Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2023)

Secondary Tumors of the Pancreas: A Multicenter Analysis of Clinicopathological and Endosonographic Features

  • Marco Spadaccini,
  • Maria Cristina Conti Bellocchi,
  • Benedetto Mangiavillano,
  • Alberto Fantin,
  • Daoud Rahal,
  • Erminia Manfrin,
  • Francesca Gavazzi,
  • Silvia Bozzarelli,
  • Stefano Francesco Crinò,
  • Maria Terrin,
  • Milena Di Leo,
  • Cristiana Bonifacio,
  • Antonio Facciorusso,
  • Stefano Realdon,
  • Chiara Cristofori,
  • Francesco Auriemma,
  • Alessandro Fugazza,
  • Luca Frulloni,
  • Cesare Hassan,
  • Alessandro Repici,
  • Silvia Carrara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12082829
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 2829

Abstract

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Many tumors may secondarily involve the pancreas; however, only retrospective autopic and surgical series are available. We retrospectively collected data from all consecutive patients with histologically confirmed secondary tumors of the pancreas referred to five Italian centers between 2010 and 2021. We described clinical and pathological features, therapeutic approach and treatment outcomes. EUS characteristics of the lesions and the tissue acquisition procedures (needle, passages, histology) were recorded. A total of 116 patients (males/females 69/47; mean age 66.7) with 236 histologically confirmed pancreatic metastases were included; kidney was the most common primary site. EUS was performed to confirm the diagnosis in 205 lesions which presented as predominantly solitary (59), hypoechoic (95) and hypervascular (60), with a heterogeneous (n = 54) pattern and well-defined borders (n = 52). EUS-guided tissue acquisition was performed in 94 patients with an overall accuracy of 97.9%. Histological evaluation was possible in 88.3% of patients, obtaining final diagnosis in all cases. When cytology alone was performed, the final diagnosis was obtained in 83.3% of cases. A total of 67 patients underwent chemo/radiation therapy, and surgery was attempted in 45 (38.8%) patients. Pancreatic metastases are a possible event in the natural history of solid tumors, even long after the diagnosis of the primary site. EUS-guided fine needle biopsy may be suggested to implement the differential diagnosis.

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