Port site metastases a year after initial laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Should the use of retrieval bags during laparoscopic cholecystectomy be the new gold standard?

IF 0.7
Natalia Petryshyn, Teodora Dražić, Piotr Hogendorf, Janusz Strzelczyk, Alicja Strzałka, Krzysztof Szwedziak, Adam Durczyński
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Furthermore, there is a lack of general acknowledgement on the vitality of using plastic retrieval bags during cholecystectomy regardless of the histopathology. The case study at hand shows how critical a plastic bag can be during cholecystectomy in further preventing the risk of local or distant metastasis originating from the gallbladder. This is especially important as it is estimated that almost one third of patients who undergo curative intent surgery for gallbladder cancer develop a tumor recurrence. Specifically, our patient was found to have a distant recurrence occurring a year after the elective surgery, which is in range with the usual median recurrence of 9.5 months or within the first 12 months [5]. &lt;/br&gt; &lt;/br&gt; Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is a common surgical procedure, and remains the gold standard for the management of benign gallbladder and biliary disease. While this procedure can be technically straightforward, there are some key factors that surgeons must take into consideration with one of them being whether to use a retrieval bag or not. According to the \"Guidelines for the Clinical Application of Laparoscopic Biliary Tract Surgery\" of the Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons (SAGES), the use of a retrieval bag for gallbladder extractions is purely at the discretion of the surgeon [6]. Generally, plastic bags should be used when gallbladder cancer is suspected to minimize disseminating tumor cells, or in the case of acute cholecystitis, to avoid spillage of gallbladder contents including possible infected bile, stones or pus. While one study states that when a cholecystectomy is performed due to gallstones, generally, surgeons will only opt for a plastic bag if there are large gallstones, great inflammation or an edematous gallbladder [7, 8]. However, another article claims the adverse, with endoscopic bags being in fact used commonly in elective cholecystectomy, despite the increased cost and apparent benefit [7]. A major drawback, and possible reason why some surgeons may decide not to use retrieval bags could be due to the extra skills needed, or increased difficulty to the surgery. This could be due to the need for enlargement of port site incision, placement of the bag around the gallbladder, as well as the potential risk to abdominal organ damage during the insertion and retrieval of the bag [7]. Sometimes the decision not to use the bag is purely economic, especially in developing countries. Fortunately nowadays commercially available endobags become more inexpensive, and to the very little extent, increase final costs of laparoscopic cholecystectomy. However, in order to reduce these costs several studies have shown that sterile male condoms or surgical non-powdered gloves can be used [9]. &lt;/br&gt; &lt;/br&gt; Umbilical port site recurrence is traditionally a major concern, however there is still little research around the exact mechanism responsible for port site recurrence. Port site metastasis is the most common form of parietal recurrence with all stages of gallbladder carcinoma being reported at any of the trocar sites. Historically it was proved that the risk of port site metastasis after laparoscopic removal of incidental gallbladder cancer remained at the level of 14-30% of all cases. Recent study conducted to assess the incidence of port site metastasis in incidental gallbladder cancer in the modern era (2000-2014) versus the historic era (1991-1999) proved that this incidence has decreased but is still relatively high to other primary tumors [10]. &lt;/br&gt; &lt;/br&gt;It generally presents after latency, ranging from a few months to 3-4 years. Many factors can contribute to port site metastasis [9]. One of the most important is intraoperative spillage of bile from gallbladder wall perforation, which has been described in 30% of laparoscopic cholecystectomy cases, and it has been linked to port site metastasis [11]. Interestingly, local recurrence was noted only in a minority of patients, with distant sites such as the liver and peritoneum being the most common sites for disease recurrence [4]. &lt;/br&gt; &lt;/br&gt; Some hypotheses suggest to elucidate the cause of port site metastasis, including direct \"chimney stack effect\" in which the cancer cells may spread along trocar wound [12]. However, recent studies indicated that the chimney effect may not be the key reason for port site metastasis after laparoscopy and other factors may play crucial role in the development of this phenomenon, such as biological invasiveness of cancer, local traumatic factors, as well as host immune response [13]. Current evidence suggests that carbon dioxide pneumoperitoneum does not enhance wound metastases following laparoscopic abdominal tumour surgery. Animal studies indicated that overall postoperative wound recurrence of cancer is not significantly different between routine and gasless laparoscopic surgery [14]. null Tissue specimens removed during surgery are examined both macroscopically and microscopically, and despite this, false negatives can still persist. While there is clear data pertaining to false negatives associated with biopsies done with FNA occurring in a staggering 11-41% to detect malignancy before surgery [15], there is little data for false negatives in the postsurgical setting. Although histopathological analysis is usually very reliable to exclude malignancy, it may fail. This is clearly evident with our case, where the result was false negative. The cause for false negativity could be due to, for example, improper sampling despite guidelines indicating that three samples ought to be taken from high-risk areas of the specimen [16]. With false positives being possible both in pre- and postsurgery biopsies, surgeons must be cautious and take this factor into account in their surgical approach [17]. &lt;/br&gt;&lt;/br&gt; At present, the only method that is universally used to reduce the recurrence of gallbladder cancer is cholecystectomy as incision of port sites and the use of endoscopic bags have been variably used among surgeons. Moreover, the use of adjuvant therapy after cholecystectomy has not shown to decrease the rate of recurrence, however, patients who underwent chemotherapy treatment often did slightly better [4]. Port site metastases are independently associated with a worse prognosis. Resection of previous laparoscopy port sites is advised in patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis after cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (CRS/HIPEC) to ensure complete cytoreduction [18]. &lt;/br&gt;&lt;/br&gt; It is clear from this standpoint that other solutions and ideas are needed. One of these could be permanent implementation of retrieval bags during cholecystectomies, especially due to the fact that it is not always possible to foresee the problems of retraction or to show a positive histopathological result in case of gallbladder rupture [4, 17]. In every cholecystectomy there is a risk of gallbladder perforation and spread of malignant cells. Perforation of the gallbladder is in fact a frequent complication during laparoscopic cholecystectomy, with a much higher risk of perforation in acute conditions like acute cholecystitis or gallbladder empyema. Some other methods that could be used to prevent dissemination of either gallbladder contents or malignant cells include clip application, rubber band ligation or endoscopic loop application. Rubber band ligation is especially good because it is considered as a safe, simple, inexpensive method, not increasing the duration of surgery [19]. Regardless of what method a surgeon decides to use to prevent cell dissemination during cholecystectomy, it is vital that one is used, and that the guidelines are amended. 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引用次数: 2

Abstract

As a result of gallbladder cancer being rare, it is often an understudied disease. There is lack of information particularly about long-term outcomes after resection during either laparoscopic or open surgery techniques [4]. There is also little data on the ways in which surgical techniques can be improved to further aid patients diagnosed with gallstones or other indications for cholecystectomy, and resulting positive histopathology. Furthermore, there is a lack of general acknowledgement on the vitality of using plastic retrieval bags during cholecystectomy regardless of the histopathology. The case study at hand shows how critical a plastic bag can be during cholecystectomy in further preventing the risk of local or distant metastasis originating from the gallbladder. This is especially important as it is estimated that almost one third of patients who undergo curative intent surgery for gallbladder cancer develop a tumor recurrence. Specifically, our patient was found to have a distant recurrence occurring a year after the elective surgery, which is in range with the usual median recurrence of 9.5 months or within the first 12 months [5]. </br> </br> Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is a common surgical procedure, and remains the gold standard for the management of benign gallbladder and biliary disease. While this procedure can be technically straightforward, there are some key factors that surgeons must take into consideration with one of them being whether to use a retrieval bag or not. According to the "Guidelines for the Clinical Application of Laparoscopic Biliary Tract Surgery" of the Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons (SAGES), the use of a retrieval bag for gallbladder extractions is purely at the discretion of the surgeon [6]. Generally, plastic bags should be used when gallbladder cancer is suspected to minimize disseminating tumor cells, or in the case of acute cholecystitis, to avoid spillage of gallbladder contents including possible infected bile, stones or pus. While one study states that when a cholecystectomy is performed due to gallstones, generally, surgeons will only opt for a plastic bag if there are large gallstones, great inflammation or an edematous gallbladder [7, 8]. However, another article claims the adverse, with endoscopic bags being in fact used commonly in elective cholecystectomy, despite the increased cost and apparent benefit [7]. A major drawback, and possible reason why some surgeons may decide not to use retrieval bags could be due to the extra skills needed, or increased difficulty to the surgery. This could be due to the need for enlargement of port site incision, placement of the bag around the gallbladder, as well as the potential risk to abdominal organ damage during the insertion and retrieval of the bag [7]. Sometimes the decision not to use the bag is purely economic, especially in developing countries. Fortunately nowadays commercially available endobags become more inexpensive, and to the very little extent, increase final costs of laparoscopic cholecystectomy. However, in order to reduce these costs several studies have shown that sterile male condoms or surgical non-powdered gloves can be used [9]. </br> </br> Umbilical port site recurrence is traditionally a major concern, however there is still little research around the exact mechanism responsible for port site recurrence. Port site metastasis is the most common form of parietal recurrence with all stages of gallbladder carcinoma being reported at any of the trocar sites. Historically it was proved that the risk of port site metastasis after laparoscopic removal of incidental gallbladder cancer remained at the level of 14-30% of all cases. Recent study conducted to assess the incidence of port site metastasis in incidental gallbladder cancer in the modern era (2000-2014) versus the historic era (1991-1999) proved that this incidence has decreased but is still relatively high to other primary tumors [10]. </br> </br>It generally presents after latency, ranging from a few months to 3-4 years. Many factors can contribute to port site metastasis [9]. One of the most important is intraoperative spillage of bile from gallbladder wall perforation, which has been described in 30% of laparoscopic cholecystectomy cases, and it has been linked to port site metastasis [11]. Interestingly, local recurrence was noted only in a minority of patients, with distant sites such as the liver and peritoneum being the most common sites for disease recurrence [4]. </br> </br> Some hypotheses suggest to elucidate the cause of port site metastasis, including direct "chimney stack effect" in which the cancer cells may spread along trocar wound [12]. However, recent studies indicated that the chimney effect may not be the key reason for port site metastasis after laparoscopy and other factors may play crucial role in the development of this phenomenon, such as biological invasiveness of cancer, local traumatic factors, as well as host immune response [13]. Current evidence suggests that carbon dioxide pneumoperitoneum does not enhance wound metastases following laparoscopic abdominal tumour surgery. Animal studies indicated that overall postoperative wound recurrence of cancer is not significantly different between routine and gasless laparoscopic surgery [14]. null Tissue specimens removed during surgery are examined both macroscopically and microscopically, and despite this, false negatives can still persist. While there is clear data pertaining to false negatives associated with biopsies done with FNA occurring in a staggering 11-41% to detect malignancy before surgery [15], there is little data for false negatives in the postsurgical setting. Although histopathological analysis is usually very reliable to exclude malignancy, it may fail. This is clearly evident with our case, where the result was false negative. The cause for false negativity could be due to, for example, improper sampling despite guidelines indicating that three samples ought to be taken from high-risk areas of the specimen [16]. With false positives being possible both in pre- and postsurgery biopsies, surgeons must be cautious and take this factor into account in their surgical approach [17]. </br></br> At present, the only method that is universally used to reduce the recurrence of gallbladder cancer is cholecystectomy as incision of port sites and the use of endoscopic bags have been variably used among surgeons. Moreover, the use of adjuvant therapy after cholecystectomy has not shown to decrease the rate of recurrence, however, patients who underwent chemotherapy treatment often did slightly better [4]. Port site metastases are independently associated with a worse prognosis. Resection of previous laparoscopy port sites is advised in patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis after cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (CRS/HIPEC) to ensure complete cytoreduction [18]. </br></br> It is clear from this standpoint that other solutions and ideas are needed. One of these could be permanent implementation of retrieval bags during cholecystectomies, especially due to the fact that it is not always possible to foresee the problems of retraction or to show a positive histopathological result in case of gallbladder rupture [4, 17]. In every cholecystectomy there is a risk of gallbladder perforation and spread of malignant cells. Perforation of the gallbladder is in fact a frequent complication during laparoscopic cholecystectomy, with a much higher risk of perforation in acute conditions like acute cholecystitis or gallbladder empyema. Some other methods that could be used to prevent dissemination of either gallbladder contents or malignant cells include clip application, rubber band ligation or endoscopic loop application. Rubber band ligation is especially good because it is considered as a safe, simple, inexpensive method, not increasing the duration of surgery [19]. Regardless of what method a surgeon decides to use to prevent cell dissemination during cholecystectomy, it is vital that one is used, and that the guidelines are amended. This case study provides the means for this, especially since a negative histopathological biopsy still does not exclude the possibility of traces of cancerous cells being undisclosed, allowing for a potential risk of port site metastases.

首次腹腔镜胆囊切除术后一年发生肝转移。腹腔镜胆囊切除术中使用取物袋是否应该成为新的金标准?
由于胆囊癌是罕见的,它往往是一个研究不足的疾病。特别是缺乏关于腹腔镜或开放手术技术切除后的长期结果的信息[4]。关于如何改进手术技术以进一步帮助诊断为胆结石或其他胆囊切除术适应症的患者,并导致组织病理学阳性的数据也很少。此外,在胆囊切除术中,无论组织病理学如何,都缺乏对使用塑料回收袋的生命力的普遍认识。手头的案例研究表明,在胆囊切除术中,塑料袋在进一步预防胆囊局部或远处转移的风险方面是多么重要。这一点尤其重要,因为据估计,几乎三分之一的胆囊癌患者在接受治疗目的手术后会出现肿瘤复发。具体来说,我们的患者在择期手术一年后发现远处复发,这与通常的中位复发9.5个月或在前12个月内的范围一致[5]。& lt; / br&gt;& lt; / br&gt;腹腔镜胆囊切除术是一种常见的外科手术,仍然是良性胆囊和胆道疾病治疗的金标准。虽然这个手术在技术上很简单,但有一些关键因素是外科医生必须考虑的,其中之一就是是否使用回收袋。根据美国胃肠内镜外科医师学会(SAGES)的《腹腔镜胆道手术临床应用指南》,胆囊摘取是否使用取囊袋完全由外科医生自行决定[6]。一般来说,当怀疑胆囊癌时,应使用塑料袋,以尽量减少肿瘤细胞的播散,或在急性胆囊炎的情况下,避免胆囊内容物溢出,包括可能感染的胆汁、结石或脓液。而一项研究表明,由于胆结石而行胆囊切除术时,通常只有在胆结石较大、炎症严重或胆囊水肿的情况下,外科医生才会选择塑料袋[7,8]。然而,另一篇文章提出了不良反应,尽管内镜袋增加了成本和明显的好处,但实际上在选择性胆囊切除术中通常使用内镜袋[7]。一个主要的缺点,可能是一些外科医生决定不使用回收袋的原因,可能是由于需要额外的技能,或者增加了手术的难度。这可能是由于需要扩大端口切口,将袋子放置在胆囊周围,以及在袋子插入和取出过程中可能对腹部器官造成损伤[7]。有时候,不使用塑料袋的决定纯粹是出于经济考虑,尤其是在发展中国家。幸运的是,现在市面上可买到的内袋越来越便宜,并且在很小程度上增加了腹腔镜胆囊切除术的最终费用。然而,为了降低这些成本,一些研究表明,可以使用无菌男用避孕套或手术无粉手套[9]。& lt; / br&gt;& lt; / br&gt;脐带部位复发历来是人们关注的主要问题,然而,关于脐带部位复发的确切机制的研究仍然很少。Port site metastasis是最常见的顶骨复发形式,所有阶段的胆囊癌在套管针的任何部位都有报道。历史证明,腹腔镜下偶发胆囊癌切除后肝部转移的风险保持在14-30%的水平。近期有研究比较了近代(2000-2014年)和历史时期(1991-1999年)偶发胆囊癌的port site metastasis的发生率,结果表明该发生率有所下降,但相对于其他原发肿瘤仍较高[10]。& lt; / br&gt;&lt;/br&gt;通常在潜伏期后出现,潜伏期从几个月到3-4年不等。许多因素可导致port site转移[9]。其中最重要的一种是术中胆囊壁穿孔导致胆汁溢出,30%的腹腔镜胆囊切除术病例发生了这种情况,并与肝口转移有关[11]。有趣的是,只有少数患者出现局部复发,远处部位如肝脏和腹膜是最常见的疾病复发部位[4]。& lt; / br&gt;& lt; / br&gt;一些假说解释了肝口转移的原因,包括直接的“烟囱效应”,癌细胞可能沿套管针创面扩散[12]。 然而,最近的研究表明,烟囱效应可能不是腹腔镜术后肝口转移的关键原因,肿瘤的生物侵袭性、局部创伤因素以及宿主免疫反应等因素可能在这一现象的发生中起着至关重要的作用[13]。目前的证据表明,二氧化碳气腹不会增加腹腔镜腹部肿瘤手术后的伤口转移。动物研究表明,常规腹腔镜手术与无气腹腹腔镜手术的总体肿瘤术后伤口复发率无显著差异[14]。手术中取出的组织标本在宏观和显微镜下进行检查,尽管如此,假阴性仍然存在。虽然有明确的数据表明,术前使用FNA进行活检检测恶性肿瘤时出现假阴性的比例高达11-41%[15],但术后出现假阴性的数据却很少。虽然组织病理学分析通常是非常可靠的排除恶性肿瘤,它可能失败。这在我们的案例中很明显,结果是假阴性。造成假阴性的原因可能是,例如,尽管指南指出应该从标本的高风险区域采集三个样本,但取样不当[16]。由于术前和术后活检都可能出现假阳性,外科医生必须谨慎,并在手术方法中考虑到这一因素[17]。& lt; / br&gt; & lt; / br&gt;目前唯一普遍采用的减少胆囊癌复发的方法是胆囊切除术,胆囊切除术为port部位切口,内镜袋的使用在外科医生中也有不同的使用。此外,胆囊切除术后使用辅助治疗并不能降低复发率,而化疗患者的复发率往往稍好一些[4]。肝转移与较差的预后独立相关。腹膜癌患者行细胞减缩手术和腹腔热化疗(CRS/HIPEC)后,建议切除既往腹腔镜下的port部位,以确保细胞完全减少[18]。& lt; / br&gt; & lt; / br&gt;从这个角度来看,显然需要其他解决办法和想法。其中之一可能是在胆囊切除术期间永久使用回收袋,特别是由于在胆囊破裂的情况下,并不总是可能预见到收回的问题或显示阳性的组织病理学结果[4,17]。每一次胆囊切除术都有胆囊穿孔和恶性细胞扩散的危险。事实上,胆囊穿孔是腹腔镜胆囊切除术中常见的并发症,在急性情况下,如急性胆囊炎或胆囊脓肿,发生穿孔的风险要高得多。其他一些可用于防止胆囊内容物或恶性细胞扩散的方法包括夹应用、橡皮筋结扎或内窥镜环应用。橡皮筋结扎特别好,因为它被认为是一种安全、简单、廉价的方法,不会增加手术时间[19]。无论外科医生决定在胆囊切除术中使用何种方法来防止细胞扩散,重要的是要使用一种方法,并修改指南。本病例研究为此提供了手段,特别是因为组织病理活检阴性仍然不能排除癌细胞痕迹未被披露的可能性,从而存在港口转移的潜在风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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