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"Illés, Dóra"
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Early Detection of Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma - New Opportunities of Screening
3.1. Importance of the topicAmong pancreatic malignancies, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is the most common, accounting for more than 90% of exocrine pancreatic malignancies (1). Although it is a rare disease, with a lifetime prevalence of 1.39% (2), PDAC is a very aggressive disease with a poor prognosis: it develops asymptomatically or with asymptomatic symptoms for a long time, so that patients are diagnosed at a late, advanced stage, when the only curative therapy, surgical resection, is already impossible due to the presence of metastases and locoregional infiltration (3). Therefore, the mortality/morbidity rate of PDAC is ~1. The 5-year survival rate approached 10% for the first time in 2020, compared to 5.26% in 2000 (4), and this rate has hardly improved in the last 40 years (5). To make matters worse, the incidence of PDAC is increasing at a rate of 0.5% to 1% per year, and PDAC is projected to become the second leading cause of cancer death by 2030 (6).Currently available cytotoxic regimens (fluorouracil, irinotecan, leucovorin, oxaliplatin or gemcitabine/nab-paclitaxel and nanoliposomal irinotecan/fluorouracil) for advanced disease are modestly effective, with a survival benefit of 2 to 6 months (1). The quality of life of these patients is usually very poor: anorexia, followed by weight loss and cachexia, weakens the immune system, leading to severe infections or even sepsis. Mechanical obstructions caused by PDAC tumour growth, such as biliary or gastrointestinal obstructions, lead to jaundice or gastric outlet syndrome, conditions that require hospitalization and often endoscopic surgery. Complications of advanced PDAC are extremely distressing for patients and are associated with significant hospital costs. All of this could be avoided if the disease were detected at an early stage when it is still operable.Unfortunately, there is no effective screening program yet, although the success in improving the survival rate of PDAC depends to a large extent on the development of a screening program for the early detection of PDAC in the asymptomatic stage.Given that PDAC is a rare disease with low lifetime-prevalence a population-wide screening would be ineffective and a huge financial burden on the healthcare system. Therefore, the recommendation for successful screening is that patients who are at high risk of PDAC should be screened (7). The clinical conditions predisposing PDAC are summarized in Table 1.Among risk factors diabetes mellitus (DM) has the strongest link to PDAC: 40-65% of patients diagnosed with PDAC meet the criteria for DM (8) while genetic factors play a smaller role (9). DM is a disorder of the metabolism of carbohydrates, fats and proteins that is characterized by an absolute or relative lack of insulin. It counts as a worldwide epidemic with increasing incidence in recent decades: it is predicted that the number of people with DM will increase to 300 million by 2025 and 366 million by 2030 (10). This represents a huge number of new patients each year, so screening this large group for PDAC would not yet be cost-effective; further narrowing of the target group is needed by investigating the association between PDAC and DM.
Dissertation
Prevalence of autoimmune pancreatitis in pancreatic resection for suspected malignancy: a systematic review and meta-analysis
by
Kovács, Attila
,
Farkas, Nelli
,
Fazekas, Alíz
in
Adenocarcinoma
,
Autoimmune diseases
,
Autoimmune pancreatitis
2024
Background/Objectives
Autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP) is a diagnosis-challenging disease that often mimics pancreatic malignancy. Pancreatic resection is considered to be a curative treatment for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). This meta-analysis aims to study the incidence of AIP in patients who have undergone pancreatic resection for clinical manifestation of cancer.
Methods
A comprehensive search was conducted in three databases, PubMed, Embase and the Cochrane Library, using the terms ‘autoimmune pancreatitis’ and ‘pancreatic resection’ and supplemented by manual checks of reference lists in all retrieved articles.
Results
Ten articles were included in the final analysis. 8917 pancreatic resections were performed because of a clinical suspicion of pancreatic cancer. AIP accounted for 140 cases (1.6%). Type 1 AIP comprised the majority of cases, representing 94% (132 cases), while type 2 AIP made up the remaining 6% (eight cases) after further classification. AIP accounted for almost 26% of all cases of benign diseases involving unnecessary surgery and was overrepresented in males in 70% of cases compared to 30% in females. The mean age for AIP patients was 59 years. Serum CA 19 − 9 levels were elevated in 23 out of 47 (49%) AIP patients, where higher levels were detected more frequently in patients with type 1 AIP (51%, 22 out of 43) than in those with type 2 AIP (25%, 1 out of 4). The sensitivity of IgG4 levels in type 1 AIP was low (43%, 21/49 patients).
Conclusion
Even with modern diagnostic methods, distinguishing between AIP and PDAC can still be challenging, thus potentially resulting in unnecessary surgical procedures in some cases. Serum CA 19 − 9 levels are not useful in distinguishing between AIP and PDAC. Work must thus be done to improve diagnostic methods and avoid unnecessary complicated surgery.
Journal Article
Analysis of Research Activity in Gastroenterology: Pancreatitis Is in Real Danger
by
Madácsy, Tamara
,
Demcsák, Alexandra
,
Hegyi, Péter
in
Acute Disease
,
Analysis
,
Biomedical Research
2016
Biomedical investment trends in 2015 show a huge decrease of investment in gastroenterology. Since academic research usually provides the basis for industrial research and development (R&D), our aim was to understand research trends in the field of gastroenterology over the last 50 years and identify the most endangered areas.
We searched for PubMed hits for gastrointestinal (GI) diseases for the 1965-2015 period. Overall, 1,554,325 articles were analyzed. Since pancreatology was identified as the most endangered field of research within gastroenterology, we carried out a detailed evaluation of research activity in pancreatology.
In 1965, among the major benign GI disorders, 51.9% of the research was performed on hepatitis, 25.7% on pancreatitis, 21.7% on upper GI diseases and only 0.7% on the lower GI disorders. Half a century later, in 2015, research on hepatitis and upper GI diseases had not changed significantly; however, studies on pancreatitis had dropped to 10.7%, while work on the lower GI disorders had risen to 23.4%. With regard to the malignant disorders (including liver, gastric, colon, pancreatic and oesophageal cancer), no such large-scale changes were observed in the last 50 years. Detailed analyses revealed that besides the drop in research activity in pancreatitis, there are serious problems with the quality of the studies as well. Only 6.8% of clinical trials on pancreatitis were registered and only 5.5% of these registered trials were multicentre and multinational (more than five centres and nations), i.e., the kind that provides the highest level of impact and evidence level.
There has been a clear drop in research activity in pancreatitis. New international networks and far more academic R&D activities should be established in order to find the first therapy specifically for acute pancreatitis.
Journal Article
Re current acute pancreatitis prevention by the elimination of alcohol and ciga r ette smoking (REAPPEAR): protocol of a randomised controlled trial and a cohort study
by
Zemplényi, Antal
,
Mirabella, Antonello
,
Zádori, Noémi
in
Acute Disease
,
Cigarette Smoking
,
Cohort Studies
2022
Acute recurrent pancreatitis (ARP) due to alcohol and/or tobacco abuse is a preventable disease which lowers quality of life and can lead to chronic pancreatitis. The REAPPEAR study aims to investigate whether a combined patient education and cessation programme for smoking and alcohol prevents ARP.
The REAPPEAR study consists of an international multicentre randomised controlled trial (REAPPEAR-T) testing the efficacy of a cessation programme on alcohol and smoking and a prospective cohort study (REAPPEAR-C) assessing the effects of change in alcohol consumption and smoking (irrespective of intervention). Daily smoker patients hospitalised with alcohol-induced acute pancreatitis (AP) will be enrolled. All patients will receive a standard intervention priorly to encourage alcohol and smoking cessation. Participants will be subjected to laboratory testing, measurement of blood pressure and body mass index and will provide blood, hair and urine samples for later biomarker analysis. Addiction, motivation to change, socioeconomic status and quality of life will be evaluated with questionnaires. In the trial, patients will be randomised either to the cessation programme with 3-monthly visits or to the control group with annual visits. Participants of the cessation programme will receive a brief intervention at every visit with direct feedback on their alcohol consumption based on laboratory results. The primary endpoint will be the composite of 2-year all-cause recurrence rate of AP and/or 2-year all-cause mortality. The cost-effectiveness of the cessation programme will be evaluated. An estimated 182 participants will be enrolled per group to the REAPPEAR-T with further enrolment to the cohort.
The study was approved by the Scientific and Research Ethics Committee of the Hungarian Medical Research Council (40394-10/2020/EÜIG), all local ethical approvals are in place. Results will be disseminated at conferences and in peer-reviewed journals.
NCT04647097.
Journal Article
New Onset of DiabetEs in aSsociation with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (NODES Trial): protocol of a prospective, multicentre observational trial
2020
IntroductionPancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has a dismal prognosis with an overall 5-year survival of approximately 8%. The success in reducing the mortality rate of PDAC is related to the discovery of new therapeutic agents, and to a significant extent to the development of early detection and prevention programmes. Patients with new-onset diabetes mellitus (DM) represent a high-risk group for PDAC as they have an eightfold higher risk of PDAC than the general population. The proposed screening programme may allow the detection of PDAC in the early, operable stage. Diagnosing more patients in the curable stage might decrease the morbidity and mortality rates of PDAC and additionally reduce the burden of the healthcare.Methods and analysisThis is a prospective, multicentre observational cohort study. Patients ≥60 years old diagnosed with new-onset (≤6 months) diabetes will be included. Exclusion criteria are (1) Continuous alcohol abuse; (2) Chronic pancreatitis; (3) Previous pancreas operation/pancreatectomy; (4) Pregnancy; (5) Present malignant disease and (6) Type 1 DM. Follow-up visits are scheduled every 6 months for up to 36 months. Data collection is based on questionnaires. Clinical symptoms, body weight and fasting blood will be collected at each, carbohydrate antigen 19–9 and blood to biobank at every second visit. The blood samples will be processed to plasma and analysed with mass spectrometry (MS)-based metabolomics. The metabolomic data will be used for biomarker validation for early detection of PDAC in the high-risk group patients with new-onset diabetes. Patients with worrisome features will undergo MRI or endoscopic ultrasound investigation, and surgical referral depending on the radiological findings. One of the secondary end points is the incidence of PDAC in patients with newly diagnosed DM.Ethics and disseminationThe study has been approved by the Scientific and Research Ethics Committee of the Hungarian Medical Research Council (41085-6/2019). We plan to disseminate the results to several members of the healthcare system includining medical doctors, dietitians, nurses, patients and so on. We plan to publish the results in a peer-reviewed high-quality journal for professionals. In addition, we also plan to publish it for lay readers in order to maximalise the dissemination and benefits of this trial.Trial registration numberClinicalTrials.gov NCT04164602
Journal Article
Metabolic‐associated fatty liver disease is associated with acute pancreatitis with more severe course: Post hoc analysis of a prospectively collected international registry
by
Tarján, Dorottya
,
Takács, Tamás
,
Gaál, Szabolcs
in
Abdomen
,
Acute Disease
,
acute pancreatitis
2023
Introduction Non‐alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a proven risk factor for acute pancreatitis (AP). However, NAFLD has recently been redefined as metabolic‐associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD). In this post hoc analysis, we quantified the effect of MAFLD on the outcomes of AP. Methods We identified our patients from the multicentric, prospective International Acute Pancreatitis Registry of the Hungarian Pancreatic Study Group. Next, we compared AP patients with and without MAFLD and the individual components of MAFLD regarding in‐hospital mortality and AP severity based on the revised Atlanta classification. Lastly, we calculated odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) using multivariate logistic regression analysis. Results MAFLD had a high prevalence in AP, 39% (801/2053). MAFLD increased the odds of moderate‐to‐severe AP (OR = 1.43, CI: 1.09–1.89). However, the odds of in‐hospital mortality (OR = 0.89, CI: 0.42–1.89) and severe AP (OR = 1.70, CI: 0.97–3.01) were not higher in the MAFLD group. Out of the three diagnostic criteria of MAFLD, the highest odds of severe AP was in the group based on metabolic risk abnormalities (OR = 2.68, CI: 1.39–5.09). In addition, the presence of one, two, and three diagnostic criteria dose‐dependently increased the odds of moderate‐to‐severe AP (OR = 1.23, CI: 0.88–1.70, OR = 1.38, CI: 0.93–2.04, and OR = 3.04, CI: 1.63–5.70, respectively) and severe AP (OR = 1.13, CI: 0.54–2.27, OR = 2.08, CI: 0.97–4.35, and OR = 4.76, CI: 1.50–15.4, respectively). Furthermore, in patients with alcohol abuse and aged ≥60 years, the effect of MAFLD became insignificant. Conclusions MAFLD is associated with AP severity, which varies based on the components of its diagnostic criteria. Furthermore, MAFLD shows a dose‐dependent effect on the outcomes of AP.
Journal Article
Invalidity of Tokyo guidelines in acute biliary pancreatitis: A multicenter cohort analysis of 944 pancreatitis cases
2023
There is a noteworthy overlap between the clinical picture of biliary acute pancreatitis (AP) and the 2018 Tokyo guidelines currently used for the diagnosis of cholangitis (AC) and cholecystitis (CC). This can lead to significant antibiotic and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) overuse.
We aimed to assess the on-admission prevalence of AC/CC according to the 2018 Tokyo guidelines (TG18) in a cohort of biliary AP patients, and its association with antibiotic use, ERCP and clinically relevant endpoints.
We conducted a secondary analysis of the Hungarian Pancreatic Study Group's prospective multicenter registry of 2195 AP cases. We grouped and compared biliary cases (n = 944) based on the on-admission fulfillment of definite AC/CC according to TG18. Aside from antibiotic use, we evaluated mortality, AC/CC/AP severity, ERCP performance and length of hospitalization. We also conducted a literature review discussing each criteria of the TG18 in the context of AP.
27.8% of biliary AP cases fulfilled TG18 for both AC and CC, 22.5% for CC only and 20.8% for AC only. Antibiotic use was high (77.4%). About 2/3 of the AC/CC cases were mild, around 10% severe. Mortality was below 1% in mild and moderate AC/CC patients, but considerably higher in severe cases (12.8% and 21.2% in AC and CC). ERCP was performed in 89.3% of AC cases, common bile duct stones were found in 41.1%.
Around 70% of biliary AP patients fulfilled the TG18 for AC/CC, associated with a high rate of antibiotic use. Mortality in presumed mild or moderate AC/CC is low. Each of the laboratory and clinical criteria are commonly fulfilled in biliary AP, single imaging findings are also unspecific-AP specific diagnostic criteria are needed, as the prevalence of AC/CC are likely greatly overestimated. Randomized trials testing antibiotic use are also warranted.
Journal Article
Recurrent acute pancreatitis prevention by the elimination of alcohol and cigarette smoking (REAPPEAR): protocol of a randomised controlled trial and a cohort study
by
Zemplényi, Antal
,
Mirabella, Antonello
,
Zádori, Noémi
in
Alcohol use
,
Cohort analysis
,
Gastroenterology and Hepatology
2022
Background/objectivesAcute recurrent pancreatitis (ARP) due to alcohol and/or tobacco abuse is a preventable disease which lowers quality of life and can lead to chronic pancreatitis. The REAPPEAR study aims to investigate whether a combined patient education and cessation programme for smoking and alcohol prevents ARP.Methods and analysisThe REAPPEAR study consists of an international multicentre randomised controlled trial (REAPPEAR-T) testing the efficacy of a cessation programme on alcohol and smoking and a prospective cohort study (REAPPEAR-C) assessing the effects of change in alcohol consumption and smoking (irrespective of intervention). Daily smoker patients hospitalised with alcohol-induced acute pancreatitis (AP) will be enrolled. All patients will receive a standard intervention priorly to encourage alcohol and smoking cessation. Participants will be subjected to laboratory testing, measurement of blood pressure and body mass index and will provide blood, hair and urine samples for later biomarker analysis. Addiction, motivation to change, socioeconomic status and quality of life will be evaluated with questionnaires. In the trial, patients will be randomised either to the cessation programme with 3-monthly visits or to the control group with annual visits. Participants of the cessation programme will receive a brief intervention at every visit with direct feedback on their alcohol consumption based on laboratory results. The primary endpoint will be the composite of 2-year all-cause recurrence rate of AP and/or 2-year all-cause mortality. The cost-effectiveness of the cessation programme will be evaluated. An estimated 182 participants will be enrolled per group to the REAPPEAR-T with further enrolment to the cohort.Ethics and disseminationThe study was approved by the Scientific and Research Ethics Committee of the Hungarian Medical Research Council (40394-10/2020/EÜIG), all local ethical approvals are in place. Results will be disseminated at conferences and in peer-reviewed journals.Trial registration numberNCT04647097
Journal Article
Initial Renal Function (eGFR) Is a Prognostic Marker of Severe Acute Pancreatitis: A Cohort-Analysis of 1,224 Prospectively Collected Cases
by
Varga, Márta
,
Vincze, Áron
,
Galeev, Shamil
in
Antidiabetics
,
AP severity and mortality
,
CKD-EPI
2021
Background: Acute pancreatitis (AP) is a life-threatening disease. We aimed to explore the prognostic relevance of renal function based on estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). Methods: A prospective registry of AP patients was established by the Hungarian Pancreatic Study Group. Data of 1,224 consecutive patients were collected between 2012 and 2017. Patients were divided into 3 groups according to their eGFR measured within 24 h of hospitalization: normal renal function: >90 mL/min, mild to moderate renal functional impairment : 30–90 mL/min and severe renal dysfunction : <30 mL/min. Associations of eGFR with outcome (survival, length of hospitalization, AP severity, blood glucose), inflammatory markers (erythrocyte sedimentation rate, white blood cell count), anemia and organ failure (heart, kidney, liver) were analyzed. Results: Death, longer hospitalization and severe AP, but not the cause of AP, were significantly associated with lower eGFR. The inflammatory markers (CRP, WBC count) but not anemia (Hb, Htk) were closely associated with severe renal dysfunction. Renal function was associated with heart and renal failure but not with other complications of AP such as respiratory failure, local pancreatic complications, diabetes or peptic ulcer. eGFR was not associated with liver damage (ALAT, γ-GT) or liver function (serum bilirubin) although biliary complications, alcohol and metabolic syndrome were the most common etiologies of AP. Conclusions: Our study suggests a useful prognostic value of initial eGFR in AP patients. Even mild eGFR reduction predicted mortality, severity of AP and the length of hospitalization. Thus, precise evaluation of renal function should be considered for assessing AP severity and outcome.
Journal Article
Effects of a continental climate on the prevalence and severity of acute non-variceal gastrointestinal bleeding
by
Boda, Krisztina
,
Szijártó, Lajos András
,
Terzin, Viktória
in
Atmospheric pressure
,
Bleeding
,
Climate
2017
Seasonal variations in acute gastrointestinal bleeding (AGIB) have rarely been studied, and the published results tend to be contradictory. The aim of this study was to determine the relation between changes in meteorological conditions and the occurrence and severity of AGIB in a continental climate. A retrospective analysis of hospital admissions for AGIB (n = 1033 patients) between 1 January 2010 and 31 December 2012 took into consideration meteorological data obtained from the Hungarian National Meteorology Service. The severity of AGIB and ulcer bleeding was determined by the Glasgow Blatchford score (GBS) and the Forrest classification. No correlations were revealed regarding the monthly and seasonal fluctuations of AGIB, but we did find a significant correlation between the occurrence of AGIB and daily mean temperature. Humidity correlated significantly with the severity of upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB), and meteorological front movement rates were correlated with the number of lower gastrointestinal bleeding (LGIB) cases. Data showed no significant correlations between gastric and duodenal ulcers and climatic factors such as front movement rates, atmospheric pressure, humidity, daily mean temperature and the presence of a full moon.
Journal Article