AUGIS 2014 Final Scientific Programme

Transcription

AUGIS 2014 Final Scientific Programme
AUGIS 18th Annual Scientific Meeting
AUGIS COUNCIL 2014
President:
Mr Bill Allum
Regional Representatives:
President Elect:
Mr Ian Beckingham
Mr Mark Taylor (Nth Ireland)
Honorary Secretary:
Mr David Hewin
Mr Neil Pearce (Oxford & Wessex)
Honorary Treasurer:
Mr Nick Hayes
Mr Adrian O’Sullivan (Ireland)
Chair of Clinical Services & Audit:
Mr Nicholas Maynard
Mr David Monk (North West & Mersey)
Chair of Education,
Training & Research Committee:
Mr Giles Toogood
Prof Nariman Karanjia (Sth Thames)
HPB Group Lead:
Mr Richard Charnley
Mr Hugh Warren (East Anglia).
Mr Colin McKay (Scotland)
Mr Bill Crisp (West Midlands)
Mr Stephen Attwood (North & Yorkshire)
Mr Amjid Riaz (Nth Thames)
Mr Ashraf Rasheed (Wales)
Mr Nick Everitt (Trent)
Mr Richard Krysztopik (Sth West)
OG Group Lead:
Mr Declan Carey
Trainee Member Representative:
Mr Robert Jones
Nurses/AHP Representative:
Mrs Venetia Wynter-Blyth
Communications Officer:
Mr Andy Wyman
BOMSS Representative:
Mr Shaw Somers
CONFERENCE SECRETARIAT
All enquiries should be addressed to:
Specialty Managers
Association of Upper Gastrointestinal Surgeons
The Royal College of Surgeons of England
35 - 43 Lincoln’s Inn Fields
London WC2A 3PE
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7304 4773
+44 (0)20 7304 4786
Fax:
+44 (0)20 7340 9235
BSG Representative:
Mr Andrew Veitch
Email:
[email protected]
[email protected]
ALS Representative:
Mr Donald Menzies
Website: www.augis.org
BASO Representative:
Mr Hassan Malik
2
Microsite: www.augis.org/brighton2014
The Brighton Centre, Brighton
Thursday 18 - Friday 19 September 2014
CONTENTS
Page Number
Presidential Address
4
Information
5
Scientific Programme
6-7
Scientific Papers
8-9
Posters
9-16
Corporate Partners 2014
18
Company Exhibitors 2014
19
Annual General Meeting Agenda
20
Exhibition Floor Plan
22-23
Brighton Town Centre Map
26-27
3
AUGIS 18th Annual Scientific Meeting
AUGIS PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
Dear Member,
I am delighted to welcome you to
the 18th AUGIS Annual Scientific
Meeting at the Brighton Centre,
Brighton on the 18th & 19th
September 2014.
On behalf of AUGIS Council, Giles
Toogood has put together an
excellent programme. The plenary
sessions include a comprehensive
discussion on Early Diagnosis of
Upper GI Cancers with a special
presentation by Sean Duffy, National
Cancer Director and sessions on
current management of acute
pancreatitis and acute gall bladder
disease.
We are delighted to have a number
of International colleagues speak on
their areas of expertise and
particularly delighted that Dr Justin
Dimick of the University of Michigan
has agreed to give this year’s BJS
lecture: Does Surgical Skill Really
Count? There will also be a plenary
session discussing the current topical
issues on Service Commissioning,
Shape of Training and Emergency
Surgery.
4
As usual there will be a plenary short
paper session for the BJS prize, in
addition to a parallel paper session
for OG, Bariatric and HPB topics.
Once again there will be sessions for
our Affiliate members, which proved
very popular in the past.
To cut down on paper, full abstracts
presented this year can be found
online at:
www.augis.org.uk/brighton2014/
abstracts/
The Brighton Centre is ideally placed
on the seafront in the centre of
town. This year we will have a
Drinks Reception in the Conference
Centre and our hosts Peter Hale and
Goldie Khera have provided an
excellent selection of restaurants to
enjoy. I look forward to welcoming
you to Brighton.
Yours sincerely,
Bill Allum
President, AUGIS
The Brighton Centre, Brighton
Thursday 18 - Friday 19 September 2014
INFORMATION
CONFERENCE VENUE
The 18th AUGIS Annual Scientific Meeting will take place at:
Brighton Centre, Kings Road,
Brighton, East Sussex BN1 2GR
Telephone: 01273 290 131
Website: www.brightoncentre.co.uk
ABSTRACTS
Please note that for 2014 the AUGIS Abstract book
will be available online at:
www.augis.org.uk/brighton2014/abstracts/
AUDIO VISUAL (AV)
The AV is being provided by Jual Media Limited.
The Speaker Preview Room will be based in Office 2
which is on the 1st floor adjacent to Auditorium 2. All
presentations must be loaded in Speaker Preview
Room, even if your presentation has been emailed
previously. Once you have registered for the meeting,
please take your presentation to the Speaker Preview
Room in Office 2 where technicians shall load your
presentation and ensure there are no technical issues.
AUGIS ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING THURSDAY 18th SEPTEMBER 2014
The AUGIS Annual General Meeting will be open to
members and will be taking place on Thursday 18
September 2014 in Auditorium 2 of the Brighton
Centre from 17:45 to 18:15.
AUGIS DRINKS RECEPTION THURSDAY 18th SEPTEMBER 2014
All delegates are invited to the AUGIS 2014 Drinks
Reception which will be held in the panoramic Restaurant
located on the third floor of the Brighton Centre.
Drinks reception: 18:30
CLOAKROOM FACILITIES
The cloakroom is located on the ground level behind
the main exhibition area. It will be manned at all times
and is free of charge to delegates.
CERTIFICATES OF ATTENDANCE
Your Conference Passport (see also below) contains
your Certificate of Attendance on the back page. No
other certificate will be issued after the Meeting.
CONFERENCE PASSPORTS
A conference passport will be issued to you when you
pick up your registration information. PLEASE
RETAIN THIS. The passport acts as your Certificate
of Attendance (back page) and contains details of your
registration, including payment. Please bring the
passport with you to all events during the Meeting.
LUNCHES AND REFRESHMENTS
Coffee, tea and a packed lunch will be provided during
the refreshment breaks from catering points in the
exhibition area on the Main Concourse. At Registration
you will receive tokens with your conference pack
which can be exchanged for tea and coffee during the
refreshment breaks. Please contact the registration
desk if you require more tokens.
There is also a paying café on the ground floor of the
Brighton Centre adjacent to the Exhibition area where
you can pay to get refreshments throughout the day.
PRAYER ROOM
The prayer room is located in Office 7 which is located
on the 3rd Floor and can be accessed by the North
Lifts or adjacent staircase.
POSTERS EXHIBITION
The poster exhibition will be displayed for the duration
of the two day meeting in the Foyer Area on the ground
floor of the Brighton Centre. Posters should be put up
where indicated by 9:00am on Thursday 18 September
2014 (you will be provided with materials with which to
attach your poster). Posters should be taken down after
14:00 on Friday 19 September 2014 and we regret that
AUGIS is unable to return any posters that are not
collected from The Brighton Centre by this date.
The presentation of the three posters selected for the
Prize Poster Presentation Session will take place on Thurs
18 September from 15:00 – 15:15 in Auditorium 2.
TAXIS - Brighton taxi companies include:
Brighton & Hove Radio Cabs - Tel: 01273 20 40 60
Website: www.brightontaxis.com
Airport Taxi Brighton - Tel: 07450 222 226
Website: www.airporttaxi-brighton-gatwick.co.uk
TOURIST INFORMATION
For further information about what to see and do in
Brighton, please visit www.visitbrighton.com.
You can also download the VisitBrighton App for
Smartphones by going to the following link:
www.visitbrighton.com/plan-your-visit/app
Finally, If you are looking for Restaurants and Bars, you
can find a wide by visiting:
www.visitbrighton.com/eating-and-drinking.
WIFI
There is free Wi-Fi access within The Brighton Centre.
You can access the connection when logged on to a
computer or device. You do not require a username or
password.
5
6
Plenary Lecture - When do UGI patients get nutritional
support and how should we do it?
Chairpersons: Mr Declan Carey
15.15 - 15.35
AUGIS Annual General Meeting
17.45 - 18.15
18:30 - 19.30
Symposium 3 - What does the future hold for UGI surgery?
Chairpersons: Mr Giles Toogood & Mr David Monk
How will commissioning affect you?
SOARD Surgical Outcomes Audit Research Database
Training the Upper GI surgeon for the future.
Training the emergency surgeon
The trainee perspective
Discussion
16.00 - 17.45
15:35 - 16:00
Prize Poster Presentations
Chairpersons: Mr David Hewin
The teetotal with pancreatitis and no gallstones
Management of complications following acute pancreatitis
15.00 - 15.15
14.00 - 15.00
Symposium 2 - Acute pancreatitis for all
Chairpersons: Mr Mike Raraty and Mr Ashley Dennison
Regional management of acute pancreatitis
Papers for BJS Prize
Chairpersons: Mr Stephen Fenwick & Mr Mark Taylor
11.30 - 13.00
13.00 - 14.00
BJS Keynote Lecture - Does surgical skill really count?
Chairperson: Mr Bill Allum
11:00 - 11:30
REGISTRATION
LUNCH
11.30 - 13.00
AUGIS DRINKS RECEPTION - TOP RESTAURANT
Mr Bill Allum, AUGIS President
Mr Ian Beckingham, AUGIS President Elect
Professor Rowan Parks, Edinburgh
Ms Asha Senapati, Portsmouth
Mr Rob Jones, AUGISt President
MEETING ROOM 1
Nurses/Allied Health Professionals: Session 1
Chairpersons: Mrs Caroline Gee, Mount Vernon Cancer Centre & Louise McCleland, Imperial College
ERAS
perspective
Fiona Jane
Huddy,
Oesophago-Gastric
Specialist
Royal Surrey
A newThe
era dietitian’s
of multi-disciplinary
surgical research: Mrs
Professor
Blazeby,
AUGIS Upper GI
Surgical Dietitian,
Specialty Research
Lead
County Hospital
more and better trials for patient benefit
ERAS The physiotherapist’s
perspective
May
Nel, Clinical
Physiotherapist
ITU, Dietitian,
Imperial College
dietitian’s perspective
Mrs Fiona
Huddy,Specialist
Oesophago-Gastric
Specialist
Royal Surrey
County
ERP - the role of the CNS
Ms
FionaHospital
Mitchell, CNS, North & East Hertfordshire
ERAS
The
physiotherapist’s
perspective
May
Nel,
Clinical
Specialist
Physiotherapist
ITU,
Imperial
College
A quiet revolution: are your patients benefitting Dr Andreyev Jervoise, Consultant Gastroenterologist in
from
Pelvic
Radiation
Disease,
Royal Marsden
Hospital
ERP -optimal
the rolemanagement
of the CNS of long term
Ms Fiona
Mitchell,
CNS, North
& East Hertfordshire
consequences
following
upper
GI surgery?
A quiet revolution:
are your
patients
benefitting Dr Andreyev Jervoise, Consultant Gastroenterologist in
A
newoptimal
era of multi-disciplinary
surgical
research: Professor
Jane Blazeby,
AUGIS
GI Surgical
from
management of long
term
Pelvic Radiation
Disease,
RoyalUpper
Marsden
HospitalSpecialty Research Lead
more
and better
trials forupper
patient
consequences
following
GI benefit
surgery?
Expert Panel Q&A
TEA & COFFEE BREAK
Professor Keith Gardiner, Postgraduate Dean
Northern Ireland
Mr Jeremy French, Jill Henderson of Freeman
Hospital, Newcastle & Mr John Wayman,
Cumberland Infirmary
Mr Andy Smith, Leeds
Mr Marc Besselink, Academic Medical Center
Amsterdam
Dr Justin Dimick, University of Michigan, USA
TEA & COFFEE BREAK
Symposium 1 - Early Diagnosis of Upper GI & HPB Cancers
Chairpersons: Mr Nick Maynard & Mr Ian Beckingham
National awareness of UGI and HPB cancer
Mr Sean Duffy, National Clinical Director for
Cancer for NHS England.
How can we achieve early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer
Professor Marco del Chiaro, Karolinska
Institutet Sweden
Raising awareness of oesophageal cancer- A regional campaign
Professor Mike Griffin, Newcastle
New ways to detect Barrett’s dysplasia
Professor Rebecca Fitzgerald, Cambridge
How hard do we chase dysplastic nodules in the liver
Dr Rebecca Jones, Leeds
Questions
09.05 - 10.30
10.30 - 11.00
Welcome - Mr Bill Allum, President of AUGIS
09.00 - 09.05
08.00 - 09.00
AUDITORIUM 2
Thursday 18th September 2014
AUGIS 18th Annual Scientific Meeting
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME
10.30 - 12.30
10.30 - 12.30
Mr Richard Hardwick, Cambridge
Mr Michael Booth, Reading
How do we manage UGI GISTS?
BSG Guidelines for oesophageal manometry
Mr Marc Besselink, Academic Medical Center Amsterdam
Professor Marco Del Chiaro, Karolinska Institutet Sweden
When do Whipple's patients need a stent?
Cystic tumours of pancreas. Should we
operate on them?
15:00
13.30 - 15:30
Dr Richard Sturgess, Aintree
Dr Justin Dimick, Michigan
CBD stones post gastrectomy
Is bile duct injury always a surgical error
AUGIS 18TH ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC MEETING CLOSES
Mr Giles Toogood, Leeds
Surgical tips of acute cholecystectomy
Closing remarks Mr Bill Allum
Mr Simon Dwerryhouse, Gloucester
How should we treat cholecystitis
Symposium 4 - Management of the acute gallbladder
Chairpersons: Mr Nick Everitt & Mr Tom Diamond
LUNCH
Mr Shaw Somers, Portsmourth
Bariatric surgical lessons for the general upper GI surgeon
Mr David Breen, Southampton
management of liver tumours?
Has ablation really got a place in the
Ethicon sponsored Lunchtime Symposium: “SSI Care Bundles – Should Plus sutures be included?” Professor David Leaper (Ethicon stand 2)
Mr Krishna Moorthy, Imperial
Management of the acutely ill obese patient
12.45 -13.05
Mr Sean Woodcock, Northumbria
Peri-operative care of the severely obese patient
Mr Merv Rees, Basingstoke
Professor Stephen Wigmore, Edinburgh
Timing of surgery for crlm
Maximising the remnant liver
12.30 - 13.30
Mr Nick Carter & Dr Gina Ingall,
Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust
Managing consultations with the obese patient
Parallel Session: Topical questions - Strategies and evidence for management of HPB patients
Chairpersons: Mr Richard Charnley & Professor Rowan Parks
TEA & COFFEE BREAK
10.00 - 10.30
Parallel Session: Topical questions in UGI surgery
Chairpersons: Mr Richard Welbourn & Professor Ashraf Rasheed
MEETING ROOM 1
Parallel Free Papers: HPB
Chairpersons: Mr Iain Cameron & Mr Andrew Smith
08.30 - 10.00
08.30 - 10.00
Parallel Free Papers Session: OG/Bariatric
Chairpersons: Mr Shaw Somers & Mr Goldie Khera
REGISTRATION
08.00 - 09.00
AUDITORIUM 2
Friday 19th September 2014
The Brighton Centre, Brighton
Thursday 18 - Friday 19 September 2014
7
AUGIS 18th Annual Scientific Meeting
Alan White, Sanjay
Pandanaboyana, Samir Pathak,
Ernest Hidalgo, K Raj Prasad, J
Peter Lodge, Giles Toogood
St James University Hospital, Leeds,
UK
Association of Upper Gastrointestinal Surgeons of
Great Britain and Ireland
Annual Meeting 18-19 September 2014
Contents
Session
BJS Scientific Papers
Bariatric Scientific Papers
OG Scientific Papers
HPB Scientific Papers
Posters
(Oral Presentations)
(Oral Presentations)
(Oral Presentations)
(Oral Presentations)
SCIENTIFIC PAPERS
BJS Scientific Papers
Auditorium 2
Thursday 18 September 2014
(11:30 – 13:00)
A01
Improved survival following
oesophagectomy – outcomes
of over 1000 cases in a single
centre
Barry Dent, Rhys Jones, Shajahan
Wahed, Helen Jaretzke, Nick
Hayes, S. Michael Griffin
Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastleupon-Tyne, UK
A02
A model to predict survival
following
pancreaticoduodenectomy
based upon tumour type and
lymph node ratio
Bobby VM Dasari1, Hodson
James2, Hassan Tarik1, Chris
Coldham1, John Isaac1, Paolo
Muiesan1, Ravi Marudanayagam1,
Robert Sutcliffe1, Simon Bramhall1,
Keith Roberts1, Darius Mirza1
1The Liver Unit, Queen Elizabeth
Hospital, Birmingham, UK, 2Wolfson
Computer Laboratory, Queen
Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, UK
A03
A randomised, single-blinded
trial assessing the effect of a
two week preoperative very
low calorie diet on
laparoscopic cholecystectomy
in obese patients
Rajiv Lahiri, Nick Burr, Katherine
Burnand, John Bennett, Mike Lewis
Norfolk and Norwich University
Hospital, Norwich, UK
8
Numbers
A01 – A08
B01 – B03
C01 – C06
D01 – D08
P001 – P169
A04
The Impact of Anastomotic
Leak on Long-term Survival
and Cancer recurrence
following Surgical resection
for Oesophageal malignancy
Sheraz Markar1, Caroline
Gronnier2, Alain Duhamel2, JeanYves Mabrut13, Jean-Pierre Ball3,
Nicolas Carrere4, Jeremie
Lefevre5, Cecile Brigand6, JeanChristophe Vaillant7, Mustapha
Adham8, Simon Msika9, Nicolas
Demartines10, Issam El Nakadi11,
Bernard Meunier14, Denis
Collet12, Christophe Mariette2
1Imperial College, London, UK,
2Claude Huriez University Hospital,
Lille, France, 3Cavale Blanche
University Hospital, Brest, France,
4Purpan University Hospital,
Toulouse, France, 5Saint Antoine
University Hospital, Paris, France,
6Hautepierre University Hospital,
Strasbourg, France, 7PitiéSalpétrière University Hospital,
Paris, France, 8Edouard Herriot
University Hospital, Lyon, France,
9Louis Mourier University Hospital,
Colombes, France, 10Vaudois
University Hospital, Lausanne,
Switzerland, 11ULB-Erasme-Bordet
University Hospital, Bruxelles,
Belgium, 12Haut-Levêque
University Hospital, Bordeaux,
France, 13Croix-Rousse University
Hospital, Lyon, France,
14Pontchaillou University Hospital,
Rennes, France
A05
Impact of parenchymal
preserving surgery on survival,
recurrence after liver
resection for colorectal liver
metastasis
A06
The By-Band randomised
study of surgery for severe
and complex obesity: baseline
clinical, socio-demographic
and quality of life data from
108 participants
Richard Welbourn1, James Byrne2,
Jamie Kelly2, David Mahon1,
Hamish Noble1, Jane Blazeby3,
On behalf of the By-Band Trial
Management Group3
1Musgrove Park Hospital, Taunton,
UK, 2Southampton University
Hospital, Southampton, UK,
3University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
A07
The Role of Endoscopic
Mucosal Resection in the
Management of Early
Oesophageal and Gastric
Cancer
Rhys Jones, Barry Dent, Lorna
Dunn, Shajahan Wahed, Arul
Immanuel, S Michael Griffin
Northern Oesophago-Gastric Unit,
Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle
upon Tyne, UK
A08
Biliary Brush Cytology and its
role in the modern
management of
pancreaticobiliary diseases
Assad Khan1, Sita Kotecha1, Snehal
Lapsia2, Mohammed Aslam3, Yogi
Reddy4, Vishal Kaushik4, Colin
Harris1, Ambareen Kausar1, David
Chang1, Daren Subar1
1Department of Hepatobiliary and
Pancreatic Surgery, East Lancashire
Hospitals NHS Trust, Blackburn,
Lancashire, UK, 2Department of
Radiology, East Lancashire
Hospitals NHS Trust, Blackburn,
Lancashire, UK, 3Department of
Pathology, East Lancashire
Hospitals NHS Trust, Blackburn,
Lancshire, UK, 4Department of
Gastroenterology, East Lancashire
Hospitals NHS Trust, Blackburn,
Lancshire, UK
Bariatric Scientific Papers
Auditorium 2
Friday 19 September 2014
(08:30 – 10:00)
B01
Long term results following
Laparoscopic Adjustable
Gastric Banding in patients
with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.
Victoria Currie, Missba Ahmed,
Avril Krempic, Pritesh Mistry,
Rishi Singahl, Paul Super
Heartlands Hospital, Birmingham,
UK
B02
Gastrojejunal anastomotic
stricture post gastric bypass
surgery; comparison of
circular vs linear anastomotic
techniques.
Prashant Patel, Jamil Aslam,
Thomas Minto, Amir Khan,
Salman Mirza
Walsall Manor Hospital, Walsall,
West Midlands, UK
B03
The role of routine endoscopy
in asymptomatic patients
prior to bariatric surgery
Yogesh Kumar, Arin Saha, Pedro
Ballester, William Ainslie, Brian
Dobbins
Huddersfield Royal Infirmary,
Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK
Oesophago-Gastric Scientific
Papers
Auditorium 2
Friday 19 September 2014
(08:30 – 10:00)
C01
Survival following operative
management of patients with
gastric linitis plastica
Richard Thompson1, Lisa
Ranaghan2, Andrew Kennedy1
1Belfast Health and Social Care
Trust, Belfast, UK, 2Northern
Ireland Cancer Registry, Belfast, UK
C02
Endoscopic Raman
spectroscopy enables objective
diagnosis of dysplasia in the
oesophagus
Max Almond, Oliver Old, Jo
Hutchings, Catherine Kendall,
Gavin Lloyd, Nick Stone, Hugh
Barr
Biophotonics Research Unit,
Gloucester, UK
C03
Surgeon caseload and
oesophagectomy, gastrectomy
and pancreatectomy for
cancer: a population based
study
Ravikrishna Mamidanna1, Zhifang
Ni1, Oliver Anderson1, David
Spiegelhalter2, Alex Bottle3, Paul
Aylin3, Omar Faiz4, George
Hanna1
The Brighton Centre, Brighton
Thursday 18 - Friday 19 September 2014
1Department
of Surgery and Cancer,
Imperial College, London, UK,
2Statistical Laboratory, Cambridge
University, Cambridge, UK, 3Dr
Foster Unit Imperial College,
London, UK, 4Surgical Epidemiology,
Trials and Outcome Centre
(SETOC), St Mark’s Hospital,
London, UK
C04
Outcomes following
mediastinal leak in patients
undergoing oesophagectomy
Barry Dent, Rhys Jones, Arul
Immanuel, Nick Hayes, S Michael
Griffin
Northern Oesophago-Gastric Unit,
Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle
upon Tyne, UK
C05
Is it worth giving adjuvant
chemotherapy to patients
with oesophagogastric cancer
who do not show a
histopathological response to
neoadjuvant chemotherapy?
Chris Bowman, John Saunders,
Harish Reddy, Vince Pang, Errum
Mumtaz, Irshad Soomro,
Srinivasan Madhusudan, Simon
Parsons
Nottingham University Hospitals,
Nottingham, UK
C06
A trial of minimally invasive or
open oesophagectomy is
possible: The ROMIO
feasibility study
Paul Barham1, Richard
Berrisford2, Chris Metcalfe3, Dan
Titcomb1, Grant Sanders2,
Andrew Hollowood1, Tim
Wheatley2, Jenny Donovan3,
Christopher Streets1, Richard
Kryzstopik4, Jane Blazeby3, On
behalf of the ROMIO Trial
Management Group3
1University Hospitals Bristol NHS
Foundation Trust, Bristol, UK,
2Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust,
Plymouth, UK, 3University of Bristol,
Bristol, UK, 4Royal United Hospital,
Bath, UK
Hepato Pancreato Biliary
Scientific Papers
Meeting Room
Friday 19 September 2014
(08:30 – 10:00)
D01
Day Case Laparoscopic
Cholecystectomy - Are we
getting it right and what can
we learn to improve outcomes
and patient satisfaction of
other day case procedures?
Sophia Tate, Belinda Pearce, Dee
Wainwright, Simon Toh
Queen Alexandra Hospital,
Portsmouth, UK
D02
A comparison of a set of
indicator genes in pancreatic
juice in patients with
pancreatic adenocarcinoma
compared to pancreatic cystic
tumours using Poly A RT PCR.
Sudip Sanyal, Ajith Siriwardena,
Richard Byers
Manchester Royal Infirmary,
Manchester, UK
D03
First Postoperative Day Drain
Fluid Amylase Greater Than
2000 IU/L Predicts Grade C
Pancreatic Fistula After
Pancreaticoduodenectomy
Robert Sutcliffe, Majd Hamoui,
Mahesh Pitchaimuthu, John Isaac,
Ravi Marudanayagam, Darius Mirza,
Paolo Muiesan, Keith Roberts
University Hospitals Birmingham
NHS Foundation Trust,
Birmingham, UK
D04
Survival outcomes of patients
with hepatocellular carcinoma
and HBsAg seroconversion
after nucleoside analogue
therapy: a case-matched study
Vincent Yip, Tan T Cheung,
Albert C Chan, KCH Chok, WC
Dai, SH Tsang, CM Lo, RT Poon,
T Yau
Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong
University, Hong Kong, Hong Kong
D05
Does a fibrin Sealant
prevent Post-Operative leak
rates following Pancreaticoduodenectomy
Shafiq R Khan, Bryon C Jaques
Newcastle University, Newcastle
upon Tyne, UK
D06
Combined Ablation and
Resection (CARe) as an
effective parenchymal sparing
treatment for extensive
colorectal liver metastases
Serge Evrard1, Stefan Stättner2,
Graeme John Poston3, Peter
Kissmeyer-Nielsen4, Abou Diallo5,
Gregoire Desolneux1, Veronique
Brouste5, Caroline Lalet5, Stephen
William Fenwick3, Hassan Malik3,
Frank Mortensen4, Ioannis
Konstantinidis6, Ronald
DeMatteo6, Michael D´Angelica6,
Peter Allen6, William Jarnagin6,
Simone Mathoulin-Pelissier7,
Yuman Fong6
1Institut Bergonie, Comprehensive
Cancer Center, Digestive Tumour
Unit, Bordeaux, France, 2Paracelsus
Medical University, Department of
Surgery, Salzburg, Austria, 3Aintree
University Hospital, HPB Surgery,
Liverpool, UK, 4Aarhus University
Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark,
5Institut Bergonie, Clinical and
Epidemiological Research Center,
Bordeaux, France, 6Memorial Sloan
Kettering Cancer Center, New York,
USA, 7Institut Bergonie,
Comprehensive Cancer Center,
INSERIM U897, Bordeaux, France
D07
A comparative study of
laparoscopic versus open
pancreaticoduodenectomy for
malignant lesions
Yazan S. Khaled1, Jenifer Barrie1,
Nicola De Liguori Carino1, Rahul
Deshpande1, Derek A. O’Reilly1,
David Sherlock1, Basil J. Ammori2
1The Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary
Unit, North Manchester General
Hospital, Manchester, UK, 2The
University of Manchester,
Manchester, UK
D08
Acute cholecystectomy rate
following emergency
admission for gallstone disease
as a quality indicator; wide
variation in practice in
England
Alex Navarro, Tom Palser,
Dhanwant Gomez, Iain Cameron,
Ian Beckingham
Nottingham University Hospitals
NHS Trust, Nottingham, UK
Posters
Bariatric
P001
A photographic description of
a technique for removing an
eroded gastric band using
standard endoscopy
equipment.
Vass David, Sharp Catherine,
Gibson Simon, Robertson Kevin
Department of Surgery, Crosshouse
Hospital, Kilmarnock, UK
P002
Repair of Petersen’s space
internal herniation following
bariatric gastric bypass; How I
do it
Peter Mekhail, Duff Bruce
Upper GI Unit, Aberdeen Royal
Infirmary Hospital, Aberdeen, UK
P003
What are important outcomes
of bariatric surgery? A
comparison between surgeons
and other health professionals
views (The Bariact Study)
James Hopkins1, Noah Howes2,
Katie Whale2, Angus McNair2,
Alex Nicholson2, Jelena Savovic2,
Sara Brookes2, Karen Coulman2,
Claudette Blake2, James Byrne1,
Richard Welbourn3, Jane Blazeby2
1University of Southampton,
Southampton, UK, 2University of
Bristol, Bristol, UK, 3Musgrove Park
Hospital, Taunton, UK
P004
Laparoscopic Sleeve
Gastrectomy in a patient 10
years after a Liver transplant for
alpha 1 anti-trypsin deficiency
Anisha Sukha, Christina Macano,
Jay Pattar, Samuel Adjepong,
Audun Sigurdsson
Royal Shrewsbury and Telford
Hospitals, West Midlands, UK
P005
Routine supplementation of
calcium and vitamin D after
Roux en Y Gastric Bypass
does not prevent secondary
hyperparathyroidism
Dipankar Chattopadhyay,
Venkatesh Kanakala, Andrew
Hollingsworth, Rupa Sarkar, Neil
Jennings, Shlok Balupuri,
Peter K Small
City Hospitals Sunderland,
Sunderland, UK
P006
Laparoscopic retrieval of
migrated oesophageal stent
following complicated removal
of gastric band
Abdulzahra Hussain, Shamsi ELHasani
King’s College Hospital NHS
Foundation Trust, Orpington, UK
P007
Revisional bariatric surgery –
Experience of a single surgeon
at a specialist weight loss and
metabolic surgical unit
Deepashree Bapu, Guillaume
Lafaurie, Audun Sigurdsson
Royal Shrewsbury Hospital,
Shrewsbury, UK
P008
Quality of life following
bariatric surgery in the supermorbidly obese elderly patient
Emma Rose McGlone, Catherine
Edge, Tara Masilamani, Omar
Khan, Andrew Wan
St George’s Hospital, London, UK
9
17th Annual Scientific
AUGIS
Meeting,
18th Annual
19 - 20Scientific
September
Meeting
2013
P009
Simultaneous Ventral Hernia
Repair during Bariatric
Surgery and Incidental Pulse
Granulomas
Sami Mansour, Naomi Sakai,
Marco Barreca, Douglas
Whitelaw, Vijyan Jain,
Periyathambi Jambulingam
Luton &Dunstable University
Hospital, Luton, UK
P015
Does Obesity Increases The
Post-operative Morbidity
Following A Pancreaticoduodenectomy?
Aisah Wardak, Vishal Shelat,
Awad Shamali, Tiago Basseres,
Morsel Samim, AbuHilal
Mohammad
Southampton General Hospital,
Southampton, UK
P010
Outcomes from a reestablished gastric bypass
service
Markos Daskalakis, Pritesh Mistry,
Victoria Currie, Martin
Richardson, Rajwinder Nijjar
Upper GI unit, Heartlands Hospital,
Heart of England NHS Foundation
Trust, Birmingham, UK
P016
Standardising outcomes in the
treatment of Obesity using
BAROS and Moorehead-Ardelt
Quality of Life Questionnaire II
(M-A QoLQ II)
Anisha Sukha, Jajini Varghese,
Adriana Rotundo, Andrew
Jenkinson
University College London Hospital,
London, UK
P011
The incidence of venous
thromboembolism post
bariatric surgery: An
observational study
Jamil Aslam, Imadeddin Adwan,
Halima Alazzani, Emily Ruiz,
Marlies Heitmann, Amir Khan,
Salman Mirza
Walsall Manor Hospital, Walsall,
West Midlands, UK
P012
Evidence for paucity of long
term follow-up and
monitoring in primary care of
patients after bariatric
surgery.
James Hopkins1, Kukua Harley1,
Rhoda Sutherland3, Jamie Kelly2,
Michael Van den Bossche3, James
Byrne2
1University of Southampton,
Southampton, UK, 2University
Hospital Southampton,
Southampton, UK, 3Spire Hospital,
Southampton, UK
P013
Improving Regional Liaison to
the Derby Bariatric Surgical
Service two and a half year
follow up Study
Matthew Sherwin, Paul Leeder
Royal Derby Hospital,
Derby, UK
P014
UK Survey of Technical
Aspects of Laparoscopic
Sleeve Gastrectomy
Samrik Singh Sandhu, Aman
Harbias, Salman Mirza,
Amir Khan
Walsall Manor Hospital, Walsall,
UK
10
Posters
Hepato Pancreato Biliary
P018
Clinical Coding Proformas in
Hepato-pancreatico-biliiary
Surgery Reduces Coding
Inaccuracies
Jennifer Murphy, Charlotte May,
Derek Yeung, Ian J Beckingham,
Iain C Cameron, Dhanny Gomez
Queens Medical Centre,
Nottingham, UK
P019
Outcomes following
Interventional Radiology (IR)
for palliation in advanced HPB
cancer
Bee T Tan, Michael SJ Wilson, Ian
A Zealley, Iain S Tait
Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, UK
P020
Influence of post-operative
complications on
chemotherapy and survival
following unplanned palliative
surgery for unresectable
pancreatic cancer
Bobby VM Dasari, Tarik Hassan,
Issac John, Ravi Marudanayagam,
Paolo Muiesan, Darius Mirza,
Robert Sutcliffe, Keith Roberts
Queen Elizabeth Hospital,
Birmingham, UK
P021
The use of anticoagulation in
the prevention of early portal
vein thrombosis following
portal vein resection during
pancreaticoduodenectomy
David Bartlett, Robert Sutcliffe,
Keith Roberts, John Isaac, Paolo
Muiesan, Darius Mirza, Ravi
Marudanayagam
Liver Unit, Queen Elizabeth Hospital
Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
P022
The impact of routine intraoperative cholangiography in
2,215 patients undergoing
laparoscopic cholecystectomy:
a single centre experience
Joseph Dixon, Samir Pathak, John
S Hammond, Adam PeckhamCooper, Thomas Pike, Andrew M
Smith, Giles J Toogood
St James’s University Hospital,
Leeds, UK
P023
Outcomes of laparoscopic liver
resection for large and giant
malignant tumours.
Federica Cipriani, Vishalkumar
Shelat, Marcel Van der Poel,
Mohammed Ahmed, Mohammad
Abu Hilal
University Hospital of
Southampton, Southampton, UK
P024
The Sheffield Teaching
Hospital Experience of the
Acute Laparoscopic
Cholecystectomy Service
Mithun Kailavasan, Judith Ritchie,
Sharon Grady, Ali Majeed, Mark
Peterson, James Gardner-Thorpe,
Ahmed Al-Mukhtar
Hepatobilary Unit, Northern
General Hospital, Sheffield,
Yorkshire, UK
P025
MRCP in diagnosing common
bile duct stones: useful tool or
cause of delay?
Dimitrios Kyriakidis, Kumar
Shenbaga Rajamanickam,
Mohammad Ayub Khan
Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation
Trust, Stafford, UK
P026
Elevated gamma glutamyl
transferase (GGT) predicts
biliary aetiology in acute
pancreatitis but does not
predict severity.
Mark Tatterton, Leanne Eddie,
Angela Brent
Poole General Hospital, Poole, UK
P027
Minimally invasive distal
pancreatectomy: A single
centre analysis of outcome
with experience and
systematic review of the
literature
Jenifer Barrie2, Basil J. Ammori1
1The University of Manchester,
Manchester, UK, 2HepatoPancreato-Biliary Unit, North
Manchester General Hospital,
Manchester, UK
P028
A 5 year analysis of surgical
mortality and outcomes for
emergency surgical admissions
with pancreatitis
Michael SJ Wilson1, Ibrahim
Ibrahim2, Lorna Grech-Fonk1,
Andreas Luhmann1, Pradeep Patil1
1NHS Tayside, Dundee, UK,
2University of Dundee, Dundee, UK
P029
Systematic review and Metaanalysis of Antecolic versus
Retrocolic Gastroenteric
Reconstruction following
Pancreatoduodenectomy (PD)
Richard Bell1, Sanjay
Pandanaboyana1, Mohammed
Gouda1, Sonsoles MartinezLopez1, John A Windsor2,
Andrew M Smith1
1Department of Hepatobiliary and
Transplant Surgery, St James
Hospital, Leeds, UK, 2Department
of HPB Surgery, Auckland City
Hospital, Auckland, New Zealand
P030
Management of severe acute
pancreatitis in the critical care
unit
Ganiy Opeyemi Abdulrahman, Jnr,
Omer Jalil, Ashraf Rasheed
Royal Gwent Hospital, Newport,
UK
P031
Junior surgical trainees can
safely and efficiently perform
laparoscopic Cholecystectomy
Sami Mansour, Naomi Sakai, Vikas
Acharya, Periyathambi
Jambulingam
Luton &Dunstable University
Hospital, Luton, UK
P032
Pancreatic head resection
with vascular resection:
correlation between
radiological criteria of
resectability, surgical margins
and survival
Maria Irene Bellini, Mudassar
Ghazanfar, Srikanth Reddy, Peter
John Friend, Zahir Soonawalla,
Michael Silva
Department of Hepatobiliary and
Pancreatic Surgery, Churchill
Hospital, Oxford University
Hospital, UK
The Brighton Centre, Brighton
Thursday 18 - Friday 19 September 2014
P033
Elevated platelet to
lymphocyte ratio predicts
poor prognosis following
hepatic resection for liver-only
colorectal metastases.
Kyriakos Neofytou1, Alexandros
Giakoustidis2, Aamir Khan1,
Satvinder Mudan1
1Royal Marsden Hospital, London,
UK, 2Barts Cancer Institute, Queen
Mary School of Medicine and
Dentistry, London, UK
P039
The Safety and Efficacy of
Laparoscopic Distal
Pancreatectomy - Early
Experience in a Tertiary HPB
Unit
David Bartlett, Darius Mirza, John
Isaac, Paolo Muiesan, Keith
Roberts, Rob Sutcliffe, Ravi
Marudanayagam
Liver Unit, Queen Elizabeth
Hospital Birmingham, Birmingham,
UK
P034
A cost effective analysis of
laparoscopic versus open left
lateral sectionectomy in a liver
transplant unit
Richard Bell, Sanjay
Pandanaboyana, Faisal Hanif,
Nehal Shah, Giles Toogood, J
Peter A Lodge, K Raj Prasad
Department of Hepatobiliary and
Transplant Surgery, St James
Hospital, Leeds, UK
P040
Outcome following
abandoned laparoscopic
cholecystectomy
Shabuddin Khan, Anwar Ahmad,
Deborah Gooch, Joanna Reed,
Donald Menzies
Colchester General Hospital,
Colchester, UK
P036
Factors affecting failure of the
ERP and associated length of
stay in patients undergoing
pancreaticoduodenectomy
Matthew Rowland, Laurenda
Obeng, Sarah Zaheer, Anton
Krige, Heather Coleman, Colin
Harris, Ambereen Kausar, David
Chang, Senhal Lapsia, Daren
Subar
East Lancashire Hospitals NHS
Trust, Blackburn, UK
P037
A systematic review and
Meta-analysis of epidural
versus local anaesthetic
infiltration via wound
catheters in open liver
resection.
Richard Bell, Sanjay
Pandanaboyana, Sonsoles
Martinez-Lopez, Nehal Shah, K
Raj Prasad
Department of Hepatobiliary and
Transplant Surgery, St James
Hospital, Leeds, UK
P038
Role of prophylactic
octreotide in
pancreaticoduodenectomy
patients: single centre
comparative study
Sanjeev Rohatgi, Shafiq Rehman,
Jeremy Jules French, Derek
Michael Manas, Gourab Sen,
Steven Alan White, Bryon Charles
Jaques
Freeman Hospital, Newcastleupon-Tyne, UK
P041
Outcomes following resection
of liver metastases secondary
to rectal cancer
Antonella De Rosa, Sina Hossaini,
Jamie Mills, Ian Beckingham, Iain
Cameron, Dhanny Gomez
Queen’s Medical Centre,
Nottingham University Hospitals
NHS Trust, Nottingham, UK
P043
Conversion of clinical practice
to numbers: how reliable is
Glasgow Scoring in acute
Gallbladder stone
pancreatitis?
Kelly Lee, Donald Menzies,
Deborah Gooch, Joanna Reed,
Shabuddin Khan
Colchester General Hospital,
Colchester, UK
P044
Inflow control in laparoscopic
liver surgery: technical
aspects
Federica Cipriani, Vishalkumar
Shelat, Awad Shamali,
Mohammed Ahmed, Aysha
Wardak, Mohammad Abu Hilal
University Hospital of
Southampton, Southampton, UK
P045
Systematic Review of
Single Incision Laparoscopic
Cholecystectomy(SILC) Vs.
Conventional Laparoscopic
Cholecystectomy
(CLC).
Henk Wegstapl, Susan Plummer,
Mahmood Hardan
Ministry of Health, Anbar-Ramadi,
Iraq
P046
Laparoscopic Roux en Y
Hepatico-jejunostomy and
gastro-jejunostomy in a
patient with advanced
pancreatic cancer.
Roy Gurprashad, Douglas
Whitelaw
Luton & Dunstable University
Hospital, Bedfordshire, UK
P052
Non-operative Management
for Blunt Traumatic Splenic
Injury: Are we Falling Behind?
A Decade’s Experience from a
University Hospital
Christopher Brown, Karen Litton,
David Fleming, Ashraf Rasheed
Royal Gwent Hospital, Newport,
UK
P047
Putative biliary strictures in
patients with a normal
bilirubin: What is the
probability of malignancy?
Sarah Thomasset, David
Saunders, Adele Holland, Ashley
Dennison, Giuseppe Garcea
Leicester General Hospital,
Leicester, UK
P054
Laparoscopic versus open
distal pancreatectomy for the
treatment of pre-malignant
and malignant lesions
Jenifer Barrie1, Rahul Deshpande1,
Derek O’Reilly1, Nicola De
Liguori Carino1, Basil Ammori2
1The Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary
Unit, North Manchester General
Hospital, Manchester, UK, 2The
University of Manchester,
Manchester, UK
P048
C-reactive protein (CRP) is an
independent valid predictor of
rate of conversion of
laparoscopic cholecystectomy
Yan Li Goh, Zaher Toumi,
Ravindra S Date
Royal Preston Hospital, Preston, UK
P049
Evaluation of heat sink effect
on microwave ablation using
an ex vivo perfused porcine
liver
Seok Ling Ong, Gianpiero
Gravante, Matthew Metcalfe,
David Lloyd, Ashley Dennison
Leicester HPB Unit, Leicester, UK
P050
Gallbladder polyps and the
risk of malignancy: A
systematic review
Mohamed Elmasry1, Don Lindop2,
Declan Dunne1, Hassan Malik1,
Graeme Poston1, Stephen
Fenwick1
1Aintree University Hospital NHS
Foundation Trust, Liverpool, UK,
2Liverpool University, Liverpool, UK
P051
Surgical Management of
Pancreatic Neuroendocrine
Tumors - PNETs:
Single Centre Experience
Nikolaos Benetatos1, James
Hodson2, Keith Roberts1, Ravi
Marudanayagam1, Robert
Sutcliffe1, Paolo Muiesan1, John R
Isaac1, Darius F Mirza1
1Liver Unit, Queen Elizabeth
Hospital of Birmingham,
Birmingham, UK, 2Wolfson
Computer Laboratory, Queen
Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham,
Birmingham, UK
P055
Ablation for recurrent
hepatocellular carcinoma:
A systematic review of
clinical efficacy and prognostic
factors
Sarah Thomasset, Ashley
Dennison, Giuseppe Garcea
Leicester General Hospital,
Leicester, UK
P056
The need for standardisation
of outcome reporting in
pancreatic cancer surgery
Jonathan Rees1, David van Dijk2,
Mariëlle Coolsen2, Steven Olde
Damink2, Jane Blazeby1
1University of Bristol, Bristol, UK,
2Maastricht University, Maastricht,
The Netherlands
P057
Audit to assess the quality of
post-operative instruction
documentation following
laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
David Thomson, Matthew
Baldwin, Maria Bellini, Michael
Silva
Oxford University Hospitals Trust,
Oxford, UK
P058
Trends in Total
Pancreatectomy over a
Quarter of a Century at the
Birmingham Liver Unit
Max Almond, Robert Sutcliffe,
Ravi Marudanayagam, John Isaac,
Paulo Muiesan, Darius Mirza,
Simon Bramhall, Keith Roberts
University Hospital, Birmingham,
UK
11
AUGIS 18th Annual Scientific Meeting
P059
The management of acute
cholelithiasis: Local Audit of
‘Hot Gallbladders’ at the
Royal Liverpool University
Hospital, 14th September
2012- 28th February 2014
Rebecca Wheelhouse, Victoria
Fretwell
Liverpool Medical School, Liverpool,
Merseyside, UK
P065
Surgical Indications for
inpatient MRCP: Does it
increase efficiency in HPB
services?
James Milburn, James Bailey, Sarah
Milner, Helen Morgan, Keith
Dunn, Ian Beckingham, Iain
Cameron, Dhanwant Gomez
Queens Medical Centre,
Nottingham, UK
P060
Is daycase laparoscopic
cholecystectomy in the over
75 age group well tolerated?
Kirk Bowling, Martha Nixon,
Gemma Dovey, Nick Johnson
Torbay Hospital, Devon, UK
P066
Enhanced recovery
programme for
Pancreaticoduodenectomy
not only reduces post
operative stay hospital
but also 30 day readmission
rates
Mohammed AbuHilal, Hannah
Clarke
University Hospital Southampton,
Southampton, UK
P061
Laparoscopic CBD exploration
(LCBDE) using rigid
choledochoscopy with near
100% complete clearance! – a
single centre experience.
Pawanindra Lal, Anubhav Vindal,
Lovenish Bains, Jagdish Chander
Division of Minimal Access Surgery,
Department of Surgery, Maulana
Azad Medical College, University of
Delhi., New Delhi, India
P062
Is pancreatoduodenectomy for
pancreatic cancer safe in
elderly patients?
Bobby V M Dasari, Tarik Hassan,
Ravi Marudanayagam, Paolo
Muiesan, Simon Bramhall, Robert
Sutcliffe, Darius Mirza, John Isaac,
Keith Roberts
The Liver Unit, Queen Elizabeth
Hospital, Birmingham, UK
P063
Impact of synchronous vs.
metachronous colorectal liver
metastases (CRLM) on overall
survival and recurrence: In
patients undergoing liver
resection with > 4 lesions.
Nehal Shah, Sanjay
Pandanaboyana, Alan White,
Ernest Hidalgo, Peter Lodge,
Giles Toogood, Raj K. Prasad
St. James University Hospital,
Leeds, UK
P064
Postoperative complications
and pancreatic fistula do not
impact on long term survival
after Pancreato-duodenectomy.
Sanjay Pandanaboyana, Andrew
Healey, Alan White, James Powell,
Mark Duxbury, Ravi Ravindran,
Stephen Wigmore, Rowan Parks
Royal Infirmary Edinburgh,
Edinburgh, UK
12
P067
Are fibrin sealants cost
effective in liver surgery?
Richard Bell, Sanjay
Pandanaboyana, Alan White,
Nehal Shah, Ernest Hidalgo, Giles
Toogood, J Peter A Lodge, K Raj
Prasad
Department of Hepatobiliary and
Transplant Surgery, St James
Hospital, Leeds, UK
P068
Outcome following liver
resection for patients
presenting with simultaneous
hepato-pulmonary colorectal
metastases: an observational
study
Rajiv Dave, Samir Pathak, Alan
White, Ernest Hidalgo, Raj Prasad,
J Peter Lodge, Richard Milton,
Giles Toogood
St James University Hospital, Leeds,
West Yorkshire, UK
P069
Improving the quality of
operative notes for
laparoscopic cholecystectomy
Mathew Baldwin, Maria Bellini,
David Thompson, Michael Silva
Oxford University NHS Trust,
Oxford, UK
P070
Does emergency laparoscopic
cholecystectomy in the over
75 age group take longer to
perform than the daycase
setting?
Martha Nixon, Kirk Bowling,
Gemma Dovey, Nick Johnson
Torbay Hospital, Devon, UK
P071
Pancreatico-duodenectomy for
non-ampullary duodenal
lesions: indications and results
Awad Shamali, Vishal Shelat, Janes
Elenor, Aisha Wardak,
Mohammed Abuhilal
University Hospital Southampton,
Southampton, UK
P072
Gallstone coleus: Images of an
atypical presentation of
cholelithiasis
Simon Morton, Simon Gibson,
Catherine Sharp, Kevin Robertson
Department of General Surgery,
University Hospital Crosshouse,
Kilmarnock, UK
P073
Cross matching in elective
hepato-pancreatico-biliary
procedures: Is it required in
all cases?
Sara Di Carlo, Ian J Beckingham,
Iain C Cameron, Dhanwant
Gomez
Queen’s Medical Centre,
Nottingham, UK
P074
Laparoscopic liver resection –
our experience
Deepak Hariharan, Dhanwant
Gomez, Iain Cameron, Ian
Beckingham
QMC, Nottingham, UK
P076
Systematic review and metaanalyses of the diagnosis of
Pancreatic Intraductal
Papillary Mucinous Neoplasia
(IPMN)
Asma Sultana1, Richard Jackson2,
Paula Ghaneh1, Michael Raraty1,
Robert Sutton1, John
Neoptolemos1, Christopher
Halloran1
1NIHR Pancreatic Biomedical
Research Unit, University of
Liverpool, Liverpool, UK, 2Medical
Statistics, Liverpool CRUK Clinical
Trials Unit, Liverpool, UK
P077
Comparison of survival
outcomes of right posterior
sectionectomy and right
hepatectomy for
hepatocellular carcinoma in
cirrhotic livers: a single centre
experience
Vincent S Yip, Tan To Cheung,
Albert C Chan, Kenneth S H
Chok, WC Dai, SH Tsang, CM Lo,
RT Poon
Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong
University, Hong Kong, Hong Kong
P078
Changes in immunological
parameters in colorectal liver
metastasis
James Pine1, Nic Orsi2, Steve
Richards1, Michelle Cummings2,
Matthew Cullen1, Philip Quirke2,
Raj Prasad1
1St James’s University Hospital,
Leeds, UK, 2Leeds Institute of
Cancer and Pathology, Leeds, UK
P079
Is a trial comparing Resection
versus Ablation of Colorectal
Liver Metastases Feasible?
Trish Duncan, Kishore Minhas,
Pufulete Maria, Mark Callaway,
Reyad Abbadi
1Bristol Royal Infirmary, Bristol, UK,
2University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
P080
A 5 year analysis of surgical
mortality and outcomes for
emergency surgical admissions
with cholecystitis
Lorna Grech-Fonk1, Fraser Peck2,
Adam Williamson1, Michael SJ
Wilson1, Pradeep Patil1
1NHS Tayside, Dundee, UK,
2University of Dundee, Dundee, UK
P081
New-onset diabetes after
distal pancreatectomy: a
systematic review
Kirstin De Bruijn, Casper van
Eijck
Erasmus University Medical Center,
Rotterdam, The Netherlands
P082
The role of intra-operative
cholangiography in patients
undergoing laparoscopic
cholecystectomy for acute
gallstone pancreatitis. Is
magnetic resonance
cholangiopancreatography still
needed?
Amitabh Thacoor, Samir Pathak,
Joseph Dixon, Adam PeckhamCooper, Thomas Pike, Christian
Macutkiewicz, Giles J Toogood,
Andrew M Smith
St James’s University Hospital,
Leeds, UK
P083
Raised neutrophil-tolymphocyte ratio in operable
colorectal liver metastases
James Pine1, Nic Orsi2, Stephen
Richards1, Michelle Cummings2,
Matthew Cullen1, Philip Quirke2,
Raj Prasad1
1St James’s University Hospital,
Leeds, UK, 2Leeds Institute of
Cancer and Pathology, Leeds, UK
The Brighton Centre, Brighton
Thursday 18 - Friday 19 September 2014
P084
The effect of rurality on
delivering day-case ERCP
Michael Gale, Georgina McLellan,
Appou Tamijmarane, Ronald
Coggins
Raigmore Hospital, Inverness, UK
P085
Laparoscopic liver resection
for lesions adjacent to major
vasculature: feasibility, safety
and oncological efficiency.
F Cipriani, V Shelat, M Van der
Poel, M Besselink, D Flowers, B
Stedmen, NW Pearce, M Abu Hilal
University Hospital of
Southampton, Southampton, UK
P087
Bilirubin level as a predictor of
hepatopancreatic and biliary
malignancy
Assad Khan1, Sita Kotecha1,
Snehal Lapsia2, Mohammed
Aslam3, Yogi Reddy4, Vishal
Kaushik4, Colin Harris1,
Ambareen Kausar1, David Chang1,
Daren Subar1
1Department of Hepatobiliary and
Pancreatic Surgery, East Lancashire
NHS Trust, Blackburn, Lancashire,
UK, 2Department of Radiology, East
Lancashire NHS Trust, Blackburn,
Lancashire, UK, 3Department of
Pathology, East Lancashire NHS
Trust, Blackburn, Lancashire, UK,
4Department of Gastroenterology,
East Lancashire NHS Trust,
Blackburn, Lancashire, UK
P088
Timing of Cholecystectomy for
gallstone pancreatitis: A
comparison between the
current practice in a teaching
hospital (St Georges Hospital)
with a district general hospital
(Kingston)
Yiwen Loh1, Hannah Mills2, Tara
Masilamani1, Kam Wa Jessica
Mok2, Amanda Bond2, Marcus
Reddy1, Nadeen Low1
1St Georges Hospital NHS Trust,
London, UK, 2Kingston Hospital,
London, UK
Posters
Oesophago-Gastric
P089
Potential for Oesophageal
Cancer Screening using
Spectral Cytopathology
Max Almond1, Oliver Old1, Gavin
Lloyd1, Hugh Barr1, Doug
Townsend2, Max Diem2
1Biophotonics Research Unit,
Gloucester, UK, 2Northeastern
University, Boston, USA
P090
Day-case laparoscopic antireflux surgery: Feasible, safe
and cost-effective using a
nurse-led protocol.
Denise Wainwright, Alun Jones,
Simon Toh, Stewart Mercer, Nick
Carter, Michael Clarke
Queen Alexandra Hospital,
Portsmouth, UK
P091
Trans-hiatal repair without
thoracotomy in lower third
oesophageal perforation
Niloy Das, Rubinder Basson, Ravi
Date, Chris Ball, Jeremy Ward,
Paul Turner, Kishore Pursnani,
Vinutha Shetty
Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS
Trust, Preston, UK
P092
Prognostic significance of body
composition in upper
gastrointestinal (UGI) cancer
surgery
Paul Blake, Alex Karran, Andrew
Beamish, David Chan, Gary
Howells, Rachel Barlow, W.G. Lewis
University Hospital of Wales,
Cardiff, UK
P093
Outcome of surgical training
in oesophago-gastric cancer
surgery
Arin Saha, Henry Sue-Ling
St. James’s University Hospital,
Leeds, West Yorkshire, UK
P094
Oncological outcome of
minimally invasive
oesophagectomy in comparison
to open oesophagectomy- a
meta-analysis.
Niteen Tapuria1, Henry Potts2,
Archana Tapuria2, Krish singh1,
Khaled Hamdan1
1Royal Sussex County, Brighton, UK,
2UCL, London, UK
P095
The impact of positive
peritoneal cytology on survival
in patients with oesophageal
and gastric cancer.
Amin Amin2, Felicity Evison1,
Michael Hallissey1, Olga Tucker2
1University Hospitals of Birmingham
Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK,
2School of Cancer Sciences,
University fo Birmingham,
Birmingham, UK
P096
Redefining response to
neoadjuvant chemotherapy in
patients with oesophagogastric cancer
David Bunting, Tim Wheatley,
Richard Berrisford, Tim Bracey,
Paul Peyser, Joe Rahamim, Grant
Sanders
Peninsula Oesophago-gastric Unit,
Plymouth, UK
P097
A multicentre evaluation of
postoperative protocols
following oesophago-gastric
cancer resections.
Sophie Doran, Vasha Kaur, Olga
Tucker, Bruno Sgromo, Stuart
Mercer, Chandra Cheruvu,
Ahmed Al-Bahrani, Edward
Cheong, Yirupaiahgari Krishnaiah
Setty Viswanath, Abeezar Sarela,
James Gossage, Andrew Davies,
Paul Leeder, Krishna Moorthy
St Mary’s Oesophago-Gastric
Surgery Unit on behalf of the Upper
GI Surgical quality improvement
alliance (SQILL), London, UK
P098
Barrett’s Oesophagus
Surveillance Study (BOSS):
overcoming the challenges of
recruitment to a large
Randomised Controlled Trial
Oliver Old1, Clive Stokes1, Julie
Hapeshi1, Chris Foy1, Corran
Roberts2, Sharon Love2, Hugh
Barr1
1Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS
Foundation Trust, Gloucester, UK,
2Centre for Statistics in Medicine,
Oxford, UK
P100
LINX as a treatment for
gastro-oesophageal reflux
disease: a systematic review
Yiwen Loh, Emma Rose Mcglone,
Marcus Reddy, Omar A Khan
St Georges Hospital NHS Trust,
London, UK
P101
Are we making progress?
Making sense of the evidence
for minimally invasive
oesophagectomy
Angeline Lee, Natalie Blencowe,
Aleksandra Szczap, Vijay Pattni,
Keh Wei Kong, Thomas Lloyd,
Krizun Loganathan, Shelley Porter,
William Robb, Katie Whale, Jane
Blazeby
University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
P102
Reflux and Dysphagia
Following Left
Thoracoabdominal and
Transhiatal Oesophagectomy
Niyati Lobo1, Husam Ebied1,
Andrew Davies1, Robert Mason1,
Asif Johar2, Pernilla Lagergren2,
Jesper Lagergren2, James
Gossage1
1Department of Upper GI Surgery,
St Thomas’ Hospital, London, UK,
2Unit of Upper Gastrointestinal
Research, Department of Molecular
Medicine and Surgery, Karolinska
Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
P103
Predictive factors for
successful outcome after
laparoscopic Nissen
fundoplication for gastrooesophageal reflux disease
(GORD)
Imeshi Wijetunga, Arin Saha,
Pedro Ballester, William Ainslie,
Brian Dobbins
Huddersfield Royal Infirmary,
Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK
P104
Can Preoperative
Investigations Predict
Outcome Following
Laparoscopic Nissen
Fundoplication?
Ashok Bohra, Satya Pal Singh,
Amit Nair
Russells Hall Hospital, Dudley, UK
P105
Avid nodal stage of
oesophageal cancer and
metabolic response to
neoadjuvant chemotherapy:
novel methods of predicting
progression to metastatic
disease
John Findlay1, Richard Gillies1,
Jamie Franklin3, Eugene Teoh3,
Greg Jones1, Sara Di Carlo1,
Bruno Sgromo1, Robert Marshall1,
Nicholas Maynard1, Kevin
Bradley3, Mark Middleton2
1Oxford OesophagoGastric Centre,
Churchill Hospital, Oxford, UK,
2NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research
Centre, Oxford, UK, 3Department
of Radiology, Churchill Hospital,
Oxford, UK
P106
Tumour Infiltrating
Lymphocytes Associate with
Improved Survival in
Oesophageal Adenocarcinoma
Fergus Noble1, Toby Mellows2,
Leo McCormick Matthews1,
Adrian Bateman2, James Byrne2,
Ian Bailey2, Donna Sharland2,
Jamie Kelly2, Tim Underwood1,
John Primrose1, Surinder Sahota1,
Andrew Bateman2, Gareth
Thomas1, Christian Ottensmeier1
1University of Southampton,
13
AUGIS 18th Annual Scientific Meeting
Southampton, UK, 2University
Hospital Southampton NHS
Foundation Trust, Southampton, UK
P107
Faecal calprotectin as a
biomarker in oesophagogastric cancer
David Bunting, Steve Hornby, Sue
Ball, Zoe Vincent, Ruth Ayling,
Tim Wheatley, Grant Sanders
Peninsula Oesophagogastric Unit,
Plymouth, UK
P112
Video capsule endoscopy for
detecting primary tumour site
in patients with metastatic
neuroendocrine tumours
Ashley Clift1, Andrea Frilling2,
Geoff Smith3, John Martin3
1School of Medicine, Imperial
College London, London, UK,
2Department of Surgery and Cancer,
Imperial College London, London,
UK, 3Department of
Gastroenterology, Imperial College
London, London, UK
P117
Genomic biomarkers of
Barrett’s Oesophagus
metaplasia, dysplasia and
malignant progression: a
meta-analysis
John Findlay1, Mark Middleton2,
Ian Tomlinson3
1Oxford OesophagoGastric Centre,
Churchill Hospital, Oxford, UK,
2Oxford NIHR Biomedical Research
Centre, Oxford, UK, 3Molecular and
Population Genetics, Wellcome
Trust Centre for Human Genetics,
Oxford, UK
P108
The impact of incidental
pulmonary thromboembolism
during neoadjuvant
chemotherapy in patients
proceeding to definitive
surgery for oesophago-gastric
malignancy
Ilayaraja Rajendran1, Jonquil
Nash2, Aseem Javaid3, Stella
Davies4, Duncan Stewart2
1wrexham Maelor Hospital,
Wrexham, Wales, UK, 2Wrexham
Maelor Hospital, Wrexham, Wales,
UK, 3Wrexham Maelor Hospital,
Wrexham, Wales, UK, 4Wrexham
Maelor Hospital, Wrexham, Wales,
UK, 5Wrexham Maelor Hospital,
Wrexham, Wales, UK
P113
MDCT for Staging of
Oesophageal and Junctional
Cancer: Do we need a
Dedicated Reporting
Template?
Mathieu Messager, Gina Brown,
William H Allum
1Department of Surgery, Royal
Marsden Hospital NHS Foundation
Trust, London, UK, 2Radiology
Department, Royal Marsden
Hospital NHS Foundation Trust,
London, UK, 3Department of
Digestive and Oncological Surgery,
Claude Huriez University Hospital,
Lille, France
P109
A review of colon interposition
after oesophagectomy
Rebecca A Fisher1, Ewen A
Griffiths3, Robert C Mason2,
Janine Zylstra2, Andrew R
Davies2, James A Gossage0
1King’s College London, London, UK,
2Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS
Foundation Trust, London, UK,
3University Hospitals Birmingham
NHS Foundation Trust,
Birmingham, UK
P114
In hospital nutritional intake
in patients undergoing elective
oesophagogastric resection
Melanie Baker1, Sue Kavanagh1,
Cathy Thompson1, Anne
Thomas2, Vanessa Halliday3, Karen
Smith2, Arne Ring2, Tom Morris2,
Robert Williams1, David Bowrey1
1University Hospitals of Leicester,
Leicester, UK, 2University of
Leicester, Leicester, UK, 3University
of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
P110
Are routine chest radiographs
following pleural drain
removal after resectional
oesophageal surgery
indicated?
Mark Grant, Tim Underwood, Ian
Bailey, James Byrne, Jamie Kelly
University Hospital Southampton
NHS Foundation Trust,
Southampton, Hampshire, UK
P115
Laparoscopic anti-reflux
surgery; Using the intraoperative calculated surface
area (SA) cm2 of hiatus hernia
defects to determine the type
of repair
Anisha Sukha, Samuel Adjepong,
Jay Pattar, Audun Sigurdsson
Royal Shrewsbury and Telford
Hospitals, West Midlands, UK
P120
Sarcopenia is associated with
toxicity in patients undergoing
neo-adjuvant chemotherapy
for oesophago-gastric cancer
Benjamin Tan1, Kirsty Brammer1,
Neena Randhawa1, Neil Welch1,
Simon Parsons1, Eleanor James2,
James Catton1
1Department of Surgery, City Hospital
Campus, Nottingham University
Hospitals, Nottingham, UK,
2Department of Oncology, City
Hospital Campus, Nottingham
University Hospitals, Nottingham, UK
P111
A 6 year service review of preoperative dietetic input for
patients undergoing
oesophageal resection at a
regional unit.
Fiona Macharg, Alice Kidd, Emma
Westmancoat, Shaun Preston
Royal Surrey County Hospital NHS
Foundation Trust, Guildford, UK
P116
Recurrent giant hiatus hernia
– are we addressing the
problem adequately at
primary operation?
Verona Chu, Yan Li Goh, Vinutha
Daya Shetty, Jeremy Bruce Ward,
Ravindra S Date
Royal Preston Hospital, Manchester,
UK
P121
Actual 5-year survival after
neoadjuvant chemotherapy
and resection for oesophageal
adenocarcinoma
S Yeluri, P Jose, AK Saha, O
Rotimi, SPL Dexter, H Sue-Ling,
AI Sarela
St. James’s University Hospital,
Leeds, UK
14
P118
Recurrence patterns and
prognosis after gastrectomy
for pT1 gastric
adenocarcinoma (early gastric
cancer)
Martin Michel, Lewis Stevens,
Gemma Armstrong, Arin Saha,
Simon Dexter, Abeezar Sarela,
Henry Sue-Ling
St. James’s University Hospital,
Leeds, West Yorkshire, UK
P119
Laparoscopic Heller’s
cardiomyotomy: A safe and
effective surgical treatment of
achalasia
Jamie Farmer, Tom Pidgeon,
Naomi Gibbs, Quentin Oury,
Peng Choong Lau, Umar Shariff,
Lam Chin Tan, Vinod Menon
Department of Upper
Gastrointestinal Surgery, University
Hospital Coventry and
Warwickshire NHS Trust, Coventry,
West Midlands, UK
P122
Who are the “overachievers”
with respect to accelerated
recovery within standardized
pathways following
esophagectomy? - A
prospective cohort study
Henner Schmidt, Christopher
Polson, Sheraz Markar, Donald Low
Virginia Mason Medical Center,
Seattle, WA, USA
P123
Beware the “stable disease”
in oesphageal cancer : a single
institution experience of CT
following neo-adjuvant
chemotherapy.
Lucinda Tullie, Janine Zylstra,
Naveen Sharma, Nyree Griffin,
Jesper Lagergren, James Gossage,
Robert Mason, Andrew Davies
St Thomas Hospital, London, UK
P124
An audit of feeding
jejunostomy complications
Laura Kelly, Hannah Fitzpatrick,
Lyndon Wells, Rachel Watkins,
Ewen Griffiths
Queen Elizabeth Hospital,
Birmingham, UK
P126
Prognostic significance of T
(LNR) M in staging gastric
cancer incorporating
pathological lymph node ratio
(LNR)
Arfon Powell1, Alex Karran2,
David Chan2, Llion Davies2, Paul
Blake2, Adam Christian2, Wyn
Lewis2
1Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK,
2South East Wales Cancer
Network, Cardiff, UK
P127
A study of the compliance
with an enhanced recovery
programme in upper GI
surgery
Hannah Wright, Mark Kelly,
William Allum
The Royal Marsden Hospital,
London, UK
P128
Endoscopic palliation of
dysphagia in Oesophagogastric
Cancer
David Vass, Oighrig Park, Kevin
Robertson, Catherine Sharp,
Simon Gibson
Department of Surgery, Crosshouse
Hospital, Kilmarnock, UK
P129
Nocturnal home enteral
The Brighton Centre, Brighton
Thursday 18 - Friday 19 September 2014
feeding post oesophagogastric
surgery reduced hospital
readmission rates
Emily Boardman, Katy Ashton,
Kate Kinrade, Ian Welch, Simon
Galloway, Andrew Macdonald
University Hospital of South
Manchester, Manchester, UK
P131
The effect of IMPACT®
immunonutrition on
outcomes in patients
undergoing elective
resections for oesophagogastric cancer
Matthew King1, Chris Deans2,
Peter Lamb2, Graeme Couper2,
Simon Paterson-Brown2, Beverley
Wallace2, Margaret MacDougall1
1The University of Edinburgh,
Edinburgh, UK, 2The Department of
Upper GI Surgery, Royal Infirmary of
Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
P132
Is Percutaneous Endoscopic
Gastrostomy tube insertion in
patients with MND a safe
procedure?
Kirk Bowling, Martha Nixon,
Gemma Dovey, Sarah Smith, Jane
Gaggs, Nick Johnson
Torbay Hospital, Torbay Hospital,
UK
P133
Mesh repair versus primary
suture repair of hiatus hernia:
a systematic review and metaanalysis of published trials
Ashton Harper1, Shafique Sajid2,
Krishna Singh1, Mazin Sayegh1
1Department of Upper GI Surgery,
Worthing Hospital, West Sussex,
UK, 2Department of Colorectal
Surgery, Worthing Hospital, West
Sussex, UK
P134
Lessons Learnt from a Decade
of Cholecystectomy SurgeonLevel Outcome Data
Andrei Mihailescu, Ashraf
Rasheed, Antonio Santos
Royal Gwent Hospital, ABHB,
Newport, Wales, UK
P135
Post-discharge patient
experience and quality of life
on planned nocturnal home
enteral feeding via a
jejunostomy following
oesophagogastric cancer
surgery
Katy Ashton, Emily Boardman,
Kate Kinrade, Simon Galloway, Ian
Welch, Andrew Macdonald
University Hospital of South
Manchester, Manchester, UK
P136
Is it safe to insert
Percutaneous Endoscopic
Gastrostomy tubes under
general anaesthetic in patients
with Motor Neurone Disease?
Martha Nixon, Kirk Bowling,
Gemma Dovey, Jane Gaggs, Sarah
Smith, Nick Johnson
Torbay Hospital, Torquay, UK
P137
Inferring the clonal evolution
of oesophageal
adenocarcinoma through
whole genome sequencing
Ayesha Noorani1, Pierre LaoSirieix1, David Wedge3, Jamie
Weaver1, Nicola Grehan1, Irene
Debiram-Beecham1, Maria O
Donovan5, Andrew Hindmarsh2,
Martin Goddard4, Richard
Hardwick2, Rebecca Fitzgerald1
1MRC Cancer Unit, University of
Cambridge, Cambridge, UK,
2Cambridge Oesophago-Gastric
Centre, Cambridge, UK, 3The
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute,
Hinxton, Cambridge, UK, 4Papworth
Hospital, Cambridge, UK,
5Department of Pathology,
Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge,
UK
P138
Pre-chemotherapy and the
effects of the first cycle of
chemotherapy on systemic
inflammatory and nutritional
markers predict long term
outcome after oesophagogastric cancer treatment.
James Hopkins1, Fergus Noble1,
David Silley1, Navamayooran
Thavanesan1, Jamie Kelly2, Ian
Bailey2, James Byrne2, Adrian
Bateman2, Andrew Bateman1,
Timothy Underwood1
1University of Southampton,
Southampton, UK, 2University
Hospital Southampton,
Southampton, UK
P139
The annual risk of postoperative vitamin & mineral
deficiencies following
oesophageal and gastric
cancer surgery
Alice Kidd, Fiona Macharg, Emma
Westmancoat, Shaun Preston
Royal Surrey County Hospital,
Guildford, UK
P140
A Novel Methylation
Biomarker in Oesophageal
Adenocarcinoma
Mark Dilworth2, Andrew Beggs2,
Rahul Hejmadi1, Derek Alderson2,
Glenn Matthews2, Olga Tucker2
1University Hospital Birmingham,
West Midlands, UK, 2University of
Birmingham, West Midlands, UK
P141
Whole Genome Sequencing of
oesophageal adenocarcinoma:
a progress update of the
OCCAMS project
Ayesha Noorani1, Jamie Weaver1,
Caryn Ross-Innes1, Nicholas
Shannon1, Andy Lynch2, Matthew
Eldridge2, Nicola Grehan1, Shona
Macrae1, Timothy Underwood5,
Maria O Donovan4, Paul
Edwards1, Nitzan Rosenfeld2,
Simon Tavare2, Richard
Hardwick3, Rebecca Fitzgerald1,
on behalf of the Occams
Consortium1
1MRC Cancer Unit, University of
Cambridge, Cambridge, UK, 2CRUK
Cambridge Institute, University of
Cambridge, UK, 3Cambridge
Oesophago-Gastric Unit,
Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge,
UK, 4Department of Pathology,
University of Cambridge,
Cambridge, UK, 5Cancer Sciences
Division, University of
Southampton,, Southampton, UK,
UK
P142
The clinical significance of
pulmonary nodules in decision
making and management of
patients diagnosed with
Oesophageal Cancer
Aggelos Laliotis1, Dionysios
Dellaportas1, Lucinda Tullie1,
Janine Zylstra1, Jesper Lagergren2,
Robert Mason2, Andrew Davies2,
James Gossage2
1Department of General Surgery, St
Thomas’ Hospital, Guy’s and St
Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust,
London, UK, 2Department of
General Surgery, St Thomas’
Hospital, Guy’s and St Thomas’
NHS Foundation Trust and Division
of Cancer Studies, Gastrointestinal
Cancer,King’s College London,
London, UK
P143
Laparoscopic Common Bile
Duct Exploration: A
retrospective comparative
study of the transcystic and
transcholedochal approach
Alex Ward, Tarig Abdelrahman,
Rahul Singh, Tamsin Boyce,
Michael Nutt, Ashraf Rasheed
Gwent Centre for Digestive
Diseases – Royal Gwent Hospital Faculty of Life Sciences –University
of South Wales, Newport, UK
P144
The effect of centralisation of
oesophago-gastric cancer
services on training
experience. A fifteen-year
retrospective study.
Euan McLaughlin1, Vinutha
Shetty2, Paul Turner2, Kishore
Pursnani2, Jeremy Ward2,
Muntzer Mughal3
1University Hospital of South
Manchester, Manchester, UK,
2Royal Preston Hospital, Preston,
UK, 3University College Hospital,
London, UK
P145
Exome sequencing of
oesophageal adenocarcinoma
demonstrates novel driver
genes and pathways of
carcinogenesis and response
to neoadjuvant chemotherapy
John Findlay1, Francesc Castro3,
Richard Gillies1, Thomas
MacGregor1, Enric Domingo3,
Mark Middleton2, Ian Tomlinson3
1Oxford OesophagoGastric Centre,
Churchill Hospital, Oxford, UK,
2Oxford NIHR Biomedical Research
Centre, Oxford, UK, 3Molecular and
Population Genetrics, Wellcome
Trust Centre for Human Genetics,
Oxford, UK
P146
Incidental findings on PET CT
for Oesophageal cancer. Are
they significant?
Ian Farrell, Zaher Toumi, Tasnim
Ransome, Kish Pursnani
Royal Preston Hospital, Lancashire,
UK
P147
Indicative numbers for
Certificate of Completion of
Training in Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery: Should it
be more robust?
Elizabeth Elsey, James Catton, Iain
Cameron, Dhanny Gomez
Nottingham University Hospitals
NHS Trust, Nottingham, UK
P148
PET-CT offers accurate
assessment of tumour length
in oesophageal malignancy
Katie Rollins, Emma Lucas,
Eleanor James, Simon Hughes,
James Catton
Nottingham University Hospitals
NHS Trust, Nottingham, UK
15
AUGIS 18th Annual Scientific Meeting
P149
Review of re-admission to
critical care in
oesophagogastric resections
Jimmy Wui Guan Ng, Simon L
Parsons, Neil T Welch
Nottingham University Hospitals
NHS Trust, Nottingham, UK
P150
Is MRI as good if not better
than EUS for nodal staging in
oesophageal and junctional
cancer?
Mathieu Messager1, Angela
Riddell2, William H Allum1, Asif M
Chaudry1
1Department of Surgery, Royal
Marsden Hospital NHS Foundation
Trust, London, UK, 2Radiology
Department, Royal Marsden
Hospital NHS Foundation Trust,
London, UK, 3Department of
Digestive and Oncological Surgery,
Claude Huriez University Hospital,
Lille, France
P151
High Definition Video
Presentation of a
Thoracoscopic Enucleation of
an Oesophageal Leiomyoma
Steve Hornby, Simon Higgs,
Simon Dwerryhouse
Gloucester Hospital,
Gloucestershire, UK
P152
A 5 year analysis of surgical
mortality and outcomes for
emergency surgical admissions
with upper gastrointestinal
ulceration
Michael SJ Wilson1, Ibrahim
Ibrahim2, Lorna Grech-Fonk1,
Andreas Luhmann1, Pradeep Patil1
1NHS Tayside, Dundee, UK,
2University of Dundee, Dundee, UK
P153
Gastric Cancer Surgery in
England versus the USA –
How can we improve?
Aruna Munasinghe1, Mantaj Brar2,
Ara Darzi1, George Hanna1,
David Chang4, Omar Faiz3
1Imperial College London, London,
UK, 2London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine, London, UK, 3St
Mark’s Hospital, London, UK,
4University of San Diego, California,
USA
P154
Is there a role for tumour
volume assessment in
oesophageal cancer?
Lucinda Tullie1, Hyon-Mok Sohn4,
Fredrik Mattsson3, Nyree Griffin2,
16
Naveen Sharma2, Francois Porte2,
James Gossage1, Jesper
Lagergren3, Robert Mason1,
Andrew Davies1
1Department of UGI surgery, St
Thomas’ Hospital, London, UK,
2Department of radiology, St
Thomas’ Hospital, London, UK,
3Karolinska Institute, Stockholm,
Sweden, 4King’s College London
School of Medicine, London, UK
P155
Complications associated with
feeding jejunostomy tubes
after oesophagogastric
surgery for cancer: is their
routine placement justified?
Bibek Das1, Xin Nee Ho2, Kiki
Cruse2, Claire Wong2, Orla
Hynes1, Janine Zylstra1, James
Gossage1, Andrew Davies1,
Robert Mason1
1Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS
Foundation Trust, London, UK,
2King’s College London, London, UK
P156
Gene set enrichment analysis
of genome wide association
data identifies novel biological
pathways associated with
Barrett’s Oesophagus, and
subsequent progression to
dysplasia and adenocarcinoma
John Findlay1, Claire Palles2, Mark
Middleton4, Janusz Jankowski3, Ian
Tomlinson2
1Oxford OesophagoGastric Centre,
Churchill Hospital, Oxford, UK,
2Molecular and Population
Genetics, Wellcome Trust Centre
for Human Genetics, Oxford, UK,
3Institute of Translational and
Stratified Medicine, University of
Plymouth, Plymouth, UK, 4Oxford
NIHR Biomedical Research Centre,
Oxford, UK
P157
Clinical outcomes of patients
referred to a dedicated
gastroparesis service at a
tertiary centre.
Martin Michel, F Chowdhury, S
Dexter, A Sarela
Leeds Teaching Hospitals, Leeds,
UK
P158
Does Pyloroplasty in Minimally
Invasive Oesophagectomy
(MIO) reduce the need for
post-operative interventions
for conduit dysfunction?
Khaleel Fareed, Mohammed
Chowdhury, John Bennett,
Naheed Farooq, Andrew
Hindmarsh, Vijay Sujendran,
Richard Hardwick, Peter Safranek
Cambridge Oesophago-Gastric
Centre, Addenbrooke’s Hospital,
Cambridge, UK
P159
A Clinical Improvement Audit
for Barrett’s Oesophagus
Surveillance in a District
General Hospital
Simon Morton, Tamaraichelvi
Parasuraman, Craig Napier, Karen
Linton, Kevin Robertson,
Catherine Sharp, Simon Gibson
Department of General Surgery,
University Hospital Crosshouse,
Kilmarnock, UK
P160
Decision theory and costbenefit analysis of re-staging
oesophageal cancer with PETCT after neoadjuvant
chemotherapy
John Findlay1, Richard Gillies1,
Jamie Franklin2, Eugene Teoh2,
Greg Jones1, Sara di Carlo1,
Fergus Gleeson2, Bruno Sgromo1,
Robert Marshall1, Kevin Bradley2,
Mark Middleton3
1Oxford OesophagoGastric Centre,
Churchill Hospital, Oxford, UK,
2Department of Radiology, Churchill
Hospital, Oxford, UK, 3NIHR
Oxford Biomedical Research Centre,
Churchill Hospital, Oxford, UK
P161
Early recurrence and death
after oesophagectomy:
validation of a predictive
model
Nikoletta Petrou, Husam Ebied,
Janine Zylstra, James Gossage,
Jesper Lagergren, Robert Mason,
Andrew Davies
Guys and St Thomas’ NHS
Foundation Trust, London, UK
P162
Evaluating innovation in
minimally invasive surgery for
oesophageal cancer
Angeline Lee, Natalie Blencowe,
Aleksandra Szczap, Keh Wei
Kong, Vijay Pattni, Thomas Lloyd,
Krizun Loganathan, William Robb,
Katie Whale, Shelley Potter, Jane
Blazeby
University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
P163
Computed Tomography
Texture Analysis (CTTA) to
assess response to
neoadjuvant treatment in
patients with oesophageal
cancer
Clifford Caruana, Khaled Hamdan
Brighton and Sussex University
Trust, Brighton, UK
P164
A comparison of oncological
outcomes between minimal
invasive and open techniques
for resection of oesophageal
and gastro-oesophageal
cancers.
Neena Randhawa, Benjamin Tan,
Javed Ahmed, Syed Iftikhar, Paul
Leeder
Royal Derby Hospital, Derby, UK
P165
Our experience of
diaphragmatic hernia postUpper GI cancer resection
surgery in our centre
Yan Li Goh, Ravindra S Date,
Christopher Ball, Paul D Turner,
Jeremy Bruce Ward, Kishore G
Pursnani, Vinutha Daya Shetty
Royal Preston Hospital, Preston, UK
P166
The impact of centralisation of
Upper GI cancer service on
benign UGI diseases
Yan Li Goh1, Daren Subar2, Nick
Heywood3, Ravindra S Date1
1Royal Preston Hospital,
Manchester, UK, 2East Lancashire
Hospitals, Manchester, UK,
3Blackpool Victoria Hospital,
Manchester, UK
P167
Prevalence of anaemia and
iron deficiency in oesophageal
cancer patients undergoing
surgical resection with
curative intent.
Abida Sultana1, James Gossage2,
Orla Hynes2
1King’s College London, London, UK,
2St Thomas’ Hospital, London, UK
P168
Peptic Ulcer Disease: Has
nearly a decade of experience
improved outcomes?
Matthew Boal, Neil Shastri-Hurst,
Rishi Singhal
Heart of England Foundation Trust,
Birmingham, UK
P169
Oesophageal obstruction and
tracheo-oesophageal fistula
secondary to complicated
surgical treatment of
Boerhaave syndrome
Yan Li Goh1, Zaher Toumi1,
Muntzer Mughal2, Paul D Turner1
1Royal Preston Hospital, Preston,
UK, 2University College Hospital,
London, UK
AUGIS 18th Annual Scientific Meeting
CORPORATE PARTNERS 2014
AUGIS are delighted to welcome the following companies as Corporate Partners.
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The new Olympus 3D imaging platform offers improved
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instruments with the pedigree of the world’s largest surgical
instrument company.
Olympus THUNDERBEAT the only surgical energy device
which integrates the benefits of both advanced bipolar and
ultrasonic energy. THUNDERBEAT delivers the energies
simultaneously, providing rapid cutting and reliable vessel
sealing - contributing to enhanced efficiency through reduced
instrument usage, fewer instrument exchanges and operating
time savings.
SILVER SPONSOR
18
The Brighton Centre, Brighton
Thursday 18 - Friday 19 September 2014
EXHIBITORS 2014
Ardmore Healthcare Ltd - Stand No: 8
Ardmore Healthcare, Stand 8,
develops and distributes specialist
Gastro systems including The
EndoFLIP® Imaging System, used to
measure the dimensions and function
of a variety of hollow organs and sphincteric regions
throughout the gastrointestinal tract. These measurements are
useful for different types of patients such as:
• GORD patients
• Potential candidates for GORD surgery
• Bariatric surgery patients
Tel: 01494 721820 • E-mail: [email protected]
Web: www.ardmorehealthcare.com
BVM Medical - Stand No: 5
Celebrating our 25th anniversary year,
BVM Medical is delighted to return to
AUGIS. Although a relative new
comer to this meeting, we are committed to introducing new
and innovative technology to UK Clinicians. Our promise is to
bring you advanced devices to help improve patient outcomes.
We look forward to seeing you during the meeting and sharing
with you information on our range of Oesophageal, Pyloric,
Biliary and Colorectal Stents as well as our new novel
Electrosurgical knife designed for ESD procedures.
We hope that you have an informative, educational and
enjoyable meeting.
Stand Number 5 • BVM Medical Ltd: Tel: 01455 614555
Cook Medical - Stand no: 7
For 50 years, Cook Medical has been
pioneering medical devices in partnership
with the medical profession. Being a
family-owned business allows us to do
what's best for the patient.
We have chosen to come to AUGIS because we believe our
biologic graft, Biodesign, will help you in your complex abdominal
wall and hiatal hernia repairs. Further discussions can take place
on Common Bile Duct Exploration and Liver Retraction.
Find out more at www.cookmedical.com
Elemental Healthcare
Stand no: 13/14
Elemental Healthcare
Elemental House, Shefford Park Farm, Great Shefford
Hungerford, Berkshire RG17 7ED
T: 0844 412 0020 • E: [email protected]
W: www.elementalhealthcare.co.uk
EXTENDING THE SMOKING BAN
TO THE ABDOMINAL CAVITY
Ultravision speeds up the natural sedimentation of smoke
particles providing a clear view throughout the procedure,
negating the need to vent CO2.
Visit Elemental to see our products in action and discuss how
to save money whilst using the latest high quality products.
• ULTRA MIS: 3mm Laparoscopic Instruments
• HANDS FREE RETRACTION: Versa Lifter creates
space in the abdomen
• INNOVATIVE HERNIA SOLUTIONS: IFABond Glue
and Premium Mesh
BRINGING YOU INNOVATION
Lotus
Stand No: 9
Lotus Ultrasonic Scalpel. Designed and
manufactured in the UK, the Lotus Ultrasonic
Scalpel uses a patented torsional mode of
ultrasonic vibration to seal and cut soft tissue (using Dissecting
Shears, Liver Resectors and Vessel Welders) in open,
laparoscopic and bariatric surgery.
Medtronics
Stand No: 12
Medtronic Advanced
Energy is dedicated to developing technology that provides
benefits to surgeons and their patients. The Aquamantys®
System and bipolar sealers uses unique Transcollation®
technology, a combination of radio frequency (RF) energy and
saline, to provide hemostatic sealing of soft tissue during surgery.
Transcollation technology is delivered through an electrosurgical
generator and single use handheld disposable devices. It is used
in a wide range of surgical oncology procedures, including liver
resection, pancreatectomy, and partial nephrectomy.
The combination of saline and RF energy allows the device
temperature to stay at approximately 100°C – nearly 200°C
less than conventional devices.
Sirtex - Stand No: 11
Sirtex Medical Europe GmbH is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Sirtex
Medical Limited, a publicly-listed
company on the Australian Securities Exchange engaged in the
field of liver-directed therapies for oncology. Our innovative
technology, SIR-Spheres® microspheres, was approved in
2002 for use in the treatment of unresectable liver tumours
within the European Union under a CE Mark and for the
treatment of colorectal cancer liver metastases in combination
with FUDR intra-arterial chemotherapy by the US Food &
Drug Administration.
SIR-Spheres microspheres are presently used to treat a variety
of unresectable liver metastases as well as in hepatocellular
carcinoma at over 100 institutions throughout Europe.
For more information, please contact Customer Services at
Head Office on 0049 228 1840730.
®
SIR-Spheres is a Registered Trademark of Sirtex SIR-Spheres Pty Ltd.
19
Association of Upper Gastrointestinal Surgeons of
Great Britain and Ireland
Annual General Meeting Agenda 2014
The Annual General Meeting of the Association of Upper Gastrointestinal Surgeons
of Great Britain and Ireland will be held on Thursday 18th September 2014 at 17.45hrs
Auditorium 2, The Brighton Centre, Brighton
1. Apologies for absence
...............................
2. Minutes of the last meeting
.........................
WA
5. Honorary Treasurer’s Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .NH
WA
6 Report from Chairman of
Clinical Services and
Audit Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .NM
3. President’s Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .WA
4. Honorary Secretary’s Report
a. Vice Treasurer Elections
b. President Elect Elections
c. Regional Representative Elections
d. Trainee Representative Election . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .DH
20
8. Report from Chairman of
Education, Training and
Research Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .GT
9. Date of next AGM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .WA
AUGIS 18th Annual Scientific Meeting
EXHIBITION FLOOR PLAN
EXHIBITORS BY STAND NUMBER
1
Covidien
2
Ethicon
3
BBraun
4
Olympus
5
BVM Medical
7
Cook Medical
8
Ardmore Healthcare
9
Lotus (SRA Developments Ltd)
10
Applied Medical
11
Sirtex
12
Medtronics
13 -14
22
Elemental Healthcare
The Brighton Centre, Brighton
Thursday 18 - Friday 19 September 2014
23
TALK TO US ABOUT
SPONSORSHIP
AUGIS is proud of its good relationship with
its partners in industry. We are always
delighted to welcome back previous sponsors
or engage with new ones.
We currently offer four categories of sponsorship
for our annual, highly regarded, Scientific Meetings.
For industry, the benefits of sponsorship include:
• Increased visibility among key audiences such
as AUGIS Surgeons, Trainees and Affiliates
• Differentiating your company from competitors
• Developing better relationships with
customers, existing and potential ones
• Showcasing services and products.
AUGIS Manager Mrs Sarvjit Wünsch would
be delighted to answer questions from
potential sponsors and can be contacted on:
Tel: +44 (0)20 7304 4773
Fax: +44 (0)20 7430 9235
Email: [email protected]
BRIGHTON TOWN CENTRE MAP
26
Association of Upper Gastrointestinal Surgeons of Great Britain and Ireland
at The Royal College of Surgeons of England
35 - 43 Lincoln’s Inn Fields
London WC2A 3PE
Tel: +44 (0)20 7304 4786 / 0044 (0)20 7304 4773
Fax: +44 (0)20 7340 9235
Email: [email protected] / [email protected]
Web: www.augis.org • Microsite: www.augis.org/brighton2014/
AUGIS reserve the right to change the enclosed information at any time.
Information correct at time of going to print.