Publication:
Paraduodenal Pancreatitis: Imaging and Pathologic Correlation of 47 Cases Elucidates Distinct Subtypes and the Factors Involved in its Etiopathogenesis

dc.contributor.authorsMuraki T., Kim G.E., Reid M.D., Mittal P., Bedolla G., Memis B., Pehlivanoglu B., Freedman A., Erbarut Seven I., Choi H., Kooby D., Maithel S.K., Sarmiento J.M., Krasinskas A., Adsay V.
dc.date.accessioned2022-03-15T02:12:55Z
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-11T11:13:06Z
dc.date.available2022-03-15T02:12:55Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.description.abstractClinicopathologic characteristics of paraduodenal (groove) pancreatitis (PDP) remain to be fully unraveled. In this study, 47 PDPs with preoperative enhanced images available were subjected to detailed comparative analysis in conjunction with pathologic findings. PDP were predominantly in males (3:1) with a mean age of 50 years, and 60% had a preoperative diagnosis of cancer. Mean lesional size was 3.1 cm. Three distinct subtypes were identified by imaging. Solid-tumoral (type-1) with groove-predominant (type-1A, 36%) forming a distinct solid band between the duodenum and pancreas often with histologic microabscesses (69% vs. 33% in others), and pancreas-involving (type-1B, 19%) forming a pseudotumoral mass spanning into the head-groove area, always diagnosed preoperatively as "cancer," but often lacked parenchymal atrophy of the body (44% vs. 92%). Cyst-forming (type-2) had groove-predominant (type-2A, 15%), often accompanied by Brunner gland hyperplasia, and pancreas-predominant (type-2B, 15%) were in younger (mean: 44 y) females (57% vs. 18%) and had less alcohol/tobacco abuse (50/33% vs. 81/69%). Ill-defined (type-3; 15%) often had main pancreatic duct dilatation (mean: 5.6 vs. 2.8 mm). The capricious presentations of PDP could be attributed to variable effects of different mechanistic and precipitative etiopathogenetic factors such as disturbed accessory duct outflow (dilated Santorini duct, 87%), aggravated by alcohol (77%) with superimposed stasis in the main ampulla (previous cholecystectomy, 47%; choledocholithiasis, 9%), strictured Wirsung duct (68%), and some likely exacerbated by ischemia (hypertension [59%], tobacco abuse [64%], arteriosclerosis in the tissue [23%]). In conclusion, our study identified 3 distinct types of PDP and each may reflect different pathogenetic contributing factors. Copyright © 2017 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
dc.identifier.doi10.1097/PAS.0000000000000919
dc.identifier.issn1475185
dc.identifier.pubmed28795998
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11424/247844
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherLippincott Williams and Wilkins
dc.relation.ispartofAmerican Journal of Surgical Pathology
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
dc.subjectautoimmune pancreatitis
dc.subjectclassification
dc.subjectGEL
dc.subjectgroove
dc.subjectIgG4
dc.subjectLPSP
dc.subjectpancreatic cancer
dc.subjectpancreatitis
dc.subjectparaduodenal
dc.subjectpathogenesis
dc.titleParaduodenal Pancreatitis: Imaging and Pathologic Correlation of 47 Cases Elucidates Distinct Subtypes and the Factors Involved in its Etiopathogenesis
dc.typearticle
dspace.entity.typePublication
oaire.citation.endPage1363
oaire.citation.issue10
oaire.citation.startPage1347
oaire.citation.titleAmerican Journal of Surgical Pathology
oaire.citation.volume41

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