Published in:
01-12-2008 | 2008 ssat plenary presentation
Mechanisms of Primary Operative Failure and Results of Remedial Operation in Patients with Chronic Pancreatitis
Authors:
Thomas J. Howard, Jeffrey S. Browne, Nicholas J. Zyromski, Harish Lavu, Marshall S. Baker, Changyu Shen, James A. Madura
Published in:
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery
|
Issue 12/2008
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Abstract
Introduction
Resection and drainage operations achieve long-term pain relief in approximately 85% of patients with chronic pancreatitis (CP). In patients who develop recurrent pain, a few data exist on the long-term results of remedial operations.
Materials and methods
Over an 18-year period (1988–2006), 316 patients with CP had primary resection or drainage operations at our institution. Thirty-nine developed recurrent pain and were treated by a remedial resection or drainage operation. Patient demographics, time to symptom recurrence, radiographic anatomic abnormalities, type of remedial operation, postoperative morbidity, and long-term outcomes were analyzed.
Results
Thirty-nine patients, 56% female with a mean age of 41 years (range 16–61 years) had either remedial resection: total pancreatectomy (TP; N = 8), pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD; N = 6), distal pancreatectomy (DP; N = 5), or drainage operation: duodenal preserving pancreatic head resection (DPPHR; N = 8), revision of pancreaticojejunostomy (N = 12). TP achieved pain relief in 88% with postoperative complications greater than or equal to grade III in 38% and diabetes in 100%. Drainage operations achieved pain relief in 67% of patients with postoperative complications greater than or equal to grade III in only 8%. Partial parenchymal resections (DPPHR, PD, DP) as a remedial procedure achieved pain relief <50% of the time.
Conclusion
Drainage procedures, when anatomically feasible, are the preferred reoperation to treat patients with recurrent pain after failed primary operation for chronic pancreatitis.