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Hepatectomy for Solitary Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Resection Margin Width Does Not Predict Survival.

Authors :
Michelakos, Theodoros
Kontos, Filippos
Sekigami, Yurie
Qadan, Motaz
Cai, Lei
Catalano, Onofrio
Deshpande, Vikram
Patel, Madhukar S.
Yamada, Teppei
Elias, Nahel
Dageforde, Leigh Anne
Kimura, Shoko
Kawai, Tatsuo
Tanabe, Kenneth K.
Markmann, James F.
Yeh, Heidi
Ferrone, Cristina R.
Source :
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery. Jul2021, Vol. 25 Issue 7, p1727-1735. 9p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: The survival benefit of negative margins for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has been demonstrated. However, there is no consensus regarding the optimal resection margin width. We assessed the impact of hepatic resection margin width for solitary HCC on overall (OS), recurrence-free (RFS), and liver-specific recurrence-free survival (LSRFS). Methods: Clinicopathologic data were retrospectively collected for solitary HCC patients who underwent a negative margin hepatectomy (1992–2015). Margin width was categorized in tertiles as "narrow" (≤ 0.3 cm), "intermediate" (0.31–1.0 cm), or "wide" (> 1.0 cm). Survival was compared among groups. Results: Of the 178 included patients, most were male (76%); median age, MELD score, and tumor size were 63 years, 8, and 5.2 cm, respectively; 93% were Child-Pugh class A. Median margin width was 0.5 cm. Median follow-up and OS were 47.8 months and 76.7 months, respectively. There was no significant survival difference among narrow, intermediate, and wide margin groups with a median OS of 53 months (IQR 21–not reached [NR]), 74 months (IQR 14–138), and 97 months (IQR 37–142) (p = 0.87), respectively. Median RFS was 33.0 months; again, there was no difference among narrow, intermediate, and wide margin groups with a median of 31 months (IQR 18–NR), 45 months (IQR 14–NR), and 27 months (IQR 11–NR), respectively (p = 0.66). Median LSRFS was 63.0 months (IQR 14–NR) with no difference among groups (p = 0.87). In multivariate analyses, margin width was not associated with OS (p = 0.77), RFS (p = 0.74), or LSRFS (p = 0.92). Findings were similar in all subgroups analyzed (≤ 5 cm, > 5 cm, microvascular invasion, T1, T2/T3, anatomical or non-anatomical resection, major or minor hepatectomy). Conclusions: Narrow margins appear to be oncologically safe and the feasibility of achieving wide margins should not determine resectability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1091255X
Volume :
25
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151917115
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11605-020-04765-6