Incidence and management of gallbladder cancer in cholecystectomy specimens: a 5‐year tertiary centre experience

Author:

Malik Hassan1ORCID,Izwan Sara12ORCID,Ng Justin13ORCID,Teng Roy12ORCID,Chan Erick12ORCID,Damodaran Prabha Ramesh1,Puhalla Harald12

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Surgery Gold Coast University Hospital Gold Coast Queensland Australia

2. School of Medicine and Dentistry Griffith University Gold Coast Queensland Australia

3. Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine Bond University Gold Coast Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundGallbladder cancer (GBC) is an uncommon, but highly aggressive cancer. Half of these cases are diagnosed pre‐operatively, and the remaining cases are discovered incidentally on post‐cholecystectomy specimens. There is a significant geographical variability in GBC incidence, with increasing age, female sex, and prolonged duration of cholelithiasis being risk factors for GBC. The primary aim was to define the overall local incidence of GBC incidental GBC and management of these cases. The secondary aim was to determine any pertinent risk factors in our case population.MethodsA retrospective observational study was performed on all the cholecystectomy specimens at the Gold Coast Hospital and Health Service from 1 January 2016 to 2 December 2021. Data was collected via the electronic medical record. The incidence and management of gallbladder cancers was calculated, and association with body mass index (BMI), smoking status, diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) was identified.Results3904 cholecystectomy specimens were reviewed. GBC was identified in 0.46% of cholecystectomies. 50% of these cases were found incidentally. Abdominal pain was the most common presenting complaint (94.4%). GBC was associated with increased age and BMI and female sex. There was no association between smoking status, diabetes or IBD with an increased incidence of cancer. Tumour staging guided surgical and/or adjuvant chemotherapy.ConclusionGBC is rare. Patients with symptoms are associated with a poor prognosis. Incidental cancers are common, and negative margin resection based on the T stage of the cancer is the most reliable curative option.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

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