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Review
. 2019 Apr;99(2):337-355.
doi: 10.1016/j.suc.2018.12.008.

Gallbladder Cancer: Diagnosis, Surgical Management, and Adjuvant Therapies

Affiliations
Review

Gallbladder Cancer: Diagnosis, Surgical Management, and Adjuvant Therapies

Laura Hickman et al. Surg Clin North Am. 2019 Apr.

Abstract

Gallbladder cancer (GBC) is an often lethal disease, but surgical resection is potentially curative. Symptoms may be misdiagnosed as biliary colic; over half of new diagnoses are made after laparoscopic cholecystectomy for presumed benign disease. Gallbladder polyps >1 cm should prompt additional imaging and cholecystectomy. For GBC diagnosed after cholecystectomy, tumors T1b and greater necessitate radical cholecystectomy. Radical cholecystectomy includes staging laparoscopy, hepatic resection, and locoregional lymph node clearance to achieve R0 resection. Patients with locally advanced disease (T3 or T4), hepatic-sided T2 tumors, node positivity, or R1 resection may benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy. Chemotherapy increases survival in unresectable disease.

Keywords: Adjuvant chemoradiotherapy; Gallbladder cancer; Gallbladder polyps; Incidental gallbladder cancer; Radical cholecystectomy; Staging laparoscopy.

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