Abstract:Objective:To investigate the safety of extended hepatic lobectomy for huge primary hepatic carcinoma (HPLC).
Methods:A retrospective analysis was made on the clinical data of 69 patients with HPLC who underwent extended lobectomy in our hospital within the recent 7 years. The data included preoperative liver functional reserve, liver resection volume, remnant liver volume and postoperative recovery and survival.
Results: Preoperatively, ICGR15 was≤15% in all the patients, and the estimated anatomic liver resection volume was 50% to 70%. Forty-three patients received radical liver resection and 26 palliative resection. Three patients died within 1 month after operation; the operative death rate was 4.3%. Postoperative complications occurred in 27.5% of the patients, but all recovered after treatment.
Conclusions:Assessment of hepatic functional reserve combined with accurate computer-aided measurements of liver volume can provide a reliable basis to determine the safe resected volume and proper limit of liver resection.