:15 am What is the role of olT for cholangiocarcinoma - Who Should We consider For this Procedure? - Julie Heimbach
11:15 - 11:30 am resection or ablation with Salvage Transplant for hcc in Setting of early Stage cirrhosis - Should We encourage This approach? - Ronnie Tung-Ping Poon
11:30 - 11:45 amWhen is Total Pancreatectomy with auto-islet Transplant indicated? - John Christein
11:45 am - 12:00 pm optimal Training in hPB Surgery: Surgical oncology, Transplant, or hPB Surgery? - Paul Greig
12:00 - 12:30 pm Panel discussion
12:30 am - 2:00 pm lunchattendees on your own at hotel restaurants New Member/Fellows/candidates/allied health
Program - By invitation onlyRoom: Lapidus-Watsonlunch Provided by the ahPBa Program supported by ethicon endo-Surgery
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AHPBA PoST GRADuATE CouRSE - Continued
2:00 - 3:30 PM PAnCREASModerator: David Linehan
2:00 - 2:15 pm Standard vs laparoscopic Whipple - When and Who Should be Performing this Procedure? - Horacio Asbun
2:15 - 2:30 pm Management of locally advanced Pancreas cancer: Which Strategy is Most optimal? - Sharon Weber
2:30 - 2:45 pm is there a role for open debridement of Peripancreatic Fluid collections? - Rowan Parks
2:45 - 3:00 pm cystic disease of the Pancreas - Too Many operations for Too little Benefit? - Peter Allen
3:00 - 3:30 pm Panel discussion3:30 - 5:00 pm case Presentations
Moderator: M. B. Majella Doyle Panelists: Alan Hemming, Eduardo de Santibanes, Palepu Jagannath, Jacques Belghiti, David
Adams and Susan OrloffRadiologist Perspective: Vamsi Narra
5:15 - 6:45 pm Welcome reception in the exhibit hallRoom: Pompeii/Promenade
7:00 - 8:30 PM EDuCATIonAl DInnER SyMPoSIA Room: Ocean Tower I A-CModerator: Roderich SchwarzProgram supported by Sirtex
Y90 regional radioembolization of liver Metastases
history, Mechanism, indications, and Safety of Y90 Therapy - Joseph Espat
clinical data and comparative assessment of outcomes of Y90 Therapy. - David Kooby
Y90 Therapy in the Multidisciplinary Process including Preoperative indications - Robert Martin
8:45 - 10:15 PM THE BERnARD lAnGER FElloW’S AnD RESIDEnT’S SyMPoSIuMRoom: Ocean Tower I A-C Moderators: Paul Hansen and D. Rohan JeyarajahIntroduction to the Symposium: D. Rohan Jeyarajah , Paul Hansen Program Supported By Covidien
HBP Training: Current StatusUpdate on Manpower and Training issues - Rebecca MinterhBP centers of excellence - Rob Glasgow
Finding or Creating the Ideal JobModerators: Reid Adams, Rohan JeyarajahPanelists: David Iannitti, Scott Helton, Rebecca Minter, Carol-Anne Molten
10:30 pm Fellows/residents informal cocktail Gathering at the central Bar With leadership.
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6:30 am - 6:00 pm registration desk open Ocean Tower I Foyer
7:00 am - 6:30 pm Speaker ready room Room: San Marco
6:15 - 7:30 AM PARAllEl EDuCATIonAl BREAKFAST SyMPoSIA
6:15 - 7:30 am 6:15 - 7:15 am 6:30 - 7:30 amhilar Strictures in the Setting of PSc: is There an optimal evaluation and Treatment Strategy?Room: Ocean Tower II CModerator: Steven Hanish
high intensity Focused Ultrasound for hepatic Tumor ablation: ready for Primetime?Room: Ocean Tower IA CModerator: David Sindram
optimizing the adjuvant Therapy in Patients with resectable colorectal MetastasesRoom: Ocean Tower II A/BModerator: Bryan Clary Speaker - Herbert Hurwitz
current Management of Patients with PSc; a hepatologists - Julie Heimbach
overview of the Technology and current applications. - Arik Hananel
discussion
imaging characteristics of hilar Strictures in PSc; concerning Findings Versus Progression of disease - James Costello
clinical experience, issues/limitations and Promise - Jean Francois Aubry
dominant Strictures and PSc; Neoadjuvant Protocol for cholangiocarcinoma and Transplantation. current Trends and data - Julie HeimbachSupported by: Bayer healthcare/onyx Pharmaceuticals
6:30 - 7:30 am ihPBa Ken Warren Foundation Board Meeting (Continental Breakfast)Room: Executive Board Room
7:45 - 8:20 AM PRESIDEnTIAl ADDRESS William r. Jarnagin
Giving Back - The emerging legacy of the ahPBaIntroduction of the President - William C. ChapmanRoom: Ocean Tower I A-C
William R. Jarnagin
8:20 - 8:25 am 2013 Distinguished Service Award Recipient henry a. PittRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CPresented by William R. Jarnagin, MD
Henry A. Pitt
8:25 - 8:35 am hPB certificate of completion PresentationRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CPresented by: William R. Jarnagin, Rebecca Minter
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8:35 - 9:05 AM RESEARCH AWARD AnD TRAVElInG FElloWSHIP PRESEnTATIonRoom: Ocean Tower I A-C
AHPBA 2011 Research Fellowship Grant Recipient: Michelle BabickyTargeting the ron Tyronsine Kinase receptor in Pancreatic cancer2012 Traveling Fellowship Award RecipientsThomas aloia, Md, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas. lucas Mccormack, Md, Hospital Aleman, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Flavio rocha, Md Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, Washington. Travel Fellowships supported in part by the ahPBa Foundation
9:05 -10:05 am President’s Plenary Session & Young investigator award competitionRoom: Ocean Tower I A-C
Top Four abstracts for Pancreas, liver, Biliary, Transplant
PPYI.01 DISTINCT PREDICTORS OF PRE- VERSUS POST-DISCHARGE VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM AFTER HEPATECTOMY: ANALYSIS OF 7,621 NSQIP PATIENTS C. D. Tzeng1, S. A. Curley1, J. N. Vauthey1, T. A. Aloia1 ; 1The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TXdiscussant: W. Scott helton
PPYI.02 DYSPLASIA AT THE SURGICAL MARGIN PREDICTS RECURRENCE FOLLOWING RESECTION OF NON-INVASIVE IPMN T. L. Frankel1, J. LaFemina2, M. D’Angelica1, R. P. DeMatteo1, Y. Fong1, T. P. Kingham1, W. R. Jarnagin1, P. J. Allen1 ; 1Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY; 2University of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center, Worcester, MAdiscussant: Mark callery
PPYI.03 VIRAL STATUS AT THE TIME OF LIVER TRANSPLANTATION FOR HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA: A PREDICTOR OF LONG-TERM SURVIVAL IN THE MODERN ERA R. T. Groeschl1, C. H. Pilgrim1, J. C. Hong1, T. Gamblin1 ; 1Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WIdiscussant: reid adams
PPYI.04 DISCORDANCE BETWEEN CONVENTIONAL AND DETAILED LYMPH NODE ANALYSIS IN RESECTED BILIARY CARCINOMA AT OR ABOVE THE CYSTIC DUCT: ARE WE UNDERSTAGING PATIENTS? L. M. Ocuin1, P. Bagci2, S. B. Fisher1, S. H. Patel1, D. A. Kooby1, C. A. Staley1, N. Adsay2, S. K. Maithel1 ; 1Department of Surgery, Atlanta, GA; 2Department of Pathology, Atlanta, GAdiscussant: Jean Nicolas Vauthey
10:10 - 10:45 am coffee Break with video presentationRoom: Exhibit Hall
Video: “left hepatectomy with caudate lobectomy and extrahepatic Bile duct resection.”Eddie Abdalla, M.D
10:45 - 11:15 AM PARAllEl STATE-oF-THE-ART lECTuRES
hereditary Pancreatic cancerRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CIntroduction: Courtney ScaifeSpeaker: Steven Gallinger
MOC AR
hepatitis-related cancer ManagementRoom: Ocean Tower II A/BIntroduction: Felipe CoimbraSpeaker: Ronnie Tung-Ping Poon
MOC
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
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13th Annual Meeting
11:15 - 1:15 PM PARAllEl SyMPoSIASocial Media and the connected Patient - lessons for SurgeonsRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CModerator: Niraj Gusani
AR
anesthetic Technique for hPB Surgery: epidural vs. iV PcaRoom: Ocean Tower II - A/BModerator: Thomas Aloia
introduction to Social Media & the connected Patient - Niraj Gusani
argument against epidural in liver Surgery - David Kooby
Patient recruitement and engagement Through Social Media - Kiran Turaga
argument for epidural in liver Surgery - Vijaya Gottumukkala
Surgeon involvement in Patient discussion Boards / Blogs - Christopher Sonnenday
The low dose epidural Protocol - Thomas Aloia
The Future of Social Media for Surgeons - Brian McGowan
The Mdacc randomized Trial of epidural -vs- Pca in liver and Pancreas Surgery - Mark Truty
Perils and Pitfalls of Social Media Use - All Speakers Panel discussion of Guidelines - All Speakers
Panel discussion and audience Questions
11:30 am - 2:15 pm ihPBa Scientific Program committee Meeting (Lunch Provided)Room: Executive Board Room
1:15 - 2:15 PM BoXED lunCH WITH THE EXHIBIToRS WITH VIDEo PRESEnTATIonSRoom: Pompeii
Video: “laparoscopic distal Pancreatectomy: Tips, Tricks and Pitfalls.”Horacio AsbunVideos Supported by NeuWave Medical
Video: “laparoscopic liver resection: Tips, Tricks and Pitfalls.”Peter KinghamVideos Supported by NeuWave Medical
2:25 - 2:55 pm invited Presidential lecturer: leslie h. Blumgart
historical development of Specialty hPB SurgeryRoom: Ocean Tower I A-C
Leslie H. Blumgart
2:55 - 3:25 pm
MOC
leslie h. Blumgart historical lecture: The Whipple ProcedureOcean Tower 1 A-CSpeaker: Howard ReberSupported by the ahPBa Foundation
Howard Reber
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3:25 - 4:55 PM PARAllEl SyMPoSIA
ahPBa-led clinical TrialsRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CModerator: Sharon Weber
MOC AR
Quality in hPB Surgery: Beyond Just the Volume of casesRoom: Ocean Tower II A/BModerator: Robert Martin and Elijah Dixon
MOCintroduction - William Jarnagin and C. Wright Pinson Predictors of readmission and Quality Parameters
in Pancreatic Surgery - Syed Ahmadidentifying ahPBa Members with Specific clinical interests: What are The options? - Timothy Pawlik
Predictors of readmission and Quality Parameters in liver Surgery - Robert Martin
What are The Most important clinical Questions? how to assess What is Most relevant to our Members. - Robert Martin
outcome Measures in hPB Surgery - how We are already Being Graded By insurance? - James M. Frazier
how to Successfully implement and Fund ahPBa-led clinical Trials Utilizing industry Partnerships - David Geller Utilizing existing cooperative Groups - Mitchell Posner discussions.
4:55 pm refreshment Break in exhibit hall / Poster Session
5:00 - 6:30 PM oRAl PoSTER I PRESEnTATIonRoom: Promenade
oral Poster i Pancreas 1Moderator: Flavio G. Rocha
OP-A1.01 DENDRITIC CELLS ADENOVIRALLY-TRANSDUCED WITH FULL-LENGTH MESOTHELIN CDNA ELICIT MESOTHELIN-SPECIFIC CYTOTOXICITY AGAINST PANCREATIC CANCER CELL LINES IN VITRO M. Miyazawa1, M. Iwahashi1, T. Ojima1, M. Tani1, M. Kawai1, S. Hirono1, K. Okada1, A. Shimizu1, Y. Kitahata1, H. Yamaue1 ; 1Second Department of Surgery, Wakayama Medical University School of Medicine, Wakayama, WAKAYAMA
OP-A1.02 AUTOTRANSPLANTATION OF POSITIVE CULTURE ISLET PRODUCT: IS DIRTY ALWAYS BAD? C. Johnson1, K. Morgan1, S. Owczarski1, H. Wang1, J. Fried1, D. Adams1 ; 1Medical University of South Carolina - Department of Surgery, Charleston, SC
OP-A1.03 COMPARED TO A CONVENTIONAL OPEN APPROACH, LAPAROSCOPIC ASSISTED PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY MAY OFFER PATIENTS BETTER PERFORMANCE STATUS AND PHYSICAL HEALTH IN THE FIRST 6 MONTHS AFTER SURGERY J. A. Graham1, A. B. Chin1, A. Rubenstein1, J. A. Nusbuam1, J. Smirniotopoulos1, R. Kayser1, L. B. Johnson1 ; 1Dept. of Surgery, Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, DC
OP-A1.05 THERE IS NO SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCE IN PERIOPERATIVE OUTCOMES AFTER PANCREATICOGASTROSTOMY VS PANCREATICOJEJUNOSTOMY FOR RECONSTRUCTION FOLLOWING PACREATICODUDENECTOMY: A META-ANALYSIS AND SYSTEMATIC REVIEW. P. Sukharamwala1, H. Safi1, S. Parikh1, P. DeVito1, G. Bogen1, N. Parikh1, A. Ghani1 ; 1Northside Medical Center/ Northeast Ohio Medical University, Youngstown, OHIO
OP-A1.06 CONTEMPORARY DIFFERENCES IN POSTOPERATIVE OUTCOMES FOLLOWING LAPAROSCOPIC VERSUS OPEN DISTAL PANCREATECTOMY FOR PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA E. P. Ceppa1, R. M. McCurdy1, J. A. Parikh1, E. M. Kilbane1, C. M. Schmidt1, N. J. Zyromski1, H. A. Pitt1, A. Nakeeb1, M. G. House1 ; 1Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN
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13th Annual Meeting
5:00 - 6:30 pm oral Poster 1 Presentation - Room: Promenade Continued
oral Poster i Pancreas 1Moderator: Flavio G. Rocha
OP-A1.07 THE CONTRIBUTION OF FOUNDER BRCA-PATHWAY GERMLINE MUTATIONS TO PANCREAS CANCER SUSCEPTIBILITY A. Smith1,2, A. Hall1,2, A. Volenik1,2, H. Rothenmund1,2, G. Chong3, A. Omeroglu1, P. Metrakos1, W. Foulkes1, G. Zogopoulos1,2 ; 1The McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, QC; 2The Goodman Cancer Research Centre, McGill University, Montreal, QC; 3Molecular Pathology Unit, Department of Pathology, Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, QC
OP-A1.08 METFORMIN DOES NOT INCREASE SURVIVAL FOR PATIENTS WITH DIABETES WHO UNDERGO PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY FOR PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA P. Toomey1, S. Ross1, A. Joseph1, A. Teta1, H. Paul1, K. Luberice1, K. Cohen1, A. Rosemurgy1 ; 1Florida Hospital Tampa, Tampa, FL
oral Poster i liver iModerator: William G. Hawkins
OP-A2.01 MATCHED COMPARISON BETWEEN ROBOTIC AND LAPAROSCOPIC MAJOR LIVER RESECTIONS IN PATIENTS WITH BENIGN AND MALIGNANT LIVER LESIONS D. C. Sukato1, S. Tohme2, S. Reddy2, J. W. Marsh2, D. Geller2, D. Bartlett4, A. Tsung2 ; 1University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA; 2Division of Hepatobiliary And Pancreatic Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center , Pittsburgh, PA; 4Division of Surgical Oncology, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center , Pittsburgh, PA
OP-A2.02 CHEMOEMBOLIZATION OUTCOMES FOR HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA IN CIRRHOTIC PATIENTS WITH COMPROMISED LIVER FUNCTION D. P. Dorn1, M. K. Bryant1, J. G. Zarzour1, J. K. Smith1, D. T. Redden1, S. Saddekni1, A. Kamel1, S. H. Gray1, D. E. Eckhoff1, D. A. DuBay1 ; 1University of Alabama At Birmingham, Birmingham, AL
OP-A2.03 MICRO-RNA PROFILING IN A MOUSE MODEL OF OBESITY-PROMOTED HCC K. J. Thompson1, N. M. Steurewald1, D. J. Neimeyer1, D. A. Iannitti1, I. H. McKillop1, D. Sindram1 ; 1Carolinas Medical Center, Charlote, NC
OP-A2.04 DIFFERENCES IN HOSPITAL CHARGES AND LENGTH OF STAYS IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING OPEN VERSUS LAPAROSCOPIC RADIOFREQUENCY ABLATION L. Watkins1, S. Varadarajuli2, R. Hawes2, S. Eubanks1, P. Arnoletti1, S. G. De La Fuente1 ; 1Florida Hospital, Division of Surgical Oncology, Orlando, FL; 2Florida Hospital, Division of Gastroenterology, Orlando, FL
OP-A2.05 LIVER RESECTION FOR NON-COLORECTAL, NON-NEUROENDOCRINE, NON-SARCOMA METASTASES: A MULTICENTER STUDY J. Hawel2, G. Martel1, K. P. Croome2, J. Rekman1, D. Quan2, F. K. Balaa1, R. Hernandez-Alejandro2 ; 1University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON; 2Western University Canada, London, ON
OP-A2.06 BLUNT HEPATIC TRAUMA IN THE AGE OF ANGIOEMBOLIZATION: A SINGLE CENTRE EXPERIENCE K. Bertens1, K. N. Vogt1, K. P. Croome1, D. Gray1, R. Hernandez-Alejandro1 ; 1Western University Canada, London, ON
OP-A2.07 MAJOR HEPATECTOMY FOR COLORECTAL LIVER METASTASIS IN THE ELDERLY B. Howe1, K. P. Croome1, N. Sela1, R. Hernandez-Alejandro1 ; 1Western University Canada, London, ON
OP-A2.08 SAFETY AND ADVANTAGES OF COMBINED RESECTION AND MICROWAVE ABLATION IN PATIENTS WITH BILOBAR HEPATIC MALIGNANCIES P. Philips1, R. W. Farmer1, S. C. Schiffman1, K. M. McMasters1, C. R. Scoggins1, G. Callender1, M. C. Robert1 ; 1University of Louisville, Department of Surgery, Division of Surgical Oncology, Louisville, KY
OP-A2.09 FIVE AND TEN YEAR OVERALL SURVIVAL IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING RADIOFREQUENCY ABLATION FOR PRIMARY AND METASTATIC HEPATIC MALIGNANCIES B. J. Golas1, J. W. Marsh1, J. C. Mejia1, T. C. Gamblin1, D. A. Geller1, A. Tsung1 ; 1UPMC Liver Cancer Center, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA
OP-A2.10 DOES LAPAROSCOPIC LIVER RESECTION MITIGATE COMPLICATIONS J. F. Buell1, A. T. Hauch1, E. Kane1, B. Saggi1, L. Balart1, N. Shores1, E. Kandil1, J. Lee1 ; 1Tulane University, New Orleans, LA
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5:00 - 6:30 pm oral Poster 1 Presentation - Room: Promenade Continued
oral Poster i Biliary and other iModerator: Jeffery Barkun
OP-A3.01 THE COST OF FUTILITY: MEASURING THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF PERCUTANEOUS CHOLECYSTOSTOMY IN MORIBUND PATIENTS S. D. Kachare1,2, D. J. Suttle1, B. D. Carr1, N. A. Vohra1,2, T. J. Fitzgerald2, E. E. Zervos1,2 ; 1East Carolina University Brody School of Medicine, Greenville, NC; 2Vidant Medical Center, Greenville, NC
OP-A3.02 OUTCOMES OF LIVER RESECTION VERSUS OPERATIVE BILIARY DRAINAGE FOR RECURRENT PYOGENIC CHOLANGITIS IS OPERATIVE BILIARY DRAINAGE STILL RELEVANT IN THE MODERN ERA? Y. Koh1, A. Chok1, A. Chiow1, L. Lee1, S. Tan1 ; 1Changi General Hospital , Singapore, SINGAPORE
OP-A3.03 FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS OF COMMON BILE DUCT INJURIES DURING CHOLECYSTECTOMY: ANALYSIS OF THE NATIONWIDE INPATIENT SAMPLE OVER A 10-YEAR PERIOD T. Rogers1, S. Varadarajulu2, R. Hawes2, S. Eubanks1, P. Arnoletti1, S. G. De La Fuente1 ; 1Florida Hospital, Division of Surgical Oncology, Orlando, FL; 2Florida Hospital, Division of Gastroenterology, Orlando, FL
OP-A3.04 OPTIMAL SURGICAL STRATEGY FOR ADVANCED GALLBLADDER CARCINOMA: SINGLE-CENTER ANALYSIS OF LONG-TERM SURVIVORS O. Itano1, M. Tanaka1, R. Nishiyama1, M. Tanabe1, M. Shinoda1, M. Kitago1, Y. Abe1, T. Hibi1, H. Yagi1, Y. Kitagawa1 ; 1Department of Surgery, Keio University, School of Medicine, Tokyo, TOKYO
OP-A3.06 DOCTOR, WHY DIDNT THAT GALL BLADDER COME OUT? M. Colaco1,2, A. S. Gillet1, E. Hagopian1,2, J. M. Davis1,2, J. J. Vernick1,2 ; 1Jersey Shore University Medical Center - Department of Surgery, Neptune, NEW JERSEY; 2Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NEW JERSEY
OP-A3.07 CLASSIFICATION OF THE ANATOMICAL VARIATION OF THE RIGHT POSSTERIOR SECTORAL BILE DUCT H. M. Alghamdi1,2 ; 1University Of Dammam, Alkhobar, Eastarn Provience ; 2King Fahad Hospital Of The University, Alkhobar, Eastarn Provience
OP-A3.08 BILIARY ACCESS IN PATIENTS WITH A ROUX-EN- Y GASTRIC BYPASS: WHOM AND HOW A. Khithani1,2, S. Conjeevaram1, M. Silberstein1, R. Santopietro1, L. Maffucci1, M. Rangraj1 ; 1Sound Shore Medical Center, New York Medical College, New Rochelle, NEW YORK; 2Metropolitan Hospital Center, New York Medical College, New York, NY
OP-A3.09 CHOLECYSTECTOMY IN OLDER PATIENTS: WHAT ARE THE RISKS? H. Ferdosi1, B. Wu1, T. Buddensick1, A. Sautter1, H. Shaukat1, G. Sulkowski1, D. M. Narducci1, R. Faugue1, M. Siddique1, F. Kamangar2, G. Kowdley1, S. C. Cunningham1 ; 1Saint Agnes Hospital, Baltimore, MD; 2Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD
OP-A3.10 A NOVEL PROCEDURE FOR MANAGING EXCLUDED SEGMENTAL POSTOPERATIVE BILE DUCT LEAK D. J. Lerner1, B. C. Wible1, P. Chesis4, C. Gooden2, S. Pelletier3, H. B. Randall2 ; 1University of Missouri - Kansas City Diagnostic And Interventional Radiology, Kansas City, MISSOURI; 2St. Lukes Hospital, Kansas City , MISSOURI; 3University of Michigan Health Systems, Ann Arbor, MICHIGAN; 4SSM St. Joseph Health Center , St. Charles, MISSOURI
oral Poster i TransplantModerator: Steven Hanish
OP-A4.01 PORTAL VEIN THROMBOSIS - HOW MUCH IS TOO MUCH WHEN IT COMES TO COST-EFFECTIVE LIVER TRANSPLANTATION? L. Dageford1, D. E. Moore1 ; 1Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN
OP-A4.02 PREDICTORS OF LENGTH OF ICU STAY AND MORTALITY AFTER LIVER TRANSPALNT S. Dumitra1, P. Chaudhury1, J. S. Barkun1, S. Alabbad1, G. Zogopoulos1, P. P. Metrakos1, S. Paraskevas1, M. Hassanain1, J. I. Tchervenkov1 ; 1McGill University Health Center- Multiorgan Tranpslantation Program, Montreal, QC - QUEBEC
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
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13th Annual Meeting
5:00 - 6:30 pm oral Poster 1 Presentation - Room: Promenade Continued
oral Poster i Transplant - Continued
OP-A4.03 CLOSER PROXIMITY TO THE TRANSPLANT CENTER IS ASSOCIATED WITH BETTER PHYSICAL HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE AFTER LIVER TRANSPLANTATION L. D. Redhage1, K. Harms1, D. E. Moore1, C. W. Pinson1, I. D. Feurer1,2 ; 1Vanderbilt University Transplant Center, Nashville, TN; 2Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN
OP-A4.04 PREDICTORS OF OUTCOMES IN LIVER TRANSPLANTATION FOR HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA IN THE MELD ERA A. Mathur2, A. M. Makris3, J. Arrobas4, K. Bruner4, A. Imperatore4, M. Christian4, E. S. Franco1, N. Kemmer1, G. W. Neff1, A. E. Alsina1 ; 1Tampa General Medical Group, Tampa, FL; 2Department of Surgery, University of South Florida, Morsani College of Medicine, Tampa, FL; 3College of Public Health, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL; 4Office of Clinical Research, Tampa General Hospital, Tampa, FL
OP-A4.05 INDICATIONS AND OUTCOMES OF PANCREAS SURGERY AFTER LIVER TRANSPLANTATION J. C. Mejia1, J. W. Marsh1, J. Steel1, B. J. Golas1, A. Humar2, H. Zeh3, D. A. Geller1, A. Tsung1 ; 1Division of Hepatobiliary And Pancreatic Surgery, Pittsburgh, PA; 2Thomas E. Starzl Transplantation Institute, Pittsburgh, PA; 3UPMC Cancer Pavilion , Pittsburgh, PA
OP-A4.07 RE-RECURRENT NON-ALCOHOLIC STEATOHEPATITIS AFTER RE-DO LIVER TRANSPLANTATION V. Leow1, V. G. Agopian2, C. R. Lassman3, R. W. Busuttil4, D. G. Farmer5 ; 1Dumont-UCLA Multivisceral Transplant Center, David Geffen School of Medicine, LA, CA; 2Dumont-UCLA Multivisceral Transplant Center, David Geffen School of Medicine, LA, CA; 3UCLA Department of Pathology And Laboratory Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine, LA, CA; 4Dumont-UCLA Multivisceral Transplant Center, David Geffen School of Medicine, LA, CA; 5Dumont-UCLA Multivisceral Transplant Center, David Geffen School of Medicine, LA, CA
oral Poster i liver iiModerator: Allan Tsung
OP-A5.01 ANATOMICAL HEPATECTOMY USING ICG NAVIGATION SYSTEM S. Hayami1, M. Ueno1, S. Yamaguchi1, M. Kawai1, M. Tani1, H. Yamaue1 ; 1Wakayama Medical University Second Department of Surgery, Wakayama, WAKAYAMA
OP-A5.03 PKI-587 AND SORAFENIB ADDITIVELY INHIBIT PROLIFERATION OF LIVER CANCER STEM CELLS AND HCC CELL LINES R. Gedaly1, P. Angulo2, J. Hundley1, M. F. Daily1, M. Shah1, R. Galuppo1, C. Chen1, B. M. Evers3 ; 1Department of Surgery, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY; 2Department of Internal Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY; 3Markey Cancer Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
OP-A5.04 PANCREAS AND LIVER SURGERY IN JEHOVAHS WITNESSES: FEASIBLE AND SAFE I. T. Konstantinidis1, P. J. Allen1, M. I. DAngelica1, R. P. DeMatteo1, Y. Fong1, T. Kingham1, W. R. Jarnagin1 ; 1Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center HepatoPancreatoBiliary Surgery Department, New York, NY
OP-A5.05 TARGETING BETA-CATENIN SIGNALING PATHWAY IN LIVER CANCER STEM CELLS AND IN HCC CELL LINES WITH FH 535 R. Gedaly1, P. Angulo2, J. Hundley1, M. F. Daily1, M. Shah1, R. Galuppo1, C. Chen1, X. Zhang3, K. A. Esser3, B. M. Evers4 ; 1Department of Surgery, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY; 2Department of Internal Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY; 3Department of Physiology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY; 4Markey Cancer Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
OP-A5.06 PREDICTORS OF EARLY POST-OPERATIVE MORTALITY FOLLOWING RIGHT EXTENDED HEPATECTOMY A. Zhuruk1, K. P. Croome1, R. Leeper1, N. Sela 1, R. Hernadez-Alejandro1 ; 1Western University Canada, London, ON
OP-A5.07 PROGNOSTIC FACTORS AFTER HEPATECTOMY FOR INTRAHEPATIC CHOLANGIOCARCINOMA: RELEVANCE OF LYMPH NODE DISSECTION T. Hibi1, O. Itano1, T. Fujimura1, M. Shinoda1, M. Kitago1, H. Yagi1, Y. Abe1, M. Tanabe1, Y. Kitagawa1 ; 1Department of Surgery, Keio University School of Medicine, Shinjuku-ku, TOKYO
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PROOF 4
5:00 - 6:30 pm oral Poster 1 Presentation - Room: Promenade Continued
oral Poster i liver ii - Continued
OP-A5.09 CLAVIEN COMPLICATIONS OF LAPAROSCOPIC VS. OPEN LIVER RESECTION: A RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW E. Kane1, A. Hauch1, J. F. Buell1, J. Lee1, B. Saggi1, L. Balart1, N. Shores1, E. Kandil1 ; 1Tulane University , New Orleans, LA
OP-A5.10 TWO STAGED HEPATECTOMY FOR “UNRESECTABLE” COLORECTAL LIVER METASTASES: THE USE OF THE ALPPS PROCEDURE TO INDUCE RAPID HYPERTROPHY IN SCENARIOS WHERE TRADITIONAL RESECTION STRATEGIES WERE DEEMED TO BE SUBOPTIMAL K. P. Croome1, L. VanHouwelingen1, R. Hernandez-Alejandro1 ; 1Western University Canada, London, ON
oral Poster i Pancreas iiModerator: Charles R. Scoggins
OP-A6.01 HIGH RATES OF PATHOLOGIC COMPLETE OR NEAR COMPLETE RESPONSE FOLLOWING NEOADJUVANT CHEMOTHERAPY AND STEREOTACTIC BODY RADIATION THERAPY FOR BORDERLINE RESECTABLE PANCREATIC CANCER M. Chuong1, E. Mellon1, S. Hoffe1, R. Shridhar1, P. Hodul1, G. Springett1, C. Harris1, S. Vignesh1, J. Klapman1, M. Hamilton1, T. Valone1, N. Roehnelt1, H. Widell1, T. Hutchinson1, M. Malafa1, R. Karl1, N. Figura2, B. Centeno1 ; 1H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, Tampa, FL; 2University of South Florida College of Medicine, Tampa, FL
OP-A6.02 IPMN TYPE BUT NOT GRADE OF DYSPLASIA IS ASSOCIATED WITH SMOKING K. M. Shaffer1, M. R. Barron1, E. C. Sturm1, C. Schmidt1, M. A. Al-Haddad2, J. M. Dewitt2, J. A. Waters1, C. M. Schmidt1 ; 1Indiana University School of Medicine Department of Surgery, Indianapolis, IN; 2Indiana University School of Medicine Department of Gastroenterology, Indianapolis, IN
OP-A6.03 OUTCOME DATA FROM MUTATIONAL PROFILING OF PANCREATIC CYST FLUIDS M. J. Lybik1, D. B. Mallat2, A. Lybik1, B. Corcoran3, E. Ellsworth3, S. Jackson3, A. Terry3, S. D. Finkelstein3,4 ; 1Northside Gastroenterology Endoscopy Center, Indianapolis, IN; 2Premier Gastroenterology of Texas, Dallas, TX; 3RedPath Integrated Pathology, Pittsburgh, PA; 4Department of Pathology, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA
OP-A6.04 STUDY OF TUMOR REGRESSION RATE IN RESECTED PANCREAS ADENOCARCINOMA AFER NEOADYUVANT TREATMENT WITH GEMCITABINA AND NAB PLACLITAXEL. PREDICTIVE VALUE OF ELASTOGRAPHY H. Duran1, E. Vicente1, Y. Quijano1, B. Ielpo1, E. Diaz1, I. Fabra1, R. Puga1, C. Oliva1, R. Caruso1, V. Ferri1, J. Plaza1, C. Corbacho1, A. Cubillo1, C. Rubio1, V. Grando1, S. Olivares1 ; 1Sanchinarro University Hospital, Madrid, MADRID
OP-A6.05 ROBOTIC ASSISTED SURGERY FOR PANCREATIC NEUROENDOCRINE TUMORS M. E. Hogg1, M. Daoaudi1, B. A. Boone1, H. M. Choudry1, K. K. Lee1, W. Marsh1, J. F. Pingpank1, M. T. Stang1, A. Tsung1, A. J. Moser2, D. L. Bartlett1, H. J. Zeh1, A. H. Zureikat1 ; 1University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA; 2Beth Isreal Deaconess Medical Center - Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA
OP-A6.06 NEW SURGICAL STRATEGY FOR PATIENTS WITH PANCREATIC BODY/TAIL CARCINOMA -THE IMPACT OF DISTAL PANCREATECTOMY WITH EN-BLOC CELIAC AXIS RESECTION- H. Yamaue1, M. Kawai1, K. Okada1, M. Tani1, S. Hirono1, M. Miyazawa1, A. Shimizu1, Y. Kitahata1, H. Yamaue1 ; 1Second Department of Surgery, Wakayama Medical University, Wakayama, WAKAYAMA
OP-A6.07 LAPAROSCOPIC TRANSGASTRIC DEBRIDEMENT OF WALLED-OFF PANCREATIC NECROSIS: A NEW THERAPEUTIC OPTION FOR PATIENTS WITH NECROTIZING PANCREATITIS. S. Kulkarni1, L. Matsuoka1, A. Bogart1, R. Selby1, D. Parekh1 ; 1Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA
OP-A6.08 THE EVALUATION AND STRATIFICATION OF PERIOPERATIVE RISK FACTORS FOR DELAYED GASTRIC EMPTYING AFTER PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY IN ORDER TO IDENTIFY SELECTION CRITERIA FOR PROPHYLACTIC SURGICAL ENTERAL ACCESS M. B. Bailey1, D. Davenport1, P. C. McGrath1, S. McKenzie1 ; 1University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
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13th Annual Meeting
5:00 - 6:30 pm oral Poster 1 Presentation - Room: Promenade Continued
oral Poster i Pancreas iiiModerator: Alice Wei
OP-A7.01 PANCREATODUODENECTOMY IN AMERICA: DO PRACTICE PATTERNS VARY? S. C. Pitt1, T. S. Riall2, M. E. Kilbane3, B. L. Hall1, H. A. Pitt3 ; 1Washington University In St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; 2University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX; 3Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN
OP-A7.02 OPERATIVE MANAGEMENT OF NECROTIZING PANCREATITIS AT A SINGLE INSTITUTION K. J. Lafaro1, G. Tran1, D. Fernando2, D. J. Vajgrt2, L. K. Findeiss2, A. N. Demirjian1, D. K. Imagawa1 ; 1University of California, Irvine Medical Center, Division of Hepatobiliary And Pancreas Surgery, Orange, CA; 2University of California, Irvine Medical Center, Division of Interventional Radiology, Orange, CA
OP-A7.03 SAFETY AND EFFICACY OF LIGASURE USAGE IN PANCREATICODUODENECTOMIES: A RETROSPECTIVE EXPERIENCE O. S. Eng1, J. Goswami2, D. Moore3, C. Chen3, C. Gannon4, D. August5, D. R. Carpizo5 ; 1Division of General Surgery, New Brunswick, NJ; 2Department of Surgery, Pittsburgh, PA; 3Department of Biostatistics, New Brunswick, NJ; 4Advanced Surgical Associates of New Jersey, Pennington, NJ; 5Division of Surgical Oncology, New Brunswick, NJ
OP-A7.04 PATIENTS WITHOUT INSULIN-DEPENDENT DIABETES OR HYPERLIPIDEMIA HAVE INCREASED SURVIVAL AFTER PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY FOR PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA P. Toomey1, S. Ross1, A. Joseph1, A. Teta1, K. Luberice1, K. Cohen1, A. Rosemurgy1 ; 1Southeastern Center For Digestive Disorders And Pancreatic Cancer, Tampa, FL
OP-A7.05 EARLY PREDICTOR OF OUTCOME AFTER PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY WITH POSTOPERATIVE PANCREATIC FISTULA RISK CALCULATOR J. A. Graham 1, R. Kayser1, J. Smirniotopoulos1, J. A. Nusbaum1, L. B. Johnson1 ; 1Department of Surgery, Washington, DC
OP-A7.06 NOT ALL NODES ARE THE SAME: NODAL STATIONS VARIABILITY IN PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY (PD) AND ROLE IN DECISION MAKING H. Osman1, A. Thomas1, D. R. Jeyarajah1 ; 1Methodist Dallas Medical Center, Dallas, TEXAS
OP-A7.07 BODY MASS INDEX (BMI): DOES IT MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY OUTCOME? H. Osman1, A. Thomas1, D. R. Jeyarajah1 ; 1Methodist Dallas Medical Center, Dallas, TEXAS
OP-A7.08 NONTHERAPEUTIC LAPAROTOMY INCIDENCE IS NOT AFFECTED BY VOLUME OF PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY FOR PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA P. Toomey1, S. Ross1, C. Childs2, K. Patel1, K. Luberice1, A. Rosemurgy1 ; 1Southeastern Center For Digestive Disorder And Pancreatic Cancer, Florida Hospital Tampa, Tampa, FL; 2Morsani College of Medicine, Tampa, FL
6:30 - 7:15 pm cocktail reception in the exhibit hall with Video Presentation.Room: PompeiiVideo: “Use of Transplant Techniques for complex hepatic resection.”Will Chapman, M.D.
7:15 -10:30 pm congress BanquetWith live entertainmentOutside in the Ocean Garden
FRIDAY
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SIRTEX_5_AHPBAad.indd 1 1/17/13 9:56 AM
13th Annual Meeting
6:30 - 8:00 AM PARAllEl EVEnTS
6:45 - 7:45 am Educational Breakfast Symposia Room: Ocean Tower II C
Management of Mucinous Pancreatic neoplasmsModerator: Christopher Wolfgang
6:45 - 7:45 am Tricks of the Trade: Technical Pearls of your CraftRoom: Ocean Tower II A/BModerators: Rowan ParksChristopher Christophi
6:30 - 8:00 am Breakfast with the Exhibitors with Video PresentationVideo: “Minimally invasive to maximally invasive liver surgery - from robotics to vascular reconstruction.”Alan Hemming
Management of iPMN/McN and overview of the international consensus Guidelines - Carlos Fernandez del Castillo
Genetics and Biology of iPMN/McN (with emphasis on how this potentially alters management) - Max Schmidt
controversies in Management of iPMN/McN - Peter Allen • Total vs. Partial Pancreatectomy for Main Duct iPMN
• What constitutes Solid Component/Mural Nodule?
• Size as an indication for resection
Panel discussion/open for questions
Tricks of The Trade Room: Ocean Tower II A/BModerators: Rowan Parks and Christopher Christophi
ToT.01 ALPPS: TIPS AND TRICKS F. Alvarez1, V. Ardiles1, R. Sanchez Claria1, J. Pekolj1, E. De Santibañsup>1 ; 1HPB Surgery And Liver Transplant Unit. Hospital Italiano De Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires
ToT.02 HEPATIC OUTFLOW MODULATION TO TARGET LIVER REGENERATION S. Balzan1,2,3, V. G. Gava1,3, M. A. Magalhaes2,3, M. L. Dotto1,2, S. Balzan1,2,3 ; 1University of Santa Cruz Do Sul - UNISC, Santa Cruz Do Sul, RS; 2Ana Nery Hospital / Institute of Oncology Saint Gallen, Santa Cruz Do Sul, RS; 3Moinhos De Vento Hospital, Porto Alegre, RS
ToT.03 TRANSECTION OF THE NECK OF THE PANCREAS: PANCREATIC DUCT ISOLATION J. A. Stauffer1, M. G. Mesleh1, H. J. Asbun1 ; 1Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL
ToT.04 MEDIAL OPEN TRANSVERSUS ABDOMINIS PLANE (MOTAP) CATHETER ANALGESIA: A SIMPLE, SAFE, EFFECTIVE TECHNIQUE FOLLOWING OPEN LIVER RESECTION R. Behman1, P. McHardy1, J. Sawyer1, J. Lam-McCulloch1, C. Law1, N. Coburn1, S. Hanna1, P. Karanicolas1, . ; 1Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
ToT.05 TECHNIQUES FOR ENUCLEATION OF PANCREATIC MASSES N. N. Nissen1, V. G. Menon1, V. C. Puri1, A. Annamalai1 ; 1Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA
ToT.06 HIGH-RISK CENTRAL PANCREATECTOMY MANAGED WITH DUAL PANCREATIC-ENTERIC ANASTOMOSIS N. N. Nissen1, V. G. Menon1 ; 1Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA
7:00 - 8:00 am Joint ihPBa and ahPBa executive committee Meeting (Continental Breakfast)Room: Executive Board Room
SATURDAY
45
PROOF 4
7:00 am - 5:00 pm registration desk open Ocean Tower I Foyer
7:00 am - 5:00 pm Speaker ready room Room: San Marco
8:00 - 10:00 AM oRAl ABSTRACTS - PARAllEl SESSIonS
liver iRoom: Ocean Tower II A/BModerators: Natalie Coburn & Flavio Rocha
Pancreas iRoom: Ocean Tower II CModerators: Shailesh Shrikhande & Michele Molinari
Transplant/BiliaryRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CModerators Nestor Gomez & Satish Nadig
long oral i-a - liver iRoom: Ocean Tower II A/B
O1-A.01 RIGHT POSTERIOR SECTORECTOMY IS PREFERRED OVER RIGHT HEPATECTOMY FOR POSTERIOR LESIONS: A DUAL-INSTITUTION STUDY S. B. Fisher1, P. J. Kneuertz2, R. M. Dodson2, S. H. Patel1, C. A. Staley1, S. K. Maithel1, T. M. Pawlik2, D. A. Kooby1 ; 1The Winship Cancer Institute, Emory University, Atlanta, GA; 2The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MDdiscussant: Srinevas reddy
O1-A.02 HEMOSTATIC EFFICACY OF LATEST GENERATION FIBRIN SEALANT AFTER HEPATIC RESECTION; A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED CLINICAL STUDY H. Bektas1, S. Nadalin2, J. Schmidt3, I. Szabo4, B. Ploder4, M. Sharkhawy4 ; 1Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Klinik F. Allgemein-, Viszeral- U. Transplantationschirurgie, Hannover, NIEDERSACHSEN; 2Eberhard Karls Univ. Tuebingen, Klinik F. Allgemein-, Viszeral- U. Transplantationschirurg., Tuebingen, BADEN-WUERTTEMBERG; 3Hirslanden Clinics Zurich, Zurich, ZURICH; 4Baxter Innovations GmbH, Vienna, VIENNAdiscussant: Sharona B. ross
O1-A.03 LIVER RESECTION AFTER DOWNSTAGING CHEMOTHERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH INITIALLY UNRESECTABLE COLORECTAL LIVER METASTASES. N. A. Devaud1, Z. S. Kanji1, N. Dhani2, R. Grant1, H. Shoushtari 1, P. Serrano1, S. Nanji1, P. D. Greig1, I. D. McGilvray1, C. A. Moulton1, A. Wei1, S. Cleary1, S. Gallinger1 ; 1Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network (UHN), Toronto, ONTARIO; 2Princess Margaret Hospital, University Health Network (UHN), Toronto, ONTARIOdiscussant: Jennifer lafemina
O1-A.04 HEPATIC HEMANGIOMAS: HOW MUCH GROWTH IS NORMAL OVER LONG-TERM FOLLOW-UP? H. Y. Hasan1, J. L. Hinshaw3, E. J. Borman3, A. Gegios2, E. R. Winslow2 ; 1Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI; 2University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; 3University of Wisconsin, Madison, WIdiscussant: Thomas e. clancy
O1-A.05 ENUCLEATION OF HEPATIC NEUROENDOCRINE TUMOR METASTASES N. N. Nissen1, V. G. Menon1 ; 1Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CAdiscussant: Michael house
O1-A.06 IMPACT OF SARCOPENIA ON OUTCOMES FOLLOWING INTRA-ARTERIAL THERAPY OF HEPATIC MALIGNANCIES R. Dodson1, A. Firoozmand1, O. Hyder1, V. Tahcer1, D. Cosgrove1, N. Bhagat1, I. Kamel1, J. Geschwind1, T. M. Pawlik1 ; 1Johns Hopkins Hopsital, Baltimore, MDdiscussant: cllifford cho
O1-A.07 COMPARISON OF MICROWAVE ABLATION AND TRANSCATHETER ARTERIAL CHEMOEMBOLIZATION IN THE TREAMTENT OF HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA L. A. Shirley1, J. C. Henry1, L. Malhotra1, P. M. Bloomston1, C. R. Schmidt1 ; 1The Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus, OHdiscussant: ajay V. Maker
O1-A.08 POST-TREATMENT SURVEILLANCE OF PATIENTS WITH HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA: DOES INTENSITY OF FOLLOW-UP IMAGING IMPACT OUTCOMES O. Hyder1, H. Nathan1, D. Cosgrove1, K. Hirose1, C. Wolfgang1, J. Geschwind1, M. Choti1, J. Herman1, I. Kamel1, T. Pawlik1 ; 1Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MDdiscussant: conrad h. Simpfendorfer
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
SATURDAY
46
13th Annual Meeting
8:00 - 10:00 am oral abstracts - Parallel Sessions Continued
long oral i-B - Pancreas iRoom: Room: Ocean Tower II C
O1-B.01 PANCREATIC NEUROENDOCRINE TUMORS: HYPOENHANCEMENT ON ARTERIAL PHASE COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY PREDICTS BIOLOGIC AGGRESSIVENESS D. J. Worhunsky1, J. A. Norton1, B. C. Visser1, P. D. Poullos1, G. A. Poultsides1 ; 1Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CAdiscussant: Yun Shin chun
O1-B.02 DOES TRAVEL DISTANCE INFLUENCE LENGTH OF STAY IN ELECTIVE PANCREATIC SURGERY? K. L. Jackson1, R. E. Glasgow1, M. C. Mone1, S. J. Mulvihill1, X. Sheng2, C. L. Scaife1 ; 1Department of Surgery, Salt Lake City, UT; 2Department of Pediatrics, Salt Lake City, UTdiscussant: david Kooby
O1-B.03 SYMPTOMATIC WALLED-OFF PANCREATIC NECROSIS (WOPN): IS THERE STILL A ROLE FOR THE SURGEON? S. Damle1, A. Alseidi1, S. I. Gan2, R. Kozarek2, A. Ross2, S. Irani2, R. Crane3, M. Fotoohi3, E. Hauptmann3, M. Gluck2, W. S. Helton1, F. G. Rocha1 ; 1HPB Service, Department of Surgery, Seattle, WA; 2Gastroenterology Service, Department of Medicine, Seattle, WA; 3Interventional Radiology Service, Deparment of Radiology, Seattle, WAdiscussant: Ketan Sheth
O1-B.04 PREDICTING THE RISKS OF VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM VERSUS POST-PANCREATECTOMY HEMORRHAGE: ANALYSIS OF 13,771 NSQIP PATIENTS C. D. Tzeng1, M. H. Katz1, J. E. Lee1, J. B. Fleming1, P. W. Pisters1, J. N. Vauthey1, T. A. Aloia1 ; 1The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TXdiscussant: Miguel Mercado
O1-B.05 LAPAROSCOPIC CYSTOGASTROSTOMY A. Kamyab1, M. J. Jacobs1 ; 1Providence Hospital And Medical Centers, Southfield, MI
O1-B.06 DOES NEOADJUVANT RADIATION THERAPY FOR PANCREATIC CANCER INCREASE POST-OPERATIVE COMPLICATIONS AFTER PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY? ANALYSIS OF AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS NATIONAL SURGICAL QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM (ACS NSQIP) S. W. Cho1, W. C. Johnston1, M. A. Cassera1, P. H. Newell1, C. W. Hammill1, R. F. Wolf1, P. D. Hansen1 ; 1Providence Portland Medical Center, Portland, ORdiscussant: Becke White
O1-B.07 FAILURE TO FOLLOW EVIDENCE-BASED, BEST-PRACTICE GUIDELINES IN THE TREATMENT OF SEVERE PANCREATITIS. A. Vlada1, B. Schmit1, J. Trevino1, K. Behrns1, S. J. Hughes1 ; 1University of Florida, Gainesville, FLdiscussant: charles M. Vollmer, Jr.
O1-B.08 IMPROVED MORTALITY IN ACUTE PANCREATITIS ASSOCIATED WITH EARLY PANCREATIC DEBRIDEMENT - ANALYSIS OF 3,617 PATIENTS UTILIZING THE NATIONWIDE INPATIENT SAMPLE B. A. Wormer1, R. Z. Swan1, K. B. Williams1, J. F. Bradley1, A. L. Walters1, J. B. Martinie1, B. T. Heniford1 ; 1Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NCdiscussant: eugene ceppa
long oral i-c - Transplant/BiliaryRoom: Ocean Tower I A-C
O1-C.01 ENDOSCOPIC ULTRASOUND IS A SAFE AND EFFECTIVE ALTERNATIVE TO PORTAL NODE SAMPLING IN PATIENTS ENROLLED THE CHOLANGIOCARCINOMA TRANSPLANT PROTOCOL S. I. Hanish1, E. Marchan3, F. Willingham2, J. Landry3, J. Kauh4, J. Magliocca1, A. Adams1, . , J. Spivey2, S. Knechtle1 ; 1Emory University Department of Surgery, Division of Liver Transplantation, Atlanta, GEORGIA; 2Emory University Department of Gastroenterology, Atlanta, GEORGIA; 3Emory University Department of Radiation Oncology, Atlanta, GEORGIA; 4Emory University Department of Medical Oncology, Atlanta, GEORGIAdiscussant: chad Ball
SATURDAY
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PROOF 4
8:00 - 10:00 am oral abstracts - Parallel Sessions Continued
long oral i-c - Transplant/Biliary - Room: Room: Ocean Tower I A-C Continued
O1-C.02 ISLET AUTOTRANSPLANTATION AFTER PANCREATECTOMY IN DIABETICS: IS IT WORTH IT? A. Patel1, K. Morgan1 ; 1Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SCdiscussant: Milan Kinkhabwala
O1-C.03 HEPATIC ISCHEMIC PRECONDITIONING INCREASES PORTAL BLOOD FLOW IN EXPERIMENTAL LIVER ISCHEMIA/ REPERFUSION INJURY IN RATS E. Ramos Figueira1,2, J. A. Rocha Filho1,3, M. Nakatani4, E. R. Tatebe5, V. Oliveira Andre6, M. F. Souza Buto5, F. F. Galvao1,7, E. Chaib1,7, C. Lanchotte1, I. Cecconello2, L. C. D’ Albuquerque1,7 ; 1Laboratory of Medical Investigations - LIM37, University of SaoPaulo School of Medicine, Sao Paulo, SP; 2Discipline of Digestive Surgery, Department of Gastroenterology, HC-FMUSP, Sao Paulo, SP; 3Discipline of Anestesiology, University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, Sao Paulo, SP; 4Scientific Initiation FAPESP 2011/09434-8, University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, Sao Paulo, SAO PAULO; 5Scientific Initiation, University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, Sao Paulo, SP; 6Scientific Initiation FAPESP 2011/08759-0,University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, Sao Paulo, SP; 7Discipline of Liver And Gastrointestinal Transplant, Department of Gastroenterology, HC-FMUSP, Sao Paulo, SPdiscussant: david Sindram
O1-C.04 PRIMARY CHOLEDOCHORRHAPHY IS ASSOCIATED WITH REDUCED COMPLICATIONS COMPARED TO T-TUBE DRAINAGE AFTER CHOLEDOCHOTOMY : A META-ANALYSIS AND A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW P. B. Sukharamwala1, S. Parikh1, H. Safi1, N. Parikh1, J. Smith1, A. Ghani1, P. DeVito1 ; 1Northside Medical Center/ Northeast Ohio Medical University, Youngstown, OHIOdiscussant: Purvi Parikh
O1-C.06 ADULT CHOLEDOCHAL CYST: A SINGLE CENTRE EXPERIENCE IN MANAGEMENT F. Vyas1, P. Joseph1, R. Sanghi1, V. Sitaram1 ; 1Christian Medical College, Vellore, TAMIL NADUdiscussant: atilla Nakeeb
O1-C.07 SURVIVAL AND CANCER RECURRENCE IN LIVER TRANSPLANTATION FOR HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA IN THE LAST DECADE: IS THERE PROGRESS? A. Mathur2, A. M. Makris3, J. Arrobas4, K. Bruner4, A. Imperatore4, M. Christian4, G. Neff1, E. Franco1,2, N. Kemmer1, A. E. Alsina1,2 ; 1Tampa General Medical Group, Tampa, FL; 2Department of Surgery, University of South Florida Morsani College of Medicine, Tampa, FL; 3College of Public Health, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL; 4Office of Clinical Research, Tampa General Hospital, Tampa, FLdiscussant: christopher J. Sonnenday
O1-C.08 SURGICAL PORTO-SYSTEMIC SHUNTS IN THE ERA OF TIPS AND LIVER TRANSPLANTATION ARE STILL RELEVANT I. Gur1, B. Diggs1, S. L. Orloff1 ; 1OHSU, Portland, OREGONdiscussant: Paul Greig
10:00 - 10:45 AM PARAllEl uPDATE lECTuRES
liver resection For colorectal Metastases with extrahepatic disease - review of the dataRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CIntroduction: Allan TsungPresenter: Jacques BelghitiOpinion: Javier Lendoire
MOC AR
Management of choledochal cysts in the Modern imaging eraRoom: Ocean Tower II A/B Introduction: Attila Nakeeb Presenter: Xabier de Aretxabala Opinion: David Nagorney
MOC
10:45 - 11:15 am Break in the exhibit hall with Video Presentation
Video: “hepatic resection with hepatic vein reconstruction: how and when?” Ian McGilvray, M.D.
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
SATURDAY
48
13th Annual Meeting
11:15 - 12:00 PM PARAllEl DEBATES
debate 1: enucleation is recommended For Benign Pancreatic lesionsRoom: Ocean Tower II A/BModerator: Carlos Chan
MOC
debate 2: all complex hepatic cysts Should Be resectedRoom: Ocean Tower 1 A-CModerator: Natalie Coburn
MOC AR
Pro: Max Schmidt con: Jennifer Tseng Pro: Juan Pekolj con: reid adams
12:00 - 1:00 PM SEQuEnTIAl STATE-oF-THE-ART lECTuRES
optimal Techniques For Kidney and liver Preservation during cadaveric TransplantRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CIntroduction: Milan Kinkhabwala Presenter: Oscar Imventarza
MOC AR
Transplantation for NaShRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CIntroduction: Christopher Sonnenday Presenter: Luiz Carneiro D’Albuquerque
MOC AR
1:00 - 2:00 PM PARAllEl EDuCATIonAl lunCH SyMPoSIA
hepatic Parenchymal Transection Techniques: is a Tonsil clamp Sufficient? Where do contemporary energy Platforms Fit?Room: Ocean Tower I A-CModerator: Charles ScogginsProgram Supported by: Medtronic, inc.
MOC
laparoscopic Surgical approaches and Use of advanced energy for Pancreas and StomachRoom: Ocean Tower II A/BSpeaker: Kevin WatkinsProgram Supported by: ethicon-endo Surgery
Dr. Kevin Watkins will present his experience building a practice for minimally invasive pancreatico-duodenectomy. This symposium will include a video presentation as well as several key points to building and maintaining this procedure in practice.
Key Points Include:* Initial considerations and steps prior to first case* Tips on building a team* Best practices and key learnings* Sustaining hospital support — identifying the
differences in disposables for open and minimally invasive techniques
* Plans to improve for the future
Traditional Methods of hepatotomy: crush-clamp Technique and cusa. - Roderich Schwarz
Modern energy devices and Staplers: do They improve results? - N. Joseph Espat
laparoscopic hepatotomy Techniques: What Technologies are available? - David Geller
2:00 - 2:15 pm Break in ocean Tower 1 Foyer
2:15 - 2:45 PM IHPBA uPDATE - Professor o. James GardenRoom: Ocean Tower I A-C
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PROOF 4
2:45 - 3:45 pm
MOC AR
ahPBa Surgical Volunteerism and humanitarian outreach: capacity Building and lessons learnedRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CModerator: Gazi ZibariSponsored in part by the ahPBa Foundation
ahPBa executive council on The road lessons learned • Nicaragua Experience - J. Nicolas Vauthey • Costa Rica Experience - William Jarnagin • Ecuador Experience - William Chapman • Caribbean Island Experience - Elijah Dixon
Face to Face and Shoulder to Shoulder - Gazi Zibari
capacity Building in Kurdistan of iraq-Surgical house Staff Prospective- Ariel Dubose
3:45 - 4:30 PM PARAllEl DEBATES
Whipple is Preferred over the Frey Procedure for chronic PancreatitisRoom: Ocean Tower I A-CModerator: Syed AhmadProgram Supported by: angiodynamics
MOC
alPPS: associating liver Partition and Portal Vein ligation for Staged hepatectomyRoom: Ocean Tower II A/BModerator: Michael D’Angelica
MOC
Pro: david adams con: W. Scott helton Pro: eduardo de Santibañes
con: Jean-Nicolas Vauthey
4:30 - 5:15 PM PARAllEl uPDATE lECTuRES
electroporation of liver and Pancreas: Still experimental or accepted Practice?Room: Ocean Tower II A/BIntroduction: Robert Glasgow Presenter: Kevin CharpentierOpinion: Robert Martin
MOC
Transplantation for cholangiocarcinoma: Who and When?Room: Ocean Tower I A-CIntroduction: Alice Wei Presenter: Charles Rosen Opinion: Christopher Anderson
MOC AR
5:15 - 6:00 pm ahPBa Business MeetingRoom: Ocean Tower I A-C
6:15 - 7:45 PM oRAl PoSTER IIRoom: Promenade
oral Poster ii Pancreas aModerator: Sebastian de la Fuente
OP-B1.01 MANAGEMENT OF CELIAC ARTERY STENOSIS IN PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY S. Damle1, A. A. Alseidi1, T. R. Biehl1, W. S. Helton1, R. Moonka1, E. J. Raker2, D. Neuzil2, D. S. Pierce2, . , L. H. Quiroga1, . , F. G. Rocha1 ; 1HPB Service, Department of Surgery, Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, WA; 2Vascular Surgery Service, Department of Surgery, Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, WA
OP-B1.03 THE NEW STAPLING TECHNIQUE REINFORCED WITH THE ABSORBABLE SHEET FOR THE DISTAL PANCREATECTOMY I. Koyama1, K. Okamoto1, K. Okada1, M. Aikawa1, Y. Watanabe1, M. Miyazawa1 ; 1Saitama Medical University International Medical Center, Hidaka-shi, SAITAMA
OP-B1.04 HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE FOR PATIENTS WITH PANCREATIC CANCER: A POPULATION-BASED STUDY C. J. Clark1, V. Zaydfudim2, S. Harmsen3, K. M. Reid-Lombardo2 ; 1Department of General Surgery, Winston-Salem, NC; 2Division of Gastroenterologic And General Surgery, Rochester, MN; 3Division of Biomedical Statistics And Informatics, Rochester, MN
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
SATURDAY
50
13th Annual Meeting
6:15 - 7:45 pm oral Poster ii - Room: Promenade Continued
oral Poster ii Pancreas a Continued
OP-B1.05 RADIOGRAPHIC CHANGES ASSOCIATED WITH SURGICAL RESECTION FOLLOWING NEOADJUVANT RADIATION THERAPY FOR LOCALLY ADVANCED PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA A. S. Dholakia1, A. Hacker-Prietz1, A. Wild1, S. Raman1, D. Laheru1, L. Zheng1, D. Le1, T. Pawlik1, M. Makary1, A. De Jesus-Acosta1, C. Wolfgang1, J. Herman1 ; 1Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
OP-B1.06 CHARACTERIZATION OF PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA OF PRIMARY AND PERITONEAL METASTASIS A PILOT STUDY USING BIOMARKERS FOR METASTASIS (EMT) A. Abrams1, T. Jie1, E. Ong1, R. Heimark1, A. Bhattacharyya2, C. Patel2 ; 1University of Arizona Department of Surgery, Tucson, ARIZONA; 2University of Arizona Department Pathology, Tucson, ARIZONA
OP-B1.07 ELEVATED HEMOGLOBIN A1C IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF PANCREATIC DUCTAL ADENOCARCINOMA AND THE RELATIONSHIP TO POSTOPERATIVE MORBIDITY AND DIABETES K. C. Hewitt1, M. C. Mone1, S. J. Mulvihill1, C. L. Scaife1 ; 1University of Utah , Salt Lake City, UTAH
OP-B1.08 IS TOTAL PANCREATECTOMY FOR DUCTAL ADENOCARCINOMA OF THE HEAD OF THE PANCREAS JUSTIFIED BASED ON THE RISK OF TUMOR MULTICENTRICITY? A. Andreou1, T. Denecke2, M. Bahra1, F. Klein1, P. Warnick1, P. Neuhaus1, M. Glanemann1 ; 1Department of General, Visceral And Transplantation Surgery, Charit魕niversit魕medizin Berlin, Berlin, BERLIN; 2Klinik Fr Strahlenheilkunde, Charit魕niversit魕medizin Berlin, Berlin, BERLIN
oral Poster ii liver aModerator: Kevin Staveley-O’Carroll
OP-B2.01 ANALYSIS OF PRE-OPERATIVE RISK FACTORS PREDICTIVE OF REOPERATIONS WITHIN 30 DAYS IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING HEPATIC RESECTIONS FOR MALIGNANCY M. Dhir1, L. M. Smith2, G. W. Dittrick3, C. Are1 ; 1University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE; 2University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE; 3Nebraska Methodist Hospital, Omaha, NE
OP-B2.02 OPTIMAL ABLATION VOLUMES ARE ACHIEVED AT SUB-MAXIMAL POWER SETTINGS IN A 2.45GHZ MICROWAVE ABLATION SYSTEM D. J. Niemeyer1, K. A. Simo1, M. McMillan1, E. M. Hanna1, J. H. Swet1, D. Sindram1, J. B. Martinie1, I. H. McKillop1, D. A. Iannitti1 ; 1Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC
OP-B2.03 ZBP-89 FACILITATES DEATH OF HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA CELLS VIA MULTIPLE CHANNELS G. G. Chen1, C. Ye1, C. Z. Zhang1, P. B. Lai1 ; 1The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, NT
OP-B2.04 HEPATECTOMY FOR BENIGN PATHOLOGY IN 112 PATIENTS AT A SINGLE TERTIARY CARE INSTITUTION S. D. Nichols1, C. R. Schmidt1, E. W. Martin1, P. Muscarella2, W. S. Melvin2, E. C. Ellison2, M. Bloomston1 ; 1The Ohio State University, Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH; 2The Ohio State University, Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH
OP-B2.05 THE ANALYSIS OF FACTORS UPON VOLUMETRICAL AND FUNCTIONAL LIVER REGENERATION AFTER LIVER RESECTION. M. Taniguchi1, K. Watanabe1, T. Einama1, K. Imai1, H. Furukawa1 ; 1Division of Gastroenterologic And General Surgery, Asahikawa Medical University, Asahikawa, HOKKAIDO
OP-B2.06 THE IMPACT OF SURGICAL MARGIN STATUS ON OUTCOME AFTER HEPATIC RESECTION FOR COLORECTAL METASTASIS S. Kaihara1, K. Inoguchi1, R. Hosotani1 ; 1Kobe City Medical Menter General Hospital, Kobe, HYOGO
OP-B2.07 COMBINED ORTHOTOPIC LIVER TRANSPLANT WITH PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY M. G. Mesleh1, J. A. Stauffer1, H. J. Asbun1, J. H. Nguyen1 ; 1Mayo Clinic Florida, Jacksonville, FL
OP-B2.08 EVALUATION OF RESISTANCE AS A MEASURE OF SUCCESSFUL TUMOR ABLATION DURING IRREVERSIBLE ELECTROPORATION E. M. Dunki-Jacobs1, P. Philips1, C. R. Scoggins1, G. G. Callender1, K. M. McMasters1, R. C. Martin1 ; 1University of Louisville, Louisville, KY
SATURDAY
51
PROOF 4
6:15 - 7:45 pm oral Poster ii - Room: Promenade Continued
oral Poster ii Tricks of the Trade aModerator: Robert Glasgow
OP-B3.01 PROGNOSTIC SIGNIFICANCE OF PET TAC IN NEUROENDOCRINE TUMOR OF THE PANCREAS H. Duran1, E. Vicente1, Y. Quijano1, B. Ielpo1, E. Diaz1, I. Fabra1, R. Puga1, C. Oliva1, R. Caruso1, V. Ferri1, J. Plaza1, L. Garcia1, J. Rodriguez1, S. Olivares1 ; 1Sanchinarro University Hospital, Madrid, MADRID
OP-B3.02 A CT-BASED METHOD OF PREDICTING PANCREATIC FISTULA BEFORE PANCREATECTOMY W. Johnston1, J. Shen1, C. Mathews1, M. Cassera1, S. Cho1, C. Hammill1, R. Wolf1, P. Hansen1, P. Newell1 ; 1Providence Portland Medical Center, Portland, OR
OP-B3.03 RISK ASSESSMENT OF PANCREATIC FISTULA AFTER PANCTRATICODUODENECTOMY BY MEASURING OF PURE PANCREATIC JUICE AMYLASE LEVEL K. Imai1, M. Furukori1, K. Watanabe1, T. Einama1, M. Taniguchi1, H. Furukawa1 ; 1Division of Gastroenterologic And General Surgery Asahikawa Medical University, Asahikawa, HOKKAIDO
OP-B3.04 USING IMAGE-GUIDANCE AND 3-D MODELS FOR NEEDLE PLACEMENT DURING IRE-NANOKNIFE SURGERIES R. C. Martin1, J. D. Stefansic2, B. W. Neese2, P. Dumpuri2 ; 1University of Louisville, KY, Louisville, KY; 2Pathfinder Therapeutics, Nashville, TN
OP-B3.05 INTRAOPERATIVE ESTIMATED BLOOD LOSS PREDICTS NEED FOR ICU CARE: A SINGLE CENTER EXPERIENCE H. Osman1, A. Thomas1, D. R. Jeyarajah1 ; 1Methodist Dallas Medical Center, Dallas, TEXAS
OP-B3.06 CORRECTION OF PRE-OPERATIVE ANEMIA WITHOUT BLOOD PRODUCTS MAY REDUCE THE NEED TO TRANSFUSE PATIENTS AFTER A PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY A. J. Rubinstein 1, C. Devulapalli1, J. A. Graham1, A. B. Parker1, L. B. Johnson1 ; 1Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, DC
OP-B3.07 THE NEED FOR JEJUNAL FEED OR TPN AFTER PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY (PD): IS IT PREDICTABLE? H. Osman1, A. Thomas1, D. R. Jeyarajah1 ; 1Methodist Dallas Medical Center, Dallas, TEXAS
OP-B3.08 MANAGEMENT OF MEDIASTINAL PANCREATIC PSEUDOCYSTS: A CASE REPORT AND REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE D. V. Hughes1, R. L. Harmon1, J. P. Arnoletti1, W. S. Eubanks1, S. G. De La Fuente1 ; 1Florida Hospital Orlando, Orlando, FL
oral Poster ii Tricks of the Trade BModerator: Dirk Gouma
OP-B4.01 MAKING HEPATIC TRISECTIONECTOMIES FOR HILAR CHOLANGIOCARCINOMA SAFER BY RETAINING SUB-SEGMENT 4A A. A. Alseidi1, F. G. Rocha1, S. .. Damle1, W. S. Helton1 ; 1Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, WA
OP-B4.02 LAPAROSCOPIC VISUALIZATION OF LESIONS AT THE HEPATIC DOME USING NOVEL TELESCOPES: VARIABLE-DIRECTION-OF-VIEW TELESCOPE AND DEFLECTABLE TELESCOPE N. N. Nissen1, V. G. Menon1 ; 1Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CALIFORNIA
OP-B4.03 BILIARY PERITONITIS DUE TO GASTRIC WALL PERFORATION AND LIVER PENETRATION AFTER SWALLOWING OF FOREIGN BODY L. M. VELTCHEV1 ; 1State Hospital , Biala Slatina , VRATZA; 2Privat Hospital “Clement Drevon,” Dijon, BOURGUNDY
OP-B4.04 SURGICAL INTERVENTION FOR INTRADUCTAL HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMAS CAUSING JAUNDICE SECONDARY TO BILIARY OBSTRUCTION Y. Koh1, S. Lee1,2, A. Chok1, A. Chung1 ; 1Department of General Surgery Singapore General Hospital , SG, SG; 2Department of Surgical Oncology National Cancer Centre, SG, SG
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
SATURDAY
52
13th Annual Meeting
6:15 - 7:45 pm oral poster ii - Room: Promenade Continued
oral Poster ii Tricks of the Trade B
OP-B4.05 ECHINOCOCCAL LIVER DISEASE IN NEW YORK; AN IMPORTED PROBLEM L. Gutnik1, M. Vivanco1, C. Coyle1, J. Chapochnick Friedmann1 ; 1Montefiore Medical Center - Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY
OP-B4.06 ASSOCIATION OF CONGENITAL PORTOSYSTEMIC SHUNT (CEPS) WITH HEPATOMA A. REGE1, P. Suhocki1, C. Berg1, D. Sudan1, K. Ravindra1, . ; 1Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina
OP-B4.07 HEPATIC ADENOMATOSIS PRESENTING WITH HEMORRHAGIC SHOCK: A CASE REPORT AND REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE B. M. Amundsen1, J. A. Greene1, L. Bijelic1 ; 1MedStar Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC
OP-B4.08 COMPARISON OF TECHNIQUES FOR VOLUMETRIC ANALYSIS OF THE FUTURE LIVER REMNANT: IMPLICATIONS FOR MAJOR HEPATIC RESECTIONS G. Martel1, R. Huang1, A. Belblidia1, M. Dagenais1, R. Lapointe1, F. Vandenbroucke-Menu1 ; 1HPB Surgery And Liver Transplantation Unit, Hal Saint-Luc, Universit魕e Montr魕, Montreal, QC
oral Poster ii Pancreas BModerator: Paul Hansen
OP-B5.01 THREE-DIMENSIONAL (3-D) CT FOR VIRTUAL SIMULATION/SURGICAL PLANNING OF PANCREATIC NEUROENDOCRINE TUMORS ENUCLEATION VS. RESECTION A. V. Maker1, V. K. Maker1 ; 1University of Illinois At Chicago, Department of Surgery, Division of Surgical Oncology, Chicago, IL
OP-B5.02 TOTAL PANCREATO DUODENECTOMY WITH PORTACAVAL SHUNT FOR THE TREATMENT OF A PANCREATIC NEUROENDOCRINE TUMOR WITH PORTAL HYPERTENSION M. Palavecino1, P. Pellegrini1, G. Arbues1, P. Perez Mesa1, J. Pekolj1 ; 1Hospital Italiano De Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, BUENOS AIRES
OP-B5.03 HEPATO-PANCREATO-BILIARY (HPB) SURGERY FELLOWS: WHAT IS AFTER FELLOWSHIP? A SINGLE FELLOWSHIP EXPERIENCE H. Osman1, D. R. Jeyarajah1 ; 1Methodist Dallas Medical Center, Dallas, TEXAS
OP-B5.04 ROCK-STAR AND OTHER SHOCKINGLY UNCOMMON CAUSES OF PANCREATITIS? A. Abdo1, S. C. Cunningham1 ; 1Saint Agnes Hospital, Baltimore, MD
OP-B5.05 HISTOPATHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF NONFUNCTIONING PANCREATIC NEUROENDOCRINE TUMORS M. Furukouri1, K. Watanabe1, T. Einama1, K. Imai1, H. Furukawa1, M. Taniguchi1 ; 1Division of Gastroenterologic And General Surgery, Asahikawa Medical Univ, Asahikawa, HOKKAIDO
OP-B5.06 SURGICAL TREATMENT OF PANCREATIC NEUROENDOCRINE TUMORS: CLINICOPATHOLOGIC FEATURES E. Ramos Figueira1, T. Bacchella1, J. A. Rocha Filho2, A. V. Fernandes3, J. Okubo3, R. Jureidini1, U. Ribeiro1, I. Cecconello1 ; 1Discipline of Digestive Surgery, Department of Gastroenterology, Hospital Das Clinicas FMUSP, Sao Paulo, SP; 2Discipline of Anesthesiology, University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, Sao Paulo, SP; 3Scientific Initiation, University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, Sao Paulo, SP
OP-B5.07 AMPULLARY PANCREATIC TYPE CANCER METASTATIC TO THE ANAL CANAL: A UNIQUE CASE F. Ejtehadi1, N. A. Chatzizacharias1, R. Brais2, A. Jah1 ; 1Department of HPB And Transplant Surgery, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire; 2Department Of Histopathology, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
SATURDAY
53
PROOF 4
6:15 - 7:45 pm oral poster ii - Room: Promenade Continued
oral Poster ii liver BModerator: Emily Winslow
OP-B6.01 LUNG AND LIVER RESECTION FOR COLORECTAL METASTASES: A SURVIVAL ANALYSIS S. Coughlin1, K. P. Croome1, R. A. Malthaner1, R. Hernandez-Alejandro1 ; 1Western University Canada, London, ON
OP-B6.02 INITIAL EXPERIENCE WITH ROBOTIC LIVER RESECTIONS S. G. Carpenter1, E. P. Castle1, P. E. Andrews1, N. N. Katariya1, D. C. Mulligan1 ; 1Mayo Clinic Arizona , Phoenix, AZ
OP-B6.03 3-D ADVANCED IMAGING FOR DETAILED DELINEATION OF LIVER SEGMENTAL ANATOMY IN PRE-SURGICAL PLANNING S. Rahmanuddin1, Y. Genyk1, H. Anoushiravan1, D. Tahour1, S. Cen1, G. Whang1, V. Duddalwar1, S. Palmer1 ; 1Keck Medical Center , University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA
OP-B6.04 CLINICAL AND FINANCIAL CONSIDERATIONS OF ESTABLISHING A HEPATOBILIARY CENTER DURING AN ECONOMIC CRISIS G. Tsoulfas1, E. Kastanias1, A. Toolias1, S. Kalamaras1, G. Marakis1 ; 1First Department Of Surgery, Aristotle University Of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki
OP-B6.05 RECOVERY OF HEPATIC FUNCTION AFTER GIANT HEPATIC ARTERY ANEURYSMECTOMY WITHOUT REVASCULARIZATION E. Vega1, L. T. Chin2, G. Vedula2 ; 1Florida Hospital General Surgery Residency , Orlando, FL; 2Florida Hospital Transplant Center, Orlando, FL
OP-B6.06 A STEPWISE APPROACH TO RESECTION IN HEPATIC ADENOMATOSIS C. Yazici1, D. J. Niemeyer1, M. T. Lavelle1, D. Iannitti1, M. W. Russo1 ; 1Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC
OP-B6.07 IMAGE GUIDED PARENCHYMAL TRANSECTION REDUCES BLOOD LOSS DURING THE FIRST YEAR OF SOLO HPB PRACTICE J. Mandell1, K. Lowe1 ; 1Akron General Medical Center, Akron, OH
OP-B6.08 PRIMARY HEPATIC LEIOMYOSARCOMA: SHOULD AN INTERNATIONAL DATABASE BE ESTABLISHED FOR BETTER STANDARD OF CARE? R. Wijaya1, L. Lee1, S. Tan1, S. Tan1 ; 1Changi General Hospital, Singapore, SINGAPORE
oral Posters ii Biliary/otherModerator: Kadiyala Ravindra
OP-B7.02 FLUOROSCOPY ASSISTED LAPAROSCOPIC CHOLECYSTECTOMY IN A PATIENT WITH A HEARTMATE II LEFT VENTRICULAR ASSIST DEVICE D. L. Eck1, E. V. Belli1, S. L. Koonce1, H. J. Asbun1, J. A. Stauffer1 ; 1Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL
OP-B7.03 INTRAHEPATIC INTRADUCTAL PAPILAR MUCINOUS NEOPLASIA OF THE BILE DUCTS; A CASE SERIES OF THIS UNFREQUENT ENTITY M. Vivanco1, L. Gutnik1, B. Wengerter1, M. Kinkhabwala1, S. Bellemare1, J. Chapochnick Friedmann1 ; 1Montefiore Medical Center - Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY
OP-B7.04 INTRADUCTAL PAPILLARY NEOPLASM OF THE BILE DUCT A. Kamyab1, M. J. Jacobs1 ; 1Providence Hospital And Medical Centers, Southfield, MI
OP-B7.05 SURGICAL TREATMENT OF BENIGN BILIOPANCREATIC DISEASES IN PATIENTS OVER 60 YEARS E. Ramos Figueira1, T. Bacchella1, J. A. Rocha Filho2, C. N. Carneiro3, A. R. Assalin4, M. R. Ciongoli3, R. Jureidini1, I. Cecconello1 ; 1Discipline of Digestive Surgery, Department of Gastroenterology, Hospital Das Clinicas FMUSP, Sao Paulo, SP; 2Discipline of Anesthesiology, University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, Sao Paulo, SP; 3Scientific Initiation, University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, Sao Paulo, SP; 4Scientific Initiation FAPESP 2011/22470-3, University of Sao Paulo School of Medicine, Sao Paulo, SP
OP-B7.06 INCIDENCE OF POST-OPERATIVE INFECTIOUS COMPLICATIONS IN COMPLEX HEPATOBILIARY SURGERY UTILIZING PREOPERATIVE BROAD SPECTRUM ANTIBIOTIC AND ANTIFUNGAL COVERAGE IN CONJUNCTION WITH INTRAOPERATIVE CULTURES. A. H. Fathi1, K. Siegel1, C. Siegel1 ; 1Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland Hghts, OHIO
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
SATURDAY
54
13th Annual Meeting
7:30 - 9:30 PM PARAllEl EDuCATIonAl DInnER SyMPoSIA
Emerging Therapeutic Approaches to Intrahepatic CholangiocarcinomaRoom: Ocean Tower II A-BModerators: Timothy Pawlik and Shishir Maithel
MOC
Pancreatic Pseudocysts: Is the Surgeon necessary? Room: Ocean Tower II CModerator: Nicholas Zyromski
MOC
Surgical resection of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma: Patient Selection, Pre-operative considerations and operative Technique - Timothy Pawlik
Pseudocyst historical Perspective: Scalpels, not Scopes - Kevin Behrns
imaging of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma: diagnostic Work-up and assessment of response - Ihab Kamel
contemporary endoscopic Perspective - Gregory Cote
loco-regional therapy of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma: intra-arterial therapy, radiation Therapy. does any of it Make Sense? - T. Clark Gamblin
crossing Boundaries: Surgeons and endoscopists Working Together - John Christein
Systemic Treatment of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma: Where do We Stand? - Melanie Thomas
We’re in the 21St century - does laparoscopy change the Playing Field? - Katherine Morgan
case Presentations
SATURDAY
55
PROOF 4
7:00 - 8:30 am Breakfast - Bloody Mary’s & Mimosas will be served.
7:30 - 11:00 am registration desk open Ocean Tower I Foyer
7:30 - 11:00 am Speaker ready room Room: San Marco
7:30 - 8:30 AM PARAllEl CoMPETITIVE VIDEoS
liverRoom: Ocean Tower I BModerators: Paulo Herman & Sean Kumer
MOC
Pancreas/BiliaryRoom: Ocean Tower I AModerators: Emily Winslow & Brendan Visser
MOC
competitive Video i-a - liver Room: Ocean Tower I BModerators: Paulo Herman & Sean Kumer
MOC
CV1.01 ROBOTIC-ASSISTED RIGHT HEPATIC RESECTION, EXTRAHEPATIC VEIN LIGATION M. S. Sabbaghian1, D. L. Bartlett1, A. Tsung1 ; 1University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA
CV1.02 ASSOCIATING LIVER PARTITION AND PORTAL VEIN LIGATION FOR STAGE HEPATECTOMY (ALPPS). A MODERN APPROACH FOR AVOIDING POSTOPERATIVE LIVER FAILURE. V. Ardiles1, S. Sala1, F. Alvarez1, J. Pekolj1, E. De Santibanes1 ; 1HPB And Liver Transplantation Unit. Hospital Italiano De Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, BUENOS AIRES
CV1.03 A SIMPLE SYSTEM FOR VIDEO OF OPEN SURGICAL CASES N. N. Nissen1, V. G. Menon1, J. A. Williams1, G. Berci1 ; 1Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CALIFORNIA
CV1.04 RADICAL SURGERY OF LIVER TUMORS INVOLVING HEPATIC VENOUS OUTFLOW WITH AND WITHOUT HIPOTHERMIC PROTECTION E. Vicente1, Y. Quijano1, B. Ielpo1, H. Duran1, E. Diaz1, I. Fabra1, R. Puga1, C. Oliva1, R. Caruso1, V. Ferri1, J. Plaza1, B. Alvarez1, S. Olivares1 ; 1Sanchinarro University Hospital, Madrid, MADRID
competitive Video i-B - Pancreas/Biliary Room: Ocean Tower I AModerators: Emily Winslow & Brendan Visser
MOC
CV2.01 TECHNIQUE OF LAPAROSCOPIC CHOLEDOCHODUODENOSTOMY M. G. Mesleh1, H. J. Asbun1, J. A. Stauffer1 ; 1Mayo Clinic Florida, Jacksonville, FL
CV2.02 HYBRID LAPAROSCOPIC-ROBOTIC PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY AS AN INSTRUCTIONAL VIDEO K. M. El-Hayek1, S. Chalikonda1, R. Walsh1 ; 1Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland Heights, OH
CV2.03 POSTERIOR SMA FIRST APPROACH FOR RESECTION OF LOCALLY ADVANCED PANCREATIC CANCER J. Rose1, F. Rocha1, A. Alseidi1, T. Biehl1, S. Helton1 ; 1Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, WA
CV2.04 ROBOTIC TRANSGASTRIC CYSTGASTROSTOMY AND PANCREATIC DEBRIDEMENT K. A. Simo1, R. Z. Swan1, D. Sindram1, D. A. Iannitti1, J. B. Martinie1 ; 1Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
SUNDAY
56
13th Annual Meeting
8:30 - 9:30 AM SyMPoSIuM By THE CoMMITTEE on SuRGICAl InnoVATIon (CSI) Ocean Tower 1B
MOCWhat is the committee for Surgical innovation? - James A. Moser
New developments in cold and Normothermic liver Perfusion in cadaveric liver Transplantation - Majella DoyleSpanning the Gap Between Unmet Need and Technology-Based Solutions:Pathways and Barriers to New device deployment - Meghan Dierks and Stan Finkelstein
Panel discussion Jim Moser, Majella Doyle, Meghan Dierks, Stan Finkelstein
Summary of Session:on a daily basis, surgeons encounter new challenges and identify opportunities where novel technology could help them be more clinically effective. in the US, however, the process of getting new technology into the hands of clinicians is long, and there can be many barriers to success. ideas conceived of at the point of care must find a path (and effective partnerships) to successful commercialization and regulatory clearance. ideas conceived of on corporate whiteboards must find a path (and effective partnerships) to the clinical environment in order to access the specialized knowledge of front-line providers and patients necessary to generate the clinical effectiveness, performance and safety data. in this session, we will discuss some of the factors that slow process of getting innovating and cutting-edge¹ technology into hands of clinicians, and why. Finally, in the panel discussion, we will explore the possible role of professional societies and clinician consortia (such as the ahBPa’s committee for Surgical innovation) can play in reducing the barriers to success.
8:30 - 10:30 AM PARAllEl ABSTRACT PRESEnTATIonS
long oral ii-d - Pancreas iiRoom: Ocean Tower I AModerators: William Hawkins & Clifford Cho
Mini oral a - liver TransplantRoom: Ocean Tower I CModerators: Jennifer Lafemina & Lee Thompson
long oral ii-d - Pancreas ii
O2-D.01 SERUM CA 19-9 REPRESENTS A MARKER OF RESPONSE TO NEOADJUVANT THERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH BORDERLINE RESECTABLE PANCREATIC CANCER C. D. Tzeng1, J. B. Fleming1, J. E. Lee1, P. W. Pisters1, T. A. Aloia1, J. N. Vauthey1, R. A. Wolff2, G. Varadhachary2, C. H. Crane3, M. H. Katz1 ; 1The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX; 2The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX; 3The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TXdiscussant: Quyen d. chu
O2-D.02 ANTECOLIC VS. RETROCOLIC GASTRO/DUODENOJEJUNOSTOMY AND DELAYED GASTRIC EMPTYING (DGE) AFTER PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY A. D. Parmar1,4, K. M. Sheffield1, G. M. Vargas1, H. A. Pitt2, E. M. Kilbane2, B. L. Hall3, T. S. Riall1 ; 1University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX; 2Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN; 3Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO; 4University of California San Francisco-East Bay, Oakland, CAdiscussant: Trey Blazer
O2-D.03 ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF FISTULAS AFTER PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY USING THE POSTOPERATIVE MORBIDITY INDEX (PMI) B. C. Miller1, J. D. Christein2, M. P. Callery3, J. A. Drebin1, T. S. Kent3, W. B. Pratt3, C. M. Vollmer1 ; 1Department of Surgery, Hospital of The University of Pennsylvania, University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia , PA; 2Department of Surgery, University of Alabama At Birmingham School of Medicine, Birmingham, AL; 3Department of Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MAdiscussant: clark Gamblin
O2-D.04 DEEP SEQUENCING ANALYSIS OF MICROBIAL DNA IN INFECTED NECROTIZING PANCREATITIS E. M. Hanna1, I. H. McKillop1,2, F. K. Bahrani-Mougeot1, A. Fodor2, T. Hamp2, J. B. Martinie1, D. Sindram1, D. A. Iannitti1 ; 1Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC; 2UNC At Charlotte, Charlotte, NCdiscussant: Stephen Behrman
SUNDAY
57
PROOF 4
8:30 - 10:30 AM PARAllEl ABSTRACT PRESEnTATIonS
long oral ii-d - Pancreas ii - Continued
O2-D.06 IS IT WORTH THE RISK: THE MORBIDITY OF TOTAL PANCREATECTOMY WITH AUTO-ISLET CELL TRANSPLANTATION COMPARED TO TOTAL PANCREATECTOMY ALONE N. H. Bhayani1, E. T. Kimchi1, K. F. Staveley-OCarroll1, N. J. Gusani1 ; 1Section of Surgical Oncology, Department of Surgery, Penn State Hershey Cancer Institute, Hershey, PAdiscussant: Satish N. Nadig
O2-D.07 RANKINGS VS. REALITY FOR PANCREATIC CANCER SURGERY: A REAL WORLD COMPARISON Z. Chau1, J. K. West4, Z. Zhou3, T. P. McDade1, J. K. Smith1, S. C. Ng2, T. S. Kent2, M. P. Callery2, A. J. Moser2, J. F. Tseng2 ; 1University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA; 2Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center- Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; 3Northwestern University Robert H. Lurie Cancer Center, Chicago, IL; 4Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Boston, MAdiscussant: christopher Wolfgang
O2-D.08 DOES REGIONAL VARIATION IMPACT DECISION MAKING IN THE MANAGEMENT AND PALLIATION OF PANCREATIC HEAD ADENOCARCINOMA? C. G. Ball1, V. Hurdle1, J. Ouellet1, E. Dixon1, T. J. Howard2, K. D. Lillemoe3 ; 1University of Calgary, Calgary, ALBERTA; 2Indiana University, Indianapolis, INDIANA; 3Harvard University, Boston, MASSACHUSETTSdiscussant: Jennifer Tseng
Mini oral a - liver/Transplant
MO-A.01 MICROWAVE ABLATION HAS LOWER LOCAL RECURRENCE RATES THAN RADIOFREQUENCY ABLATION AFTER TREATMENT OF COLORECTAL LIVER METASTASIS. A MATCHED COHORT ANALYSIS. C. Correa-Gallego1, Y. Fong1, M. Gonen1, M. I. D’Angelica1, P. J. Allen1, R. P. DeMatteo1, W. R. Jarnagin1, T. P. Kingham1 ; 1Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY
MO-A.02 THE IMPACT OF UNDERLYING VIRAL DISEASE ON OUTCOMES AFTER LIVER RESECTION FOR HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA: THE RESULTS FROM A NORTH AMERICAN CENTRE J. Lee1, P. T. Kim1, S. Fung2, S. Gallinger1, I. McGilvray1, C. Moulton1, A. C. Wei1, P. D. Greig1, S. P. Cleary1 ; 1University of Toronto, Department of General Surgery, Toronto, ONTARIO; 2University of Toronto, Division of General Internal Medicine, Toronto, ON
MO-A.03 DOES TYPE OF COLORECTAL PROCEDURE IMPACT COMPLICATION RATES FOLLOWING COMBINED LIVER AND COLORECTAL RESECTIONS FOR METASTATIC COLORECTAL CANCER? ANALYSIS OF AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS NATIONAL SURGICAL QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM (ACS NSQIP) S. W. Cho1, W. C. Johnston1, M. A. Cassera1, P. H. Newell1, C. W. Hammill1, M. Whiteford1, R. F. Wolf1, P. D. Hansen1 ; 1Providence Portland Medical Center, Portland, OR
MO-A.04 LAPAROSCOPIC RADIOFREQUENCY ABLATION OF LIVER METASTASES FROM BREAST CANCER Y. Tasci1, E. Aksoy1, H. Moore1, H. E. Taskin1, S. Aliyev1, O. Agcaoglu1, A. Siperstein1, E. Berber1 ; 1Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OHIO
MO-A.05 LAPAROSCOPIC VENTRAL HERNIA REPAIR IN THE CIRRHOTIC PATIENT, A SAFE ALTERNATIVE B. A. Wormer1, P. D. Colavita1, J. F. Bradley1, K. B. Williams1, A. L. Walters1, V. A. Augenstein1, B. T. Heniford1 ; 1Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC
MO-A.06 PORTAL VEIN THROMBOSIS SECONDARY TO HEPATOPANCREATICOBILIARY MALIGNANCY: AN ASSESSMENT OF INCIDENCE, RISK FACTORS, AND CLINICAL MANAGEMENT E. M. Dunki-Jacobs1, E. E. Priddy1, P. Philips1, M. E. Egger1, C. R. Scoggins1, G. G. Callender1, K. M. McMasters1, R. C. Martin1 ; 1University of Louisville, Louisville, KY
MO-A.07 INCIDENCE AND OUTCOMES OF HEPATOBLASTOMAS IN CHILDREN B. J. Allan1, E. A. Perez1, H. L. Neville1, J. E. Sola1 ; 1University of Miami, Miami, FL
MO-A.08 FACTORS AFFECTING LIKELIHOOD OF SURGICAL REFERRAL FOR HEPATIC MALIGNANCIES A. P. Chidi1, D. A. Geller1, C. L. Bryce2, A. Tsung1 ; 1University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA; 2University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, Pittsburgh, PA
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
SUNDAY
58
13th Annual Meeting
8:30 - 10:30 AM PARAllEl ABSTRACT PRESEnTATIonS
Mini oral a - liver/Transplant Continued
MO-A.09 MULTI-INSTITUTION ANALYSIS OF SURVIVAL AFTER HEPATECTOMY FOR FIBROLAMELLAR CARCINOMA R. T. Groeschl1, R. K. Wong1, C. H. Pilgrim1, M. Bloomston2, M. E. Lidsky3, B. M. Clary3, R. C. Martin4, J. F. Buell5, G. Belli6, T. Gamblin1 ; 1Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI; 2Ohio State University, Columbus, OH; 3Duke University, Durham, NC; 4University of Louisville, Louisville, KY; 5Tulane University, New Orleans, LA; 6Loreto Nuovo Hospital, Napoli, NA
MO-A.10 MINIMALLY INVASIVE RESECTION OF COLORECTAL CANCER LIVER METASTASES SHORTENS THE INTERVAL TO INITIATION OF ADJUVANT SYSTEMIC CHEMOTHERAPY: A CASE-CONTROL STUDY B. J. Golas1, S. Li1, S. K. Reddy1, J. Steel1, J. C. Mejia1, J. F. Pingpank2, J. W. Marsh1, D. L. Bartlett2, D. A. Geller1, A. Tsung1 ; 1UPMC Liver Cancer Center, Starzl Transplant Institute, Pittsburgh, PA; 2University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA
MO-A.11 LAPAROSCOPIC MICROWAVE ABLATION OF LIVER TUMORS USING 3D GUIDANCE SYSTEM IN HUMANS D. Sindram1, K. A. Simo1, R. Z. Swan1, D. J. Niemeyer1, S. B. Lee1, I. H. McKillop1, D. A. Iannitti1, J. B. Martinie1 ; 1Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC
MO-A.12 TREATMENT SEQUENCING STRATEGY FOR HEPATIC EPITHELIOID HEMANGIOENDOTHELIOMA R. M. Thomas1, M. J. Truty2, E. Choi3, S. A. Curley1, J. Vauthey1, E.K. Abdalla4, T. A. Aloia1 ; 1The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX; 2Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN; 3The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; 4University Medical Center, Achrafieh, BEIRUT
MO-A.13 INCIDENCE OF COAGULOPATHY DURING HEPATECTOMIES AND THE EFFECT OF EPIDURAL USE ON POSTOPERATIVE COMPLICATIONS A. Amini1, A. E. Patanwala1, E. S. Glazer1, G. H. Skrepnek1, T. Jie1, R. W. Gruessner1, E. S. Ong1 ; 1University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ
MO-A.14 NON-INVASIVE PREOPERATIVE QUANTIFICATION OF HEPATIC STEATOSIS USING A NOVEL MRI TECHNIQUE: 100% ACCURACY CONFIRMED WITH PATHOLOGIC ASSESSMENT T. A. Aloia1, G. Zimmitti1, J. Ma1, P. Hou1, A. Rashid1, S. A. Curley1, J. Vauthey1, H. Choi1 ; 1UT MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TEXAS
MO-A.15 CLINICO-PATHOLOGICAL FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH PROGNOSIS IN PRIMARY INTRA-HEPATIC CHOLANGIOCARCINOMA: A SINGLE CENTER EXPERIENCE Z. S. Kanji1,2, N. Devaud1, S. Gallinger1, S. P. Cleary1 ; 1Department Of General Surgery, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario; 2Department Of General Surgery, Vancouver, BC
MO-A.16 DISTINCTIVE LYSOPHOSPHATIDIC ACID RECEPTOR EXPRESSION IN HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA N. J. Skill1, J. Wu1, M. A. Maluccio1 ; 1Indiana University, Indianapolis, INDIANA
MO-A.17 THE EFFECT OF INTRA-OPERATIVE STENTING ON BILIARY COMPLICATIONS FOLLOWING ORTHOTOPIC LIVER TRANSPLANTATION A. K. Mathur1, S. N. Nadig1, T. H. Welling1 ; 1University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
MO-A.18 WHEN THE OUTFLOW SLOWS: TECHNICAL AND DIAGNOSTIC CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE HEPATIC VENOUS ANASTAMOSIS IN PEDIATRIC LIVER TRANSPLANTATION J. Sommovilla1, M. M. Doyle1,2, N. Vachharajani1, N. Saad1, M. Nadler2, Y. P. Turmelle1,2, A. Weymann1,2, W. C. Chapman1,2, J. A. Lowell1,2 ; 1Washington University, St Louis, St Louis, Mo; 2St Louis Children’s Hospital, St Louis, MO
MO-A.19 THE VALIDATION OF A CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM FOR BILIARY COMPLICATIONS FOLLOWING ORTHOTOPIC LIVER TRANSPLANTATION (OLT) A. Neville1, M. Boutros1, J. Barkun1 ; 1McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, QC
MO-A.20 NATIONALLY PLACED HIGH-RISK LIVER ALLOGRAFTS ARE A COST-EFFECTIVE MECHANISM OF INCREASING PATIENT ACCESS AND DECREASING WAIT LIST MORTALITY P. Witkowski1, J. Byam1, A. Desai2, H. Te2, A. Arohnson2, M. Millis1, J. Renz1 ; 1University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; 2University of Chicago, Chicago, IL
SUNDAY
59
PROOF 4
9:30 - 10:30 am Special lecture: how Many hPB Surgeons do we Need? results From a National Workforce Survey. Rebecca Minter Room: Ocean Tower 1 B
10:30 AM - 12:30 PM PARAllEl ABSTRACT PRESEnTATIonS
long oral ii-e - liver iiRoom: Ocean Tower 1 AModerators: Ajay Maker & Pamela Hodul
Mini oral B - Pancreas/BiliaryRoom: Ocean Tower I CModerators: Steven Behrman & Purvi Parikh
long oral ii-e - liver iiRoom: Ocean Tower 1 A
O2-E.01 IMPACT OF PERIOPERATIVE BEVACIZUMAB ON SURVIVAL IN PATIENTS WITH RESECTED COLORECTAL LIVER METASTASES: AN ANALYSIS OF LIVERMETSURVEY Z. Rong1, G. Martel1, F. Vandenbroucke-Menu1, R. Adam2, R. Lapointe1 ; 1HPB Surgery And Liver Transplantation Unit, Hal Saint-Luc, Universite Montr, Montreal, QC; 2Hepatobiliary Center, Hal Paul Brousse, Villejuif, CEDEXdiscussant: Shailesh V. Shirkhande
O2-E.02 ELEVATED RISK OF BILE LEAK FOLLOWING HEPATIC RESECTION AMONG PATIENTS EXPOSED TO BEVACIZUMAB B. D. Nath1, S. Tizio1, L. Mazer1, T. S. Kent1, A. J. Moser1, S. R. Johnson2, D. W. Hanto1 ; 1Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA; 2St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center, Brighton, MAdiscussant: Pamela J. hodul
O2-E.03 PROGNOSTIC LIMITATIONS OF THE CLINICAL RISK SCORE: A CONDITIONAL SURVIVAL ANALYSIS IN PATIENTS WITH COLORECTAL LIVER METASTASIS M. Tan1, J. M. Butte1, M. Gonen1, Y. Fong1, P. J. Allen1, T. Kingham1, R. P. DeMatteo1, W. R. Jarnagin1, M. I. D’Angelica1 ; 1Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NYdiscussant: Thomas aloia
O2-E.04 COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY PREDICTORS OF CHEMOEMBOLIZATION-INDUCED HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA TUMOR NECROSIS M. K. Bryant1, D. P. Dorn1, J. Zarzour1, J. K. Smith1, D. T. Redden1, S. Saddekni1, A. Kamel1, S. H. Gray1, D. E. Eckhoff1, D. A. DuBay1 ; 1University of Alabama At Birmingham, Birmingham, ALdiscussant: Peter Kingham
O2-E.05 RIGHT TRISECTONECTOMY WITH ANTERIOR APPROACH AND HANGING MANEUVER. J. Pekolj1, L. Yazde1, S. Rochet1, G. Del Valle1, E. De Santibasup>1 ; 1HPB Surgery And Liver Transplant Unit. Hospital Italiano De Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, BUENOS AIRES
O2-E.06 PREDICTORS OF MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY AFTER HEPATECTOMY IN ELDERLY PATIENTS: ANALYSIS OF 7,621 NSQIP PATIENTS C. D. Tzeng1, S. A. Curley1, J. N. Vauthey1, T. A. Aloia1 ; 1The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TXdiscussant: carlos corvera
O2-E.07 ALTERED LYSOPHOSPHATIDIC ACID RECEPTOR EXPRESSION DURING HEPATIC REGENERATION K. A. Simo1, E. M. Hanna1, K. J. Thompson1, D. J. Niemeyer1, A. L. Eheim1, E. Sokolov1, D. Sindram1, D. A. Iannitti1, I. H. McKillop1 ; 1Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NCdiscussant: Bryan clary
O2-E.08 THE EFFECT OF CHEMOTHERAPY ON THE SHORT TERM OUTCOME OF LIVER RESECTION - A COMPARISON OF NO CHEMOTHERAPY VERSUS CONVENTIONAL CHEMOTHERAPY VERSUS BIOLOGICAL AGENTS G. c. Ndlovu1, s. iosifidou1, G. E. Bond-Smith1, R. R. Hutchins1 ; 1Barts And The London HPB Unit, London, ENGLANDdiscussant: Brendan c. Visser
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
SUNDAY
60
13th Annual Meeting
10:30 AM - 12:30 PM PARAllEl ABSTRACT PRESEnTATIonS
Mini oral B - Pancreas/BiliaryOcean Tower 1 C
MO-B.01 THE IMPACT OF PYLORUS-RESECTING PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY-THE SHORT AND LONG TERM OUTCOMES IN A PROSPECTIVE RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL- M. Kawai1, M. Tani1, S. Hirono1, K. Okada1, M. Miyazawa1, A. Shimizu1, Y. Kitahata1, M. Ueno1, S. Hayami1, H. Yamaue1 ; 1Second Department of Surgery, Wakayama Medical University, Wakayama, WAKAYAMA
MO-B.02 EXTENDED NEOADJUVANT CHEMOTHERAPY FOR BORDERLINE RESECTABLE PANCREATIC CANCER DEMONSTRATES PROMISING POSTOPERATIVE OUTCOMES AND SURVIVAL J. B. Rose1, F. Rocha1, A. Alseidi1, T. Biehl1, R. Moonka1, J. Ryan1, B. Lin2, V. Picozzi2, S. Helton1 ; 1Virginia Mason Medical Center - Department of Surgery, Seattle, WA; 2Virginia Mason Medical Center - Department of Hematology/Oncology, Seattle, WA
MO-B.03 PANCREATIC NEUROENDOCRINE TUMORS: TUMOR SIZE, RADIOLOGIC FEATURES, AND ASSOCIATED HIGH RISK FACTORS S. L. Koonce1, J. A. Stauffer1, D. L. Eck1, H. J. Asbun1, . ; 1Mayo Clinic Florida, Jacksonville , FL
MO-B.04 HETEROGENEITY OF PANCREATIC CANCER ASSOCIATED FIBROBLASTS H. L. Beal1, Q. Dai1, J. E. Shea1, C. L. Scaife1,2, M. A. Firpo1,2, S. J. Mulvihill1,2 ; 1Department of Surgery, Slat Lake City, UT; 2Huntsman Cancer Institute, Salt Lake City, UT
MO-B.05 EVOLUTION OF ROBOTIC SURGICAL TECHNIQUE: THE LEARNING CURVE OF ROBOTIC ASSISTED PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY B. A. Boone1, M. Daouadi1, M. Zenati1, A. Moser2, D. L. Bartlett1, H. J. Zeh1, A. Zureikat1 ; 1University of Pittsburgh Department of Surgery, Pittsburgh, PA; 2Beth Israel Deaconness Medical Center Department of Surgery, Boston, MA
MO-B.06 NATIONAL TRENDS OF PANCREATIC CYSTIC LESIONS OVER AN 18-YEAR PERIOD E. Vega1, S. Varadarajulu2, R. Hawes2, S. Eubanks1, P. Arnoletti1, S. G. De La Fuente1 ; 1Florida Hospital, Division of Surgical Oncology, Orlando, FL; 2Florida Hospital, Division of Gastroenterology, Orlando, FL
MO-B.07 THE USE OF SYSTEMIC ANTICOAGULATION IS SAFE IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING CURATIVE RESECTION OF PANCREATIC DUCTAL ADENOCARCINOMA A. B. Cooper1, R. M. Thomas1, D. S. Kwon2, M. H. Katz1, P. W. Pisters1, J. Vauthey1, J. E. Lee1, J. B. Fleming1 ; 1University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX; 2Henry Ford West Bloomfield Hospital, West Bloomfield, MI
MO-B.08 A NOVEL THERAPEUTIC (SIGMA-2/SMAC CONJUGATE) EFFECTIVELY TARGETS APOPTOSIS IN PANCREAS ADENOCARCINOMA Y. M. Hashim1, D. Spitzer1, S. Vangveravong1, R. Mach1, W. Hawkins1 ; 1Washington University School of Medicine In St Louis, Department of Surgery, St. Louis, MO
MO-B.09 PREDICTORS OF INITIATION AND COMPLETION OF ADJUVANT THERAPY AFTER SURGICAL RESECTION FOR PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA L. M. Mazer1, C. M. Vollmer2, M. P. Callery1, T. S. Kent1 ; 1Department of Surgery Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA; 2HUP Dept of Surgery, Philadelphia, PA
MO-B.10 INDICATION OF SURGICAL RESECTION FOR BRANCH DUCT TYPE IPMN S. Hirono1, M. Tani1, M. Kawai1, K. Okada1, M. Miyazawa1, A. Shimizu1, Y. Kitahata1, M. Ueno1, S. Hayami1, H. Yamaue1 ; 1Wakayama Medical University, Wakayama, WAKAYAMA
MO-B.11 OPERATIVE COMPLICATIONS ASSOCIATED WITH NON-THERAPEUTIC LAPAROTOMY IN PATIENTS WITH UNRESECTABLE PANCREATIC CANCER P. M. Spanheimer1, A. R. Cyr1, J. R. Howe1, J. J. Mezhir1 ; 1University of Iowa Hospitals And Clinics, Iowa City, IOWA
MO-B.12 SERUM IGFBP2 AND MSLN AS DIAGNOSTIC AND PROGNOSTIC BIOMARKERS FOR PANCREATIC ADENOCARCINOMA R. C. Repko1, Z. W. Kendrick1, M. A. Firpo1,4, C. L. Scaife1,4, D. G. Adler2,4, K. M. Boucher3,4, S. J. Mulvihill1,4 ; 1Department of Surgery, Salt Lake City, UT; 2Division of Gastroenterology And Hepatology , Salt Lake City, UT; 3Department of Oncological Sciences , Salt Lake City, UT; 4Huntsman Cancer Institute, Salt Lake City, UT
SUNDAY
61
PROOF 4
10:30 AM - 12:30 PM PARAllEl ABSTRACT PRESEnTATIonS
Mini oral B - Pancreas/Biliary - Continued
MO-B.13 A COMPARISON OF PANCREATICODUODENECTOMY TO TOTAL PANCREATECTOMY FOR PANCREATIC NEOPLASIA A NATIONAL SURGICAL QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROJECT ANALYSIS N. H. Bhayani1, J. L. Miller1, E. Kimchi1, G. Ortenzi1, K. F. Staveley-OCarroll1, N. J. Gusani1 ; 1Section of Surgical Oncology, Department of Surgery, Penn State Hershey Cancer Institute, Hershey, PA
MO-B.14 ENDOSCOPIC DRAINAGE IS A SAFE AND EFFECTIVE INITIAL MANAGEMENT OF SELECTED PANCREATIC PSEUDOCYSTS C. Luu1, J. Velasquez1, B. E. Stabile1, B. Lee1 ; 1Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, CA
MO-B.15 CYTOLOGIC ATYPIA AND CANCER-ASSOCIATED MUTATIONAL CHANGES IN CYTOCENTRIFUGATION SUPERNATANT FLUID L. Freed1, B. Corcoran1, J. Bleicher1, V. Stearns1, S. Jackson1, E. Ellsworth1, S. Finkelstein1,2 ; 1RedPath Integrated Pathology, Pittsburgh, PA; 2Department of Pathology, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA
MO-B.16 EFFECT OF ALCOHOL ON DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRESSION OF SEVERE ACUTE PANCREATITIS (SAP) IN EXPERIMENTAL RAT MODELS E. M. Hanna1, I. H. McKillop1, K. J. Thompson1, D. M. Foureau1, J. B. Martinie1, D. A. Iannitti1, D. Sindram1 ; 1Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC
MO-B.17 PROGRESSION AND MANAGEMENT OF ADVANCED DUODENAL POLYPOSIS IN PATIENTS WITH FAMILIAL ADENOMATOUS POLYPOSIS P. Serrano1, D. Kim1, R. Grant1, G. May1, P. Kortan1, T. Berk1, H. Al-Ali1, S. Gallinger1 ; 1University of Toronto, Toronto, ON
MO-B.18 EFFECT OF EXTERNAL BEAM RADIOTHERAPY ON SURVIVAL IN SURGICALLY RESECTED GALLBLADDER ADENOCARCINOMA A PROPENSITY SCORE MATCHED SEER ANALYSIS O. Hyder1, T. Sachs1, S. Mayo1, J. Herman1, T. M. Pawlik1 ; 1Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD
MO-B.19 PERCUTANEOUS TRANSHEPATIC BILIARY DRAINAGE: FIRST CHOICE OR SECOND CHOICE FOR PREOPERATIVE BILIARY DRAINAGE OF HILAR CHOLANGIOCARCINOMA? J. K. Wiggers1, J. J. Kloek1, E. A. Rauws1, K. P. Van Lienden1, O. R. Busch1, D. J. Gouma1, T. M. Van Gulik1 ; 1Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, NOORD-HOLLAND
MO-B.20 PREDICTING GANGRENOUS CHOLECYSTITIS: WHO SHOULD OPERATE? B. Wu1, H. Ferdosi1, T. Buddensick1, A. Sautter1, H. Shaukat1, R. Faugue1, M. Siddique1, F. Kamangar2, D. M. Narducci1, G. N. Sulkowski1, G. Kowdley1, S. C. Cunningham1 ; 1Saint Agnes Hospital, Baltimore, MD; 2Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD
12:30 pm closing address: President William c. chapmanRoom: Ocean Tower I ADrawing for complimentary 2014 Meeting Registration
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
SUNDAY
62
HPBOFFICIAL JOURNAL OFIHPBA, AHPBA AND E-AHPBA
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Professor O. James Garden
Have you discovered the HPB Virtual Journal Club?The Virtual Journal Club provides an easy and enjoyable method for learning about a key HPB topic, and features a series of recent articles on the chosen topic accompanied by Learning Objectives around which discussion can be centred.
If you haven’t already discovered the HPB Virtual Journal Club why not explore it today and use it to form the base of your next Journal club discussion.
www.hpbjournal.com
VIRTUAL
JOURNAL CLUB
HSJ-12-40347_HPB VI Filler_5.5"x8.5"_PRF1.indd 1 18/12/2012 16:08
PROOF 4
exhibit hall
New This Year!
Video Presentations
Area
vISIt Our MeDAl-level SPONSOrS!
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
Exhibitors
64
13th Annual Meeting
booth #12AnGIoDynAMICS14 Plaza DrLatham, NY 12110978-988-1100978-988-1128
AngioDynamics provides minimally invasive medical devices to professional healthcare providers for vascular access, surgery, peripheral vascular disease and oncology. More information is available at www.AngioDynamics.com.
booth #18BAyER HEAlTHCARE / onyX PHARMACEuTICAlS 250 Ridge RoadDayton, NJ 08810732-274-2000 x 301732-274-2417
Bayer HealthCare and Onyx Pharmaceuticals are committed to cancer research and treatment options. We continually apply our experience, knowledge and passion to develop new cancer therapies.
booth #4 & 5BIoCoMPATIBlES, InC.115 Hurley Road, Building 3Oxford, CT 06478203-262-4198 x 3109203-262-6314
Biocompatibles, with its heritage of leadership and innovation in interventional oncology, is now a BTG International group company. We are investing in product development and clinical trials to deliver on a shared vision of excellence in interventional medicine.
booth #3BK MEDICAl8 Centennial DrivePeabody, MA 01960978-326-1300509-272-0452
The Flex Focus 800 premium ultrasound system from Analogic’s BK Medical is tailored specifically to the surgical suite. It is small, lightweight, supporting a comprehensive range of sterilizable transducers, and can be battery powered.
booth #8CAREFuSIon1500 Waukegan RoadMcGaw Park, IL 60085847-473-7576847-473-7782
CareFusion delivers clinically proven products and services that measurably improve the productivity and safety of healthcare globally. The Pleurx® catheter system is the easy-to-use and effective choice for the home Management of recurrent pleural effusions and malignant ascites. With the PlerX In-dwelling catheter and vacuum bottles, patients can manage fluid accumulation through intermittent drainages at home, with minimal physician intervention.
booth #6ElSEVIER, InC.1600 JFK Blvd. - Suite 1800Philadelphia, PA 19103215-239-3491215-239-3494
ELSEVIER is a leading publisher of health science publications, advancing medicine by delivering superior reference information and decision support tools to doctors, nurses, health practitioners and students With an extensive media spectrum - print, online and handheld, we are able to supply the information you need in the most convenient format.
Exhibitors
65
PROOF 4
booth #22ERBE uSA2225 NW ParkwayMarietta, GA 30067770-955-4400770-955-2577
ERBE, with over 160 years developing innovative technologies for surgery, presents the ERBEJET®2. A unique water-jet dissector for the separation and aspiration of water-soluble tissue, that tends to spare fibrin rich structures such as vessels and ducts and provides accurate dissection with minimal trauma to surrounding tissue.
booth #13, 14, 15 & 16ETHICon EnDo-SuRGERy4545 Creek RoadCincinnati, OH 45242513-337-7286513-337-4764
EES Energy Boilerplate for Medical Meeting Program Directories. Ethicon Endo-Surgery, a Johnson & Johnson company, develops and markets energy devices that are gentle on surrounding tissue for a variety of procedures across Bariatric, Colorectal, ENT, General, Gynecologic, Orthopedic, Plastic and Thoracic specialties. Ultrasonic HARMONIC® technology offers a unique combination of precision and multifunctionality. And ENSEAL® technology offers devices that are strong on sealing. More information on the company can be found at www.ees.com.
booth #7HITACHI AloKA MEDICAl10 Fairfield Blvd.Wallingford, CT 06492203-269-5088203-269-6075
Hitachi Aloka Medical’s commitment to ultrasound for surgeons offers a wide range of consoles and specifically designed transducers to meet the needs of every surgeon.
booth #21InTEGRA311 Enterprise DrivePlainsboro, NJ 08536609-275-0500609-799-3297
Integra is a leader in neurosurgery, offering a vast portfolio of implants, devices, instruments and systems used in neurosurgery, neuromonitoring, neurotrauma, and critical care.
booth #19 & 20InTuITIVE SuRGICAl1266 Kifer RoadSunnyvale, CA 94086408-523-7552
Intuitive Surgical, Inc. is the global technology leader in robotic-assisted, minimally invasive surgery. The Company’s da Vinci® System enables general surgeons to offer a minimally invasive approach - even to patients with complex conditions.
booth #1 & 2MEDTRonIC180 International DrivePortsmouth, NH 03801603-848-9659
Medtronic Advanced Energy products deliver proprietary Transcollation technology, a combination of radiofrequency energy and saline that provides hemostatic sealing of soft tissue during a wide variety of surgical procedures.
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
Exhibitors
66
13th Annual Meeting
booth #9PATHFInDER TECHnoloGIES2969 Armory Drive Suite 100ANashville, TN 37204847-420-2339615-783-0554
Pathfinder Technologies offers computer-assisted navigation for enhanced visualization to enable medical professionals to deliver optimal therapies to the target anatomy with precision and efficiency.
booth #11RED PATH InTEGRATED PATHoloGy2515 Liberty AvePittsburgh, PA 15222412-224-6100412-224-6110
RedPath is a molecular diagnostics laboratory focused on providing the most advanced clinical testing to clinicians. Our patented PathFinder TG® platform produces mutational profiles to help physicians resolve complex diagnostic dilemas.
booth #17SIRTEX MEDICAl InC.300 Unicorn Park DriveWoburn, MA 08101888-474-7839978-229-9585
SIR-Spheres® microspheres is the first and only, fully FDA-approved radiolabeled product for the treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer Available at more than 500 treatment centers, over 25,000 doses of SIR-Spheres microspheres have been supplied worldwide.
booth #10THoMPSon SuRGICAl InSTRuMEnTS10170 E. Cherry Bend RoadTraverse City, MI 49684231-922-5178231-922-0174
Exhibitors
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ihPba / kenneth Warren foundation donorsWe are proud to recognize our donors and would like to thank all of the Organizations and Individual Supporters whose continued generosity allows us to promote the research on diseases of the liver, pancreas and biliary tract.
international life circleThomas Warren Wiley Blackwell, Inc.
research steWards circle Americas Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association (AHPBA)International Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association (IHPBA)
O. James GardenC. Wright PinsonSally Warren
leadersAsian-Pacific Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association (A-PHPBA)Markus BüchlerJohn L. Cameron
European-African Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association (E-AHPBA)Carlos Fernandez-del CastilloDirk Joan GoumaW. Scott Helton
Joan E. KolliganJoseph W.Y. LauYuji NimuraHenry A. PittJames ToouliGeorge Warren
benefactorsMichael D’AngelicaJacques Belghiti
William R. JarnaginGlenn Steele
Jean-Nicolas VautheyJohn Albert Windsor
sPonsorsClem ImrieYoshifumi Kawarada
Satoshi KondoSean Mulvihill
Steven StrasbergAtushi Sugioka
friendsEduardo Akaishi
Mohammed Alsaghier
Adnan Alseidi
Taku Aoki
Gerard Aranha
Takehide Asano
Christoph Ausch
Martine Azagra-Goergen
Telesforo Bacchella
Claudio Bassi
Shantanu Basu
Giulio Belli
Neil Anthony Berry
Syryabhan Bhalerao
Andrew Biankin
Giulio Belli
Giovanni Antonio Bonilla
Christoph Broelsch
Iain Cameron
Jorge Leon Celsi
Matteo Cescon
Eddy Hok Chin Chan
John W. Chen
Stanley Chen
Zhibin Cheng
Daniel Cherqui
Chol-Kyoon Cho
Roland Montenegro Costa
Raul Cutait
Eduardo de Santibanes
Horacio D’Agostino
Bobby Dasari
Mark Deakin
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
AHPBA 2013
68
13th Annual Meeting
Cornelis Dejong
Rajendra Desai
Elijah Dixon
Paul Michael Dolan
Marcelo Enne
Jonathan Fawcett
Evangelos Felekouras
Carlos Fernandez-Del Castillo
Daniel Figueroa-Tentori
Craig Fischer
Carlos Florez-Zorilla
Yiliam Fundora
Eldar M. Gadzijev
Steven Gallinger
Dieter Jose Garcia
Kleanthis Giannoulis
Jean-Francios Gigot
Georgios Glantzounis
Mehmet Haberal
Ellen Hagopian
Ho-seong Han
Ulrich Hopt
Arild Horn
Thomas Howard
Thomas Hugh
Oscar Imventarza
Palepu Jagannath
Razman Bin Jarmin
Timoleon Kakavoulis
Santeev Kanoria
Basil P. Kekis
Chen-Guo Ker
Mustafa Kerem
Wolfram Trudo Knoefel
Valery Kubyshkin
Nobuaki Kurauchi
Paul Lada
Roberto Lauro
Sunggyu Lee
Mickael Lesurtel
Richard Letourneau
Kam Fung Leung
Jun Li
Michael Ka Wah Li
Marcel Machado
Sameer Mihrshahi
Paulo Mira
Kohji Miyazaki
Michele Molinari
Frank G. Moody
Mariano Moro
Gareth Morris-Stiff
Jorge Antonio Mosquera
Satvinder Mudan
Akimasa Nakao
David Nagorney
Leslie Nathanson
John P Neoptolemos
Overgaard Nielson
Yuji Nimura
Gregory Nolan
Peter David Nottle
Adianto Nugroho
Shinji Osada
Karl-Joseph Paquet
Maris Pavars
Zbigniew Puchalski
Stefano Puleo
Guntars Pupelis
Renyi Qin
Sadasivan Ramalingam
Samuel Ramos Linaje
Alvarao Riart
Khunpugdee Saipan
Robert Sammartano
Wayne H. Schwesinger
Markus Selzner
Norbert Senninger
Yan-Shen Shan
Harjit Singh
Ross C. Smith
Dinananth Sonar
Karl Sondenaa
David Stell
Michael Stephen
Cheng-hsi Su
Miguel Angel Suarez Munoz
Atsushi Sugioka
Mounib Tacla
Shin Takasaki
Sumihito Tamura
Masao Tanaka
Pavel Tarazov
Hirtaka Tashiro
Jorge H. Tobar de Leon
Guido Torzilli
Evangelos C. Tsimoyiannis
Ajay K. Upadhyay
Atsushi Urakami
Thomas van Gulik
Tjarda van Heek
Dionisios Vrochides
Toshifumi Wakai
Andrew Warshaw
J. Anthony Williams
Robin Williamson
Thomas Wilson
Errawan Wiradisuria
Cheng-Chung Wu
Hongqiang Yang
Euripedes Yettmis
Keisuke Yoshida
Xu-ting Zhi
Krzysztof Zieniewicz
Annual Meeting
69
AHPBA 2014
MAKE YOUR PLANS
FOR NEXT YEAR
March 12-16, 2014
Eden Roc Renaissance M i a M i B e ac h , F l o r i da
13th Annual Meeting
sPeakers, moderators, discussantsThe following Speakers/Moderators/Discussants provided information to be disclosed.
Kevin CharpentierAngiodynamicsRole - Speaker/Lecturer/Meeting participantData Safety Monitoring BoardReceived - Ownership interestResearch Grant
David GellerMedtronicRole - Board Member/Officer/TrusteeReceived - Ownership interest
Chet HammillPathfinderRole - Member on advisory committees or review panelsReceived - Ownership interest
William HeltonLifecell CorpRole - Board Member/Officer/TrusteeReceived - Ownership interestReceived - Other
Alan HemmingBayerRole - OtherReceived - Ownership interest
David LinehanPfizerRole - Speaker/Lecturer/Meeting participantReceived Royalty - Research FundingResearch Funding
Martin MartinAngiodynamicsRole - Member on advisory committees or review panelsReceived - Ownership interest
Flavio RochaCovidienRole - OtherReceived - Other
Roderich SchwarzVartis, GenentechRole - Board Member/Officer/TrusteeReceived - Other
Charles ScogginsEthicon EndosurgeryRole - Member on advisory committees or review panelsRole - Board Member/Officer/TrusteeReceived - Ownership interestReceived - Other
Disclosures
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PROOF 4
abstract authorsThe following Abstract Authors provided information to be disclosed.
George BerciKarl Storz Endoscopy
Received Salary And Grant Support.Role - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - SalaryReceived - Horaria
Joseph BuellEthicon
Consultant And TrainerRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
CovidienConsultant And TrainerRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
BaxterConsultant And TrainerRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
AppliedConsultant And TrainerRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
EthiconConsultant And TrainerRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
CovidienConsultant And TrainerRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
BaxterConsultant And TrainerRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
AppliedConsultant And TrainerRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
Sricharan ChalikondaIntuitive Surgical.
Role - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
Eric EllsworthRedPath Integrated Pathology
Role - EmploymentReceived - Salary
Sydney FinkelsteinRedPath Integrated Pathology
Role - EmploymentRole - Management positionRole - Board Member/Officer/
TrusteeReceived - SalaryReceived - Ownership interest
Real LapointeSafi-Adventis
Speaker’s And Conference HorariaReceived - Horaria
RocheSpeaker’s And Conference HorariaReceived - Horaria
Mark LybikRedPath Integrated Pathology
Role - InvestigatorReceived Other: RedPath Provided Financial Support To Northside Gastroenterology For Data Collection In This Study
Robert Calvin Grier Martin IIAngiodynamicsSenior Author Is A Consultant For Company Who Manufactures The Device Used In The StudyRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
A. James. MoserBayer
Techlogy ConsultantRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
IntuitiveTechlogy ConsultantRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
Bayer, IntuitiveRole - Consultant/AdvisorReceived - Consulting Fee
Marlies SharkhawyBaxter Healthcare Corp.EmployeesRole - EmploymentReceived - SalaryReceived - Ownership interest
Ann-Marie TerryRedPath Integrated PathologyRedPath Is A Reference Lab That Offers Molecular Diagstic Testing.Role - EmploymentReceived - Salary
Improving Patient Outcomes in HPB
Disclosures
72
*AngioDynamics, the AngioDynamics logo, StarBurst, NanoKnife and Acculis are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of AngioDynamics, Inc., an affi liate or a subsidiary. Legal Manufacturer: Microsulis Medical, Ltd., Parklands Business Park, Denmead, Hampshire UKRefer to individual product Instructions and/or User Manual for Indications for Use, Contraindications, Warnings and Precautions.CAUTION: Federal (USA) law restricts this device to sale by or on the order of a physician. © 2013 AngioDynamics, Inc. MLC 507 US Rev A
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