AUSTRALASIAN MULTICENTRED PROSPECTIVE RANDOMISED STUDY OF LAPAROSCOPIC VS CONVENTIONAL SURGICAL TREATMENT OF COLON CA
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$495,000.00
Summary
Colon cancer is one of the most common solid tumours in western society. The usual initial treatment is excision of the cancer by an operation done through a cut down the midline of the abdominal wall. Over the past 10 years, minimally invasive technology has changed the approach to many surgical operations. A good example of this is an operation to remove the gall bladder. This is now routinely done using a laparoscope (telescope) which is introduced at the umbilicus. An image on a video screen ....Colon cancer is one of the most common solid tumours in western society. The usual initial treatment is excision of the cancer by an operation done through a cut down the midline of the abdominal wall. Over the past 10 years, minimally invasive technology has changed the approach to many surgical operations. A good example of this is an operation to remove the gall bladder. This is now routinely done using a laparoscope (telescope) which is introduced at the umbilicus. An image on a video screen of the gall bladder is then used to guide instruments to remove the gall bladder without making a large incision in the abdominal wall. This is called a laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The safety of a laparoscopic assisted approach in the removal of colon cancer is yet to be determined. This study will compare the long term and short term outcomes of people who have colon cancers removed either by a laparotomy (a cut in the midline of the abdominal wall) or by a laparoscopic assisted approach (telescope).Read moreRead less
Australasian Randomised Clinical Trial Comparing Laparoscopic And Open Surgical Treatment Of Colon Cancer: Follow-up.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$233,000.00
Summary
Colon cancer is one of the most common solid tumours in western society. The usual initial treatment is excision of the cancer by an operation done through a cut down the midline of the abdominal wall. Over the past 15 years, minimally invasive technology has changed the approach to many surgical operations. A good example of this is an operation to remove the gall bladder. This is now routinely done using a laparoscope (telescope) which is introduced at the umbilicus. An image on a video screen ....Colon cancer is one of the most common solid tumours in western society. The usual initial treatment is excision of the cancer by an operation done through a cut down the midline of the abdominal wall. Over the past 15 years, minimally invasive technology has changed the approach to many surgical operations. A good example of this is an operation to remove the gall bladder. This is now routinely done using a laparoscope (telescope) which is introduced at the umbilicus. An image on a video screen of the gall bladder is then used to guide instruments to remove the gall bladder without making a large incision in the abdominal wall. This is called a laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The safety of a laparoscopic assisted approach in the removal of colon cancer is yet to be determined. This study will compare the long term and short term outcomes of people who have colon cancers removed whether by laparotomy ( a cut in the midline of the abdominal wall) or by a laparoscopic assisted approach (telescope).Read moreRead less
Preconditioning: The Molecular Basis For Protection From Hepatic Ischemia-reperfusion Injury
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$406,980.00
Summary
When the blood supply to the liver is cut off temporarily (ischemia) and later restored (reperfusion) the liver is damaged by a process called ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury. This is a major problem during liver surgery and is also an underlying problem in liver transplantation; following storage of a donor liver ready for placing into the recipient it can undergo a similar process called preservation injury. We now understand a lot about how IR comes about, particularly by the formation of da ....When the blood supply to the liver is cut off temporarily (ischemia) and later restored (reperfusion) the liver is damaged by a process called ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury. This is a major problem during liver surgery and is also an underlying problem in liver transplantation; following storage of a donor liver ready for placing into the recipient it can undergo a similar process called preservation injury. We now understand a lot about how IR comes about, particularly by the formation of damaging oxygen radicals within liver cells to start a process of programmed cell death, but it remains difficult to prevent or treat IR injury. A recent breakthrough has been recognition that subjecting the liver to only a short period (5 or 10 minutes) of ischemia protects against a later period of prolonged ischemia or IR. In the investigator s mouse model, for example, such preconditioning was 60 to 90% protective (depending on the time after IR). This project seeks to understand how preconditioning works to protect the liver against IR injury. Our idea is that preconditioning generates a limited amount of oxygen radicals, and that these turn on signalling pathways in the cell that regulate certain protective genes. Genes that encode antioxidant and other anti-stress pathways are likely to be important, but so are genes that prepare the cell to enter the cell cycle and divide into new cells that regenerate the liver. Conversely, genes that program cell death may be turned off. The outcomes of this research will be to understand the molecular and cellular basis of how preconditioning protects against ischemia-reperfusion injury of the liver. This will allow drug treatments to be devised that, by simulating preconditioning, prevent this common and severe type of liver damage.Read moreRead less