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Solid pseudopapillary neoplasm of the pancreas: a report of 10 cases and literature review
Background Solid pseudopapillary tumour of the pancreas (SPTP) is a rare pancreatic tumour characterized by a non‐specific clinical presentations and vague radiologic features. The aim of this study is to identify these tumours from other pancreatic neoplasms because complete resection is curative i...
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Published in: | ANZ journal of surgery 2020-09, Vol.90 (9), p.1683-1688 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background
Solid pseudopapillary tumour of the pancreas (SPTP) is a rare pancreatic tumour characterized by a non‐specific clinical presentations and vague radiologic features. The aim of this study is to identify these tumours from other pancreatic neoplasms because complete resection is curative in most cases and provides long‐term survival.
Methods
A retrospective analysis of patients operated for SPTP between January 2000 and December 2018 was conducted. The collected data included age, gender, clinical findings, laboratory tests, radiological findings, anatomopathological examination, immunohistochemistry results, surgical treatment, mortality, morbidity and recurrence.
Results
Ten cases of SPTP have been diagnosed between January 2000 and December 2018 representing 5.1% of all pancreatic tumours operated during this period (male/female: 2/8; median age 41.2 years; range 19–78 years). The most common symptom was abdominal pain and physical examination was normal in four of 10 cases. The most common tumour localization was the tail of the pancreas. The main tumour size was 7.2 cm (range 2–15 cm). One patient had abdominal disseminated disease. Surgical interventions were distal pancreatectomy in five cases, enucleation in one case, cephalic duodeno‐pancreatectomy in two cases, central pancreatectomy in one case and pancreatic biopsy in one case. Only one patient received adjuvant chemotherapy. During follow‐up, one patient died after 12 months and another developed unique hepatic metastasis that was resected.
Conclusion
Although it is delayed in diagnosis, the overall prognosis of these tumours remains good even with local recurrence and metastasis. Complete surgical resection is the treatment of choice even in cases of recurrence.
Although it is delayed in diagnosis, the overall prognosis of solid pseudopapillary neoplasm of the pancreas remains good even with local recurrence and metastasis. Complete surgical resection is the treatment of choice even in cases of recurrence. |
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ISSN: | 1445-1433 1445-2197 |
DOI: | 10.1111/ans.15701 |