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Review
. 1990 Jan;45(1-2):67-74.

[Primary carcinoma of the gallbladder]

[Article in Italian]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 2186301
Review

[Primary carcinoma of the gallbladder]

[Article in Italian]
G Ghilardi et al. Minerva Chir. 1990 Jan.

Abstract

Primary carcinoma of the gallbladder, while infrequent, is the most representative among the malignant neoplasms of the biliary tract. The diagnosis of carcinoma of the gallbladder was made in 22 out of 1252 operations performed for gallbladder disease (1.8%) since January 1980 through June 1988: only in 9% of the subjects a malignant tumor of the gallbladder was suspected preoperatively. In 21 cases the carcinoma was associated with chronic lithiasic cholecystitis. The 22 cases were assessed according to the classification proposed by Nevin. The operations performed were: 4 routine cholecystectomies (stages I and II) 4 cholecystectomies with lymphadenectomy (stages I and II); 4 cholecystectomies with lymphadenectomy and liver wedge resection of the bed of the gallbladder (stages II, III, IV, V); 7 explorative laparotomies and 3 gastrojejunal anastomoses (stage V). A complete follow-up was available for each of the 22 subjects: cumulative survival rates were calculated according to Kaplan-Meyer. The overall 5-year cumulative survival rate after operation was 19% for the whole group, whereas it reached 76% for the subgroup of 9 patients classified in stages I and II. This analysis reinforces the statement that surgical therapy can achieve excellent results if brought about before cancer overwhelms the muscular layer of the gallbladder wall. Thus, as the preoperative diagnosis of gallbladder carcinoma is extremely difficult and uncertain, any delay in performing cholecystectomy seems to be unwise in all those cases of chronic benign disease of the gallbladder (whether lithiasic in nature or not) that are suspected to be a major risk factor for cancer degeneration because of their frequent association with the carcinoma of the gallbladder.

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