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Clinical analysis of uncinate process carcinoma of the pancreas |
Chun Ye, Peng-Cheng Xi and Xian-Gui Hu |
Shanghai, China
From the Department of General Surgery, Changhai Hospital, Second Military Medical University, Shanghai 200433, China (Ye C, Xi PC and Hu XG)
Correspondence: Chun Ye, MD, Department of General Surgery, Changhai Hospital, Second Military Medical University, Shanghai 200433, China (Tel: 86-21-65584005; Email: thomas2000@citiz.net) |
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Abstract OBJECTIVE: To analyse the clinical features of uncinate process carcinoma of the pancreas and the diagnosis and treatment of this malignancy.
METHOD: Fifty-nine patients with pancreas uncinate process carcinoma treated from January 1998 to September 2002 at our hospital were analysed retrospectively.
RESULTS: Major symptoms of these patients were upper abdominal pain accompanied with lumbar pain, body weight loss and jaundice. Thirty-seven patients received regional pancreaticoduodenectomy (RP), 16 partial resection of the superior mesenteric vein-portal vein (SMV-PV) or superior mesenteric artery (SMA) and reconstruction, 1 anhydrous alcohol injection in the celiac nerve plexus, regional chemotherapy via a chemotherapy pump, and liver biopsy, and 5 no operation. The survival of the patients after operation was 2-46 months (median 12.1 months). Eleven patients are still alive with a longest survival of 46 months. The 1- and 3-year survival rates were 37.7% and 5.6%.
CONCLUSIONS: Pancreas uncinate process carcinoma invading the adjacent SMV/SMA-PV causes difficulty in early diagnosis and poor prognosis, which are related to its location, not tumor’s aggressive nature. This carcinoma has a high resection rate of 89.8%.
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