The aim of the present study was to determine the outcome of patients undergoing pancreatic resection with (VR+) or without (VR-) mesenteric-portal vein resection for pancreatic carcinoma. Between January 1998 and December 2012, 241 patients with pancreatic cancer underwent pancreatic resection: in 64 patients, surgery included venous resection for macroscopic invasion of mesenteric-portal vein axis. Morbidity and mortality did not differ between the two groups (VR+: 29% and 3%; VR-: 30% and 4.0%, resp.). Radical resection was achieved in 55/64 (78%) in the VR+ group and in 126/177 (71%) in the VR- group. Vascular invasion was histologically proven in 44 (69%) of the VR+ group. Survival curves were not statistically different between the two groups. Mean and median survival time were 26 and 15 months, respectively, in VR- versus 20 and 14 months, respectively, in VR+ group p=0.52. In the VR+ group, only histologically proven vascular invasion significantly impacted survival p=0.02, while, in the VR- group, R0 resection p=0.001 and tumor's grading p=0.01 significantly influenced long-term survival. Vascular resection during pancreatectomy can be performed safely, with acceptable morbidity and mortality. Long-term survival was the same, with or without venous resection. Survival was worse for patients with histologically confirmed vascular infiltration.
CITATION STYLE
Beltrame, V., Gruppo, M., Pedrazzoli, S., Merigliano, S., Pastorelli, D., & Sperti, C. (2015). Mesenteric-portal vein resection during pancreatectomy for pancreatic cancer. Gastroenterology Research and Practice, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/659730
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