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

Authors
 Yutaro Kato  ;  Atsushi Sugioka  ;  Masayuki Kojima  ;  Nicholas L Syn  ;  Wang Zhongkai  ;  Rong Liu  ;  Federica Cipriani  ;  Thomas Armstrong  ;  Davit L Aghayan  ;  Tiing-Foong Siow  ;  Chetana Lim  ;  Olivier Scatton  ;  Paulo Herman  ;  Fabricio Ferreira Coelho  ;  Marco V Marino  ;  Vincenzo Mazzaferro  ;  Adrian K H Chiow  ;  Iswanto Sucandy  ;  Arpad Ivanecz  ;  Sung Hoon Choi  ;  Jae Hoon Lee  ;  Mikel Gastaca  ;  Marco Vivarelli  ;  Felice Giuliante  ;  Bernardo Dalla Valle  ;  Andrea Ruzzenente  ;  Chee-Chien Yong  ;  Constantino Fondevila  ;  Mikhail Efanov  ;  Fabrizio Di Benedetto  ;  Andrea Belli  ;  James O Park  ;  Fernando Rotellar  ;  Gi-Hong Choi  ;  Ricardo Robles-Campos  ;  Xiaoying Wang  ;  Robert P Sutcliffe  ;  Moritz Schmelzle  ;  Johann Pratschke  ;  Eric C H Lai  ;  Charing C N Chong  ;  Mathieu D'Hondt  ;  Kazuteru Monden  ;  Santiago Lopez-Ben  ;  T Peter Kingham  ;  Fabio Forchino  ;  Alessandro Ferrero  ;  Giuseppe Maria Ettorre  ;  Giovanni Battista Levi Sandri  ;  Franco Pascual  ;  Daniel Cherqui  ;  Olivier Soubrane  ;  Go Wakabayashi  ;  Roberto I Troisi  ;  Tan-To Cheung  ;  Zewei Chen  ;  Mengqiu Yin  ;  Mizelle D'Silva  ;  Ho-Seong Han  ;  Phan Phuoc Nghia  ;  Tran Cong Duy Long  ;  Bjørn Edwin  ;  David Fuks  ;  Kuo-Hsin Chen  ;  Mohammad Abu Hilal  ;  Luca Aldrighetti  ;  Brian K P Goh  ;  International Robotic and Laparoscopic Liver Resection Study Group Investigators 
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
MeSH
Hepatectomy / adverse effects ; Humans ; Laparoscopy* / adverse effects ; Length of Stay ; Liver Neoplasms* / complications ; Operative Time ; Postoperative Complications / etiology ; Retrospective Studies
Keywords
Difficulty ; Laparoscopic liver resection ; Major hepatectomy ; Minimally invasive liver ; Size
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.
Full Text
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1245/s10434-023-13863-z
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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