Login / Signup

Factors Associated with and Impact of Open Conversion in Laparoscopic and Robotic Minor Liver Resections: An International Multicenter Study of 10,541 Patients.

Mansour SalehFranco PascualMohammed GhallabAndrew G R WuKen-Min ChinFrancesca RattiMariano Cesare GiglioMarco GarattiPhan Phuoc NghiaYutaro KatoChetana LimPaulo HermanFabricio Ferreira CoelhoMoritz SchmelzleJohann PratschkeDavit L AghayanQiu LiuMarco V MarinoAndrea BelliAdrian K H ChiowIswanto SucandyArpad IvaneczFabrizio Di BenedettoSung Hoon ChoiJae Hoon LeeJames O ParkMikel PrietoYoelimar GuzmanConstantino FondevilaMikhail EfanovFernando RotellarGi-Hong ChoiRicardo Robles-CamposPrashant KadamRobert P SutcliffeRoberto I TroisiChung Ngai TangCharing C ChongMathieu D'HondtBernardo Dalla ValleAndrea RuzzenenteT Peter KinghamOlivier ScattonRong LiuAlejandro MejiaKohei MishimaGo WakabayashiSantiago Lopez-BenXiaoying WangAlessandro FerreroGiuseppe Maria EttorreMarco VivarelliVincenzo MazzaferroFelice GiulianteChee Chien YongMengqiu YinKazuteru MondenDavid GellerKuo-Hsin ChenAtsushi SugiokaBjørn EdwinTan-To CheungTran Cong Duy LongMohammad Abu HilalLuca AldrighettiOlivier SoubraneDavid FuksHo-Seong HanDaniel CherquiBrian Kim Poh Gohnull null
Published in: Annals of surgical oncology (2024)
Multiple risk factors were associated with conversion of MILR even for minor hepatectomies, and open conversion was associated with significantly poorer perioperative outcomes.
Keyphrases
  • minimally invasive
  • risk factors
  • robot assisted
  • cardiac surgery
  • patients undergoing
  • clinical trial
  • type diabetes
  • metabolic syndrome
  • acute kidney injury
  • adipose tissue
  • liver metastases