Abstract

SummaryObjectiveTo identify and compare significant or relevant prognostic factors in pre-operatively diagnosed, surgically resectable, gallbladder cancer and in incidentally detected gallbladder cancer cases.Material and methodsGallbladder resections (October 2009-March 2016) were identified on the histopathology Winpath database. Cases with a final histological diagnosis of gallbladder cancer (GBC) were categorised into: Group A: clinically suspected operable GBC (n = 13). Group B: incidental GBC with staged liver bed resection (n = 5). Group C: incidental GBC without staged liver bed resection (n = 15). The clinicopathological features were analysed in each group separately.ResultsThe overall incidence of primary (GBC) was 0.66% and all the cases were adenocarcinomas, of which, 6 of 33 (18.2%) were grade 1 and 15 of 33 (45.4%) were grade 3. Male to female ratio is 1:2.3. Of the 33 patients with GBC 14 (42.4%) has died of disease at 18-month follow-up. 15 of 33 had perineural invasion and 10/21 (47.6%) cases showed lymph node matastasis. Six cases had positive surgical margin and 9/15 showed direct liver invasion. Higher stage disease (T3/T4) was seen in 10/14 cases.ConclusionThe prognosis of primary GBC is poor and best clinical outcomes can be achieved with early diagnosis followed by radical cholecystectomy and staged liver resection with negative margins.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call