Introduction: Alveolar Echinicoccosis is a severe parasitic disease: its natural evolution is comparable to a slowly progressive malignant liver tumour. There is no definitive medical therapy. Surgery remains the only option to assure a cure. This report is our surgical experience for the care of this affection.
Patients and method: Between 1980 and 2002, 12 patients were operated for an hepatic alveolar echinococcosis. For 11 of them, the affection was primary. Lesions were located in the right liver lobe (n = 9), in the left lobe (n = 1), in both lobes (n = 1) and close to the hilar region (n = 1). Twice there was a diaphragmatic infiltration and once a pleural infiltration. Resections consisted in: segmentectomies in the right lobe (n = 4), right hepatectomy (n = 5, associated once with a partial I and IV segmentectomy), left hepatectomy (n = 1), one liver transplantation (n = 1), one drainage of a parasitic cavity (n = 1). One pleurectomy and a partial diaphragmatic resection were made. All patients were treated postoperatively with benzimidazole chemotherapy.
Results: Three patients presented some complications: segmental necrosis with biloma (n = 1), biliary fistula tract (n = 1), subdiaphragmatic hematoma (n = 1), cholangitis (n = 1). 10 patients are alive (median follow-up of 10 years). Two patients still present some parasitic lesions; the situation remains doubtful for one of them. Two patients died (one of them in the context of a disease progression).
Conclusion: Surgical treatment, associated with medical therapy, assured a control of the parasitic lesions or a definitive cure in most cases. When the disease is limited to the liver with no possibility for partial hepatectomy, a transplantation is an option.