Upload
vonga
View
219
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
1
SARS ANNUAL MEETING 2018
MEDICAL SCHOOL, QUEEN’S MEDICAL CENTRE,
UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM
DELEGATE INFORMATION
Contents
SARS programme Page 2-4
Full list of abstracts by session with timings
Wednesday 10th Jan Page 5-10
Thursday 11th Jan Page 11-16
Posters Page 17
BBA programme and abstract lists Page 18-21
AGM Agenda Page 22
Medical School Floorplans Floors A & B Page 23
Floor D (BBA meeting) Page 24
WiFi instructions Page 25
General information
Wifi: There is free wifi for conference delegates. See page 25 for
access information.
Coats/Cases: Wednesday B128 (B floor)
Thursday A5 (A floor) See maps on p23 for location. Please note that these rooms are
unmanned and possessions are left at your own risk. If you have
items of value please keep them with you.
Presentation upload: Wednesday A7 (A floor)
Thursday A6 (A floor) Please upload at least an hour before the start of the session in
which you are presenting.
Abstracts: All abstracts are available to download from the SARS website
Society Dinner tickets: Pre-purchased tickets have been emailed to delegates.
A limited number are available at the registration desk £65
each.
Bursaries: Bursary winners should collect the cheque from registration.
Local taxi firms: Yellow cabs 011509818181
DG Cars 0115 9 500 500 or 0115 9 607 607
2
SARS MEETING
10th & 11th January 2018
PROGRAMME
Wednesday 10th January
07.45 Registration opens
Foyer
08.20-09.30 Welcome & Symposium
Chairpersons: Professor Derek Alderson & Professor Dileep Lobo
Research in Nottingham
Lecture Theatre 3
Professor Anthony Avery, The Nottingham BTC
Professor Penny Gowland, The Development of MR Imaging in Nottingham
Professor Brian Hopkinson, Steamboats and sewing machines - Endovascular Surgery in
Nottingham
09.30-10.50 Parallel Oral Presentations 1A Vascular Surgery, 9 papers (5 min + 2min) Chairpersons: Professor Matt Bown & Professor Frank Smith Lecture Theatre 3 1B Colorectal Surgery, 12 papers (5 min + 2min) Chairpersons: Professor Dion Morton & Professor Austin Acheson Lecture Theatre 4 10.50-11.10 Coffee Foyer 11.10-11.40 SUS, SRS(SA) and ESSR Prize Winners’ Presentations
Chairs: Professor Arnold Hill & Dr. Taylor Riall
Lecture Theatre 3 11.10 SUS Prize Winner
Dr Jennifer Miller-Ocuin DNA released from PAD4-mediated NETosis enhances tumor growth in murine pancreatic cancer
11.20 SRS(SA) Prize Winner Dr Imraan Ismail Sardiwalla
Laparoscopic lavage versus suction only in complicated acute appendicitis 11.30 ESSR Walter Brendel Award Winner Dr Wolfgang Jungraithmayr
Induction of tolerance in lung transplants by IL-2 complex - stimulated regulatory T cells
11.40-12.50 Patey Prize Session 1, 7 papers (7 min + 3 min)
Chairs: Professor Derek Alderson & Professor Arnold Hill Lecture Theatre 3 12.50-13.50 Lunch and Poster presentations Foyer 13.50-15.15 Parallel Oral Presentations 2A Medical Student Prize, 12 papers (5 min + 2 min) Chairpersons: Professor Alun Davies & Mr Kourosh Saeb-Parsy Lecture Theatre 3
3
2B RSM Future Project Prize, 12 papers (5+2) Chairpersons: Miss Rachel Hargest & Professor Frank Smith Lecture Theatre 4 15.15-15.45 Hunterian Lecture
Introduced by Professor Derek Alderson Mr Bijan Modarai
Novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for critical limb ischaemia Lecture Theatre 3
15.45-16.00 Coffee Foyer 16.00-17.00 Parallel Oral Presentations 3A Breast papers, 7 papers (3 min + 2min) Chairpersons: Professor Malin Sund & Mr Kwok-Leung Cheung Lecture Theatre 3 3B Oesophagogastric, Upper GI & Bariatric, 8 papers (5 min + 2min) Chairpersons: Professor Derek Alderson & Mr Ravi Vohra Lecture Theatre 4 17.00-17.30 BJS Lecture
Introduced by Professor Derek Alderson Professor Malin Sund
Morbidity after breast cancer treatment - is more surgery needed? Lecture Theatre 3 We gratefully acknowledge the support of The BJS for this lecture
17.30-18.00 Annual General Meeting Lecture Theatre 3 19.00 Pre-dinner Drinks (Ticket holders only) Council Room, The Trent Building 19.30 Society Dinner (Ticket holders only) Council Room, The Trent Building
4
Thursday 11th January 07.30 Registration opens Foyer 08.00-09.00 ASiT symposium Becoming a well-rounded researcher Lecture Theatre 4 09.00-10.35 Parallel Oral Presentations
4A Miscellaneous, 12 papers (5 min + 2 min) Chairpersons: Professor Matt Bown & Professor Steven White Lecture Theatre 3 4B Training and Education, 14 papers (5 min + 2 min) Chairpersons: ASiT rep & Dr Sarah Watts Lecture Theatre 4 10.35-10.50 Coffee, Foyer 10.50-11.20 BBA Guest Lecture Introduced by Naiem Moiemen
Professor Steven Wolf Translational Research Resulting in Improvement in Care of the Burns Patient
Lecture Theatre 3 11.20-12.20 Parallel Oral Presentations
5A Burnand and Williams Prize session, 8 papers (5min + 2min) Chairpersons: Professor Dileep Lobo & Professor Paul Greenhaff Lecture Theatre 3 5B Transplantation, 5 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Chairpersons: Mr Kourosh Saeb-Parsy & Ms Lorna Marson Lecture Theatre 4 12.20-13.05 Lunch, Foyer 13.05-14.25 Parallel Oral Presentation 6A HPB, 11 papers (5 min + 2 min) Chairpersons: Professor Steven White & Ms Lorna Marson Lecture Theatre 3 6B Perioperative and Surgical Trauma, 9 papers (5 min + 2 min) Chairpersons: Dr Sarah Watts & Professor Dileep Lobo Lecture Theatre 4 14.25-15.35 Patey Prize session 2, 7 papers (7 min + 3 min) Chairpersons: Professor Arnold Hill & Professor Derek Alderson Lecture Theatre 3 15.35-16.05 John Farndon Lecture Introduced by Professor Arnold Hill
Professor Rupert Pearse The Surgeon Researcher: Are you your own worst enemy? Lecture Theatre 3 16.05-16.35 Presentation of Prizes Lecture Theatre 3 Professor Derek Alderson & Professor Arnold Hill
5
LIST OF ALL ABSTRACTS AND TIMINGS
WEDNESDAY 10 JANUARY
1A VASCULAR SURGERY
09.30-10.50, 9 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 3
09.30-09.37 O15 BEHAVIOUR OF THE ANTERIOR ACCESSORY SAPHENOUS VEIN AS A SOURCE OF RECURRENCE FROM A RCT COMPARING LASER TO FOAM AT 5 YEARS E Choe (1,3), M Azzam (1,2), J Barnaby (1,3), G Geroulakos (1,2), E Kalodiki (1,2), CR Lattimer (1,2) Josef Pflug Vascular Laboratory, Ealing Hospital (1); Imperial College, Department of Surgery and Cancer (2); American University of the Caribbean, School of Medicine (3)
09.37-09.44 O16 A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF PERIPHERAL BLOOD BIOMARKERS IN PRIMARY CHRONIC VENOUS DISEASE LR Manley, S Onida, AH Davies Imperial College London 09.44-09.51 O17 THE IMPACT OF ABDOMINAL AORTIC ANEURYSM SCREENING ON QUALITY OF LIFE MF Bath, D Sidloff, A Saratzis, MJ Bown, UKAGS Collaborators Department of Cardiovascular Sciences and NIHR Leicester Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit, University of Leicester, Leicester Royal Infirmary, Leicester, UK 09.51-09.58 O18 Moved to Miscellaneous
09.58-10.05 O19 PHYSICIAN MODIFIED FENESTRATED ENDOGRAFTS FOR EMERGENCY ENDOVASCULAR ANEURYSM REPAIR: PROOF OF CONCEPT, SAFETY AND INITIAL OUTCOMES A Singh, S Mafeld, R Williams, J McCaslin Northern Vascular Centre, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle 10.05-10.12 O20 THE EFFECT OF TANGENTIAL SKIN COMPRESSION WITH ADHESIVE TAPE IN REDUCING THE SIZE OF BULGING VARICOSE VEINS J Barnaby (1,3), M Azzam (1,2), E Choe (1,3), S Ash (1,2,3), E Kalodiki (1,2), CR Lattimer (1,2) Josef Pflug Vascular Laboratory, Ealing Hospital (1), Imperial College, Department of Surgery and Cancer (2), American University of the Caribbean, School of Medicine (3) 10.12-10.19 O21 CROSS SECTOR NEUROVASCULAR MDT AND VASCULAR SURGICAL CENTRALISATION REDUCES TIME TO SYMPTOMTIC CAROTID ENDARTERECTOMY (CEA) O Ziff (2), S Qureshi (2), A Webber (2), D Epstein (2), DM Baker (1)
Department of Surgery (1) Department of Stroke Medicine (2), Royal Free Hospital London 10.19-10.26 O22 SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS: SAFETY AND EFFICACY OF TREATMENTS FOR POPLITEAL ANEURYSMS O Khalil, T Rance, X Jia, DJA Scott Leeds Vascular Institute, Leeds Teaching Hospitals 10.26-10.33 O23 EXTRACORPOREAL SHOCKWAVE THERAPY IN LOWER LIMB INTERMITTENT CLAUDICATION A Raza, A Harwood, T Cayton, G Smith, I Chetter Hull and East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust 10.33-10.40 024 REMOTELY SUPERVISED EXERCISE FOR INTERMITTENT CLAUDICATION AP Coupland, A Thapar, T Allan, A Davies Academic Section of Vascular Surgery, Imperial College London
1B COLORECTAL SURGERY 09.30-10.50, 12 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 4
09.30-09.37 O25 ADENOMA DETECTION RATES DURING COLONOSCOPY: A REVIEW OF CURRENT PRACTICE C Cheung, W Ahmed, A McHugh, M Hassan, NM Foley, K Oaikhinen, F Cooke University Hospital Waterford 09.37-09.44 O26 DOES LAPAROSCOPIC COLORECTAL SURGERY RESULT IN SHORT AND LONG TERM POST-OP ERATIVE COGNITIVE DECLINE (POCD)? P Vitish-Sharma, R Van Oss, B Guo, C Maxwell-Armstrong, AG Acheson Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust 09.44-09.51 O27 QUANTIFICATION OF PERIOPERATIVE CTDNA LEVELS AND INFLAMMATORY MARKERS MAY IDENTIFY RISK OF EARLY RECURRENCE IN COLON CANCER CA Fleming, DP O’Leary, JH Wang, HP Redmond
6
Surguvant Research Centre, Cork University Hospital 09.51-09.58 O28 ANALYSIS OF PRE-OPERATIVE VISCERAL ADIPOSITY AND CYTOKINE PROFILES PREDICT POST-OPERATIVE COMPLICATIONS, DISEASE RECURRENCE AND SURVIVAL IN COLON CANCER CA Fleming (1), EP O’Connell (1), DP O’Leary (1), M Twomey (2), M Maher (2), HP Redmond (1) (1) Surguvant Research Centre, Cork University Hospital (2) Department of Radiology, Cork University
Hospital 09.58-10.05 O29 A RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW OF ADEQUACY OF CAECAL PHOTOGRAPHY IN THE DOCUMENTATION OF CAECAL INTUBATION RATES A Waqas, A McHugh, M Hassan, C Cheung, NM Foley, K Oaikhinen, F Cooke University Hospital Waterford 10.05-10.12 O30 INFORMATIONAL PREFERENCES OF PATIENTS WHO HAVE UNDERGONE SURGERY FOR PERIANAL CROHNS FISTULA JH Marshall (1), MJ Lee (2), GL Jones (3), A Lobo (2), SR Brown (2) University of Sheffield (1), Sheffield Teaching Hospitals (2), Leeds Beckett University (3) 10.12-10.19 O31 RIGHT ILIAC FOSSA TREATMENT (RIFT) STUDY - UK RESULTS RIFT Collaborators on behalf of the West Midlands Research Collaborative West Midlands Research Collaborative
10.19-10.26 O32 LOW ANTERIOR RESECTION SYNDROME (LARS) FOLLOWING LAPAROSCOPIC AND ROBOTIC RECTAL CANCER SURGERY (MRC/NIHR ROLARR TRIAL) WS Bolton (1), SJ Chapman (1), N Corrigan (2), DG Jayne (1) (1) Section of Translational Anaesthesia & Surgery, Leeds Institute of Biological & Clinical Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS9 7FT United Kingdom, (2) Leeds Institute for Clinical Trials Research, Level 10 Worsley Building, Clarendon Way, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9NL United Kingdom. 10.26-10.33 O33 SHORT TERM OUTCOMES FOR RIGHT AND LEFT SIDED COLONIC RESECTIONS S Hossaini (1), J Lim (1), C Penfold (2), R Longman (3), C Atkinson (2) (1) Department of Coloproctology, Great Western Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Swindon, UK (2) School of Oral and Dental Sciences, University of Bristol, UK (3) Department of Coloproctology, University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust, Bristol, UK
10.33-10.40 O34 DOCUMENTATION OF DIGITAL RECTAL EXAMINATION DURING COLONOSCOPY A McHugh, A Waqas, C Cheung, M Hassan, NM Foley, K Oaikhinen, F Cooke University Hospital Waterford 10.40-10.47 O35 INVESTIGATING THE ROLE OF ACID CERAMIDASE IN THE RADIOTHERAPY RESPONSE OF AN IN VITRO MODEL OF COLORECTAL CANCER N Govindarajah (1,2) , P Sutton (2), D Bowden (2), JL Parsons (2), D Vimalachandran (1,2) (1)The Countess of Chester Hospital, (2)The University of Liverpool 10.47-10.54 O134 GLOBAL VARIATION IN END STOMA FORMATION FOLLOWING LEFT SIDED COLORECTAL RESECTION GlobalSurg Collaborative
PATEY PRIZE 1 11.40-12.50, 7 papers (7 min + 3 min) Lecture Theatre 3
11.40-11.50 O1 ACTIVATION OF THE PREGNANE X RECEPTOR AFTER LIVER
TRANSPLANTATION REDUCES THE INCIDENCE OF ANASTOMOTIC BILIARY STRICTURES A Amer, R Figueiredo, CH Wilson, DM Manas, MC Wright, SA White Institute of Transplantation, Freeman Hospital 11.50-12.00 O2 SUCCINATE ACCUMULATION IS THE KEY METABOLOMIC SIGNATURE AND THERAPEUTIC TARGET FOR TRANSPLANT ISCHAEMIA-REPERFUSION INJURY IN MOUSE, PIG AND MAN J Martin (1), ASH Costa (2), A Gruszczyk (1,3), M Hamad (1), F Allen (3), EC Hinchy (3), AM James (3), T Krieg (4), AC Smith (3), A Robinson (3), C Frezza (2), MP Murphy (3), K Saeb-Parsy (1) (1) Department of Surgery and Cambridge NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, Biomedical Campus, University of Cambridge (2) MRC Cancer Unit, Hutchison/MRC Research Centre, Biomedical Campus, University of Cambridge (3) MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit, Biomedical Campus, University of
Cambridge (4) Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge 12.00-12.10 O3 HUMAN OMENTAL ADIPOSE DERIVED REGENERATIVE CELLS (HOADRCS) FOR THE PREVENTION OF ANASTOMOTIC LEAK AE Williams (1), JS Behra (2), A Rose (1), RM Day (3), OJ Cayre (2), DG Jayne (1) (1) Leeds Institute of Clinical and Biological Sciences, University of Leeds, (2) School of Chemical and Process Engineering, University of Leeds (3) University College London 12.10-12.20 O4 HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING DOES NOT IMPROVE CARDIORESPIRATORY FITNESS WITHIN NHS CANCER WAITING TIME TARGETS IN COLORECTAL CANCER PATIENTS
7
C Boereboom, B Phillips, J Williams, J Lund University of Nottingham, Royal Derby Hospital 12.20-12.30 O5 RISK ADJUSTMENT FOR COMORBIDITIES IN AORTIC ANEURYSM SURGERY A Aber (1), T Tong (1), J Chilcott (1), R Maheswaran (1), S Thomas (2), S Nawaz (2), J Michaels (1) (1) School of Health and Related Research (ScHARR), University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK, (2) Sheffield
Vascular Institute, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, Sheffield, UK 12.30-12.40 O6 GUT HORMONES AFTER OESOPHAGECTOMY: IMPLICATIONS FOR APPETITE, GLYCAEMIA AND NUTRITIONAL STATUS IN SURVIVORSHIP JA Elliott (1,2) CF Murphy (1,2) NG Docherty (2,3) SL Doyle (1) N Ravi (1) CW le Roux (2,3), JV Reynolds (1) (1) Department of Surgery, Trinity Centre for Health Sciences, Trinity College Dublin and St. James’s Hospital, Dublin 8, Ireland (2) Metabolic Medicine, Conway Institute of Biomedical and Biomolecular Research, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland (3)Gastrosurgical Laboratory, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden 12.40-12.50 O7 THE IMPACT OF MECHANICAL BOWEL PREPARATION IN ELECTIVE COLORECTAL SURGERY: A META-ANALYSIS KE Rollins, H Javanmard-Emamghissi, DN Lobo
Gastrointestinal Surgery, Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre and National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Nottingham Biomedical Research Centre, Nottingham University Hospitals and University of Nottingham, Queens Medical Centre, Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK
2A MEDICAL STUDENT PRIZE SESSION 13.50-15.15, 12 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 3
13.50-13.57 O36 HILAR CHOLANGIOCARCINOMA: MANAGEMENT IN A NORTHERN TERTIARY REFERRAL CENTRE AK Malik, SM Robinson, JJ French, G Sen, C Wilson, J Hammond, PJ Atherton, J Scott, SA White, DM Manas HPB and Transplant Unit, Freeman Hospital 13.57-14.04 O37 NEUTROPHIL TO LYMPHOCYTE RATIO (NLR) IN LUMINAL A BREAST CANCERS: RELATIONSHIP WITH ONCOTYPE DX SCORE N Ni Mhaonaigh, P McAnena, M Kerin, J Brown Department of Surgery, The Lambe Institute for Translational Research, NUI Galway, Galway, Ireland
14.04-14.11 O38 EVALUATING THE BENEFITS OF USING OBJECTIVE BENCHMARKS IN A VIRTUAL REALITY TRAINING CURRICULUM, FOR ROBOTIC AND LAPAROSCOPIC SURGERY W Watkinson, P Harrison, N Raison, K Ahmed MRC Centre for Transplantation, King’s College London, London 14.11-14.18 O39 MODELLING THE EFFECTS OF MICRORNA-24 AND -145 INHIBITION IN ENDOTHELIAL CELL CULTURE SJ Tingle, A Sewpaul, LL Bates, R Figueiredo, E Thompson, S Ali, NS Sheerin, CH Wilson Newcastle University 14.18-14.25 O40 SUITABILITY OF TNM STAGING FOR RECTAL CANCER TREATED WITH NEOADJUVANT RADIOTHERAPY AND MAJOR RESECTION: A SURVEILLANCE, EPIDEMIOLOGY AND END RESULTS (SEER) ANALYSIS SK Kamarajah (1), RP Kiran (2), P Tekkis (3,4), A Bhangu (1,5)
(1)University of Birmingham, UK, (2) Division of Colorectal Surgery, New York Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, USA, (3) Department of Colorectal Surgery, Royal Marsden Hospital, Fulham Road, London, UK, (4) Division of Surgery, Imperial College, Chelsea and Westminster Campus, London, UK, (5) Department of Colorectal Surgery, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, UK 14.25-14.32 O41 EPH-EPHRIN SIGNALING REGULATES VENOUS VALVE DEVELOPMENT C Seet (1), O Lyons (1), A Arnold (2), S Padayachee (2), S Mansour (3), P Ostergaard (3), P Mortimer (3), T Makinen (4), A Smith (1) (1) Academic Department of Vascular Surgery, Cardiovascular Research Division, KCL, St Thomas’ Hospital, UK. (2) Ultrasonic Angiology, Guy’s & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, UK (3) SW Thames Regional Genetics Service, St George’s Hospital, UK; (4) Rudbeck Laboratory, Department of Immunology, Genetics and Pathology, Uppsala University, Sweden
14.32-14.39 O42 NARCA; A NOVEL PROGNOSTIC SCORING SYSTEM IN PALLIATIVE PANCREATIC CANCER SJ Tingle, GR Severs, M Goodfellow, JA Moir, SA White Freeman Hospital 14.39-14.46 O43 RISK OF GORD-RELATED DISORDERS IN OBESE PATIENTS ON PPI THERAPY: A POPULATION ANALYSIS S Erridge, O Moussa, P Ziprin, S Purkayastha
8
Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, UK 14.46-14.53 O44 BODY MASS INDEX AND COMPLICATIONS FOLLOWING MAJOR GASTROINTESTINAL SURGERY - A PROSPECTIVE, INTERNATIONAL COHORT STUDY EuroSurg Collaborative EuroSurg Collaborative 14.53-15.00 O45 PREGNANE X RECEPTOR ACTIVATION IN LIVER PERFUSION
S Moulding, RS Figueiredo, A Sewpaul AC Leitch, L Bates, MC Wright, CH Wilson Institute of Cellular Medicine, Newcastle University 15.00-15.07 O46 VARIATIONS IN PATIENT REPORTED QUALITY OF RECOVERY WITH SURGICAL APPROACH FOLLOWING COLORECTAL RESECTIONS R Thavayogan (1), S Iftekhar Tani (2), A Acheson (1,2), K Mohiuddin (2), B Bharathan (2) (1) School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK (2) Nottingham Colorectal Service, Nottingham University Hospitals, Nottingham, UK 15.07-15.14 O47 COMPARISON OF K-BOX AND ADVANCED SCOPE TRAINER BENCH MODELS FOR FLEXIBLE URETERORENOSCOPY TRAINING: A RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL F Nawab, A Aydin, B Smith, MS Khan, P Dasgupta, K Ahmed MRC Centre for Transplantation, Guy’s Hospital, King’s College London, King’s Health Partners, London, UK
2B RSM FUTURE PROJECTS PRIZE SESSION 13.50-15.15, 12 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 4
13.50-13.57 O48 IMPROVING CONSENT IN THE DIGITAL ERA - LEARNING FROM
MONTGOMERY P Daliya (1,2), DN Lobo (1), SL Parsons (1,2) (1) Gastrointestinal Surgery, Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Unit, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust and University of Nottingham, Queens Medical Centre Campus, Derby Road, Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK. (2) Trent Oesophago-Gastric Unit, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, City Hospital Campus, Nottingham, NG5 1PB, UK 13.57-14.04 049 THE ROLE OF SELECTIVE DECONTAMINATION OF THE DIGESTIVE TRACT IN PREVENTING SURGICAL SITE INFECTIONS IN ELECTIVE COLORECTAL RESECTIONS: A RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIAL (SELDDEC TRIAL) I Balasubramanian (1), R Sehgal (1), E McNamara( 1), E Condon (1), D Waldron (1), JC Coffey (1), J
Mulsow (2), JP Burke (3), ST Martin (4), DC Winter (4), C Peirce (1) (1)University Hospital Limerick, Dooradoyle, Limerick, Ireland (2)Mater Miscercordiae University Hospital, Dublin 7, Ireland (3) Beaumont Hospital, Dublin 9, Ireland (4) St. Vincent’s University Hospital, Dublin 4, Ireland 14.04-14.11 O50 FAECAL MICROBIOTA TRANSPLANT IN ULCERATIVE COLITIS (FMTUC) – A PHASE II SINGLE-BLIND RANDOMISED CLINICAL TRIAL M Jitsumura (1), RF Kokelaar (2), J Kinross (3), M Hitchings (4), P Row (4), A Davies (4), DA Harris (2, 1), Core Surgical Trainee Wales Deanery, Wrexham Maelor Hospital, (2) Colorectal department, Singleton Hospital, Abertawe Bro Morgannwg, University Health Board, (3) Department of Surgery and Cancer, St. Mary’s Hospital, Imperial College London (4): Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Swansea University College of Medicine 14.11-14.18 O51 DOES INTRAWOUND TOPICAL VANCOMYCIN REDUCE RATES OF
INFECTION IN HIP FRACTURE SURGERY? - A PROPOSED RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL S Craxford, J Nightingale, D Forward, B Ollivere Queen’s Medical Centre Nottingham 14.18-14.25 O52 DOES IDIOPATHIC CTEV HAVE AN IMPACT ON ATTAINMENT OF DEVELOPMENTAL MILESTONES? A PROPOSED MULTI-CENTRE, INTERNATIONAL CASE-CONTROL STUDY K Hughes (1), M Williamson (1), S Bickerton (2), A Yeo (1), Y Gelfer (1,3) (1) Trauma and Orthopaedic Department, St. George’s Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK (2) Paediatric Physiotherapy Department, St. George’s Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK (3) St. George’s University of London, UK 14.25-14.32 O53 EFFECT OF 4 WEEKS HIGH INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING (HIIT) ON CARDIORESPIRATORY FITNESS AND MITOCHONDRIAL PROTEIN SYNTHETIC RATE, IN AN
OLDER POPULATION WITH CO-MORBIDITIES JEM Blackwell (1,2), B Doleman (1,2), K Smith (2), DJ Wilkinson (2), BE Phillips (2), JN Lund (1,2), JP Williams (1,2) (1) University of Nottingham (2) Royal Derby Hospital 14.32-14.39 O54 A PILOT STUDY TO ASSESS IMPACT OF PREHABILITATION ON INSULIN SENSITIVITY AND CARDIOPULMONARY FITNESS BEFORE PANCREATIC SURGERY – IS FOUR WEEKS ENOUGH?
9
JM George, MB Whyte, MJP Scott, TA Rockall Royal Surrey County Hospital, Guildford 14.39-14.46 055 EXPLORING TIME EFFICIENT STRATEGIES TO IMPROVE FITNESS FOR SURGERY: A RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL PJJ Herrod (1,2), JN Lund (1,2), BE Phillips (2) Royal Derby Hospital (2) University of Nottingham
14.46-14.53 O56 DEVELOPING A CORE OUTCOME SET FOR INTERVENTIONS TO IMPROVE INFORMED CONSENT FOR SURGERY LJ Convie (1,2), RS McCain(1), WJ Campbell(1), M Clarke(2), SJ Kirk (1) (1) Department of General Surgery, Ulster Hospital Dundonald. (2) Centre for Public Health, Queen’s University Belfast 14.53-15.00 O57 ASSESSING THE EVIDENCE FOR AUTOLOGOUS FIBRIN GLUE IN SOFT TISSUE WOUND CLOSURE R Miller (1), J Wormald (2), Z Alaqaf (3), R Wade (4), D Collins (1) (1) Chelsea and Westminster Hospital (2) Great Ormond Street Hospital (3) Al-Amiri Hospital (4) Leeds Royal Infirmary 15.00-15.07 058 A PROSPECTIVE TRIAL OF AUGMENTED REALTIY IN UNDERGRADUATE SURGICAL TRAINING
A Munteanu (1), J Luck (2), M Greenfeld (1), M Billingsley (2) A Mosahebi University College London Medical School, Royal Free Hospital 15.07-15.14 059 PERFORMANCE ANXIETY AMONG SURGEONS: ESTABLISHING OUR CURRENT UNDERSTANDING R Miller (1), M Hotton (2), T Goodacre (2), J Chan (2) (1)Chelsea and Westminster Hospital (2) Oxford University Healthcare NHS Trust
3A BREAST SURGERY 16.00-17.00, 7 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 3 16.00-16.07 O60 THREE-DIMENSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY AS A VOLUMETRIC ASSESSMENT TOOL FOR THE BREAST FHK Jeon, M Griffin, J Varghese, P Butler University College London 16.07-16.14 O61 CLINICAL EFFICACY OF PERI-OPERATIVE AROMATASE INHIBITOR (AI) IN DETERMINING LONG-TERM OUTCOME IN EARLY BREAST CANCER –THE POETIC* TRIAL (CRUK/07/015) JFR Robertson (1), JP Morden (2), M Dowsett (3), I Smith (4), JM Bliss (2) (1)University of Nottingham (Royal Derby Hospital), Derby, UK (2) Institute of Cancer Research, London, UK (3) Ralph Lauren Centre for Breast Cancer Research, London, UK (4) Royal Marsden NHS Foundation
Trust, London, UK (5)Institute of Cancer Research, London, UK 16.14-16.21 O62 NEUTROPHIL/LYMPHOCYTE RATIO AS A PROGNOSTIC INDICATOR IN NEO-ADJUVANT CHEMOTHERAPY TREATED LUMINAL A AND TRIPLE NEGATIVE BREAST CANCER D Miresse, PF McAnena, MJ Kerin, JAL Brown College of Medicine, Lambe Institute for Translational Research, Discipline of Surgery, NUI Galway, Galway, Ireland 16.21-16.28 O63 AZD5363, AN AKT INHIBITOR, SIGNIFICANTLY INHIBITS KEY BIOMARKERS OF THE AKT PATHWAY AND KI67, IN A RANDOMIZED, PLACEBO, CONTROLLED STUDY (STAKT) IN HUMAN BREAST CANCERS JFR Robertson (1), RE Coleman (2), KL Cheung (1), A Evans (3), C Holcombe (4), A Skene (5), D Rea (6), S Ahmed (7), A Jahan (8), S Kelly (9), K Horgan (10), P Rauchhaus (11), R Littleford (11), A Foxley
(12), JPO Lindemann (12), M Pass (12), P Rugman (12), R Deb (13), P Finlay (14), JMW Gee (14) (1) University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK, (2) University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK, (3) Poole Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Poole, UK, (4) Royal Liverpool University Hospital, Liverpool, UK, (5) Royal Bournemouth & Christchurch NHS Foundation, Bournemouth, UK, (6) University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK, (7) Leicester Royal Infirmary, Leicester, UK, (8) Kings Mill Hospital, Nottingham, UK, (9) Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, UK, (10) Leeds General Infirmary, Leeds, UK, (11) University of Dundee, Dundee, UK, (12) AstraZeneca, Melbourne, UK, (13) Royal Derby Hospital, Derby, UK, (14) University of Cardiff, Cardiff, UK 16.28-16.35 O64 THE PHENOTYPE OF B-LYMPHOCYTES IN BREAST CANCER C Strachan (1,2), K Horgan (2), C Carter (1), T Hughes (1) (1)University of Leeds School of Medicine (2) The Breast Unit St James’s University Hospital Leeds
16.35-16.42 O65 3D BREAST CANCER CULTURES DEMONSTRATE CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR CHANGES IN RESPONSE TO MEK INHIBITION A Behbehani, B Smith, J Correia, Y Xie, M Loizidou, H Welch UCL Medical School
10
16.42-16.49 O66 CLINICAL VARIATION IN THE DELIVERY OF ABDOMINAL BASED MICROVASCULAR BREAST RECONSTRUCTION IN THE UNITED KINGDOM (THE OPTIFLAPP STUDY) optiFLAPP Collaborative Imperial College London
3B OESOPHAGOGASTRIC, UPPER GI & BARIATRIC 16.00-17.00, 8 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 4
16.00-16.07 O67 IMPROVED OUTCOMES OF OESOPHAGO-GASTRIC CANCER TREATMENT OVER 15 YEARS
JH Saunders, M Dorrington, CR Bowman, N Tewari, JA Catton, NT Welch, JP Duffy, RS Vohra, SL Parsons Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust 16.07-16.14 O68 BARIATRIC SURGERY ASSOCIATED WITH REDUCED MORTALITY IN THE MORBIDLY OBESE: A CLINICAL PRACTICE RESEARCH DATALINK STUDY O Moussa, S Erridge, S Chidambaram, P Ziprin, S Purkayastha Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, UK 16.14-16.21 O69 THE PANCREATIC EPSILON-CELLS RECOVER THE EMBRYONIC GHRELIN SECRETION IN RESPONSE TO BARIATRIC SURGERY D Almorza-Gomar, A Belmonte-Nuñez, A Camacho-Ramirez, G Pérez-Arana, JA Prada-Oliveira University of Cádiz 16.21-16.28 O70 EXPLORING THE MULTICELLULAR ECO-SYSTEM OF OESOPHAGEAL CANCER
RC Walker, J Harrington, R Parker, I Fesenko, M Rose-Zerilli, TJ Underwood Cancer Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton 16.28-16.35 O71 POSTOPERATIVE COMPLICATIONS IMPACT LONG-TERM SURVIVAL, BUT NOT DISEASE RECURRENCE, FOLLOWING OESOPHAGO-GASTRIC CANCER RESECTION JH Saunders, M Dorrington, CR Bowman, N Tewari, JA Catton, NT Welch, JP Duffy, RS Vohra, SL Parsons Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust 16.35-16.42 O72 THE RISK OF VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM AFTER SURGERY FOR OESOPHOGO-GASTRIC MALIGNANCY AND THE IMPACT OF CHEMOTHERAPY: A POPULATION BASED COHORT STUDY A Adiamah (1), L Ban (1), J West (2), DJ Humes (1,2) (1) National Institute for Health Research Nottingham Digestive Diseases Biomedical Research Centre, E
Floor West Block, QMC Campus, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham, UK, NG7 2UH (2) Division of Epidemiology and Public Health, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Clinical Sciences Building 2, City Hospital, Nottingham, UK, NG5 1PB 16.42-16.49 O73 A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM RATES AFTER SURGERY FOR OESOPHAGEAL OR GASTRIC CANCER A Adiamah, MH Henry, N Tewari, E Qureshi, J West, DJ Humes National Institute for Health Research Nottingham Digestive Diseases Biomedical Research Unit 16.49-16.56 O74 CUMULATIVE SUM (CUSUM) ANALYSIS OF POST-OPERATIVE PNEUMONIA, BUT NOT MORTALITY OR ANASTOMOTIC LEAK, IS A USEFUL TOOL FOR REAL-TIME OUTCOME MONITORING D Thakur, C Swords, N Varma, G Roberts, J Bennett, A Hindmarsh, V Sujendran, P Safranek, R Hardwick Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge
11
THURSDAY 11TH JANUARY
4A MISCELLANEOUS 09.00-10.35, 12 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 3
09.00-09.07 O75 VITAMIN D INSUFFICIENCY MAY BE LINKED TO LOWER PATIENT
REPORTED OUTCOME MEASURE (PROM) SCORES FOLLOWING TOTAL HIP OR KNEE REPLACEMENT. RJM Morrison (1,2), KS Rankin (2), MR Reed (1,2) (1) Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust (2) University of Newcastle 09.07-09.14 O76 PURINERGIC RECEPTOR SIGNALLING IN MECHANOTRANSDUCTION IN BONE AND CARTILAGE: A NEW THERAPEUTIC TARGET? O Godsafe, BA Evans Cardiff University School of Medicine 09.14-09.21 O77 Withdrawn 09.21-09.28 O78 THE CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE IS GETTING IT WOEFULLY WRONG IN PROSECUTIONS FOR GROSS NEGLIGENCE MANSLAUGHTER
CX Cheung, NM Foley, F Cooke University Hospital Waterford 09.28-09.35 O79 THE SCARE STATEMENT: CONSENSUS-BASED SURGICAL CASE REPORT GUIDELINES RA Agha, AJ Fowler, A Saeta, I Barai, S Rajmohan, DP Orgill; SCARE Group North West London Hospitals NHS Trust 09.35-09.42 O80 DOES SUPPLEMENTATION FOR VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY IMPROVE OUTCOMES FOLLOWING TOTAL HIP OR KNEE REPLACEMENT? THE VASO TRIAL RJM Morrison (1,3), D Bunn (1), WK Gray (1), P Baker (2), C White (2), A Rangan (2), KS Rankin (3), MR Reed (1,3) (1) Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust (2) South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (3)
University of Newcastle 09.42-09.49 O81 THE STROCSS STATEMENT: STRENGTHENING THE REPORTING OF COHORT STUDIES IN SURGERY RA Agha (1), MR Borrelli (1), M Vella-Baldacchino (2), R Thavayogan (3) and D Orgill (4) (1) Department of Plastic Surgery, Guy's & St. Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, (2) Department of Emergency Surgery, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, (3) School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, (4) Division of Plastic Surgery, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston, USA 09.49-09.56 O82 A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META ANALYSIS OF RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIALS COMPARING THE SAFETY AND EFFICACY OF GREENLIGHT LASER PHOTOSELECTIVE VAPORISATION WITH MODERN SURGICAL TREATMENTS FOR BENIGN PROSTATIC HYPERPLASIA R Shah, J D’Costa, J Parkin
Barts and The London 09.56-10.03 O83 IS THERE ANY DIFFERENCE IN THE OUTCOME OF EMERGENCY LAPAROTOMY FOR PATIENTS ADMITTED OR UNDERGOING SURGERY ON A WEEKDAY OR WEEKEND? K Ramesh (1), T Abdelrahman (2), R Hargest (2) (1) Cardiff University School of Medicine (2) University Hospital Wales 10.03-10.10 O84 IMPACT OF THE SCARE GUIDELINE ON THE REPORTING OF SURGICAL CASE REPORTS: A BEFORE AND AFTER STUDY RA Agha, R Farwana, MR Borrelli, T Tickunas, T Kusu-Orkar, MC Millip, R Thavayogan, J Garner, DP Orgill University of Birmingham (1), King’s College London (2) 10.10-10.17 O85 LIPOTRANSFER SUBSTANTIALLY IMPROVES MEASURES OF APPEARANCE AND FUNCTION DUE TO FACIAL FIBROSIS IN SYSTEMIC SCLEROSIS
A Almadori (1,2,3), C Ryan (1), M Griffin (1,2,3), E Hansen (4), C Denton (5), PEM Butler (1,2,3) (1) Centre for Nanotechnology and Regenerative Surgery, Division of Surgery & Interventional Science, University College London, London, UK (2) Plastic Surgery Department, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust Hospital, London, UK (3) Charles Wolfson Centre for Reconstructive Surgery, Royal Free Hospital, London, UK (4. Clinical Psychology, Plastic Surgery Department, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust Hospital, London, UK (5) Centre for Rheumatology, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust Hospital, London, UK 10.17-10.24 O86 A SYSTEMATIC RECURRENT THEME ANALYSIS OF THE REPORTED LIMITATIONS OF FACIAL ELECTROMYOGRAPHY L Geoghegan (1), RM Kwasnicki (1), S Kanabar (1), D Pethers (1), C Nduka (2) (1) Department of Surgery, Imperial College London (2) Department of Plastic and Reconstructive
Surgery, Queen Victoria Hospital
12
10.24-10.31 O18 PREOPERATIVE ANAEMIA AS PREDICTOR OF THE RATE OF PERIOPERATIVE RED BLOOD CELL TRANSFUSION IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING SURGERY FOR LOWER LIMB ISCHAEMIA A Shalan, C Ivel, M Aslet, RJT Wilson York Teaching Hospital
4B TRAINING AND EDUCATION 09.00-10.35, 13 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 4
09.00-09.07 O87 VALIDATING TOUCH SURGERY FOR TRAINING IN LAPAROSCOPIC
CHOLECYSTECTOMIES: A RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL S Erridge, S Chidambaram, DR Leff, S Purkayastha Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, UK 09.07-09.14 O88 THE VALIDATION OF A NOVEL ROBOT-ASSISTED RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY VIRTUAL REALITY MODULE P Harrison, N Raison, T Abe, P Dasgupta, K Ahmed MRC Centre for Transplantation, King’s College London, London 09.14-09.21 O89 DEVELOPMENT AND VALIDATION OF THE NON-TECHNICAL SKILLS FOR UROLOGICAL SURGEONS (NOTSUS) TRAINING CURRICULUM A Aydin (1), K Ahmed (1,2), O Brunckhorst (1), N Raison (1), C McIlhenny (3), J Brewin (4), T Abe (1), S Jain (5), F Dar (1), H Aya (1), CE Lovegrove (1), MH Iqbal (1), A Al-Jabir (1), M Shabbir (1,2), MS Khan (1,2), P Dasgupta (1,2)
(1) MRC Centre for Transplantation, King’s College London, (2) Dept. of Urology, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, (3) Dept. of Urology, NHS Forth Valley, (4) Dept. of Urology, Salisbury NHS Foundation Trust, (5) Dept. of Urology, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust 09.21-09.28 O90 VIRTUAL REALITY SIMULATION IN MINIMALLY INVASIVE SURGERY TRAINING: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS Z Sheikh (1,2), R Jackson (3), P Tharmanathan (1), A Keding (1) (1)University of York, (2) York Teaching hospital, (3) Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital 09.28-09.35 O91 FOUNDATION DOCTOR KNOWLEDGE OF WOUNDS AND DRESSINGS IS IMPROVED BY A SIMPLE INTERVENTION: AN AUDIT CYCLE-BASED QUALITY IMPROVEMENT STUDY L Geoghegan (1), H Catton (2), AJ Goss (3), RZ Adami (4), J Rodrigues (5)
(1) Imperial College Medical School, London (2) Stoke Mandeville Hospital, Aylesbury (3) John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford (4) Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge (5) Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences (NDORMS), University of Oxford, Oxford 09.35-09.42 O92 STUDENTS’ VIEWS OF PEER-LED TEACHING IN ANATOMY MT Smith (1,2), M Marsden (1,3)
(1) Centre for Trauma Sciences, Blizard Institute, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK, (2) University
of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK, (3) Academic Department of Military Surgery and Trauma, Royal Centre
for Defence Medicine, Birmingham, UK
09.42-09.49 O93 MAKING SURGERY SAFER: THE WHO SAFER SURGERY CHECKLIST AND NEVER EVENTS. WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM A TRUST-WIDE PROSPECTIVE AUDIT? M Elbuzidi, M Syed, R Hinckley King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust 09.49-09.56 O94 THE IMPACT OF OUT OF PROGRAMME PERIODS ON TIME IN GENERAL SURGICAL TRAINING: A UK NATIONAL DATABASE STUDY. EJ Elsey (1), G Griffiths (2), J West (1), DJ Humes (1,3) (1) Division of Epidemiology and Public Health, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham (2) Ninewells Hospital, Dundee (3) Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre and NIHR Nottingham Digestive Diseases Biomedical Research Centre, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham 09.56-10.03 O95 GENERAL PAEDIATRIC SURGERY: A NATIONAL SURVEY OF SPECIALIST
SURGICAL REGISTRARS S Hassan, B Keeler, K Lakhoo John Radcliffe Hospital 10.03-10.10 O96 FROM SCARED TO PREPARED: SIMULATION TRAINING FOR ENT DEPARTMENTAL INDUCTIONS M Ally, I Beegun, Y Abbas, L Steele, C Bullido, N Orban, J Ahmed, N Tolley Imperial College NHS Trust, London 10.10-10.17 O97 SEE ONE, DO ONE, TEACH ONE - DOES UNDERGRADUATE MEDICAL TRAINING PREPARE TOMORROWS DOCTORS TO PERFORM COMMON UROLOGICAL PROCEDURES CONFIDENTLY? SF Smith, ER Osen
(1) Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge (2) Colchester Hospital, Colchester
13
10.17-10.24 O98 IS CURRENT UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION IN UROLOGY EQUIPPING FOUNDATION DOCTORS - A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY ER Osen (1), SF Smith (2) (1) Colchester Hospital University Foundation Trust, (2) University of Cambridge 10.24-10.31 O99 A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE APPLICATIONS OF TELEMENTORING FOR SURGEONS
S Erridge, DKT Yeung, S Purkayastha Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, UK 10.31-10.38 O135 EARLY YEARS POSTGRADUATE SURGICAL TRAINING PROGRAMMES IN THE UK ARE FAILING TO MEET NATIONAL QUALITY STANDARDS: AN ANALYSIS OF THE ASIT LOST TRIBE STUDY ASiT/BOTA Lost Tribe Study Group
5A BURNAND AND WILLIAMS PRIZE SESSION 11.20-12.20, 8 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 3
11.20-11.27 O100 METABOLOMIC PROFILING OF FAST- AND SLOW-GROWING
ABDOMINAL AORTIC ANEURYSMS REVEALS MARKERS OF DISEASE PROGRESSION RELATED TO LIPID METABOLISM L Liyanage, L Heaney, T Suzuki, UK Aneurysm Growth Study Collaborators, M Bown Department of Cardiovascular Sciences and the NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK 11.27-11.34 O101 VALIDATION OF AN AUTOANTIBODY BLOOD TEST FOR THE DETECTION OF EARLY BREAST CANCER (BC), PARTICULARLY HORMONE RECEPTOR POSITIVE BC OH Negm, O Ahmad, GP Figueredo, MR Hamed, L Pollard, J Garibaldi, H Sewell, JF Robertson University of Nottingham, UK 11.34-11.41 O102 OUTCOMES OF EMERGENCY VERSUS INTERVAL CHOLECYSTECTOMY FOLLOWING ACUTE CHOLECYSTITIS: A PROPENSITY SCORE MATCHED NATIONAL COHORT STUDY
P Daliya (1,2), J Mytton (3), SL Parsons (1,2), DN Lobo (2), R Lilford (4), RS Vohra (1,2) (1) Trent Oesophago-Gastric Unit, City Hospital Campus, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Hucknall Road, Nottingham NG5 1PB, UK (2) Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Unit, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust and University of Nottingham, Queens Medical Centre Campus, Derby Road, Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK (3) Department of Health Informatics, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Yardley Court, 11-13 Frederick Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 1JD, UK (4) Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK 11.41-11.48 O103 DURATION AND MAGNITUDE OF POSTOPERATIVE RISK OF VENOUS THROMBOEMBOLISM AFTER CHOLECYSTECTOMY: A POPULATION BASED COHORT STUDY MH Henry (1), A Abdul-Sultan (2), AJ Walker (2), J West (2), DJ Humes (1,2)
(1) National Institute for Health Research Nottingham Digestive Diseases Biomedical Research Centre, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust (2) Division of Epidemiology and Public Health, School of Medicine, University of Nottingham 11.48-11.55 O104 COMPARISON OF ROBOTIC VERSUS OPEN AND LAPAROSCOPIC DISTAL PANCREATECTOMY N Sutandi, SM Robinson, JJ French, G Sen, R Thakkar, DM Manas, RM Charnley, SA White Department of HPB Surgery, Freeman Hospital 11.55-12.02 O105 DECELLULARIZATION OF A WHOLE HUMAN MAXILLOFACIAL SKELETAL MUSCLE TO PRODUCE AN ACELLULAR SCAFFOLD FOR FACIAL RECONSTRUCTION A Naik, MF Griffin, M Szarko, PE Butler Division of Surgery & Interventional Science, University College London, London, United Kingdom 12.02-12.09 O106 NORMOTHERMIC PERFUSION DEPLETES INFLAMMATORY LEUKOCYTES
IN HUMAN DONOR KIDNEYS T Moore, J Ferdinand, SA Hosgood, M Clatworthy, ML Nicholson University of Cambridge 12.09-12.16 O107 HAEMOADSORPTION REDUCES THE INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE AND IMPROVES BLOOD FLOW DURING EX VIVO RENAL PERFUSION IN AN EXPERIMENTAL MODEL SA Hosgood, T Moore, T Kleverlaan, T Adams, ML Nicholson University of Cambridge
14
5B TRANSPLANTATION SURGERY 11.20-11.55, 5 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 4
11.20-11.27 O108 THE EFFECTS OF HYDROGEN GAS ON RENAL ISCHAEMIA REPERFUSION INJURY IN A PRE-CLINICAL MODEL T Adams, SA Hosgood, T Moore, M Qurashi, ML Nicholson University of Cambridge 11.27-11.34 O109 NORMOTHERMIC MACHINE PERFUSION PARAMETERS CORRELATE WITH EARLY ALLOGRAFT FUNCTION IN DBD AND DCD KIDNEY TRANSPLANTS L Grant, SA Hosgood, M Hamed, K Crick, C Fear, ML Nicholson University of Cambridge
11.34-11.41 O110 INSULIN USE ON INTENSIVE CARE UNITS AS A MARKER OF BETA-CELL DEATH IN BRAIN DEAD PANCREAS DONORS IM Shapey, A Summers, J O’Sullivan, P Yianoullou, T Augustine, MK Rutter, D van Dellen (1) University of Manchester, (2) Central Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust 11.41-11.48 O111 OUTCOMES FOLLOWING SIMULTANEOUS PANCREAS AND KIDNEY TRANSPLANTATION: IDENTIFYING PATIENTS AT RISK OF MORTALITY USING PRE-TRANSPLANT QRISK2 SCORE SC Goh, P Yiannoullou, A Summers, Z Moinuddin, I Shapey, H Khambalia, MK Rutter, T Augustine, D van Dellen Manchester Royal Infirmary 11.48-11.55 O112 PERI-TRANSPLANT GLYCAEMIC CONTROL IN SOLID PANCREAS TRANSPLANTATION
IM Shapey, ZL Tan, A Summers, P Yiannoullou, H Kambalia, T Augustine, MK Rutter, D van Dellen (1) University of Manchester, (2) Central Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
6A HPB SURGERY 13.05-14.25, 11 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 3
13.05-13.12 O113 ANTIBIOTIC PROPHYLAXIS IN ACUTE PANCREATITIS COMPLICATED BY PANCREATIC NECROSIS E Psaltis (1), E Villatoro (2), M Larvin (3) (1) University of Nottingham, (2) King’s Mill Hospital, Sherwood Forest NHS Foundation Trust, (3) University of Limerick 13.12-13.19 O114 ROBOTIC VERSUS LAPAROSCOPIC DISTAL PANCREATECTOMY: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS N Sutandi, SM Robinson, SA White
Department of HPB Surgery, Freeman Hospital 13.19-13.26 O115 IMMUNOHISTOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISATION OF INFLAMED AND HISTOLOGICALLY NORMAL GALLBLADDERS E Psaltis (1), AM Zaitoun (2), DN Lobo (1) Gastrointestinal Surgery (1) and Pathology (2), Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Unit, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust and University of Nottingham, Queens Medical Centre Campus 13.26-13.33 O116 UNDERSTANDING THE MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF PANCREATIC ACINAR CELL CARCINOMA Z Khan (1), JJ French (2), T Ness (3), D Parkinson (3), SA White (1,2), J Mann (1), RM Charnley (2), SM Robinson (1,2) (1) Fibrosis Research Group, Newcastle University (2) Department of HPB Surgery, Freeman Hospital (3)
Histopathology Department, Royal Victoria Infirmary 13.33-13.40 O117 CHEMOTHERAPY FOR HILAR CHOLANGIOCARCINOMA (HCCA): A SINGLE-CENTRE EXPERIENCE IN A NORTHERN TERTIARY REFERRAL UNIT AK Malik, SM Robinson, JJ French, G Sen, C Wilson, J Hammond, J Scott, PJ Atherton, SA White, DM Manas HPB and Transplant Unit, Freeman Hospital 13.40-13.47 O118 THE ROLE OF CHEST COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY IMAGING IN THE STAGING OF PANCREATICOBILIARY CANCERS KE Rollins (1), AP Navarro (2), DS Gomez (2), GR Irving (2), IC Cameron (2), AJ Brooks (2), WK Dunn (3), DN Lobo (1) (1) Gastrointestinal Surgery, Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre and National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Nottingham Biomedical Research Centre, Nottingham University Hospitals and
University of Nottingham, Queen’s Medical Centre, Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK (2) Department of Hepatobiliary Surgery, Nottingham University Hospitals and University of Nottingham, Queen’s Medical
15
Centre, Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK (3) Department of Radiology, Nottingham University Hospitals and University of Nottingham, Queens Medical Centre, Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK 13.47-13.54 O119 PRE-OPERATIVE GLYCOSYLATED HAEMOGLOBIN (HBA1C) DOES IMPACT ON POST-OPERATIVE COMPLICATIONS IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING GASTROINTESTINAL AND HEPATOBILIARY SURGERY SK Kamarajah (1), A Adlan (1), B Barmayehvar (1), M Sowida (1), C Reihill (2), P Ellahee (2)
(1)College of Medical and Dental Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK (2) Lead Nurse, Pre-operative Assessment Unit, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, UK (3) Consultant Anaesthetist, Preoperative Assessment Unit, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, UK 13.54-14.01 O120 INITIAL EXPERIENCE OF ROBOTIC FENESTRATION OF MASSIVE LIVER CYSTS USING THE INTUITIVE ENDOWRIST ONE VESSEL SEALER: THE BENCHMARK OPERATION FOR HPB SURGICAL TRAINEES R Thakkar, JA Logue, SM Robinson, A Kanwar, G Alessandri, JJ French, DM Manas, SA White Department of HPB and Transplant Surgery, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne 14.01-14.08 O121 A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EPIDEMIOLOGY, PATHOPHYSIOLOGY AND CURRENT MANAGEMENT OF HYPERLIPIDAEMIC PANCREATITIS A Adiamah, E Psaltis, M Crook, DN Lobo National Institute for Health Research Nottingham Digestive Diseases Biomedical Research Unit
14.08-14.15 O122 DISTAL PANCREATECTOMY FOR PANCREATIC NEUROENDOCRINE TUMOURS (PNETS): WHICH APPROACH? N Sutandi, JA Logue, SM Robinson, JJ French, C Wilson, RM Charnley, DM Manas, SA White Department of HPB and Transplant Surgery, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne 14.15-14.22 O123 THE LEARNING CURVE IN DISTAL PANCREATECTOMY: A COMPARISON BETWEEN CONVENTIONAL LAPAROSCOPIC AND ROBOTIC APPROACHES N Sutandi, SM Robinson, JJ French, R Thakkar, RM Charnley, DM Manas, SA White Department of HPB Surgery, Freeman Hospital
6B PERIOPERATIVE AND SURGICAL TRAUMA 13.05-14.25, 10 papers (5 min + 2 min)
Lecture Theatre 4
13.05-13.12 O124 MICROBIOLOGICAL AND FUNCTIONAL OUTCOMES AFTER OPEN EXTREMITY FRACTURES SUSTAINED OVERSEAS: THE EXPERIENCE OF A UK LEVEL I TRAUMA CENTRE L Geoghegan, B Ardehali, A Khajuria, D Reissis, S Naique, R Bhattacharya, G Lawton, A Jain, J Simmons,
S Hettiaratchy Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, St. Mary’s Hospital, Imperial College NHS Trust Background Open extremity fractures carry a high risk of limb loss and poor functional outcomes. 13.12-13.19 O125 WITHDRAWN 13.19-13.26 O126 LOWER LIMB MUSCLE ACTIVITY IN NON-STEADY SPORT-SPECIFIC MOVEMENTS IN RECOVERED ANTERIOR CRUCIATE LIGAMENT INJURED BADMINTON PLAYERS: A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY M Khaliq (1,2), A Birn-Jeffery (1) (1)Queen Mary University of London, (2) University of Sheffield 13.26-13.33 O127 STREAMLINING PATIENT CARE FROM THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT TO DISCHARGE PROOF OF CONCEPT OF AN ELECTRONIC NECK OF FEMUR PATHWAY
AE Ward, N Nanavati, L Hoggett, J Chowdhury Doncaster Royal Infirmary 13.33-13.40 O128 INCIDENCE, ASSOCIATED RISK FACTORS AND PROGNOSIS ASSOCIATED WITH POSTOPERATIVE AF FOLLOWING ABDOMINAL SURGERY: A DATABASE STUDY SYSurg Atrial Fibrillation Group: EG Heywood, O Spence, TM Drake, J Lee, M Wilson, MJ Lee Sheffield Teaching Hospitals 13.40-13.47 O129 PROPHYLACTIC ANTIBIOTICS FOR PENETRATING ABDOMINAL TRAUMA-DURATION OF USE AND ANTIBIOTIC CHOICE: A COCHRANE SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS PJJ Herrod, H Boyd-Carson, B Doleman, JEM Blackwell, A Bhalla, JP Williams, R Nelson, JN Lund Royal Derby Hospital
13.47-13.54 O130 FACTORS IN PREDICTING THE SURGICAL OUTCOMES OF PEDIATRIC TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY (TBI) PATIENTS SY Chee (1), WY Lee (2), VD Nga (3), TT Yeo (3) (1) Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, (2) National University, Singapore (3) National University Hospital, Singapore 13.54-14.01 O131 A QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROJECT INTO PERI-OPERATIVE MEDICINE FOR THE OLDER SURGICAL PATIENT AT LEEDS TEACHING HOSPITALS NHS TRUST
16
T Dale MacLaine (1), R Anthony (2), D Burke (2) University of Leeds (1), Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust (2) 14.01-14.08 O132 BURIED VERSUS EXPOSED KIRSCHNER WIRES FOLLOWING FIXATION OF METACARPAL AND PHALANGEAL FRACTURES: A NATIONAL CLINICIAN AND PATIENT SURVEY JC Wormald (1,3), S Gardiner (4), JN Rodrigues (2,3), T Pezas (3), H Lloyd-Hughes (4), F Issa (2), A
Jain (1,2), MD Gardiner (2) (1) Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Imperial College Healthcare NHS trust, St Mary’s Hospital, Praed St, London, W2 1NY (2) Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford, Roosevelt Drive, Oxford, OX3 7FY, UK (3) Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Oxford University Hospitals, Oxford, OX3 7FY, UK (4): Royal Free Hospital, Pond Street, London, NW3 2QG 14.08-14.15 O133 DOES TRENDELENBURG POSITION LEAD TO COGNITIVE DECLINE IN HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS? P Vitish-Sharma, C Yick, B Guo, C Maxwell-Armstrong, AG Acheson Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust
PATEY PRIZE 2 14.25-15.35, 7 papers (7 min + 3 min) Lecture Theatre 3 14.25-14.35 O8 DESIGN AND VALIDATION OF A NOVEL AND COST-EFFECTIVE ANIMAL TISSUE MODEL FOR TRAINING LAPAROSCOPIC ADHESIOLYSIS AND MESH REPAIR OF AN INCISIONAL HERNIA DJ Porter, G Ross, C Payne, B Tang Cuschieri Skills Centre, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School, Dundee, Scotland 14.35-14.45 O9 MODIFYING RENAL GENE EXPRESSION BY ANTI-SENSE
OLIGONUCLEOTIDE DELIVERY DURING NORMOTHERMIC MACHINE PERFUSION A Sewpaul (1,2,3), RS Figueiredo (1,2,3), L Bates (2,3), SJ Tingle (2), SS Ladak (2), E Thompson (1,2,3), S Stamp (1), WE III Scott WE (2,3), SA Hosgood (4), ML Nicholson (4), S Ali (2,3), N Sheerin (1,2,3), CH Wilson (1,2,3) (1)Department of Transplant Surgery, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom (2) Institute of Cellular Medicine, Newcastle University (3) NIHR Blood and Transplant Research Unit in Organ Donation and Transplantation (4) Department of Surgery, University of Cambridge 14.45-14.55 O10 EVALUATION OF THE NOVEL ANTI-NEOPLASTIC AGENT 1,4,5-OXATHIAZINANE-4,4-DIOXIDE IN TRIPLE NEGATIVE BREAST CANCER M Jinih (1), RW Pfirrmann (2), JH Wang (1) , MA Corrigan (3), HP Redmond (1,3) (1)Department of Academic Surgery, Cork University Hospital (CUH), Wilton, Cork (2) Weggis, Lucerne, Switzerland (3) Department of Breast Surgery, Cork University Hospital (CUH), Wilton, Cork
14.55-15.05 O11 THERANOSTIC FOSLIP LOADED AND CEA-AFFIMER FUNCTIONALISED SILICA NANOPARTICLES FOR FLUORESCENT IMAGING AND PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY OF COLORECTAL CANCER YS Khaled, S Shamsuddin, J Tiernan, M McPherson, T Hughes, P Millner, DG Jayne University of Leeds 15.05-15.15 O12 ALGINATE MICROSPHERE ENCAPSULATION OF PRO-ARTERIOGENIC MACROPHAGES ENHANCES THERAPEUTIC CELL RETENTION AND PERFUSION IN THE ISCHAEMIC LIMB FE Ludwinski (1), G Damodaran (1), AS Patel (1), J Cho (1), S Jayasinghe (2), A Smith (1), B Modarai (1) King’s College London (1), University College London (2) 15.15-15.25 O13 CLINICAL EXPERIENCE OF HYPOTHERMIC OXYGENATED LIVER
PERFUSION WITH STANDARD UW RS Figueiredo, A Sewpaul, L Bates, I Ibrahim, E Thompson, JJ French, G Sen, D Talbot, SA White, DM Manas, MC Wright, CH Wilson Freeman Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust 15.25-15.35 O14 HUMAN SKELETAL MUSCLE IS RESISTANT TO THE ANABOLIC EFFECTS OF LEUCINE DURING THE POST-PRANDIAL MUSCLE-FULL PERIOD WK Mitchell, BE Phillips, D Rankin, JN Lund, JP Williams, DJ Wilkinson, K Smith, PJ Atherton MRC-ARUK Centre for Musculoskeletal Ageing Research and NIHR Nottingham BRC, School of Medicine, Royal Derby Hospital, University of Nottingham, UK
17
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
P01 ONLINE SURGICAL FOLLOW-UP – THE FUTURE FOR SURGERY? P Daliya (1,2), DN Lobo (1), SL Parsons (1,2) (1) Gastrointestinal Surgery, Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre and National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Unit, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust and University of
Nottingham, Queen’s Medical Centre Campus, Derby Road, Nottingham, NG7 2UH, UK (2) Trent Oesophago-Gastric Unit, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, City Hospital Campus, Nottingham, NG5 1PB, UK P02 EARLY MOTION AND DIRECTED EXERCISE AN ANKLE FRACTURE RCT P Matthews, B Scammell, B J Ollivere University of Nottingham P03 IMAGINE: ILEUS MANAGEMENT INTERNATIONAL EuroSurg Collaborative EuroSurg Collaborative, Europe P04 A PROSPECTIVE COHORT STUDY TO COMPARE MAGSEED WITH GUIDE-WIRE LOCALISATION FOR IMPALPABLE BREAST CANCER A Micha, K Downey, V Sinnett, AR Wilson, PA Barry, JE Rusby, K Krupa
The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust P05 PATIENT ATTITUDES TOWARDS MEDICAL STUDENTS IN A GENERAL SURGERY CLINIC S Erridge, S Chidambaram, E Lin Goh Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, UK P06 A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOME MEASURES FOLLOWING SURGICAL INTERVENTION FOR CHRONIC MIGRAINE J Luck (1), J Wormald (1), M Greenfield (1), T Muehlberger (2), B Athwal (3), A Mosahebi (1) (1) Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Royal Free Hospital, London, UK; (2) Department of Plastic Surgery, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany; (3) Department of Neurology, Royal Free Hospital, London, UK P07 A RANDOMISED CONTROL TRIAL TO ASSESS THE EFFICACY OF SHORT-TERM, HOME-
BASED, HIGH-INTENSITY INTERVAL TRAINING (HIT) FOR IMPROVING INDICES OF CARDIORESPIRATORY FITNESS TS Sian (1,2), JEM Blackwell (1,2), JN Lund (1,2), BE Philips (1) (1) Division of Medical Science & Graduate Entry Medicine, University of Nottingham, Derby, UK (2) Department of Surgery, Royal Derby Hospital, Derby, UK P08 MACROPHAGE DEPLETION OVERCOMES RESISTANCE TO IMMUNE CHECKPOINT BLOCKADE FOLLOWING IRRADIATION K Jones, J Tiersma, A Gordon-Weeks, A Yuzhalin, R Muschel Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences, Oxford Centre for Radiation Oncology, University of Oxford
18
BBA SECTION OF SARS MEETING
Thursday 11th January 2018
PROGRAMME
07.30 Registration opens 08.00-09.00 ASiT symposium Becoming a well-rounded researcher Lecture Theatre 4 09.00-10.35 Jackson prize session, 13 papers (5 min + 2 min) D96 (D floor)
09.00 BP1 DEVELOPING AN EX VIVO BURN WOUND MODEL
JW Oldbury, M Shah
The University of Manchester
09.07 BP2 VITAMIN D STATUS AND INFLUENCE ON OUTCOMES FOLLOWING
MAJOR BURN INJURY: AN OBSERVATIONAL COHORT STUDY
KS Altarrah (1,2), CL Kwang (1,2), C Jenkinson (3), A Bamford (2), F Gardiner (2), A Logan
(1), M Hewison (3), NS Moiemen (1,2), JM Lord (1)
(1)Institute of Inflammation and Ageing, University of Birmingham (2) Scar Free Foundation
Centre for Burns Research, University Hospitals Birmingham Foundation Trust (3) Institute of
Metabolism and Systems Research, University of Birmingham
09.14 BP3 THE RELIABILITY AND CROSS VALIDATION OF A PANEL OF
OBJECTIVE MEASUREMENT TOOLS FOR THE BURN SCAR
K Chear Lee (1,2), A Bamford (1), F Gardiner (1), B ter Horst (1,2), K al Tarrah (1,2),
Annarita Agovino (1), Gary Reynolds (2), Ann Logan (2), Naiem Moiemen (1)
(1) Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham (2) University of Birmingham
09.21 BP4 A HISTOLOGICAL AND CLINICAL STUDY OF MATRIDERM® BURN
SCAR RECONSTRUCTION
B ter Horst (1,3), K Chear Lee (1,3), CM Wearn (1), A Bamford (1), A Gummaraju (3), K Al-
Tarrah (3), E Curtis (2), RK Hejmadi (2), NM Moiemen (1)
(1) The Scar Free Foundation for Burns Research, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham,
University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, B15 2WB, UK (2)
Department of Histopathology, Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, Edgbaston,
Birmingham, B15 2WB (3)University of Birmingham, Birmingham, B15 2TT
09.28 BP5 THE TRANSCRIPTIONAL EFFECTS OF THERMAL INJURY AND
COOLING ON HUMAN SKIN AND IMPLICATIONS FOR WOUND HEALING
H Wright (1,2), M Tyler (2), A Harris (1), D Furniss (3)
(1) Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Oxford, (2) Department of Plastic
Surgery, Stoke Mandeville Hospital, Aylesbury, (3) Botnar Research Centre, University of
Oxford
09.35 BP6 COOLING OF EXPERIMENTAL HUMAN BURNS REDUCES INJURY
THROUGH INHIBITION OF THE COMPLEMENT AND COAGULATION CASCADES
H Wright (1,2), M Tyler (2), A Harris (1), D Furniss (3)
(1) Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Oxford, (2) Department of Plastic
Surgery, Stoke Mandeville Hospital, Aylesbury, (3) Botnar Research Centre, University of
Oxford
09.42 BP7 TEMPORAL DIFFERENCES IN RE-EPITHELIALISATION AND RE-
PIGMENTATION OF PARTIAL THICKNESS BURN WOUNDS OF VARIABLE DEPTH
S Jabeen, S Chadwick, A Thomlinson, M Ferguson, M Shah
University of Manchester
09.49 BP8 CELL-LOADED GELLAN-HYDROGEL CARRIER FOR TOPICAL SPRAY
DELIVERY TO ENHANCE BURN WOUND HEALING
B ter Horst (1,2), RL Williams (1), G Chouhan (1), NM Moiemen (2), LM Grover (1)
(1) University of Birmingham (2) University Hospitals Birmingham
09.56 BP9 ASSESSING THE IMPACT OF CARBON DIOXIDE LASER TREATMENT
IN BURN-RELATED SCARRING
A Arnout (1), A Murray (1), H Douglas (2), KA Harms (3), J Lynch (4), T Krop (4), C van
Vreeswick (5), L Kunath (2), S McGarry (5), M Fear (4), S Rea (2), F Wood (4)
19
(1)Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust, (2) State Burns Unit Western Australia, (3)
Monash University, Melbourne, (4) University of Western Australia, (5) Curtin University,
Western Australia
10.03 BP10 ATTRIBUTION BIAS UNDERLYING BURNS-INDUCED ANXIETY
SYMPTOMS
M Farag (1), SI Al-Aidarous (1), EJR Watson (1), K Nenadlova (1), S Mandalia (1), L Williams
(1), T Edginton (2), D Collins (1), MP Vizcaychipi (1)
(1) Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust; (2) City, University of London
10.10 BP11 IDENTIFYING INTENTIONAL PAEDIATRIC SCALDS INJURIES – A
SYNTHESIS OF UK EXPERT OPINION.
JA Ward, JD Cormack, G Phillips, P Dziewulski
St Andrew’s Centre for Plastic Surgery & Burns
10.17 BP12 ROLE OF ABDOMINAL COMPARTMENT PRESSURE MONITORING IN
MAJOR BURNS: EXPERIENCE OF A REGIONAL BURNS CENTRE
L MacDonald, R Clancy, P Muthayya, R Sandhu
Pinderfields Hospital, Mid Yorkshire NHS Trust
10.24 BP13 AN IN VITRO ASSESSMENT OF ACELLULAR DERMAL SUBSTITUTES
I Cosentini, M Griffin, C Ryan, B Cousins, PEM Butler
UCL Division of Surgery & Interventional Science, University College London, London, United
Kingdom
Department of Plastic Surgery, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust Hospital, London,
United Kingdom
The Charles Wolfson Centre for Reconstructive Surgery, Royal Free Hospital, London, United
Kingdom
10.35-10.50 Coffee Foyer 10.50-11.20 BBA Guest Lecture Introduced by Naiem Moiemen Professor Steven Wolf Translational research resulting in improvement in care of the burns patient Lecture Theatre 3 11.20-12.20 Gibson prize session 1, 8 papers (5 min + 2 min) D96 (D floor)
11.20 BP14 RESULTS OF THE IBRA-2 PROSPECTIVE MULTICENTRE COHORT
STUDY: DOES IMMEDIATE BREAST RECONSTRUCTION DELAY DELIVERY OF
ADJUVANT TREATMENT?
iBRA-2 Steering Group, Breast Reconstruction Research Collaborative
Wexham Park Hospital
11.27 BP15 NIPPLE SPARING VERSUS SKIN SPARING MASTECTOMY: A
SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
RA Agha (1), G Wellstead (2), H Sagoo (3) , Y Al Omran (2), I Barai (4), S Rajmohan
(4), MR Borrelli (3), M Vella-Baldacchino (5), AJ Fowler (1), D Orgill (6), J Rusby (7)
(1) Guy’s and St. Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, (2) Barts and The London
School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary and Westfield University, London, (3)
GKT School of Medical Education, King’s College London, London, (4) Imperial College
School of Medicine, London, (5) John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, (6) Brigham and
Womens Hospital, Boston, MA, USA, (7) The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust,
Sutton, UK
11.34 BP16 ALGINATE VERSUS COLLAGEN HYDROGELS FOR
VASCULARIZATION STRATEGIES IN TISSUE ENGINEERING
N.Mehtani, M Griffin, CM Ryan, P Ferretti, PEM Butler
UCL Division of Surgery & Interventional Science, University College London, London, United Kingdom Department of Plastic Surgery, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust Hospital, London, United Kingdom The Charles Wolfson Center for Reconstructive Surgery, Royal Free Hospital, London, United Kingdom 11.41 BP17 RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL OF REPLACING OR DISCARDING
THE NAIL PLATE AFTER NAIL-BED REPAIR IN CHILDREN
20
MD Gardiner on behalf of the NINJA Pilot Collaborative
NDORMS, University of Oxford
11.48 BP18 Moved to BP13
11.55 BP19 SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS OF BIOLOGICAL VS
NON-BIOLOGICAL DRESSINGS IN THE MANAGEMENT OF SPLIT SKIN GRAFT
DONOR SITES
S Rahman, A Al-Hadad, B Langridge, R Ali Khan, M Hyder Junejo, A Mosahebi
Division of Surgery and Interventional Science, UCL, London
12.02 BP20 FEASIBILITY OF CONDUCTING A MULTICENTRE AUDIT OF
CURRENT MANAGEMENT PRACTICE FOR BREAST ANGIOSARCOMA IN THE
UNITED KINGDOM
Jenny Banks on behalf of the BRASS Study Collaborative
Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital
12.09 BP21 SELF CITATIONS AND IMPACT FACTOR IN PLASTIC AND
RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY JOURNALS, A LIKE FOR A LIKE?
A Perusseau-Lambert (1), H Ramdany (2), CM Quaresma (1), E Berzina (1), S
Basavaraj (1)
St Mary Hospital Isle of Wight (1), Imperial College London (2)
12.20-13.20 Lunch Foyer 13.20-14.20 Gibson prize session 2, 6 papers (5 min + 2 min) D96 (D floor)
13.20 BP22 ANGIOGENIC ANALYSIS USING SIDESTREAM DARK FIELD IMAGING ON CHICK CHORIOALLANTOIC MEMBRANE ASSAY N.Mehtani, M Griffin, CM Ryan, P Ferretti, PEM Butler UCL Division of Surgery & Interventional Science, University College London, London, United Kingdom Department of Plastic Surgery, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust Hospital, London, United Kingdom The Charles Wolfson Center for Reconstructive Surgery, Royal Free Hospital, London, United Kingdom 13.27 BP24 AUTOLOGOUS FAT GRAFTING AS A SOFT-TISSUE FILLER FOR
HEMIFACIAL ATROPHY: A RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW OF 19 PATIENTS
FHK Jeon, J Varghese, H Henderson, S Withey, P Butler
13.34 BP25 A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF METHODOLOGIES USED TO ASSESS
MASTECTOMY FLAP VIABILITY
F Hyun Kyung Jeon (1), J Varghese (1,2), M Griffin (1,2), P Butler (1,2), D Ghosh (1,2),
A Mosahebi (1,2)
13.31 BP26 STEM CELL-ENRICHED LIPOTRANSFER REVERSES FACIAL
FIBROSIS IN SYSTEMIC SCLEROSIS
A Almadori (1,2,4), CM Ryan (1,2,4), M Griffin (1,2,4), E Hansen (2), CP Denton (3), PEM
Butler (1,2,4)
(1) UCL Division of Surgery & Interventional Science, University College London, London,
UK
(2) Department of Plastic Surgery, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust Hospital,
London, UK (3) Center for Rheumatology, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust
Hospital, London, UK
(4) The Charles Wolfson Center for Reconstructive Surgery, Royal Free Hospital, London,
UK
13.48 BP27 LIPOTRANSFER AS A REGENERATIVE TREATMENT FOR VULVAR
LICHEN SCLEROSUS: RESULTS FROM AN OPEN COHORT STUDY
A Almadori (1,2,3), E Hansen (4), A Bootle (4), N Zenner (5), D Boyle (5), A Maclean
(5), W Reid (5), PEM Butler (1,2,3)
(1)Department of Plastic Surgery, NHS Foundation Trust Royal Free Hospital (2) UCL
Centre for Nanotechnology and Regenerative Surgery, Division of Surgery and
Interventional Science, University College of London (3) Charles Wolfson Center for
Reconstructive Surgery, Royal Free Hospital, London, United Kingdom (4) Clinical
Psychology, Department of Plastic Surgery, NHS Foundation Trust Royal Free Hospital
(5) Department of Gynaecology, NHS Foundation Trust Royal Free Hospital
21
14.25-15.35 Patey Prize 2 Lecture Theatre 3 15.35-16.05 John Farndon Lecture Introduced by Professor Arnold Hill Professor Rupert Pearse The Surgeon Researcher: Are you your own worst enemy? Lecture Theatre 3 16.05-16.35 Presentation of Prizes Lecture Theatre 3
22
SOCIETY OF ACADEMIC & RESEARCH SURGERY
ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
Wednesday 10th January, 5.30pm-6.00pm
University of Nottingham Medical School, Lecture Theatre 3
All delegates are welcome to attend
AGENDA
1. Apologies
2. Minutes of the last AGM, held on 18th January 2017
3. Matters arising
4. President’s report
5. Honorary Secretary’s Report
6. Treasurer’s Report
7. Date of next meeting – Royal Society of Medicine, 7th & 8th January 2019
8. A.O.B.
23
24
25
How to access Free Wi-Fi for Conference Delegates How to connect 1. Make sure the wireless network adaptor is activated on your device.
2. If you are in range, your device should automatically connect to the UoN-guest network. If not, find ‘UoN-guest’ in the list of wireless connections available and select this network. If it is not listed, you are not within range of the hotspot. Please move the device until you are in range.
3. Open your web browser, then browse to any website that is not associated with The University of Nottingham.
4. A certificate message may be displayed by your browser. If this is the case then click to accept the certificate as prompted by the browser.
5. The UoN-welcome wireless login page will appear.
6. If you have already created an account, log in here, otherwise follow the on-screen instructions to register for an account.
7. You will be sent an email asking you to confirm your address. You have 10 minutes grace time to accept this.
8. Once you confirm your account you can log in and use the service for 7 days before you will need to re-register. Using UoN-guest The UoN-welcome wireless network allows devices to establish connections to websites and other internet services. A device which is successfully connected to the network will be provided with access to most internet destinations using standard ports e.g. http and https. Please note: ‘UoN-guest network’ is an open network and does not provide encryption for traffic transmitted or received by connected devices. Security for connections made using the UoN-guest network remains the responsibility of
the user and the service is used at your own risk. Please do not enter passwords online
when using this network.