ALPPS for Locally Advanced Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma: Did Aggressive Surgery Lead to the Oncological Benefit? An International Multi-center Study

  • Jun Li
  • Mohamed Moustafa
  • Michael Linecker
  • Georg Lurje
  • Ivan Capobianco
  • Janine Baumgart
  • Francesca Ratti
  • Falk Rauchfuss
  • Deniz Balci
  • Eduardo Fernandes
  • Roberto Montalti
  • Ricardo Robles-Campos
  • Bergthor Bjornsson
  • Stefan A Topp
  • Jiri Fronek
  • Chao Liu
  • Roger Wahba
  • Christiane Bruns
  • Stefan M Brunner
  • Hans J Schlitt
  • Asmus Heumann
  • Björn-Ole Stüben
  • Jakob R Izbicki
  • Jan Bednarsch
  • Enrico Gringeri
  • Elisa Fasolo
  • Jens Rolinger
  • Jakub Kristek
  • Roberto Hernandez-Alejandro
  • Andreas Schnitzbauer
  • Natascha Nuessler
  • Michael R Schön
  • Sergey Voskanyan
  • Athanasios S Petrou
  • Oszkar Hahn
  • Yuji Soejima
  • Emilio Vicente
  • Carlos Castro-Benitez
  • René Adam
  • Federico Tomassini
  • Roberto Ivan Troisi
  • Alexandros Kantas
  • Karl Juergen Oldhafer
  • Victoria Ardiles
  • Eduardo de Santibanes
  • Massimo Malago
  • Pierre-Alain Clavien
  • Marco Vivarelli
  • Utz Settmacher
  • Luca Aldrighetti
  • Ulf Neumann
  • Henrik Petrowsky
  • Umberto Cillo
  • Hauke Lang (Shared last author)
  • Silvio Nadalin (Shared last author)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: ALPPS is found to increase the resectability of primary and secondary liver malignancy at the advanced stage. The aim of the study was to verify the surgical and oncological outcome of ALPPS for intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC).

METHODS: The study cohort was based on the ALPPS registry with patients from 31 international centers between August 2009 and January 2018. Propensity score matched patients receiving chemotherapy only were selected from the SEER database as controls for the survival analysis.

RESULTS: One hundred and two patients undergoing ALPPS were recruited, 99 completed the second stage with median inter-stage duration of 11 days. The median kinetic growth rate was 23 ml/day. R0 resection was achieved in 87 (85%). Initially high rates of morbidity and mortality decreased steadily to a 29% severe complication rate and 7% 90-day morbidity in the last 2 years. Post-hepatectomy liver failure remained the main cause of 90-day mortality. Multivariate analysis revealed insufficient future liver remnant at the stage-2 operation (FLR2) to be the only risk factor for severe complications (OR 2.91, p = 0.02). The propensity score matching analysis showed a superior overall survival in the ALPPS group compared to palliative chemotherapy (median overall survival: 26.4 months vs 14 months; 1-, 2-, and 3-year survival rates: 82.4%, 70.5% and 39.6% vs 51.2%, 21.4% and 11.3%, respectively, p < 0.01). The survival benefit, however, was not confirmed in the subgroup analysis for patients with insufficient FLR2 or multifocal ICC.

CONCLUSION: ALPPS showed high efficacy in achieving R0 resections in locally advanced ICC. To get the most oncological benefit from this aggressive surgery, ALPPS would be restricted to patients with single lesions and sufficient FLR2.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1068-9265
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 05.2020
PubMed 32002719