-
Palliative gastroenterostomy for pancreatic cancer.
The records of 125 consecutive patients with unresectable pancreatic cancer treated between 1958 and 1979 were evaluated to determine the benefit or morbidity of gastroenterostomy performed on a routine basis. One hundred three patients had no evidence of gastric outlet obstruction from tumor extension as determined at the time of initial operation. Fifty-seven of these patients underwent biliary diversion as their only operative procedure. The morbidity and mortality in this group was 31 and 14 percent, respectively. Six of these 57 patients required decompressing gastroenterostomy at a later date to relieve gastric outlet obstruction. Forty-six patients underwent both biliary and prophylactic gastric outlet diversion with a 15 percent mortality rate and a 46 percent incidence of morbidity. The most common complication in this group was delayed gastric emptying (14 percent). These findings, and the high incidence of delayed gastric emptying after gastroenterostomy and the relatively infrequent occurrence of gastric outlet obstruction (11 percent) after initial biliary diversion, suggest that gastroenterostomy should be performed on a selective basis only.
PMID: 6203420 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
-
Cited by 6 PubMed Central articles
-
'Cross-section gastroenterostomy' in patients with irresectable periampullary carcinoma.
Horstmann O, Kley C, Post S, Becker H.
HPB (Oxford). 2001; 3(2):157-63.
[HPB (Oxford). 2001]
-
The need for a prophylactic gastrojejunostomy for unresectable periampullary cancer: a prospective randomized multicenter trial with special focus on assessment of quality of life.
Van Heek NT, De Castro SM, van Eijck CH, van Geenen RC, Hesselink EJ, Breslau PJ, Tran TC, Kazemier G, Visser MR, Busch OR, et al.
Ann Surg. 2003 Dec; 238(6):894-902; discussion 902-5.
[Ann Surg. 2003]
-
Morbidity and mortality after radical and palliative pancreatic cancer surgery. Risk factors influencing the short-term results.
Bakkevold KE, Kambestad B.
Ann Surg. 1993 Apr; 217(4):356-68.
[Ann Surg. 1993]
- » See all...