Nikfarjam Mehrdad, Warshaw Andrew L, Axelrod Lloyd, Deshpande Vikram, Thayer Sarah P, Ferrone Cristina R, Fernández-del Castillo Carlos
Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School, 55 Fruit Street, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
Ann Surg. 2008 Jan;247(1):165-72. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0b013e31815792ed.
To determine changes in the management strategy of patients with insulinomas and identify critical factors in patient outcome.
Pancreatic insulinomas are rare neoplasms that are present in various ways. The optimal approach to localization, operative management, and follow-up of insulinomas is undetermined.
Sixty-one patients with a diagnosis of insulinoma requiring surgery at a tertiary care center between 1983 and 2007 were reviewed. Demographic details, mode of presentation, preoperative localization, operative procedures, and pathology data were assessed. The effect of different factors on survival was determined.
Seven of 61 (11%) patients had a diagnosis of multiple endocrine neoplasia-type 1 (MEN-1). Multiple insulinomas were noted in 8% of cases and were more common in MEN-1 patients. The overall rate of malignancy was 8%. Confusion (67%), visual disturbances (42%), and diaphoresis (30%) were the most common presenting symptoms. Weight gain was noted in 44% of patients. The median duration of symptoms before diagnosis was 18 (1-240) months. The sensitivity of preoperative imaging of tumors before 1994 was 75%, compared with 98% after this period, which included use of endoscopic ultrasound scanning (P = 0.012). A combination of palpation and intraoperative ultrasound detected 92% of tumors. Distal pancreatectomy (40%), enucleation (34%), and pancreaticoduodenectomy (16%) were the most common procedures and pancreatic fistula occurred in 18% of patients. Three patients underwent noncurative distal pancreatectomy in the early period. The 10-year disease-specific and disease-free survival was 100% and 90% respectively. There were 5 patients with disease recurrence. Lymph node metastases (P < 0.001), lymphovascular invasion (P < 0.001), and the presence of MEN-1 (P = 0.035) were prognostically significant adverse factors in disease-free survival. Lymphovascular invasion was the only significant factor on multivariate analysis (P = 0.002).
Pancreatic insulinomas can be readily localized preoperatively with modern imaging to avoid unsuccessful blind pancreatic resection. Surgical resection is associated with low morbidity and mortality and achieves long-term disease-free survival in the absence of lymphovascular invasion.
确定胰岛素瘤患者管理策略的变化,并确定影响患者预后的关键因素。
胰腺胰岛素瘤是罕见肿瘤,表现形式多样。胰岛素瘤的最佳定位、手术管理及随访方法尚未确定。
回顾了1983年至2007年间在一家三级医疗中心诊断为胰岛素瘤且需手术治疗的61例患者。评估了人口统计学细节、临床表现方式、术前定位、手术操作及病理数据。确定了不同因素对生存的影响。
61例患者中有7例(11%)诊断为1型多发性内分泌腺瘤(MEN-1)。8%的病例发现有多发性胰岛素瘤,在MEN-1患者中更常见。总体恶性率为8%。意识模糊(67%)、视觉障碍(42%)和多汗(30%)是最常见的临床表现。44%的患者有体重增加。诊断前症状的中位持续时间为18(1-240)个月。1994年前肿瘤术前成像的敏感性为75%,此后为98%,其中包括使用内镜超声扫描(P = 0.012)。触诊与术中超声联合检测出92%的肿瘤。胰体尾切除术(40%)、摘除术(34%)和胰十二指肠切除术(16%)是最常见的手术方式,18%的患者发生胰瘘。早期有3例患者接受了非根治性胰体尾切除术。10年疾病特异性生存率和无病生存率分别为100%和90%。有5例患者疾病复发。淋巴结转移(P < 0.001)、淋巴管侵犯(P < 0.001)和MEN-1的存在(P = 0.035)是无病生存的预后显著不良因素。多因素分析显示淋巴管侵犯是唯一的显著因素(P = 0.002)。
胰腺胰岛素瘤术前可通过现代成像轻松定位,以避免盲目胰腺切除失败。手术切除的发病率和死亡率较低,在无淋巴管侵犯的情况下可实现长期无病生存。