Whether you’re looking for the perfect place to study, want to listen to the Cal Band or run into an acclaimed professor or athlete, we’ve got you covered. We present
Windows are our only openings to the world outside the four walls we call home. They connect us to the dog walkers, early-morning runners, and a constant cadence of cars
The 13 Largest Global Startup Funding Rounds of November 2022 – AlleyWatch alleywatch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from alleywatch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
CLEVELAND - In a Correspondence article published in the April 29, 2021 issue of the
New England Journal of Medicine, researchers from University Hospitals (UH) Cleveland Medical Center, and New York Presbyterian Hospital - Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, found a substantial reduction in the use of minimally invasive surgery for cervical cancer after publication of the results a major study called the Laparoscopic Approach to Cervical Cancer (LACC) in November 2018.
The earlier study, which compared minimally invasive surgery with open abdominal radical hysterectomy in patients with early-stage cervical cancer, found that minimally invasive surgery was associated with worse disease-free and overall survival than open surgery. As a result of that study and other related studies, many guidelines recommended that surgeons use open surgery rather than minimally invasive surgery.