The ageing of the world’s population requires new methods to prevent adverse outcomes such as delirium in older patients after surgery. Delirium is an expression of depleted reserves, which in turn... Show moreThe ageing of the world’s population requires new methods to prevent adverse outcomes such as delirium in older patients after surgery. Delirium is an expression of depleted reserves, which in turn decreases a patient’s resilience and makes a patient more frail. It may be triggered due to precipitating risk factors that shift the balance and overflow a patient’s resilience. A systematic review and meta-analysis demonstrated that delirium can be prevented by implementing multicomponent interventions. Therefore, a new multicomponent prehabilitation intervention was designed. The incidence of delirium was successfully reduced by implementing this prehabilitation program, however no effects were seen on all other short-term outcomes. On the long term, postoperative delirium increases the risk of 1-year mortality over 4 times and is associated with decreased functional outcomes after 6 and 12 months. Moreover, surgery and subsequent delirium affect the quality of life of patients and caregivers and may lead to depressive symptoms. Faster return to preoperative functioning may therefore be key to a faster return to preoperative quality of life. Future perioperative care pathways focusing on delirium prevention, optimisation and fast return to baseline functioning after surgery, should begin prior to hospital admission and end long after discharge. Show less
The studies in this thesis contribute to more accurate risk assessment and prognosis prediction for DCIS and to better response evaluation of IBC treatment.For the Ductal Carcinoma In Situ (DCIS)... Show moreThe studies in this thesis contribute to more accurate risk assessment and prognosis prediction for DCIS and to better response evaluation of IBC treatment.For the Ductal Carcinoma In Situ (DCIS) studies, unbiased cohorts were used within the international Grand Challenge PRECISION consortium, funded by Cancer Research UK and KWF Dutch Cancer Society. DCIS is graded as low-, intermediate-, or high-grade depending on how abnormal the DCIS-cells look like. However, we showed that pathologists often disagree on grade. To overcome this limitation, we found that almost all DCIS scored as non-high-grade by the majority of pathologists express the estrogen receptor (ER) and are negative for the growth factor receptor HER2, whereas high-grade DCIS is mixed in expression for ER and HER2. We also provided insights in the recurrence risks of DCIS after treatment. See also https://cancergrandchallenges.org/teams/precision.The studies on Invasive Breast Cancer (IBC) were performed on a hospital-based cohort. We found for example substantial variation in tumour response evaluation for HER2-positive IBC after pre-operative chemotherapy due to different guidelines used. For accurate outcome analysis, reducing such variation is mandatory. Therefore, we are working on reaching international consensus of response evaluation. Show less
As with all cancer screening programmes, the expected reduction in cancer cases and deaths must be weighed against the burden of screening and possible side effects. The aim of this thesis is to... Show moreAs with all cancer screening programmes, the expected reduction in cancer cases and deaths must be weighed against the burden of screening and possible side effects. The aim of this thesis is to provide insights in consequences of colorectal cancer screening participation from a surgical perspective. We investigated potential harm in terms of serious morbidity from colonoscopy, additional findings on imaging, and psychological impacts following a positive faecal immunochemical test (FIT) result. Second, studies were performed to gain more in-depth insight into surgical referral patterns for benign colorectal lesions and CRC lesions with only submucosal invasion (pT1), thereby contributing to the understanding of whether early diagnosis following CRC screening results in better surgical outcomes. Third, surgical outcomes of screen-detected patients were compared with symptomatic patients. Show less