• Pancreas · Nov 2016

    Treatment Strategy for Borderline Resectable Pancreatic Cancer With Radiographic Artery Involvement.

    • Seiko Hirono, Manabu Kawai, Ken-Ichi Okada, Motoki Miyazawa, Atsushi Shimizu, Yuji Kitahata, Masaki Ueno, and Hiroki Yamaue.
    • From the Second Department of Surgery, Wakayama Medical University, School of Medicine, Wakayama, Japan.
    • Pancreas. 2016 Nov 1; 45 (10): 1438-1446.

    ObjectivesWe evaluated whether neoadjuvant therapy followed by surgical resection improves the clinical outcome for patients with borderline resectable pancreatic cancer with radiologic artery involvement (BRPC-A).MethodsWe reviewed 143 BRPC-A patients from among 330 pancreatic cancer patients, including 111 potentially resectable pancreatic cancer patients and 76 borderline resectable pancreatic cancer with portal/superior mesenteric vein involvement patients, who underwent surgery at Wakayama Medical University Hospital. We compared the clinicopathological factors of 40 BRPC-A patients treated with neoadjuvant therapy followed by surgery and those of 103 BRPC-A patients treated with upfront surgery.ResultsThe R0 rate and progression-free survival of BRPC-A patients who received neoadjuvant therapy and subsequent surgical resection were significantly better compared to those who received upfront surgery (R0: P = 0.041; progression-free survival: P = 0.033), but overall survival was not significantly different. A multivariate analysis showed that intraoperative transfusion (P = 0.007), moderately or poorly differentiated pathological adenocarcinoma (P = 0.019), and failure to complete postoperative adjuvant therapy (P < 0.001) independently predicted a poor prognosis for BRPC-A patients who underwent surgical resection.ConclusionsNeoadjuvant treatment followed by surgery might provide clinical benefits for BRPC-A patients; however, the establishment of the most appropriate neoadjuvant therapy is needed by further studies.

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