AI Article Synopsis

  • Pancreatic surgery for complex tumors, especially those that invade blood vessels, is risky and often leads to complications; this study explores a new method called EUS-sugar-RFA aimed at improving surgical outcomes.
  • The experiment involved using augmented endoscopic ultrasound-guided radiofrequency ablation on pig models, examining its effects on the pancreas adjacent to key blood vessels, with comparisons to control groups receiving different treatments.
  • Results showed that the EUS-sugar-RFA technique was safe, with no complications during or after surgery, and preserved vascular integrity while creating a controllable area of necrosis, suggesting it could enhance the feasibility of surgery for difficult pancreatic cancers.

Article Abstract

Pancreatic surgery remains complex, particularly for borderline resectable and locally advanced tumors. Vascular invasion compromises resectability, and vascular resection entails increased morbidity and mortality. Following a feasibility and safety demonstration of augmented endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided radiofrequency ablation (RFA) using hydroxyethyl starch (HES) in porcine pancreatic parenchyma, the present study assesses whether this approach (EUS-sugar-RFA) in the pancreatic perivascular space is safe and creates a controllable margin of necrosis to enable a vessel-sparing resection. EUS-sugar-RFA in the pancreatic parenchyma adjacent to the splenic artery and vein was performed in a live animal model. Following different survival periods (0-4 days) in the interventional group (n = 3), open pancreatectomy was carried out. The control group (n = 4) included open pancreatectomies in two pigs with non-treated pancreases and in two with pancreatic RFA alone on the same day. All procedures were completed successfully, without intraoperative or postoperative complications. Survival periods were uncomplicated. Histopathological examination showed local necrosis and inflammatory reaction at the ablation sites. Vascular wall integrity was preserved in all specimens. The untreated pancreatic zones in the interventional group were no different from the normal pancreases in the control group. Preoperative perivascular augmented RFA using HES was safe, and in the pancreatic animal model, the best timeframe was within 24 hours before pancreatic surgery. This technique might improve resectability in selected borderline and locally advanced pancreatic cancers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10719046PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-2180-9709DOI Listing

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