Dr. Gonzalez Rivas, uniportal VATS and minimally invasive thoracic surgery online

Thoracics.org is here with registration information for two upcoming thoracic surgery conferences online.

With the continuing pandemic, and related infection control measures, the majority of thoracic surgery conferences have been postponed or cancelled. However, the are two upcoming online thoracic surgery conferences to take note of.

The first conference is this weekend – June 26th, 2020 with Dr. Diego Gonzalez Rivas.

Uniportal VATS “double sleeve” technical aspects

This webinar hosted by the Argentine Society of Thoracic Surgeons, and Dr. Hector Rivero. Interested readers may register for this webinar at this link: Register for Webinar 26 June 2020.

Duke Masters of Minimally Invasive Thoracic Surgery

While readers have just a few days to register for the conference above, there is considerably more time to register for the 13th Annual Masters of Minimally Invasive Thoracic Surgery – Virtual Conference. While the traditional conference has become the annual pilgrimage south – this year’s online offering offers opportunities for greater attendance and participation from surgeons outside North America.

This conference runs September 25th, 2020. Interested readers may click here to register. The full online schedule of speakers has not yet been published

Save the date! Duke Masters of Minimally Invasive Thoracic Surgery Course in September 2015

duke_v2_logo

Interested surgeons, don’t worry – there’s still plenty of time of register for the upcoming Minimally Invasive Thoracic Surgery course offered by the Duke Center for Surgery Innovation.  The course will be held September 24th – 26th, 2015 at the Waldorf Astoria in Orlando, Florida.

Featured speakers include some of the biggest names in minimally invasive surgery including Dr. Robert Cerfolio, Dr. Thomas D’Amico and Dr. Diego Gonzalez Rivas.

Dr. D’Amico is organizing the event – which will surely be one of the highlights of the 2015 conference circuit.  (Alas! No live surgery).

Several of his Duke colleagues will be presenting including Dr. Matthew Hartwig, Dr. David Harpole and Scott Balderson PA-C.

Lung Transplant - Dr. Shu S. Lin
Surgery with Dr. Shu S. Lin and Dr. Matthew Hartwig at Duke University Medical Center

Dr. Diego Gonzalez Rivas will be talking about uniport lobectomies and segmentectomies in two separate segments, as well as participating in a case presentation.

Dr. Diego Gonzalez Rivas
Dr. Diego Gonzalez Rivas

Lovers of esophageal surgery take note:  there will be an entire session devoted to minimally invasive esophageal surgery.

Dr. Todd Demmy will be talking about the use of 3D optics as part of a segment on recent advances in thoracic surgery.

Dr. Jiang Gening  (Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital) performs dual port thoracoscopy using a 3D monitor
Dr. Jiang Gening (Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital) performs dual port thoracoscopy using a 3D monitor

For more of the course schedule – please see the course agenda.

To register on-line: please click here.

If you can’t make it – Thoracics.org will be there, taking notes and interviewing attendees..

Talking about Transplant with Dr. R. Duane Davis

Interview with Dr. R. Duane Davis, the Chief of Lung Transplant at Duke University

(Part of a series on the lung transplant program at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina)

Dr. R. Duane Davis is the Chief of the Lung Transplant Program at Duke, which is the second largest lung transplant program in the United States (after Cleveland Clinic which performed 154 transplants last year to Duke’s 117*).  During my visit, surgeons performed their 70 & 71st transplant this year, and will probably complete around 140 transplants before the year’s end.  Much of Duke’s success at becoming a high volume transplant center lays at the feet of Dr. Davis, who took over the program in 1994, after training with the famed Dr. Joel Cooper.  However, he credits many of his achievements to his training with several pulmonologists.  In fact, he reports that it was his collaborative efforts with pulmonologists that led to his initial observations regarding the frequency of gastric reflux among transplant patients.  (Later this was translated into the seminal work on the relationship between reflux / aspiration and graft failure**.) He cites this as one of the more important recent discoveries in the field of lung transplantation.

He estimates that during his career (thus far) he has performed around 750 – 800 lung transplants, making him one of the world’s more prolific lung transplant surgeons.

Dr. Davis is also responsible for several decisions that have distinguished Duke among transplant programs.

One of these decisions was the elimination of upper age restrictions for recipients.  Unlike many facilities, Duke does not limit eligibility for transplantation solely based on age. (Many facilities limit transplantation to patients in their mid-sixties or below.)  As part of this, he also rejects much of the ageism that is often implicit in transplant.  “If we have two patients, otherwise equally matched but one is 18-years-old and the other is 53, then everyone always wants to give the transplant to the 18-year-old,” he explains.  “It’s ageism to do that, particularly when research shows that the 18-year-old may not do as well [due to risk of noncompliance with anti-rejection meds. etc] so we need to carefully consider all of the factors before deciding,” he continues.  “It makes us all feel good to give it to the 18-year-old, but that’s not always the right decision.”

One of the other decisions is something we talked about in a previous post – the use of organs that other facilities have turned down, sight unseen.  He credits this decision with the short waiting periods for Duke patients compared with other patients nationwide.

Dr. Davis explains this policy along with other efforts to expand the donor pool.  “There will always be a larger demand than the supply, but by expanding our eligibility criteria we increase our likelihood of finding an organ for our patients.  As Dr. Davis explains, using traditional criteria, only about 10,000 donors are available every year, and in this donor pool, only about 17% of donations are lungs.  He believes this number should be at least 40%, and that many useful organs that could have been transplanted are discarded.  This is why Duke often sends their procuring surgeon on site to examine the lungs personally before deciding to reject organs for transplantation, if the lungs are otherwise a good match; (by size, blood type, etc.).  In an attempt to meet demand and extend the lives of patients that might not otherwise receive transplants due to the shortage of donors, Duke surgeons recently implemented a program to accept donors from cardiac death patients (where the heart has stopped beating.)  In traditional donor criteria, the patient’s heart is still beating at the time of organ retrieval.  However, this criteria severely restricts the amount of donors available.  As part of his efforts towards these ends, he reminds people of the value that organ donation has to help others, and encourages people to become organ donors.

During the interview, he also talks about breakthroughs in transplantation, such as the double transplantation of Laura Margaret, a 16-year-old with an immune deficiency disorder (bubble boy disease) who received a double lung transplant, followed by a bone marrow transplant from the same donor.  In particular, he sees this particular case as a gateway to future discoveries in preventing graft (organ) rejection.

Like most Lung transplant surgeons, transplantation is only part of what Dr. Davis does, he is also an accomplished cardiothoracic surgeon, and performs cardiac surgery (such as bypass surgery/ valve replacement and surgery for atrial fibrillation) routinely.  He states that he doesn’t have a favorite procedure, but he does have a favorite scenario.  “I love the Christmas transplant,” he explains, when a patient receives a transplant on or around the holidays, and I get to come out to the family after the operation, and tell them Merry Christmas.”  It really is a wonderful gift for the patient, he finishes.

** Surprisingly, even very large centers such as John Hopkins (24 last year), Massachusetts General (16) and Mayo Clinic (16) perform less lung transplants that we might expect.  Even UCLA only performed 50 lung transplants in 2010. (Information from Organ Procurement and Transplant Network).  Like many thoracic procedures, (as mentioned during discussions on esophagectomy and other lung surgeries) better surgical outcomes are linked to high-volume centers.  Whether this is a result of ‘practice makes perfect’ or is due to the fact that high volume centers like Cleveland Clinic and Duke are usually large academic centers with a wealth of resources is not entirely clear.  However, I would advise patients to use caution before seeking organ transplant at a center that does only a few transplants per year (less than 20- 30.) A recent study by Weiss et. al (2009) at John Hopkins places this number at 20, which as Dr. Mathew Hartwig noted during a recent lecture, is coincidentally,the three-year average [number of lung transplants] at that center.

* Future article planned for this topic.

More about Laura Margaret:

Double lung transplant saves teen’s life

Pioneer transplant surgery

Laura Margaret story

Lung Transplant at Duke: part one of a series

a series of articles based on a week with the surgeons of the Lung Transplant service at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina including interviews and highlights from my trip for organ procurement.

Durham, North Carolina (USA)

I recently received an amazing invitation from Dr. Shu S. Lin, MD, PhD at Duke University Medical Center.  Dr. Lin** and I previously worked together when I was at the Duke cardiothoracic surgery clinic in southern Virginia.  Dr. Lin would often rotate up to our facility to help cover the service so the attending surgeon could have a (much-needed) weekend off, so I got to know Dr. Lin fairly well.  Dr. Lin is currently the Director of the cardiothoracic intensive care and step-down units, as well as an associate professor of Surgery (cardiovascular and thoracic) and an associate professor in Immunology and Pathology.

I always enjoyed working with Dr. Lin, who is a very calm, quietly brilliant and confident surgeon.   He enjoys time with his patients, (and always makes time for them, spending as long as it takes to answer their questions and address their concerns.) He is an elegant surgeon, a throwback to a previous era in surgery – he doesn’t delegate, he manages the smallest details himself.

Working with Dr. Lin at the smaller hospital in Virginia gave me a very different perspective and experience than is typical of interactions with attending surgeons in large volume academic centers.  Since our facility was uncluttered with the detritus  of academia, with no residents, no students or fellows it was just the surgeon and the NP, which gave me a better chance to know the person inside the surgeon.  This is important, because it’s the first thing that often gets lost in academic medicine. It will be interesting to see him here in his native (academic) environment.

During my week down here, I will be interviewing Dr. Lin at length and spending time in Lung Transplant for an upcoming series of articles here at Cirugia de Torax.

Since lung transplantation is such a huge topic, I am devoting a series of articles to my experience here at Duke.  As part of the series, I will be publishing articles about the surgeons, the facility itself and more on the lung transplant procedure.

For now, I have including some information on the basics of lung transplantation.

Since many of you are as unfamiliar with lung transplant as I am – I have provided a couple of links that provide a nice overview of Lung transplantation.  (Despite working in thoracic surgery for several years, I have never worked with transplant patients, so it’s a learning experience for me as well.)

Medline: Lung Transplant

Roger Steven’s perspective:  a patient created website with information on lung transplantation, as well as his own story.  Mr. Stevens had a double-lung tranplant in 1997 (at the University of Maryland).

Patient education guide from the American Society of Transplant – (a little dated but written in a patient friendly fashion. (pdf)

Duke affiliated websites:

Lung Transplant at Duke

Patient resources for Lung Transplant

Lung Transplant friends – a support group for patients at Duke undergoing lung transplantation.

Duke Transplant Services

I will be updating these links periodically.

** In-depth article based on interviews with Dr. Shu S. Lin pending.