Abstract
To determine the safety, feasibility, and efficacy of associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy (ALPPS) in a single high-volume hepatobiliary center. The ALPPS approach allows achieving resectability of liver malignancies by a rapid and large future liver remnant (FLR) hypertrophy. However, this proposal has been associated with high morbidity and mortality rates. This was a single-cohort, prospective, observational study [NCT02164292]. Between June 2011 and April 2014, patients with liver malignancies considered unresectable due to an insufficient FLR who underwent ALPPS were included. Thirty patients were treated. Median age was 58.6 years (range = 35-81) and 19 patients were males (63%). In a median of 6 days (range = 4-67), the median FLR hypertrophy was 89.7% (range = 21-287). Twenty-nine patients completed the second stage (97% feasibility). Morbidity according to the Dindo-Clavien classification was 53% (grade ≥IIIa 43% and grade ≥IIIb 31%). The mortality rate was 6.6%. Total parenchymal transection was identified as an independent risk factor for complications (P = 0.049). There was not significant difference in terms of FLR hypertrophy between total or partial parenchymal transection (P = 0.45). Median hospital stay was 16 days (range = 11-62). The overall and disease-free survival at 1 year was 78% and 67% and at 2 years was 63% and 40%, respectively. This prospective study on the largest reported single-center experience shows that ALPPS has acceptable morbidity and mortality, together with a high oncological feasibility and hypertrophic efficacy. Partial parenchymal transection seems to reduce morbidity without negatively impacting FLR hypertrophy.
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