Abstract

Bilobar hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer pose a problem in terms of management, with curative surgery often requiring several stages. The purpose of our study was to evaluate laparoscopic approach with portal vein ligation in the first step of two-stage hepatectomy in the treatment of patients with synchronous liver metastases from colorectal cancers (SLMCRC). We conducted a single-center retrospective study from August 2016 to January 2020. It included patients with SLMCRC requiring two-stage curative surgery due to insufficient future liver remnant volume (FRL). The primary endpoint was to evaluate postoperative morbidity and mortality following first step laparoscopy at 30 days. The secondary endpoints were to evaluate conversion rate, FRL hypertrophy following laparoscopic portal vein ligation, postoperative morbidity and mortality of 2nd step of two-stage hepatectomy and finally treatment completion rate. We included six patients (4 men and 2 women) with a mean age of 64 (44-72) years. The first step of surgery consisted of a laparoscopic colonic resection associated with right portal vein ligation in 5 patients and left portal vein ligation in one patient. The postoperative morbimortality was zero. The conversion rate was zero. After portal vein ligation, 5 of the 6 patients had significantly enlarged FRL, with a mean gain in FRL volume of 59.48% (31.02%-68.71%). Two of the six patients had severe morbidity after 2nd step hepatectomy (Clavien IIIb). All patients completed the treatment.

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