Impact of Tumor Size on the Difficulty of Laparoscopic Major Hepatectomies: An International Multicenter Study.
Yutaro KatoAtsushi SugiokaMasayuki KojimaNicholas L SynWang ZhongkaiRong LiuFederica CiprianiThomas ArmstrongDavit L AghayanTiing-Foong SiowChetana LimOlivier ScattonPaulo HermanFabricio Ferreira CoelhoMarco V MarinoVincenzo MazzaferroAdrian K H ChiowIswanto SucandyArpad IvaneczSung Hoon ChoiJae Hoon LeeMikel GastacaMarco VivarelliFelice GiulianteBernardo Dalla ValleAndrea RuzzenenteChee-Chien YongConstantino FondevilaMikhail EfanovFabrizio Di BenedettoAndrea BelliJames O ParkFernando RotellarGi-Hong ChoiRicardo Robles-CamposXiaoying WangRobert P SutcliffeMoritz SchmelzleJohann PratschkeEric C H LaiCharing C N ChongMathieu D'HondtKazuteru MondenSantiago Lopez-BenT Peter KinghamFabio ForchinoAlessandro FerreroGiuseppe Maria EttorreGiovanni Battista Levi SandriFranco PascualDaniel CherquiOlivier SoubraneGo WakabayashiRoberto I TroisiTan-To CheungZewei ChenMengqiu YinMizelle D'SilvaHo-Seong HanPhan Phuoc NghiaTran Cong Duy LongBjørn EdwinDavid FuksKuo-Hsin ChenMohammad Abu HilalLuca AldrighettiBrian Kim Poh Gohnull nullPublished in: Annals of surgical oncology (2023)
Increasing TS was associated with poorer intraoperative but not postoperative outcomes after L-MH. We determined 2 TS cutoffs (50 mm and 10 mm) which could optimally stratify the surgical difficulty of L-MH.