Se Jin Baek
Korea University
92 Papers
295 Citations
Se Jin Baek is an academic researcher from Korea University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Laparoscopic surgery. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 75 publications. Previous affiliations of Se Jin Baek include Yonsei University & Mayo Clinic.
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Papers
Long-term oncologic outcomes of robotic low anterior resection for rectal cancer: a comparative study with laparoscopic surgery.
Eun Jung Park,Min Soo Cho,Se Jin Baek,Hyuk Hur,Byung Soh Min,Seung Hyuk Baik,Kang Young Lee,Nam Kyu Kim +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated long-term oncologic outcomes of robotic surgery for rectal cancer compared with laparoscopic surgery at a single institution and found that robotic surgery is regarded as a new modality to surpass the technical limitations of conventional surgery.
229
Robotic vs laparoscopic resection of rectal cancer: short-term outcomes of a case-control study.
TL;DR: Robotic rectal cancer resection can be safely performed by experienced laparoscopic surgeons, with acceptable short-term outcomes comparable to those for Laparoscopic resection, according to a case-control study.
188
Robotic versus Conventional Laparoscopic Surgery for Rectal Cancer: A Cost Analysis from A Single Institute in Korea
TL;DR: Considering that robotic surgery can be applied more easily for low-lying cancers, the cost-effectiveness of robotic rectal cancer surgery should be assessed based on oncologic outcomes and functional results from future studies.
168
Robotic surgery for rectal cancer can overcome difficulties associated with pelvic anatomy
Se Jin Baek,Chang Hee Kim,Min Soo Cho,Sung Uk Bae,Hyuk Hur,Byung Soh Min,Seung Hyuk Baik,Kang Young Lee,Nam Kyu Kim +8 more
TL;DR: There was no difference between the easy, moderate, and difficult groups in terms of surgical outcomes, such as operation time, for robotic rectal surgery, and the robot system can provide more comfort during surgery for the surgeon, and may overcome challenges associated with difficult pelvic anatomy.
117
Modified complete mesocolic excision with central vascular ligation for the treatment of right-sided colon cancer: long-term outcomes and prognostic factors.
TL;DR: The mCME technique, on the basis of the same principle as CME, but with a more tailored approach, has successfully established the long-term oncologic outcomes and risk of postoperative morbidity that were comparable with those seen with the original CME procedure.
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