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Short-term Effects of LASI Surgery Versus Conventional Laparotomy for Colorectal Liver Metastasis


ABSTRACT: Surgical resection is still recommended as the optional treatment for colorectal liver metastasis (CLM) patients. There are two main concerns for resectable colorectal liver metastasis which remain controversial: surgical time and surgical type. As for the former, synchronous resection of primary colorectal tumor and liver metastasis, with the reason of fare overall survival rate and absence of a second surgery, has gained wide population from gastrointestinal surgeons who believe it will bring benefits to CLM patients. With regard to surgical type, Open liver resection is the optimum choice for CLM patients no matter what the metastasis profile is. And for management of primary tumor, laparoscopic procedure is mature in surgical skill and has been evidenced equivalent overall survival rate compared with open resection. So, primary colorectal tumor resection could be either open or laparoscopic procedure. Therefore, the investigators team conducted the controlled trial to compare two surgical procedures in treatment of resectable colorectal liver metastasis. Patients will be randomly assigned into conventional laparotomy group for simultaneously resection of both primary colorectal tumor and liver metastasis, or laparoscopic-assisted small-incision group for resection of laparoscopic colorectal tumor combined with synchronously small-incision open resection of liver metastasis. The aim of this trial is to observing short-term operative effects after surgeries.

DISEASE(S): Colorectal Cancer,Colorectal Neoplasms

PROVIDER: 2182818 | ecrin-mdr-crc |

REPOSITORIES: ECRIN MDR

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