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What Should Guide the Performance of Venous Resection During Pancreaticoduodenectomy for Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma with Venous Contact?

Journal

ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 11, Pages 6211-6222

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1245/s10434-020-09568-2

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Complete surgical resection with perioperative chemotherapy is the only chance for cure in pancreatic cancer, with R0 resection being a key factor for survival. Proximity of mesenteric vessels increases the risk of vein involvement, leading to the need for concomitant venous resection to reduce the risk of positive margins. Surgeons must balance the technical difficulty of venous resection with the hope for absence of perivascular tumor infiltration to achieve optimal surgical outcomes in pancreatic cancer cases.
Complete surgical resection, most often associated with perioperative chemotherapy, is the only way to offer a chance of cure for patients with pancreatic cancer. One of the most important factors in determining survival outcome that can be influenced by the surgeon is the R0 resection. However, the proximity of mesenteric vessels in cephalic pancreatic tumors, especially the mesenterico-portal venous axis, results in an increased risk of vein involvement and/or the presence of malignant cells in the venous bed margin. A concomitant venous resection can be performed to decrease the risk of a positive margin. Given the additional technical difficulty that this implies, many surgeons seek a path between the tumor and the vein, hoping for the absence of tumor infiltration into the perivascular tissue on pathologic analysis, particularly in cases with administration of neoadjuvant therapy. The definition of optimal surgical margin remains a subject of debate, but at least 1 mm is an independent predictor of survival after pancreatic cancer surgical resection. Although preoperative radiologic assessment is essential for accurate planning of a pancreatic resection, intraoperative decision-making with regard to resection of the mesenterico-portal vein in tumors with a venous contact remains unclear and variable. Although venous histologic involvement and perivascular infiltration are not accurately predictable preoperatively, clinicians must examine the existing criteria and normograms to guide their surgical management according to the integration of new imaging techniques, preoperative chemotherapy use, tumor biology and molecular histopathology, and surgical techniques.

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