To investigate the prognostic factors of pancreatic cancer, a retrospective analysis of 193 patients who underwent curative resection was conducted. Of the 193 patients, 38 (20%) survived for more than 5 years, the 5-year survival rates for stages I, II, II, and IV disease being 41%, 17%, 11%, and 6%, respectively. According to a multivariate analysis, lymph node metastasis, intrapancreatic perineural invasion, and portal vein invasion were significant prognostic factors. Subsequently, a subgroup analysis concerning nodal metastasis and intrapancreatic perineural invasion was performed in 126 patients with records of these histological findings. In the group of patients without nodal metastasis, the 5-year survival rate for those without perineural invasion was 75%, whereas that for those with perineural invasion was 29%, the difference in survival of these subgroups being significant (P < 0.02). In the group of patients with nodal metastasis, the 5-year survival rate for those without perineural invasion was 17%, while that for those with perineural invasion was 10%. The most favorable 5-year survival of 89% was observed in the subgroup of patients with stage I disease without perineural invasion. Thus, pancreatic adenocarcinoma categorized by the combination of these independent types of biological behavior showed 5-year survival rates ranging from very high to low, indicating that these two factors play an important role in the prognosis of this disease.
To enhance the resectability of cancer of the pancreatic body, a new surgical technique should be developed. Of 25 patients with cancer of the pancreatic body who underwent distal pancreatectomy with curative intent, seven with cancer invasion around the celiac artery underwent stomach-preserving distal pancreatectomy with combined resection of the celiac artery. This procedure secured arterial blood supply to the whole stomach and liver via the inferior pancreaticoduodenal artery without arterial reconstruction. There was no postoperative mortality. One patient developed transient passage disturbance in the duodenum. Another one developed a minor pancreatic fistula. No patients had serious complications related to ischemia of the stomach or liver. The quality of life of the patients after surgery was well maintained, and planned adjuvant therapy was accomplished. Local recurrence was evident in only two patients. The median survival time of patients who underwent distal pancreatectomy with (n = 7) or without (n = 18) resection of the celiac artery was 19 and 25 months, respectively. The overall survival rate was not significantly different between the two groups (P = 0.5300). The present study suggests that this surgical procedure is a rational approach to locally advanced pancreatic body cancer invading around the celiac artery. In view of the feasibility of this procedure, it can also be adopted for less advanced cancer of the pancreatic body to enhance local control and survival.
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