Neoadjuvant therapy and major arterial resection for potentially reconstructable arterial involvement by stage 3 adenocarcinoma of the pancreas.

Journal: HPB : The Official Journal Of The International Hepato Pancreato Biliary Association
Published:
Abstract

Background: Stage 3 pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is defined by arterial involvement. This study objective was to evaluate outcomes for patients with stage 3 PDAC with potentially reconstructable arterial involvement, considered for neoadjuvant therapy (NAT) and pancreatic resection, and to compare outcomes following arterial (AR) and non-arterial resection (NAR).

Methods: This study included patients from 2009 to 2016 with biopsy-proven stage 3 PDAC who were offered NAT before surgical exploration. AR was performed if required to achieve R0 resection. Time to event outcomes were analysed from diagnosis date.

Results: 87/89 patients (97.8%) received NAT (chemotherapy 41.6%, chemotherapy/radiotherapy 56.2%). 46/89 (51.7%) underwent exploration; 31 underwent resection (AR n = 20, NAR n = 11). AR patients had longer operative time (681 vs. 563 min, p = 0.006) and more blood loss (1600 vs. 575 mL, p = 0.0004), with no difference for blood transfusion, pancreatic fistula, length of stay, reoperation, or mortality. R0 rate was 30/31. Post-resection 90-day mortality was 3.2%. Median overall survival was statistically comparable between the AR and NAR groups (19.7 vs. 28.4 months, p = 0.41).

Conclusions: AR had comparable clinical and oncologic outcomes to NAR. Following careful selection and non-progression after NAT, major AR may cautiously be considered if required to obtain a negative resection margin.

Authors
Benjamin P Loveday, Nathan Zilbert, Pablo Serrano, Koji Tomiyama, Amélie Tremblay, Adrian Fox, Maja Segedi, Martin O'malley, Ayelet Borgida, Teresa Bianco, Sean Creighton, Anna Dodd, Adriana Fraser, Malcolm Moore, John Kim, Sean Cleary, Carol-anne Moulton, Paul Greig, Alice Wei, Steven Gallinger, Neesha Dhani, Ian Mcgilvray
Relevant Conditions

Pancreatectomy, Pancreatic Cancer