Long‐term and perioperative outcomes of laparoscopic versus open liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma with propensity score matching: a multi‐institutional Japanese study

Takeshi Takahara(Iwate Medical University), Go Wakabayashi(Iwate Medical University), Toru Beppu(Kumamoto University), Arihiro Aihara(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Kiyoshi Hasegawa(The University of Tokyo), Naoto Gotohda(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Etsuro Hatano(Kyoto University), Yoshinao Tanahashi(Fujita Health University), Toru Mizuguchi(Sapporo Medical University), Toshiya Kamiyama(Hokkaido University), Tetsuo Ikeda(Kyushu University), Shogo Tanaka(Osaka City University), Nobuhiko Taniai(Nippon Medical School), Hideo Baba(Kumamoto University), Minoru Tanabe(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Norihiro Kokudo(The University of Tokyo), Masaru Konishi(National Cancer Center Hospital East), Shinji Üemoto(Kyoto University), Atsushi Sugioka(Fujita Health University), Koichi Hirata(Sapporo Medical University), Akinobu Taketomi(Hokkaido University), Yoshihiko Maehara(Kyushu University), Shoji Kubo(Osaka City University), Eiji Uchida(Nippon Medical School), Hiroaki Miyata(Tokyo Health Care University), Masafumi Nakamura(Kawasaki Medical School), Hironori Kaneko(Toho University), Hiroki Yamaue(Wakayama Medical University), Masaru Miyazaki(Chiba University), Tadahiro Takada(Teikyo University)
Journal of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Sciences
June 22, 2015
Cited by 263Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to compare the long-term outcomes and perioperative outcomes of laparoscopic liver resection (LLR) with those of open liver resection (OLR) for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) between well-matched patient groups. METHODS: Hepatocellular carcinoma patients underwent primary liver resection between 2000 and 2010, were collected from 31 participating institutions in Japan and were divided into LLR (n = 436) and OLR (n = 2969) groups. A one-to-one propensity case-matched analysis was used with covariates of baseline characteristics, including tumor characteristics and surgical procedures of hepatic resections. Long-term and short-term outcomes were compared between the matched two groups. RESULTS: The two groups were well balanced by propensity score matching and 387 patients were matched. There were no significant differences in overall survival and disease-free survival between LLR and OLR. The median blood loss (158 g vs. 400 g, P < 0.001) was significantly less with LLR, and the median postoperative hospital stay (13 days vs. 16 days, P < 0.001) was significantly shorter for LLR. Complication rate (6.7% vs. 13.0%, P = 0.003) was significantly less in LLR. CONCLUSION: Compared with OLR, LLR in selected patients with HCC showed similar long-term outcomes, associated with less blood loss, shorter hospital stay, and fewer postoperative complications.


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