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"pancreatic tumours"
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Serous cystic neoplasm of the pancreas: a multinational study of 2622 patients under the auspices of the International Association of Pancreatology and European Pancreatic Club (European Study Group on Cystic Tumors of the Pancreas)
2016
ObjectivesSerous cystic neoplasm (SCN) is a cystic neoplasm of the pancreas whose natural history is poorly known. The purpose of the study was to attempt to describe the natural history of SCN, including the specific mortality.DesignRetrospective multinational study including SCN diagnosed between 1990 and 2014.Results2622 patients were included. Seventy-four per cent were women, and median age at diagnosis was 58 years (16–99). Patients presented with non-specific abdominal pain (27%), pancreaticobiliary symptoms (9%), diabetes mellitus (5%), other symptoms (4%) and/or were asymptomatic (61%). Fifty-two per cent of patients were operated on during the first year after diagnosis (median size: 40 mm (2–200)), 9% had resection beyond 1 year of follow-up (3 years (1–20), size at diagnosis: 25 mm (4–140)) and 39% had no surgery (3.6 years (1–23), 25.5 mm (1–200)). Surgical indications were (not exclusive) uncertain diagnosis (60%), symptoms (23%), size increase (12%), large size (6%) and adjacent organ compression (5%). In patients followed beyond 1 year (n=1271), size increased in 37% (growth rate: 4 mm/year), was stable in 57% and decreased in 6%. Three serous cystadenocarcinomas were recorded. Postoperative mortality was 0.6% (n=10), and SCN's related mortality was 0.1% (n=1).ConclusionsAfter a 3-year follow-up, clinical relevant symptoms occurred in a very small proportion of patients and size slowly increased in less than half. Surgical treatment should be proposed only for diagnosis remaining uncertain after complete workup, significant and related symptoms or exceptionally when exists concern with malignancy. This study supports an initial conservative management in the majority of patients with SCN.Trial registration numberIRB 00006477.
Journal Article
Role of biliary stent and neoadjuvant chemotherapy in the pancreatic tumor microbiome
2021
Background
Intra-tumor microbiota have been implicated in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) development, treatment response and post-treatment survivorship. Moreover, therapeutic interventions targeting microbiota may improve the response to chemotherapy and immunotherapy, further emphasizing the critical need to understand the origins of and growth of bacteria within the pancreatic tumor microenvironment. Here, we studied the role of several clinical factors on the bacterial colonization of PDAC.
Results
We obtained matched tumor and normal pancreatic tissue specimens from 27 patients who had undergone surgical resection for PDAC between 2011 and 2015 from the University of Minnesota Biological Materials Procurement Network (BioNet). We found that 26 (48%) out of 54 pancreatic tissue samples harbored detectable bacterial communities using real-time PCR targeting the 16S rRNA gene. Bacterial colonization was detected significantly more frequently in samples from patients who had pancreatic head tumors, underwent Whipple procedure, or had preoperative biliary stent placement. There was also a significantly greater relative abundance of microbiota from the family
Enterobacteriaceae
among samples from patients who underwent biliary stent placement or neoadjuvant treatment with a combination of Gemcitabine and Paclitaxel.
Conclusions
These findings suggest that biliary stent placement and neoadjuvant chemotherapy are associated with specific alterations that promote the infiltration and growth of intra-tumor bacteria in the setting of PDAC. Further studies exploring whether specific bacterial communities could contribute to increased chemoresistance will be essential for optimizing medical therapies in the future.
Journal Article
CD47 expression and CD163+ macrophages correlated with prognosis of pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor
2021
Background
Recent studies have suggested the important roles of CD47 and tumor-associated macrophages in the prognosis and immunotherapy of various human malignancies. However, the clinical significance of CD47 expression and CD163+ TAMs in pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor (PanNET) remains unclear.
Methods
In this study, 47 well-differentiated PanNET resection specimens were collected. CD47 expression and CD163+ macrophages were evaluated using immunohistochemistry and correlated with clinicopathologic properties.
Results
Positive CD47 staining was seen in all PanNETs as well as adjacent normal islets. Compared to normal islets, CD47 overexpressed in PanNETs (
p
= 0.0015). In the cohort, lymph node metastasis (LNM), lymphovascular invasion (LVI), and perineural invasion (PNI) were found in 36.2, 59.6, and 48.9% of the cases, respectively. Interestingly, PanNETs with LNM, LVI, or PNI had significantly lower H-score of CD47 than those without LNM (
p
= 0.035), LVI (
p
= 0.0005), or PNI (
p
= 0.0035). PanNETs in patients with disease progression (recurrence/death) also showed a significantly lower expression of CD47 than those without progression (
p
= 0.022). In contrast, CD163+ macrophage counts were significantly higher in cases with LNM, LVI, and PNI.
Conclusions
Our data suggest relative low CD47 expression and high CD163+ TAMs may act as indicators for poor prognosis of PanNETs.
Journal Article
Long-Term Oncologic Outcome following Duodenum-Preserving Pancreatic Head Resection for Benign Tumors, Cystic Neoplasms, and Neuroendocrine Tumors: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
2024
Background
Pancreatoduodenectomy (PD) has a considerable surgical risk for complications and late metabolic morbidity. Parenchyma-sparing resection of benign tumors has the potential to cure patients associated with reduced procedure-related short- and long-term complications.
Materials and Methods
Pubmed, Embase, and Cochrane libraries were searched for studies reporting surgery-related complications following PD and duodenum-preserving total (DPPHRt) or partial (DPPHRp) pancreatic head resection for benign tumors. A total of 38 cohort studies that included data from 1262 patients were analyzed. In total, 729 patients underwent DPPHR and 533 PD.
Results
Concordance between preoperative diagnosis of benign tumors and final histopathology was 90.57% for DPPHR. Cystic and neuroendocrine neoplasms (PNETs) and periampullary tumors (PATs) were observed in 497, 89, and 31 patients, respectively. In total, 34 of 161 (21.1%) patients with intraepithelial papillar mucinous neoplasm exhibited severe dysplasia in the final histopathology. The meta-analysis, when comparing DPPHRt and PD, revealed in-hospital mortality of 1/362 (0.26%) and 8/547 (1.46%) patients, respectively [OR 0.48 (95% CI 0.15–1.58);
p
= 0.21], and frequency of reoperation of 3.26 % and 6.75%, respectively [OR 0.52 (95% CI 0.28–0.96);
p
= 0.04]. After a follow-up of 45.8 ± 26.6 months, 14/340 patients with intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms/mucinous cystic neoplasms (IPMN/MCN, 4.11%) and 2/89 patients with PNET (2.24%) exhibited tumor recurrence. Local recurrence at the resection margin and reoccurrence of tumor growth in the remnant pancreas was comparable after DPPHR or PD [OR 0.94 (95% CI 0.178–5.34);
p
= 0.96].
Conclusions
DPPHR for benign, premalignant neoplasms provides a cure for patients with low risk of tumor recurrence and significantly fewer early surgery-related complications compared with PD. DPPHR has the potential to replace PD for benign, premalignant cystic and neuroendocrine neoplasms.
Journal Article
A faecal microbiota signature with high specificity for pancreatic cancer
by
Guarner, Carlos
,
Kocher, Hemant M
,
Maistrenko, Oleksandr M
in
Accuracy
,
Adenocarcinoma
,
Biomarkers
2022
BackgroundRecent evidence suggests a role for the microbiome in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) aetiology and progression.ObjectiveTo explore the faecal and salivary microbiota as potential diagnostic biomarkers.MethodsWe applied shotgun metagenomic and 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing to samples from a Spanish case–control study (n=136), including 57 cases, 50 controls, and 29 patients with chronic pancreatitis in the discovery phase, and from a German case–control study (n=76), in the validation phase.ResultsFaecal metagenomic classifiers performed much better than saliva-based classifiers and identified patients with PDAC with an accuracy of up to 0.84 area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) based on a set of 27 microbial species, with consistent accuracy across early and late disease stages. Performance further improved to up to 0.94 AUROC when we combined our microbiome-based predictions with serum levels of carbohydrate antigen (CA) 19–9, the only current non-invasive, Food and Drug Administration approved, low specificity PDAC diagnostic biomarker. Furthermore, a microbiota-based classification model confined to PDAC-enriched species was highly disease-specific when validated against 25 publicly available metagenomic study populations for various health conditions (n=5792). Both microbiome-based models had a high prediction accuracy on a German validation population (n=76). Several faecal PDAC marker species were detectable in pancreatic tumour and non-tumour tissue using 16S rRNA sequencing and fluorescence in situ hybridisation.ConclusionTaken together, our results indicate that non-invasive, robust and specific faecal microbiota-based screening for the early detection of PDAC is feasible.
Journal Article
Enrichment of oral microbiota in early cystic precursors to invasive pancreatic cancer
2019
ObjectivesIntraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs) are pancreatic cysts that can progress to invasive pancreatic cancer. Associations between oncogenesis and oral microbiome alterations have been reported. This study aims to investigate a potential intracystic pancreatic microbiome in a pancreatic cystic neoplasm (PCN) surgery patient cohort.DesignPaired cyst fluid and plasma were collected at pancreatic surgery from patients with suspected PCN (n=105). Quantitative and qualitative assessment of bacterial DNA by qPCR, PacBio sequencing (n=35), and interleukin (IL)-1β quantification was performed. The data were correlated to diagnosis, lesion severity and clinical and laboratory profile, including proton-pump inhibitor (PPI) usage and history of invasive endoscopy procedures.ResultsIntracystic bacterial 16S DNA copy number and IL-1β protein quantity were significantly higher in IPMN with high-grade dysplasia and IPMN with cancer compared with non-IPMN PCNs. Despite high interpersonal variation of intracystic microbiota composition, bacterial network and linear discriminant analysis effect size analyses demonstrated co-occurrence and enrichment of oral bacterial taxa including Fusobacterium nucleatum and Granulicatella adiacens in cyst fluid from IPMN with high-grade dysplasia. The elevated intracystic bacterial DNA is associated with, but not limited to, prior exposure to invasive endoscopic procedures, and is independent from use of PPI and antibiotics.ConclusionsCollectively, these findings warrant further investigation into the role of oral bacteria in cystic precursors to pancreatic cancer and have added values on the aetiopathology as well as the management of pancreatic cysts.
Journal Article
Molecular Basis of Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors
by
Volchkov, Pavel
,
Maksimov, Denis
,
Avsievich, Ekaterina
in
Biomarkers, Tumor - genetics
,
Biomarkers, Tumor - metabolism
,
Cancer
2024
Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) are rare well-differentiated neoplasms with limited therapeutic options and unknown cells of origin. The current classification of pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors is based on proliferative grading, and guides therapeutic strategies, however, tumors within grades exhibit profound heterogeneity in clinical manifestation and outcome. Manifold studies have highlighted intra-patient differences in tumors at the genetic and transcriptomic levels. Molecular classification might become an alternative or complementary basis for treatment decisions and reflect tumor biology, actionable cellular processes. Here, we provide a comprehensive review of genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic and epigenomic studies of pancreatic NETs to elucidate patterns shared between proposed subtypes that could form a foundation for new classification. We denote four NET subtypes with distinct molecular features, which were consistently reproduced using various omics technologies.
Journal Article
Tumor-Infiltrating Neutrophils Predict Poor Survival of Non-Functional Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumor
2020
This study retrospectively characterized the immune infiltrating profile in nonfunctional pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (NF-PanNETs).
Tumor tissues from the 109-patient Fudan cohort and a 73-patient external validation set were evaluated by immunohistochemistry for 9 immune cell types: tumor-infiltrating neutrophils (TINs), tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), CD11c+ dendritic cells, anti-NCR1+ natural killer (NK) cells, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, CD45RO+ memory T cells, FOXP3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs), and CD20+ B cells.
TINs were primarily distributed in the intratumoral area, dendritic cells and NK cells were scattered evenly in intratumoral and stromal areas, and Tregs were rarely detected. The remaining 5 cell types were primarily present in peritumoral stroma. Total TINs (P < .001) and TAMs (P = .002) increased as NF-PanNET grade rose. Kaplan-Meier analyses showed that high intratumoral TINs, total TAMs, and stromal CD4+ T-cell infiltration correlated with shorter recurrence-free survival (RFS, P = .010, P = .027, and P = .035, respectively) and overall survival (OS, P = .017, P = .029, and P = .045, respectively). Additionally, high intratumoral CD8+ T cell infiltration correlated with prolonged RFS (P = .039). Multivariate Cox regression demonstrated that intratumoral TINs, World Health Organization (WHO) classification, and eighth edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer tumor-node-metastasis staging system (AJCC8th TNM) were independent factors for RFS (P = .043, P = .023, and P = .029, respectively), whereas intratumoral TINs and WHO classification were independent factors for OS (P = .010 and P = .007, respectively). Furthermore, the combination of TINs, WHO classification, and AJCC8th TNM remarkably improved prognostic accuracy for RFS. These results have been verified in the external validation set.
Intratumoral TINs are an independent and unfavorable predictor of postoperative NF-PanNETs. A combination of TINs, WHO classification, and AJCC8th TNM could improve prognostic accuracy for RFS.
Journal Article
Diagnostic insights into solid pseudopapillary neoplasms of the pancreas: a decade of experience with pediatric representation
by
Abdelfatah, Dalia
,
Tahoun, Neveen S.
,
Ebrahim, Noura A. A.
in
12E7 Antigen - analysis
,
12E7 Antigen - metabolism
,
Adolescent
2025
Background
Solid pseudopapillary neoplasms (SPNs) of the pancreas are rare, low-grade malignancies that predominantly affect young females. Their diagnosis is often facilitated by a characteristic histomorphological pattern and immunohistochemical profile. However, diagnostic challenges persist, especially in pediatric and atypical presentations. Recent attention has focused on the diagnostic value of CD99 and LEF1 in distinguishing SPNs from other pancreatic neoplasms.
Objective
To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy and utility of CD99 and LEF1 as immunohistochemical markers for SPNs.
Methods
A retrospective analysis of 60 SPN cases diagnosed between 2015 and 2024 was performed. Histopathological features were systematically reviewed, and immunohistochemical staining for CD99, LEF1, β-catenin, Cyclin D1, PR, Ki-67 was evaluated. Immunohistochemical marker interpretation was standardized using internally validated thresholds informed by existing literature: CD99 was considered positive with ≥ 10% cytoplasmic staining exhibiting paranuclear accentuation; β-catenin positivity was defined by ≥ 5% nuclear localization; Cyclin D1 by ≥ 10% moderate-to-strong nuclear staining; and progesterone receptor (PR) expression by ≥ 1% nuclear positivity, consistent with hormone receptor evaluation guidelines.
Marker expression was statistically analyzed for their associations.
Results
SPNs exhibited a strong female predilection (F:M ratio ≈ 7:1), with a mean age of 32.5 years. Pediatric cases (
n
= 4) displayed higher mean expression of CD99 (73.8%) and LEF1 (86.5%) compared to adults. CD99 showed cytoplasmic positivity with paranuclear accentuation in 96.7% of cases, while LEF1 demonstrated nuclear staining in 91.7%. β-catenin nuclear localization was observed in 95% of tumors, reflecting Wnt/β-catenin pathway activation. Cyclin D1 and PR were expressed in 90% and 88.3% of cases, respectively. Co-expression of β-catenin, CD99, LEF1, Cyclin D1, and PR was observed in 73.3% of tumors. CD99 and LEF1 inversely correlated with tumor size and proliferative activity (Ki-67), whereas Cyclin D1 and Ki-67 positively correlated with tumor size and lymphovascular invasion (LVI). Pediatric tumors generally exhibited favorable profiles, with limited evidence of LVI.
Conclusion
SPNs present with distinctive immunohistochemical signatures that are critical for accurate diagnosis, particularly in morphologically ambiguous or pediatric cases. CD99 and LEF1 are highly sensitive markers that, in combination with β-catenin and Cyclin D1, enhance diagnostic precision. These findings emphasize the central role of Wnt/β-catenin signaling in SPN pathogenesis and underscore the importance of integrating clinicopathological and molecular data for comprehensive tumor assessment.
Journal Article
Hyaluronan impairs vascular function and drug delivery in a mouse model of pancreatic cancer
by
Nakagawa, Tomoaki
,
Neesse, Albrecht
,
Kultti, Anne
in
Angiogenesis
,
Animals
,
Antineoplastic Agents - administration & dosage
2013
Objective Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is characterised by stromal desmoplasia and vascular dysfunction, which critically impair drug delivery. This study examines the role of an abundant extracellular matrix component, the megadalton glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan (HA), as a novel therapeutic target in PDA. Methods Using a genetically engineered mouse model of PDA, the authors enzymatically depleted HA by a clinically formulated PEGylated human recombinant PH20 hyaluronidase (PEGPH20) and examined tumour perfusion, vascular permeability and drug delivery. The preclinical utility of PEGPH20 in combination with gemcitabine was assessed by short-term and survival studies. Results PEGPH20 rapidly and sustainably depleted HA, inducing the re-expansion of PDA blood vessels and increasing the intratumoral delivery of two chemotherapeutic agents, doxorubicin and gemcitabine. Moreover, PEGPH20 triggered fenestrations and interendothelial junctional gaps in PDA tumour endothelia and promoted a tumour-specific increase in macromolecular permeability. Finally, combination therapy with PEGPH20 and gemcitabine led to inhibition of PDA tumour growth and prolonged survival over gemcitabine monotherapy, suggesting immediate clinical utility. Conclusions The authors demonstrate that HA impedes the intratumoral vasculature in PDA and propose that its enzymatic depletion be explored as a means to improve drug delivery and response in patients with pancreatic cancer.
Journal Article