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Laparoscopic versus open hemihepatectomy: does side matter? A post-hoc analysis of the ORANGE II PLUS randomized controlled trial

Laparoscopic versus open hemihepatectomy: does side matter? A post-hoc analysis of the ORANGE II PLUS randomized controlled trial
Laparoscopic versus open hemihepatectomy: does side matter? A post-hoc analysis of the ORANGE II PLUS randomized controlled trial

Background: laparoscopic liver surgery offers several benefits, yet the adoption of laparoscopic right hemihepatectomy (RH) is slow, owing to its high degree of technical complexity. It is uncertain whether the general benefits of laparoscopy also extend to RH. This study evaluates perioperative outcomes of laparoscopic vs open RH, and illustrates differences in laparoscopic RH and left hemihepatectomy (LH) within the international, multicentre, double-blinded ORANGE-II-PLUS randomized trial. 

Methods: patients were randomly assigned to open (n = 166) or laparoscopic hemihepatectomy (n = 166). The present post-hoc subgroup analysis compares perioperative and oncological outcomes of laparoscopic RH (n = 105) vs open RH (n = 108). In addition, interaction between surgical approach (open or laparoscopic) and hemihepatectomy laterality (RH; n = 213 vs LH; n = 119) was assessed. 

Results: there was a higher proportion of malignancy, including more colorectal liver metastases, and more preoperative portal vein embolization in patients undergoing RH compared to LH, other characteristics were well-balanced. The laparoscopic approach was associated with shorter time to functional recovery compared to open surgery for RH (median 5 vs 5 days, p =.004) and shorter length of hospital stay (median 5 vs 6 days, p =.014). Except for longer operating times in laparoscopy (332 vs 263 min, p <.001), no differences were found in other perioperative and oncological outcomes between laparoscopic and open RH. For all outcomes, interaction testing between surgical approach and laterality did not reach significance, suggesting that approach did not affect RH and LH differently. Though patients requiring laparoscopic RH needed longer operating time (332 vs 225 min) and time to functional recovery (median 5 vs 3 days) than patients requiring laparoscopic LH. 

Conclusion: patients undergoing RH showed modest, population-level, benefits from a laparoscopic approach with regard to time to functional recovery and hospital length of stay, despite higher technical complexity and a more pronounced postoperative impact on the patient. Interaction testing between RH and LH did not reach significance, suggesting the effect of the approach on outcomes were consistent regardless of resection laterality. These results support the implementation of the laparoscopic approach for RH if surgeons are experienced. 

Clinical trial information: NCT01441856.

Laparoscopic hepatectomy, Left hemihepatectomy, Minimally invasive liver surgery, Randomized controlled trial, Right hemihepatectomy
0930-2794
4195-4205
Olij, Bram
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Pilz da Cunha, Gabriela
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Ratti, Francesca
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Abu Hilal, Mohammad
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Troisi, Roberto I.
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Sutcliffe, Robert P.
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Besselink, Marc G.
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Aroori, Somaiah
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Menon, Krishna V.
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Edwin, Bjørn
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D'Hondt, Mathieu
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Lucidi, Valerio
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Ulmer, Tom F.
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Díaz-Nieto, Rafael
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Soonawalla, Zahir
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White, Steve
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Sergeant, Gregory
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Kuemmerli, Christoph
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Korenblik, Remon
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Scuderi, Vincenzo
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Berrevoet, Frederik
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Vanlander, Aude
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Marudanayagam, Ravi
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Tanis, Pieter J.
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Coolsen, Marielle M.E.
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Fichtinger, Robert S.
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Eminton, Zina B.
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Neumann, Ulf P.
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Brandts, Lloyd
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Pugh, Siân A.
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Fretland, Åsmund A.
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Primrose, John N.
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van Dam, Ronald M.
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ORANGE II PLUS Collaborative
Olij, Bram
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Pilz da Cunha, Gabriela
bc1bdee7-2204-45f7-8e37-bd07f00cf81a
Ratti, Francesca
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Abu Hilal, Mohammad
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Troisi, Roberto I.
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Sutcliffe, Robert P.
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Besselink, Marc G.
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Aroori, Somaiah
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Menon, Krishna V.
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Edwin, Bjørn
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D'Hondt, Mathieu
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Lucidi, Valerio
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Ulmer, Tom F.
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Díaz-Nieto, Rafael
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Soonawalla, Zahir
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White, Steve
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Sergeant, Gregory
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Kuemmerli, Christoph
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Korenblik, Remon
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Scuderi, Vincenzo
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Berrevoet, Frederik
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Vanlander, Aude
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Marudanayagam, Ravi
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Tanis, Pieter J.
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Coolsen, Marielle M.E.
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Fichtinger, Robert S.
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Eminton, Zina B.
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Neumann, Ulf P.
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Brandts, Lloyd
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Pugh, Siân A.
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Fretland, Åsmund A.
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Primrose, John N.
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van Dam, Ronald M.
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Olij, Bram, Pilz da Cunha, Gabriela and Ratti, Francesca , ORANGE II PLUS Collaborative (2026) Laparoscopic versus open hemihepatectomy: does side matter? A post-hoc analysis of the ORANGE II PLUS randomized controlled trial. Surgical Endoscopy, 40 (5), 4195-4205. (doi:10.1007/s00464-026-12588-w).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: laparoscopic liver surgery offers several benefits, yet the adoption of laparoscopic right hemihepatectomy (RH) is slow, owing to its high degree of technical complexity. It is uncertain whether the general benefits of laparoscopy also extend to RH. This study evaluates perioperative outcomes of laparoscopic vs open RH, and illustrates differences in laparoscopic RH and left hemihepatectomy (LH) within the international, multicentre, double-blinded ORANGE-II-PLUS randomized trial. 

Methods: patients were randomly assigned to open (n = 166) or laparoscopic hemihepatectomy (n = 166). The present post-hoc subgroup analysis compares perioperative and oncological outcomes of laparoscopic RH (n = 105) vs open RH (n = 108). In addition, interaction between surgical approach (open or laparoscopic) and hemihepatectomy laterality (RH; n = 213 vs LH; n = 119) was assessed. 

Results: there was a higher proportion of malignancy, including more colorectal liver metastases, and more preoperative portal vein embolization in patients undergoing RH compared to LH, other characteristics were well-balanced. The laparoscopic approach was associated with shorter time to functional recovery compared to open surgery for RH (median 5 vs 5 days, p =.004) and shorter length of hospital stay (median 5 vs 6 days, p =.014). Except for longer operating times in laparoscopy (332 vs 263 min, p <.001), no differences were found in other perioperative and oncological outcomes between laparoscopic and open RH. For all outcomes, interaction testing between surgical approach and laterality did not reach significance, suggesting that approach did not affect RH and LH differently. Though patients requiring laparoscopic RH needed longer operating time (332 vs 225 min) and time to functional recovery (median 5 vs 3 days) than patients requiring laparoscopic LH. 

Conclusion: patients undergoing RH showed modest, population-level, benefits from a laparoscopic approach with regard to time to functional recovery and hospital length of stay, despite higher technical complexity and a more pronounced postoperative impact on the patient. Interaction testing between RH and LH did not reach significance, suggesting the effect of the approach on outcomes were consistent regardless of resection laterality. These results support the implementation of the laparoscopic approach for RH if surgeons are experienced. 

Clinical trial information: NCT01441856.

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Accepted/In Press date: 10 January 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 March 2026
Published date: May 2026
Keywords: Laparoscopic hepatectomy, Left hemihepatectomy, Minimally invasive liver surgery, Randomized controlled trial, Right hemihepatectomy

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511694
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511694
ISSN: 0930-2794
PURE UUID: ee7922d1-8cca-4ad9-8028-78aee8a4a8ea
ORCID for John N. Primrose: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2069-7605

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Date deposited: 28 May 2026 16:35
Last modified: 29 May 2026 01:34

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Contributors

Author: Bram Olij
Author: Gabriela Pilz da Cunha
Author: Francesca Ratti
Author: Mohammad Abu Hilal
Author: Roberto I. Troisi
Author: Robert P. Sutcliffe
Author: Marc G. Besselink
Author: Somaiah Aroori
Author: Krishna V. Menon
Author: Bjørn Edwin
Author: Mathieu D'Hondt
Author: Valerio Lucidi
Author: Tom F. Ulmer
Author: Rafael Díaz-Nieto
Author: Zahir Soonawalla
Author: Steve White
Author: Gregory Sergeant
Author: Christoph Kuemmerli
Author: Remon Korenblik
Author: Vincenzo Scuderi
Author: Frederik Berrevoet
Author: Aude Vanlander
Author: Ravi Marudanayagam
Author: Pieter J. Tanis
Author: Marielle M.E. Coolsen
Author: Robert S. Fichtinger
Author: Zina B. Eminton
Author: Ulf P. Neumann
Author: Lloyd Brandts
Author: Siân A. Pugh
Author: Åsmund A. Fretland
Author: Ronald M. van Dam
Corporate Author: ORANGE II PLUS Collaborative

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