Background: Surgery represents the only potentially curative treatment of hilar cholangiocarcinoma (hilCC). It may be suggested that meticulous preoperative work-up in Asian countries leads to higher resection rates.
Method: One hundred and eighty-two patients treated in our department between 1998 and 2008 were included in an analysis based on our prospectively recorded database. Among them, 75 % had a percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography as part of their diagnostic work-up. A total of 160 patients underwent explorative surgery and 123 patients were resected (77 % of patients undergoing exploration, 68 % of all patients).
Results: Ninety-one percent of the patients were diagnosed to have Bismuth III and IV tumours. En-bloc resection of the tumour and the adjacent liver including segment 1 was the standard procedure in 109 of these patients, while hilar resection was performed in 14 patients. Upon tumour resection, hospital mortality was 5.7 %. Five-year survival in patients without surgery or with mere exploration was 0 %, after resection it reached 26 %. Patients with R 1 resection experienced longer survival than patients without resection (p < 0.001). Right and left hemihepatectomies were performed with identical frequency resulting in identical survival. Lymph node involvement proved to be the only significant predictor of prognosis (p = 0.006).
Conclusion: Resection should be performed whenever possible since even after palliative resection survival is substantially increased compared to patients without resection. Meticulous preoperative work-up may contribute to a high resection rate in patients with hilCC by providing additional information allowing the surgeon to perform more aggressive approaches.
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.