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Article Abstract

Objective: To identify and compare significant or relevant prognostic factors in pre-operatively diagnosed, surgically resectable, gallbladder cancer and in incidentally detected gallbladder cancer cases.

Material And Methods: Gallbladder resections (October 2009-March 2016) were identified on the histopathology Winpath database. Cases with a final histological diagnosis of gallbladder cancer (GBC) were categorised into: Group A: clinically suspected operable GBC (n = 13). Group B: incidental GBC with staged liver bed resection (n = 5). Group C: incidental GBC without staged liver bed resection (n = 15). The clinicopathological features were analysed in each group separately.

Results: The overall incidence of primary (GBC) was 0.66% and all the cases were adenocarcinomas, of which, 6 of 33 (18.2%) were grade 1 and 15 of 33 (45.4%) were grade 3. Male to female ratio is 1:2.3. Of the 33 patients with GBC 14 (42.4%) has died of disease at 18-month follow-up. 15 of 33 had perineural invasion and 10/21 (47.6%) cases showed lymph node matastasis. Six cases had positive surgical margin and 9/15 showed direct liver invasion. Higher stage disease (T3/T4) was seen in 10/14 cases.

Conclusion: The prognosis of primary GBC is poor and best clinical outcomes can be achieved with early diagnosis followed by radical cholecystectomy and staged liver resection with negative margins.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9248258PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.32074/1591-951X-291DOI Listing

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