The Role of Hand-Assisted Laparoscopic Surgery in a Right Hemicolectomy for Right-Sided Colon Cancer
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¹è¼º¿í(Bae Sung-Uk) - Yonsei University College of Medicine Severance Hospital Department of Surgery
¹ÚÁø¼®(Park Jin-Seok) - Eulji University Hospital Department of Surgery
ÃÖ¿µÁø(Choi Young-Jin) - Eulji University Hospital Department of Surgery
À̹α¸(Lee Min-Ku) - Eulji University Hospital Department of Surgery
Á¶º´¼±(Cho Byung-Sun) - Eulji University Hospital Department of Surgery
°À±Áß(Kang Yoon-Jung) - Eulji University Hospital Department of Surgery
¹ÚÁÖ½Â(Park Joo-Seung) - Eulji University Hospital Department of Surgery
±èâ³²(Kim Chang-Nam) - Eulji University Hospital Department of Surgery
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the perioperative and long-term oncologic outcomes of hand-assisted laparoscopic surgery (HALS) and standard laparoscopic surgery (SLS) and assess the role of HALS in the management of right-sided colon cancer.
Methods: The study group included 53 patients who underwent HALS and 45 patients who underwent SLS for right-sided colon cancer between April 2002 and December 2008.
Results: The patients in each group were similar in age, American Society of Anesthesiologist (ASA) score, body mass index, and history of previous abdominal surgeries. Eight patients in the HALS group and no patient in the SLS group exhibited signs of tumor invasion into adjacent structures. No differences were noted in the time to return of normal bowel function, time to toleration of diet, lengths of hospital stay and narcotic usage, and rate of postoperative complications. The median incision length was longer in the HALS group (HALS: 7.0 cm vs. SLS: 4.8 cm, P < 0.001). The HALS group had a significantly higher pathologic TNM stage and significantly larger tumor size (HALS: 6.0 cm vs. SLS: 3.3 cm, P < 0.001). The 5-year overall, disease-free, and cancer-specific survival rates of the HALS and the SLS groups were 87.3%, 75.2%, and 93.9% and 86.4%, 78.0%, and 90.7%, respectively (P = 0.826, P = 0.574, and P = 0.826).
Conclusion: Although patients in the HALS group had more advanced disease and underwent more complex procedures than those in the SLS group, the short-term benefits and the oncologic outcomes between the two groups were comparable. HALS can, therefore, be considered an alternative to SLS for bulky and fixed right-sided colon cancer.
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Colonic neoplasms, Laparoscopy, Hand-assisted laparoscopy
KMID :
0356720140300010011
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