101 results on '"De Meyere C."'
Search Results
2. Transition from laparoscopic to robotic liver surgery: clinical outcomes, learning curve effect, and cost-effectiveness
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D’Hondt, M., Devooght, A., Willems, E., Wicherts, D., De Meyere, C., Parmentier, I., Provoost, A., Pottel, H., and Verslype, C.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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3. Five-year single center experience of sacral neuromodulation for isolated fecal incontinence or fecal incontinence combined with low anterior resection syndrome
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De Meyere, C., Nuytens, F., Parmentier, I., and D’Hondt, M.
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- 2020
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4. A multicenter cohort analysis of laparoscopic hepatic caudate lobe resection
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Cappelle, M., Aghayan, D. L., van der Poel, M. J., Besselink, M. G., Sergeant, G., Edwin, B., Parmentier, I., De Meyere, C., Vansteenkiste, F., and D’Hondt, M.
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- 2020
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5. Robotic Versus Laparoscopic Left and Extended Left Hepatectomy: An International Multicenter Study Propensity Score-Matched Analysis
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Sucandy I., Rayman S., Lai E. C., Tang C. -N., Chong Y., Efanov M., Fuks D., Choi G. -H., Chong C. C., Chiow A. K. H., Marino M. V., Prieto M., Lee J. -H., Kingham T. P., D'Hondt M., Troisi R. I., Choi S. H., Sutcliffe R. P., Cheung T. -T., Rotellar F., Park J. O., Scatton O., Han H. -S., Pratschke J., Wang X., Liu R., Goh B. K. P., Chan C. -Y., D'Silva M., Schotte H., De Meyere C., Krenzien F., Schmelzle M., Kadam P., Montalti R., Liu Q., Lee K. -F., Salimgereeva D., Alikhanov R., Lee L. S., Gastaca M., Jang J. Y., Lim C., Labadie K. P., Sucandy, I., Rayman, S., Lai, E. C., Tang, C. -N., Chong, Y., Efanov, M., Fuks, D., Choi, G. -H., Chong, C. C., Chiow, A. K. H., Marino, M. V., Prieto, M., Lee, J. -H., Kingham, T. P., D'Hondt, M., Troisi, R. I., Choi, S. H., Sutcliffe, R. P., Cheung, T. -T., Rotellar, F., Park, J. O., Scatton, O., Han, H. -S., Pratschke, J., Wang, X., Liu, R., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., D'Silva, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Kadam, P., Montalti, R., Liu, Q., Lee, K. -F., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. S., Gastaca, M., Jang, J. Y., Lim, C., and Labadie, K. P.
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Oncology ,Surgery - Abstract
Background: Controversies exist among liver surgeons regarding clinical outcomes of the laparoscopic versus the robotic approach for major complex hepatectomies. The authors therefore designed a study to examine and compare the perioperative outcomes of laparoscopic left hepatectomy or extended left hepatectomy (L-LH/L-ELH) versus robotic left hepatectomy or extended left hepatectomy (R-LH/R-ELH) using a large international multicenter collaborative database. Methods: An international multicenter retrospective analysis of 580 patients undergoing L-LH/L-ELH or R-LH/R-ELH at 25 specialized hepatobiliary centers worldwide was undertaken. Propensity score-matching (PSM) was used at a 1:1 nearest-neighbor ratio according to 15 perioperative variables, including demographics, tumor characteristics, Child-Pugh score, presence of portal hypertension, multiple resections, histologic diagnosis, and Iwate difficulty grade. Results: Before the PSM, 190 (32 %) patients underwent R-LH/R-ELH, and 390 (68 %) patients underwent L-LH/L-ELH. After the matching, 164 patients were identified in each arm without significant differences in demographics, preoperative variables, medical history, tumor pathology, tumor characteristics, or Iwate score. Regarding intra- and postoperative outcomes, the rebotic approach had significantly less estimated blood loss (EBL) (100 ml [IQR 200 ml] vs 200 ml [IQR 235 ml]; p = 0.029), fewer conversions to open operations (n = 4 [2.4 %] vs n = 13, [7.9 %]; p = 0.043), and a shorter hospital stay (6 days [IQR 3 days] vs 7 days [IQR 3.3 days]; p = 0.009). Conclusion: Both techniques are safe and feasible in major hepatic resections. Compared with L-LH/L-ELH, R-LH/R-ELH is associated with less EBL, fewer conversions to open operations, and a shorter hospital stay.
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- 2022
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6. ASO Author Reflections: The Robotic Versus Laparoscopic Approach to Left and Extended Left Hepatectomy
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Rayman S., Jacoby H., Sucandy I., Goh B. K. P., Chan C. -Y., Han H. -S., D'Silva M., D'Hondt M., Schotte H., De Meyere C., Krenzien F., Schmelzle M., Pratschke J., Sutcliffe R. P., Kadam P., Troisi R. I., Giglio M., Montalti R., Liu R., Liu Q., Chong C. C., Lee K. -F., Efanov M., Salimgereeva D., Alikhanov R., Chiow A. K. H., Lee L. S., Prieto M., Gastaca M., Choi S. -H., Jang J. Y., Scatton O., Lim C., Park J. O., Labadie K. P., Lai E. C., Tang C. -N., Wang X., Chong Y., Fuks D., Choi G. -H., Marino M. V., Lee J. H., Kingham T. P., Cheung T. -T., Rotellar F., Rayman, S., Jacoby, H., Sucandy, I., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., Han, H. -S., D'Silva, M., D'Hondt, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Pratschke, J., Sutcliffe, R. P., Kadam, P., Troisi, R. I., Giglio, M., Montalti, R., Liu, R., Liu, Q., Chong, C. C., Lee, K. -F., Efanov, M., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Chiow, A. K. H., Lee, L. S., Prieto, M., Gastaca, M., Choi, S. -H., Jang, J. Y., Scatton, O., Lim, C., Park, J. O., Labadie, K. P., Lai, E. C., Tang, C. -N., Wang, X., Chong, Y., Fuks, D., Choi, G. -H., Marino, M. V., Lee, J. H., Kingham, T. P., Cheung, T. -T., and Rotellar, F.
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Oncology ,Surgery - Published
- 2022
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7. Impact of neoadjuvant chemotherapy on the difficulty and outcomes of laparoscopic and robotic major liver resections for colorectal liver metastases: A propensity-score and coarsened exact-matched controlled study
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Ghotbi, J., Aghayan, D., Fretland, A., Edwin, B., Syn, N. L., Cipriani, F., Alzoubi, M., Lim, C., Scatton, O., Long, T. C. D., Herman, P., Coelho, F. F., Marino, M. V., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Choi, S. -H., Lee, J. H., Prieto, M., Vivarelli, M., Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, A., Yong, C. -C., Yin, M., Fondevila, C., Efanov, M., Morise, Z., Di Benedetto, F., Brustia, R., Dalla Valle, R., Boggi, U., Geller, D., Belli, A., Memeo, R., Mejia, A., Park, J. O., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Robles-Campos, R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Tang, C. -N., Chong, C. C. N., D'Hondt, M., Monden, K., Lopez-Ben, S., Kingham, T. P., Ferrero, A., Ettorre, G. M., Levi Sandri, G. B., Pascual, F., Cherqui, D., Liang, X., Mazzotta, A., Wakabayashi, G., Giglio, M., Troisi, R. I., Han, H. -S., Cheung, T. -T., Sugioka, A., Chen, K. -H., Liu, R., Soubrane, O., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Abu Hilal, M., Goh, B. K. P., Gastaca, M., Meurs, J., De Meyere, C., Lee, K. -F., Ng, K. K., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Jang, J. Y., Kato, Y., Kojima, M., Pirola Kruger, J. A., Lopez-Lopez, V., Casellas I Robert, M., Montalti, R., Lee, B., D'Silva, M., Wang, H. -P., Saleh, M., Chen, Z., Yu, S., Vani, S., Ardito, Francesco, Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mocchegiani, F., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Labadie, K. P., Conticchio, M., Dogeas, E., Kauffmann, E. F., Giuffrida, M., Sommacale, D., Laurent, A., Magistri, P., Nghia, P. P., Mishima, K., Valle, B. D., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Kadam, P., Liu, Q., Lai, E. C. H., Zheng, J., Siow, T. F., Forchino, F., Giuliante F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9517-8220), Ardito F. (ORCID:0000-0003-1596-2862), Ghotbi, J., Aghayan, D., Fretland, A., Edwin, B., Syn, N. L., Cipriani, F., Alzoubi, M., Lim, C., Scatton, O., Long, T. C. D., Herman, P., Coelho, F. F., Marino, M. V., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Choi, S. -H., Lee, J. H., Prieto, M., Vivarelli, M., Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, A., Yong, C. -C., Yin, M., Fondevila, C., Efanov, M., Morise, Z., Di Benedetto, F., Brustia, R., Dalla Valle, R., Boggi, U., Geller, D., Belli, A., Memeo, R., Mejia, A., Park, J. O., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Robles-Campos, R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Tang, C. -N., Chong, C. C. N., D'Hondt, M., Monden, K., Lopez-Ben, S., Kingham, T. P., Ferrero, A., Ettorre, G. M., Levi Sandri, G. B., Pascual, F., Cherqui, D., Liang, X., Mazzotta, A., Wakabayashi, G., Giglio, M., Troisi, R. I., Han, H. -S., Cheung, T. -T., Sugioka, A., Chen, K. -H., Liu, R., Soubrane, O., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Abu Hilal, M., Goh, B. K. P., Gastaca, M., Meurs, J., De Meyere, C., Lee, K. -F., Ng, K. K., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Jang, J. Y., Kato, Y., Kojima, M., Pirola Kruger, J. A., Lopez-Lopez, V., Casellas I Robert, M., Montalti, R., Lee, B., D'Silva, M., Wang, H. -P., Saleh, M., Chen, Z., Yu, S., Vani, S., Ardito, Francesco, Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mocchegiani, F., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Labadie, K. P., Conticchio, M., Dogeas, E., Kauffmann, E. F., Giuffrida, M., Sommacale, D., Laurent, A., Magistri, P., Nghia, P. P., Mishima, K., Valle, B. D., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Kadam, P., Liu, Q., Lai, E. C. H., Zheng, J., Siow, T. F., Forchino, F., Giuliante F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9517-8220), and Ardito F. (ORCID:0000-0003-1596-2862)
- Abstract
Background: Minimal invasive liver resections are a safe alternative to open surgery. Different scoring systems considering different risks factors have been developed to predict the risks associated with these procedures, especially challenging major liver resections (MLR). However, the impact of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAT) on the difficulty of minimally invasive MLRs remains poorly investigated. Methods: Patients who underwent laparoscopic and robotic MLRs for colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) performed across 57 centers between January 2005 to December 2021 were included in this analysis. Patients who did or did not receive NAT were matched based on 1:1 coarsened exact and 1:2 propensity-score matching. Pre- and post-matching comparisons were performed. Results: In total, the data of 5189 patients were reviewed. Of these, 1411 procedures were performed for CRLM, and 1061 cases met the inclusion criteria. After excluding 27 cases with missing data on NAT, 1034 patients (NAT: n = 641; non-NAT: n = 393) were included. Before matching, baseline characteristics were vastly different. Before matching, the morbidity rate was significantly higher in the NAT-group (33.2% vs. 27.2%, p-value = 0.043). No significant differences were seen in perioperative outcomes after the coarsened exact matching. After the propensity-score matching, statistically significant higher blood loss (mean, 300 (SD 128–596) vs. 250 (SD 100–400) ml, p-value = 0.047) but shorter hospital stay (mean, 6 [4-8] vs. 6 [5-9] days, p-value = 0.043) were found in the NAT-group. Conclusion: The current study demonstrated that NAT had minimal impact on the difficulty and outcomes of minimally-invasive MLR for CRLM.
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- 2023
8. Defining Global Benchmarks for Laparoscopic Liver Resections: An International Multicenter Study
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Goh, B. K. P., Han, H. -S., Chen, K. -H., Chua, D. W., Chan, C. -Y., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D. L., Fretland, A. A., Sijberden, J., D'Silva, M., Siow, T. F., Kato, Y., Lim, C., Nghia, P. P., Herman, P., Marino, M. V., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Choi, S. H., Lee, J. H., Gastaca, M., Vivarelli, M., Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, A., Yong, C. -C., Yin, M., Chen, Z., Fondevila, C., Efanov, M., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Campos, R. R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Lai, E., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Monden, K., Lopez-Ben, S., Coelho, F. F., Kingham, T. P., Liu, R., Long, T. C. D., Ferrero, A., Sandri, G. B. L., Saleh, M., Cherqui, D., Scatton, O., Soubrane, O., Wakabayashi, G., Troisi, R. I., Cheung, T. -T., Sugioka, A., Hilal, M. A., Fuks, D., Edwin, B., Aldrighetti, L., Syn, N., Prieto, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Jang, J. Y., Kojima, M., Ghotbi, J., Kruger, J. A. P., Lopez-Lopez, V., Valle, B. D., Casellas I Robert, M., Mishima, K., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Mazzotta, A., Lee, B., Wang, H. -P., Pascual, F., Kadam, P., Tang, C. -N., Yu, S., Ardito, Francesco, Vani, S., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mocchegiani, F., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Giuliante F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9517-8220), Ardito F. (ORCID:0000-0003-1596-2862), Goh, B. K. P., Han, H. -S., Chen, K. -H., Chua, D. W., Chan, C. -Y., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D. L., Fretland, A. A., Sijberden, J., D'Silva, M., Siow, T. F., Kato, Y., Lim, C., Nghia, P. P., Herman, P., Marino, M. V., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Choi, S. H., Lee, J. H., Gastaca, M., Vivarelli, M., Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, A., Yong, C. -C., Yin, M., Chen, Z., Fondevila, C., Efanov, M., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Campos, R. R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Lai, E., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Monden, K., Lopez-Ben, S., Coelho, F. F., Kingham, T. P., Liu, R., Long, T. C. D., Ferrero, A., Sandri, G. B. L., Saleh, M., Cherqui, D., Scatton, O., Soubrane, O., Wakabayashi, G., Troisi, R. I., Cheung, T. -T., Sugioka, A., Hilal, M. A., Fuks, D., Edwin, B., Aldrighetti, L., Syn, N., Prieto, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Jang, J. Y., Kojima, M., Ghotbi, J., Kruger, J. A. P., Lopez-Lopez, V., Valle, B. D., Casellas I Robert, M., Mishima, K., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Mazzotta, A., Lee, B., Wang, H. -P., Pascual, F., Kadam, P., Tang, C. -N., Yu, S., Ardito, Francesco, Vani, S., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mocchegiani, F., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Giuliante F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9517-8220), and Ardito F. (ORCID:0000-0003-1596-2862)
- Abstract
Objective: To establish global benchmark outcomes indicators after laparoscopic liver resections (L-LR). Background: There is limited published data to date on the best achievable outcomes after L-LR. Methods: This is a post hoc analysis of a multicenter database of 11,983 patients undergoing L-LR in 45 international centers in 4 continents between 2015 and 2020. Three specific procedures: left lateral sectionectomy (LLS), left hepatectomy (LH), and right hepatectomy (RH) were selected to represent the 3 difficulty levels of L-LR. Fifteen outcome indicators were selected to establish benchmark cutoffs. Results: There were 3519 L-LR (LLS, LH, RH) of which 1258 L-LR (40.6%) cases performed in 34 benchmark expert centers qualified as low-risk benchmark cases. These included 659 LLS (52.4%), 306 LH (24.3%), and 293 RH (23.3%). The benchmark outcomes established for operation time, open conversion rate, blood loss ≥500 mL, blood transfusion rate, postoperative morbidity, major morbidity, and 90-day mortality after LLS, LH, and RH were 209.5, 302, and 426 minutes; 2.1%, 13.4%, and 13.0%; 3.2%, 20%, and 47.1%; 0%, 7.1%, and 10.5%; 11.1%, 20%, and 50%; 0%, 7.1%, and 20%; and 0%, 0%, and 0%, respectively. Conclusions: This study established the first global benchmark outcomes for L-LR in a large-scale international patient cohort. It provides an up-to-date reference regarding the "best achievable" results for L-LR for which centers adopting L-LR can use as a comparison to enable an objective assessment of performance gaps and learning curves.
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- 2023
9. Comparison between the difficulty of laparoscopic limited liver resections of tumors located in segment 7 versus segment 8: An international multicenter propensity-score matched study
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Efanov, M., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Wu, A. G. R., Geller, D., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D. L., Fretland, A. A., Sijberden, J., Belli, A., Marino, M. V., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Choi, S. H., Lee, J. H., Prieto, M., Vivarelli, M., Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, A., Yong, C. -C., Fondevila, C., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Robless Campos, R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Lai, E., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Monden, K., Lopez-Ben, S., Herman, P., Di Benedetto, F., Kingham, T. P., Liu, R., Long, T. C. D., Ferrero, A., Levi Sandri, G. B., Cherqui, D., Scatton, O., Wakabayashi, G., Troisi, R. I., Cheung, T. -T., Sugioka, A., Han, H. -S., Abu Hilal, M., Soubrane, O., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Edwin, B., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., Syn, N., D'Silva, M., Lee, B., Lim, C., Nghia, P. P., Gastaca, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., Lee, L. S., Jang, J. Y., Kojima, M., Kato, Y., Ghotbi, J., Kruger, J. A. P., Coelho, F. F., Lopez-Lopez, V., Valle, B. D., Robert, M. C. I., Mishima, K., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Wang, H. -P., Pascual, F., Saleh, M., Kadam, P., Tang, C. -N., Ardito, Francesco, Vani, S., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mocchegiani, F., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Dogeas, E., Magistri, P., Mazzotta, A., Giuliante F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9517-8220), Ardito F. (ORCID:0000-0003-1596-2862), Efanov, M., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Wu, A. G. R., Geller, D., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D. L., Fretland, A. A., Sijberden, J., Belli, A., Marino, M. V., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Choi, S. H., Lee, J. H., Prieto, M., Vivarelli, M., Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, A., Yong, C. -C., Fondevila, C., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Robless Campos, R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Lai, E., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Monden, K., Lopez-Ben, S., Herman, P., Di Benedetto, F., Kingham, T. P., Liu, R., Long, T. C. D., Ferrero, A., Levi Sandri, G. B., Cherqui, D., Scatton, O., Wakabayashi, G., Troisi, R. I., Cheung, T. -T., Sugioka, A., Han, H. -S., Abu Hilal, M., Soubrane, O., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Edwin, B., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., Syn, N., D'Silva, M., Lee, B., Lim, C., Nghia, P. P., Gastaca, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., Lee, L. S., Jang, J. Y., Kojima, M., Kato, Y., Ghotbi, J., Kruger, J. A. P., Coelho, F. F., Lopez-Lopez, V., Valle, B. D., Robert, M. C. I., Mishima, K., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Wang, H. -P., Pascual, F., Saleh, M., Kadam, P., Tang, C. -N., Ardito, Francesco, Vani, S., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mocchegiani, F., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Dogeas, E., Magistri, P., Mazzotta, A., Giuliante F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9517-8220), and Ardito F. (ORCID:0000-0003-1596-2862)
- Abstract
Background: Presently, according to different difficulty scoring systems, there is no difference in complexity estimation of laparoscopic liver resection (LLR) of segments 7 and 8. However, there is no published data supporting this assumption. To date, no studies have compared the outcomes of laparoscopic parenchyma-sparing resection of the liver segments 7 and 8. Methods: A post hoc analysis of patients undergoing LLR of segments 7 and 8 in 46 centers between 2004 and 2020 was performed. 1:1 Propensity score matching (PSM) was used to compare isolated LLR of segments 7 and 8. Subset analyses were also performed to compare atypical resections and segmentectomies of 7 and 8. Results: A total of 2411 patients were identified, and 1691 patients met the inclusion criteria. Comparison after PSM between the entire cohort of segment 7 and segment 8 resections revealed inferior results for segment 7 resection in terms of increased blood loss, blood transfusions, and conversions to open surgery. Subset analyses of only atypical resections similarly demonstrated poorer outcomes for segment 7 in terms of increased blood loss, operation time, blood transfusions, and conversions to open surgery. Conversely, a subgroup analysis of segmentectomies after PSM found better outcomes for segment 7 in terms of a shorter operation time and hospital stay. Conclusion: Differences in the outcomes of segments 7 and 8 resections suggest a greater difficulty of laparoscopic atypical resection of segment 7 compared to segment 8, and greater difficulty of segmentectomy 8 compared to segmentectomy 7.
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- 2023
10. The Introduction of Robotic Surgery Leads to a Higher Rate of Minimally Invasive Redo Hepatectomies Compared to the Laparoscopic Approach. A Single Center Analysis
- Author
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Willems, E., primary, De Meyere, C., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, and D'Hondt, M., additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. An international multicenter propensity-score matched and coarsened-exact matched analysis comparing robotic versus laparoscopic partial liver resections of the anterolateral segments
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Kadam P., Sutcliffe R. P., Scatton O., Sucandy I., Kingham T. P., Liu R., Choi G. H., Syn N. L., Gastaca M., Choi S. -H., Chiow A. K. H., Marino M. V., Efanov M., Lee J. -H., Chong C. C., Tang C. -N., Cheung T. -T., Pratschke J., Wang X., Campos R. R., Ivanecz A., Park J. O., Rotellar F., Fuks D., D'Hondt M., Han H. -S., Troisi R. I., Goh B. K. P., Chan C. -Y., Prieto M., Schotte H., De Meyere C., Lai E., Krenzien F., Schmelzle M., Montalti R., Liu Q., Lee K. -F., Salimgereeva D., Alikhanov R., Lee L. -S., Jang J. Y., Lim C., Labadie K. P., Lopez-Lopez V., Kadam, P., Sutcliffe, R. P., Scatton, O., Sucandy, I., Kingham, T. P., Liu, R., Choi, G. H., Syn, N. L., Gastaca, M., Choi, S. -H., Chiow, A. K. H., Marino, M. V., Efanov, M., Lee, J. -H., Chong, C. C., Tang, C. -N., Cheung, T. -T., Pratschke, J., Wang, X., Campos, R. R., Ivanecz, A., Park, J. O., Rotellar, F., Fuks, D., D'Hondt, M., Han, H. -S., Troisi, R. I., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., Prieto, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Lai, E., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Montalti, R., Liu, Q., Lee, K. -F., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Jang, J. Y., Lim, C., Labadie, K. P., and Lopez-Lopez, V.
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Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,robotic liver resection ,Hepatology ,Liver Neoplasms ,anterolateral segment ,laparoscopic liver resection ,Length of Stay ,Postoperative Complications ,Robotic Surgical Procedures ,Hepatectomy ,Humans ,Laparoscopy ,Surgery ,Propensity Score ,Retrospective Studies ,minimally invasive liver surgery - Abstract
Background: Robotic liver resections (RLR) may have the ability to address some of the drawbacks of laparoscopic liver resections (LLR) but few studies have done a head-to-head comparison of the outcomes after anterolateral segment resections by the two techniques. Methods: A retrospective study was conducted of 3202 patients who underwent minimally invasive LR of the anterolateral liver segments at 26 international centres from 2005 to 2020. Two thousand six hundred and six cases met study criteria of which there were 358 RLR and 1868 LLR cases. Perioperative outcomes were compared between the two groups using a 1:3 Propensity Score Matched (PSM) and 1:1 Coarsened Exact Matched (CEM) analysis. Results: Patients matched after 1:3 PSM (261 RLR vs 783 LLR) and 1:1 CEM (296 RLR vs 296 LLR) revealed no significant differences in length of stay, readmission rates, morbidity, mortality, and involvement of or close oncological margins. RLR surgeries were associated with significantly less blood loss (50 mL vs 100 ml, P
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- 2022
12. Utility of the Iwate difficulty scoring system for laparoscopic right posterior sectionectomy: do surgical outcomes differ for tumors in segments VI and VII?
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Choi S. H., Chen K. -H., Syn N. L., Cipriani F., Cheung T. -T., Chiow A. K. H., Choi G. -H., Siow T. -F., Sucandy I., Marino M. V., Gastaca M., Chong C. C., Lee J. H., Ivanecz A., Mazzaferro V., Lopez-Ben S., Fondevila C., Rotellar F., Campos R. R., Efanov M., Kingham T. P., Sutcliffe R. P., Troisi R. I., Pratschke J., Wang X., D'Hondt M., Yong C. C., Levi Sandri G. B., Tang C. N., Ruzzenente A., Cherqui D., Ferrero A., Wakabayashi G., Scatton O., Aghayan D., Edwin B., Coelho F. F., Giuliante F., Liu R., Sijberden J., Abu Hilal M., Sugioka A., Long T. C. D., Fuks D., Aldrighetti L., Han H. -S., Goh B. K. P., Kang I., Jang J. Y., Chan C. -Y., D'Silva M., Schotte H., De Meyere C., Lai E., Krenzien F., Schmelzle M., Kadam P., Montalti R., Giglio M., Liu Q., Lee K. -F., Salimgereeva D., Alikhanov R., Lee L. -S., Prieto M., Lim C., Nghia P. P., Kojima M., Kato Y., Forchino F., Herman P., Kruger J. A. P., Saleh M., Pascual F., Dalla Valle B., Lopez-Lopez V., Casellas-Robert M., Giustizieri U., Citterio D., Mishima K., Fretland A. A., Ghotbi J., Ettorre G. M., Colasanti M., Guzman Y., Ardito F., Vani S., Wang H. -P., Choi, S. H., Chen, K. -H., Syn, N. L., Cipriani, F., Cheung, T. -T., Chiow, A. K. H., Choi, G. -H., Siow, T. -F., Sucandy, I., Marino, M. V., Gastaca, M., Chong, C. C., Lee, J. H., Ivanecz, A., Mazzaferro, V., Lopez-Ben, S., Fondevila, C., Rotellar, F., Campos, R. R., Efanov, M., Kingham, T. P., Sutcliffe, R. P., Troisi, R. I., Pratschke, J., Wang, X., D'Hondt, M., Yong, C. C., Levi Sandri, G. B., Tang, C. N., Ruzzenente, A., Cherqui, D., Ferrero, A., Wakabayashi, G., Scatton, O., Aghayan, D., Edwin, B., Coelho, F. F., Giuliante, F., Liu, R., Sijberden, J., Abu Hilal, M., Sugioka, A., Long, T. C. D., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Han, H. -S., Goh, B. K. P., Kang, I., Jang, J. Y., Chan, C. -Y., D'Silva, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Lai, E., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Kadam, P., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Liu, Q., Lee, K. -F., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Prieto, M., Lim, C., Nghia, P. P., Kojima, M., Kato, Y., Forchino, F., Herman, P., Kruger, J. A. P., Saleh, M., Pascual, F., Dalla Valle, B., Lopez-Lopez, V., Casellas-Robert, M., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mishima, K., Fretland, A. A., Ghotbi, J., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Ardito, F., Vani, S., Wang, H. -P., Choi, Sung Hoon, Chen, Kuo-Hsin, Syn, Nicholas L, Cipriani, Federica, Cheung, Tan-To, Chiow, Adrian K H, Choi, Gi-Hong, Siow, Tiing-Foong, Sucandy, Iswanto, Marino, Marco V, Gastaca, Mikel, Chong, Charing C, Lee, Jae Hoon, Ivanecz, Arpad, Mazzaferro, Vincenzo, Lopez-Ben, Santiago, Fondevila, Constantino, Rotellar, Fernando, Campos, Ricardo Roble, Efanov, Mikhail, Kingham, T Peter, Sutcliffe, Robert P, Troisi, Roberto I, Pratschke, Johann, Wang, Xiaoying, D'Hondt, Mathieu, Yong, Chee Chien, Levi Sandri, Giovanni Battista, Tang, Chung Ngai, Ruzzenente, Andrea, Cherqui, Daniel, Ferrero, Alessandro, Wakabayashi, Go, Scatton, Olivier, Aghayan, Davit, Edwin, Bjørn, Coelho, Fabricio Ferreira, Giuliante, Felice, Liu, Rong, Sijberden, Jasper, Abu Hilal, Mohammad, Sugioka, Atsushi, Long, Tran Cong Duy, Fuks, David, Aldrighetti, Luca, Han, Ho-Seong, and Goh, Brian K P
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Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Laparoscopic liver ,Settore MED/18 - CHIRURGIA GENERALE ,Operative Time ,Liver Neoplasms ,Carcinoma ,Hepatocellular ,Difficulty score ,Length of Stay ,Iwate ,Laparoscopic hepatectomy ,Right posterior sectionectomy ,Treatment Outcome ,Postoperative Complications ,Humans ,Hepatectomy ,Surgery ,Laparoscopy ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Introduction: The Iwate Score (IS) have not been well-validated for specific procedures, especially for right posterior sectionectomy (RPS). In this study, the utility of the IS was determined for laparoscopic (L)RPS and the effect of tumor location on surgical outcomes was investigated. Methods: Post-hoc analysis of 647 L-RPS performed in 40 international centers of which 596L-RPS cases met the inclusion criteria. Baseline characteristics and perioperative outcomes of patients stratified based on the Iwate score were compared to determine whether a correlation with surgical difficulty existed. A 1:1 Mahalanobis distance matching was utilized to investigate the effect of tumor location on L-RPS outcomes. Results: The patients were stratified into 3 levels of difficulty (31 intermediate, 143 advanced, and 422 expert) based on the IS. When using a stepwise increase of the IS excluding the tumor location score, only Pringle’s maneuver was more frequently used in the higher surgical difficulty level (35.5%, 54.6%, and 65.2%, intermediate, advanced, and expert levels, respectively, Z = 3.34, p = 0.001). Other perioperative results were not associated with a statistical gradation toward higher difficulty level. 80 of 85 patients with a segment VI lesion and 511 patients with a segment VII lesion were matched 1:1. There were no significant differences in the perioperative outcomes of the two groups including open conversion, operating time, blood loss, intraoperative blood transfusion, postoperative stay, major morbidity, and mortality. Conclusion: Among patients undergoing L-RPS, the IS did not significantly correlate with most outcome measures associated with intraoperative difficulty and postoperative outcomes. Similarly, tumor location had no effect on L-RPS outcomes.
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- 2022
13. Comparison between the difficulty of laparoscopic limited liver resections of tumors located in segment 7 versus segment 8
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Efanov, M., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., A. G. R., Wu, Geller, D., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D. L., Fretland, A. A., Sijberden, J., Belli, A., Marino, M. V., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Choi, S. H., Lee, J. H., Prieto, M., Vivarelli, M., Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, A., Yong, C. -C., Fondevila, C., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Robless Campos, R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Lai, E., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Monden, K., Lopez-Ben, S., Herman, P., Di Benedetto, F., Kingham, T. P., Liu, R., Long, T. C. D., Ferrero, A., Levi Sandri, G. B., Cherqui, D., Scatton, O., Wakabayashi, G., Troisi, R. I., Cheung, T. -T., Sugioka, A., Han, H. -S., Abu Hilal, M., Soubrane, O., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Edwin, B., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., Syn, N., D'Silva, M., Lee, B., Lim, C., Nghia, P. P., Gastaca, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., Lee, L. S., Jang, J. Y., Kojima, M., Kato, Y., Ghotbi, J., Kruger, J. A. P., Coelho, F. F., Lopez-Lopez, V., Valle, B. D., Robert, M. C. I., Mishima, K., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Wang, H. -P., Pascual, F., Saleh, M., Kadam, P., Tang, C. -N., Ardito, Francesco, Vani, S., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mocchegiani, F., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Dogeas, E., Magistri, P., Mazzotta, A., Graduate School, Surgery, CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life, Efanov, M., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Wu, A. G. R., Geller, D., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D. L., Fretland, A. A., Sijberden, J., Belli, A., Marino, M. V., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Choi, S. H., Lee, J. H., Prieto, M., Vivarelli, M., Giuliante, F., Ruzzenente, A., Yong, C. -C., Fondevila, C., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Robless Campos, R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Lai, E., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Monden, K., Lopez-Ben, S., Herman, P., Di Benedetto, F., Kingham, T. P., Liu, R., Long, T. C. D., Ferrero, A., Levi Sandri, G. B., Cherqui, D., Scatton, O., Wakabayashi, G., Troisi, R. I., Cheung, T. -T., Sugioka, A., Han, H. -S., Abu Hilal, M., Soubrane, O., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Edwin, B., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., Syn, N., D'Silva, M., Lee, B., Lim, C., Nghia, P. P., Gastaca, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., Lee, L. S., Jang, J. Y., Kojima, M., Kato, Y., Ghotbi, J., Kruger, J. A. P., Coelho, F. F., Lopez-Lopez, V., Valle, B. D., Robert, M. C. I., Mishima, K., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Wang, H. -P., Pascual, F., Saleh, M., Kadam, P., Tang, C. -N., Ardito, F., Vani, S., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mocchegiani, F., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Dogeas, E., Magistri, P., Mazzotta, A., Efanov, Mikhail, Salimgereeva, Diana, Alikhanov, Ruslan, Wu, Andrew G R, Geller, David, Cipriani, Federica, Aghayan, Davit L, Fretland, Asmund Avdem, Sijberden, Jasper, Belli, Andrea, Marino, Marco V, Mazzaferro, Vincenzo, Chiow, Adrian K H, Sucandy, Iswanto, Ivanecz, Arpad, Choi, Sung Hoon, Lee, Jae Hoon, Prieto, Mikel, Vivarelli, Marco, Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, Andrea, Yong, Chee-Chien, Fondevila, Constantino, Rotellar, Fernando, Choi, Gi-Hong, Robless Campos, Ricardo, Wang, Xiaoying, Sutcliffe, Robert P, Pratschke, Johann, Lai, Eric, Chong, Charing C, D'Hondt, Mathieu, Monden, Kazuteru, Lopez-Ben, Santiago, Herman, Paulo, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, Kingham, T Peter, Liu, Rong, Long, Tran Cong Duy, Ferrero, Alessandro, Levi Sandri, Giovanni Battista, Cherqui, Daniel, Scatton, Olivier, Wakabayashi, Go, Troisi, Roberto I, Cheung, Tan-To, Sugioka, Atsushi, Han, Ho-Seong, Abu Hilal, Mohammad, Soubrane, Olivier, Fuks, David, Aldrighetti, Luca, Edwin, Bjorn, and Goh, Brian K P
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hepatectomy ,laparoscopy ,liver resection ,posterosuperior segments ,risk score ,Hepatology ,Settore MED/18 - CHIRURGIA GENERALE ,Surgery ,posterosuperior segment - Abstract
Background: Presently, according to different difficulty scoring systems, there is no difference in complexity estimation of laparoscopic liver resection (LLR) of segments 7 and 8. However, there is no published data supporting this assumption. To date, no studies have compared the outcomes of laparoscopic parenchyma-sparing resection of the liver segments 7 and 8. Methods: A post hoc analysis of patients undergoing LLR of segments 7 and 8 in 46 centers between 2004 and 2020 was performed. 1:1 Propensity score matching (PSM) was used to compare isolated LLR of segments 7 and 8. Subset analyses were also performed to compare atypical resections and segmentectomies of 7 and 8. Results: A total of 2411 patients were identified, and 1691 patients met the inclusion criteria. Comparison after PSM between the entire cohort of segment 7 and segment 8 resections revealed inferior results for segment 7 resection in terms of increased blood loss, blood transfusions, and conversions to open surgery. Subset analyses of only atypical resections similarly demonstrated poorer outcomes for segment 7 in terms of increased blood loss, operation time, blood transfusions, and conversions to open surgery. Conversely, a subgroup analysis of segmentectomies after PSM found better outcomes for segment 7 in terms of a shorter operation time and hospital stay. Conclusion: Differences in the outcomes of segments 7 and 8 resections suggest a greater difficulty of laparoscopic atypical resection of segment 7 compared to segment 8, and greater difficulty of segmentectomy 8 compared to segmentectomy 7.
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- 2022
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14. An international multicentre propensity score matched analysis comparing between robotic versus laparoscopic left lateral sectionectomy
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Chong Y., Prieto M., Gastaca M., Choi S. -H., Sucandy I., Chiow A. K. H., Marino M. V., Wang X., Efanov M., Schotte H., D'Hondt M., Choi G. -H., Krenzien F., Schmelzle M., Pratschke J., Kingham T. P., Giglio M., Troisi R., Lee J. H., Lai E. C., Tang C. N., Fuks D., D'Silva M., Han H. -S., Kadam P., Sutcliffe R. P., Lee K. -F., Chong C. C., Cheung T. -T., Liu Q., Liu R., Goh B. K. P., Chan C. -Y., De Meyere C., Salimgereeva D., Alikhanov R., Lee L. -S., Jang J. Y., Montalti R., Chong, Y., Prieto, M., Gastaca, M., Choi, S. -H., Sucandy, I., Chiow, A. K. H., Marino, M. V., Wang, X., Efanov, M., Schotte, H., D'Hondt, M., Choi, G. -H., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Pratschke, J., Kingham, T. P., Giglio, M., Troisi, R., Lee, J. H., Lai, E. C., Tang, C. N., Fuks, D., D'Silva, M., Han, H. -S., Kadam, P., Sutcliffe, R. P., Lee, K. -F., Chong, C. C., Cheung, T. -T., Liu, Q., Liu, R., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., De Meyere, C., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Jang, J. Y., and Montalti, R.
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Laparoscopic ,Left lateral sectionectomy ,Minimally invasive surgery ,Robotic - Abstract
Background: Left lateral sectionectomy (LLS) is one of the most commonly performed minimally invasive liver resections. While laparoscopic (L)-LLS is a well-established technique, over traditional open resection, it remains controversial if robotic (R)-LLS provides any advantages of L-LLS. Methods: A post hoc analysis of 997 patients from 21 international centres undergoing L-LLS or R-LLS from 2006 to 2020 was conducted. A total of 886 cases (214 R-LLS, 672 L-LLS) met study criteria. 1:1 and 1:2 propensity score matched (PSM) comparison was performed between R-LLS & L-LLS. Further subset analysis by Iwate difficulty was also performed. Outcomes measured include operating time, blood loss, open conversion, readmission rates, morbidity and mortality. Results: Comparison between R-LLS and L-LLS after PSM 1:2 demonstrated statistically significantly lower open conversion rate in R-LLS than L-LLS (0.6% versus 5%, p = 0.009) and median blood loss was also statistically significantly lower in R-LLS at 50 (80) versus 100 (170) in L-LLS (p = 0.011) after PSM 1:1 although there was no difference in the blood transfusion rate. Pringle manoeuvre was also found to be used more frequently in R-LLS, with 53(24.8%) cases versus to 84(12.5%) L-LLS cases (p < 0.001). There was no significant difference in the other key perioperative outcomes such as operating time, length of stay, postoperative morbidity, major morbidity and 90-day mortality between both groups. Conclusion: R-LLS was associated with similar key perioperative outcomes compared to L-LLS. It was also associated with significantly lower blood loss and open conversion rates compared to L-LLS.
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- 2022
15. Impact of tumor size on the difficulty of laparoscopic left lateral sectionectomies
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Arizza, G., Russolillo, N., Ferrero, A., Syn, N. L., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D., Marino, M. V., Memeo, R., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Vivarelli, M., Di Benedetto, F., Choi, S. -H., Lee, J. H., Park, J. O., Gastaca, M., Fondevila, C., Efanov, M., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Robles-Campos, R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Tang, C. N., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Yong, C. C., Ruzzenente, A., Herman, P., Kingham, T. P., Scatton, O., Liu, R., Levi Sandri, G. B., Soubrane, O., Mejia, A., Lopez-Ben, S., Monden, K., Wakabayashi, G., Cherqui, D., Troisi, R. I., Yin, M., Giuliante, Felice, Geller, D., Sugioka, A., Edwin, B., Cheung, T. -T., Long, T. C. D., Hilal, M. A., Fuks, D., Chen, K. -H., Aldrighetti, L., Han, H. -S., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., Prieto, M., Meurs, J., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., K. K., Ng, Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Jang, J. Y., Labadie, K. P., Kato, Y., Kojima, M., Fretland, A. A., Ghotbi, J., Coelho, F. F., Kruger, J. A. P., Lopez-Lopez, V., Magistri, P., Robert, M. C. I., Mishima, K., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Mazzotta, A., Lee, B., D'Silva, M., Wang, H. -P., Saleh, M., Pascual, F., Suhool, A., Nghia, P. P., Lim, C., Liu, Q., Kadam, P., Dalla Valle, B., Lai, E. C., Conticchio, M., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Chen, Z., Yu, S., Ardito, Francesco, Vani, S., Dogeas, E., Siow, T. F., Mocchegianni, F., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Arizza, G., Russolillo, N., Ferrero, A., Syn, N. L., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D., Marino, M. V., Memeo, R., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Vivarelli, M., Di Benedetto, F., Choi, S. -H., Lee, J. H., Park, J. O., Gastaca, M., Fondevila, C., Efanov, M., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Robles-Campos, R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Tang, C. N., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Yong, C. C., Ruzzenente, A., Herman, P., Kingham, T. P., Scatton, O., Liu, R., Levi Sandri, G. B., Soubrane, O., Mejia, A., Lopez-Ben, S., Monden, K., Wakabayashi, G., Cherqui, D., Troisi, R. I., Yin, M., Giuliante, F., Geller, D., Sugioka, A., Edwin, B., Cheung, T. -T., Long, T. C. D., Hilal, M. A., Fuks, D., Chen, K. -H., Aldrighetti, L., Han, H. -S., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., Prieto, M., Meurs, J., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., Ng, K. K., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Jang, J. Y., Labadie, K. P., Kato, Y., Kojima, M., Fretland, A. A., Ghotbi, J., Coelho, F. F., Kruger, J. A. P., Lopez-Lopez, V., Magistri, P., Robert, M. C. I., Mishima, K., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Mazzotta, A., Lee, B., D'Silva, M., Wang, H. -P., Saleh, M., Pascual, F., Suhool, A., Nghia, P. P., Lim, C., Liu, Q., Kadam, P., Dalla Valle, B., Lai, E. C., Conticchio, M., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Chen, Z., Yu, S., Ardito, F., Vani, S., Dogeas, E., Siow, T. F., Mocchegianni, F., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., and Guzman, Y.
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difficulty ,laparoscopic hepatectomy ,laparoscopic liver ,left lateral sectionectomy ,size ,Hepatology ,Settore MED/18 - CHIRURGIA GENERALE ,Surgery - Abstract
Background: Tumor size (TS) represents a critical parameter in the risk assessment of laparoscopic liver resections (LLR). Moreover, TS has been rarely related to the extent of liver resection. The aim of this study was to study the relationship between tumor size and difficulty of laparoscopic left lateral sectionectomy (L-LLS). Methods: The impact of TS cutoffs was investigated by stratifying tumor size at each 10 mm-interval. The optimal cutoffs were chosen taking into consideration the number of endpoints which show a statistically significant split around the cut-points of interest and the magnitude of relative risk after correction for multiple risk factors. Results: A total of 1910 L-LLS were included. Overall, open conversion and intraoperative blood transfusion were 3.1 and 3.3%, respectively. The major morbidity rate was 2.7% and 90-days mortality 0.6%. Three optimal TS cutoffs were identified: 40-, 70-, and 100-mm. All the selected cutoffs showed a significant discriminative power for the prediction of open conversion, operative time, blood transfusion and need of Pringle maneuver. Moreover, 70- and 100-mm cutoffs were both discriminative for estimated blood loss and major complications. A stepwise increase in rates of open conversion rate (Z = 3.90, P
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- 2022
16. Defining Global Benchmarks for Laparoscopic Liver Resections: An International Multicenter Study
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Goh, B. K. P., Han, H. -S., Chen, K. -H., Chua, D. W., Chan, C. -Y., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D. L., Fretland, A. A., Sijberden, J., D'Silva, M., Siow, T. F., Kato, Y., Lim, C., Nghia, P. P., Herman, P., Marino, M. V., Mazzaferro, V., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Choi, S. H., Lee, J. H., Gastaca, M., Vivarelli, M., Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, A., Yong, C. -C., Yin, M., Chen, Z., Fondevila, C., Efanov, M., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Campos, R. R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Lai, E., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Monden, K., Lopez-Ben, S., Coelho, F. F., Kingham, T. P., Liu, R., Long, T. C. D., Ferrero, A., Sandri, G. B. L., Saleh, M., Cherqui, D., Scatton, O., Soubrane, O., Wakabayashi, G., Troisi, R. I., Cheung, T. -T., Sugioka, A., Hilal, M. A., Fuks, D., Edwin, B., Aldrighetti, L., Syn, N., Prieto, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Jang, J. Y., Kojima, M., Ghotbi, J., Kruger, J. A. P., Lopez-Lopez, V., Valle, B. D., Casellas I Robert, M., Mishima, K., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Mazzotta, A., Lee, B., Wang, H. -P., Pascual, F., Kadam, P., Tang, C. -N., Yu, S., Ardito, Francesco, Vani, S., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mocchegiani, F., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Goh, Brian K P, Han, Ho-Seong, Chen, Kuo-Hsin, Chua, Darren W, Chan, Chung-Yip, Cipriani, Federica, Aghayan, Davit L, Fretland, Asmund A, Sijberden, Jasper, D'Silva, Mizelle, Siow, Tiing Foong, Kato, Yutaro, Lim, Chetana, Nghia, Phan Phuoc, Herman, Paulo, Marino, Marco V, Mazzaferro, Vincenzo, Chiow, Adrian K H, Sucandy, Iswanto, Ivanecz, Arpad, Choi, Sung Hoon, Lee, Jae Hoon, Gastaca, Mikel, Vivarelli, Marco, Giuliante, Felice, Ruzzenente, Andrea, Yong, Chee-Chien, Yin, Mengqui, Chen, Zewei, Fondevila, Constantino, Efanov, Mikhail, Rotellar, Fernando, Choi, Gi-Hong, Campos, Ricardo R, Wang, Xiaoying, Sutcliffe, Robert P, Pratschke, Johann, Lai, Eric, Chong, Charing C, D'Hondt, Mathieu, Monden, Kazuteru, Lopez-Ben, Santiago, Coelho, Fabricio F, Kingham, Thomas Peter, Liu, Rong, Long, Tran Cong Duy, Ferrero, Alessandro, Sandri, Giovanni B Levi, Saleh, Mansour, Cherqui, Daniel, Scatton, Olivier, Soubrane, Olivier, Wakabayashi, Go, Troisi, Roberto I, Cheung, Tan-To, Sugioka, Atsushi, Hilal, Mohammad Abu, Fuks, David, Edwin, Bjørn, and Aldrighetti, Luca
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benchmark ,hepatectomy ,quality assessment ,Settore MED/18 - CHIRURGIA GENERALE ,minimally invasive ,Surgery ,laparoscopic liver resection ,global - Abstract
To establish global benchmark outcomes indicators after laparoscopic liver resections (L-LR).There is limited published data to date on the best achievable outcomes after L-LR.This is a post hoc analysis of a multicenter database of 11,983 patients undergoing L-LR in 45 international centers in 4 continents between 2015 and 2020. Three specific procedures: left lateral sectionectomy (LLS), left hepatectomy (LH), and right hepatectomy (RH) were selected to represent the 3 difficulty levels of L-LR. Fifteen outcome indicators were selected to establish benchmark cutoffs.There were 3519 L-LR (LLS, LH, RH) of which 1258 L-LR (40.6%) cases performed in 34 benchmark expert centers qualified as low-risk benchmark cases. These included 659 LLS (52.4%), 306 LH (24.3%), and 293 RH (23.3%). The benchmark outcomes established for operation time, open conversion rate, blood loss ≥500 mL, blood transfusion rate, postoperative morbidity, major morbidity, and 90-day mortality after LLS, LH, and RH were 209.5, 302, and 426 minutes; 2.1%, 13.4%, and 13.0%; 3.2%, 20%, and 47.1%; 0%, 7.1%, and 10.5%; 11.1%, 20%, and 50%; 0%, 7.1%, and 20%; and 0%, 0%, and 0%, respectively.This study established the first global benchmark outcomes for L-LR in a large-scale international patient cohort. It provides an up-to-date reference regarding the "best achievable" results for L-LR for which centers adopting L-LR can use as a comparison to enable an objective assessment of performance gaps and learning curves.
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- 2022
17. Utility of the Iwate difficulty scoring system for laparoscopic right posterior sectionectomy: do surgical outcomes differ for tumors in segments VI and VII?
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Choi, S. H., Chen, K. -H., Syn, N. L., Cipriani, F., Cheung, T. -T., Chiow, A. K. H., Choi, G. -H., Siow, T. -F., Sucandy, I., Marino, M. V., Gastaca, M., Chong, C. C., Lee, J. H., Ivanecz, A., Mazzaferro, V., Lopez-Ben, S., Fondevila, C., Rotellar, F., Campos, R. R., Efanov, M., Kingham, T. P., Sutcliffe, R. P., Troisi, R. I., Pratschke, J., Wang, X., D'Hondt, M., Yong, C. C., Levi Sandri, G. B., Tang, C. N., Ruzzenente, A., Cherqui, D., Ferrero, A., Wakabayashi, G., Scatton, O., Aghayan, D., Edwin, B., Coelho, F. F., Giuliante, Felice, Liu, R., Sijberden, J., Abu Hilal, M., Sugioka, A., Long, T. C. D., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Han, H. -S., Goh, B. K. P., Kang, I., Jang, J. Y., Chan, C. -Y., D'Silva, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Lai, E., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Kadam, P., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Liu, Q., Lee, K. -F., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Prieto, M., Lim, C., Nghia, P. P., Kojima, M., Kato, Y., Forchino, F., Herman, P., Kruger, J. A. P., Saleh, M., Pascual, F., Dalla Valle, B., Lopez-Lopez, V., Casellas-Robert, M., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mishima, K., Fretland, A. A., Ghotbi, J., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Ardito, Francesco, Vani, S., Wang, H. -P., Giuliante F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9517-8220), Ardito F. (ORCID:0000-0003-1596-2862), Choi, S. H., Chen, K. -H., Syn, N. L., Cipriani, F., Cheung, T. -T., Chiow, A. K. H., Choi, G. -H., Siow, T. -F., Sucandy, I., Marino, M. V., Gastaca, M., Chong, C. C., Lee, J. H., Ivanecz, A., Mazzaferro, V., Lopez-Ben, S., Fondevila, C., Rotellar, F., Campos, R. R., Efanov, M., Kingham, T. P., Sutcliffe, R. P., Troisi, R. I., Pratschke, J., Wang, X., D'Hondt, M., Yong, C. C., Levi Sandri, G. B., Tang, C. N., Ruzzenente, A., Cherqui, D., Ferrero, A., Wakabayashi, G., Scatton, O., Aghayan, D., Edwin, B., Coelho, F. F., Giuliante, Felice, Liu, R., Sijberden, J., Abu Hilal, M., Sugioka, A., Long, T. C. D., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Han, H. -S., Goh, B. K. P., Kang, I., Jang, J. Y., Chan, C. -Y., D'Silva, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Lai, E., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Kadam, P., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Liu, Q., Lee, K. -F., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. -S., Prieto, M., Lim, C., Nghia, P. P., Kojima, M., Kato, Y., Forchino, F., Herman, P., Kruger, J. A. P., Saleh, M., Pascual, F., Dalla Valle, B., Lopez-Lopez, V., Casellas-Robert, M., Giustizieri, U., Citterio, D., Mishima, K., Fretland, A. A., Ghotbi, J., Ettorre, G. M., Colasanti, M., Guzman, Y., Ardito, Francesco, Vani, S., Wang, H. -P., Giuliante F. (ORCID:0000-0001-9517-8220), and Ardito F. (ORCID:0000-0003-1596-2862)
- Abstract
Introduction: The Iwate Score (IS) have not been well-validated for specific procedures, especially for right posterior sectionectomy (RPS). In this study, the utility of the IS was determined for laparoscopic (L)RPS and the effect of tumor location on surgical outcomes was investigated. Methods: Post-hoc analysis of 647 L-RPS performed in 40 international centers of which 596L-RPS cases met the inclusion criteria. Baseline characteristics and perioperative outcomes of patients stratified based on the Iwate score were compared to determine whether a correlation with surgical difficulty existed. A 1:1 Mahalanobis distance matching was utilized to investigate the effect of tumor location on L-RPS outcomes. Results: The patients were stratified into 3 levels of difficulty (31 intermediate, 143 advanced, and 422 expert) based on the IS. When using a stepwise increase of the IS excluding the tumor location score, only Pringle’s maneuver was more frequently used in the higher surgical difficulty level (35.5%, 54.6%, and 65.2%, intermediate, advanced, and expert levels, respectively, Z = 3.34, p = 0.001). Other perioperative results were not associated with a statistical gradation toward higher difficulty level. 80 of 85 patients with a segment VI lesion and 511 patients with a segment VII lesion were matched 1:1. There were no significant differences in the perioperative outcomes of the two groups including open conversion, operating time, blood loss, intraoperative blood transfusion, postoperative stay, major morbidity, and mortality. Conclusion: Among patients undergoing L-RPS, the IS did not significantly correlate with most outcome measures associated with intraoperative difficulty and postoperative outcomes. Similarly, tumor location had no effect on L-RPS outcomes.
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- 2022
18. Transition from laparoscopic to robotic liver surgery: clinical outcomes, learning curve effect, and cost-effectiveness
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D’Hondt, M., primary, Devooght, A., additional, Willems, E., additional, Wicherts, D., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, Provoost, A., additional, Pottel, H., additional, and Verslype, C., additional
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- 2022
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19. A Comparative Study of an Integrated Ultrasonic/Bipolar Sealing Device versus an Articulating Bipolar Sealing Device for Laparoscopic Liver Surgery
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Provoost, A.-L., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, Devooght, A., additional, Pottel, H., additional, and Verslype, C., additional
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- 2022
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20. Is There a Rapid Adaptation in Robotic Liver Surgery for a Liver Surgeon with a Large Experience in Laparoscopic Liver Surgery?
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Devooght, A., primary, D'Hondt, M., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, and Willems, E., additional
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- 2022
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21. Laparoscopic and Robotic Technically Major Liver Resections for Lesions Involving Segment 7: A Single Surgeon Experience of 123 Cases
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Willems, E., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, and Parmentier, I., additional
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- 2022
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22. Comparison of Minimally Invasive Versus Open Pancreatoduodenectomy: Propensity Score-Matched Analysis of a Single Centre’s Experience
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Vandeputte, M., primary, Vansteenkiste, F., additional, Ceelen, W., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, and D'Hondt, M., additional
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- 2022
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23. Clinical added value of MRI to CT in patients scheduled for local therapy of colorectal liver metastases (CAMINO)
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Görgec, B., Hansen, I., Kemmerich, G., Syversveen, T., Abu Hilal, M., Belt, E. J. T., Bisschops, R. H. C., Bollen, T. L., Bosscha, K., Burgmans, M. C., Cappendijk, V., de Boer, M. T., D’Hondt, M., Edwin, B., Gielkens, H., Grünhagen, D. J., Gillardin, P., Gobardhan, P. D., Hartgrink, H. H., Horsthuis, K., Kok, N. F. M., Kint, P. A. M., Kruimer, J. W. H., Leclercq, W. K. G., Lips, D. J., Lutin, B., Maas, M., Marsman, H. A., Morone, M., Pennings, J. P., Peringa, J., te Riele, W. W., Vermaas, M., Wicherts, D., Willemssen, F. E. J. A., Zonderhuis, B. M., Bossuyt, P. M. M., Swijnenburg, R. J., Fretland, A., Verhoef, C., Besselink, M. G., Stoker, J., Bnà, C., de Meyere, C., Draaisma, W. A., Gerhards, M. F., Imani, F., Kuhlmann, K. F. D., Liem, M. S. L., Meyer, Y., Surgery, Radiology & Nuclear Medicine, Graduate School, Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, AMS - Rehabilitation & Development, AMS - Sports, Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism, Epidemiology and Data Science, APH - Methodology, APH - Personalized Medicine, CCA - Imaging and biomarkers, CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life, Radiology and nuclear medicine, Pathology, Obstetrics and gynaecology, CCA - Cancer Treatment and quality of life, AGEM - Re-generation and cancer of the digestive system, and VU University medical center
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Gadolinium DTPA ,Cancer Research ,Colorectal cancer ,Gadoxetic acid ,Contrast Media ,Diagnostic accuracy ,Multimodal Imaging ,Liver MRI ,Study Protocol ,Liver metastases ,Prospective Studies ,FDG-PET ,RC254-282 ,OUTCOMES ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Minimal clinically important difference ,Liver Neoplasms ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Oncology ,SURVIVAL ,Radiology ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,STRATEGIES ,HEPATIC RESECTION ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,CANCER PATIENTS ,RADIOFREQUENCY ABLATION ,Liver surgery ,RECURRENCE ,Protocol (science) ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,Abdominal CT scan ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Diffusion weighted imaging ,PERFORMANCE ,medicine.disease ,Thermal ablation ,Colorectal liver metastases ,CONTRAST-ENHANCED CT ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
Background Abdominal computed tomography (CT) is the standard imaging method for patients with suspected colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) in the diagnostic workup for surgery or thermal ablation. Diffusion-weighted and gadoxetic-acid-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the liver is increasingly used to improve the detection rate and characterization of liver lesions. MRI is superior in detection and characterization of CRLM as compared to CT. However, it is unknown how MRI actually impacts patient management. The primary aim of the CAMINO study is to evaluate whether MRI has sufficient clinical added value to be routinely added to CT in the staging of CRLM. The secondary objective is to identify subgroups who benefit the most from additional MRI. Methods In this international multicentre prospective incremental diagnostic accuracy study, 298 patients with primary or recurrent CRLM scheduled for curative liver resection or thermal ablation based on CT staging will be enrolled from 17 centres across the Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, and Italy. All study participants will undergo CT and diffusion-weighted and gadoxetic-acid enhanced MRI prior to local therapy. The local multidisciplinary team will provide two local therapy plans: first, based on CT-staging and second, based on both CT and MRI. The primary outcome measure is the proportion of clinically significant CRLM (CS-CRLM) detected by MRI not visible on CT. CS-CRLM are defined as liver lesions leading to a change in local therapeutical management. If MRI detects new CRLM in segments which would have been resected in the original operative plan, these are not considered CS-CRLM. It is hypothesized that MRI will lead to the detection of CS-CRLM in ≥10% of patients which is considered the minimal clinically important difference. Furthermore, a prediction model will be developed using multivariable logistic regression modelling to evaluate the predictive value of patient, tumor and procedural variables on finding CS-CRLM on MRI. Discussion The CAMINO study will clarify the clinical added value of MRI to CT in patients with CRLM scheduled for local therapy. This study will provide the evidence required for the implementation of additional MRI in the routine work-up of patients with primary and recurrent CRLM for local therapy. Trial registration The CAMINO study was registered in the Netherlands National Trial Register under number NL8039 on September 20th 2019.
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- 2021
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24. Transition from laparoscopic to robotic liver surgery: clinical outcomes, learning curve effect, and cost-effectiveness.
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D'Hondt, M., Devooght, A., Willems, E., Wicherts, D., De Meyere, C., Parmentier, I., Provoost, A., Pottel, H., and Verslype, C.
- Abstract
The reproducibility of the implementation of robotic liver surgery (RLS) is still debated. The aim of the present study is to evaluate short-term outcomes and cost differences during the implementation of RLS, performed by an early adopter in laparoscopic liver surgery (LLS). Patients undergoing RLS between February 2020 and May 2021 were included. Short-term outcomes of the robotic group (RG) were compared to the "Initial Phase" group (IP) of 120 LLS cases and the 120 most recent laparoscopic cases or "Mastery Phase" group (MP). A cost analysis per procedure for the three groups was performed. Seventy-one patients underwent RLS during the study period. Median operative time in the RG was comparable to the IP, but significantly shorter in the MP (140 vs 138 vs 120 min, p < 0.001). Median intraoperative blood loss in the RG was lower than in both laparoscopic groups (40 ml [20–90 ml] vs 150 ml [50–250 ml] vs 80 ml [30–150 ml], p < 0.001). Median hospital stay in the RG was significantly shorter than the IP group (p < 0.001). There were no significant differences in postoperative complication, conversion, or readmission rates. Procedural cost analysis was in favor of robotic surgery (€5008) compared to the IP (€ 6913) and the MP (€6099). Surgeons with sufficient experience in LLS can rapidly overcome the learning curve for RLS. In our experience, the short-term outcomes of the implementation phase of RLS are similar to the mastery phase of LLS. The total average cost per procedure is lower for RLS compared to LLS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. A Comparative Study of an Integrated Ultrasonic/Bipolar Sealing Device versus an Articulating Bipolar Sealing Device for Laparoscopic Liver Surgery
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Provoost, A.-L., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, Pottel, H., additional, and Verslype, C., additional
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- 2021
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26. Is there a Rapid Adaptation in Robotic Liver Surgery for a Liver Surgeon with a Large Experience in Laparoscopic Liver Surgery?
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Devooght, A., additional, Vandeputte, M., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, and Parmentier, I., additional
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- 2021
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27. Predicting intra-operative outcomes in laparoscopic liver surgery using validated difficulty scores. Statistical analysis in 320 laparoscopic liver resections
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Willems, E., additional, Vansteenbrugge, L., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, Verslype, C., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, Vansteenkiste, F., additional, Besselink, M., additional, and Pottel, H., additional
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- 2020
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28. Learning curve in laparoscopic liver surgery: A single-surgeon risk-adjusted CUSUM analysis for postoperative complications of the first 320 laparoscopic liver resections
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Willems, E., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, Verslype, C., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, Vansteenkiste, F., additional, Besselink, M., additional, Pottel, H., additional, and Vansteenbrugge, L., additional
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- 2020
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29. One stage laparoscopic parenchymal sparing liver resection for bilobar colorectal liver metatases: Safety, recurrence patterns and oncologic outcomes
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Parmentier, I., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, Besselink, M., additional, Vansteenkiste, F., additional, Pironet, Z., additional, Pottel, H., additional, and Verslype, C., additional
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- 2020
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30. The laparoscopic approach for two stage hepatectomy: A single center five year experience
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Taillieu, E., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, and Parmentier, I., additional
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- 2020
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31. Laparoscopic liver resection for liver tumors in proximity to major vasculature: a single-center comparative study
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Willems, E., primary, D'Hondt, M., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, Pottel, H., additional, Verslype, C., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, Vansteenkiste, F., additional, and Besselink, M., additional
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- 2018
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32. Short term and oncologic outcomes of the first 250 laparoscopic liver resections performed by a laparoscopically trained liver surgeon
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Willems, E., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, Pottel, H., additional, Verslype, C., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, Vansteenkiste, F., additional, and Besselink, M., additional
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- 2018
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33. Pure laparoscopic liver resections in the posterosuperior segments in semiprone position: a single surgeon experience of 111 consecutive cases
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Willems, E., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, Pottel, H., additional, Verslype, C., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, and Vansteenkiste, F., additional
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- 2018
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34. Laparoscopic liver resection for tumors in proximity to major vasculature and the impact of neo-adjuvant systemic therapy
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D'Hondt, M., primary, Willems, E., additional, Parmentier, I., additional, Pottel, H., additional, Verslype, C., additional, De Meyere, C., additional, Vansteenkiste, F., additional, and Besselink, M., additional
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- 2018
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35. P-125 - Laparoscopic liver resection for tumors in proximity to major vasculature and the impact of neo-adjuvant systemic therapy
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D'Hondt, M., Willems, E., Parmentier, I., Pottel, H., Verslype, C., De Meyere, C., Vansteenkiste, F., and Besselink, M.
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- 2018
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36. Resurgence of a lethal drug: paramethoxyamphetamine deaths in Belgium
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Stefan Voorspoels, Coucke V, Covaci A, Maervoet J, Schepens P, De Meyere C, and Jacobs W
37. Laparoscopic versus open parenchymal preserving liver resections posterosuperior segments (ORANGE segments): a multicentre, patient-blinded, randomised controlled trial.
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Sijberden, J., Kuemmerli, C., Ratti, F., D'Hondt, M., Sutcliffe, R.P., Troisi, R.I., Efanov, M., Fichtinger, R.S., Díaz-Nieto, R., Ettorre, G.M., Sheen, A.J., Menon, K., Besselink, M.G., Soonawalla, Z., Aroori, S., de Meyere, C., Marudanayagam, R., Eminton, Z., Brandts, L., and Ferrari, C.
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- 2024
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38. Factors associated with and impact of open conversion on the outcomes of minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomies: An international multicenter study
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Hao Ping Wang, Chee Chien Yong, Andrew G.R. Wu, Daniel Cherqui, Roberto I. Troisi, Federica Cipriani, Davit Aghayan, Marco V. Marino, Andrea Belli, Adrian K.H. Chiow, Iswanto Sucandy, Arpad Ivanecz, Marco Vivarelli, Fabrizio Di Benedetto, Sung-Hoon Choi, Jae Hoon Lee, James O. Park, Mikel Gastaca, Constantino Fondevila, Mikhail Efanov, Fernando Rotellar, Gi-Hong Choi, Ricardo Robles Campos, Xiaoying Wang, Robert P. Sutcliffe, Johann Pratschke, Chung Ngai Tang, Charing C. Chong, Mathieu D’Hondt, Andrea Ruzzenente, Paolo Herman, T. Peter Kingham, Olivier Scatton, Rong Liu, Alessandro Ferrero, Giovanni Battista Levi Sandri, Olivier Soubrane, Alejandro Mejia, Santiago Lopez-Ben, Jasper Sijberden, Kazuteru Monden, Go Wakabayashi, Atsushi Sugioka, Tan-To Cheung, Tran Cong Duy Long, Bjorn Edwin, Ho-Seong Han, David Fuks, Luca Aldrighetti, Mohamed Abu Hilal, Brian K.P. Goh, Chung-Yip Chan, Nicholas Syn, Mikel Prieto, Henri Schotte, Celine De Meyere, Felix Krenzien, Moritz Schmelzle, Kit-Fai Lee, Diana Salimgereeva, Ruslan Alikhanov, Lip Seng Lee, Jae Young Jang, Kevin P. Labadie, Masayuki Kojima, Yutaro Kato, Asmund Avdem Fretland, Jacob Ghotbi, Fabricio Ferreira Coelho, Jaime Arthur Pirola Kruger, Victor Lopez-Lopez, Paolo Magistri, Bernardo Dalla Valle, Margarida Casellas I Robert, Kohei Mishima, Giuseppe Maria Ettorre, Federico Mocchegiani, Prashant Kadam, Franco Pascual, Mansour Saleh, Alessandro Mazzotta, Roberto Montalti, Mariano Giglio, Boram Lee, Mizelle D’Silva, Phan Phuoc Nghia, Chetana Lim, Qu Liu, Eric C. Lai, Wang, Hao Ping, Yong, Chee Chien, Wu, Andrew G R, Cherqui, Daniel, Troisi, Roberto I, Cipriani, Federica, Aghayan, Davit, Marino, Marco V, Belli, Andrea, Chiow, Adrian K H, Sucandy, Iswanto, Ivanecz, Arpad, Vivarelli, Marco, Di Benedetto, Fabrizio, Choi, Sung-Hoon, Lee, Jae Hoon, Park, James O, Gastaca, Mikel, Fondevila, Constantino, Efanov, Mikhail, Rotellar, Fernando, Choi, Gi-Hong, Campos, Ricardo Roble, Wang, Xiaoying, Sutcliffe, Robert P, Pratschke, Johann, Tang, Chung Ngai, Chong, Charing C, D'Hondt, Mathieu, Ruzzenente, Andrea, Herman, Paolo, Kingham, T Peter, Scatton, Olivier, Liu, Rong, Ferrero, Alessandro, Levi Sandri, Giovanni Battista, Soubrane, Olivier, Mejia, Alejandro, Lopez-Ben, Santiago, Sijberden, Jasper, Monden, Kazuteru, Wakabayashi, Go, Sugioka, Atsushi, Cheung, Tan-To, Long, Tran Cong Duy, Edwin, Bjorn, Han, Ho-Seong, Fuks, David, Aldrighetti, Luca, Abu Hilal, Mohamed, Goh, Brian K P, Wang, H. P., Yong, C. C., Wu, A. G. R., Cherqui, D., Troisi, R. I., Cipriani, F., Aghayan, D., Marino, M. V., Belli, A., Chiow, A. K. H., Sucandy, I., Ivanecz, A., Vivarelli, M., Di Benedetto, F., Choi, S. -H., Lee, J. H., Park, J. O., Gastaca, M., Fondevila, C., Efanov, M., Rotellar, F., Choi, G. -H., Campos, R. R., Wang, X., Sutcliffe, R. P., Pratschke, J., Tang, C. N., Chong, C. C., D'Hondt, M., Ruzzenente, A., Herman, P., Kingham, T. P., Scatton, O., Liu, R., Ferrero, A., Levi Sandri, G. B., Soubrane, O., Mejia, A., Lopez-Ben, S., Sijberden, J., Monden, K., Wakabayashi, G., Sugioka, A., Cheung, T. -T., Long, T. C. D., Edwin, B., Han, H. -S., Fuks, D., Aldrighetti, L., Abu Hilal, M., Goh, B. K. P., Chan, C. -Y., Syn, N., Prieto, M., Schotte, H., De Meyere, C., Krenzien, F., Schmelzle, M., Lee, K. -F., Salimgereeva, D., Alikhanov, R., Lee, L. S., Jang, J. Y., Labadie, K. P., Kojima, M., Kato, Y., Fretland, A. A., Ghotbi, J., Coelho, F. F., Pirola Kruger, J. A., Lopez-Lopez, V., Magistri, P., Valle, B. D., Casellas I Robert, M., Mishima, K., Ettorre, G. M., Mocchegiani, F., Kadam, P., Pascual, F., Saleh, M., Mazzotta, A., Montalti, R., Giglio, M., Lee, B., D'Silva, M., Nghia, P. P., Lim, C., Liu, Q., Lai, E. C., Graduate School, Surgery, and CCA - Cancer Treatment and Quality of Life
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Male ,Operative Time ,Length of Stay ,Conversion to Open Surgery ,Hepatectomy ,Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Postoperative Complications ,Retrospective Studies ,Treatment Outcome ,Hypertension, Portal ,Laparoscopy ,Neoplasms ,Hypertension ,Surgery ,Portal - Abstract
Background: Despite the rapid advances that minimally invasive liver resection has gained in recent decades, open conversion is still inevitable in some circumstances. In this study, we aimed to determine the risk factors for open conversion after minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomy, and its impact on perioperative outcomes. Methods: This is a post hoc analysis of 2,445 of 2,678 patients who underwent minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomy at 45 international centers between 2004 and 2020. Factors related to open conversion were analyzed via univariate and multivariate analyses. One-to-one propensity score matching was used to analyze outcomes after open conversion versus non-converted cases. Results: The open conversion rate was 69/2,445 (2.8%). On multivariate analyses, male gender (3.6% vs 1.8%, P = .011), presence of clinically significant portal hypertension (6.1% vs 2.6%, P = .009), and larger tumor size (50 mm vs 32 mm, P < .001) were identified as independent factors associated with open conversion. The most common reason for conversion was bleeding in 27/69 (39.1%) of cases. After propensity score matching (65 open conversion vs 65 completed via minimally invasive liver resection), the open conversion group was associated with increased operation time, blood transfusion rate, blood loss, and postoperative stay compared with cases completed via the minimally invasive approach. Conclusion: Male sex, portal hypertension, and larger tumor size were predictive factors of open conversion after minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomy. Open conversion was associated with inferior perioperative outcomes compared with non-converted cases.
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- 2022
39. Complete hepatic caudate lobe resection: is robotic approach safe? Report from experienced centers.
- Author
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Donisi G, Doria E, Bosch G, Burdio F, De Meyere C, D'Hondt M, Di Benedetto F, Filippo R, Libia A, Lopez-Lopez V, Magistri P, Memeo R, Sanchez-Velazquez P, Spampinato MG, Robles-Campos R, Sucandy I, and Ielpo B
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- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Treatment Outcome, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Liver surgery, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Blood Loss, Surgical statistics & numerical data, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Hepatectomy methods, Hepatectomy adverse effects, Feasibility Studies, Operative Time, Liver Neoplasms surgery, Liver Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Minimally invasive liver surgery has become widely accepted as a safe and effective approach, especially with experienced surgeons. Robotic hepatectomy may offer significant benefits in challenging procedures like caudate lobe resection. The caudate lobe's intricate anatomy and deep-seated location make its resection particularly challenging, with limited reports on minimally invasive techniques. The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility and safety of robotic isolated complete caudectomy and to provide a detailed description of the different technical approaches available. This retrospective multicenter study was conducted across eight experienced hepatobiliary robotic surgery centers between June 2020 and March 2024. All patients who underwent elective RICC during this period were included. Data were prospectively collected and retrospectively analyzed, focusing on demographics, intraoperative variables, postoperative outcomes, and histopathological results. The primary outcome was the feasibility and safety of the robotic approach. The study included 42 patients. The median (IQR) operative time was 180 (125-245) min, with a median estimated blood loss of 30 (0-100) ml. There were no conversions to open surgery and only one severe complication (Clavien-Dindo ≥ 3) occurred. No postoperative mortality was observed, and all resections for malignant lesions achieved R0 margins. The median time to flatus was 1 (1-1) day, time to solid diet was 1 (1-2) days, and the median length of stay was 3 (2-4) days. RICC is a feasible and safe procedure, demonstrating significant benefits in operative efficiency and patient recovery. However, further research with larger, prospective multicenter studies is necessary to confirm these findings and assess long-term outcomes., Competing Interests: Declarations. Conflict of interest: The authors declare no competing interests. Ethical approval: The study was conducted under the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and local regulatory requirements. Approval was obtained from the Local Ethical Committee of the Coordinating Centre (Hospital del Mar Hospital, Barcelona). Informed consent: Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag London Ltd., part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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40. Is prolonged operative time associated with postoperative complications in liver surgery? An international multicentre cohort study of 5424 patients.
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Kuemmerli C, Sijberden JP, Cipriani F, Osei-Bordom D, Aghayan D, Lanari J, de Meyere C, Cacciaguerra AB, Rotellar F, Fuks D, Liu R, Besselink MG, Zimmitti G, Ruzzenente A, di Benedetto F, Succandy I, Efanov M, Memeo R, Jovine E, Vrochides D, Dagher I, Croner R, Lopez-Ben S, Geller D, Ahmad J, Gallagher T, White S, Alseidi A, Goh BKP, Sparrelid E, Ratti F, Marudanayagam R, Fretland ÅA, Vivarelli M, D'Hondt M, Cillo U, Edwin B, Sutcliffe RP, Aldrighetti LA, and Hilal MA
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Aged, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Adult, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Hepatectomy adverse effects, Hepatectomy methods, Operative Time, Laparoscopy adverse effects, Laparoscopy methods
- Abstract
Background: The relation between operative time and postoperative complications in liver surgery is unclear. The aim of this study is to assess the impact of operative time on the development of postoperative complications in patients who underwent minimally invasive or open liver resections of various anatomical extent and technical difficulty levels., Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, patients that underwent a right hemihepatectomy (RH), technically major resection (anatomically minor resection in segment 1, 4a, 7 or 8; TMR) or left lateral sectionectomy (LLS) between 2000 and 2022 were extracted from a multicenter database comprising the prospectively maintained databases of 31 centers in 13 countries. Minimally invasive procedures performed during the learning curve were omitted. Logistic regression models, performed separately for 9 different groups based on stratification by procedure type and allocated surgical approach, were used to assess the association between the fourth quartile of operative time (25% of patients with the longest operative time) and postoperative complications., Results: Overall, 5424 patients were included: 1351 underwent RH (865 open, 373 laparoscopic and 113 robotic), 2821 TMR (1398 open, 1225 laparoscopic and 198 robotic), and 1252 LLS (241 open, 822 laparoscopic and 189 robotic). After adjusting for potential confounders (age, BMI, gender, ASA grade, previous abdominal surgery, disease type and extent, blood loss, Pringle, intraoperative transfusions and incidents), the fourth quartile of operative time, compared to the first three quartiles, was associated with an increased risk of postoperative complications after open, laparoscopic and robotic TMR (aOR 1.35, p = 0.031; aOR 1.74, p = 0.001 and aOR 3.11, p = 0.014, respectively), laparoscopic and robotic RH (aOR 1.98, p = 0.018 and aOR 3.28, p = 0.055, respectively) and solely laparoscopic LLS (aOR 1.69, p = 0.019)., Conclusions: A prolonged operative time is associated with an increased risk of postoperative complications, although it remains to be defined if this is a causal relationship., Competing Interests: Declarations. Disclosures: The authors Christoph Kuemmerli, Jasper P. Sijberden, Federica Cipriani Daniel Osei-Bordom, Davit Aghayan, Jacopo Lanari, Celine de Meyere, Andrea Benedetti Cacciaguerra, Fernando Rotellar, David Fuks, Rong Liu, Marc G. Besselink, Giuseppe Zimmitti, Andrea Ruzzenente, Fabrizio di Benedetto, Iswanto Succandy, Mikhail Efanov, Riccardo Memeo, Elio Jovine, Dionisios Vrochides, Ibrahim Dagher, Roland Croner, Santi Lopez-Ben, David Geller, Jawad Ahmad, Tom Gallagher, Steven White, Adnan Alseidi, Brian K.P. Goh, Ernesto Sparrelid, Francesca Ratti, Ravi Marudanayagam, Åsmund Avdem Fretland, Marco Vivarelli, Mathieu D’Hondt, Umberto Cillo, Bjørn Edwin, Robert P. Sutcliffe, Luca A. Aldrighetti, Mohammed Abu Hilal have no conflicts of interest or financial ties to disclose., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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41. Robotic liver parenchymal transection using the SynchroSeal.
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Pilz da Cunha G, De Meyere C, D'Hondt M, and Swijnenburg RJ
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Electrosurgery methods, Electrosurgery instrumentation, Prospective Studies, Blood Loss, Surgical statistics & numerical data, Equipment Design, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Treatment Outcome, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Hepatectomy methods
- Abstract
Background: There is much heterogeneity in the instrumentation used for parenchymal transection in minimally invasive liver surgery. Instruments specifically designed for robotic parenchymal transection of the liver are lacking. We aim to gain insight into the safety and effectiveness of the SynchroSeal (Intuitive Surgical, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA), a novel bipolar electrosurgical device, in the context of liver surgery., Methods: The present study is a post-hoc analysis of prospectively collected data from patients undergoing robotic liver resection (RLR) using the SynchroSeal in two high-volume centres. The results of the SynchroSeal were compared with that of the previous generation bipolar-sealer; Vessel Sealer Extend (Intuitive Surgical, Inc., Sunnyvale, CA) using propensity score matching, after excluding the first 25 Vessel Sealer procedures per center., Results: During the study period (February 2020-March 2023), 155 RLRs meeting the eligibility criteria were performed with the SynchroSeal (after implementation in June 2021) and 145 RLRs with the Vessel Sealer. Excellent outcomes were achieved when performing parenchymal transection with the SynchroSeal; low conversion rate (n = 1, 0.6%), small amounts of intraoperative blood loss (median 40 mL [IQR 10-100]), short hospital stays (median 3 days [IQR 2-4]), and adequate overall morbidity (19.4%) as well as severe morbidity (11.0%). In a matched comparison (n = 94 vs n = 94), the SynchroSeal was associated with less intraoperative blood loss (48 mL [IQR 10-143] vs 95 mL [IQR 30-200], p = 0.032) compared to the Vessel Sealer. Other perioperative outcomes were similar between the devices., Conclusion: The SynchroSeal is a safe and effective device for robotic liver parenchymal transection., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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42. Laparoscopic versus open right hepatectomy for colorectal liver metastases after portal vein embolization: international multicentre study.
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Bozkurt E, Sijberden JP, Langella S, Cipriani F, Collado-Roura F, Morrison-Jones V, Görgec B, Zozaya G, Lanari J, Aghayan D, De Meyere C, Fuks D, Zimmiti G, Ielpo B, Efanov M, Sutcliffe RP, Russolillo N, Gomez-Artacho M, Ratti F, D'Hondt M, Edwin B, Cillo U, Rotellar F, Besselink MG, Primrose JN, Lopez-Ben S, Aldrighetti LA, Ferrero A, and Abu Hilal M
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Propensity Score, Treatment Outcome, Feasibility Studies, Length of Stay, Hepatectomy methods, Liver Neoplasms secondary, Liver Neoplasms surgery, Colorectal Neoplasms pathology, Laparoscopy methods, Portal Vein surgery, Embolization, Therapeutic methods
- Abstract
Background: Laparoscopic liver surgery is increasingly used for more challenging procedures. The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility and oncological safety of laparoscopic right hepatectomy for colorectal liver metastases after portal vein embolization., Methods: This was an international retrospective multicentre study of patients with colorectal liver metastases who underwent open or laparoscopic right and extended right hepatectomy after portal vein embolization between 2004 and 2020. The perioperative and oncological outcomes for patients who underwent laparoscopic and open approaches were compared using propensity score matching., Results: Of 338 patients, 84 patients underwent a laparoscopic procedure and 254 patients underwent an open procedure. Patients in the laparoscopic group less often underwent extended right hepatectomy (18% versus 34.6% (P = 0.004)), procedures in the setting of a two-stage hepatectomy (42% versus 65% (P < 0.001)), and major concurrent procedures (4% versus 16.1% (P = 0.003)). After propensity score matching, 78 patients remained in each group. The laparoscopic approach was associated with longer operating and Pringle times (330 versus 258.5 min (P < 0.001) and 65 versus 30 min (P = 0.001) respectively) and a shorter length of stay (7 versus 8 days (P = 0.011)). The R0 resection rate was not different (71% for the laparoscopic approach versus 60% for the open approach (P = 0.230)). The median disease-free survival was 12 (95% c.i. 10 to 20) months for the laparoscopic approach versus 20 (95% c.i. 13 to 31) months for the open approach (P = 0.145). The median overall survival was 28 (95% c.i. 22 to 48) months for the laparoscopic approach versus 42 (95% c.i. 35 to 52) months for the open approach (P = 0.614)., Conclusion: The advantages of a laparoscopic over an open approach for (extended) right hepatectomy for colorectal liver metastases after portal vein embolization are limited., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Foundation Ltd.)
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- 2024
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43. Robot-assisted versus laparoscopic pancreatoduodenectomy: a pan-European multicenter propensity-matched study.
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Emmen AMLH, Zwart MJW, Khatkov IE, Boggi U, Groot Koerkamp B, Busch OR, Saint-Marc O, Dokmak S, Molenaar IQ, D'Hondt M, Ramera M, Keck T, Ferrari G, Luyer MDP, Moraldi L, Ielpo B, Wittel U, Souche FR, Hackert T, Lips D, Can MF, Bosscha K, Fara R, Festen S, van Dieren S, Coratti A, De Hingh I, Mazzola M, Wellner U, De Meyere C, van Santvoort HC, Aussilhou B, Ibenkhayat A, de Wilde RF, Kauffmann EF, Tyutyunnik P, Besselink MG, and Abu Hilal M
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Europe epidemiology, Aged, Hospital Mortality, Pancreatic Neoplasms surgery, Pancreatic Neoplasms mortality, Treatment Outcome, Pancreaticoduodenectomy methods, Pancreaticoduodenectomy adverse effects, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Laparoscopy methods, Laparoscopy adverse effects, Propensity Score, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology
- Abstract
Background: The use of robot-assisted and laparoscopic pancreatoduodenectomy is increasing, yet large adjusted analyses that can be generalized internationally are lacking. This study aimed to compare outcomes after robot-assisted pancreatoduodenectomy and laparoscopic pancreatoduodenectomy in a pan-European cohort., Methods: An international multicenter retrospective study including patients after robot-assisted pancreatoduodenectomy and laparoscopic pancreatoduodenectomy from 50 centers in 12 European countries (2009-2020). Propensity score matching was performed in a 1:1 ratio. The primary outcome was major morbidity (Clavien-Dindo ≥III)., Results: Among 2,082 patients undergoing minimally invasive pancreatoduodenectomy, 1,006 underwent robot-assisted pancreatoduodenectomy and 1,076 laparoscopic pancreatoduodenectomy. After matching 812 versus 812 patients, the rates of major morbidity (31.9% vs 29.6%; P = .347) and 30-day/in-hospital mortality (4.3% vs 4.6%; P = .904) did not differ significantly between robot-assisted pancreatoduodenectomy and laparoscopic pancreatoduodenectomy, respectively. Robot-assisted pancreatoduodenectomy was associated with a lower conversion rate (6.7% vs 18.0%; P < .001) and higher lymph node retrieval (16 vs 14; P = .003). Laparoscopic pancreatoduodenectomy was associated with shorter operation time (446 minutes versus 400 minutes; P < .001), and lower rates of postoperative pancreatic fistula grade B/C (19.0% vs 11.7%; P < .001), delayed gastric emptying grade B/C (21.4% vs 7.4%; P < .001), and a higher R0-resection rate (73.2% vs 84.4%; P < .001)., Conclusion: This European multicenter study found no differences in overall major morbidity and 30-day/in-hospital mortality after robot-assisted pancreatoduodenectomy compared with laparoscopic pancreatoduodenectomy. Further, laparoscopic pancreatoduodenectomy was associated with a lower rate of postoperative pancreatic fistula, delayed gastric emptying, wound infection, shorter length of stay, and a higher R0 resection rate than robot-assisted pancreatoduodenectomy. In contrast, robot-assisted pancreatoduodenectomy was associated with a lower conversion rate and a higher number of retrieved lymph nodes as compared with laparoscopic pancreatoduodenectomy., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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44. Global benchmarks in primary robotic bariatric surgery redefine quality standards for Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy.
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Giudicelli G, Gero D, Romulo L, Chirumamilla V, Iranmanesh P, Owen CK, Bauerle W, Garcia A, Lucas L, Mehdorn AS, Pandey D, Almuttawa A, Cabral F, Tiwari A, Lambert V, Pascotto B, De Meyere C, Yahyaoui M, Haist T, Scheffel O, Robert M, Nuytens F, Azagra S, Kow L, Prasad A, Vaz C, Vix M, Bindal V, Beckmann JH, Soussi D, Vilallonga R, El Chaar M, Wilson EB, Ahmad A, Teixeira A, Hagen ME, Toso C, Clavien PA, Puhan M, Bueter M, and Jung MK
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Aged, Adult, Male, Benchmarking, Retrospective Studies, Gastrectomy adverse effects, Treatment Outcome, Gastric Bypass adverse effects, Obesity, Morbid surgery, Robotic Surgical Procedures, Bariatric Surgery adverse effects, Laparoscopy adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Whether the benefits of the robotic platform in bariatric surgery translate into superior surgical outcomes remains unclear. The aim of this retrospective study was to establish the 'best possible' outcomes for robotic bariatric surgery and compare them with the established laparoscopic benchmarks., Methods: Benchmark cut-offs were established for consecutive primary robotic bariatric surgery patients of 17 centres across four continents (13 expert centres and 4 learning phase centres) using the 75th percentile of the median outcome values until 90 days after surgery. The benchmark patients had no previous laparotomy, diabetes, sleep apnoea, cardiopathy, renal insufficiency, inflammatory bowel disease, immunosuppression, history of thromboembolic events, BMI greater than 50 kg/m2, or age greater than 65 years., Results: A total of 9097 patients were included, who were mainly female (75.5%) and who had a mean(s.d.) age of 44.7(11.5) years and a mean(s.d.) baseline BMI of 44.6(7.7) kg/m2. In expert centres, 13.74% of the 3020 patients who underwent primary robotic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and 5.9% of the 4078 patients who underwent primary robotic sleeve gastrectomy presented with greater than or equal to one complication within 90 postoperative days. No patient died and 1.1% of patients had adverse events related to the robotic platform. When compared with laparoscopic benchmarks, robotic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass had lower benchmark cut-offs for hospital stay, postoperative bleeding, and marginal ulceration, but the duration of the operation was 42 min longer. For most surgical outcomes, robotic sleeve gastrectomy outperformed laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy with a comparable duration of the operation. In robotic learning phase centres, outcomes were within the established benchmarks only for low-risk robotic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass., Conclusion: The newly established benchmarks suggest that robotic bariatric surgery may enhance surgical safety compared with laparoscopic bariatric surgery; however, the duration of the operation for robotic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass is longer., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd.)
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- 2024
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45. Robotic Versus Laparoscopic Hepatectomy: A Single Surgeon Experience of 629 Consecutive Minimally Invasive Liver Resections.
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Winckelmans T, Wicherts DA, Parmentier I, De Meyere C, Verslype C, and D'Hondt M
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- Humans, Hepatectomy adverse effects, Cohort Studies, Retrospective Studies, Liver, Postoperative Complications etiology, Length of Stay, Treatment Outcome, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Liver Neoplasms secondary, Laparoscopy adverse effects, Surgeons
- Abstract
Background: Robotic surgery has the potential to broaden the indications for minimally invasive liver surgery owing to its technical advantages. This paper compares our experience with robotic liver surgery (RLS) with conventional laparoscopic liver surgery (LLS)., Methods: All consecutive liver resections between October 2011 and October 2022 were selected from our prospective database to be included in this cohort study. Patients who underwent RLS were compared with a LLS group for operative and postoperative outcomes., Results: In total, 629 patients were selected from our database, including 177 patients who underwent a RLS and 452 patients who had LLS. Colorectal liver metastasis was the main indication for surgery in both groups. With the introduction of RLS, the percentage of open resections decreased significantly (32.6% from 2011 to 2020 vs. 11.5% from 2020 onward, P < 0.001). In the robotic group, redo liver surgery was more frequent (24.3% vs. 16.8%, P = 0.031) and the Southampton difficulty score was higher (4 [IQR 4 to 7] vs. 4 [IQR 3 to 6], P = 0.02). Median blood loss was lower (30 vs. 100 ml, P < 0.001), and postoperative length of stay (LOS) was shorter in the robotic group (median 3 vs. 4 days, P < 0.001). There was no significant difference in postoperative complications. Cost related to the used instruments and LOS was significantly lower in the RLS group (median €1483 vs. €1796, P < 0.001 and €1218 vs. €1624, P < 0.001, respectively), while cost related to operative time was higher (median €2755 vs. €2470, P < 0.001)., Conclusions: RLS may allow for a higher percentage of liver resections to be completed in a minimally invasive way with lower blood loss and a shorter LOS., (© 2023. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to Société Internationale de Chirurgie.)
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- 2023
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46. Laparoscopic versus open liver resection for intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma: a multicenter propensity score-matched study.
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Sahakyan MA, Aghayan DL, Edwin B, Alikhanov R, Britskaia N, Brudvik KW, D'Hondt M, De Meyere C, Efanov M, Fretland ÅA, Hoff R, Ismail W, Ivanecz A, Kazaryan AM, Lassen K, Magdalenić T, Parmentier I, Røsok BI, Villanger O, and Yaqub S
- Subjects
- Humans, Treatment Outcome, Propensity Score, Retrospective Studies, Hepatectomy methods, Liver, Bile Ducts, Intrahepatic, Length of Stay, Laparoscopy methods, Cholangiocarcinoma surgery, Liver Neoplasms, Bile Duct Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Background: The role of laparoscopy in the treatment of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) remains unclear. This multicenter study examined the outcomes of laparoscopic liver resection for ICC., Methods: Patients with ICC who had undergone laparoscopic or open liver resection between 2012 and 2019 at four European expert centers were included in the study. Laparoscopic and open approaches were compared in terms of surgical and oncological outcomes. Propensity score matching was used for minimizing treatment selection bias and adjusting for confounders (age, ASA grade, tumor size, location, number of tumors and underlying liver disease)., Results: Of 136 patients, 50 (36.7%) underwent laparoscopic resection, whereas 86 (63.3%) had open surgery. Median tumor size was larger (73.6 vs 55.1 mm, p = 0.01) and the incidence of bi-lobar tumors was higher (36.6 vs 6%, p < 0.01) in patients undergoing open surgery. After propensity score matching baseline characteristics were comparable although open surgery was associated with a larger fraction of major liver resections (74 vs 38%, p < 0.01), lymphadenectomy (60 vs 20%, p < 0.01) and longer operative time (294 vs 209 min, p < 0.01). Tumor characteristics were similar. Laparoscopic resection resulted in less complications (30 vs 52%, p = 0.025), fewer reoperations (4 vs 16%, p = 0.046) and shorter hospital stay (5 vs 8 days, p < 0.01). No differences were found in terms of recurrence, recurrence-free and overall survival., Conclusion: Laparoscopic resection seems to be associated with improved short-term and with similar long-term outcomes compared with open surgery in patients with ICC. However, possible selection criteria for laparoscopic surgery are yet to be defined.
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- 2023
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47. Combined Ablation and Resection for Colorectal Liver Metastases in the Minimally Invasive Surgical Era.
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Vandeputte M, Saveyn T, Lutin B, De Meyere C, Parmentier I, and D'Hondt M
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Hepatectomy methods, Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures methods, Treatment Outcome, Colorectal Neoplasms surgery, Colorectal Neoplasms pathology, Liver Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: Thermal ablation is an accepted treatment modality for small and central liver tumors. In extensive colorectal liver metastatic disease (CRLM), hepatectomy can be combined with ablation, resulting in a parenchymal-sparing strategy. This may increase salvageability rates in case of recurrence., Methods: All patients with advanced CRLM that underwent combined ablation and resection between April 2012 and April 2021, were retrospectively analyzed from a prospectively maintained database. Primary endpoints include postoperative 30-day morbidity and ablation-site recurrence (ASR). The surgical approaches were compared. Ablated lesions were screened for ASR on postoperative follow-up imaging., Results: Of 54 patients that underwent combined ablation and resection, 32 (59.3%) were performed through a minimally invasive approach. Eleven (20.4%) were minor resections, 32 (59.3%) were technically major and 11 (20.4%) were anatomically major resections. Twelve complications occurred (22.2%), among which 2 (3.8%) major complications (Clavien-Dindo ≥IIIa). Ninety-day mortality rate was 1.9%. Out of 82 ablated lesions, 6 ASRs (11.1%) occurred. Median blood loss was significantly lower in the minimally invasive group, compared with open [90 mL (32.5 to 200) vs. 200 mL (100 to 400), P =0.005]. Pringle maneuver was significantly performed less in the minimally invasive group [8 (25.0%) vs. 16 (72.7%), P =0.001], but took more time [36.1 min (±15.6) vs. 21.6 (±9.9); P =0.011]. Short-term (1 y) overall and disease-free survival were respectively 81.4% and 50.0%., Conclusion: Combining microwave ablation and liver resection is a feasible and safe parenchymal-sparing technique, through both minimally invasive and open approach for treating extended CRLM disease. It has a low ablation-related complication rate and acceptable ablation-site recurrence rate., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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48. Morbidity and survival after laparoscopic versus open pancreatoduodenectomy: propensity score matched comparison.
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Vandeputte M, Vansteenkiste F, Ceelen W, De Meyere C, and D'Hondt M
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- Humans, Pancreaticoduodenectomy methods, Propensity Score, Length of Stay, Morbidity, Postoperative Complications etiology, Retrospective Studies, Pancreatic Neoplasms surgery, Pancreatic Neoplasms complications, Laparoscopy methods
- Abstract
Purpose: Technical challenges and a perceived higher risk of complications hinder a wide adoption of minimally invasive pancreatoduodenectomy. We aim to further define the place of minimally invasive pancreatoduodenectomy by comparison with the traditional open approach., Methods: A comparison of the surgical outcomes and survival after laparoscopic (LPD) versus open pancreatoduodenectomy (OPD) was retrospectively performed from a prospectively kept database. To reduce the effect of bias and confounding, baseline characteristics of both groups were matched using propensity score matching (NCT05110573; Nov 8, 2021; retrospectively registered)., Results: From a total of 67 LPD and 105 OPD patients, propensity score matching resulted in two balanced groups of 38 patients. In both groups, 87% of surgeries were performed for cancer. In the LPD group, conversion rate was 22.4%. Mean operative time was significantly longer after LPD versus OPD (320.1 ± 53.8 vs. 277.7 ± 63.8 min; p = .008). Hospital stay was significantly shorter after LPD versus OPD (median 13.5 vs. 17.0 days; p = .039). No significant differences were observed in blood loss, total complication rate (73.7% vs. 86.8%; p = .249), major complication rate (26.5% vs. 10.5%; p = .137), postoperative pancreatic fistula rate (13.2% vs. 7.9%; p = .711), 90-day mortality rate (5.3% vs. 0%; p = .493), R0 resection rate (85.4% vs. 85.8%), or number of lymph nodes (median 10.0 vs. 8.5; p = .273). In cancer patients, no significant differences were observed in overall survival (median 27.1 vs. 23.9 months; p = .693), disease-free survival, or recurrence rate., Conclusion: LPD provided acceptable short-term and oncological outcomes. Compared to OPD, we noted a higher major complication rate, without compromising surgical safety or oncological outcomes., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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49. A Comparative Study of an Integrated Ultrasonic/Bipolar Sealing Device Versus an Articulating Bipolar Sealing Device for Laparoscopic Liver Surgery.
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Provoost AL, D'Hondt M, Willems E, De Meyere C, Parmentier I, Devooght A, Pottel H, and Verslype C
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Operative Time, Liver, Ultrasonics, Laparoscopy
- Abstract
Background: Sealing devices (SD) seal and cut tissue through different energy modalities, and are routinely used in laparoscopic liver surgery (LLS). The aim of this study is to compare the outcome of Thunderbeat (TB), an integrated ultrasonic/bipolar SD, versus Enseal (ES), an articulating bipolar SD, in LLS., Methods: A retrospective analysis was conducted in a single center from December 2013 to September 2020. The primary endpoint was difference in blood loss (BL) between ES and TB. Secondary endpoints were complications, operative time, hospital stay, and 90-day mortality., Results: 352 patients were identified: TB (n = 105) and ES (n = 247). Median BL was significantly lower with TB (50 mL [20-120]) compared to ES (100 mL [50-250]) (p < 0.0001). Significant differences were identified for median operative time (TB 115 min [45-300]) vs. ES 140 min [40-370]; p = 0.0008) and median hospital stay (TB 2 days [1-4] vs. ES 4 days [3-6]; p < 0.0001). No major differences were encountered for postoperative bleeding (TB 0% vs. ES 1%; p = 0.5574), biliary leak (TB 1% vs. ES 2%; p = 1.0000), and 90-day mortality (TB 0% vs. ES 1%; p = 1.0000)., Conclusion: The integrated ultrasonic/bipolar SD is superior to the articulating bipolar SD in LLS for intraoperative BL without an increase in complications., (© 2022. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to Société Internationale de Chirurgie.)
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- 2022
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50. Laparoscopic liver resection for colorectal liver metastases: retrospective analysis of prognostic factors and oncological outcomes in a single-center cohort.
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Taillieu E, De Meyere C, Nuytens F, Vanneste G, Libbrecht L, Alaerts H, Parmentier I, Verslype C, and D'Hondt M
- Subjects
- Hepatectomy adverse effects, Humans, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Colorectal Neoplasms pathology, Laparoscopy, Liver Neoplasms
- Abstract
Purpose: Laparoscopic liver resection (LLR) has gained acceptance as an effective treatment for colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) in selected patients, providing similar oncologic outcomes compared to open liver resection (OLR). The aim of this study was to determine prognostic factors for survival outcomes associated with LLR for CRLM., Methods: A single-center retrospective analysis of a prospectively maintained database was performed. The inclusion period ranged from September 2011 until mid-March 2020., Results: Two hundred consecutive LLRs were included. The 5-year overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) rates equalled 54.8% and 49%, respectively. A pushing (HR = 5.42, 95% CI 1.56-18.88, p = 0.008), as well as a replacement (3.87, 1.05-14.2, p = 0.04) growth pattern of the CRLM, poor differentiation of the primary colorectal cancer (CRC) (3.72, 1.72-8.07, p < 0.001) and administration of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) (2.95, 1.28-6.8, p = 0.01) were identified as independent predictors of a worse OS. Requirement of more than 6 cycles of NAC (6.17, 2.37-16.03, p < 0.001), a replacement (4.96, 1.91-12.87, p < 0.001), as well as a pushing (4.3, 1.68-11, p = 0.002) growth pattern of the CRLM and poor differentiation of the primary CRC (2.61, 1.31-5.2, p = 0.006) were identified as independent predictors of a worse DFS., Conclusion: LLR for CRLM offers adequate long-term oncologic outcomes. OS and DFS rates are negatively affected by the administration of NAC and by pathological features, including the differentiation grade of the primary CRC and the histological growth pattern of the CRLM., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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