Although the possibilities for the treatment of hepatic echinococcosis have increased considerably in recent years (including medical treatment, PAIR, or a combination of these two), surgery remains the mainstay for healing of hydatid disease [2, 3]. Due to the development in technology and especially the increasing number of more experienced surgeons, laparoscopic surgery has been introduced for the surgical treatment of liver hydatid disease liver as well as for the surgical treatment of many other organs.
Initially, however, laparoscopy was not quickly accepted or widely used in the treatment of hydatid disease due to the concern that the recurrence rate and the risk of intraperitoneal dissemination might be higher with laparoscopy than with the conventional approach [4, 5]. Different authors have attempted to reduce the risks with laparoscopy by pre- and postoperative albendazole therapy, proper isolation of the cyst from the remainder of the peritoneal cavity (using various devices), and the use of wide-angle laparoscopes [6–8]. In fact, the real risk of spillage is lower than might be expected [9], and the short-term recurrence rate varies between 0 and 9 % after laparoscopy, whereas in open cases, it is higher (0–30 %) [10, 11].
Laparoscopic treatment of liver hydatidosis should not be regarded as a new surgical technique but rather as a new and minimally invasive access (with all its benefits) for performing a popularly established surgical intervention. Like any other surgical intervention, laparoscopic treatment of liver hydatidosis complies with the basic surgical principles of treating liver hydatid cysts by an open approach including prevention of hydatid spillage, sterilization and evacuation of the parasite, and management of the residual cavity [2–5].
Most of the reports on laparoscopic treatment of liver hydatidosis consist of case reports or small patient series [2, 5, 7, 12]. They could give the misleading impression that they are oriented to publish successful results with this technique, but the difference detected in favor of the minimally invasive approach could be due to the limited number of patients and the rigorous selection criteria (central location of the cyst, cyst size exceeding 10 cm, cysts with thickened and calcified walls).
Our series of 59 patients is one of the largest series in the literature, and our selection criteria were truly permissive (including any patient wanting a laparoscopic approach whose cyst was not communicating with the biliary tree or was located in liver segment 1 or 7). Our series included a large variety of hydatid cysts. Most of them were proligere cysts with daughter vesicles (>66 %), but infected or calcified cysts were represented as well. Regarding cyst size, although most cysts were medium-sized (5–10 cm), a large number of giant cysts (>10 cm) were treated by means of the laparoscopic approach.
Another great advantage of laparoscopic treatment is that the laparoscope can be inserted inside the cystic cavity, allowing its inspection. The image of the pericystic cavity’s interior displayed on monitors actually is two to three times larger. If a biliocystic communication is observed, it can be approached by applying a clip or an X-shaped wire. Also, remnants of the germinal membrane can be identified and removed, reducing the incidence of recurrence or suppurative complications.
A few disadvantages of the laparoscopic approach need to be considered. For example, laparoscopy still is limited in terms of liver resection, closure of biliary communications, and achievement of pericystodigestive anastomoses, although in recent years, an increasing number of authors have published promising results (small series of patients) [12–14].
We did not perform any hepatic resections or pericystodigestive anastomoses via laparoscopy, although a recently published review involving a large number of patients (1,294 patients with liver resection, 314 of whom were treated via laparoscopy) proved that laparoscopic liver resection is safe and feasible with definite short-term benefits and lower postoperative morbidity [15].
No prospective, randomized clinical trials comparing laparoscopic with open surgical treatment of hydatid disease have been reported. Postoperative morbidity ranges from 8 to 25 % in laparoscopic studies and from 12 to 63 % in open series [4]. Treatment-related death after laparoscopy is almost zero in laparoscopic series, whereas it ranges from 0 to 3 % in open series [4, 11].
Our morbidity rate was significantly lower in the laparoscopic group, mainly due to a lower incidence of abdominal wound complications (0 vs. 8.72 %, p = 0.015) and general complications (0 vs. 5.23 %, p = 0.023). No disease- or procedure-related mortality occurred in the minimally invasive treatment group. Similar results have been reported by other authors [8, 12].
Although the mean operative time was slightly longer with the laparoscopic approach (without statistical significance), we believe that this obstacle can easily be overcome by increased experience of the surgical team.
The encouraging results from the current study favor extending the limits of laparoscopy in hydatid disease, motivated primarily by a lower postoperative morbidity, an increased speed of healing, a shorter hospital stay, and superior aesthetic results. Knowing the relationship between the cyst and the biliary tree is essential in choosing the appropriate patients for the laparoscopic technique, although considering that laparoscopic hepatic resection is a growing option in the field of hepatic surgery [15], the only absolute contraindication to the laparoscopic approach in the treatment of liver hydatid cyst is posterior location of the cyst (segments 7 and 1). For surgeons experienced in liver surgery, working in centers with adequate technical equipment, the presence of biliocystic communication is a relative contraindication that can be overcome with increasing experience.
The indications for the laparoscopic approach in the treatment of liver hydatidosis have been and still are in constant change. It should not be forgotten that 15 years ago, the indications for a laparoscopic approach to the treatment of liver cyst were limited to small liver hydatid cysts (<5 cm) without daughter vesicles and in a peripheral location. All these contraindications proved to be overstated given that the same prophylactic measures are taken to reduce the risk of peritoneal hydatidosis and that the surgical time for the conventional surgery is observed. Therefore, the only real contraindication with absolute character is the surgeon’s inability to physically perform the suggested surgery (and this happens when the hydatid liver cyst has a posterior location: segments 7 and 1).
When the advantages of the laparoscopic approach are weighed, especially the fast healing and aesthetic results, which actually were the only real criteria for assessing the quality of the interventions, the disadvantages of minimally invasive approach are set aside. They are temporary impediments in perfecting the therapeutic concept of the minimally invasive approach, which surely will be the future of surgery.