Outcome of liver resection for small bowel neuroendocrine tumour metastases

<p><strong>Background</strong> Small bowel neuroendocrine tumours frequently metastasise to the liver. While liver resection improves survival and provides symptomatic relief, multifocal bilobar disease adds complexity to surgical management.</p> <p><strong>Object...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Polkinghorne, MD, Krige, JEJ, Jonas, E, Kotze, UK, Bernon, MM
Format: Journal article
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2018
Description
Summary:<p><strong>Background</strong> Small bowel neuroendocrine tumours frequently metastasise to the liver. While liver resection improves survival and provides symptomatic relief, multifocal bilobar disease adds complexity to surgical management.</p> <p><strong>Objectives</strong> This study evaluated outcome in patients with small bowel neuroendocrine liver metastases who underwent liver resection at Groote Schuur Hospital and UCT Private Academic Hospital.</p> <p><strong>Methods</strong> All patients with small bowel neuroendocrine liver metastases treated with resection from 1990-2015 were identified from a prospective departmental database. Demographic data, operative management, morbidity and mortality using the Accordion classification were analysed. Survival was assessed using the Kaplan-Meier method.</p> <p><strong>Results</strong> Seventeen patients (9 women, 8 men, median age 55 years, range 31-76) underwent resection. Each patient had all identifiable liver metastases resected and/or ablated (median n = 3, range 1-20). Ten patients had major anatomical liver resections. Three patients had five segments resected, and seven had four resected. Nine patients (53%) had a concurrent bowel resection of the small bowel NET primary and a regional mesenteric lymphadenectomy. Median operating time was 255 min (range 150-720). Median blood-loss was 800 ml (range 200-10,000). Five patients required intraoperative blood transfusion. Hepatic vascular inflow control was used in ten patients (56.5 min median, range 20-150 min), which included hepatic inflow control n = 8, total hepatic exclusion n = 1, and selective hepatic exclusion n = 1. Median postoperative hospital stay was 9 days (range 2-28). Thirteen complications occurred in seven patients. Accordion grades were 1 n = 3, 2 n = 4, 3 n = 3, 4 n = 2, 6 n = 1. One patient required reoperation for bleeding and a bile leak. One patient died of a myocardial infarction 36 hours postoperatively. Sixteen patients (94%) had symptomatic improvement. Five-year overall survival was 91% (median follow-up 36 months, range 14-86 months.</p> <p><strong>Conclusion</strong> Our data show that liver resection can be safely performed for small bowel NET metastases with a good 5-year survival. However, a substantial number of patients require a major liver resection and these patients are best managed at a multidisciplinary referral centre</p>