Conference Coverage

Laparoscopic surgery survival outcomes on par with open approach in colorectal liver metastases


 

REPORTING FROM ASCO 2019

– For colorectal cancer patients with liver metastases, laparoscopic surgery has short-term advantages over open surgery, including fewer complications and better quality of life as compared to open surgery. Now, there are data to show that long-term outcomes with the laparoscopic approach aren’t any worse with the laparoscopic approach.

In a video interview at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Åsmund Avdem Fretland, MD, discusses results of the 280-patient randomized OSLO-COMET study, including 5-year survival of 56% for the laparoscopic approach, and similarly, 57% for the open procedure.

Based on lower morbidity, and now similar life expectancy, more centers should be doing laparoscopic procedures for liver metastases, said Dr. Fretland, a surgeon in the department of HPB surgery at Oslo University Hospital.

For now, however, open surgery appears to be the dominant approach. According to a recent survey, just 22% of U.S. patients with colorectal liver metastases have laparoscopic surgery.

More data could help. Dr. Fretland said in the interview that more randomized trials are underway aimed at evaluating the long-term outcomes of laparoscopic versus open procedures.

Dr. Fretland reported honoraria from Olympus Medical Systems.

Recommended Reading

Appendectomy linked to increased risk of subsequent Parkinson’s
MDedge Surgery
Robotic and lap surgery achieve similar negative margins for rectal resection
MDedge Surgery
Study identifies predictors of bariatric surgery attrition
MDedge Surgery
PPI metabolism may be altered in about one-third of bariatric surgery candidates
MDedge Surgery
In duodenal neuroendocrine tumors, resection technique matters
MDedge Surgery
Bariatric surgery found to be effective in IBD patients
MDedge Surgery
Adding drugs to gastric balloons increases weight loss
MDedge Surgery
Early cholecystectomy prevents recurrent biliary events
MDedge Surgery
Cultural competence behaviors linked to higher patient satisfaction scores
MDedge Surgery
Asymptomatic gallstones seldom require surgical intervention
MDedge Surgery