1.Four trocar configurations for robot-assisted radical prostatectomy for da Vinci SP devices:Comparison of pros and cons and pricing
Young Hwii KO ; Byung Hoon KIM ; Sung Gu KANG ; Kwang Hyun KIM ; Jongsoo LEE ; Sung-Hoo HONG ; COSPUS (Consortium of Single Port Urologic Surgery)
Investigative and Clinical Urology 2024;65(3):311-314
2.Phosphodiesterase-5 Inhibitor Use in Robot Assisted Radical Prostatectomy Patients Is Associated with Reduced Risk of Death: A Propensity Score Matched Analysis of 1,058 Patients
Jongsoo LEE ; Hye Rim KIM ; Ji Eun HEO ; Won Sik JANG ; Kwang Suk LEE ; Sung Ku KANG ; Hyunho HAN ; Young Deuk CHOI
The World Journal of Men's Health 2023;41(4):892-899
Purpose:
We investigated whether the use of a phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitor (PDE5i) after robot assited radical prostatectomy has a survival benefit over non-use patients because there are controversial results on the association between PDE5i use and survival outcomes for prostate cancer patients in literature.
Materials and Methods:
We designed a retrospective, matched, large-sample cohort study of 5,545 patients who underwent robot assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) during 2013–2021 in a single institute. The exclusion criteria was patients who were aged >70 years at surgery, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status classification grade 4 or 5, history of other malignancies, patients who started PDE5i 6 months after survery and patients with follow up period less than 24 months after surgery. Among the 1,843 included patients, 1,298 were PDE5i users, and 545 were PDE5i non-users. We performed propensity score matching (PSM) of PDE5i users (n=529) with non-users (n=529) by adjusting for the variables of age, Gleason grade group, pathological T stage, preoperative ASA physical status grade, and International Index of Erectile Function score.
Results:
There were no significant difference in patient characteristics according to PSM. Kaplan–Meier curve revealed the difference of overall survival for PDE5i users and non-users (clustered log-rank test p<0.05). In a stratified Cox regression analysis, PDE5i use after RARP was associated with improved overall survival and reduced risk of death (hazard ratio 0.43; confidence interval 0.24–0.79; p=0.007). The limitation of this study was that the indication for the prescription of PDE5i was not given.
Conclusions
PDE5i administration after RARP were associated with overall survival of patients with prostate cancer. A further randomized control trial may reveal whether routine use of PDE5i after prostatectomy can improve survival of prostate cancer patient.
3.Quantitative Assessment of Chest CT Patterns in COVID-19 and Bacterial Pneumonia Patients: a Deep Learning Perspective
Myeongkyun KANG ; Kyung Soo HONG ; Philip CHIKONTWE ; Miguel LUNA ; Jong Geol JANG ; Jongsoo PARK ; Kyeong-Cheol SHIN ; Sang Hyun PARK ; June Hong AHN
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2021;36(5):e46-
Background:
It is difficult to distinguish subtle differences shown in computed tomography (CT) images of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and bacterial pneumonia patients, which often leads to an inaccurate diagnosis. It is desirable to design and evaluate interpretable feature extraction techniques to describe the patient's condition.
Methods:
This is a retrospective cohort study of 170 confirmed patients with COVID-19 or bacterial pneumonia acquired at Yeungnam University Hospital in Daegu, Korea. The lung and lesion regions were segmented to crop the lesion into 2D patches to train a classifier model that could differentiate between COVID-19 and bacterial pneumonia. The K-means algorithm was used to cluster deep features extracted by the trained model into 20 groups.Each lesion patch cluster was described by a characteristic imaging term for comparison.For each CT image containing multiple lesions, a histogram of lesion types was constructed using the cluster information. Finally, a Support Vector Machine classifier was trained with the histogram and radiomics features to distinguish diseases and severity.
Results:
The 20 clusters constructed from 170 patients were reviewed based on common radiographic appearance types. Two clusters showed typical findings of COVID-19, with two other clusters showing typical findings related to bacterial pneumonia. Notably, there is one cluster that showed bilateral diffuse ground-glass opacities (GGOs) in the central and peripheral lungs and was considered to be a key factor for severity classification. The proposed method achieved an accuracy of 91.2% for classifying COVID-19 and bacterial pneumonia patients with 95% reported for severity classification. The CT quantitative parameters represented by the values of cluster 8 were correlated with existing laboratory data and clinical parameters.
Conclusion
Deep chest CT analysis with constructed lesion clusters revealed well-known COVID-19 CT manifestations comparable to manual CT analysis. The constructed histogram features improved accuracy for both diseases and severity classification, and showedcorrelations with laboratory data and clinical parameters. The constructed histogram features can provide guidance for improved analysis and treatment of COVID-19.
4.Quantitative Assessment of Chest CT Patterns in COVID-19 and Bacterial Pneumonia Patients: a Deep Learning Perspective
Myeongkyun KANG ; Kyung Soo HONG ; Philip CHIKONTWE ; Miguel LUNA ; Jong Geol JANG ; Jongsoo PARK ; Kyeong-Cheol SHIN ; Sang Hyun PARK ; June Hong AHN
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2021;36(5):e46-
Background:
It is difficult to distinguish subtle differences shown in computed tomography (CT) images of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and bacterial pneumonia patients, which often leads to an inaccurate diagnosis. It is desirable to design and evaluate interpretable feature extraction techniques to describe the patient's condition.
Methods:
This is a retrospective cohort study of 170 confirmed patients with COVID-19 or bacterial pneumonia acquired at Yeungnam University Hospital in Daegu, Korea. The lung and lesion regions were segmented to crop the lesion into 2D patches to train a classifier model that could differentiate between COVID-19 and bacterial pneumonia. The K-means algorithm was used to cluster deep features extracted by the trained model into 20 groups.Each lesion patch cluster was described by a characteristic imaging term for comparison.For each CT image containing multiple lesions, a histogram of lesion types was constructed using the cluster information. Finally, a Support Vector Machine classifier was trained with the histogram and radiomics features to distinguish diseases and severity.
Results:
The 20 clusters constructed from 170 patients were reviewed based on common radiographic appearance types. Two clusters showed typical findings of COVID-19, with two other clusters showing typical findings related to bacterial pneumonia. Notably, there is one cluster that showed bilateral diffuse ground-glass opacities (GGOs) in the central and peripheral lungs and was considered to be a key factor for severity classification. The proposed method achieved an accuracy of 91.2% for classifying COVID-19 and bacterial pneumonia patients with 95% reported for severity classification. The CT quantitative parameters represented by the values of cluster 8 were correlated with existing laboratory data and clinical parameters.
Conclusion
Deep chest CT analysis with constructed lesion clusters revealed well-known COVID-19 CT manifestations comparable to manual CT analysis. The constructed histogram features improved accuracy for both diseases and severity classification, and showedcorrelations with laboratory data and clinical parameters. The constructed histogram features can provide guidance for improved analysis and treatment of COVID-19.
5.Hospital Volume Threshold Associated with Higher Survival after Endovascular Recanalization Therapy for Acute Ischemic Stroke
Dong-Hyun SHIM ; Youngsoo KIM ; Jieun ROH ; Jongsoo KANG ; Kyung-Pil PARK ; Jae-Kwan CHA ; Seung Kug BAIK ; Yoon KIM
Journal of Stroke 2020;22(1):141-149
Background:
and Purpose Endovascular recanalization therapy (ERT) is becoming increasingly important in the management of acute ischemic stroke (AIS). However, the hospital volume threshold for optimal ERT remains unknown. We investigated the relationship between hospital volume of ERT and risk-adjusted patient outcomes.
Methods:
From the National Health Insurance claims data in Korea, 11,745 patients with AIS who underwent ERT from July 2011 to June 2016 in 111 hospitals were selected. We measured the hospital’s ERT volume and patient outcomes, including the 30-day mortality, readmission, and postprocedural intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) rates. For each outcome measure, we constructed risk-adjusted prediction models incorporating demographic variables, the modified Charlson comorbidity index, and the stroke severity index (SSI), and validated them. Risk-adjusted outcomes of AIS cases were compared across hospital quartiles to confirm the volume-outcome relationship (VOR) in ERT. Spline regression was performed to determine the volume threshold.
Results:
The mean AIS volume was 14.8 cases per hospital/year and the unadjusted means of mortality, readmission, and ICH rates were 11.6%, 4.6%, and 8.6%, respectively. The VOR was observed in the risk-adjusted 30-day mortality rate across all quartile groups, and in the ICH rate between the first and fourth quartiles (P<0.05). The volume threshold was 24 cases per year.
Conclusions
There was an association between hospital volume and outcomes, and the volume threshold in ERT was identified. Policies should be developed to ensure the implementation of the AIS volume threshold for hospitals performing ERT.
6.Spontaneous Intracranial Hypotension as a Cause of Subdural Hematoma in a Patient with Cerebral Venous Thrombosis on Anticoagulation Treatment
Min Ok KIM ; Juhyeon KIM ; Jongsoo KANG ; Chang Hun KIM ; Young-Soo KIM ; Heeyoung KANG ; Nack-Cheon CHOI ; Oh-Young KWON ; Soo-Kyoung KIM
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2020;16(2):327-329
7.Clinical Characteristics of Female Panic Disorder Patients with Abortion History
Hye Jin HWANG ; Jongsoo OH ; Minji BANG ; Eunsoo WON ; Kang Soo LEE ; Tai Kiu CHOI ; Sang Hyuk LEE
Journal of the Korean Society of Biological Psychiatry 2019;26(2):65-70
OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study is to investigate differences in clinical characteristics between female panic disorder (PD) patients with abortion history (PD+A) and without abortion history (PD−A).METHODS: We examined data from 341 female patients diagnosed with PD. We divided the patients with PD into PD+A (82 patients) and PD−A (259 patients) to compare demographic and clinical characteristics. The following instruments were applied : stress coping strategies, NEO-neuroticism, the Anxiety Sensitivity Index-Revised (ASI-R), the Albany Panic and Phobia Questionnaire (APPQ), the Beck Depression Inventory, the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) and the Sheehan Disability Scale.RESULTS: Compared to the PD−A, the PD+A group showed no significant difference in coping strategies. However, significantly higher scores in neuroticism, the ASI-R, the APPQ and the BAI were observed. In terms of health-related disability, the PD+A group did not show significant difference.CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that the PD+A group may differ from the PD−A group in trait markers such as neuroticism and anxiety sensitivity, and abortion history may be associated with panic-related symptom severity. Our study suggests that further consideration is needed on such clinical characteristics in PD patients with abortion history.
Abortion, Induced
;
Anxiety
;
Depression
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Panic Disorder
;
Panic
;
Phobic Disorders
8.Effects of Uric Acid on the Alterations of White Matter Connectivity in Patients with Major Depression.
Hoyoung SOHN ; Min Soo KWON ; Sun Woo LEE ; Jongsoo OH ; Min Kyoung KIM ; Sang Hyuk LEE ; Kang Soo LEE ; Borah KIM
Psychiatry Investigation 2018;15(6):593-601
OBJECTIVE: Uric acid is a non-enzymatic antioxidant associated with depression. Despite its known protective role in other brain disorders, little is known about its influence on the structural characteristics of brains of patients with major depressive disorder (MDD). This study explored the association between uric acid and characteristics of white matter (WM) in patients with MDD. METHODS: A total of 32 patients with MDD and 23 healthy controls (HCs) were examined. All participants were scored based on the Beck Depression Inventory and Beck Anxiety Inventory at baseline. All patients were also rated with the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. We collected blood samples from all participants immediately after their enrollment and before the initiation of antidepressants in case of patients. Tract-based spatial statistics were used for all imaging analyses. RESULTS: Lower fractional anisotropy (FA) and higher radial diffusivity (RD) values were found in the MDD group than in the HC group. Voxelwise correlation analysis revealed that the serum uric acid levels positively correlated with the FA and negatively with the RD in WM regions that previously showed significant group differences in the MDD group. The correlated areas were located in the left anterior corona radiata, left frontal lobe WM, and left anterior cingulate cortex WM. CONCLUSION: The present study suggests a significant association between altered WM connectivity and serum uric acid levels in patients with MDD, possibly through demyelination.
Anisotropy
;
Antidepressive Agents
;
Antioxidants
;
Anxiety
;
Brain
;
Brain Diseases
;
Demyelinating Diseases
;
Depression*
;
Depressive Disorder
;
Depressive Disorder, Major
;
Frontal Lobe
;
Gyrus Cinguli
;
Humans
;
Neuroimaging
;
Oxidative Stress
;
Uric Acid*
;
White Matter*
9.Erratum: Effects of Uric Acid on the Alterations of White Matter Connectivity in Patients with Major Depression.
Hoyoung SOHN ; Min Soo KWON ; Sun Woo LEE ; Jongsoo OH ; Min Kyoung KIM ; Sang Hyuk LEE ; Kang Soo LEE ; Borah KIM
Psychiatry Investigation 2018;15(7):743-743
The authors discovered that the p-value for group difference in sex (male/female) in Table 1 was incorrect. And the authors described unclearly whether the p-value for the sex distribution was obtained by chi-square test or Fisher's exact test.
10.Feasibility, Safety, and Follow-up Angiographic Results of Endovascular Treatment for Non-Selected Ruptured Intracranial Aneurysms Under Local Anesthesia with Conscious Sedation
Jongsoo KANG ; Chul Hoo KANG ; Jieun ROH ; Jeong A YEOM ; Dong Hyun SHIM ; Young Soo KIM ; Sang Won LEE ; Young Soo KIM ; Kee Hong PARK ; Chang Hun KIM ; Soo Kyoung KIM ; Nack Cheon CHOI ; Oh Young KWON ; Heeyoung KANG ; Seung Kug BAIK
Journal of Neurocritical Care 2018;11(2):93-101
BACKGROUND: At most centers, general anesthesia (GA) has been preferred for endovascular treatment (EVT) of ruptured intracranial aneurysms (RIAs). In this study, we analyzed procedural results, clinical outcomes, and follow-up angiographic findings for patients undergoing EVT for RIA under local anesthesia (LA) with conscious sedation (CS). METHODS: We retrospectively evaluated 308 consecutive patients who underwent EVT for RIAs at a single institution between June 2009 and February 2017. EVT under LA with CS was considered for all patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage, regardless of Hunt and Hess (HH) scale score. RESULTS: EVT was performed for 320 aneurysms in 308 patients with subarachnoid hemorrhages. The mean patient age was 55.5±12.6 years. Moderate (III) and poor (IV, V) HH grades were observed in 75 (24.4%) and 77 patients (25%), respectively. Complete occlusion immediately after EVT was achieved for 270 (84.4%) of 320 aneurysms. Thromboembolic complications and intraprocedural ruptures occurred in 25 (7.8%) and 14 cases (4.3%), respectively. The morbidity rate at discharge (as defined by a modified Rankin scale score of 3 or greater) was 27.3% (84/308), while the mortality rate was 11.7% (36/308). Follow-up angiographic results were available for 210 (68.1%) of 308 patients. Recanalization was observed in 64 (29.3%) of 218 aneurysms in 210 patients. CONCLUSION: Based on our experience, EVT for RIAs under LA with CS was feasible, regardless of the clinical grade of the subarachnoid hemorrhage. Complication rates and follow-up angiographic results were also comparable to those observed when GA was used to perform the procedure.
Anesthesia, General
;
Anesthesia, Local
;
Aneurysm
;
Conscious Sedation
;
Endovascular Procedures
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Intracranial Aneurysm
;
Mortality
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Rupture
;
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

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