Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9239328 | HPB | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PCS) is a progressive disease leading to secondary biliary cirrhosis. Patients are at increased risk of developing cholangiocarcinoma, which is usually diagnosed at an advanced stage. Treatment of PCS includes medical therapy, endoscopic biliary dilation, percutaneous transhepatic stenting, extrahepatic biliary resection and liver transplantation. The most effective management of primary sclerosing cholangitis before the onset of cirrhosis remains unclear. Nonâtransplant surgical procedures have a limited but defined role in patients with PCS. Resection of the extrahepatic biliary tree in symptomatic nonâcirrhotic patients improves hyperbilirubinaemia and prolongs both transplantâfree and overall survival when compared with nonâoperative dilation and/or stenting. Surgical resection may also definitively establish or exclude a diagnosis of cholangiocarcinoma in patients with dominant extrahepatic or perihilar strictures. Extrahepatic bile duct resection may also reduce the risk of cholangiocarcinoma. Extrahepatic biliary resection should be considered in selected nonâcirrhotic patients with symptomatic biliary obstruction and dominant extrahepatic and/or perihilar strictures. Those patients in whom cholangiocarcinoma is suspected should also undergo resection.
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Authors
Bastian Domajnko, Steven A. Ahrendt,