Abstract

The purpose of this study was to assess the patterns of hepatic invasion in advanced carcinoma of the gallbladder by histologically examining surgical specimens obtained in 32 cases of hepatectomy for that carcinoma. Two modes of microscopic tumor extension were observed. The expansive pattern was restricted to liver-bed carcinomas, in which the tumor extends into the liver, primarily from the liver bed. Most of the infiltrating patterns were found with hepatic-hilar carcinomas, in which the tumor invades the hepatic hilum along Glisson's sheath, especially tumors exhibiting a discontinuous front of tumor invasion. The average width for wedge resection of the liver bed was 15.6 +/- 2.9 mm, in contrast to 25.6 +/- 8.1 mm for resection of segments IVa and V and 44.1 +/- 10.3 mm for extensive hepatic resection (both p < 0.01). When the hepatic invasion distance is more than 20 mm, the tumor should be selectively managed by extensive hepatic resection, such as extended right hepatic lobectomy or central bisegmentectomy. The results suggest that wedge resection of the liver bed and resection of segments IVa and V are advisable for carcinoma localized to the gallbladder alone and for liver-bed carcinoma with slight hepatic invasion and an expansive tumor growth pattern. Extensive hepatic resection, however, is recommended for carcinoma of the invasive liver-bed type and carcinoma of the hepatic-hilar type.

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