| Literature DB >> 22347539 |
Federico Sista1, Giuseppe De Santis, Antonio Giuliani, Emanuela Marina Cecilia, Federica Piccione, Laura Lancione, Sergio Leardi, Gianfranco Amicucci.
Abstract
We focus on the diagnostic and therapeutic problems of duodenal adenocarcinoma, reporting a case and reviewing the literature. A 65-year old man with adenocarcinoma in the third duodenal portion was successfully treated with a segmental resection of the third part of the duodenum, avoiding a duodeno-cephalo-pancreatectomy. This tumor is very rare and frequently affects the III and IV duodenal portion. A precocious diagnosis and the exact localization of this neoplasia are crucial factors in order to decide the surgical strategy. Given a non-specificity of symptoms, endoscopy with biopsy is the diagnostic gold standard. Duodeno-cephalo-pancreatectomy (DCP) and segmental resection of the duodenum (SRD) are the two surgical options, with overlapping morbidity (27% vs 18%) and post operative mortality (3% vs 1%). The average incidence of postoperative long-term survival is 100%, 73.3% and 31.6% of cases after 1, 3 and 5 years from surgery, respectively. Long-term survival is made worse by two factors: the presence of metastatic lymph nodes and tumor localization in the proximal duodenum. The two surgical options are radical: DCP should be used only for proximal localizations while SRD should be chosen for distal localizations.Entities:
Keywords: Duodenal carcinoma; Duodenal embryological development; Duodeno-cephalo-pancreatectomy; III duodenal portion; Segmental resection; Survival
Year: 2012 PMID: 22347539 PMCID: PMC3277878 DOI: 10.4240/wjgs.v4.i1.23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastrointest Surg