Results of 136 curative hepatectomies with a safety margin of less than 10 mm for colorectal metastases

Dominique Elias, Andréa Cavalcanti, Jean Christophe Sabourin, Jean Pierre Pignon, Michel Ducreux, Philippe Lasser

    Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

    142 Citations (Scopus)

    Résumé

    Background and Objectives: It is now established that liver resection is beneficial for metastases from colorectal cancer. Nevertheless, a surgical margin estimated at less than 10 mm at preoperative imaging is considered an absolute contraindication to surgery by some, and a relative contraindication by others. The true impact of the width of the margin on the prognosis is unclear. Methods: From 1984 to 1996, 196 patients underwent curative hepatectomy for liver metastases and were studied prospectively. Surgery was to be curative (or a complete R0 resection) and mortality was to be avoided. Of these 196 patients, 136 had surgical margins of less than 10 mm. Sixty- eight percent had multiple liver metastases and 15% had extrahepatic metastatic lesions. Clinical and pathological factors were studied specifically and a multivariate analysis was carded out. Results: Overall 5- year survival rate of these 136 patients (taking into account postoperative mortality which attained 1.5%) was 27.8% and the disease-free survival was 22.9%. The surgical margin was 0 mm in 30 cases. The sole prognostic factor was the discovery of unsuspected (resectable) extrahepatic lesions at laparotomy (P < 0.001); the width of the free margin had no significant effect. However, in the multivariate analysis of prognostic factors for the entire series (269 hepatectomies), three powerful parameters were identified: (1) the curative nature of resection (P = 0.0007), (2) less than 20% of liver involvement (P = 0.002), and (3) a free margin exceeding 9 mm (P = 0.02). A correlation was found between narrow margins and extensive disease (high number of metastases, bilateral sites, and extended hepatectomy). There was also a greater likelihood of microscopic satellite lesions within 10 mm around the metastases. Conclusions: The prognostic impact of the width of the surgical margin should not be overestimated. Hepatectomy for liver metastases can procure long-term survival, even in patients with supposedly poor prognostic factors. Resection is justified as long as it is complete and the risks are minimal.

    langue originaleAnglais
    Pages (de - à)88-93
    Nombre de pages6
    journalJournal of Surgical Oncology
    Volume69
    Numéro de publication2
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 oct. 1998

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