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Outcome and learning curve in 159 consecutive patients undergoing total laparoscopic hemihepatectomy

Outcome and learning curve in 159 consecutive patients undergoing total laparoscopic hemihepatectomy
Outcome and learning curve in 159 consecutive patients undergoing total laparoscopic hemihepatectomy
Importance: Widespread implementation of laparoscopic hemihepatectomy is currently limited by its technical difficulty, paucity of training opportunities, and perceived long and harmful learning curve. Studies confirming the possibility of a short and safe learning curve for laparoscopic hemihepatectomy could potentially benefit the further implementation of the technique.

Objective: To evaluate the extent and safety of the learning curve for laparoscopic hemihepatectomy.

Design, Setting, and Participants: A prospectively collected single-center database containing all laparoscopic liver resections performed in our unit at the University Hospital Southampton National Health Service Foundation Trust between August 2003 and March 2015 was retrospectively reviewed; analyses were performed in December 2015. The study included 159 patients in whom a total laparoscopic right or left hemihepatectomy procedure was started (intention-to-treat analysis), including laparoscopic extended hemihepatectomies and hemihepatectomies with additional wedge resections, at a tertiary referral center specialized in laparoscopic hepato-pancreato-biliary surgery.

Main Outcomes and Measures: Primary end points were clinically relevant complications (Clavien-Dindo grade ?III). The presence of a learning curve effect was assessed with a risk-adjusted cumulative sum analysis.

Results: Of a total of 531 consecutive laparoscopic liver resections, 159 patients underwent total laparoscopic hemihepatectomy (105 right and 54 left). In a cohort with 67 men (42%), median age of 64 years (interquartile range [IQR], 51-73 years), and 110 resections (69%) for malignant lesions, the overall median operation time was 330 minutes (IQR, 270-391 minutes) and the median blood loss was 500 mL (IQR, 250-925 mL). Conversion to an open procedure occurred in 17 patients (11%). Clinically relevant complications occurred in 17 patients (11%), with 1% mortality (death within 90 days of surgery, n?=?2). Comparison of outcomes over time showed a nonsignificant decrease in conversions (right: 14 [13%] and left: 3 [6%]), blood loss (right: 550 mL [IQR, 350-1150 mL] and left: 300 mL [IQR, 200-638 mL]), complications (right: 15 [14%] and left: 4 [7%]), and hospital stay (right: 5 days [IQR, 4-7 days] and left: 4 days [IQR, 3-5 days]). Risk-adjusted cumulative sum analysis demonstrated a learning curve of 55 laparoscopic hemihepatectomies for conversions.

Conclusions and Relevance: Total laparoscopic hemihepatectomy is a feasible and safe procedure with an acceptable learning curve for conversions. Focus should now shift to providing adequate training opportunities for centers interested in implementing this technique.
2168-6254
923-928
van der Poel, Marcel J.
2fb8ae5c-b373-4e6a-8e4b-8b934d578c4f
Besselink, Marc G.
45b5ed26-b8ed-4706-902f-b36907ed0994
Cipriani, Federica
aca25573-d300-425d-ba9c-20be3190ce2e
Armstrong, Thomas
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Takhar, Arjun S.
dbf44f14-c50a-4613-9843-49f0dd0b236b
van Dieren, Susan
c77ef5f4-2729-4f65-830a-0440fa2a36c2
Primrose, John N.
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Pearce, Neil W.
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Abu Hilal, Mohammad
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van der Poel, Marcel J.
2fb8ae5c-b373-4e6a-8e4b-8b934d578c4f
Besselink, Marc G.
45b5ed26-b8ed-4706-902f-b36907ed0994
Cipriani, Federica
aca25573-d300-425d-ba9c-20be3190ce2e
Armstrong, Thomas
3b87df01-cd08-4048-91c4-7390c73a5960
Takhar, Arjun S.
dbf44f14-c50a-4613-9843-49f0dd0b236b
van Dieren, Susan
c77ef5f4-2729-4f65-830a-0440fa2a36c2
Primrose, John N.
d85f3b28-24c6-475f-955b-ec457a3f9185
Pearce, Neil W.
6e450393-03db-472b-9231-1aa2e39b0565
Abu Hilal, Mohammad
384e1c60-8519-4eed-8e92-91775aad4c47

van der Poel, Marcel J., Besselink, Marc G., Cipriani, Federica, Armstrong, Thomas, Takhar, Arjun S., van Dieren, Susan, Primrose, John N., Pearce, Neil W. and Abu Hilal, Mohammad (2016) Outcome and learning curve in 159 consecutive patients undergoing total laparoscopic hemihepatectomy. JAMA Surgery, 151 (10), 923-928. (doi:10.1001/jamasurg.2016.1655). (PMID:27383568)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Importance: Widespread implementation of laparoscopic hemihepatectomy is currently limited by its technical difficulty, paucity of training opportunities, and perceived long and harmful learning curve. Studies confirming the possibility of a short and safe learning curve for laparoscopic hemihepatectomy could potentially benefit the further implementation of the technique.

Objective: To evaluate the extent and safety of the learning curve for laparoscopic hemihepatectomy.

Design, Setting, and Participants: A prospectively collected single-center database containing all laparoscopic liver resections performed in our unit at the University Hospital Southampton National Health Service Foundation Trust between August 2003 and March 2015 was retrospectively reviewed; analyses were performed in December 2015. The study included 159 patients in whom a total laparoscopic right or left hemihepatectomy procedure was started (intention-to-treat analysis), including laparoscopic extended hemihepatectomies and hemihepatectomies with additional wedge resections, at a tertiary referral center specialized in laparoscopic hepato-pancreato-biliary surgery.

Main Outcomes and Measures: Primary end points were clinically relevant complications (Clavien-Dindo grade ?III). The presence of a learning curve effect was assessed with a risk-adjusted cumulative sum analysis.

Results: Of a total of 531 consecutive laparoscopic liver resections, 159 patients underwent total laparoscopic hemihepatectomy (105 right and 54 left). In a cohort with 67 men (42%), median age of 64 years (interquartile range [IQR], 51-73 years), and 110 resections (69%) for malignant lesions, the overall median operation time was 330 minutes (IQR, 270-391 minutes) and the median blood loss was 500 mL (IQR, 250-925 mL). Conversion to an open procedure occurred in 17 patients (11%). Clinically relevant complications occurred in 17 patients (11%), with 1% mortality (death within 90 days of surgery, n?=?2). Comparison of outcomes over time showed a nonsignificant decrease in conversions (right: 14 [13%] and left: 3 [6%]), blood loss (right: 550 mL [IQR, 350-1150 mL] and left: 300 mL [IQR, 200-638 mL]), complications (right: 15 [14%] and left: 4 [7%]), and hospital stay (right: 5 days [IQR, 4-7 days] and left: 4 days [IQR, 3-5 days]). Risk-adjusted cumulative sum analysis demonstrated a learning curve of 55 laparoscopic hemihepatectomies for conversions.

Conclusions and Relevance: Total laparoscopic hemihepatectomy is a feasible and safe procedure with an acceptable learning curve for conversions. Focus should now shift to providing adequate training opportunities for centers interested in implementing this technique.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 May 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 July 2016
Published date: 1 October 2016
Organisations: Cancer Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 399589
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/399589
ISSN: 2168-6254
PURE UUID: 05e9b9b7-7f32-46cd-b72a-a0a87f27b45d
ORCID for John N. Primrose: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2069-7605

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Date deposited: 19 Aug 2016 14:07
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:49

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Contributors

Author: Marcel J. van der Poel
Author: Marc G. Besselink
Author: Federica Cipriani
Author: Thomas Armstrong
Author: Arjun S. Takhar
Author: Susan van Dieren
Author: Neil W. Pearce
Author: Mohammad Abu Hilal

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