Abstract
This retrospective study was designed to appraise the surgical procedures for pT2 gallbladder (GB) carcinomas. Twenty patients with pT2 GB carcinomas underwent surgical resection. Hepatectomy of segments 4b and 5 was performed in 19 patients, and an extended right hepatic lobectomy was performed in 1. The extrahepatic bile duct was preserved in 8 patients in whom the disease was limited to the GB fundus and/or body. Regional lymphadenectomy was performed in 18 patients. A separate radical second operation was performed in 8 patients after cholecystectomy. Final pathological staging was stage IB in 15 patients, IIB in 4, and IV in 1. Overall 5-year survival rate in those 20 patients was 77% without operative deaths. The 5-year survival rate in 5 patients with nodal metastasis and in 8 patients without extrahepatic biliary resection was 80% and 100%, respectively. A separate radical second operation in 8 patients yielded 75% survival after 5 years. Perineural invasion as a prognostic determinant was closely associated with tumor extending to the neck or the cystic duct. Partial hepatectomy, usually with extrahepatic biliary resection and regional lymphadenectomy, was appropriate as a standard radical operation for pT2 GB carcinoma, but preservation of extrahepatic bile duct is advocated for disease limited to the GB fundus and/or body. Radical second operation enhanced the chance for cure in patients with pT2 GB carcinoma.
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