Cholangiocarcinoma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Long-term Morbidity After Surgery for Perihilar Cholangiocarcinoma; a Cohort Study
Surgery for perihilar cholangiocarcinoma offers the only possibility of long-term survival,
but remains a formidable undertaking. Traditionally, 90 day post-operative complications and
death have been used to define operative risk. However, there is concern that this metric may
not accurately capture long-term morbidity after such complex surgery.
This is a retrospective review of a prospective database of patients undergoing surgery for
perihilar cholangiocarcinoma at a Western centre between 2009-2017.
Cholangiocarcinoma is an uncommon cancer, but is the second commonest primary hepatic tumour
after hepatocellular carcinoma. Its incidence is rising globally with 1200 cases per year in
England & Wales. Tumours may originate within the liver itself, although the majority arise
at the confluence of the hepatic ducts (perihilar tumours). Surgery is the only potentially
curative treatment, but remains a formidable undertaking usually requiring a major liver
resection to achieve the clear surgical margins that are essential for long-term survival,
followed by complex biliary reconstruction. The magnitude of this surgery is reflected in an
operative mortality reported between 10-15% in most Western centres. In addition, almost half
the patients suffer major complications prior to discharge from hospital.
Following such surgery, around 30-40% of patients are alive after 5 years. However, a
significant minority succumb to rapid disease recurrence, with a third dying within the first
year after resection. Although offering no hope of cure, systemic chemotherapy with
cisplatin/gemcitabine offers a median overall survival of 11.7 months. For patients planned
to undergo surgery, but found to have locally advanced and therefore irresectable disease at
laparotomy, median survival with palliative chemotherapy can reach 16 months with 10% of
patients alive 3 years later. It therefore seems likely that a proportion of patients undergo
major surgery, at significant risk of immediate postoperative mortality or morbidity, when
they may be better served by systemic chemotherapy.
Operative morbidity and mortality has traditionally been reported as death or complication
occurring within the first 30 days after surgery. However, it is now clear that this 30-day
cut-off underestimates the morbidity and mortality after hepatic resection with ninety-day
morbidity and mortality increasingly recognised as a more appropriate measure of
postoperative outcome after liver surgery. There is also a lack of evidence on the impact
that contemporary enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) programmes may have on these
outcomes.
The unique characteristics of the complex and demanding surgery required for resection of
this disease means there is also a possibility of long-term complications beyond 90-days. To
date, the long-term morbidity after resection has not been reported. These data are essential
to allow patients to make fully informed decisions around the risks and benefits of surgery.
This study therefore aimed to characterise the long-term morbidity after resection of
perihilar cholangiocarcinoma managed with an ERAS programme in a Western centre.
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