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Surgical removal of specific liver parts did not improve survival or safety for gallbladder cancer patients

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Surgical removal of specific liver parts did not improve survival or safety for gallbladder cancer p…
Photo by HI! ESTUDIO / Unsplash

This study looked at patients who needed surgery for gallbladder cancer. The team compared a standard larger cut, called segment 4b or 5 resection, with a smaller cut known as wedge resection. The goal was to see if the bigger cut helped remove the cancer better or kept people alive longer.

During the operation, the larger cut took about thirty minutes longer and caused patients to lose more blood. However, the risk of getting sick or dying during recovery was the same for both groups. The surgeons were just as successful at removing all the cancer with either method.

After an average of two years and three months, patients who had the larger cut lived for about three and a half years. Those with the smaller cut lived for about three and a quarter years. The study found no real difference in how long people lived or how well the cancer was controlled.

In conclusion, doing a bigger cut during surgery for gallbladder cancer does not make patients live longer or get better results. The extra time in the operating room and more blood loss are not worth it. Doctors can choose the smaller cut without worrying about worse long-term health.

What this means for you:
A larger liver cut for gallbladder cancer surgery does not improve survival or safety compared to a smaller cut.
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