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Impact of liver cirrhosis, the severity of cirrhosis, and portal hypertension on the outcomes of minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomies for primary liver malignancies.

Authors :
Coelho FF
Herman P
Kruger JAP
Wu AGR
Chin KM
Hasegawa K
Zhang W
Alzoubi M
Aghayan DL
Siow TF
Scatton O
Kingham TP
Marino MV
Mazzaferro V
Chiow AKH
Sucandy I
Ivanecz A
Choi SH
Lee JH
Gastaca M
Vivarelli M
Giuliante F
Ruzzenente A
Yong CC
Dokmak S
Fondevila C
Efanov M
Morise Z
Di Benedetto F
Brustia R
Valle RD
Boggi U
Geller D
Belli A
Memeo R
Gruttadauria S
Mejia A
Park JO
Rotellar F
Choi GH
Robles-Campos R
Wang X
Sutcliffe RP
Pratschke J
Lai ECH
Chong CCN
D'Hondt M
Monden K
Lopez-Ben S
Liu R
Ferrero A
Ettorre GM
Cipriani F
Cherqui D
Liang X
Soubrane O
Wakabayashi G
Troisi RI
Yin M
Cheung TT
Sugioka A
Han HS
Long TCD
Fuks D
Abu Hilal M
Chen KH
Aldrighetti L
Edwin B
Goh BKP
Source :
Surgery [Surgery] 2023 Sep; Vol. 174 (3), pp. 581-592. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jun 09.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: The impact of cirrhosis and portal hypertension on perioperative outcomes of minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomies remains unclear. We aimed to compare the perioperative outcomes between patients with preserved and compromised liver function (noncirrhotics versus Child-Pugh A) when undergoing minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomies. In addition, we aimed to determine if the extent of cirrhosis (Child-Pugh A versus B) and the presence of portal hypertension had a significant impact on perioperative outcomes.<br />Methods: This was an international multicenter retrospective analysis of 1,526 patients who underwent minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomies for primary liver malignancies at 60 centers worldwide between 2004 and 2021. In the study, 1,370 patients met the inclusion criteria and formed the final study group. Baseline clinicopathological characteristics and perioperative outcomes of these patients were compared. To minimize confounding factors, 1:1 propensity score matching and coarsened exact matching were performed.<br />Results: The study group comprised 559, 753, and 58 patients who did not have cirrhosis, Child-Pugh A, and Child-Pugh B cirrhosis, respectively. Six-hundred and thirty patients with cirrhosis had portal hypertension, and 170 did not. After propensity score matching and coarsened exact matching, Child-Pugh A patients with cirrhosis undergoing minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomies had longer operative time, higher intraoperative blood loss, higher transfusion rate, and longer hospital stay than patients without cirrhosis. The extent of cirrhosis did not significantly impact perioperative outcomes except for a longer duration of hospital stay.<br />Conclusion: Liver cirrhosis adversely affected the intraoperative technical difficulty and perioperative outcomes of minimally invasive left lateral sectionectomies.<br /> (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-7361
Volume :
174
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37301612
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.surg.2023.04.057