OBJECTIVES
To explore clinicopathological features and effects of surgical treatment of squamous/adenosquamous carcinoma of the gallbladder.
METHODS
We enrolled 411 patients who were surgically treated for gallbladder cancer in our hospital, including 10 with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), 24 with adenosquamous carcinoma (ASC), and 377 with adenocarcinoma (AC). The ASC-SCC group was compared with the AC group for clinicopathological features and surgical outcomes.
RESULTS
The patients' average age was 61.4 years. Abdominal pain was the most common presenting symptom, and 67.6% of patients had gallstones. All patients had advanced-stage (T3/T4) carcinomas. The ASC-SCC group had significantly higher percentages of T4 disease (61.8%) and N1 nodal involvement (58.8%) than did the AC group (T4 disease: 34.0%, P = 0.001; N1 involvement: 39.0%, P = 0.02). Patients in the ASC-SCC group who underwent R0 resections had significantly better 1-year survival (30%) than those who underwent R1 or R2 resections (0%; P = 0.025), but lower 1-year survival rates than similar-staged patients in the AC group (69.3%; P = 0.016).
CONCLUSIONS
Patients with gallbladder ASC-SCC were similar to those with AC in clinical characteristics, but tended to have more infiltration of multiple adjacent organs and lymphatic metastasis. Curative resection could give these patients better outcomes.