Background/purpose: A clinical study was carried out to clarify the indications for extended resection of pancreatic cancer.
Methods: From July 1981 to April 2000, 200 of 314 (63.7%) patients with pancreatic cancer underwent extended tumor resection. Portal vein resection was performed in 146 of the 200 (73%) resected cases. The postoperative survival rate was studied based on the operative and histopathological findings.
Results: Operative death (within 30 days postoperatively) occurred in 11 of the 200 (5.5%) resected patients. Most of the patients who survived for 2 or 3 years were in the group with carcinoma-free surgical margins.
Conclusion: The most important indication for an extended operation combined with portal vein resection for pancreatic cancer is the likelihood of obtaining surgical cancer-free margins. There is no indication for an extended resection inpatients in whom the surgical margins will become cancer-positive if such a resection is employed.