| Literature DB >> 28868399 |
Bruno Gonçalves1, João Bruno Soares1, Pedro Bastos1.
Abstract
Pancreatic cancer is one of the digestive cancers with the poorest prognosis, so an early and correct diagnosis is of utmost importance. With the development of new therapeutic options an accurate staging is essential. Endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) has a major role in all stages of the management of these patients. EUS has a high accuracy in the diagnosis of pancreatic adenocarcinoma and the possibility to perform fine-needle aspiration/biopsy (FNA/FNB) increases the diagnostic yield of EUS. There is still no consensus on the several technical aspects of FNA, namely on the rapid on-site evaluation (ROSE), the diameter and type of needle, the number of passes and the use of stylet and suction. Contrast-enhanced EUS (CE-EUS) and EUS elastography (EUS-E) have been used in recent years as an adjunct to EUS-FNA. Given the higher sensitivity of these techniques a negative cytology by EUS-FNA should not exclude malignancy when CE-EUS and/or EUS-E are suggestive of pancreatic neoplasia. EUS remains one of the main methods in the staging of pancreatic adenocarcinoma, namely to further evaluate patients with non-metastatic disease that appears resectable on initial imaging. EUS is crucial for an accurate preoperative evaluation of pancreatic cancer which is essential to choose the correct management strategy. The possibility to obtain samples from suspicious lesions or lymph nodes, by means of EUS-guided fine-needle aspiration as well as the use of contrast-enhanced and elastography, makes EUS an ideal modality for the diagnosis and staging of pancreatic cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Biopsy, Fine-Needle; Endosonography; Neoplasm Staging; Pancreatic Neoplasms
Year: 2015 PMID: 28868399 PMCID: PMC5580187 DOI: 10.1016/j.jpge.2015.04.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: GE Port J Gastroenterol ISSN: 2387-1954
Figure 1Screen capture of video sequence of contrast-enhanced harmonic endoscopic ultrasonography (left panel). The video sequence also included a B-mode standard EUS image of the lesion of interest (right panel). This lesion has a hypo-enhancement pattern suggestive of pancreatic adenocarcinoma (this was confirmed by EUS-FNA).
Figure 2Screen capture of video sequence of endoscopic ultrasound elastography (left panel). The video sequence also included a B-mode standard EUS image of the lesion of interest (right panel). This lesion has a heterogeneous blue-predominant pattern suggestive of pancreatic adenocarcinoma (this was confirmed by EUS-FNA).
TNM staging system for pancreatic adenocarcinoma.
| TX: Primary tumor cannot be assessed |
| T0: No evidence of primary tumor |
| Tis: Carcinoma in situ |
| T1: Tumor limited to the pancreas, ≤2 cm in greatest dimension |
| T2: Tumor limited to the pancreas, >2 cm in greatest dimension |
| T3: Tumor extends beyond the pancreas but without involvement of the celiac axis or the superior mesenteric artery |
| T4: Tumor involves the celiac axis or the superior mesenteric artery (unresectable primary tumor) |
| NX: Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed |
| N0: No regional lymph node metastasis |
| N1: Regional lymph node metastasis |
| M0: No distant metastasis |
| M1: Distant metastasis |
| Stage 0–Tis, N0, M0 |
| Stage IA–T1, N0, M0 |
| Stage IB–T2, N0, M0 |
| Stage IIA–T3, N0, M0 |
| Stage IIB–T1, N1, M0 or T2, N1, M0 or T3, N1, M0 |
| Stage III–T4, any N, M0 |
| Stage IV–any T, any N, M1 |
(AJCC Cancer Staging Manual. 7th ed. New York: Springer; 2010. p. 241).
Criteria for pancreatic adenocarcinoma staging.
| Stage | Arterial | Venous |
|---|---|---|
| Resectable | Clear fat planes around CA, SMA, and HA | No SMV/portal vein distortion |
| Borderline resectable | Gastroduodenal artery encasement up to the hepatic artery with either short segment encasement or direct abutment of the hepatic artery without extension to the CA. Tumor abutment of the SMA not to exceed greater than 180° of the circumference of the vessel wall | Venous involvement of the SMV or portal vein with distortion or narrowing of the vein or occlusion of the vein with suitable vessel proximal and distal, allowing for safe resection and replacement |
| Unresectable | Aortic invasion or encasement. Based on tumor location: | Unreconstructible SMV/portal vein occlusion |
CA- celiac axis; HA- hepatic artery; IVC- inferior vena cava; SMA/SMV- superior mesenteric artery/vein.
The presence of distant metastasis, including metastases to lymph nodes beyond the field of resection, renders the patient unresectable irrespective of the type of vascular involvement.
(Al-Hawary et al Gastroenterology 2014; 146: 291–304, NCCN practice guidelines for Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma, version 1.2015; http://www.nccn.org).
Global performance of different imaging methods for pancreatic adenocarcinoma.γ
| EUS | EUS vs. CT | EUS vs. MDR-CT | EUS vs. MRI | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | Specificity | AUC | Sensitivity | Specificity | Accuracy | Sensitivity | Specificity | Accuracy | Sensitivity | Specificity | |
| T staging | 72–90% | 72–90% | 0.90 | 63–85% vs. | 67 vs. 41% | ||||||
| N staging | 62–69% | 74–81% | 0.79 | 24% vs. 58% | 88% vs. 85% | 44–75% vs. | 44 vs. 47% | 36 vs. 15% | 87 vs. 97% | ||
| Vascular invasion | 73–87% | 90–92% | 0.94 | 58% vs. 86% | 95% vs. 93% | 68–100% vs. | 61 vs. 56% | 90 vs. 93% | 0.8 vs. 0.74 | 42 vs. 59% | 97 vs. 84% |
| Venous | 80–91% | ||||||||||
| Arterial | 17–67% | 67% vs. 67% | 100% vs. 90% | 100 vs. 60% | |||||||
| Resectability | 90% | 86% | 87 vs. 90% | 89% vs.69% | 63–93% vs. | 88 vs. 92% | |||||
Compared with surgery or clinical follow-up.
Area under the curve.
Positive predictive value.
Negative predictive value.