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Comment on surgical approaches for definitive treatment of hepatic alveolar echinococcosis: results of a survey in 178 patients

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 August 2020

Sami Akbulut*
Affiliation:
Department of Surgery and Liver Transplant Institute, Inonu University Faculty of Medicine, Malatya, 244280, Turkey
Tevfik Tolga Sahin
Affiliation:
Department of Surgery and Liver Transplant Institute, Inonu University Faculty of Medicine, Malatya, 244280, Turkey
*
Author for correspondence: Sami Akbulut, E-mail: akbulutsami@gmail.com

Abstract

Echinococcus multilocularis causes alveolar echinococcosis which is a chronic, progressive zoonotic disease that mainly affects the liver. Hepatic alveolar echinococcosis is insidious and the patients are asymptomatic most of the time. Generally, it is incidentally found on imaging studies performed for other reasons. Specific symptoms may evolve if the vascular and biliary structures of the liver are affected. Hepatic alveolar echinococcosis shows a similar pattern to malignancies in terms of radiologic and clinical features. For this reason, oncological surgical principles should be applied during the resection of hepatic alveolar echinococcosis. The gold standard surgical treatment is resection with negative surgical margin. However, in patients whose radical resection is not possible other therapeutic options include palliative resection which has no benefit to the patient, and other curative major surgical options such as ex vivo liver resection, and autotransplantation and ultimately liver transplantation. The remnant liver volume has paramount importance if resection is going to be performed. For this reason, occasionally, remnant liver volume hypertrophy is induced by employing either two-stage hepatectomy or associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press

Review and reassessment of previous study

We provide a review and reassessment of data from 178 patients with hepatic alveolar echinococcosis (HAE) originally presented by Yang et al. (Reference Yang, He, Yang and Wang2019). First, we commend Yang et al., in performing major resection in 67.9% of their HAE patients but wish to make specific reference to their patient D group as their liver transplantation group, for we judge this to be an autotransplantation group. So in order to prevent any further confusion, better terminology such as ‘ex vivo liver resection and autotransplantation’ should be used throughout to avoid confusion.

We point out concerns on how they determined their predicted future liver remnant volume (FLRV) cut-off of 40%, as usually this is determined by evaluation of liver function tests and the quality of the liver parenchyma. For this reason, FRLV should be >20% in normal livers, >30% in steatotic livers, and > 40% in the cholestatic liver for a patient to tolerate major liver resection (Guglielmi et al., Reference Guglielmi, Conci, Valdegamberi and Iacono2012). Therefore, the cut-off value of >40% determined by the authors in Child A patients, without any history of chemotherapy, is not compatible with literature and our experience of over 2200 donor hepatectomies and 500 major liver resections. Of additional note, they could have better explained why they have included patients under 18 years but excluded the patients >60 years of age which, in our opinion, is important to include P1-4N0-1M0 patients. Patients >60 years of age that fit the inclusion criteria and who underwent successful resection should have been included. Furthermore, although the authors have included patients with FRLV >40%, there were 9 patients that did not meet these criteria and received a two-stage hepatectomy (TSH).

Since benzimidazole treatment was given to the patients for 2 years following the surgery, we observe some patients had a follow-up period of less than 2 years. There is consensus that patients with HAE should receive radical surgical and medical therapy to avoid any invasion of major vasculobiliary structures. Although the radiological tests reported were unequivocal, distant organ metastasis was detected in some patients. Medical therapy of patients with HAE should be in accordance with the PNM classification of the World Health Organization (WHO). According to these guidelines, stage P1-2N0M0 patients who had a successful radical resection should receive benzimidazole therapy for 2 years post-operative. In stage P3-4N0-1M1, patients in whom surgery could not be performed or is suboptimal, benzimidazole therapy should be used indefinitely (Brunetti et al., Reference Brunetti, Kern and Vuitton2010). For this reason, we believe, nearly half of the patients in the present study should receive benzimidazole treatment indefinitely.

For those patients who did not tolerate benzimidazole therapy well and had severe adverse events, alternative treatment options could have been better explored. Whilst the authors discontinued benzimidazole therapy, they did not report how many nor what alternatives were provided. Whilst novel therapeutic agents are being developed or repurposed, administration of liposomal amphotericin B could have been useful. A period of 8-12 weeks should be sufficient to reach adequate functional FLRV values in standard TSH treatment. On the other hand, advanced Associating Liver Partition and Portal vein Ligation for Staged hepatectomy (ALPPS) require 7-10 days to reach optimal FRLV (Selby and Hernandez-Alejandro, Reference Selby and Hernandez-Alejandro2014; Zhou et al., Reference Zhou, Xu, Lin, Pan, Zhou, Zhong and Xu2017; Sandstrom et al., Reference Sandstrom, Røsok, Sparrelid, Larsen, Larsson, Lindell, Schultz, Bjørnbeth, Isaksson, Rizell and Bjornsson2018).

Current meta-analyses showed that results of ALPPS are superior to TSH (Zhou et al., Reference Zhou, Xu, Lin, Pan, Zhou, Zhong and Xu2017; Liu et al., Reference Liu, Yang, Gu and Tang2019). The authors, therefore, should clarify why they chose TSH with long waiting periods instead of performing the ALPPS procedure for waiting 3 months for a definitive complementary resection increases the risk of complications and dissemination of disease. To strengthen their study we have made a statistical comparison of their groups in terms of demographic and clinical parameters by re-analysis of their Table 2 & 3 and have presented our clinical results in Table 1 and Table 2. Although most of the variables are less than 5 in the 4 by 2 crosstable, our analysis shows which groups are broadly different. Briefly, following parameters were statistically different between the groups: abdominal pain, palpable mass, incidental, right lobe, left lobe, bilobar, one lesion, four or more lesion, HV invasion, PV invasion, HA invasion, IVC invasion, diaphragmatic invasion, all PNM classification, right hepatectomy, left hepatectomy, extended right hepatectomy, extended left hepatectomy, autologous liver transplantation, and hydrothorax.

Table 1. Comparison of all four groups in terms of clinical characteristics and PNM classification (revised authors’ Table 1 & 2).

Table 2. Comparison of all four groups in terms of surgical treatment and complication (revised authors’ [by Akbulut et al.] Table 3).

Topic highlight

  • Alveolar echinococcosis is an aggressive zoonotic disease that affects mainly the liver but can be seen at any tissue and organ in the human body. Hepatic alveolar echinococcosis behaves like a neoplastic lesion and tends to invade the liver parenchyma. Although there is no definitive consensus, a clear surgical margin of 10 mm (1–20 mm) is recommended to reduce the postoperative recurrence risk.

  • Adjuvant medical therapy including albendazole, mebendazole, praziquantel, nitazoxanide, and amphotericin, is recommended for postoperative 2 years in patients with R0 resection and more than 2 years in patients with R1-2 resection.

  • The best surveillance strategy for alveolar echinococcosis after treatment is the use of a combination of serologic (recEm18-ELISA) and radiologic (computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging) tests.

  • The best treatment strategy for the disease is the use of a combination of surgical and medical therapy. The gold standard surgical treatment is radical resection. However, in patients whose radical resection is not possible other therapeutic options include palliative resection which has no benefit to the patient, and other curative major surgical options such as ex vivo liver resection, and autotransplantation and ultimately liver transplantation. The remnant liver volume has paramount importance if resection is going to be performed. For this reason, occasionally, remnant liver volume hypertrophy is induced by employing either two-stage hepatectomy (TSH) or associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy (ALPPS).

  • Both ex vivo liver resection and autotransplantation and liver transplantation are a major surgical procedure that has high morbidity and mortality risk and must be performed in centres that are experienced in hepatobiliary surgery. If liver transplantation is selected for hepatic alveolar echinococcosis then it is recommended that immunosuppressive therapy should be tapered and adjuvant anthelminthic therapy should be performed for at least postoperative 2 years.

Financial support

None

Conflicts of interest

None

Ethical standards

Not applicable

References

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Guglielmi, Ruzzenente A, Conci, S, Valdegamberi, A and Iacono, C (2012) How much remnant is enough in liver resection? Digestive Surgery 29, 617.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liu, Y, Yang, Y, Gu, S and Tang, K (2019) A systematic review and meta-analysis of associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy (ALPPS) versus traditional staged hepatectomy. Medicine (Baltimore) 98, e15229.Google ScholarPubMed
Sandstrom, P, Røsok, BI, Sparrelid, E, Larsen, PN, Larsson, AL, Lindell, G, Schultz, NA, Bjørnbeth, BA, Isaksson, B, Rizell, M and Bjornsson, B (2018) ALPPS Improves resectability compared with conventional two-stage hepatectomy in patients with advanced colorectal liver metastasis: results from a Scandinavian multicenter randomized controlled trial (LIGRO trial). Annals of Surgery 267, 833840.Google Scholar
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Zhou, Z, Xu, M, Lin, N, Pan, C, Zhou, B, Zhong, Y and Xu, R (2017) Associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy versus conventional two-stage hepatectomy: a systematic review and meta-analysis. World Journal of Surgical Oncology 15, 227.Google ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Comparison of all four groups in terms of clinical characteristics and PNM classification (revised authors’ Table 1 & 2).

Figure 1

Table 2. Comparison of all four groups in terms of surgical treatment and complication (revised authors’ [by Akbulut et al.] Table 3).