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Advanced hilar cholangiocarcinoma: An aggressive surgical approach for the treatment of advanced hilar cholangiocarcinoma: Perioperative management, extended procedures, and multidisciplinary approaches.

Hilar cholangiocarcinoma is a highly intractable malignancy. One of the reasons for its intractability is that most patients with the disease are diagnosed with an advanced stage of the disease at their initial presentation. Surgical resection is the standard therapy for hilar cholangiocarcinoma, providing a chance for a cure, and an aggressive surgical approach substantially increases the number of resectable tumors that are initially regarded as unresectable tumors. The success and standardization of the aggressive approach is warranted by meticulous preoperative management that prevents fatal postoperative complications. Extended resection procedures, including hepatic trisectionectomy for Bismuth type IV tumors, hepatopancreaticoduodenectomy for tumors with extensive longitudinal tumor spreading, and combined vascular resection with reconstruction for tumors with the involvement of hepatic vascular structures, have been challenged to expand the surgical indication. Due to acceptable surgical/survival outcomes, the three extended procedures are currently regarded as extended but standard options in specialized hepatobiliary centers. Although it remains a controversial multidisciplinary approach, the combination of these extended procedures with an adjuvant/neoadjuvant treatment is a promising approach for further improving the resectability of tumors and the survival of patients.

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