Cancers (May 2024)

Oncological Outcomes and Patterns of Recurrence after the Surgical Resection of an Invasive Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm versus Primary Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma: An Analysis from the German Cancer Registry Group of the Society of German Tumor Centers

  • Thaer S. A. Abdalla,
  • Jannis Duhn,
  • Monika Klinkhammer-Schalke,
  • Sylke Ruth Zeissig,
  • Kees Kleihues-van Tol,
  • Kim C. Honselmann,
  • Rüdiger Braun,
  • Markus Kist,
  • Louisa Bolm,
  • Lennart von Fritsch,
  • Hryhoriy Lapshyn,
  • Stanislav Litkevych,
  • Richard Hummel,
  • Sergii Zemskov,
  • Ulrich Friedrich Wellner,
  • Tobias Keck,
  • Steffen Deichmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16112016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 11
p. 2016

Abstract

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Background: Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs) are premalignant cystic neoplasms of the pancreas (CNPs), which can progress to invasive IPMN and pancreatic cancer. The available literature has shown controversial results regarding prognosis and clinical outcomes after the resection of invasive IPMN. Aims: This study aims to characterize the oncologic outcomes and metastatic progression pattern after the resection of non-metastatic invasive IPMN. Methods: Data were obtained from 24 clinical cancer registries participating in the German Cancer Registry Group of the Society of German Tumor Centers (ADT). Patients with invasive IPMN (n = 217) as well as PDAC (n = 5794) between 2000 and 2021 were included and compared regarding oncological outcomes. Results: Invasive IPMN was significantly smaller in size (p p p p < 0.001), and consequently a higher R0 resection rate (88 vs. 74%) compared to PDAC. Moreover, invasive IPMN was associated with fewer local (11 vs. 15%) and distant recurrences (29 vs. 46%) and metastasized more frequently in the lungs only (26% vs. 14%). Invasive IPMN was associated with a longer median OS (29 vs. 19 months) and DFS (31 vs. 15 months) compared to PDAC and stayed independently prognostic in multivariable analyses. These survival differences were most pronounced in early tumor stages. Interestingly, postoperative chemotherapy was not associated with improved overall survival in surgically resected invasive IPMN. Conclusions: Invasive IPMN is a rare pancreatic entity with increasing incidence in Germany. It is associated with favorable histopathological features at the time of resection and longer OS and DFS compared to PDAC, particularly before the locoregional spread has occurred. Invasive IPMNs are associated with lung-only metastasis. The benefit of postoperative chemotherapy after the resection of invasive IPMN remains uncertain.

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