Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6088898 | HPB | 2013 | 6 Pages |
BackgroundMucinous cystic neoplasms of the liver (hepatobiliary cystadenomas) are rare neoplastic lesions. Such cysts are often incorrectly diagnosed and managed, and carry a risk of malignancy. The objective of this study was to review the surgical experience with these lesions over 15 years.MethodsA retrospective chart review identified consecutive patients undergoing surgery for liver cystadenomas from 1997-2011. Clinical data were collected and summarized.ResultsThirteen patients (mean age 51 years, 12/13 females) with cysts 4.6-18.1cm were identified. Most cysts were located in the left lobe/centrally (11/12) and had septations (8/13). Mural nodularity was infrequent (3/13). Nine patients had liver resection/enucleation, whereas four had unroofing. Frozen section analysis had a high falseânegative rate (4/6). All patients had cystadenomas, of which two had foci of invasive carcinoma (cystadenocarcinoma) within mural nodules. There was no 90âday mortality. All but one patient (myocardial infarction) were alive at a median followâup of 23.1 months. No patient with unroofing has developed malignancy to date.ConclusionsNonâinvasive hepatobiliary cystadenomas present as large central/leftâsided cysts in young or middleâaged women. Associated malignancy was relatively uncommon and found within mural nodules. Intraâoperative frozen section analysis was ineffective at ruling out cystadenomas. Complete excision is recommended, but close followâup might be considered in patients with a prohibitive technical or medical risk, in the absence of nodularity on highâquality imaging.