AI Article Synopsis

  • Distal pancreatic cancers often go undetected until they are advanced and may invade surrounding organs, leading to complications like colonic perforation, as seen in a 66-year-old man diagnosed with such a cancer.
  • The treatment involved a multidisciplinary strategy that included initial colostomy and chemotherapy to shrink the tumor before attempting radical surgery, which successfully removed the cancerous tissue along with some adjacent organs.
  • The patient had no perioperative complications and remained free of cancer recurrence for 19 months following the surgery, showcasing the effectiveness of a combined treatment approach.

Article Abstract

BACKGROUND Distal pancreatic cancers may be unresectable at the time of diagnosis because these cancers are asymptomatic and readily infiltrate neighboring organs. Radical resection of a pancreatic tail cancer with colonic perforation is rare. We describe successful resection of a locally advanced pancreatic tail cancer with colonic perforation using a multidisciplinary approach. CASE REPORT A 66-year-old man presented to our hospital with a chief concern of high fever. Abdominal computed tomography revealed a pancreatic tail tumor infiltrating the neighboring organs and causing colonic obstruction with perforation, which resulted in an intra-abdominal abscess. Colonoscopy revealed obstruction of the descending colon by extramural invasion. Laboratory tests showed high tumor marker concentrations (carcinoembryonic antigen, 11.6 ng/dL; pancreatic cancer-associated antigen-2, >1600 U/mL). We clinically diagnosed locally advanced pancreatic tail cancer with an intra-abdominal abscess caused by colonic perforation. First, we performed transverse colostomy and percutaneous drainage. We then started neoadjuvant chemotherapy with FOLFIRINOX for tumor shrinkage and prevention of distant metastases. The therapeutic effect was a partial response, and no distant metastases was found. We therefore performed radical surgery comprising distal pancreatectomy with partial resection of neighboring organs. Although pathological examination revealed a pancreatic tail tubular adenocarcinoma with direct invasion of the neighboring organs, R0 resection was achieved. The patient was discharged with no perioperative complications. Tegafur/gimeracil/oteracil potassium were administered as adjuvant chemotherapy. The patient remained recurrence-free for 19 months after surgery. CONCLUSIONS We achieved successful en bloc resection of a locally advanced distal pancreatic cancer with colonic perforation by using a multidisciplinary approach.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8525901PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.933226DOI Listing

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