4.7 Article

Textbook Outcomes After Open Live Donor Right Hepatectomy and Open Right Hepatic Lobectomy for Cancer in 686 patients Redefining the Benchmark

Journal

ANNALS OF SURGERY
Volume 278, Issue 2, Pages E256-E263

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000005749

Keywords

benchmark; donor hepatectomy; laparoscopic hepatectomy; laparoscopic liver resection; major hepatectomy; liver resection; right hepatectomy; right hepatic lobectomy; textbook outcomes

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This study compared textbook outcomes (TO) of open live donor right hepatectomy (RH) versus open right hepatic lobectomy for cancer in a single Western center and identified clinical factors associated with failure to achieve a TO. The results showed that the TO rate after RH for live donor purposes was 92.2% and for RH for cancer cases was 53.7%.
Objective:To compare textbook outcomes (TO) of open live donor right hepatectomy (RH) versus open right hepatic lobectomy for cancer in a single Western center and to identify clinical factors associated with failure to achieve a TO. Background:TO, a composite quality measure that captures multiple aspects of perioperative care, has not been thoroughly studied in open RH. We hypothesized that TO rates after RH for live donor transplant could represent the best-achievable results of this operation and could serve as the benchmark for RH performed for an oncologic indication. Methods:A prospective database was reviewed to compare TO rates after RH for live donor purposes versus RH for cancer at a single center from 2010 to 2020. A TO was defined as achieving 7 metrics: no perioperative transfusion, no major postoperative complications, no significant bile leak, no unplanned transfer to the ICU, no 30-day mortality, no 30-day readmission, and no R1 margins for cancer cases. Results:Among 686 RH patients (371 live donor and 315 cancer cases), a TO was achieved in 92.2% of RH donors and 53.7% of RH cancer cases. Live donor patients tended to be younger, healthier, and thinner. Among donors, increased intraoperative blood loss, and in cancer cases, male sex, tumor size, and increased intraoperative blood loss were associated with TO failure. Conclusions:A TO can be achieved in over 90% of patients undergoing living donor RH and in approximately half of RH cancer cases. These metrics represent a new benchmark for real-world TO after open RH.

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