• HPB (Oxford) · Sep 2009

    Open versus laparoscopic resection for liver tumours.

    • Thomas van Gulik.
    • Department of Surgery, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. t.m.vangulik@amc.uva.nl
    • HPB (Oxford). 2009 Sep 1; 11 (6): 465-8.

    BackgroundThe issue under debate is whether laparoscopic liver resections for malignant tumours produce outcomes which are comparable with conventional, open liver resections.MethodsLiterature review on liver resection and laparoscopy.ResultsThere are no randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published that provide any evidence for the benefits of laparoscopic liver resections for liver tumours. In case-control series reporting short-term outcomes, laparoscopic liver resection has been shown to have the advantage of a reduced length of hospital stay. There are as yet, however, no adequate long-term survival studies demonstrating that laparoscopic liver resection is oncologically equivalent to open resection.DiscussionThe challenge for the near future is to test the oncological integrity of laparoscopic liver resection in controlled trials in the same way that we have learned from the RCTs carried out in laparoscopic resection for colorectal cancer. It is likely that laparoscopic liver resection will then have to compete with fast-track, open liver resection. Already, concerns have been raised regarding the learning curve required to master the techniques of laparoscopic liver resection.

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