Carcinoma of the main hepatic duct junction: indications, operative morbidity and mortality, and long-term survival
- PMID: 2396193
Carcinoma of the main hepatic duct junction: indications, operative morbidity and mortality, and long-term survival
Abstract
Carcinoma of the main hepatic duct junction tends to spread extensively along the hepatic ducts into the liver parenchyma. Therefore extensive resection of the bile ducts combined with hepatic resection is the procedure of choice. Between January 1973 and April 1989, 25 of 50 patients with this type of carcinoma underwent resection, a resectability rate of 50%. One patient died of staphylococcal sepsis on the postoperative day 42 after right trisegmentectomy and resection of the bile ducts, a hospital death rate of 4%. Twenty-four patients were discharged from the hospital. The 5-year actuarial survival rate calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method was 19%. Four patients lived longer than 5 years after surgery; the longest survival was 9 years after right trisegmentectomy and resection of the bile ducts. These four patients had clear margins at the resected bile ducts. This article was designed to clarify the point at issue by presenting our results in terms of indications, operative morbidity and mortality, and long-term survival.
Comment in
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Operative management of bile duct cancers.Surgery. 1995 Mar;117(3):357-8. doi: 10.1016/s0039-6060(05)80220-x. Surgery. 1995. PMID: 7878548 No abstract available.
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