Affiliation:
1. The Department of Surgery, Southmead Hospital, Bristol BSIO 5NB, United Kingdom
Abstract
Background Faced with a difficult laparoscopic
cholecystectomy the surgeon may feel that conversion
to open operation would risk greater complications
because of the laparotomy. Information on the
effect of conversion is lacking. The purpose of this
study is to measure the complications of laparoscopic
cholecystectomy and observe the effect of the
conversion rate.Methods A total of 957 patients were studied.
There were three consecutive series of patients; the
first undergoing open cholecystectomy (384 patients),
the second laparoscopic cholecystectomy with a 5.8%
conversion rate (412 patients) and the third laparoscopic
cholecystectomy with a 1.3% conversion rate
(161 patients). Data was collected prospectively using
a continuous audit, and the complication rate
compared on an intention to treat basis. In addition a
panel of experienced surgeons was asked to score the
complications depending on their severity and a
composite complication score calculated. Comparison
between the 3 groups was then undertaken.
Results Open cholecystectomy produced a postoperative
complication rate of 6%. Initially this
appeared to fall to 3.1% with the introduction of
laparoscopic cholecystectomy, but when the complications
occurring in the converted patients were
included (i.e., on an intention to treat basis) the rate
increased to 5.6% in the first group of laparoscopically-
treated patients and 3.1% in the second. These
differences were not statistically significant. A similar
pattern emerged when scoring the severity of the
complications as judged by the expert panel. The
inclusion of intra-operative complications appears
to remove any small advantage for laparoscopic
cholecystectomy. The reduction in the conversion
rate between the two laparoscopic groups from 5.8%
to 1.2% was statistically significant.Conclusion When considered on an intention to
treat basis laparoscopic cholecystectomy offers no
advantage over open operation in terms of the frequency
or severity of complications. Reducing the
frequency of conversion from a laparoscopic to an
open procedure also has no significant effect on the
complications encountered. We conclude, therefore,
that the complication rate is independent of the conversion
rate and that the surgeon, when faced with
difficulty at laparoscopic cholecystectomy, should
not be deterred from converting to open operation
for fear of the post-operative consequences.
Cited by
23 articles.
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