학술논문

Laparoscopy may decrease morbidity and length of stay after elective colon cancer resection, especially in frail patients: results from an observational real-life study
Document Type
Original Paper
Author
Cerdán Santacruz, CarlosFrasson, MatteoFlor-Lorente, BlasRamos Rodríguez, José LuisTrallero Anoro, MartaMillán Scheiding, MónicaMaseda Díaz, OlgaDujovne Lindenbaum, PaulaMonzón Abad, AndrésGarcía-Granero Ximenez, EduardoAlvarez Rico, Miguel AngelGarcía Brao, Maria JesusSanchez Gonzalez, Juan ManuelBraithwaite, MarielaMartí Martínez, EvaÁlvarez Pérez, José AntonioEspí, AlejandroRomero Simó, ManuelEscoll Rufino, JordiSantamaría Olabarrieta, MartaViñas Martínez, JoséLópez Bañeres, ManoloBlesa Sierra, IsabelFeliú Villaró, FrancescAguiló Lucía, JavierBargallo Berzosa, JoséAlonso Hernández, NataliaLabrador Vallverdú, Francisco JavierParra Baños, Pedro AntonioAis Conde, GuillermoCodina Cazador, AntonioHernandis Villalba, JuanÁlvarez Laso, CarlosMartínez Alcaide, SoniaCáceres Alvarado, María NievesRey Simó, IgnacioMontero García, JosepGarcía Fadrique, AlfonsoAguilella Diago, VicenteGarcía Septiem, JavierGarcía García, JacintoPonchietti, LucaCarceller Navarro, María SoledadRamos Fernández, MaríaConde Muiño, RaquelHuerga Álvarez, DanielMenéndez Sánchez, PabloMaristany Bienert, CarlosGarcía Martínez, María TeresaMoreno Muzas, CeliaPastor Idoate, CarlosAndicoechea, AlejandroAlonso Casado, Adolfo PedroRoig Vila, José VicenteGoded Broto, IgnacioCollera, PabloArroyo Sebastián, AntonioThe ANACO Study Group
Source
Surgical Endoscopy: And Other Interventional TechniquesOfficial Journal of the Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons (SAGES) and European Association for Endoscopic Surgery (EAES). :1-11
Subject
Colon cancer
Laparoscopic surgery
Short-term outcome
Morbidity
Mortality
Length-of-stay
Observational multicenter study
Language
English
ISSN
0930-2794
1432-2218
Abstract
Background:Advantages of laparoscopic approach in colon cancer surgery have been previously demonstrated in controlled, randomized trials and in retrospective analysis of large administrative databases. Nevertheless, evidence of these advantages in prospective, observational studies from real-life settings is scarce.Methods:This is a prospective, observational study, including a consecutive series of patients that underwent elective colonic resection for cancer in 52 Spanish hospitals. Pre-/intraoperative data, related to patient, tumor, surgical procedure, and hospital, were recorded as well as 60-day post-operative outcomes, including wound infection, complications, anastomotic leak, length of stay, and mortality. A univariate and multivariate analysis was performed to determine the influence of laparoscopy on short-term post-operative outcome. A sub-analysis of the effect of laparoscopy according to patients’ pre-operative risk (ASA Score I–II vs. III–IV) was also performed.Results:2968 patients were included: 44.2% were initially operated by laparoscopy, with a 13.9% conversion rate to laparotomy. At univariate analysis, laparoscopy was associated with a decreased mortality (p = 0.015), morbidity (p < 0.0001), wound infection (p < 0.0001), and post-operative length of stay (p < 0.0001). At multivariate analysis, laparoscopy resulted as an independent protective factor for morbidity (OR 0.7; p = 0.004), wound infection (OR 0.6; p < 0.0001), and length of post-operative stay (Effect—2 days; p < 0.0001), compared to open approach. These advantages were more relevant in high-risk patients (ASA III–IV), even if the majority of them were operated by open approach (67.1%).Conclusions:In a real-life setting, laparoscopy decreases wound infection rate, post-operative complications, and length of stay, especially in ASA III–IV patients.