Publication | Closed Access
Morbidity and survival of liver resection for colorectal adenocarcinoma
45
Citations
14
References
1991
Year
Liver ResectionSurgical OncologyHepatologyIsolated Colorectal MetastasesGastrointestinal OncologyColorectal SurgeryMedicineMedian SizeHepatic ResectionGastroenterologyHepatobiliary TumorSurgeryLiver CancerOncologyRadiation OncologyCancer Research
Sixty-two patients underwent hepatic resection for isolated colorectal metastases from 1963 to 1988. The numbers of hepatic resections were: lobectomy, 24 (39 percent); wedge resection, 23 (37 percent); and segmentectomy, 15 (24 percent). The median number of intraoperative blood transfusions was 3.0 units (range, 0-16 units). The median number of days in the hospital following hepatic resection was 13 (range, 4-51 days). There were 19 patients (30 percent), who developed a total of 23 complications. Surgery was required for complications in nine patients. Surgical mortality occurred in 5 of 62 (8 percent) patients. The estimated median survival in 56 patients with one to three metastases was 26 months, with a 28 percent estimated 5-year survival. The median size of the metastases was 4.0 cm (range, 0.7-13 cm). The estimated median survival in 27 patients with metastases less than 4 cm in diameter was 26 months, with a 24 percent estimated 5-year survival. The estimated median overall survival from the time of hepatic resection was 25 months.
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