4. Pancreatic neoplasm Flashcards
Types of pancreatic neoplasms
- Benign pancreatic epithelial tumours
- Serous cystademonas
- Mucinous cystic neoplasms
- Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm - Pancreatic carcinoma
- Pancreatic endocrine neoplasm
- Insulinoma
- Glucagonoma
- Gastrinoma aka Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome
- Somatostainoma
- VIPoma
- Carcinoid tumour
Benign pancreatic epithelial tumours
- Serous cystadenomas
- Mucinous cystic neoplasms
- Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm
Serous Cystadenomas
- Almost always benign
2. Glycogen-rich cuboidal cells surrounding small cysts with clear, thin, straw-coloured fluid
Mucinous cystic neoplasms
- May become malignant
- Usually found in body or tail of pancreas
- Cysts larger than those found in serous cystsadenomas, filled with thick tenacious mucin
Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm
- May become malignant
- Usually found in head of pancreas
- Papillary growth pattern, mucin-producing, involves or connected to normal pancreatic ductal system
Etiologies & Associations with pancreatic carcinoma
- Smoking
- Fat-rich diet
- Diabetes mellitus (hard to ascertain cause-&-effect)
- Chronic pancreatitis (hard to ascertain cause-&-effect)
Pathogenesis of pancreatic carcinoma
- Pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasm → invasive pancreatic carcinoma sequence
- Progressive mutations:
- Telomere shortening
- K-RAS mutation
- p16 tumour suppressor gene inactivation
- p53, SMAD4, BRCA2 gene inactivation
Histological subtypes of pancreatic carcinoma
- Adenocarcinoma (usual form)
- Squamous cell carcinoma
- Cystadenocarcinoma
- Acinar cell carcinoma
- Prominent acinar cell differentiation
- Production of exocrine enzymes
- May cause metastatic fat necrosis due to lipases released into circulation - Undifferentiated carcinoma
- May have osteoclast-like giant multinucleated cells - Pancreatoblastoma
- Rare, found in children age 1-15 years
- Squamous islands admixed with acinar cells
Sites of pancreatic carcinoma
- Head of pancreas (60%)
- Better prognosis in general due to earlier detection due to obstruction of bile duct which passes through the head of the pancreas - Body of pancreas (15%)
- Tail of pancreas (5%)
- Entire pancreas (20%)
Pathological Effects & Complications of pancreatic carcinoma
- Generally poor prognosis (one of the highest mortality rates amongst all cancers)
- Biliary obstruction (for tumours of head of pancreas)
- Obstructive jaundice
- Ascending cholangitis
- Cholecystitis - Gastrointestinal bleeding
- Migratory thrombophlebitis (Trousseau’s sign)
- Due to tumour-elaborated procoagulants & platelet aggregating factors
Definition of pancreatic endocrine neoplasms
Islet cell tumours
Insulinoma (beta cell tumour)
- Most common pancreatic endocrine neoplasm
- Tumour elaborating insulin
- Clinical features: Whipple’s triad
- Attacks of hypoglycemia occurring with glucose levels < 50mg/dL
- CNS manifestation (confusion, stupor, loss of consciousness) related to fasting or exercise
- Prompt relief of symptoms with glucose administration - Other differentials for hypoglycaemia:
- Islet hyperplasia (e.g. in maternal diabetes)
- Ectopic insulin production by fibromas
- Inherited glycogenoses
- Diffuse liver disease
Glucagonoma (alpha cell tumour)
- Tumour elaborating glucagon
- Occurs mostly in peri- & postmenopausal women
- Clinical features:
- Increased serum glucagon levels
- Mild diabetes mellitus
- Migratory necrotizing skin erythema (often presents at groin/perineal region, lower extremities)
- Anemia
Gastrinoma (G cell tumour) aka Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome
- Tumour elaborating gastrin
- Clinical features:
- Gastric hypersecretion/hyperacidity
- Intractable peptic ulceration (gastric, duodenal & even jejuna)
- Diarrhoea - Note: gastrinomas can arise within the ‘gastrinoma triangle” which comprises:
- Pancreas
- Duodenum
- Peripancreatic soft tissue
Somatostatinoma (delta cell tumour)
- Tumour elaborating somatostatin
- Clinical features
- Increased serum somatostatin levels
- Diabetes mellitus (due to suppressed insulin)
- Cholelithiasis (due decreased gallbladder motility)
- Steatorrhea (due to decreased exocrine pancreas enzymatic secretions)
- Hypochlorhydria (due to decreased parietal cell HCl secretion)