Surgical resection of liver metastasis in pancreatic and periampullary carcinoma.


Journal

Minerva chirurgica
ISSN: 1827-1626
Titre abrégé: Minerva Chir
Pays: Italy
ID NLM: 0400726

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Jun 2019
Historique:
pubmed: 3 1 2019
medline: 21 12 2019
entrez: 3 1 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Once liver metastases in pancreatic and periampullary carcinoma are diagnosed, guidelines do not recommend resection of the primary tumor. In this stage of the disease, therapeutic regimes with chemotherapy are the standard treatment. However, it is unclear whether combinations of extensive surgery and novel chemotherapy treatments confer a survival benefit in selected patients. We provide a systematic review about liver metastases in pancreatic and periampullary carcinoma treated by surgery utilizing EMBASE, Medline/PubMed, Cochrane and Scopus databases according to PRISMA guidelines. In pancreatic and periampullary carcinoma, the number of lesions that can be resected includes a mean or median of 1-3; the size of the lesions should not exceed 3 cm and the most frequent surgical technique used were wedge or atypical resections. Overall morbidity and mortality after liver resection from pancreatic tumors were 0-68% and 0-9.1%, respectively, and from periampullary carcinomas were 0-82% and 0-21%, respectively. Considering both types of carcinomas, the rate of recurrence was up to 91%. Median overall survival ranged from 5.5 to 16.6 months for liver metastases from pancreas carcinoma, and from 5 to 23 months for periampullary carcinoma, with better prognosis for duodenal carcinomas. Perioperative chemotherapy is the cornerstone of treatment in patients with liver metastasis from pancreatic and periampullary carcinoma. Liver resection from early liver metastases could be acceptable in selected patients with oligometastatic disease and small single lesions taking into account the individual risk of complications.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30600968
pii: S0026-4733.18.07972-5
doi: 10.23736/S0026-4733.18.07972-5
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Systematic Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

253-262

Auteurs

Victor Lopez-Lopez (V)

Department of Surgery, Virgen de la Arrixaca Clinic and University Hospital, Murcia, Spain.

Ricardo Robles-Campos (R)

Department of Surgery, Virgen de la Arrixaca Clinic and University Hospital, Murcia, Spain - rirocam@um.es.

Asunción López-Conesa (A)

Department of Surgery, Virgen de la Arrixaca Clinic and University Hospital, Murcia, Spain.

Roberto Brusadin (R)

Department of Surgery, Virgen de la Arrixaca Clinic and University Hospital, Murcia, Spain.

Guillermo Carbonel (G)

Department of Radiology, Virgen de la Arrixaca Clinic and University Hospital, Murcia, Spain.

Alvaro Gomez-Ruiz (A)

Department of Surgery, Virgen de la Arrixaca Clinic and University Hospital, Murcia, Spain.

Juan J Ruiz (JJ)

Department of Surgery, Virgen de la Arrixaca Clinic and University Hospital, Murcia, Spain.

Pascual Parrilla (P)

Department of Surgery, Virgen de la Arrixaca Clinic and University Hospital, Murcia, Spain.

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Classifications MeSH