Objective: To describe the diagnostic work-up and treatment of patients with a pancreatic carcinoma in the Amsterdam area, the Netherlands, particularly in general hospitals.
Design: Retrospective, descriptive.
Method: During 1997, 286 patients with a pancreatic carcinoma were diagnosed in 20 hospitals in the Amsterdam area. Diagnostic work-up and treatment data were collected from the medical records and analysed.
Results: Ninety percent of the patients presented in one of the 17 general hospitals (n = 252; 132 men and 154 women; mean age: 70 years). Thirty-five percent of them underwent diagnostic investigations which did not focus directly on pancreatic pathology. Ultrasound was performed in 97% of patients (4% in combination with Doppler) and CT in 60% (4% spiral CT). Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) was performed in 39% of these patients and endoprostheses were only inserted in half the cases. Thirty-five percent of the patients who underwent both CT and ERCP underwent ERCP first. Ninety-nine patients (39%) were referred to a reference hospital for further investigation or treatment. The period between the first investigation and the histological diagnosis was 4 weeks.
Conclusion: In the diagnostic work-up of patients with a pancreatic carcinoma, invasive diagnostic procedures were often performed before the non-invasive tests. Spiral CT was used minimally and ERCP was frequently performed without subsequent biliary drainage. The mean duration of diagnostic work-up was relatively long.