Predictors and Prognostic Significance of Postoperative Complications for Patients with Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma

Author:

Endo Yutaka1,Moazzam Zorays1,Woldesenbet Selamawit1,Araujo Lima Henrique1,Alaimo Laura12,Munir Muhammad Musaab1,Shaikh Chanza F.1,Guglielmi Alfredo2,Aldrighetti Luca3,Weiss Matthew4,Bauer Todd W.5,Alexandrescu Sorin6,Poultsides George A.7,Kitago Minoru8,Maithel Shishir K.9,Marques Hugo P.10,Martel Guillaume11,Pulitano Carlo12,Shen Feng13,Cauchy François14,Koerkamp Bas Groot15,Endo Itaru16,Pawlik Timothy M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and James Comprehensive Cancer Center 395 W. 12Th Ave., Suite 670 Columbus OH USA

2. Department of Surgery University of Verona Verona Italy

3. Department of Surgery Ospedale San Raffaele Milan Italy

4. Department of Surgery John Hopkins Hospital Baltimore MD USA

5. Department of Surgery University of Virginia Charlottesville VA USA

6. Department of Surgery Fundeni Clinical Institute Bucharest Romania

7. Department of Surgery Stanford University Stanford CA USA

8. Department of Surgery Keio University Tokyo Japan

9. Department of Surgery Emory University Atlanta GA USA

10. Department of Surgery Curry Cabral Hospital Lisbon Portugal

11. Department of Surgery University of Ottawa Ottawa ON Canada

12. Department of Surgery Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, University of Sydney Sydney Australia

13. Department of Surgery Eastern Hepatobiliary Surgery Hospital Shanghai China

14. Department of Hepatobiliopancreatic Surgery APHP, Beaujon Hospital Clichy France

15. Department of Surgery Erasmus University Medical Centre Rotterdam Netherlands

16. Department of Gastroenterological Surgery Yokohama City, University School of Medicine Yokohama Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe prognostic impact of major postoperative complications (POCs) for intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) remains ill‐defined. We sought to analyze the relationship between POCs and outcomes relative to lymph node metastases (LNM) and tumor burden score (TBS). MethodsPatients who underwent resection of ICC between 1990–2020 were included from an international database. POCs were defined according to Clavien‐Dindo classification ≥ 3. The prognostic impact of POCs was estimated relative to TBS categories (i.e., high and low) and lymph node status (i.e., N0 or N1).ResultsAmong 553 patients who underwent curative‐intent resection for ICC, 128 (23.1%) individuals experienced POCs. Low TBS/N0 patients who experienced POCs presented with a higher risk of recurrence and death (3‐year cumulative recurrence rate; POCs: 74.8% vs. no POCs: 43.5%, p = 0.006; 5‐year overall survival [OS], POCs 37.8% vs. no POCs 65.8%, p = 0.003), while POCs were not associated with worse outcomes among high TBS and/or N1 patients. The Cox regression analysis confirmed that POCs were significant predictors of poor outcomes in low TBS/N0 patients (OS, hazard ratio [HR] 2.91, 95%CI 1.45–5.82, p = 0.003; recurrence free survival [RFS], HR 2.42, 95%CI 1.28–4.56, p = 0.007). Among low TBS/N0 patients, POCs were associated with early recurrence (within 2 years) (Odds ratio [OR] 2.79 95%CI 1.13–6.93, p = 0.03) and extrahepatic recurrence (OR 3.13, 95%CI 1.14–8.54, p = 0.03), in contrast to patients with high TBS and/or nodal disease.ConclusionsPOCs were independent, negative prognostic determinants for both OS and RFS among low TBS/N0 patients. Perioperative strategies that minimize the risk of POCs are critical to improving prognosis, especially among patients harboring favorable clinicopathologic features.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Surgery

Reference38 articles.

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2. Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma

3. Systematic review and meta‐analysis of prognostic factors for early recurrence in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma after curative‐intent resection;Choi WJ;Ann Surg Oncol,2022

4. Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma

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