Abstract

Purpose: To establish comparable reporting of surgical results in pediatric liver surgery, the recently introduced composite outcome measures Textbook Outcome (TO) and Comprehensive Complication Index (CCI) are applied and validated in a pediatric surgery context for the first time. In a representative cohort of pediatric patients undergoing liver resection, predictive factors for TO and CCI are investigated, and outcomes are compared to available literature on surgical outcomes of pediatric liver resection.Methods: All liver resections for patients under 21 years of age performed at the Department of General, Visceral, Transplantation and Pediatric Surgery of the University of Heidelberg between 2009 and 2020 were included in the analysis. Criteria for TO were defined prior to the analysis. Univariate and Multivariate regression was applied to identify factors associated with TO and CCI.Results: Fifty-three pediatric patients underwent liver resections during the observation period. No 30- or 90-day mortality occurred. Twenty-three patients (43.4%) had a TO. CCI and TO showed highly significant correlation (b = −30.33, 95% CI [−37.44; −23.22], p < 0.001). Multivariate analyses revealed significant association between intraoperative blood loss (adjusted for circulating blood volume) and CCI (b = 0.70, 95%CI [0.22; 1.32], p = 0.008) and failure to achieve TO (OR = 0.85, 95%CI [0.69; 0.97], p = 0.048).Conclusion: TO and CCI are suited outcome measures in pediatric surgical studies and offer objective comparability of results. Their application in clinical studies will be a major step forward to establish evidence-based therapies in pediatric surgery. Systematic utilization of TO and CCI can aid in generating comparable studies on surgical techniques and outcomes in pediatric liver resection.

Highlights

  • Indications for liver resection in children and adolescents are infrequent and, critical

  • Benign liver tumors in pediatric patients may lead to compression of neighboring organs or vessels, compromise liver function or may be of uncertain biological behavior, and necessitate liver resection [5, 7,8,9]

  • Open surgery was performed in 51 (96.2%) patients and laparoscopy was applied in two cases (3.8%)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Indications for liver resection in children and adolescents are infrequent and, critical. Two thirds of liver tumors in pediatric patients are malignant [2, 5]. Hepatoblastoma and (fibrolamellar) hepatocellular carcinoma are the most frequent entities [5, 6]. Tumors such as biliary rhabdomyosarcoma, angiosarcoma, undifferentiated sarcoma, and germ cell tumors as well as surgery for liver metastases of non-hepatic cancers are rare [5,6,7]. Benign liver tumors in pediatric patients may lead to compression of neighboring organs or vessels, compromise liver function or may be of uncertain biological behavior, and necessitate liver resection [5, 7,8,9]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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