Reuters Health Information: Reoperation may be effective for some patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome
Reoperation may be effective for some patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome
Last Updated: 2017-02-16
By Reuters Staff
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) � As many as 25% of patients with
persistent or recurrent Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) can be
cured with repeat surgery, a prospective database study
suggests.
Few patients with sporadic and multiple endocrine neoplasia
type 1 (MEN1) are cured by initial surgery, but the indications
for surgical re-exploration, the type of surgery to perform and
the benefits of reoperation are largely undefined and
controversial.
Dr. Jeffrey A. Norton from Stanford University School of
Medicine in California and colleagues queried a prospective
database including 223 patients with ZES to determine the role
of reoperation in patients with persistent or recurrent ZES.
During a mean follow-up of 11.2 years, 52 patients (23%)
developed recurrent or persistent disease and met the criteria
for re-exploration, the team reports in Annals of Surgery,
online January 17.
The mean time between the initial surgery and the first
operation was 7.6 years.
Most patients (n=44) had one reoperation, six had two
reoperations, one had three reoperations and another had seven
reoperations.
During total follow-up averaging nearly 25 years, nine
patients died (17%, seven of them from the disease) a mean of 12
years after the initial operation and five years after the last
reoperation.
At the last follow-up after the last reoperation (mean,
eight years later), 13 of 52 patients (25%) remained
disease-free. All of these patients were sporadic ZES patients;
all those with MEN1 recurred.
During follow-up, 21 patients (40%) developed new liver
metastases, and the presence of liver metastases was associated
with a reduced mean survival of 6.5 years.
�At present, it is not established that reoperation actually
increases survival, but the long-term survival with the current
approach is excellent,� the researchers conclude. �It is our
strategy to reoperate on ZES patients with imaging evidence of
recurrent gastrinoma if all identifiable tumors can be
completely resected.�
�This has been done with acceptable morbidity and most
patients have had excellent survival,� they note. �Patients with
either the development of liver metastases or the recurrence of
liver metastases (stage 4) disease do worse but some still live
for long periods suggesting that this is not a contraindication
to this strategy.�
Dr. Norton did not respond to a request for comments.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2kW3JAo
Ann Surg 2017.
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