joint hospital grand round topic: intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (ipmn) of pancreas dr....
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Joint Hospital Grand Round Topic: Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN) of
PancreasDr. Chui Lap Bun
Prince of Wales Hospital16th January, 2010
Introduction
More pancreatic cystic lesions are being detected .
Evolution from small benign cystic neoplasms may be very slow and some had high malignant potential and therefore allow selective treatment according to morphological characteristics.
ClassificationNon-neoplastic lesions Neoplastic lesions
Pseudocyst Serous cystic tumour
Retention cyst Mucinous cystic neoplasm
Congenital cyst Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN)
Lymphoepithelial cyst Solid pseudopapillary neoplasm
Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN)
First described in 1982, it is characterized by papillary proliferation of mucin-producing epithelial cells with excessive mucus production and cystic dilatation of main or branch pancreatic ducts.
Two-third of IPMN are men. Peak age : 60- 70
Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN)
Main duct type: – characterised by marked dilatation of the MPD, diffuse or segmental. Together with atrophy of the pancreas.
Branch duct type – Multi- focal cysts in clusters with mild or no dilatation of MPD.
CTBranch duct IPMN
Branch duct IPMN
Main duct IPMN
Main duct IPMN
Investigation CT scan MRI + MRCP ERCP- mucin protruding from a widely
open papilla. EUS- Detect communication with
pancreatic duct and detect mural nodules. Sample cystic fluid and biopsy
Cyst fluid for cytology, amylase, mucin and CEA
Malignancy in main duct IPMNs (including mixed type IPMN)
Reference (author)
Year published
Patients Malignant including CIS (%)
Invasive malignancy (%)
Kobari 1999 13 92% 23%
Terris 2000 30 57% 37%
Doi 2002 12 83% -
Mastsumoto 2003 27 63% -
Choi 2003 34 85% -
Kitagawa 2003 37 65% 54%
Sugiyama 2003 30 70% 57%
Sohn 2004 69 - 45%
Salvia 2004 140 60% 42%
Mean 70% 43%
Malignancy in branch duct IPMNs
Reference (author)
Year published
Patients Malignant including CIS (%)
Invasive malignancy (%)
Kobari 1999 13 31% 6%
Terris 2000 30 15% 0%
Doi 2002 12 46% -
Mastsumoto 2003 27 6% -
Choi 2003 34 25% -
Kitagawa 2003 37 35% 31%
Sugiyama 2003 30 40% 9%
Sohn 2004 69 - 30%
Mean 25% 15%
Indication for surgery
International Consensus guideline for Management of IPMN and MCN of Pancreas [Pancreatology 2006; 6: 17-32]
Main duct and mixed variant IPMN Resection
Branch-duct IPMN 1. symptomatic (30% malignancy), 2. > 3cm in size 3. mural nodules
Extent of surgery
For invasive IPMN, recurrence after partial pancreatectomy vs total pancreatectomy 67% vs 62% suggested no oncologic advantage of total pancreatecomy.
[ Study of recurrence after surgical resection of IPMN of the pancreas. Gastroenterology. 2002 Nov; 123(5): 1500-7 ]
The extent of pancreatic resection remain controversial.
Extent of surgery
Risk of recurrence Vs. the morbidity of total pancreatectomy.
Routine total pancreatectomy for IPMN is not recommended.
Total pancreatectomy should only be reserved for patients with resectable but extensive IPMN which involves the whole pancreas.
Frozen section
Microscopic extension of neoplastic cells beyond visible boundaries of the main lesion is common.
IPMNs can be multifocal and the margin frequently involved at the time of resection
Positive Margin (LD, MD, HD, invasive) Resect more??
Frozen section
Clinical Significance of Frozen Section Analysis During Resection of Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm: Should a Positive Pancreatic Margin for Adenoma or Borderline Lesion Be Resected Additionally? [J. Am Coll Surg 2009; 209:614-621
IPMN with CIS or invasive carcinoma: complete resection if possible.
IPM adenoma or borderline lesion: might not need further resection
Clinical Significance of Frozen Section Analysis During Resection of Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm: Should a Positive Pancreatic Margin for Adenoma or Borderline Lesion Be Resected Additionally? [J. Am Coll Surg 2009; 209:614-621
Diagnosis Initial IOFSA Additional resection
Recurrence
Negative 83 0 17
LD or MD 26 12 1
HD (CIS) 10 10 0
Invasive cancer 6 6 1
Follow up plan
Slow growing Residual tumour may develop into
carcinoma New IPMN arise from ramnant Time of recurrence ranged from 8-62
months
Need regular FU imaging
Synchronous and metachronous malignancy
23.6 – 32% IPMNs associated with extrapancreatic malignant neoplasm, including gastric, biliary, colorectal and lung malignancy.
[ Yamaguchi et, al. Osanai et al., Augiyama et al.]
Mayo clinic: IPMN patients with more benign and malignant neoplasms compared with controls– screening colonoscopy should be considered in all patients with IPMN. [Ann Surg 2010; 251: 64-69]
Conclusion
IPMN of the pancreas is uncommon but important because it is slow growing with significant malignant potential.
Main duct type should be resected. Branch duct type with tumour > 3cm, mural
nodule or positive symptoms warrants surgical resection.
High incidence of extrapancreatic malignancies and pancreatic ductal carcinoma.
~Thank you~
Q&A
2
Frequency of Extrapancreatic Neoplasms in Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm of the Pancreas: Implications for Management.Reid-Lombardo, Kaye; Mathis, Kellie; Wood, Christina; Harmsen, William; Sarr, Michael
Annals of Surgery. 251(1):64-69, January 2010.DOI: 10.1097/SLA.0b013e3181b5ad1e
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