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Parenchymal sparing surgery for colorectal liver metastases: The need for a common definition.

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Published:15th Oct 2017
Author: Desjardin M, Desolneux G, Brouste V, Degrandi O, Bonhomme B, Fonck M et al.
Availability: Pay for access, or by subscription
Ref.:Eur J Surg Oncol. 2017. pii: S0748-7983(17)30949-6.
DOI:10.1016/j.ejso.2017.10.209


Background:
The definition of parenchymal sparing surgery (PSS) for colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) diverges requiring a clarification of the concept.

Method: A consecutive series of patients were treated by PSS for their CRLMs, either by resection or intra-operative ablation (IOA), whenever possible a one-stage surgery and minimal usage of portal vein embolization. Post-operative complications were the primary endpoint with a special focus on post-operative liver failure.

Results: Three hundred and eighty-seven patients underwent a PSS out of which 328 patients received a median of 9 pre-operative cycles of chemotherapy. One hundred and twenty-eight patients had a major resection, combined with IOA in 137 patients and IOA alone in 50 cases. The 5yr-overall survival was 50.3%. There was no difference in post-operative complications between minor and major resections, validating our PSS definition based on the Tumor burden/Healthy liver ratio and not just the retrieved volume.

Conclusions: PSS is defined as a high ratio of tumoral burden per specimen retrieved while favoring one-stage surgery approach. Our series, using combined resections and IOAs, matches this definition well. Furthermore, complications were correlated neither to chemotherapy nor to liver-induced toxicities, contrary to extended hepatectomies.

 

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