P. Varley
9 Papers
1 Citations
P. Varley is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Neighborhood-Level Socioeconomic Disadvantage Predicts Outcomes in Cytoreductive Surgery and Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy for Peritoneal Malignancy
Nolan Winicki,Shannon Radomski,Isabella Florissi,Jordan M. Cloyd,Goutam Gutta,Travis E. Grotz,Christopher P. Scally,Keith Fournier,Sean P. Dineen,Benjamin D. Powers,Jula Veerapong,Joel M. Baumgartner,Callisia N. Clarke,Anai N. Kothari,Ugwuji N. Maduekwe,Sameer H. Patel,Gregory C. Wilson,Patrick B. Schwartz,P. Varley,Mustafa Raoof,Byrne Lee,Israr Ahmed Malik,Fabian M. Johnston,Jonathan B. Greer +23 more
TL;DR: Even after controlling for cancer-specific variables, adverse outcomes persisted in association with neighborhood-level socioeconomic disadvantage, and the individual and structural-level factors leading to these cancer disparities warrant further investigation.
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Association of Neighborhood Disadvantage with Short- and Long-Term Outcomes After Pancreatectomy for Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma.
Clayton Marcinak,Corinne E Praska,Roberto J. Vidri,Amy K Taylor,John K. Krebsbach,Kaleem S Ahmed,Noelle K. LoConte,P. Varley,Majid Afshar,Sharon M. Weber,Daniel E. Abbott,Jomol Mathew,Muhammed Murtaza,Mark E. Burkard,Matthew M. Churpek,Syed Nabeel Zafar +15 more
TL;DR: It is found that worse neighborhood disadvantage is associated with a higher risk of major complication and unplanned readmission after pancreatectomy for PDAC.
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Interpreting the risk analysis index of frailty in the context of surgical oncology
Jamie L. Estock,Cameron Schlegel,Myrick C. Shinall,P. Varley,Ada O. Youk,Richard S. Hoehn,Daniel E. Hall +6 more
TL;DR: The inclusion of cancer status in the Risk Analysis Index (RAI) has raised two key concerns about its suitability for use in surgical oncology: (1) the potential over classification of cancer patients as frail, and (2) potential overestimation of postoperative mortality for patients with surgically curable cancers as discussed by the authors .
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Higher Numbers of Examined Lymph Nodes Are Associated with Increased Survival in Resected, Treatment-Naïve, Node-Positive Esophageal, Gastric, Pancreatic, and Colon Cancers
Razmik Ghukasyan,Sudeep Banerjee,Christopher Childers,Amanda Labora,Daniel J McClintick,Mark D. Girgis,P. Varley,Amanda M. Dann,Timothy R. Donahue +8 more
TL;DR: In patients with surgically resected node-positive GI malignancies who did not receive neoadjuvant systemic therapy, a higher number of examined LNs is associated with increased OS, which is the strongest for gastric cancer, followed by colon, esophageal, and pancreatic cancers respectively.
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Colon Cancer Survival Among South Asian Americans: A Cross-Sectional Analysis of a National Dataset.
Kaleem S. Ahmed,Clayton Marcinak,Noelle K. LoConte,John K. Krebsbach,S. S. Virani,Andrea M. Schiefelbein,P. Varley,Margaret R Walker,Kulsoom Ghias,Muhammed Murtaza,Syed Nabeel Zafar +10 more
TL;DR: This national study of 2873 South Asian Americans with colon cancer found they presented with more advanced disease, treatment delays, but had better adjusted overall survival compared to 639,488 non-Hispanic Whites, warranting further exploration of tumor biology and socioeconomic factors.
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