- Browse by Subject
Browsing by Subject "pancreatic neoplasms"
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item The Dilemma of the Dilated Main Pancreatic Duct in the Distal Pancreatic Remnant After Proximal Pancreatectomy for IPMN(Springer, 2019-08) Simpson, Rachel E.; Ceppa, Eugene P.; Wu, Howard H.; Akisik, Fatih; House, Michael G.; Zyromski, Nicholas J.; Nakeeb, Attila; Al-Haddad, Mohammad A.; DeWitt, John M.; Sherman, Stuart; Schmidt, C. Max; Surgery, School of MedicineObjective(s) A dilated main pancreatic duct in the distal remnant after proximal pancreatectomy for intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMN) poses a diagnostic dilemma. We sought to determine parameters predictive of remnant main-duct IPMN and malignancy during surveillance. Methods Three hundred seventeen patients underwent proximal pancreatectomy for IPMN (Indiana University, 1991–2016). Main-duct dilation included those ≥ 5 mm or “dilated” on radiographic reports. Statistics compared groups using Student’s T/Mann-Whitney U tests for continuous variables or chi-square/Fisher’s exact test for categorical variables with P < 0.05 considered significant. Results High-grade/invasive IPMN or adenocarcinoma at proximal pancreatectomy predicted malignant outcomes (100.0% malignant outcomes; P < 0.001) in remnant surveillance. Low/moderate-grade lesions revealed benign outcomes at last surveillance regardless of duct diameter. Twenty of 21 patients undergoing distal remnant reoperation had a dilated main duct. Seven had main-duct IPMN on remnant pathology; these patients had greater mean maximum main-duct diameter prior to reoperation (9.5 vs 6.2 mm, P = 0.072), but this did not reach statistical significance. Several features showed high sensitivity/specificity for remnant main-duct IPMN. Conclusions Remnant main-duct dilation after proximal pancreatectomy for IPMN remains a diagnostic dilemma. Several parameters show a promise in accurately diagnosing main-duct IPMN in the remnant.Item Pseudo–“solid pseudopapillary neoplasms” of the testis: in reality Sertoli cell tumors(Elsevier, 2018) Ulbright, Thomas M.; Young, Robert H.; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineItem Secretin-induced Duodenal Aspirate of Pancreatic Juice (SIDA): Utility of Commercial Genetic Analysis(International Institute of Anticancer Research, 2020) Simpson, Rachel E.; Yip-Schneider, Michele; Flick, Katelyn F.; Soufi, Mazhar; Ceppa, Eugene P.; Al-Haddad, Mohammad A.; Easler, Jeffrey J.; Sherman, Stuart; Dewitt, John M.; Schmidt, C. Max; Surgery, School of MedicineBackground: Secretin-induced duodenal aspiration (SIDA) of pancreatic duct fluid has been proposed for pancreatic neoplasm screening in very high-risk patients. We sought to determine the clinical yield and safety of commercially-analyzed SIDA samples in patients at moderately elevated risk. Patients and Methods: A prospectively maintained institutional database of pancreatic fluid DNA profiles was retrospectively reviewed. Results: Fifty-seven patients underwent SIDA testing, most commonly for intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (n=43) and not otherwise specified solitary cysts (n=9). SIDA mutation yield was low compared to 37 concomitant endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) samples of pancreatic fluid: KRAS (2.5% vs. 40.0%), GNAS (2.6% vs. 11.1%) and allelic loss of heterozygosity (3.1% vs. 0%). Patients undergoing SIDA alone experienced no complications while 3 patients with concomitant EUS-FNA had post-procedural pancreatitis. Conclusion: The genetic yield of commercially-analyzed SIDA samples was relatively low in a moderately elevated risk cohort. SIDA testing may have a better safety profile than EUS-FNA.