Journal of Clinical Medicine (Mar 2023)

Middle Segment-Preserving Pancreatectomy to Avoid Pancreatic Insufficiency: Individual Patient Data Analysis of All Published Cases from 2003–2021

  • Thomas M. Pausch,
  • Xinchun Liu,
  • Josefine Dincher,
  • Pietro Contin,
  • Jiaqu Cui,
  • Jishu Wei,
  • Ulrike Heger,
  • Matthias Lang,
  • Masayuki Tanaka,
  • Stephen Heap,
  • Jörg Kaiser,
  • Rosa Klotz,
  • Pascal Probst,
  • Yi Miao,
  • Thilo Hackert

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12052013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. 2013

Abstract

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Middle segment-preserving pancreatectomy (MPP) can treat multilocular diseases in the pancreatic head and tail while avoiding impairments caused by total pancreatectomy (TP). We conducted a systematic literature review of MPP cases and collected individual patient data (IPD). MPP patients (N = 29) were analyzed and compared to a group of TP patients (N = 14) in terms of clinical baseline characteristics, intraoperative course, and postoperative outcomes. We also conducted a limited survival analysis following MPP. Pancreatic functionality was better preserved following MPP than TP, as new-onset diabetes and exocrine insufficiency each occurred in 29% of MPP patients compared to near-ubiquitous prevalence among TP patients. Nevertheless, POPF Grade B occurred in 54% of MPP patients, a complication avoidable with TP. Longer pancreatic remnants were a prognostic indicator for shorter and less eventful hospital stays with fewer complications, whereas complications of endocrine functionality were associated with older patients. Long-term survival prospects after MPP appeared strong (median up to 110 months), but survival was lower in cases with recurring malignancies and metastases (median < 40 months). This study demonstrates MPP is a feasible treatment alternative to TP for selected cases because it can avoid pancreoprivic impairments, but at the risk of perioperative morbidity.

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