World Journal of Surgical Oncology (Aug 2006)

Association between biliary complications and technique of hilar division (extrahepatic vs. intrahepatic) in major liver resections

  • Gamaletsos Evangelos,
  • Dafnios Nikolaos,
  • Polydorou Andreas,
  • Vassiliou Ioannis,
  • Voros Dionysios,
  • Theodoraki Kassiani,
  • Arkadopoulos Nikolaos,
  • Smyrniotis Vassileios,
  • Daniilidou Kyriaki,
  • Kannas Dimitrios

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1477-7819-4-59
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
p. 59

Abstract

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Abstract Background Division of major vascular and biliary structures during major hepatectomies can be carried out either extrahepatically at the porta hepatic or intrahepatically during the parenchymal transection. In this retrospective study we test the hypothesis that the intrahepatic technique is associated with less early biliary complications. Methods 150 patients who underwent major hepatectomies were retrospectively allocated into an intrahepatic group (n = 100) and an extrahepatic group (n = 50) based on the technique of hilar division. The two groups were operated by two different surgical teams, each one favoring one of the two approaches for hilar dissection. Operative data (warm ischemic time, operative time, blood loss), biliary complications, morbidity and mortality rates were analyzed. Results In extrahepatic patients, operative time was longer (245 ± 50 vs 214 ± 38 min, p Conclusion Intrahepatic hilar division is as safe as extrahepatic hilar division in terms of intraoperative blood requirements, morbidity and mortality. The extrahepatic technique is associated with more severe bile leaks and biliary injuries.