Role of a Multidisciplinary Clinic in the Management of Patients with Pancreatic Cysts: A Single-Center Cohort Study

Background Incidental pancreatic cysts are common, a small number of which are premalignant or malignant. Multidisciplinary care has been shown to alter management and improve outcomes in many types of cancers, but its role has not been examined in patients with pancreatic cysts. We assessed the eff...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of surgical oncology 2014-10, Vol.21 (11), p.3668-3674
Hauptverfasser: Lennon, Anne Marie, Manos, Lindsey L., Hruban, Ralph H., Ali, Syed Z., Fishman, Elliot K., Kamel, Ihab R., Raman, Siva P., Zaheer, Atif, Hutfless, Susan, Salamone, Ashley, Kiswani, Vandhana, Ahuja, Nita, Makary, Martin A., Weiss, Matthew J., Hirose, Kenzo, Goggins, Michael, Wolfgang, Christopher L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Incidental pancreatic cysts are common, a small number of which are premalignant or malignant. Multidisciplinary care has been shown to alter management and improve outcomes in many types of cancers, but its role has not been examined in patients with pancreatic cysts. We assessed the effect of a multidisciplinary pancreatic cyst clinic (MPCC) on the diagnosis and management of patients with pancreatic cysts. Methods The referring institution and MPCC diagnosis and management plan were recorded. Patient were placed into one of five categories—no, low, intermediate, or high risk of malignancy within the cyst, and malignant cyst—on the basis of their diagnosis. Patients were assigned one of four management options: surveillance, surgical resection, further evaluation, or discharge with no further follow-up required. The MPCC was deemed to have altered patient care if the patient was assigned a different risk or management category after the MPCC review. Results Referring institution records were available for 262 patients (198 women; mean age 62.7 years), with data on risk category available in 138 patients and management category in 225. The most common diagnosis was branch duct intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm. MPCC review altered the risk category in 11 (8.0%) of 138 patients. The management category was altered in 68 (30.2%) of 225 patients. Management was increased in 52 patients, including 22 patients who were recommended surgical resection. Management was decreased in 16 patients, including 10 who had their recommendation changed from surgery to surveillance. Conclusions MPCC is helpful and alters the management over 30% of patients.
ISSN:1068-9265
1534-4681
DOI:10.1245/s10434-014-3739-x