Abstract
This paper summarizes the treatment results of 28 cases of gall‐bladder carcinoma at Toowoomba Base Hospital, Toowoomba, Queensland. Australia. The literature is reviewed in order to determine whether more extensive resection is improving the outcome of a disease generally understood to have a deplorable prognosis. The complete records of 28 patients with this malignancy were obtained from the period 1978 to 1994 and analysed retrospectively. Twenty‐three patients had cholecystec‐tomy, but only one underwent formal lymph node dissection. Overall, the 5 year survival rate was 13%. and long‐term survivors all had stage I or II disease. Those with stage III or IV disease had a median survival of 46 days. Recent literature confirms that simple cholecystectomy is not always curative for early lesions discovered incidentally and also that some patients with advanced disease can achieve long‐term survival if treated with radical resection. Wedge resection of the liver and nodal clearance of the hepatoduodenal ligament at least has been recommended in patients with T2 lesions (subserosal/perimuscular), and in selected patients with stage III disease.