Abstract
Background: Gallbladder cancer (GBC) is rare but aggressive. The extent of surgical intervention for different GBC stages is non-uniform, ranging from cholecystectomy alone to extended resections including major hepatectomy, resection of adjacent organs and routine extrahepatic bile duct resection (EBDR). Robust evidence here is lacking, however, and survival benefit poorly defined. This study assesses factors associated with recurrence-free survival (RFS), overall survival (OS) and morbidity and mortality following GBC surgery in high income countries (HIC) and low and middle income countries (LMIC). Methods: The multicentre, retrospective Operative Management of Gallbladder Cancer (OMEGA) cohort study included all patients who underwent GBC resection across 133 centres between 1st January 2010 and 31st December 2020. Regression analyses assessed factors associated with OS, RFS and morbidity. Findings: On multivariable analysis of all 3676 patients, wedge resection and segment IVb/V resection failed to improve RFS (HR 1.04 [0.84–1.29], p = 0.711 and HR 1.18 [0.95–1.46], p = 0.13 respectively) or OS (HR 0.96 [0.79–1.17], p = 0.67 and HR 1.48 [1.16–1.88], p = 0.49 respectively), while major hepatectomy was associated with worse RFS (HR 1.33 [1.02–1.74], p = 0.037) and OS (HR 1.26 [1.03–1.53], p = 0.022). Furthermore, EBDR (OR 2.86 [2.3–3.52], p < 0.0010), resection of additional organs (OR 2.22 [1.62–3.02], p < 0.0010) and major hepatectomy (OR 3.81 [2.55–5.73], p < 0.0010) were all associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Compared to LMIC, patients in HIC were associated with poorer RFS (HR 1.18 [1.02–1.37], p = 0.031) but not OS (HR 1.05 [0.91–1.22], p = 0.48). Adjuvant and neoadjuvant treatments were infrequently used. Interpretation: In this large, multicentre analysis of GBC surgical outcomes, liver resection was not conclusively associated with improved survival, and extended resections were associated with greater morbidity and mortality without oncological benefit. Aggressive upfront resections do not benefit higher stage GBC, and international collaborations are needed to develop evidence-based neoadjuvant and adjuvant treatment strategies to minimise surgical morbidity and prioritise prognostic benefit. Funding:Cambridge Hepatopancreatobiliary Department Research Fund.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 101951 |
Journal | EClinicalMedicine |
Volume | 59 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 May 2023 |
Cite this
- APA
- Author
- BIBTEX
- Harvard
- Standard
- RIS
- Vancouver
}
Surgical outcomes of gallbladder cancer : the OMEGA retrospective, multicentre, international cohort study. / The OMEGA Study Investigators.
In: EClinicalMedicine, Vol. 59, 101951, 01.05.2023.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Academic › peer-review
TY - JOUR
T1 - Surgical outcomes of gallbladder cancer
T2 - the OMEGA retrospective, multicentre, international cohort study
AU - Balakrishnan, Anita
AU - Barmpounakis, Petros
AU - Demiris, Nikolaos
AU - Jah, Asif
AU - Spiers, Harry V. M.
AU - Talukder, Shibojit
AU - Martin, Jack L.
AU - Gibbs, Paul
AU - Harper, Simon J. F.
AU - Huguet, Emmanuel L.
AU - Kosmoliaptsis, Vasilis
AU - Liau, Siong S.
AU - Praseedom, Raaj K.
AU - Basu, Bristi
AU - de Aretxabala, Xavier
AU - Lendoire, Javier
AU - Maithel, Shishir
AU - The OMEGA Study Investigators
AU - Branes, Alejandro
AU - Andersson, Bodil
AU - Serrablo, Alejandro
AU - Adsay, Volkan
AU - Abe, Tomoyuki
AU - Abu Hilal, Moh'd
AU - Achalandabaso Boira, Maria del Mar
AU - Adham, Mustapha
AU - Adam, Mohamed
AU - Ahmad, Maryam
AU - Al-Sarireh, Bilal
AU - Albiol, Maite
AU - Alhaboob, Nassir
AU - Alseidi, Adnan
AU - Ammar, Houssem
AU - Anand, Akshay
AU - Antonakis, Pantelis
AU - Araya, Veronica
AU - Ashley, Stanley W.
AU - Atanasov, Georgi
AU - Ausania, Fabio
AU - Balestri, Ricardo
AU - Banerjee, Abhirup
AU - Banting, Simon
AU - Barauskas, Giedrius
AU - Bartsch, Fabian
AU - Belli, Andrea
AU - Beretta, Simona
AU - Berrevoet, Frederik
AU - Fernandez, Gerardo Blanco
AU - Bolm, Louisa
AU - Bonal, Mathieu
AU - Bozkurt, Emre
AU - Braat, Andries E.
AU - Bradshaw, Luke
AU - Burdine, Lyle
AU - Byrne, Matthew
AU - Caceres, Maria
AU - Castro Santiago, Maria Jesus
AU - Chan, Benjamin
AU - Chong, Lynn
AU - Çoker, Ahmet
AU - Conde Rodriguez, Maria
AU - Croagh, Daniel
AU - Crutchley, Alyn
AU - Cutolo, Carmen
AU - D'Hondt, Mathieu
AU - D'Souza, Daniel
AU - Daams, Freek
AU - Dalla Valle, Raffaele
AU - Davide, José
AU - de Bellis, Mario
AU - de Boer, Marieke
AU - de Meyere, Celine
AU - de Reuver, Philip
AU - Dixon, Matthew
AU - Dorovinis, Panagiotis
AU - Bauer, Gabriela Echeverría
AU - Eduarda, Maria
AU - Eker, Hasan
AU - Erdmann, Joris
AU - Erkan, Mert
AU - Felekouras, Evangelos
AU - Felli, Emanuele
AU - Fernandes, Eduardo
AU - Figueroa Rivera, Eduardo
AU - Fulop, Andras
AU - Galun, Daniel
AU - Gerhards, Michael
AU - Ghorbani, Poya
AU - Giannone, Fabio
AU - Gil, Luis
AU - Giorgakis, Emmanouil
AU - Giuffrida, Mario
AU - Giuliante, Felice
AU - Gkekas, Ioannis
AU - Gomez Bravo, Miguel
AU - Groot Koerkamp, Bas
AU - Guevara, Oscar
AU - Guglielmi, Alfredo
AU - Gulla, Aiste
AU - Gupta, Rahul
AU - Gupta, Amit
AU - Gutiérrez, Marta
AU - Hafeez Bhatti, Abu Bakar
AU - Hagendoorn, Jeroen
AU - Hajee, Zain
AU - Hakeem, Abdul Rahman
AU - Hamid, Hytham
AU - Hassen, Sayed
AU - Heinrich, Stefan
AU - Higuchi, Ryota
AU - Hoffman, Daniel
AU - Holroyd, David
AU - Hughes, Daniel
AU - Ivanecz, Arpad
AU - Iype, Satheesh
AU - Torrejimeno, Isabel Jaen
AU - Joglekar, Shantanu
AU - Jones, Robert
AU - Kaczirek, Klaus
AU - Kanhere, Harsh
AU - Kausar, Ambareen
AU - Kee, Zhanyi
AU - Keilson, Jessica
AU - Kleef, Jorg
AU - Klose, Johannes
AU - Knowles, Brett
AU - Koong, Jun Kit
AU - Kumar, Nagappan
AU - Kunnuru, Supreeth
AU - Lakhey, Paleswan Joshi
AU - Laurenzi, Andrea
AU - Lee, Yeong Sing
AU - Leon, Felipe
AU - Leow, Voon Meng
AU - Lequeu, Jean-Baptiste
AU - Lesurtel, Mickael
AU - Lo, Elisabeth
AU - Löb, Stefan
AU - Lockie, Elizabeth
AU - Lodge, Peter
AU - López Garnica, Dolores
AU - Lopez Lopez, Victor
AU - Lundgren, Linda
AU - Machairas, Nikolaos
AU - Maharjan, Dhiresh
AU - Malde, Deep
AU - Martel, Guillaume
AU - Martin, Julie
AU - Mazzola, Michele
AU - Mehrabi, Arianeb
AU - Memeo, Ricardo
AU - Milana, Flavio
AU - Molina, George
AU - Monette, Leah
AU - Morgul, Haluk
AU - Moris, Dimitrios
AU - Morsi-Yeroyannis, Antonios
AU - Mowbray, Nicholas
AU - Mulita, Francesk
AU - Muttillo, Edoardo Maria
AU - Nandasena, Malith
AU - Nashidengo, Pueya Rashid
AU - Nickkholgh, Arash
AU - Noel, Colin Byron
AU - Ohtsuka, Masayuki
AU - Ozolins, Arturs
AU - Pandanaboyana, Sanjay
AU - Pararas, Nikolaos
AU - Parente, Alessandro
AU - Peng, June
AU - Perfecto Valero, Arkaitz
AU - Perinel, Julie
AU - Perivoliotis, Konstatinos
AU - Perra, Teresa
AU - Pessaux, Patrick
AU - Petruch, Natalie
AU - Piccolo, Gaetano
AU - Piros, Laszlo
AU - Porcu, Alberto
AU - Prabakaran, Viswakumar
AU - Prasad, Raj
AU - Calvo, Mikel Prieto
AU - Primavesi, Florian
AU - Pueyo Periz, Eva Maria
AU - Quaglia, Alberto
AU - Ramia Angel, Jose M.
AU - Rammohan, Ashwin
AU - Razionale, Francisco
AU - Campos, Ricardo Robles
AU - Roy, Manas
AU - Rozwadowski, Sophie
AU - Ruffolo, Luis
AU - Ruiz, Natalia
AU - Ruzzenante, Andrea
AU - Saadat, Lily
AU - Said, Mohamed Amine
AU - Saladino, Edoardo
AU - Saliba, Gabriel
AU - Sandstrom, Per
AU - Schena, Carlo Alberto
AU - Scholer, Anthony
AU - Schwartz, Cristoph
AU - Serafini, Lorenzo
AU - Serrano, Pablo
AU - Sharma, Deepak
AU - Sheen, Aali
AU - Siddagangaiah, Vishwanath
AU - Silva, Michael
AU - Singh, Saurabh
AU - Siriwardena, Ajith
AU - Skalski, Michal
AU - Smig, Mante
AU - Soliman, Faris
AU - Sousa Silva, Donzília
AU - Sparrelid, Ernesto
AU - Srinivasan, Parthi
AU - Sternby Eilard, Malin
AU - Strobel, Oliver
AU - Stupan, Urban
AU - Suarez-Munoz, Miguel Angel
AU - Subramaniam, Manisekar
AU - Sugiura, Teiichi
AU - Sutcliffe, Robert
AU - Swank, Hilko
AU - Taylor, Lillian
AU - Thapa, Prabin Bikram
AU - The, Catherine
AU - Thepbunchonchai, Asara
AU - Thieu, Caman
AU - Tiwari, Navneet
AU - Torzilli, Guido
AU - Tovikkai, Chutwichai
AU - Trotovsek, Blaz
AU - Tsaramanidis, Savvas
AU - Tsoulfas, Georgios
AU - Uesaka, Katsuhiko
AU - Umar, Garzali
AU - Urbani, Lucio
AU - Vailas, Michail
AU - van Dam, Ronald
AU - van de Boezem, Peter
AU - van Laarhoven, Stijn
AU - Vanagas, Tomas
AU - van Dooren, Mike
AU - Viannet, Manon
AU - Vigano, Luca
AU - Vijayashanker, Aarathi
AU - Villodre, Celia
AU - Wakai, Toshifumi
AU - Workneh, Aklile
AU - Xu, Li
AU - Yamamoto, Masakazu
AU - Yang, Zhiying
AU - Young, Robert
AU - Zivanovic, Marko
N1 - Funding Information: We thank Ms Carrie Hooper and Dr Adam Duckworth for their help with this study, and Prof Robert Tasker for his contribution to this manuscript. Funding for the statistical analyses was provided by the Cambridge Hepatopancreatobiliary Department Research Fund . Funding Information: SM has the following interests: 1) Principal investigator of a clinical trial on intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma funded by BMS/Celgene (grant funding provided to institution, no personal compensation) 2) Advisory board member at Astra Zeneca on management of hepatocellular carcinoma and 3) Scientific Medical Advisory Board member Cholangiocarcinoma Foundation. Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s)
PY - 2023/5/1
Y1 - 2023/5/1
N2 - Background: Gallbladder cancer (GBC) is rare but aggressive. The extent of surgical intervention for different GBC stages is non-uniform, ranging from cholecystectomy alone to extended resections including major hepatectomy, resection of adjacent organs and routine extrahepatic bile duct resection (EBDR). Robust evidence here is lacking, however, and survival benefit poorly defined. This study assesses factors associated with recurrence-free survival (RFS), overall survival (OS) and morbidity and mortality following GBC surgery in high income countries (HIC) and low and middle income countries (LMIC). Methods: The multicentre, retrospective Operative Management of Gallbladder Cancer (OMEGA) cohort study included all patients who underwent GBC resection across 133 centres between 1st January 2010 and 31st December 2020. Regression analyses assessed factors associated with OS, RFS and morbidity. Findings: On multivariable analysis of all 3676 patients, wedge resection and segment IVb/V resection failed to improve RFS (HR 1.04 [0.84–1.29], p = 0.711 and HR 1.18 [0.95–1.46], p = 0.13 respectively) or OS (HR 0.96 [0.79–1.17], p = 0.67 and HR 1.48 [1.16–1.88], p = 0.49 respectively), while major hepatectomy was associated with worse RFS (HR 1.33 [1.02–1.74], p = 0.037) and OS (HR 1.26 [1.03–1.53], p = 0.022). Furthermore, EBDR (OR 2.86 [2.3–3.52], p < 0.0010), resection of additional organs (OR 2.22 [1.62–3.02], p < 0.0010) and major hepatectomy (OR 3.81 [2.55–5.73], p < 0.0010) were all associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Compared to LMIC, patients in HIC were associated with poorer RFS (HR 1.18 [1.02–1.37], p = 0.031) but not OS (HR 1.05 [0.91–1.22], p = 0.48). Adjuvant and neoadjuvant treatments were infrequently used. Interpretation: In this large, multicentre analysis of GBC surgical outcomes, liver resection was not conclusively associated with improved survival, and extended resections were associated with greater morbidity and mortality without oncological benefit. Aggressive upfront resections do not benefit higher stage GBC, and international collaborations are needed to develop evidence-based neoadjuvant and adjuvant treatment strategies to minimise surgical morbidity and prioritise prognostic benefit. Funding:Cambridge Hepatopancreatobiliary Department Research Fund.
AB - Background: Gallbladder cancer (GBC) is rare but aggressive. The extent of surgical intervention for different GBC stages is non-uniform, ranging from cholecystectomy alone to extended resections including major hepatectomy, resection of adjacent organs and routine extrahepatic bile duct resection (EBDR). Robust evidence here is lacking, however, and survival benefit poorly defined. This study assesses factors associated with recurrence-free survival (RFS), overall survival (OS) and morbidity and mortality following GBC surgery in high income countries (HIC) and low and middle income countries (LMIC). Methods: The multicentre, retrospective Operative Management of Gallbladder Cancer (OMEGA) cohort study included all patients who underwent GBC resection across 133 centres between 1st January 2010 and 31st December 2020. Regression analyses assessed factors associated with OS, RFS and morbidity. Findings: On multivariable analysis of all 3676 patients, wedge resection and segment IVb/V resection failed to improve RFS (HR 1.04 [0.84–1.29], p = 0.711 and HR 1.18 [0.95–1.46], p = 0.13 respectively) or OS (HR 0.96 [0.79–1.17], p = 0.67 and HR 1.48 [1.16–1.88], p = 0.49 respectively), while major hepatectomy was associated with worse RFS (HR 1.33 [1.02–1.74], p = 0.037) and OS (HR 1.26 [1.03–1.53], p = 0.022). Furthermore, EBDR (OR 2.86 [2.3–3.52], p < 0.0010), resection of additional organs (OR 2.22 [1.62–3.02], p < 0.0010) and major hepatectomy (OR 3.81 [2.55–5.73], p < 0.0010) were all associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Compared to LMIC, patients in HIC were associated with poorer RFS (HR 1.18 [1.02–1.37], p = 0.031) but not OS (HR 1.05 [0.91–1.22], p = 0.48). Adjuvant and neoadjuvant treatments were infrequently used. Interpretation: In this large, multicentre analysis of GBC surgical outcomes, liver resection was not conclusively associated with improved survival, and extended resections were associated with greater morbidity and mortality without oncological benefit. Aggressive upfront resections do not benefit higher stage GBC, and international collaborations are needed to develop evidence-based neoadjuvant and adjuvant treatment strategies to minimise surgical morbidity and prioritise prognostic benefit. Funding:Cambridge Hepatopancreatobiliary Department Research Fund.
KW - Cholangiocarcinoma
KW - Gallbladder cancer
KW - Liver resection
KW - Surgical outcomes
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85152300811&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.101951
DO - 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.101951
M3 - Article
SN - 2589-5370
VL - 59
JO - EClinicalMedicine
JF - EClinicalMedicine
M1 - 101951
ER -