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Matteo Frasson

Researcher at University of Valencia

Publications -  105
Citations -  2978

Matteo Frasson is an academic researcher from University of Valencia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Colorectal cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 88 publications receiving 2280 citations. Previous affiliations of Matteo Frasson include Università telematica San Raffaele & Vita-Salute San Raffaele University.

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Laparoscopic Resection in Rectal Cancer Patients: Outcome and Cost-Benefit Analysis

TL;DR: Laroscopic resection reduced length of hospital stay, improved first-year quality of life, and slightly increased hospital costs, and short-term postoperative morbidity was similar in the two groups.
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Risk Factors for Anastomotic Leak After Colon Resection for Cancer: Multivariate Analysis and Nomogram From a Multicentric, Prospective, National Study With 3193 Patients.

TL;DR: Anastomotic leak after colon resection for cancer is a frequent, relevant complication and patients, surgical technique, and hospital are all important determining factors of anastomosis leak risk.
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Benefits of Laparoscopic Colorectal Resection Are More Pronounced in Elderly Patients

TL;DR: Laparoscopy improved short-term postoperative outcome more in elderly than in younger patients, and advanced age was associated with higher morbidity and longer length of stay only in patients who underwent open colorectal surgery.
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Laparoscopic vs. open colectomy in cancer patients: long-term complications, quality of life, and survival.

TL;DR: SLaparoscopic colorectal resection was associated with a lower incidence of long-term complications and a better quality of life in the first 12 months after surgery compared with open surgery, and no difference between groups was found in overall and disease-free survival rates.
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Laparoscopic versus open colorectal surgery: cost-benefit analysis in a single-center randomized trial.

TL;DR: The better postoperative short-term outcome in patients receiving LPS had a key role to nearly balance the operative room charges due to laparoscopy, and showed a slight additional cost in the LPS group.