Lessons from laparoscopic liver surgery: A nine-year case series

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Abstract

Objective. This series describes a developing experience in laparoscopic liver surgery presenting results from 40 procedures including right hemihepatectomy, left lateral lobectomy, and microwave ablation therapy. Methods. Forty patients undergoing laparoscopic liver surgery between September 1997 and November 2006 were included. The data set includes: operative procedure and duration, intraoperative blood loss, conversion to open operation rates, length of hospital stay, complications, mortality, histology of lesions/resection margins, and disease recurrence. Results. Mean age of patient: 59 years, 17/40 male, 23/40 female, 23/40 of lesions were benign, and 17/40 malignant. Operations included: laparoscopic anatomical resections n = 15, nonanatomical resections n = 11, microwave ablations n = 8 and deroofing of cysts n = 7. Median anaesthetic time: 120 minutes (range 40-240), mean blood loss 78mL and 1/40 conversions to open. Median resection margins were 10mm (range 1-14) and median length of stay 3 days (range 1-10). Operative and 30-day mortality were zero with no local disease recurrence. Conclusion. Laparoscopic liver surgery appears safe and effective and is associated with reduced hospital stay. Larger studies are required to confirm it is oncologically sound.

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Spencer, L., Metcalfe, M. S., Strickland, A. D., Elsey, E. J., Robertson, G. S., & Lloyd, D. M. (2008). Lessons from laparoscopic liver surgery: A nine-year case series. HPB Surgery. https://doi.org/10.1155/2008/458137

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