Background/aims: To describe the initial experience of simultaneous resection of colorectal cancer and liver metastases through hand-assisted laparoscopy (HALS).
Methodology: After endotracheal general anesthesia, patients were placed in the Trendelenburg with lithotomy position. A 5-cm longitudinal subumbilical port was created, and the Lap Disc device was placed and pneumoperitoneum was established. A laparoscope was inserted to explore the liver and the whole pelvic cavity. The surgeon stood on the right side or between the patient's legs, and a 10-mm trocar was placed in the abdominal wall based upon the location of the tumor. The liver and the colorectal lesion were reselected with the assisted-hand through the Lap Disc to establish the possibility of resection, the tumor margin, and metastasis.
Results: Simultaneous resection of colorectal cancer and liver metastases through HALS were successful in all eight patients with operating time of 2-4 h. Average intraoperative blood loss was 100-300 ml, and no severe postoperative complications were observed. The average length of postoperative hospital stay was 7.5 days.
Conclusions: HALS for simultaneous resection of colorectal and metastatic liver cancer has the advantages of safety, feasibility, minimal invasion, shorter operation time, reduced operative difficulty less pain and rapid recovery.