BACKGROUND The aim of this analysis is to compare the postoperative outcomes of resection and enucleation of small pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PNETs). METHODS The 2014-17 American College of Surgeons-NSQIP dataset… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND The aim of this analysis is to compare the postoperative outcomes of resection and enucleation of small pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PNETs). METHODS The 2014-17 American College of Surgeons-NSQIP dataset was queried. Patients undergoing pancreatoduodenectomy (N = 297) or distal pancreatectomy (N = 712) for nonfunctional, small PNETs (T1/T2) were compared to 127 patients (11%) who were enucleated. RESULTS Operative time (170 vs 261, p < 0.01) and transfusions were less in the enucleation cohort (1.6% vs 6.7% p < 0.01). There was no difference in postoperative pancreatic fistulas, but morbidity was lower in enucleated patients (36.2% vs 48.7% p < 0.01). Fifteen resected patients died postoperatively (1.5%) while all enucleated patients survived (p = 0.058). Mean postoperative length of stay was shorter after enucleation (5.7 vs 7.2 days p < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS Enucleation of PNETs is performed in only 11% of patients, but takes less time, requires fewer transfusions, and is associated with reduced morbidity and shorter length of stay than resection.
               
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