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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust | OTHER |
| University Hospital, Ghent | OTHER |
| San Raffaele University Hospital, Italy | OTHER |
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The added value of the laparoscopic hemihepatectomy compared to the open hemihepatectomy has never been studied in a randomized controlled setting. Therefore, the multicenter international ORANGE II PLUS - trial has been constructed and will provide evidence on the merits of laparoscopic versus open hemihepatectomy in terms of time to functional recovery, hospital length of stay, intraoperative blood loss, operation time, resection margin, time to adjuvant chemotherapy initiation, readmission percentage, (liver-specific) morbidity, quality of life, body image, reasons for delay of discharge after functional recovery, long term incidence of incisional hernias, hospital and societal costs during one year and overall five-year survival.
Liver resection for colorectal metastasis is the only potentially curative therapy and has become the standard of care in appropriately staged patients, offering 5-year survival rates of approximately 35-40%. Also for symptomatic benign lesions and those of uncertain nature or large size, liver resection is a widely accepted treatment. Open hepatectomy (OH) is the current standard of care for the management of primary and secondary malignancies. Although the feasibility of laparoscopic hepatectomy (LH) has been established, only select centres have used this technique as their primary modality.
Laparoscopic liver resection was first reported in 1991. Over the last decade the method has gained wide acceptance for various liver resection procedures. Multiple retrospective case series and reviews comparing open with laparoscopic liver resection indicate that laparoscopic liver resection can be applied safely for both malignant and benign liver lesions. Laparoscopic liver resection has been associated with shorter hospital length of stay, reduced intraoperative blood loss, less postoperative pain, earlier recovery and better quality of life. Initially the left lateral segments of the liver were chosen for anatomic laparoscopic resection with good results. Many liver centres worldwide are currently adopting laparoscopic surgery for resection of anterior segments, but relatively low volumes to operate on, a significant learning curve and lack of evidence restrict the majority of liver surgeons to further adopt and disseminate this technique.
Recently, indications for resectability have been broadened by new (neo)adjuvant chemotherapies and (radio)embolisation techniques. A new impulse for the laparoscopic management of liver lesions came after the first reports of laparoscopic hemihepatectomies. Major hepatic resections can be technically demanding and hold an increased risk for morbidity. It was demonstrated that in expert hands major anatomical laparoscopic liver resections were feasible with good efficacy and safety. Expert liver centers are already performing laparoscopic (extended) hemihepatectomies. Currently, in European centers, a median hospital length of stay of 6.0 to 13.1 and 3.5 to 10.0 days is observed after respectively open and laparoscopic hepatic resection. In expert hands median duration of admission after major hepatic resection varies between 6 - 12.5 for open and 4 - 8.2 for laparoscopic surgery. However, reports are scarce and level 1 evidence on this matter is still to be presented.
Within the framework of optimising postoperative recovery, broader indications for resection and further adoption of laparoscopic liver surgery there is a need for a randomized trial.Regarding postoperative care, enthusiasm has arisen for the Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS®) program. This multimodal program, derived from Kehlet's 1990's pioneer work in the multimodal surgical care field, involves optimization of several aspects of the perioperative management of patients undergoing major abdominal surgery. In patients undergoing segmental colectomy, the ERAS® -program enabled earlier recovery and consequently shorter hospital length of stay. Furthermore, a reduction of postoperative morbidity in patients undergoing intestinal resection was reported. These results stimulated liver surgeons of the ERAS® group (Maastricht, Edinburgh and Tromsö) to adapt the ERAS®-program to patients undergoing open liver resection. Van Dam et al. found a significantly reduced hospital length of stay after open liver resection when patients were managed within a multimodal ERAS®-program. Besides a reduction of median total hospital length of stay from 8 to 6 days (25%), the data also suggested that a further reduction of stay could be possible as there was a delay between recovery and actual discharge of the patients. Moreover, Stoot et al. showed - retrospectively - a further reduction in length of stay from 7 days to 5 days when patients were operated laparoscopically and managed within an ERAS®-program. In this study there was also a delay between recovery and actual discharge of the patients. Earlier, Maessen et al. reported a median delay to discharge of 2 days after patients had functionally recovered from colonic surgery managed within an ERAS®-program. This delay is often linked to social problems, problems in homecare support or logistic problems.
The added value of the laparoscopic hemihepatectomy compared to the open hemihepatectomy has never been studied in a randomized controlled setting. Therefore, the multicenter international ORANGE II PLUS - trial has been constructed and will provide evidence on the merits of laparoscopic versus open hemihepatectomy.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open or Laparocopic Left | Active Comparator | Open or Laparoscopic left hemihepatectomy |
|
| Open or Laparoscopic Right | Active Comparator | Open or Laparoscopic right hemihepatectomy |
|
| Prospective registry | Active Comparator | Prospective registry of patients that cannot be randomized (both open and laparoscopic left + right hemihepatectomy) |
|
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Open or Laparoscopic left hemihepatectomy | Procedure | Patients in this arm will undergo a left hemihepatectomy within an Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Program. |
|
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Time to functional recovery | Time until a patient is functionally recovered | expected average of 4-10 days |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Length of hospital stay | Total length of hospital stay | 30 days |
| Readmission percentage | Total percentage of patients being readmitted |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| R.M. van Dam, MD PhD | Maastricht University Medical Center | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Erasmus Hospital | Brussels | Belgium | ||||
| Ghent University Hospital |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 41803352 | Derived | Olij B, Pilz da Cunha G, Ratti F, Abu Hilal M, Troisi RI, Sutcliffe RP, Besselink MG, Aroori S, Menon KV, Edwin B, D'Hondt M, Lucidi V, Ulmer TF, Diaz-Nieto R, Soonawalla Z, White S, Sergeant G, Kuemmerli C, Korenblik R, Scuderi V, Berrevoet F, Vanlander A, Marudanayagam R, Tanis PJ, Coolsen MME, Fichtinger RS, Eminton ZB, Neumann UP, Brandts L, Pugh SA, Fretland AA, Primrose JN, van Dam RM; ORANGE II PLUS Collaborative. Laparoscopic versus open hemihepatectomy: does side matter? A post-hoc analysis of the ORANGE II PLUS randomized controlled trial. Surg Endosc. 2026 May;40(5):4195-4205. doi: 10.1007/s00464-026-12588-w. Epub 2026 Mar 9. | |
| 41385067 |
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| Derriford Hospital |
| OTHER |
| Academisch Medisch Centrum - Universiteit van Amsterdam (AMC-UvA) | OTHER |
| Queen Elizabeth Hospital NHS Foundation Trust | OTHER |
| King's College London | OTHER |
| Newcastle-upon-Tyne Hospitals NHS Trust | OTHER |
| Oslo University Hospital | OTHER |
| General Hospital Groeninge | OTHER |
| Jessa Hospital | OTHER |
| Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel | OTHER |
| University Hospital, Aachen | OTHER |
| Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust | OTHER_GOV |
| Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust | OTHER |
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The patient, surgical ward physician and surgical ward nurses are blinded up and until postoperative day 4.
| Open or Laparoscopic right hemihepatectomy | Procedure | Patients in this arm will undergo a right hemihepatectomy within an Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Program. |
|
| 1 year |
| Total morbidity | Total morbidity during one year | 1 year |
| Composite endpoint of liver specific morbidity | Composite endpoint of liver specific morbidity(intra-abdominal bleeding, intra-abdominal abcess, ascites, postresectional liver failure, intra-operative mortality, bile leakage) | 1 year |
| Long term incidence of incisional hernia | Incidence of incisional hernia after 1 year | 1 year |
| Quality of life: QLQ-C30 + LM 21 | Quality of life assessment (QLQ-C30 + LM 21) during one year | 1 year |
| Body image and cosmesis | Influence of intervention on body image and cosmesis during one year | 1 year |
| Reasons for delay in discharge after functional recovery | 1 year |
| Intraoperative blood loss | During procedure |
| Intraoperative time | Surgical time from incision to closure |
| Resection margin | During pathology assessment |
| Time to adjuvant chemotherapy initiation | 1 year |
| Disease-free survival | 1 year |
| Hospital and societal costs | 1 year |
| Overall survival | 1 year and 5 years |
| Ghent |
| Belgium |
| Jessa Hospital | Hasselt | Belgium |
| General Hospital Groeninge | Kortrijk | Belgium |
| University Hospital Aachen | Aachen | Germany |
| San Raffaele Hospital | Milan | Italy |
| Academic Medical Center | Amsterdam | Netherlands |
| Maastricht University Medical Center+ | Maastricht | Netherlands |
| University Hospital Oslo | Oslo | Norway |
| Aintree University Hospital | Aintree | United Kingdom |
| Queen Elizabeth Hospital | Birmingham | United Kingdom |
| King's College Hospital | London | United Kingdom |
| Freeman Hospital | Newcastle | United Kingdom |
| Oxford University Hospitals | Oxford | United Kingdom |
| Derriford Hospital | Plymouth | United Kingdom |
| University Hospital Southampton | Southampton | United Kingdom |
| Derived |
| Olij B, Pilz da Cunha G, Kimman M, Ratti F, Abu Hilal M, Troisi RI, Sutcliffe RP, Besselink MG, Aroori S, Menon KV, Edwin B, D'Hondt M, Lucidi V, Ulmer TF, Diaz-Nieto R, Soonawalla Z, White S, Sergeant G, Coolsen MME, Kuemmerli C, Scuderi V, Berrevoet F, Vanlander A, Marudanayagam R, Tanis PJ, Dewulf MJL, Fichtinger RS, Eminton ZB, Neumann UP, Brandts L, Pugh SA, Fretland AA, Primrose JN, van Dam RM; ORANGE II PLUS Collaborative. Healthcare Utilization, Costs, and Cost-Effectiveness of Patients Undergoing Laparoscopic and Open Hemihepatectomy: A Secondary Analysis of the ORANGE II PLUS Randomized Controlled, Phase 3, Superiority Trial. Ann Surg Oncol. 2026 Apr;33(4):2882-2898. doi: 10.1245/s10434-025-18779-4. Epub 2025 Dec 12. |
| 40491830 | Derived | Olij B, Fichtinger RS, Aldrighetti LA, Abu Hilal M, Troisi RI, Sutcliffe RP, Besselink MG, Aroori S, Menon KV, Edwin B, D'Hondt M, Lucidi V, Ulmer TF, Diaz-Nieto R, Soonawalla Z, White S, Sergeant G, Ratti F, Kuemmerli C, Scuderi V, Berrevoet F, Vanlander A, Marudanayagam R, Tanis PJ, Dewulf MJL, Eminton ZB, Neumann UP, Brandts L, Pugh SA, Fretland AA, Kimman ML, Primrose JN, van Dam RM; ORANGE II PLUS Collaborative. Health-related quality of life in patients undergoing laparoscopic versus open hemihepatectomy: a secondary analysis of the ORANGE II PLUS randomised controlled, phase 3, superiority trial. Lancet Reg Health Eur. 2025 May 19;54:101311. doi: 10.1016/j.lanepe.2025.101311. eCollection 2025 Jul. |
| 38640453 | Derived | Fichtinger RS, Aldrighetti LA, Abu Hilal M, Troisi RI, Sutcliffe RP, Besselink MG, Aroori S, Menon KV, Edwin B, D'Hondt M, Lucidi V, Ulmer TF, Diaz-Nieto R, Soonawalla Z, White S, Sergeant G, Olij B, Ratti F, Kuemmerli C, Scuderi V, Berrevoet F, Vanlander A, Marudanayagam R, Tanis P, Dewulf MJL, Dejong CHC, Eminton Z, Kimman ML, Brandts L, Neumann UP, Fretland AA, Pugh SA, van Breukelen GJP, Primrose JN, van Dam RM; ORANGE II PLUS Collaborative. Laparoscopic Versus Open Hemihepatectomy: The ORANGE II PLUS Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial. J Clin Oncol. 2024 May 20;42(15):1799-1809. doi: 10.1200/JCO.23.01019. Epub 2024 Apr 19. |