| Literature DB >> 23135763 |
Marcia Irene Canto1, Femme Harinck, Ralph H Hruban, George Johan Offerhaus, Jan-Werner Poley, Ihab Kamel, Yung Nio, Richard S Schulick, Claudio Bassi, Irma Kluijt, Michael J Levy, Amitabh Chak, Paul Fockens, Michael Goggins, Marco Bruno.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Screening individuals at increased risk for pancreatic cancer (PC) detects early, potentially curable, pancreatic neoplasia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23135763 PMCID: PMC3585492 DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2012-303108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut ISSN: 0017-5749 Impact factor: 23.059
Summary of diagnostic yield of familial pancreatic cancer screening and surveillance programmes
| Study | High-risk group | Imaging tests | Diagnostic yield*n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brentnall 1999 (1) n=14 | FPC | EUS+ERCP+CT | 7/14 (50)† |
| Kimmey 2002 n=46‡ | FPC | EUS; ERCP§ | 12/46 (26)† |
| Canto 2004 (2) n=38 | FPC, PJS | EUS; ERCP§, EUS-FNA§, CT§ | 2/38 (5.3)† |
| Canto 2006 (3) n=78 | FPC, PJS | EUS; CT§,EUS-FNA§, ERCP§ | 8/78 (10.3)¶,† |
| Poley 2009 (4) n=44 | FPC, BRCA, PJS, p16, p53, HP | EUS;CT§, MRI§ | 10/44 (23) |
| Langer 2009 (5) n=76 | FPC, BRCA | EUS+MRCP; EUS-FNA§ | 1/76 (1.3)¶,† |
| Verna 2010 (6) n=51 | FPC, BRCA, p16 | EUS and/or MRCP | 6/51 (12)† |
| Ludwig 2011 n=109 | FPC, BRCA | MRCP; EUS§, EUS-FNA§ | 9/109 (8.3)¶ |
| Vasen 2011 (7) n=79 | p16 | MRI/MRCP | 14/79† (18) |
| Al-Sukhni 2011 (8) n=262 | FPC, BRCA, PJS, p16, HP | MRI; CT§, EUS§, ERCP§ | 19/262¶ (7.3) |
| Schneider 2011 (9)** n=72 | FPC, BRCA, PALB2 | EUS+MRCP | 11/72 (15)¶ |
| Canto 2012 (10) n=216 | FPC, BRCA, PJS | CT, MRI/MRCP, EUS; ERCP§ | 5/216 (2.3)†–92/216 (43) |
*Yield is defined as the detection of any pathologically proven (pre)malignant lesion (≥PanIN-2/IPMN and pancreatic adenocarcinoma) and lesions that are morphologically suspicious for branch-duct IPMNs.
†Includes only pathologically proven pancreatic neoplasms (histology or cytology).
‡Continuation of Brentnall 1999, included 14 high-risk individuals from Brentnall 1999.
§Test performed only as an additional test for detected abnormalities.
¶Includes baseline and follow-up.
**Continuation of Langer 2009, includes high-risk individuals from this series.
ERCP, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography; EUS, endoscopic ultrasonography; FNA, fine-needle aspiration; FPC, familial pancreatic cancer; IPMN, intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm; MRCP, magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography; PJS, Peutz–Jeghers syndrome; PanIN, pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia.
Summary of consensus statements for the management of high risk individuals
| Who should be screened? | |
|---|---|
| Statements | |
| A1 | Individuals with three or more affected blood relatives, with at least one affected FDR, should be considered for screening. |
| A2 | Individuals with at least two affected FDRs with PC, with at least one affected FDR, should be considered for screening once they reach a certain age. |
| A3 | Individuals with two or more affected blood relatives with PC, with at least one affected FDR, should be considered for screening. |
| A4 | All patients with Peutz–Jeghers syndrome should be screened, regardless of family history of PC. |
| A5 | |
| A6 | |
| A7 | |
| A8 | |
| A9 | Mismatch repair gene mutation carriers (Lynch syndrome) with one affected FDR should be considered for screening. |
| How should high-risk individuals be screened? | |
| Statements | |
| B1 | Initial screening should include (multiple answers allowed): |
| B2 | When previous screening did not detect an abnormality that met criteria for shortening of the interval or surgical resection, follow-up screening should include (multiple answers allowed): EUS 79.6% MRI/MRCP 69.4%, CT 22.4%, abdominal ultrasound 4.1%, ERCP 2.0%. |
| B3 | Standardised nomenclature should be used to define chronic pancreatitis-like abnormalities. |
| B4 | Whenever a cystic lesion is detected, an additional ERCP should not be performed. |
| B5 | Patients with a cystic lesion without worrisome features for malignancy should have an imaging test after 6–12 months. |
| B6 | When a solid lesion is detected, CT should also be performed. |
| B7 | When a solid lesion is detected, ERCP should not be performed. |
| B8 | When a solid lesion is detected at baseline with an indeterminate diagnosis and the patient is not referred for immediate surgery, imaging should be repeated after 3 months. |
| B9 | When a new solid lesion is detected at follow-up with an indeterminate diagnosis and the patient is not referred for immediate surgery, imaging should be repeated after 3 months. |
| B10 | |
| When should surgery be performed? | |
| Statements | |
| C1 | Screening should only be offered to individuals who are candidates for surgery. |
| C2 | Pancreatic resections should be performed at specialty centres (taking into account volume, morbidity and mortality rates and expertise available). |
| C3 | |
| C4 | |
| C5 | |
| C6 | |
| C7 | |
| What are the goals of screening? What outcome(s) would be considered a ‘success’? | |
| Statements | |
| D1 | Resectable carcinoma is a potential target for early detection and treatment. |
| D2 | PanINs are a potential target for early detection and treatment. |
| D3 | IPMNs are a potential target for early detection and treatment. |
| D4 | Detection and treatment of multifocal PanIN-3 should be considered a success of a screening/surveillance programme. |
| D5 | Detection and treatment of IPMNs with high-grade dysplasia should be considered a success of a screening/surveillance programme. |
| D6 | Detection and treatment of invasive cancer-T1N0M0 detected at baseline should be considered a success of a screening programme. |
| D7 | Treatment of invasive cancer-T1N0M0 detected at follow-up should be considered a success of a screening programme. |
| D8 | Detection and treatment of invasive cancer >T1N0M0 resectable with margins negative at baseline, should be considered a success of a screening programme. |
ERCP, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography; EUS, endoscopic ultrasonography; FDR, first-degree relative; IPMN, intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm; MRCP, magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography; PC, pancreatic cancer; PanIN, pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia.