Institutional Variants For Lymph Node Counts After Pancreatic Resections

Date
2017
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English
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Abstract

Background

Lymph node (LN) counts from pancreatectomy are postulated as quality metric for surgical therapy of pancreatic malignancy.

Methods

Prospectively collected data from a single surgeon's pancreatectomy experience were analyzed for predictors of LN counts.

Results

Of 315 consecutive patients (54% female, median age: 65, range 18–88), 239 had a proven cancer diagnosis (76%). Operations included pancreatoduodenectomy (69%), distal pancreatectomy (26%), total pancreatectomy (1%) and others (4%). Patients were treated in 4 different tertiary cancer center settings (Institution A: 11%; B: 46%; C: 27%; D: 16%) with consistent regional dissection standards. Mean total LN counts differed between institutions for malignancies (A: 18, B: 13, C: 26, D: 26, p < 0.0001) and benign diseases (p = 0.003). At least 15 LNs were reported in 63% of cancer patients (institution range: 34–92%, p < 0.0001).

Conclusions

Pathologic processing should be standardized if LN numbers are to be adopted as quality metric for pancreatic cancer resections.

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Schwarz, R. E. (2017). Institutional variants for lymph node counts after pancreatic resections. The American Journal of Surgery. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amjsurg.2017.06.001
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The American Journal of Surgery
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