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Benchmarks and Geographic Differences in Gallbladder Cancer Surgery: An International Multicenter Study.

Authors :
Vega EA
Newhook TE
Mellado S
Ruzzenente A
Okuno M
De Bellis M
Panettieri E
Ahmad MU
Merlo I
Rojas J
De Rose AM
Nishino H
Sinnamon AJ
Donadon M
Hauger MS
Guevara OA
Munoz C
Denbo JW
Chun YS
Tran Cao HS
Sanchez Claria R
Tzeng CD
De Aretxabala X
Vivanco M
Brudvik KW
Seo S
Pekolj J
Poultsides GA
Torzilli G
Giuliante F
Anaya DA
Guglielmi A
Vinuela E
Vauthey JN
Source :
Annals of surgical oncology [Ann Surg Oncol] 2023 Aug; Vol. 30 (8), pp. 4904-4911. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 May 06.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: High-quality surgery plays a central role in the delivery of excellent oncologic care. Benchmark values indicate the best achievable results. We aimed to define benchmark values for gallbladder cancer (GBC) surgery across an international population.<br />Patients and Methods: This study included consecutive patients with GBC who underwent curative-intent surgery during 2000-2021 at 13 centers, across seven countries and four continents. Patients operated on at high-volume centers without the need for vascular and/or bile duct reconstruction and without significant comorbidities were chosen as the benchmark group.<br />Results: Of 906 patients who underwent curative-intent GBC surgery during the study period, 245 (27%) were included in the benchmark group. These were predominantly women (n = 174, 71%) and had a median age of 64 years (interquartile range 57-70 years). In the benchmark group, 50 patients (20%) experienced complications within 90 days after surgery, with 20 patients (8%) developing major complications (Clavien-Dindo grade ≥ IIIa). Median length of postoperative hospital stay was 6 days (interquartile range 4-8 days). Benchmark values included ≥ 4 lymph nodes retrieved, estimated intraoperative blood loss ≤ 350 mL, perioperative blood transfusion rate ≤ 13%, operative time ≤ 332 min, length of hospital stay ≤ 8 days, R1 margin rate ≤ 7%, complication rate ≤ 22%, and rate of grade ≥ IIIa complications ≤ 11%.<br />Conclusions: Surgery for GBC remains associated with significant morbidity. The availability of benchmark values may facilitate comparisons in future analyses among GBC patients, GBC surgical approaches, and centers performing GBC surgery.<br /> (© 2023. Society of Surgical Oncology.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1534-4681
Volume :
30
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Annals of surgical oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37149547
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1245/s10434-023-13531-2