The purpose of this trial is to study health related quality of life (HQoL)after resection of colorectal liver metastases combined with perioperative chemotherapy. The investigators want to study if an aggressive, life prolonging and multimodal treatment can be defended from a quality of life perspective.
Background: Hepatic resection is the only treatment with potential curative intent for patients having colorectal liver metastases. Combined with chemotherapy, the overall 5-year survival is 40-50%. The disease free 5-year survival is about 20%, and about 70% of resected patients experience recurrence from their disease. Even if surgery is superior all other treatments, most patients will finally die from their cancer. However; surgery contributes by adding years of life, and for a minority, a disease free life. There has been much effort to study predictors for outcome after surgery, but little has been focused on quality of life following this treatment. Method: EORTC Validated questionnaire (European Organisation Research of Treatment of Cancer) version QLQ-C30 (3.0) and QLQ LMC21. The patients fill out the questionnaire before surgery as a baseline, and then after 3,6 and 12 months after surgery. The investigators also register important clinicopathological data about each patient prospectively.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Departement of acute and digestive surgery, surgical clinic, Haukeland University Hospital
Bergen, Bergen, Norway
RECRUITINGHealth related quality of life after liver resection in combination with chemotherapy
The EORTC board has made validated questionaries with manuals for measuring quality of life. The important focus is to see if and when patients gain their HQoL as they did have before surgery.
Time frame: 12 months after surgery
Identifying possible clinical parameters influencing the HQoL after liver resection.
Examples of parameters: complications, extent of surgery, chemotherapy.
Time frame: Up to one year after surgery, maybe longer
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.