| Literature DB >> 28386272 |
Yutaka Takahashi1, Satoshi Katagiri1, Shun-Ichi Ariizumi1, Yoshihito Kotera1, Hiroto Egawa1, Go Wakabayashi2, Hironori Kaneko3, Masakazu Yamamoto1.
Abstract
Purpose. Since laparoscopic hepatectomy (LH) became covered by national health insurance in April 2010 in Japan, the numbers of applied cases and institutions performing it have increased and the indication has expanded. We surveyed the current state and safety of LH in Japan. Methods. A questionnaire survey was performed in 41 institutions related to the Japanese Endoscopic Liver Surgery Study Group and 747 institutions certified by the Japanese Society of Gastroenterological Surgery, and responses concerning all 2962 cases of LH performed by August 2011 were obtained. Results. The surgical procedure employed was hemihepatectomy in 234 (8%), segmentectomy in 88 (3%), left lateral segmentectomy in 434 (15%), segmentectomy in 156 (5%), and partial resection in 1504 (51%) cases. The approach was pure laparoscopy in 1835 (63%), hand-assisted laparoscopic surgery in 201 (7%), and laparoscopy-assisted surgery in 926 (31%). Regarding perioperative complications, surgery was switched to laparotomy in 59 (2.0%), reoperation was performed in 4 (0.1%), and surgery-related death occurred in 2 (0.07%). Intraoperative accidents occurred in 68 (2.3%), and postoperative complications developed in 94 (3.2%). Conclusions. When the selection of cases is appropriate, LH for liver diseases can be safely performed.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28386272 PMCID: PMC5366230 DOI: 10.1155/2017/6868745
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6121 Impact factor: 2.260
Figure 1The treated disease.
Figure 2Surgical procedures for laparoscopic hepatectomy.
Figure 3Type of surgical approach.
Surgical procedures in each surgical approach (HCC/Meta).
| Pure-LH | HALS | Hybrid-LH | Total | |
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| Anatomical resection |
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| Partial resection |
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| MCT/RFA/Cryo |
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| Fenestration |
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Anatomical resection (all/HCC/Meta).
| Pure-LH | HALS | Hybrid-LH | Total | ||||||
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| Hemihepatectomy | Right |
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| Left |
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| Sectionectomy | Left lateral |
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| Posterior |
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| Other |
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| Segmentectomy | S1 | S2 |
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| S3 | S4 |
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| S5 | S6 |
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| S7 | S8 |
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The number of partial resection cases in each segment (all/HCC/Meta).
| Pure-LH | HALS | Hybrid-LH | Total | |
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| S1 |
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| S6 |
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The rate of conversion to open surgery and complications in each surgical approach.
| All | Pure-LH | HALS | Hybrid-LH | HCC | Meta | |
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| Conversion to open surgery |
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| Mortality |
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| Reoperation |
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| Intraoperative accidents |
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| Bleeding | 39 (1.3%) | |||||
| Hyper carbon dioxidemia | 1 (0.03%) | |||||
| Gas embolism | 2 (0.06%) | |||||
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| Postoperative complications |
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| Bleeding | 8 (0.3%) | |||||
| Liver failure | 2 (0.07%) | |||||
| Bile leakage | 15 (0.5%) | |||||
| Pleural effusion/ascites | 24 (0.8%) | |||||
| Surgical site infection | 18 (0.6%) | |||||
| Liver abscess | 9 (0.3%) | |||||
| Hyper carbon dioxidemia | 1 (0.03%) | |||||
| Ileus | 2 (0.07%) | |||||
Figure 4The number of part-year hepatectomy (open and laparoscopic) cases in each institute.
Figure 5The number of institute on each intraoperative pneumoperitoneum pressure.