Abstract
Purpose Comparisons of open and laparoscopic colon cancer resection have shown that laparoscopy offers an oncologically safe option. However, there are no data on long-term influence of converted resection, despite conversion rates of up to 30% and the general observation that short-term outcome is significantly worsened. The aim was to compare the long-term results of primary open resection (OR), purely laparoscopic resection (LR-p) and converted resection (LR-c). Methods In a prospective study at 282 German hospitals demographic, tumor- and treatment-related data and disease-free survival were compared in the three groups. Results 8015 of 8307 patients with OR, 280 of 290 patients with LR-p and 55 of 56 patients with LR-c were followed for 39.5 months (median). Overall, no statistically significant differences were seen for five-year DFS (74.8%, 81.3% and 65.6%). However, for patients in stage II with conversion, the five-year DFS was significantly poorer (43.3%) than for OR (80.5%; p = 0.003) and LR-p patients (92.5%; p = 0.001). For stages I and III no differences were observed. Conclusion Conversion of laparoscopic colon cancer resection worsens DFS in locally advanced stage II carcinoma. There is a need to reduce the conversion rate by adequate patient selection for laparoscopic resection by experienced surgeons.
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