Laparoscopic versus open liver resection for intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma: a multicenter propensity score-matched study
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27701Date
2022-11-14Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Sahakyan, Mushegh; Aghayan, Davit; Edwin, Bjørn von Gohren; Alikhanov, Ruslan; Britskaia, Natalia; Brudvik, Kristoffer Watten; D’Hondt, Mathieu; De Meyere, Celine; Efanov, Mikhail; Fretland, Åsmund Avdem; Hoff, Rune; Ismail, Warsan; Ivanecz, Arpad; Kazaryan, Airazat; Lassen, Kristoffer; Magdalenić, Tomislav; Parmentier, Isabelle; Røsok, Bård Ingvald; Villanger, Olaug; Yaqub, SherazAbstract
Methods: Patients with ICC who had undergone laparoscopic or open liver resection between 2012 and 2019 at four European expert centers were included in the study. Laparoscopic and open approaches were compared in terms of surgical and oncological outcomes. Propensity score matching was used for minimizing treatment selection bias and adjusting for confounders (age, ASA grade, tumor size, location, number of tumors and underlying liver disease).
Results: Of 136 patients, 50 (36.7%) underwent laparoscopic resection, whereas 86 (63.3%) had open surgery. Median tumor size was larger (73.6 vs 55.1 mm, p¼ 0.01) and the incidence of bi-lobar tumors was higher (36.6 vs 6%, p< 0.01) in patients undergoing open surgery. After propensity score matching baseline characteristics were comparable although open surgery was associated with a larger fraction of major liver resections (74 vs 38%, p< 0.01), lymphadenectomy (60 vs 20%, p< 0.01) and longer operative time (294 vs 209 min, p< 0.01). Tumor characteristics were similar. Laparoscopic resection resulted in less complications (30 vs 52%, p¼ 0.025), fewer reoperations (4 vs 16%, p¼ 0.046) and shorter hospital stay (5 vs 8 days, p< 0.01). No differences were found in terms of recurrence, recurrence-free and overall survival.
Conclusion: Laparoscopic resection seems to be associated with improved short-term and with similar long-term outcomes compared with open surgery in patients with ICC. However, possible selection criteria for laparoscopic surgery are yet to be defined.