S
Sonia T. Orcutt
Researcher at Baylor College of Medicine
Publications - 27
Citations - 899
Sonia T. Orcutt is an academic researcher from Baylor College of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Odds ratio & Hazard ratio. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 25 publications receiving 651 citations. Previous affiliations of Sonia T. Orcutt include University of Illinois at Chicago.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Infectious postoperative complications decrease long-term survival in patients undergoing curative surgery for colorectal cancer: a study of 12,075 patients.
Avo Artinyan,Sonia T. Orcutt,Daniel A. Anaya,Peter Richardson,Guoqing J. Chen,David H. Berger +5 more
TL;DR: The presence of postoperative complications after CRC resection is associated with decreased long-term survival, independent of patient, disease, and treatment factors, and the impact on long- term outcome is primarily driven by infectious complications, particularly severe postoperative infections.
Journal ArticleDOI
Liver Resection and Surgical Strategies for Management of Primary Liver Cancer.
Sonia T. Orcutt,Daniel A. Anaya +1 more
TL;DR: For both diseases, onco-surgical strategies including portal vein embolization and parenchymal-sparing resections have increased the number of patients eligible for curative liver resection by improving patient outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Combining radiomic features with a miRNA classifier may improve prediction of malignant pathology for pancreatic intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms.
Jennifer B. Permuth,Jung Choi,Yoganand Balarunathan,Jongphil Kim,Dung-Tsa Chen,Lu Chen,Sonia T. Orcutt,Matthew P. Doepker,Kenneth L. Gage,Geoffrey Zhang,Kujtim Latifi,Sarah E. Hoffe,Kun Jiang,Domenico Coppola,Barbara A. Centeno,Anthony M. Magliocco,Qian Li,Jose G. Trevino,Nipun B. Merchant,Robert J. Gillies,Mokenge P. Malafa +20 more
TL;DR: This proof-of-concept study suggests a noninvasive radiogenomic approach may more accurately predict IPMN pathology than ‘worrisome’ radiologic features considered in consensus guidelines.
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Use of a Pfannenstiel incision in minimally invasive colorectal cancer surgery is associated with a lower risk of wound complications.
Sonia T. Orcutt,Courtney J. Balentine,Christy L. Marshall,Celia N. Robinson,Daniel A. Anaya,Avo Artinyan,Samir S. Awad,David H. Berger,Daniel Albo +8 more
TL;DR: The use of a Pfannenstiel incision in MIS colorectal cancer resections is associated with a decreased risk of short-term wound complications.
Journal ArticleDOI
Laparoscopic versus robotic rectal resection for rectal cancer in a veteran population.
Ramiro Fernandez,Daniel A. Anaya,Daniel A. Anaya,Linda T. Li,Sonia T. Orcutt,Courtney J. Balentine,Samir A. Awad,Samir A. Awad,David H. Berger,David H. Berger,Daniel Albo,Avo Artinyan,Avo Artinyan +12 more
TL;DR: The robotic approach for rectal cancer resection is safe with similar postoperative and oncologic outcomes compared with laparoscopy.