Publication | Closed Access
Intraductal Carcinoma of the Pancreas
74
Citations
14
References
1992
Year
Surgical OncologyPancreatic CancerEpigastric PainMedicinePancreatic Fluid CollectionSurgical PathologyHistopathologyGastroenterologyPathologyEntirely Intraductal CarcinomaPancreatic SurgerySurgeryMain Pancreatic DuctIntraductal CarcinomaOncologyCarcinoma
Four multicentric intraductal papillary carcinomas arising in the main pancreatic duct are presented. Three of the neoplasms showed stromal invasion and metastasized to regional lymph nodes. Three patients had a long history of epigastric pain, confirming the progressive slow growth and less aggressive nature of this clinicopathologic entity. Histologically, all tumors were papillary, and three also showed a pseudocribriform pattern. Individual cells exhibited a range of atypia from mild to overt malignant change. Focal intestinal differentiation was recognized in two tumors. Despite the well-differentiated appearance of these tumors, two patients died within 1 year of surgery. One patient with an entirely intraductal carcinoma is alive and well 3 years after surgical treatment. The fourth patient who had lymph node metastasis is alive 6 months after a Whipple's procedure.
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