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Impact of Tumor Size on the Difficulty of Laparoscopic Major Hepatectomies: An International Multicenter Study

Authors
 Kato, Yutaro  ;  Sugioka, Atsushi L.  ;  Kojima, Masayuki  ;  Syn, Nicholas  ;  Zhongkai, Wang  ;  Liu, Rong  ;  Cipriani, Federica L.  ;  Armstrong, Thomas  ;  Aghayan, Davit  ;  Siow, Tiing-Foong  ;  Lim, Chetana  ;  Scatton, Olivier  ;  Herman, Paulo V.  ;  Coelho, Fabricio Ferreira  ;  Marino, Marco  ;  Mazzaferro, Vincenzo  ;  Chiow, Adrian K. H.  ;  Sucandy, Iswanto  ;  Ivanecz, Arpad  ;  Choi, Sung Hoon  ;  Lee, Jae Hoon  ;  Gastaca, Mikel  ;  Vivarelli, Marco  ;  Giuliante, Felice  ;  Dalla Valle, Bernardo  ;  Ruzzenente, Andrea  ;  Yong, Chee-Chien  ;  Fondevila, Constantino  ;  Efanov, Mikhail  ;  Di Benedetto, Fabrizio O.  ;  Belli, Andrea  ;  Park, James  ;  Rotellar, Fernando  ;  Choi, Gi-Hong  ;  Robles-Campos, Ricardo P.  ;  Wang, Xiaoying  ;  Sutcliffe, Robert  ;  Schmelzle, Moritz  ;  Pratschke, Johann  ;  Lai, Eric C. H.  ;  Chong, Charing C. N.  ;  D'Hondt, Mathieu  ;  Monden, Kazuteru  ;  Lopez-Ben, Santiago  ;  Kingham, T. Peter  ;  Forchino, Fabio  ;  Ferrero, Alessandro  ;  Ettorre, Giuseppe Maria  ;  Levi Sandri, Giovanni Battista  ;  Pascual, Franco  ;  Cherqui, Daniel  ;  Soubrane, Olivier, I  ;  Wakabayashi, Go  ;  Troisi, Roberto  ;  Cheung, Tan-To  ;  Chen, Zewei  ;  Yin, Mengqiu  ;  D'Silva, Mizelle  ;  Han, Ho-Seong  ;  Nghia, Phan Phuoc  ;  Long, Tran Cong duy  ;  Edwin, Bjorn  ;  Fuks, David  ;  Chen, Kuo-Hsin  ;  Abu Hilal, Mohammad  ;  Aldrighetti, Luca  ;  Goh, Brian K. P. 
Citation
 ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY, Vol.30(11) : 6628-6636, 2023-10 
Journal Title
ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY
ISSN
 1068-9265 
Issue Date
2023-10
Keywords
Laparoscopic liver resection ; Major hepatectomy ; Size ; Difficulty ; Minimally invasive liver
Abstract
IntroductionAlthough tumor size (TS) is known to affect surgical outcomes in laparoscopic liver resection (LLR), its impact on laparoscopic major hepatectomy (L-MH) is not well studied. The objectives of this study were to investigate the impact of TS on the perioperative outcomes of L-MH and to elucidate the optimal TS cutoff for stratifying the difficulty of L-MH.MethodsThis was a post-hoc analysis of 3008 patients who underwent L-MH at 48 international centers. A total 1396 patients met study criteria and were included. The impact of TS cutoffs was investigated by stratifying TS at each 10-mm interval. The optimal cutoffs were determined taking into consideration the number of endpoints which showed a statistically significant split around the cut-points of interest and the magnitude of relative risk after correction for multiple risk factors.ResultsWe identified 2 optimal TS cutoffs, 50 mm and 100 mm, which segregated L-MH into 3 groups. An increasing TS across these 3 groups (& LE; 50 mm, 51-100 mm, > 100 mm), was significantly associated with a higher open conversion rate (11.2%, 14.7%, 23.0%, P < 0.001), longer operating time (median, 340 min, 346 min, 365 min, P = 0.025), increased blood loss (median, 300 ml, ml, 400 ml, P = 0.002) and higher rate of intraoperative blood transfusion (13.1%, 15.9%, 27.6%, P < 0.001). Postoperative outcomes such as overall morbidity, major morbidity, and length of stay were comparable across the three groups.ConclusionIncreasing TS was associated with poorer intraoperative but not postoperative outcomes after L-MH. We determined 2 TS cutoffs (50 mm and 10 mm) which could optimally stratify the surgical difficulty of L-MH.
DOI
10.1245/s10434-023-13863-z
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Surgery (외과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Choi, Gi Hong(최기홍) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1593-3773
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/199371
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