| Literature DB >> 23304085 |
Sven-Petter Haugvik1, Knut Jørgen Labori, Bjørn Edwin, Øystein Mathisen, Ivar Prydz Gladhaug.
Abstract
Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PNETs) are rare neoplasms. They are clinically diverse and divided into functioning and nonfunctioning disease, depending on their ability to produce symptoms due to hormone production. Surgical resection is the only curative treatment and remains the cornerstone therapy for this patient group, even in patients with advanced disease. Over the last decade there has been a noticeable trend towards more aggressive surgery as well as more minimally invasive surgery in patients with PNETs. This has resulted in improved long-term survival in patients with locally advanced and metastatic disease treated aggressively, as well as shorter hospital stays and comparable long-term outcomes in patients with limited disease treated minimally invasively. There are still controversies related to issues of surgical treatment of PNETs, such as to what extent enucleation, lymph node sampling, and vascular reconstruction are beneficial for the oncologic outcome. Histopathologic tumor classification is of high clinical importance for treatment planning and prognostic evaluation of patients with PNETs. A constant challenge, which relates to the treatment of PNETs, is the lack of an internationally accepted histopathological classification system. This paper reviews current issues on the surgical treatment of sporadic PNETs with specific focus on surgical approaches and tumor classification.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23304085 PMCID: PMC3523601 DOI: 10.1100/2012/357475
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Tumor-node-metastasis definitions in the European Neuroendocrine Tumor Society (ENETS) for staging for pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors [14, 15].
| T—primary tumor | |
|---|---|
| Tx | Primary tumor cannot be assessed |
| T0 | No evidence of primary tumor |
| T1 | Tumor limited to the pancreas and size <2 cm |
| T2 | Tumor limited to the pancreas and size 2–4 cm |
| T3 | Tumor limited to the pancreas and size >4 cm or invading duodenum or bile duct |
| T4 | Tumor invading adjacent organs (stomach, spleen, colon, adrenal gland) or wall of large vessels (celiac axis or superior mesenteric artery) |
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| N—regional lymph nodes | |
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| Nx | Regional lymph node cannot be assessed |
| N0 | No regional lymph node metastasis |
| N1 | Regional lymph node metastasis |
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| M—distant metastasis | |
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| Mx | Distant metastasis cannot be assessed |
| M0 | No distant metastasis |
| M1 | Distant metastasis |
Pathology report recommendations for pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PNETs) [4].
| Macroscopic description | |
|---|---|
| (i) Exact anatomical site | |
| (ii) Margins distance | |
| (iii) Size of the lesion | |
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| Microscopic description | |
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| (i) Description inclusive of all relevant aspects according to specific anatomical site (structure, necrosis, etc.) | |
| (ii) Supporting immunohistochemistry | |
| (iii) Mitotic count per 10 HPF (2 mm2) and number of mitoses assessed in 50 HPF | |
| (iv) Ki-67 index per 400–2,000 cells (hot spots) | |
| (v) Node status | |
| (vi) Margins status | |
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| Diagnosis | |
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| (i) Definition (NET or NEC) | |
| (ii) Cell component (functioning cases only) | |
| (iii) Grade (1, 2, or 3) | |
| (iv) Tumor-node-metastasis stage | |
HPF: high-power field; NEC: neuroendocrine carcinoma; NET: neuroendocrine tumor.
Key points.
| Key points | |
|---|---|
| (i) Surgical resection is the only curative treatment for patients with PNETs. | |
| (ii) The incidence of PNETs has increased during the last decades. | |
| (iii) PNETs are clinically diverse and divided in functioning and nonfunctioning disease. | |
| (iv) The ENETS TNM staging system is superior to the UICC/AJCC/WHO 2010 TNM staging system in terms of prognostic stratification for patients with PNETs. | |
| (v) There has been a trend towards more aggressive surgery as well as more minimally invasive surgery in patients with PNETs over the last decade. | |
| (vi) Lymph node sampling should be performed routinely after curative resection of PNETs, as lymph node ratio is a significant predictor of recurrence. | |
| (vii) The five- and 10-year survival rates for all PNETs are about 65% and 45%. | |
| (viii) Long-term followup of patients having undergone surgical treatment for nonfunctioning PNETs is essential due to the risk of late recurrence. |