The available data suggest that lymph node involvement is an important prognostic factor in patients with carcinoma of the head of the pancreas. Lymph node metastases occur in as many as 50% of the cases of even the smallest pancreatic cancers now being diagnosed and resected (i.e., those < 2 cm in diameter). There is some evidence, especially from clinical experience in Japan, that wider lymphatic dissections (i.e., wider than those commonly done with the standard Whipple resection) may prolong survival. Unfortunately, many of the available data around the world are retrospective and are not randomized between the standard and the radical operation. Moreover, the pathologic material has not been staged uniformly according to accepted criteria. Thus the various series are not comparable. Comparisons between series require standardization with respect to stage of disease, pathologic classification, and treatment protocols. Before any modification of the standard pancreaticoduodenectomy is adopted, an appropriately designed study should be performed to test its efficacy. This study would also require a more comprehensive analysis of the pathologic material than is commonly performed today in the United States and Europe.