Prevention of Liver Failure in Extended Hepatic Resection

Background.  Postoperative failure is a major cause of adverse outcomes in extensive liver resection. Post-resection liver failure requires intensive, including extracorporeal, care. Issues in correcting liver failure warrant novel approaches to prevent severe cases. Materials and methods.  A retros...

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Veröffentlicht in:Kreativnaâ hirurgiâ i onkologiâ (Online) 2021-04, Vol.11 (1), p.10-14
Hauptverfasser: Mirasova, G. Kh, Salimgareev, I. Z., Loginov, M. O., Gritsaenko, A. I., Nartaylakov, M. A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background.  Postoperative failure is a major cause of adverse outcomes in extensive liver resection. Post-resection liver failure requires intensive, including extracorporeal, care. Issues in correcting liver failure warrant novel approaches to prevent severe cases. Materials and methods.  A retrospective analysis of 228 various-extent liver resections included minor (55.7 %), major (26.8 %) and extended (17.5 %) operations for malignant, benign and parasitic liver lesions. The post-resection liver failure rate has ben graded according to ISGLS. Results and discussion.  Postoperative hepatic failure developed in 58 (25.4 %) cases, including 5 of 127 minor (3.9 %) resections, 18 major (29.5 %) and 35 of 40 extended resections (87.5 %). Mild class A liver failures were reported in 12.3 %, and severe classes B and C — in 9.2 % and 3.9 % cases, respectively. CT volumetry in place of the number of resected segments is suggested as a criterion to grade the expected post-resection residual liver, with >70 % defining a minor, 36–70 % — major and 25–35 % — extended expected residual liver. A two-staged extended hepatic resection approach is proposed to reduce postoperative liver failure, with vascular radiology-guided right portal vein embolisation (RPVE) or associating liver partition and portal vein ligation (ALPPS) at stage 1. A comparison of extended hepatic resection outcomes ( n  = 40) showed a significantly higher rate and severity of liver failure in single- vs. two-staged operations ( p  < 0.05). Conclusion.  Liver failure is a leading cause of death in major and extended hepatic resection. Preoperative CT volumetry allows a more accurate volumetric control of expected post-resection residual liver. Two-staged extended hepatic resection can reliably reduce the rate and severity of postoperative liver failure.
ISSN:2307-0501
2307-0501
DOI:10.24060/2076-3093-2021-11-1-10-14