Distal subtotal pancreatectomy with resection of celiac trunk and common hepatic artery is safe, provides significant analgesic effect, increases resectability and expands the indications for pancreatectomy.
Development of surgical approach for pancreatic head and periampullary cancer at the Blokhin National Medical Research Center of Oncology over the past 30 years and global surgical tendencies of surgery for pancreatic cancer are demonstrated in the article. Over this period, gastropancreaticoduodenectomy has evolved from standard procedure without complete lymph node dissection and neurodissection and extended gastropancreaticoduodenectomy with obligatory circular skeletonization of superior mesenteric artery and para-aortic lymphadenectomy to standard gastropancreaticoduodenectomy. The last procedure implies mandatory skeletonization of the right semicircle of superior mesenteric artery, all tubular structures of hepatoduodenal ligament and possible resection of portal and superior mesenteric vein for suspected invasion. Surgical possibilities in the treatment of patients with pancreatic head and periampullary cancer are exhausted. The concept of “early diagnosis” is not applicable for patients with ductal pancreatic cancer. Further progress is exclusively associated with medicamentous combined treatment based on the molecular-biological characteristics of pancreatic and periampular cancer and, possibly, with primary prevention of pancreatic cancer.
Liver resection remains essential treatment of cholangiocellular carcinoma including patients with obstructive jaundice. Additional curative methods are necessary to increase resectability and decrease the risk of recurrence.
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