4.4 Article

Intra-operative gallbladder scoring predicts conversion of laparoscopic to open cholecystectomy: a WSES prospective collaborative study

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY SURGERY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13017-019-0230-9

Keywords

Cholecystitis; Operative severity scoring system; Conversion to open cholecystectomy; Index surgery; Surgical outcomes

Funding

  1. EU's INTERREG VA Programme

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IntroductionLaparoscopic cholecystectomy, the gold-standard approach for cholecystectomy, has surprisingly variable outcomes and conversion rates. Only recently has operative grading been reported to define disease severity and few have been validated. This multicentre, multinational study assessed an operative scoring system to assess its ability to predict the need for conversion from laparoscopic to open cholecystectomy.MethodsA prospective, web-based, ethically approved study was established by WSES with a 10-point gallbladder operative scoring system; enrolling patients undergoing elective or emergency laparoscopic cholecystectomy between January 2016 and December 2017. Gallbladder surgery was considered easy if the G10 score <2, moderate (24), difficult (57) and extreme (810). Demographics about the patients, surgeons and operative procedures, use of cholangiography and conversion rates were recorded.ResultsFive hundred four patients, mean age 53.5 (range 18-89), were enrolled by 55 surgeons in 16 countries. Surgery was performed by consultants in 70% and was elective in (56%) with a mean operative time of 78.7 min (range 15-400). The mean G10 score was 3.21, with 22% deemed to have difficult or extreme surgical gallbladders, and 71/504 patients were converted. The G10 score was 2.98 in those completed laparoscopically and 4.65 in the 71/504 (14%) converted. (p<0.0001; AUC 0.772 (CI 0.719-0.825). The optimal cut-off point of 0.067 (score of 3) was identified in G10 vs conversion to open cholecystectomy. Conversion occurred in 33% of patients with G10 scores of 5. The four variables statistically predictive of conversion were GB appearancecompletely buried GB, impacted stone, bile or pus outside GB and fistula.ConclusionThe G10 operative scores provide simple grading of operative cholecystectomy and are predictive of the need to convert to open cholecystectomy. Broader adaptation and validation may provide a benchmark to understand and improve care and afford more standardisation in global comparisons of care for cholecystectomy.

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