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Pierre-Alain Clavien

Researcher at University of Zurich

Publications -  691
Citations -  72707

Pierre-Alain Clavien is an academic researcher from University of Zurich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Liver transplantation & Transplantation. The author has an hindex of 108, co-authored 647 publications receiving 61732 citations. Previous affiliations of Pierre-Alain Clavien include Boston Children's Hospital & Université Paris-Saclay.

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Classification of surgical complications: a new proposal with evaluation in a cohort of 6336 patients and results of a survey.

TL;DR: The new complication classification appears reliable and may represent a compelling tool for quality assessment in surgery in all parts of the world.
Journal Article

Proposed classification of complications of surgery with examples of utility in cholecystectomy.

TL;DR: Risk factors for development of complications were determined, and the classification was also used to analyze the value of a modified APACHE II as a preoperative prognostic score, which supported the relevance of the proposed classification.
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The Brisbane 2000 terminology of liver anatomy and resections.

TL;DR: The purpose of this paper is to present that terminology sought which was anatomically correct, in which anatomical and surgical terms agreed, and which was consistent, self-explanatory, linguistically correct, translatable, precise and concise.
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Recommendations for laparoscopic liver resection: a report from the second international consensus conference held in Morioka

Go Wakabayashi, +42 more
- 01 Apr 2015 - 
TL;DR: The Second International Consensus Conference on Laparoscopic Liver Resections (LLR) was held in Morioka, Japan, from October 4 to 6, 2014 to evaluate the current status of laparoscopic liver surgery and to provide recommendations to aid its future development.
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The comprehensive complication index: a novel continuous scale to measure surgical morbidity.

TL;DR: The CCI summarizes all postoperative complications and is more sensitive than existing morbidity endpoints and may serve as a standardized and widely applicable primary endpoint in surgical trials and other interventional fields of medicine.