Skip to main content
. 2006 May 14;12(18):2949–2954. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v12.i18.2949

Table 4.

Comparison of treatment options for symptomatic simple liver cysts

Treatment options Advantages Disadvantages
Observation alone - Because most cysts are asymptomatic, intervention is unlikely to be helpful and may be harmful - Only effective cyst treatment can prove whether symptoms are related to the cyst
US-guided aspiration - Simple procedure - High recurrence rate
- May be used as a diagnostic test to assess whether symptoms are related to the cyst
US-guided aspiration with sclerotherapy - Relatively non-invasive - Less effective for uncooperative patients
- Complications are rare - Can not be performed if cyst communicates with biliary tree
- Effective
- Possible in poor surgical candidates
Laparoscopic unroofing - Technically feasible and effective in > 80% cases - More invasive
- Improved results with extensive fenestration and argon beam coagulation or electrocoagulation - Morbidity in up to 25%
- Low recurrence rate (0%-20%) - Less effective for cysts which are superior, posterior, or deep within hepatic parenchyma
- Visualization of cyst interior (exclude other diagnoses) - Less effective if prior surgery has been attempted
Laparotomy (resection, fenestration, or excision) - Effective - Most invasive
- Allows treatment of laparoscopically inaccessible cysts - Larger scars
- Useful for cysts with complications - Longer hospital stays compare to laparoscopy
- May perform cystojejunostomy at time of laparotomy for cysts with biliary communication - Significant post-surgical morbidity