Decoding Surgical Complexity: Measuring the Impact of Operative Difficulty on Quality Outcomes Following Hepatectomy for Liver Cancer over Two Decades
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Open Access
Type
ArticleAbstract
Introduction:
Operative time is commonly used as a surrogate marker for operative difficulty in liver resection, but the contribution of other intraoperative factors is less well understood. This study aimed to develop an objective, composite score to assess operative difficulty ...
See moreIntroduction: Operative time is commonly used as a surrogate marker for operative difficulty in liver resection, but the contribution of other intraoperative factors is less well understood. This study aimed to develop an objective, composite score to assess operative difficulty and evaluate its association with postoperative and oncological outcomes. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted on patients who underwent liver resection for malignant disease between 1999 and 2023 at an Australian tertiary hospital, using a prospectively maintained database. Principal component analysis (PCA) was applied to operative time, estimated blood loss, total time of hepatic inflow occlusion and the number of packed red bloods transfused intraoperatively to derive a composite operative difficulty score. Patients were then stratified into low, moderate and high difficult groups using Gaussian mixture models (GMM). Comparison of textbook oncological outcomes (TOO) achievement and futile resection rates were assessed using Chi-squared analysis. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to assess recurrence-free and overall survival in subgroup analysis. Results: Of 729 patients, 699 met the inclusion criteria. GMM identified three distinct operative difficulty groups: low (n=540), moderate (n=143), and high (n=16). TOO and non-futile resection rates declined with increasing difficulty: 77% and 58% (low), 47% and 52% (moderate), and 6% and 19% (high), respectively (p<0.001, p=0.004 respectively). Among patients with cholangiocarcinoma, median overall survival was inversely correlated with operative difficulty (40 months low, 16 months moderate, 7 months high, p=0.004). In patients with colorectal liver metastases, there was a trend towards worse overall survival and disease-free survival with increasing operative difficulty, however, this did not reach statistical significance. Conclusion: An objective intraoperative difficulty score was developed and demonstrated a significant inverse association with both quality and oncological outcomes. While external validation is required, these findings support the potential of operative difficulty assessment to enhance perioperative decision-making, inform patient counselling, and optimise postoperative care planning.
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See moreIntroduction: Operative time is commonly used as a surrogate marker for operative difficulty in liver resection, but the contribution of other intraoperative factors is less well understood. This study aimed to develop an objective, composite score to assess operative difficulty and evaluate its association with postoperative and oncological outcomes. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted on patients who underwent liver resection for malignant disease between 1999 and 2023 at an Australian tertiary hospital, using a prospectively maintained database. Principal component analysis (PCA) was applied to operative time, estimated blood loss, total time of hepatic inflow occlusion and the number of packed red bloods transfused intraoperatively to derive a composite operative difficulty score. Patients were then stratified into low, moderate and high difficult groups using Gaussian mixture models (GMM). Comparison of textbook oncological outcomes (TOO) achievement and futile resection rates were assessed using Chi-squared analysis. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to assess recurrence-free and overall survival in subgroup analysis. Results: Of 729 patients, 699 met the inclusion criteria. GMM identified three distinct operative difficulty groups: low (n=540), moderate (n=143), and high (n=16). TOO and non-futile resection rates declined with increasing difficulty: 77% and 58% (low), 47% and 52% (moderate), and 6% and 19% (high), respectively (p<0.001, p=0.004 respectively). Among patients with cholangiocarcinoma, median overall survival was inversely correlated with operative difficulty (40 months low, 16 months moderate, 7 months high, p=0.004). In patients with colorectal liver metastases, there was a trend towards worse overall survival and disease-free survival with increasing operative difficulty, however, this did not reach statistical significance. Conclusion: An objective intraoperative difficulty score was developed and demonstrated a significant inverse association with both quality and oncological outcomes. While external validation is required, these findings support the potential of operative difficulty assessment to enhance perioperative decision-making, inform patient counselling, and optimise postoperative care planning.
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Date
2026Source title
CancersVolume
18Issue
3Publisher
MDPILicence
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0Faculty/School
Faculty of Medicine and HealthShare