1 Department of General Surgery, Ospedali Riuniti Marche Nord, Pesaro, Italy.
2 Department of General Surgery, Carlo Urbani Hospital, Jesi (Ancona), Italy.
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2021, 10(02), 006–009
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjarr.2021.10.2.0091
DOI url: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2021.10.2.0091
Received on 24 February 2021; revised on 27 March 2021; accepted on 30 March 2021
Purpose: The treatment of hepatic neoplasms has undergone, in recent years, various evolution of the surgical technique and extension to the indication for resection. Many patients with liver tumors cannot benefit from resection due to the difficulty of the anatomical site of the lesion.Of these patients, only some can benefit from ex vivo hepatic resection, which consists of a complete hepatectomy, bench tumor resection and self-transplant.
Materials and methods: We have retrospectively evaluated PUBMED databases. Studies was evaluated from 2010 to 2020.Only very few studies analyzed “Ex situ liver resection”, “Extracorporeal liver resection”, “Liver auto-transplantation”.
Conclusion: Ex vivo liver resection and autotransplantation is fesible in very few patients with unresectable hepatic tumor fit for surgery. R0 resection accounts about 60%-90% but outcomes are less satisfactory due to high complications rate of about 25% and low survival in 3 years.
Ex situ liver resection; Extracorporeal liver resection; Liver auto-transplantation
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Danilo Coco and Silvana Leanza. Ex vivo liver resection for liver tumors: Last resort when conventional technique is not applicable. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2021, 10(02), 006–009. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2021.10.2.0091
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