Background: Patients with perihilar cholangiocarcinoma (pCCA) have high postoperative mortality and a poor prognosis. A reliable preoperative marker is needed to determine whether these patients are likely to benefit from surgical treatment. Objectives: This study aimed to verify the predictive value of preoperative albumin-bilirubin (ALBI) grades for 90-day mortality and long-term outcomes in these patients. Methods and design: This retrospective, multicenter, cohort study included patients with pCCA, surgically treated between January 2012 and December 2023. Patients were divided into ALBI 1–2 and ALBI 3 groups according to preoperative ALBI grade. Logistic and Cox regression analyses evaluated risk factors for 90-day death and overall survival (OS), respectively. Results: Of the 828 included patients, 243 (29.3%) had ALBI grade 3. In total, 744 (89.9%) and 89 (10.1%) patients underwent radical resection and palliative surgery, respectively. The 90-day mortality rate was 8.9% for the entire cohort and 16.5% for patients with ALBI 3, higher than that of ALBI 1–2 (5.8%). Age, extended hemihepatectomy, and ALBI 3 were independent risk factors for 90-day mortality. Patients with ALBI 3 had a higher postoperative intra-abdominal bleeding, bile leakage, and acute organ dysfunction. The median OS of patients with ALBI 3 (21.0 months) was shorter than that of ALBI 1–2 (29.0 months). In the radical resection subgroup, the median OS of ALBI 3 was 23.0 months, poorer than that of ALBI 1–2 (33.0 months). Conclusion: Preoperative ALBI grades can identify patients with pCCA who may benefit from surgical resection. Patients with ALBI 3 had a high risk of postoperative complications, 90-day mortality, and poorer long-term survival, and may benefit only marginally from surgical treatment. Trial registration: ChiCTR2500102958 (Medical Research).
Zhang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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