Portal lymphadenectomy is an integral part of gallbladder, intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma, and perihilar cholangiocarcinoma resection to improve staging and prognostication. This is also believed by many oncologists to potentially serve as therapy to remove cancer containing nodes. While the current guideline requires removal of at least 6 portal lymphnodes, many surgeons face technical difficulty in performing the systematic portal lymphadenectomy especially in minimally invasive fashion. The anatomical complexity of biliovascular structures within the porta hepatis contributes to this technical challenge. In this video, we demonstrate our robotic technique of systematic portal lymphadenectomy for the treatment of gallbladder cancer.
Background
Acute ascending cholangitis is a life-threatening infection due to biliary obstruction. Decompression via endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) or interventional radiologic (IR) drainage controls the source of the sepsis. Numerous studies have been published with conflicting data on whether earlier drainage affects morbidity and mortality. We sought to publish our experience at two Las Vegas community hospitals.
Methods
After IRB approval, over 4000 inpatient non-elective ERCs were analyzed between 2010 and 2019. Six-hundred and twenty-five patients met the 2018 Tokyo criteria for a “definitive diagnosis” of acute ascending cholangitis. A univariate and multivariate analysis was conducted to identify factors significantly associated with length of stay and mortality.
Results
On univariate analysis, patients who had drainage conducted within 24 hours had significantly shorter lengths of stay (p = 0.0012 95% CI [-88.1 to -21.8 hrs]), higher mean diastolic blood pressure (p=0.0029 95% CI [1.03 to 5.01 mm Hg]), and lower mean maximum temperature (p=0.0001 95% CI [-0.842 to -0.382
o
C]) when compared to patients who underwent decompression more than 24 hours after admission. There were no statistically significant differences in mortality between patients who underwent decompression within 24 hours of admission versus patients who underwent decompression beyond 24 hours of admission.
On multivariate analysis, earlier decompression reduced the length of stay for patients with mild (p<0.0001), moderate (p<0.0001), and severe cholangitis (p=0.0023). Mortality was significantly associated with the worsening severity of the cholangitis (moderate [p=0.0001] and severe [p<0.0001], but not mild disease) and the use of vasopressors.
Conclusions
Timely biliary decompression within 24 hours of admission significantly reduces the length of stay, pyrexia, and hemodynamic abnormalities. In addition, our data corroborate the 2018 Tokyo guidelines that correlate the severity of cholangitis with mortality.
Liver resection for stage 4 colorectal cancer with liver metastasis is the standard of care, in combination with systemic chemotherapy. R-0 complete resection for colorectal liver metastasis is a curative-intent operation, which is considered the only chance for cure in this disease. The location and proximity of the tumor to major intrahepatic vessels such as hepatic and portal vein determine technical difficulty. Tumors located in the posterosuperior segments of the liver (segments 7 and 8) are technically challenging to resect using a minimally invasive fashion; therefore, conventional open resection is still the technique of choice today. In this video, we demonstrated our approach of an open parenchymal-sparing posterosuperior liver resection for a colorectal liver metastasis.
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