4.5 Article

Simultaneous resection of colorectal cancer and synchronous colorectal liver metastases: A risk stratified analysis of the NSQIP database

Journal

JOURNAL OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jso.27393

Keywords

colorectal cancer; hepatic metastases; minimally invasive surgery

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This study investigates the safety of simultaneous surgical approach for colorectal cancer patients with colorectal liver metastases. The results show that simultaneous resection of colorectal and synchronous liver metastases is associated with increased morbidity risk in most cases, although rates of readmission and reoperation were not increased. Minimally invasive surgical approaches may significantly mitigate this risk.
Background and ObjectivesOver 25% of patients diagnosed with colorectal cancer (CRC) will develop colorectal liver metastases (CRLM). Controversy exists over the surgical management of these patients. This study aims to investigate the safety of a simultaneous surgical approach by stratifying patients based on procedure risk and operative approach. MethodsUsing ACS-NSQIP (2016-2020), patients with CRC who underwent isolated colorectal, isolated hepatic, or simultaneous resections were identified. Colorectal and hepatic procedures were stratified by morbidity risk (high vs. low) and operative approach (open vs. minimally invasive). Thirty-day overall morbidity was compared between risk matched isolated and simultaneous resection groups. ResultsA total of 65 417 patients were identified, with 1550 (2.4%) undergoing simultaneous resections. A total of 1207 (77.9%) underwent a low-risk colorectal and low-risk liver resection. On multivariate analysis, there was no significant difference in overall morbidity between patients who had a simultaneous open high-risk colorectal/low-risk hepatic procedure compared to patients who had an isolated open high-risk colorectal procedure (odds ratio: 1.19; 95% confidence interval: 0.94-1.50; p = 0.148). All other combinations of simultaneous procedures had statistically significant higher rates of morbidity than the isolated group. ConclusionsSimultaneous resection of colorectal and synchronous CRLM is associated with an increased risk of morbidity in most circumstances in a risk stratified analysis, although rates of readmission and reoperation were not increased. Minimally invasive surgical approaches may significantly mitigate this morbidity.

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