Belli Giulio, Cioffi Luigi, Fantini Corrado, D'Agostino Alberto, Russo Gianluca, Limongelli Paolo, Belli Andrea
Department of General and Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Surgery, S.M. Loreto Nuovo Hospital Naples, via Cimarosa 2a, 80127, Naples, Italy.
Surg Endosc. 2009 Aug;23(8):1807-11. doi: 10.1007/s00464-009-0344-3. Epub 2009 Mar 10.
Recurrence of cancer and the need for several surgical treatments are the Achilles' heel of the treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in cases of cirrhosis. The difficulty of reintervention is increased by the formation of adhesions after the previous hepatectomy that can make a new surgical procedure more difficult and less safe. With a minimally invasive approach, the formation of postoperative adhesions seems to be minimized, and the adhesiolysis procedure seems to be faster and safer in terms of blood loss and risk of visceral injuries.
This report describes a series of 15 patients submitted to a laparoscopic reintervention (hepatic resection or radiofrequency ablation) for a recurrence of HCC after a previous open (group 1) or laparoscopic (group 2) procedure for a primary tumor. It aims to explain the feasibility, safety, and results of repeated laparoscopic liver surgery.
The rates for overall postoperative mortality and morbidity were respectively 0% and 26.6% (4/15). No patients had a severe postoperative complication. Only one patient in group 2 presented with moderate ascites postoperatively, whereas two patients in group 1 reported atelectasis requiring physiotherapy and one experienced pneumonia, which was treated with antibiotics. In this series, the findings indicated that patients submitted first to an open hepatic resection (group 1) experience more intraabdominal adhesions. Moreover, in group 1, hypervascularized adhesions typical of cirrhotic patients were several and thicker, with a major potential risk of bleeding and bowel injuries at the time of reintervention. Although for group 2 the length of the intervention was shorter, for group 1, the operating times and safety in terms of bowel injuries were acceptable, demonstrating the feasibility of iterative laparoscopic surgery also for cirrhotic patients previously treated by the open surgical approach. The operative time for the second surgical procedure was shorter and the adhesiolysis easier for the patients previously treated with the laparoscopic approach (group 2). This underscores the advantages of the minimally invasive approach for managing the long oncologic history of cirrhotic patients.
Laparoscopic redo surgery for recurrent HCC in cirrhotic patients is a safe and feasible procedure with good short-term outcomes, but further prospective studies are needed to support these results.
癌症复发以及需要多次手术治疗是肝硬化患者肝细胞癌(HCC)治疗的致命弱点。先前肝切除术后粘连的形成增加了再次干预的难度,这可能使新的手术操作更加困难且安全性降低。采用微创方法,术后粘连的形成似乎可降至最低,并且就失血和内脏损伤风险而言,粘连松解术似乎更快且更安全。
本报告描述了15例患者,他们因先前针对原发性肿瘤进行的开放手术(第1组)或腹腔镜手术(第2组)后HCC复发而接受了腹腔镜再次干预(肝切除或射频消融)。其目的是解释重复腹腔镜肝脏手术的可行性、安全性和结果。
术后总死亡率和发病率分别为0%和26.6%(4/15)。没有患者出现严重的术后并发症。第2组中只有1例患者术后出现中度腹水,而第1组中有2例患者报告肺不张需要物理治疗,1例发生肺炎,经抗生素治疗。在本系列研究中,结果表明首先接受开放肝切除术的患者(第1组)腹腔内粘连更多。此外,在第1组中,肝硬化患者典型的血管丰富的粘连数量更多且更厚,再次干预时有更大的出血和肠损伤潜在风险。虽然第2组的干预时间较短,但对于第1组,手术时间和肠损伤方面的安全性是可以接受的,这表明对于先前接受开放手术治疗的肝硬化患者,重复腹腔镜手术也是可行的。先前接受腹腔镜手术治疗的患者(第2组)第二次手术的手术时间更短,粘连松解更容易。这突出了微创方法在处理肝硬化患者长期肿瘤病史方面的优势。
肝硬化患者复发性HCC的腹腔镜再次手术是一种安全可行的手术,具有良好的短期效果,但需要进一步的前瞻性研究来支持这些结果。