Automated Author Profile

Mogal, Harveshp

Current S-Index

1.3

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

0.7

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

2

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

13.5%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

2

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

The impact of HIPEC <i>vs.</i> EPIC for the treatment of mucinous appendiceal carcinoma: a study from the US HIPEC collaborative

Mucinous appendiceal carcinoma is a rare malignancy that commonly spreads to the peritoneum leading to peritoneal metastases. Complete cytoreduction with perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy (PIC) is the mainstay of treatment, administered as either hyperthermic intra peritoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) or early post-operative intraperitoneal chemotherapy (EPIC). Our goal was to assess the perioperative and long term survival outcomes associated with these two PIC methods. Patients with mucinous appendiceal carcinoma were identified in the US HIPEC Collaborative database from 12 academic institutions. Patient demographics, clinical characteristics, and survival outcomes were compared among patients who underwent HIPEC vs. EPIC with inverse probability weighting (IPW) used for adjustment. Among 921 patients with mucinous appendiceal carcinoma, 9% underwent EPIC while 91% underwent HIPEC. There was no difference in Grade III–V complications between the two groups (18.5% for HIPEC vs. 15.0% for EPIC, p=.43) though patients who underwent HIPEC had higher rates of readmissions (21.2% vs. 8.8%, p Among patients with mucinous appendiceal carcinoma, both EPIC and HIPEC appear to be associated with similar perioperative and long-term outcomes.

Authors

  • Leiting, Jennifer L. ;
  • Day, Courtney N. ;
  • Harmsen, William S. ;
  • Cloyd, Jordan M. ;
  • Abdel-Misih, Sherif ;
  • Fournier, Keith ;
  • Lee, Andrew J. ;
  • Dineen, Sean ;
  • Dessureault, Sophie ;
  • Veerapongh, Jula ;
  • Baumgartner, Joel M. ;
  • Clarke, Callisia ;
  • Mogal, Harveshp ;
  • Russell, Maria C. ;
  • Zaidi, Mohammad Y. ;
  • Patel, Sameer H. ;
  • Morris, Mackenzie C. ;
  • Hendrix, Ryan J. ;
  • Lambert, Laura A. ;
  • Abbott, Daniel E. ;
  • Pokrzywa, Courtney ;
  • Raoof, Mustafa ;
  • Eng, Oliver ;
  • Johnston, Fabian M. ;
  • Greer, Jonathan ;
  • Grotz, Travis E.
1 Citation0 Mentions13% FAIR0.7 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.13078613January 2020

The impact of HIPEC <i>vs.</i> EPIC for the treatment of mucinous appendiceal carcinoma: a study from the US HIPEC collaborative

Mucinous appendiceal carcinoma is a rare malignancy that commonly spreads to the peritoneum leading to peritoneal metastases. Complete cytoreduction with perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy (PIC) is the mainstay of treatment, administered as either hyperthermic intra peritoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) or early post-operative intraperitoneal chemotherapy (EPIC). Our goal was to assess the perioperative and long term survival outcomes associated with these two PIC methods. Patients with mucinous appendiceal carcinoma were identified in the US HIPEC Collaborative database from 12 academic institutions. Patient demographics, clinical characteristics, and survival outcomes were compared among patients who underwent HIPEC vs. EPIC with inverse probability weighting (IPW) used for adjustment. Among 921 patients with mucinous appendiceal carcinoma, 9% underwent EPIC while 91% underwent HIPEC. There was no difference in Grade III–V complications between the two groups (18.5% for HIPEC vs. 15.0% for EPIC, p=.43) though patients who underwent HIPEC had higher rates of readmissions (21.2% vs. 8.8%, p Among patients with mucinous appendiceal carcinoma, both EPIC and HIPEC appear to be associated with similar perioperative and long-term outcomes.

Authors

  • Leiting, Jennifer L. ;
  • Day, Courtney N. ;
  • Harmsen, William S. ;
  • Cloyd, Jordan M. ;
  • Abdel-Misih, Sherif ;
  • Fournier, Keith ;
  • Lee, Andrew J. ;
  • Dineen, Sean ;
  • Dessureault, Sophie ;
  • Veerapongh, Jula ;
  • Baumgartner, Joel M. ;
  • Clarke, Callisia ;
  • Mogal, Harveshp ;
  • Russell, Maria C. ;
  • Zaidi, Mohammad Y. ;
  • Patel, Sameer H. ;
  • Morris, Mackenzie C. ;
  • Hendrix, Ryan J. ;
  • Lambert, Laura A. ;
  • Abbott, Daniel E. ;
  • Pokrzywa, Courtney ;
  • Raoof, Mustafa ;
  • Eng, Oliver ;
  • Johnston, Fabian M. ;
  • Greer, Jonathan ;
  • Grotz, Travis E.
1 Citation0 Mentions13% FAIR0.7 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.13078613.v1January 2020