Allowed Publications
LayerRx Mapping ID
551
Slot System
Featured Buckets
Featured Buckets Admin

Rectal indomethacin cut odds of post-ERCP pancreatitis in real-world study

Article Type
Changed
Sat, 12/08/2018 - 02:48
Display Headline
Rectal indomethacin cut odds of post-ERCP pancreatitis in real-world study

A single, 100-mg rectal dose of indomethacin cut the odds of moderate to severe pancreatitis after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) by 85% in a single-center retrospective study of more than 4,000 patients reported in the August issue of Gastroenterology.

The effect extended to low-risk patients and those with malignant biliary obstruction, who make up the majority of ERCP patients in community practice, said Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam, MD, and his associates at the University of Pennsylvania. “Usage of rectal indomethacin in current clinical practice is low, as most endoscopists outside of referral centers perform ERCP for indications that are considered low-risk for PEP [post-ERCP pancreatitis], and until now, there were no data to support a benefit of rectal NSAIDs in this population,” they wrote in Gastroenterology. Their “real-world analysis” clearly shows the benefits of rectal indomethacin in low-risk patients and supports its increased use after ERCP, they added.

 

Pancreatitis, the most common complication of ERCP, affected 2%-9% of patients in prior studies and costs about $200 million in the United States annually, the investigators noted. Pancreatic duct stents help prevent post-ERCP pancreatitis, but require experience to place and have their own complications that limit their use in low-risk patients. Past studies of rectal indomethacin after ERCP reported mixed results and mainly focused on high-risk patients, leaving questions about whether to routinely use this NSAID after ERCP, said the researchers (Gastroenterology. 2016 May 20. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2016.04.048). Their study included 4,017 patients who underwent ERCP at the University of Pennsylvania between 2009 and 2015. From 2012 onward, nearly all patients received 100 mg rectal indomethacin immediately after the duodenoscope was withdrawn. This indomethacin group included 2,007 patients, while 2,010 patients in the study did not receive rectal indomethacin. In all, 95 (4.73%) untreated patients developed post-ERCP pancreatitis, compared with only 40 (1.99%) patients who received indomethacin, for a 65% reduction in the odds of post-ERCP pancreatitis (odds ratio, 0.35; 95% confidence interval, 0.24-0.51; P less than .001). Rectal indomethacin also led to an 83% drop in the odds of moderate to severe post-ERCP pancreatitis (OR, 0.17; 95% CI, 0.09-0.32; P less than .001) and showed very similar protective effects for patients with malignant obstruction (OR, 0.35; 95% CI, 0.17-0.75; P less than .001] and 0.20; 95% CI, 0.07-0.63; P less than 0.001, respectively).

Rectal indomethacin was particularly beneficial for patients with malignant obstruction and pancreatic adenocarcinoma, the investigators noted. Such patients had post-ERCP rates of 2.31% when they received rectal indomethacin and 7.53% otherwise (P less than .001). They also had a nearly sevenfold lower rate of moderate to severe post-ERCP pancreatitis when they received rectal indomethacin (P = .001).

Treatment did not affect the chances of perforation and did not cause anaphylaxis, but was tied to a slightly higher rate of postprocedural gastrointestinal bleeding among sphincterotomy patients (0.65% with treatment versus 0.45% without; P = .52). However, sphincterotomy patients were much less likely to develop pancreatitis when they received rectal indomethacin than when they did not (0% and 9.58% of patients, respectively; P = .003).

“The majority of ERCPs were performed by experienced endoscopists at a tertiary care center, which may have limited the effects of variable procedural skills on the risk of PEP,” the researchers said. “Therefore, generalizability of our findings to other populations may be limited. However, it should be noted that the overall PEP rate in both the unexposed and indomethacin groups was fairly low and similar to large community-based estimates, suggesting that our overall patient population was of similar overall risk.” The study was not powered to assess the combined effects of rectal indomethacin and pancreatic duct stents, they noted.

The investigators reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.

Publications
Topics
Sections

A single, 100-mg rectal dose of indomethacin cut the odds of moderate to severe pancreatitis after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) by 85% in a single-center retrospective study of more than 4,000 patients reported in the August issue of Gastroenterology.

The effect extended to low-risk patients and those with malignant biliary obstruction, who make up the majority of ERCP patients in community practice, said Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam, MD, and his associates at the University of Pennsylvania. “Usage of rectal indomethacin in current clinical practice is low, as most endoscopists outside of referral centers perform ERCP for indications that are considered low-risk for PEP [post-ERCP pancreatitis], and until now, there were no data to support a benefit of rectal NSAIDs in this population,” they wrote in Gastroenterology. Their “real-world analysis” clearly shows the benefits of rectal indomethacin in low-risk patients and supports its increased use after ERCP, they added.

 

Pancreatitis, the most common complication of ERCP, affected 2%-9% of patients in prior studies and costs about $200 million in the United States annually, the investigators noted. Pancreatic duct stents help prevent post-ERCP pancreatitis, but require experience to place and have their own complications that limit their use in low-risk patients. Past studies of rectal indomethacin after ERCP reported mixed results and mainly focused on high-risk patients, leaving questions about whether to routinely use this NSAID after ERCP, said the researchers (Gastroenterology. 2016 May 20. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2016.04.048). Their study included 4,017 patients who underwent ERCP at the University of Pennsylvania between 2009 and 2015. From 2012 onward, nearly all patients received 100 mg rectal indomethacin immediately after the duodenoscope was withdrawn. This indomethacin group included 2,007 patients, while 2,010 patients in the study did not receive rectal indomethacin. In all, 95 (4.73%) untreated patients developed post-ERCP pancreatitis, compared with only 40 (1.99%) patients who received indomethacin, for a 65% reduction in the odds of post-ERCP pancreatitis (odds ratio, 0.35; 95% confidence interval, 0.24-0.51; P less than .001). Rectal indomethacin also led to an 83% drop in the odds of moderate to severe post-ERCP pancreatitis (OR, 0.17; 95% CI, 0.09-0.32; P less than .001) and showed very similar protective effects for patients with malignant obstruction (OR, 0.35; 95% CI, 0.17-0.75; P less than .001] and 0.20; 95% CI, 0.07-0.63; P less than 0.001, respectively).

Rectal indomethacin was particularly beneficial for patients with malignant obstruction and pancreatic adenocarcinoma, the investigators noted. Such patients had post-ERCP rates of 2.31% when they received rectal indomethacin and 7.53% otherwise (P less than .001). They also had a nearly sevenfold lower rate of moderate to severe post-ERCP pancreatitis when they received rectal indomethacin (P = .001).

Treatment did not affect the chances of perforation and did not cause anaphylaxis, but was tied to a slightly higher rate of postprocedural gastrointestinal bleeding among sphincterotomy patients (0.65% with treatment versus 0.45% without; P = .52). However, sphincterotomy patients were much less likely to develop pancreatitis when they received rectal indomethacin than when they did not (0% and 9.58% of patients, respectively; P = .003).

“The majority of ERCPs were performed by experienced endoscopists at a tertiary care center, which may have limited the effects of variable procedural skills on the risk of PEP,” the researchers said. “Therefore, generalizability of our findings to other populations may be limited. However, it should be noted that the overall PEP rate in both the unexposed and indomethacin groups was fairly low and similar to large community-based estimates, suggesting that our overall patient population was of similar overall risk.” The study was not powered to assess the combined effects of rectal indomethacin and pancreatic duct stents, they noted.

The investigators reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.

A single, 100-mg rectal dose of indomethacin cut the odds of moderate to severe pancreatitis after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) by 85% in a single-center retrospective study of more than 4,000 patients reported in the August issue of Gastroenterology.

The effect extended to low-risk patients and those with malignant biliary obstruction, who make up the majority of ERCP patients in community practice, said Nikhil R. Thiruvengadam, MD, and his associates at the University of Pennsylvania. “Usage of rectal indomethacin in current clinical practice is low, as most endoscopists outside of referral centers perform ERCP for indications that are considered low-risk for PEP [post-ERCP pancreatitis], and until now, there were no data to support a benefit of rectal NSAIDs in this population,” they wrote in Gastroenterology. Their “real-world analysis” clearly shows the benefits of rectal indomethacin in low-risk patients and supports its increased use after ERCP, they added.

 

Pancreatitis, the most common complication of ERCP, affected 2%-9% of patients in prior studies and costs about $200 million in the United States annually, the investigators noted. Pancreatic duct stents help prevent post-ERCP pancreatitis, but require experience to place and have their own complications that limit their use in low-risk patients. Past studies of rectal indomethacin after ERCP reported mixed results and mainly focused on high-risk patients, leaving questions about whether to routinely use this NSAID after ERCP, said the researchers (Gastroenterology. 2016 May 20. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2016.04.048). Their study included 4,017 patients who underwent ERCP at the University of Pennsylvania between 2009 and 2015. From 2012 onward, nearly all patients received 100 mg rectal indomethacin immediately after the duodenoscope was withdrawn. This indomethacin group included 2,007 patients, while 2,010 patients in the study did not receive rectal indomethacin. In all, 95 (4.73%) untreated patients developed post-ERCP pancreatitis, compared with only 40 (1.99%) patients who received indomethacin, for a 65% reduction in the odds of post-ERCP pancreatitis (odds ratio, 0.35; 95% confidence interval, 0.24-0.51; P less than .001). Rectal indomethacin also led to an 83% drop in the odds of moderate to severe post-ERCP pancreatitis (OR, 0.17; 95% CI, 0.09-0.32; P less than .001) and showed very similar protective effects for patients with malignant obstruction (OR, 0.35; 95% CI, 0.17-0.75; P less than .001] and 0.20; 95% CI, 0.07-0.63; P less than 0.001, respectively).

Rectal indomethacin was particularly beneficial for patients with malignant obstruction and pancreatic adenocarcinoma, the investigators noted. Such patients had post-ERCP rates of 2.31% when they received rectal indomethacin and 7.53% otherwise (P less than .001). They also had a nearly sevenfold lower rate of moderate to severe post-ERCP pancreatitis when they received rectal indomethacin (P = .001).

Treatment did not affect the chances of perforation and did not cause anaphylaxis, but was tied to a slightly higher rate of postprocedural gastrointestinal bleeding among sphincterotomy patients (0.65% with treatment versus 0.45% without; P = .52). However, sphincterotomy patients were much less likely to develop pancreatitis when they received rectal indomethacin than when they did not (0% and 9.58% of patients, respectively; P = .003).

“The majority of ERCPs were performed by experienced endoscopists at a tertiary care center, which may have limited the effects of variable procedural skills on the risk of PEP,” the researchers said. “Therefore, generalizability of our findings to other populations may be limited. However, it should be noted that the overall PEP rate in both the unexposed and indomethacin groups was fairly low and similar to large community-based estimates, suggesting that our overall patient population was of similar overall risk.” The study was not powered to assess the combined effects of rectal indomethacin and pancreatic duct stents, they noted.

The investigators reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Rectal indomethacin cut odds of post-ERCP pancreatitis in real-world study
Display Headline
Rectal indomethacin cut odds of post-ERCP pancreatitis in real-world study
Sections
Article Source

FROM GASTROENTEROLOGY

Disallow All Ads
Alternative CME
Vitals

Key clinical point: A single 100-mg rectal dose of indomethacin given immediately after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography significantly reduced the odds of postprocedural pancreatitis, including in low-risk patients and those with malignant obstruction.

Major finding: The odds of pancreatitis were 65% lower when patients received rectal indomethacin than otherwise.

Data source: A single-center retrospective cohort study of 4,017 patients undergoing ERCP.

Disclosures: The investigators reported no funding sources and had no disclosures.

Inhibiting integrin-mediated activation might help treat, reverse chronic pancreatitis

Proof of effect in ‘more robust’ models needed
Article Type
Changed
Fri, 06/23/2017 - 14:01
Display Headline
Inhibiting integrin-mediated activation might help treat, reverse chronic pancreatitis

Integrins that bind arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) activated stellate cells in the pancreas, inducing pancreatic fibrogenesis in mice, researchers reported in the July issue of Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

“Small-molecule antagonists of this interaction might be developed for the treatment of pancreatic fibrotic diseases,” wrote Dr. Barbara Ulmasov and her associates at Saint Louis University.

 

Cytokine transforming growth factor beta, or TGFB, plays a “central” role in the activation of pancreatic stellate cells and the promotion of fibrogenesis, both in the pancreas and in other organs, the investigators noted. Because latent TGFB is “abundantly present” in the pancreas and most other tissues, it might be more important to control the activation of TGFB than its expression, they added. Studies of other organs have shown that TGFB is activated when integrins of the av family bind the RGD sequence, but no one had determined whether this was true for pancreatic fibrogenesis, Dr. Ulmasov and her associates asserted (Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2016 Mar 16. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2016.03.004).

Therefore, they repeatedly injected female C57BL/6 mice with cerulein to induce pancreatic fibrogenesis, and gave a group of control mice sterile saline instead. The mice then received continuous infusions of a small molecule called CWHM-12, which is an antagonist of RGD-integrin that is known to prevent both pulmonary and hepatic fibrosis in mice. After euthanizing the mice, the researchers measured pancreatic parenchymal atrophy, fibrosis, and activation of pancreatic stellate cells. They also studied TGFB activation in an established line of pancreatic stellate cells from rats.

Pancreatic stellate cells expressed messenger RNAs encoding RGD-binding integrins, the investigators found. The mice that received cerulein had higher levels of these integrins than the mice that received saline, and the cerulein group also had more disrupted acinar cell architecture, tubular complexes, and infiltrations of inflammatory cells. Mice that received prophylactic CWHM-12 had only somewhat less acinar cell loss and atrophy than the control mice, and had similar levels of inflammatory cell infiltration, but had “dramatically” lower levels of pancreatic fibrosis, the researchers said. Even if mice received CWHM-12 several days after starting cerulein, they still had less fibrosis and activation of TGFB than if they received saline, they noted.

The established line of pancreatic stellate cells “could robustly activate endogenously produced TGFB,” the investigators also reported. Furthermore, CWHM-12 “potently blocked TGFB activation,” unlike the control compound. Taken together, the findings illustrate the “critical role of RGD-binding integrins in chronic pancreatitis, and the promising potential to arrest or possibly even reverse pancreatic fibrosis using a pharmacologic approach to inhibiting integrin-mediated TGFB activation,” the researchers concluded.

The National Pancreas Foundation and the Frank R. Burton Memorial Fund supported the study. Dr. Ulmasov had no disclosures. Three coinvestigators reported being consultants and/or holding equity in Integrin Therapeutics, Nimbus Therapeutics, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Janssen, Mitsubishi Tanabe, Conatus, and Scholar Rock.

Body

Integrins are transmembrane proteins that organize epithelial cells and transmit signals from the tissue matrix. These proteins consist of two subunits that partner to form more than 20 specific combinations, are induced upon tissue injury, and act as signaling molecules that mediate inflammatory and wound-healing responses. The utility of targeting integrins has been established by drugs such as vedolizumab, which targets specific integrins to dampen injury in inflammatory bowel disease.

 

Dr. Chuhan Chung

Specific integrins also mediate profibrotic responses by activating TGF-beta, the major fibrogenic cytokine. An arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) integrin-binding motif found on the TGF-beta molecule triggers this activation upon interaction with specific integrins. Blocking the RGD-integrin interaction reduces fibrosis in multiple organs including the lung, liver, and kidney.

In the current issue of Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Ulmasov et al. report on the use of a synthetic peptide (CWHM-12) in a model of chronic pancreatitis. This peptide mimetic antagonizes the RGD interaction with integrins, thereby limiting TGF-beta activation. Using a cerulein-induced pancreatic fibrosis model, the authors demonstrated that CWHM-12 inhibits pancreatic stellate cell (PSC) activation and generation of active TGF-beta. CWHM-12 suppressed fibrosis when administered prior to cerulein injection, and to a lesser extent, during the course of generating fibrosis. The alpha-v-beta1 integrin was identified as a critical integrin and was expressed at high levels in the murine pancreas, primary PSCs, and further in cerulein-induced pancreatitis.

 

Dr. Fred Gorelick

Limitations of the current study warrant comment. The most obvious is that this model does not generate true chronic pancreatitis, because unlike chronic pancreatitis, fibrosis resolves spontaneously. Proof of effect in more robust chronic pancreatitis models is needed. Off-target effects are also suggested by the finding that serum white blood counts were significantly higher with CWHM-12. Finally, the chronicity and unpredictability of human chronic pancreatitis make this preclinical study an early starting point for determining whether CWHM-12 has true “clinical legs.”

Dr. Chuhan Chung and Dr. Fred Gorelick are in the department of medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and the VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven.

Publications
Topics
Sections
Body

Integrins are transmembrane proteins that organize epithelial cells and transmit signals from the tissue matrix. These proteins consist of two subunits that partner to form more than 20 specific combinations, are induced upon tissue injury, and act as signaling molecules that mediate inflammatory and wound-healing responses. The utility of targeting integrins has been established by drugs such as vedolizumab, which targets specific integrins to dampen injury in inflammatory bowel disease.

 

Dr. Chuhan Chung

Specific integrins also mediate profibrotic responses by activating TGF-beta, the major fibrogenic cytokine. An arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) integrin-binding motif found on the TGF-beta molecule triggers this activation upon interaction with specific integrins. Blocking the RGD-integrin interaction reduces fibrosis in multiple organs including the lung, liver, and kidney.

In the current issue of Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Ulmasov et al. report on the use of a synthetic peptide (CWHM-12) in a model of chronic pancreatitis. This peptide mimetic antagonizes the RGD interaction with integrins, thereby limiting TGF-beta activation. Using a cerulein-induced pancreatic fibrosis model, the authors demonstrated that CWHM-12 inhibits pancreatic stellate cell (PSC) activation and generation of active TGF-beta. CWHM-12 suppressed fibrosis when administered prior to cerulein injection, and to a lesser extent, during the course of generating fibrosis. The alpha-v-beta1 integrin was identified as a critical integrin and was expressed at high levels in the murine pancreas, primary PSCs, and further in cerulein-induced pancreatitis.

 

Dr. Fred Gorelick

Limitations of the current study warrant comment. The most obvious is that this model does not generate true chronic pancreatitis, because unlike chronic pancreatitis, fibrosis resolves spontaneously. Proof of effect in more robust chronic pancreatitis models is needed. Off-target effects are also suggested by the finding that serum white blood counts were significantly higher with CWHM-12. Finally, the chronicity and unpredictability of human chronic pancreatitis make this preclinical study an early starting point for determining whether CWHM-12 has true “clinical legs.”

Dr. Chuhan Chung and Dr. Fred Gorelick are in the department of medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and the VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven.

Body

Integrins are transmembrane proteins that organize epithelial cells and transmit signals from the tissue matrix. These proteins consist of two subunits that partner to form more than 20 specific combinations, are induced upon tissue injury, and act as signaling molecules that mediate inflammatory and wound-healing responses. The utility of targeting integrins has been established by drugs such as vedolizumab, which targets specific integrins to dampen injury in inflammatory bowel disease.

 

Dr. Chuhan Chung

Specific integrins also mediate profibrotic responses by activating TGF-beta, the major fibrogenic cytokine. An arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) integrin-binding motif found on the TGF-beta molecule triggers this activation upon interaction with specific integrins. Blocking the RGD-integrin interaction reduces fibrosis in multiple organs including the lung, liver, and kidney.

In the current issue of Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Ulmasov et al. report on the use of a synthetic peptide (CWHM-12) in a model of chronic pancreatitis. This peptide mimetic antagonizes the RGD interaction with integrins, thereby limiting TGF-beta activation. Using a cerulein-induced pancreatic fibrosis model, the authors demonstrated that CWHM-12 inhibits pancreatic stellate cell (PSC) activation and generation of active TGF-beta. CWHM-12 suppressed fibrosis when administered prior to cerulein injection, and to a lesser extent, during the course of generating fibrosis. The alpha-v-beta1 integrin was identified as a critical integrin and was expressed at high levels in the murine pancreas, primary PSCs, and further in cerulein-induced pancreatitis.

 

Dr. Fred Gorelick

Limitations of the current study warrant comment. The most obvious is that this model does not generate true chronic pancreatitis, because unlike chronic pancreatitis, fibrosis resolves spontaneously. Proof of effect in more robust chronic pancreatitis models is needed. Off-target effects are also suggested by the finding that serum white blood counts were significantly higher with CWHM-12. Finally, the chronicity and unpredictability of human chronic pancreatitis make this preclinical study an early starting point for determining whether CWHM-12 has true “clinical legs.”

Dr. Chuhan Chung and Dr. Fred Gorelick are in the department of medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and the VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven.

Title
Proof of effect in ‘more robust’ models needed
Proof of effect in ‘more robust’ models needed

Integrins that bind arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) activated stellate cells in the pancreas, inducing pancreatic fibrogenesis in mice, researchers reported in the July issue of Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

“Small-molecule antagonists of this interaction might be developed for the treatment of pancreatic fibrotic diseases,” wrote Dr. Barbara Ulmasov and her associates at Saint Louis University.

 

Cytokine transforming growth factor beta, or TGFB, plays a “central” role in the activation of pancreatic stellate cells and the promotion of fibrogenesis, both in the pancreas and in other organs, the investigators noted. Because latent TGFB is “abundantly present” in the pancreas and most other tissues, it might be more important to control the activation of TGFB than its expression, they added. Studies of other organs have shown that TGFB is activated when integrins of the av family bind the RGD sequence, but no one had determined whether this was true for pancreatic fibrogenesis, Dr. Ulmasov and her associates asserted (Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2016 Mar 16. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2016.03.004).

Therefore, they repeatedly injected female C57BL/6 mice with cerulein to induce pancreatic fibrogenesis, and gave a group of control mice sterile saline instead. The mice then received continuous infusions of a small molecule called CWHM-12, which is an antagonist of RGD-integrin that is known to prevent both pulmonary and hepatic fibrosis in mice. After euthanizing the mice, the researchers measured pancreatic parenchymal atrophy, fibrosis, and activation of pancreatic stellate cells. They also studied TGFB activation in an established line of pancreatic stellate cells from rats.

Pancreatic stellate cells expressed messenger RNAs encoding RGD-binding integrins, the investigators found. The mice that received cerulein had higher levels of these integrins than the mice that received saline, and the cerulein group also had more disrupted acinar cell architecture, tubular complexes, and infiltrations of inflammatory cells. Mice that received prophylactic CWHM-12 had only somewhat less acinar cell loss and atrophy than the control mice, and had similar levels of inflammatory cell infiltration, but had “dramatically” lower levels of pancreatic fibrosis, the researchers said. Even if mice received CWHM-12 several days after starting cerulein, they still had less fibrosis and activation of TGFB than if they received saline, they noted.

The established line of pancreatic stellate cells “could robustly activate endogenously produced TGFB,” the investigators also reported. Furthermore, CWHM-12 “potently blocked TGFB activation,” unlike the control compound. Taken together, the findings illustrate the “critical role of RGD-binding integrins in chronic pancreatitis, and the promising potential to arrest or possibly even reverse pancreatic fibrosis using a pharmacologic approach to inhibiting integrin-mediated TGFB activation,” the researchers concluded.

The National Pancreas Foundation and the Frank R. Burton Memorial Fund supported the study. Dr. Ulmasov had no disclosures. Three coinvestigators reported being consultants and/or holding equity in Integrin Therapeutics, Nimbus Therapeutics, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Janssen, Mitsubishi Tanabe, Conatus, and Scholar Rock.

Integrins that bind arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) activated stellate cells in the pancreas, inducing pancreatic fibrogenesis in mice, researchers reported in the July issue of Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

“Small-molecule antagonists of this interaction might be developed for the treatment of pancreatic fibrotic diseases,” wrote Dr. Barbara Ulmasov and her associates at Saint Louis University.

 

Cytokine transforming growth factor beta, or TGFB, plays a “central” role in the activation of pancreatic stellate cells and the promotion of fibrogenesis, both in the pancreas and in other organs, the investigators noted. Because latent TGFB is “abundantly present” in the pancreas and most other tissues, it might be more important to control the activation of TGFB than its expression, they added. Studies of other organs have shown that TGFB is activated when integrins of the av family bind the RGD sequence, but no one had determined whether this was true for pancreatic fibrogenesis, Dr. Ulmasov and her associates asserted (Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2016 Mar 16. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2016.03.004).

Therefore, they repeatedly injected female C57BL/6 mice with cerulein to induce pancreatic fibrogenesis, and gave a group of control mice sterile saline instead. The mice then received continuous infusions of a small molecule called CWHM-12, which is an antagonist of RGD-integrin that is known to prevent both pulmonary and hepatic fibrosis in mice. After euthanizing the mice, the researchers measured pancreatic parenchymal atrophy, fibrosis, and activation of pancreatic stellate cells. They also studied TGFB activation in an established line of pancreatic stellate cells from rats.

Pancreatic stellate cells expressed messenger RNAs encoding RGD-binding integrins, the investigators found. The mice that received cerulein had higher levels of these integrins than the mice that received saline, and the cerulein group also had more disrupted acinar cell architecture, tubular complexes, and infiltrations of inflammatory cells. Mice that received prophylactic CWHM-12 had only somewhat less acinar cell loss and atrophy than the control mice, and had similar levels of inflammatory cell infiltration, but had “dramatically” lower levels of pancreatic fibrosis, the researchers said. Even if mice received CWHM-12 several days after starting cerulein, they still had less fibrosis and activation of TGFB than if they received saline, they noted.

The established line of pancreatic stellate cells “could robustly activate endogenously produced TGFB,” the investigators also reported. Furthermore, CWHM-12 “potently blocked TGFB activation,” unlike the control compound. Taken together, the findings illustrate the “critical role of RGD-binding integrins in chronic pancreatitis, and the promising potential to arrest or possibly even reverse pancreatic fibrosis using a pharmacologic approach to inhibiting integrin-mediated TGFB activation,” the researchers concluded.

The National Pancreas Foundation and the Frank R. Burton Memorial Fund supported the study. Dr. Ulmasov had no disclosures. Three coinvestigators reported being consultants and/or holding equity in Integrin Therapeutics, Nimbus Therapeutics, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Janssen, Mitsubishi Tanabe, Conatus, and Scholar Rock.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Inhibiting integrin-mediated activation might help treat, reverse chronic pancreatitis
Display Headline
Inhibiting integrin-mediated activation might help treat, reverse chronic pancreatitis
Sections
Article Source

FROM CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY

Disallow All Ads
Alternative CME
Vitals

Key clinical point: Small molecules that inhibit the interaction between integrins and RGD (arginine-glycine-aspartic acid) might effectively treat chronic fibrosing pancreatic diseases.

Major finding: Continuous infusion with an active RGD peptidomimetic reduced atrophy and loss of pancreatic acinar cells and helped prevent pancreatic fibrosis, activation of pancreatic stellate cells, and expression of genes regulated by cytokine transforming growth factor beta.

Data source: A study of C57BL/6 female mice with chronic pancreatitis induced by repeated administration of cerulein.

Disclosures: The National Pancreas Foundation and the Frank R. Burton Memorial Fund supported the study. Dr. Ulmasov had no disclosures. Three coinvestigators reported being consultants and/or holding equity in Integrin Therapeutics, Nimbus Therapeutics, Bristol Myers Squibb, Janssen, Mitsubishi Tanabe, Conatus, and Scholar Rock.

Persistent SIRS, leukocytosis linked to unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 01/02/2019 - 09:35
Display Headline
Persistent SIRS, leukocytosis linked to unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis

SAN DIEGO – Patients who have persistent leukocytosis (greater than 12 x 109 white blood cells per liter) or persistent systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) on the day of scheduled cholecystectomy may have unrecognized pancreatic necrosis, which increases the risk of postsurgical organ failure and infected necrosis, Dr. Wilson Kwong reported.

For these patients, “we recommend performing a contrast-enhanced CT scan on day 4 or 5 to reassess for necrosis,” Dr. Kwong of the gastroenterology department at the University California, San Diego, said in an interview. “Patients who have necrosis should undergo interval cholecystectomy instead, while those without necrosis are likely safe to proceed with laparoscopic cholecystectomy,” he added.

 

Guidelines recommend same-admission cholecystectomy for mild acute gallstone pancreatitis, although this approach will send some patients with unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis to surgery, “with unknown consequences,” Dr. Kwong said at the annual Digestive Diseases Week.

To better understand presurgical predictors of necrotizing pancreatitis, Dr. Kwong and his coauthor, Dr. Santhi Swaroop Vege of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., studied 46 Mayo Clinic patients with apparent mild acute gallstone pancreatitis who in fact had necrotizing pancreatitis diagnosed during same-admission laparoscopic cholecystectomies (SALCs).

The most frequent characteristics of patients with unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis included persistent SIRS (area under the curve, 0.96) and persistent leukocytosis (AUC, 0.92) on the day of cholecystectomy (both P less than .0001). However, 82% of patients with unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis met criteria for SIRS by their second day in the hospital, with SIRS continuing until the day of planned cholecystectomy.

Next, the investigators compared the SALC patients with 48 patients who had necrotizing pancreatitis, but did not undergo SALC. In all, 24% of SALC patients developed new organ failure, compared with none of the comparison group (P = .0003). The SALC patients also had nearly double the rate of culture-confirmed infected necrosis (52% vs. 27%, P = .02), and stayed about 1.5 days longer in the hospital (26 vs. 24.5 days, P = .049). The chances of undergoing an intervention for necrotizing pancreatitis, conversion to open cholecystectomy, or death were slightly higher for SALC patients, compared with controls, but none of these differences reached statistical significance. Two SALC patients (4%) died, compared with 2% of patients who did not undergo SALC, the investigators reported.

The researchers also compared the SALC patients with a second control group of 48 patients who were later confirmed during SALC to have true mild acute gallstone pancreatitis. Fully 91% of patients with necrotizing pancreatitis met criteria for SIRS on the day of surgery, compared with none of the patients with acute gallstone pancreatitis (P less than .0001). Furthermore, all 11 patients with necrotizing pancreatitis and available test results had persistent leukocytosis on the day of surgery, compared with only 21% of the gallstone pancreatitis group (P less than .0001).

Finally, the researchers looked at the magnitude of the problem of unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis. “From January 2014 to August 2015, 102 consecutive patients were directly admitted to Mayo Clinic, Rochester, with acute gallstone pancreatitis and underwent SALC,” they reported. “After laparoscopic cholecystectomy, seven of these patients were discovered to have previously unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis, thus giving a 7% occurrence rate for this complication during this recent time period.” Accurately identifying patients with emerging necrotizing pancreatitis is crucial to help prevent potentially severe complications after SALC, they emphasized.

Dr. Kwong had no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Vege disclosed consulting fees and other compensation from Takeda and several other companies.

Click for Credit Link
Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Legacy Keywords
systemic inflammatory response syndrome, SIRS, leukocytosis, unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis
Sections
Click for Credit Link
Click for Credit Link
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

SAN DIEGO – Patients who have persistent leukocytosis (greater than 12 x 109 white blood cells per liter) or persistent systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) on the day of scheduled cholecystectomy may have unrecognized pancreatic necrosis, which increases the risk of postsurgical organ failure and infected necrosis, Dr. Wilson Kwong reported.

For these patients, “we recommend performing a contrast-enhanced CT scan on day 4 or 5 to reassess for necrosis,” Dr. Kwong of the gastroenterology department at the University California, San Diego, said in an interview. “Patients who have necrosis should undergo interval cholecystectomy instead, while those without necrosis are likely safe to proceed with laparoscopic cholecystectomy,” he added.

 

Guidelines recommend same-admission cholecystectomy for mild acute gallstone pancreatitis, although this approach will send some patients with unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis to surgery, “with unknown consequences,” Dr. Kwong said at the annual Digestive Diseases Week.

To better understand presurgical predictors of necrotizing pancreatitis, Dr. Kwong and his coauthor, Dr. Santhi Swaroop Vege of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., studied 46 Mayo Clinic patients with apparent mild acute gallstone pancreatitis who in fact had necrotizing pancreatitis diagnosed during same-admission laparoscopic cholecystectomies (SALCs).

The most frequent characteristics of patients with unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis included persistent SIRS (area under the curve, 0.96) and persistent leukocytosis (AUC, 0.92) on the day of cholecystectomy (both P less than .0001). However, 82% of patients with unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis met criteria for SIRS by their second day in the hospital, with SIRS continuing until the day of planned cholecystectomy.

Next, the investigators compared the SALC patients with 48 patients who had necrotizing pancreatitis, but did not undergo SALC. In all, 24% of SALC patients developed new organ failure, compared with none of the comparison group (P = .0003). The SALC patients also had nearly double the rate of culture-confirmed infected necrosis (52% vs. 27%, P = .02), and stayed about 1.5 days longer in the hospital (26 vs. 24.5 days, P = .049). The chances of undergoing an intervention for necrotizing pancreatitis, conversion to open cholecystectomy, or death were slightly higher for SALC patients, compared with controls, but none of these differences reached statistical significance. Two SALC patients (4%) died, compared with 2% of patients who did not undergo SALC, the investigators reported.

The researchers also compared the SALC patients with a second control group of 48 patients who were later confirmed during SALC to have true mild acute gallstone pancreatitis. Fully 91% of patients with necrotizing pancreatitis met criteria for SIRS on the day of surgery, compared with none of the patients with acute gallstone pancreatitis (P less than .0001). Furthermore, all 11 patients with necrotizing pancreatitis and available test results had persistent leukocytosis on the day of surgery, compared with only 21% of the gallstone pancreatitis group (P less than .0001).

Finally, the researchers looked at the magnitude of the problem of unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis. “From January 2014 to August 2015, 102 consecutive patients were directly admitted to Mayo Clinic, Rochester, with acute gallstone pancreatitis and underwent SALC,” they reported. “After laparoscopic cholecystectomy, seven of these patients were discovered to have previously unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis, thus giving a 7% occurrence rate for this complication during this recent time period.” Accurately identifying patients with emerging necrotizing pancreatitis is crucial to help prevent potentially severe complications after SALC, they emphasized.

Dr. Kwong had no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Vege disclosed consulting fees and other compensation from Takeda and several other companies.

SAN DIEGO – Patients who have persistent leukocytosis (greater than 12 x 109 white blood cells per liter) or persistent systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) on the day of scheduled cholecystectomy may have unrecognized pancreatic necrosis, which increases the risk of postsurgical organ failure and infected necrosis, Dr. Wilson Kwong reported.

For these patients, “we recommend performing a contrast-enhanced CT scan on day 4 or 5 to reassess for necrosis,” Dr. Kwong of the gastroenterology department at the University California, San Diego, said in an interview. “Patients who have necrosis should undergo interval cholecystectomy instead, while those without necrosis are likely safe to proceed with laparoscopic cholecystectomy,” he added.

 

Guidelines recommend same-admission cholecystectomy for mild acute gallstone pancreatitis, although this approach will send some patients with unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis to surgery, “with unknown consequences,” Dr. Kwong said at the annual Digestive Diseases Week.

To better understand presurgical predictors of necrotizing pancreatitis, Dr. Kwong and his coauthor, Dr. Santhi Swaroop Vege of the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., studied 46 Mayo Clinic patients with apparent mild acute gallstone pancreatitis who in fact had necrotizing pancreatitis diagnosed during same-admission laparoscopic cholecystectomies (SALCs).

The most frequent characteristics of patients with unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis included persistent SIRS (area under the curve, 0.96) and persistent leukocytosis (AUC, 0.92) on the day of cholecystectomy (both P less than .0001). However, 82% of patients with unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis met criteria for SIRS by their second day in the hospital, with SIRS continuing until the day of planned cholecystectomy.

Next, the investigators compared the SALC patients with 48 patients who had necrotizing pancreatitis, but did not undergo SALC. In all, 24% of SALC patients developed new organ failure, compared with none of the comparison group (P = .0003). The SALC patients also had nearly double the rate of culture-confirmed infected necrosis (52% vs. 27%, P = .02), and stayed about 1.5 days longer in the hospital (26 vs. 24.5 days, P = .049). The chances of undergoing an intervention for necrotizing pancreatitis, conversion to open cholecystectomy, or death were slightly higher for SALC patients, compared with controls, but none of these differences reached statistical significance. Two SALC patients (4%) died, compared with 2% of patients who did not undergo SALC, the investigators reported.

The researchers also compared the SALC patients with a second control group of 48 patients who were later confirmed during SALC to have true mild acute gallstone pancreatitis. Fully 91% of patients with necrotizing pancreatitis met criteria for SIRS on the day of surgery, compared with none of the patients with acute gallstone pancreatitis (P less than .0001). Furthermore, all 11 patients with necrotizing pancreatitis and available test results had persistent leukocytosis on the day of surgery, compared with only 21% of the gallstone pancreatitis group (P less than .0001).

Finally, the researchers looked at the magnitude of the problem of unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis. “From January 2014 to August 2015, 102 consecutive patients were directly admitted to Mayo Clinic, Rochester, with acute gallstone pancreatitis and underwent SALC,” they reported. “After laparoscopic cholecystectomy, seven of these patients were discovered to have previously unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis, thus giving a 7% occurrence rate for this complication during this recent time period.” Accurately identifying patients with emerging necrotizing pancreatitis is crucial to help prevent potentially severe complications after SALC, they emphasized.

Dr. Kwong had no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Vege disclosed consulting fees and other compensation from Takeda and several other companies.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Persistent SIRS, leukocytosis linked to unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis
Display Headline
Persistent SIRS, leukocytosis linked to unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis
Legacy Keywords
systemic inflammatory response syndrome, SIRS, leukocytosis, unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis
Legacy Keywords
systemic inflammatory response syndrome, SIRS, leukocytosis, unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis
Click for Credit Status
Active
Sections
Article Source

AT DDW® 2016

Disallow All Ads
Alternative CME
Vitals

Key clinical point: Persistent leukocytosis (greater than 12 x 109 white blood cells per liter) and SIRS on the day of scheduled laparoscopic cholecystectomy may indicate unrecognized necrotizing pancreatitis.

Major finding: The highest areas under the curve were for SIRS (0.96), followed by a WBC at or above 12 x 109/L (0.92; both P less than .0001).

Data source: A single-center retrospective study of 46 patients with unrecognized pancreatitis who underwent same-admission laparoscopic cholecystectomy, 48 patients with necrotizing pancreatitis who did not undergo SALC, and 48 patients with true mild acute gallstone pancreatitis.

Disclosures: Dr. Kwong had no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Vege disclosed consulting fees and other compensation from Takeda and several other companies.

Surveillance finds pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ at resectable stage

Progress in earlier detection of pancreatic cancer
Article Type
Changed
Wed, 05/26/2021 - 13:54
Display Headline
Surveillance finds pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ at resectable stage

Surveillance of CDNK2A mutation carriers detected most pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ (PDAC) at a resectable stage, while the surveillance benefit was lower for those with familial prostate cancer.

Among 178 CDKN2A mutation carriers, PDAC was detected in 13 (7.3%), 9 of whom underwent surgery. Compared with previously reported rates of 15%-20% for symptomatic PDAC, this 70% resection rate represents a substantial increase. The 5-year survival rate of 24% for screen-detected PDAC was higher than 4%-7% reported for symptomatic sporadic PDAC. Among individuals with familial prostate cancer (FPC), 13 of 214 individuals (6.1%) underwent surgery, but with a higher proportion of precursor lesions detected, just four high-risk lesions (1.9% of screened FPC patients) were removed.

 

Whether surveillance improved prognosis for FPC families was difficult to determine, according to the investigators. The yield of PDAC was low at 0.9%, as was the yield of relevant precursor lesions (grade 3 PanIN and high-grade IPMN) at 1.9%.

“However, if surgical removal of multifocal grade 2 PanIN and multifocal BD-IPMNs is regarded as beneficial, the diagnostic yield increases to 3.7% (eight of 214 patients), and surveillance of FPC might also be considered effective,” wrote Dr. Hans Vasen, professor in the department of gastroenterology and hepatology at the Leiden University Medical Center, the Netherlands, and colleagues. “The value of surveillance of FPC is still not clear, and the main effect seems to be prevention of PDAC by removal of” precursor lesions, they added (J Clin Oncol. 2016 Apr 25. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2015.64.0730).

The retrospective evaluation of an ongoing prospective follow-up study included 411 high-risk individuals: 178 with CDKN2A mutations, 214 with familial pancreatic cancer, and 19 with BRCA1/2 or PALB2 mutations. The study was conducted at three expert centers in Marburg, Germany; Leiden, the Netherlands; and Madrid.

In the BRCA1/2 and PALB2 mutation cohort, one individual (3.8%) with a BRCA2 mutation developed PDAC and underwent surgery; 17 months after the surgery this patient died of liver metastasis. Two others underwent surgery for cystic lesions and are in good health at 10 and 21 months after surgery.

In the cohort of CDKN2A mutation carriers, the mean age at the start of surveillance was 56 years (range, 37-75) and the mean follow-up time was 53 months (range, 0-169): in total, 866 MRIs and 106 endoscopic ultrasounds were conducted. In the FPC group, the mean age was 48 years (range, 27-81), and the mean follow up was 2.8 years (range, 0-10.8): 618 MRIs and 402 endoscopic ultrasounds were conducted. Among BRCA1/2 and PALB2 mutation carriers, the mean age was 52.6 years (range, 25-70), and the mean follow up was 32.7 months (range, 1-119).

Click for Credit Link
Body

Given the difficulty of detecting precursor lesions and distinguishing incipient neoplasia from lower grade or nonneoplastic cystic lesions, the authors of the accompanying study achieved impressive results in improving cancer outcomes among high-risk individuals.

Several strategies for earlier cancer detection can be gleaned from the study. Improved outcomes may depend on expert centers running the surveillance. The detection rate of 2%-7%, depending on the cohort studied and the surveillance protocol, may have room for improvement with better risk stratification and refined protocols for cost effectiveness. The age at the start of surveillance may be one place to start: the mean age of pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ detection was 53-68 years, depending on the center, and it may be possible to shift the starting age upward to improve yield.

The type of mutation conferring susceptibility may aid in risk stratification. For example, CDKN2A mutation carriers had a higher cancer rate (16%) than BRCA/PALB2 mutation carriers (5%). Other factors that could mitigate risk upward include diabetes, family history, and smoking history. A composite risk assessment could aid in identifying the highest-risk patients. Lastly, future studies are needed to determine which surveillance protocols are best. To make valid comparisons, several surveillance protocols must be tested.

These results impact not only high-risk individuals, but the general population as well. The data support that early detection improves outcomes and highlights the need for developing better biomarkers and tests for early detection of PDAC.

 

Dr. Teresa A. Brentnall is professor in the department of medicine, division of gastroenterology, University of Washington, Seattle. These remarks were part of an accompanying editorial (J Clin Oncol. 2016 Apr 25. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2015.64.0730).

Publications
Topics
Click for Credit Link
Click for Credit Link
Body

Given the difficulty of detecting precursor lesions and distinguishing incipient neoplasia from lower grade or nonneoplastic cystic lesions, the authors of the accompanying study achieved impressive results in improving cancer outcomes among high-risk individuals.

Several strategies for earlier cancer detection can be gleaned from the study. Improved outcomes may depend on expert centers running the surveillance. The detection rate of 2%-7%, depending on the cohort studied and the surveillance protocol, may have room for improvement with better risk stratification and refined protocols for cost effectiveness. The age at the start of surveillance may be one place to start: the mean age of pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ detection was 53-68 years, depending on the center, and it may be possible to shift the starting age upward to improve yield.

The type of mutation conferring susceptibility may aid in risk stratification. For example, CDKN2A mutation carriers had a higher cancer rate (16%) than BRCA/PALB2 mutation carriers (5%). Other factors that could mitigate risk upward include diabetes, family history, and smoking history. A composite risk assessment could aid in identifying the highest-risk patients. Lastly, future studies are needed to determine which surveillance protocols are best. To make valid comparisons, several surveillance protocols must be tested.

These results impact not only high-risk individuals, but the general population as well. The data support that early detection improves outcomes and highlights the need for developing better biomarkers and tests for early detection of PDAC.

 

Dr. Teresa A. Brentnall is professor in the department of medicine, division of gastroenterology, University of Washington, Seattle. These remarks were part of an accompanying editorial (J Clin Oncol. 2016 Apr 25. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2015.64.0730).

Body

Given the difficulty of detecting precursor lesions and distinguishing incipient neoplasia from lower grade or nonneoplastic cystic lesions, the authors of the accompanying study achieved impressive results in improving cancer outcomes among high-risk individuals.

Several strategies for earlier cancer detection can be gleaned from the study. Improved outcomes may depend on expert centers running the surveillance. The detection rate of 2%-7%, depending on the cohort studied and the surveillance protocol, may have room for improvement with better risk stratification and refined protocols for cost effectiveness. The age at the start of surveillance may be one place to start: the mean age of pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ detection was 53-68 years, depending on the center, and it may be possible to shift the starting age upward to improve yield.

The type of mutation conferring susceptibility may aid in risk stratification. For example, CDKN2A mutation carriers had a higher cancer rate (16%) than BRCA/PALB2 mutation carriers (5%). Other factors that could mitigate risk upward include diabetes, family history, and smoking history. A composite risk assessment could aid in identifying the highest-risk patients. Lastly, future studies are needed to determine which surveillance protocols are best. To make valid comparisons, several surveillance protocols must be tested.

These results impact not only high-risk individuals, but the general population as well. The data support that early detection improves outcomes and highlights the need for developing better biomarkers and tests for early detection of PDAC.

 

Dr. Teresa A. Brentnall is professor in the department of medicine, division of gastroenterology, University of Washington, Seattle. These remarks were part of an accompanying editorial (J Clin Oncol. 2016 Apr 25. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2015.64.0730).

Title
Progress in earlier detection of pancreatic cancer
Progress in earlier detection of pancreatic cancer

Surveillance of CDNK2A mutation carriers detected most pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ (PDAC) at a resectable stage, while the surveillance benefit was lower for those with familial prostate cancer.

Among 178 CDKN2A mutation carriers, PDAC was detected in 13 (7.3%), 9 of whom underwent surgery. Compared with previously reported rates of 15%-20% for symptomatic PDAC, this 70% resection rate represents a substantial increase. The 5-year survival rate of 24% for screen-detected PDAC was higher than 4%-7% reported for symptomatic sporadic PDAC. Among individuals with familial prostate cancer (FPC), 13 of 214 individuals (6.1%) underwent surgery, but with a higher proportion of precursor lesions detected, just four high-risk lesions (1.9% of screened FPC patients) were removed.

 

Whether surveillance improved prognosis for FPC families was difficult to determine, according to the investigators. The yield of PDAC was low at 0.9%, as was the yield of relevant precursor lesions (grade 3 PanIN and high-grade IPMN) at 1.9%.

“However, if surgical removal of multifocal grade 2 PanIN and multifocal BD-IPMNs is regarded as beneficial, the diagnostic yield increases to 3.7% (eight of 214 patients), and surveillance of FPC might also be considered effective,” wrote Dr. Hans Vasen, professor in the department of gastroenterology and hepatology at the Leiden University Medical Center, the Netherlands, and colleagues. “The value of surveillance of FPC is still not clear, and the main effect seems to be prevention of PDAC by removal of” precursor lesions, they added (J Clin Oncol. 2016 Apr 25. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2015.64.0730).

The retrospective evaluation of an ongoing prospective follow-up study included 411 high-risk individuals: 178 with CDKN2A mutations, 214 with familial pancreatic cancer, and 19 with BRCA1/2 or PALB2 mutations. The study was conducted at three expert centers in Marburg, Germany; Leiden, the Netherlands; and Madrid.

In the BRCA1/2 and PALB2 mutation cohort, one individual (3.8%) with a BRCA2 mutation developed PDAC and underwent surgery; 17 months after the surgery this patient died of liver metastasis. Two others underwent surgery for cystic lesions and are in good health at 10 and 21 months after surgery.

In the cohort of CDKN2A mutation carriers, the mean age at the start of surveillance was 56 years (range, 37-75) and the mean follow-up time was 53 months (range, 0-169): in total, 866 MRIs and 106 endoscopic ultrasounds were conducted. In the FPC group, the mean age was 48 years (range, 27-81), and the mean follow up was 2.8 years (range, 0-10.8): 618 MRIs and 402 endoscopic ultrasounds were conducted. Among BRCA1/2 and PALB2 mutation carriers, the mean age was 52.6 years (range, 25-70), and the mean follow up was 32.7 months (range, 1-119).

Surveillance of CDNK2A mutation carriers detected most pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ (PDAC) at a resectable stage, while the surveillance benefit was lower for those with familial prostate cancer.

Among 178 CDKN2A mutation carriers, PDAC was detected in 13 (7.3%), 9 of whom underwent surgery. Compared with previously reported rates of 15%-20% for symptomatic PDAC, this 70% resection rate represents a substantial increase. The 5-year survival rate of 24% for screen-detected PDAC was higher than 4%-7% reported for symptomatic sporadic PDAC. Among individuals with familial prostate cancer (FPC), 13 of 214 individuals (6.1%) underwent surgery, but with a higher proportion of precursor lesions detected, just four high-risk lesions (1.9% of screened FPC patients) were removed.

 

Whether surveillance improved prognosis for FPC families was difficult to determine, according to the investigators. The yield of PDAC was low at 0.9%, as was the yield of relevant precursor lesions (grade 3 PanIN and high-grade IPMN) at 1.9%.

“However, if surgical removal of multifocal grade 2 PanIN and multifocal BD-IPMNs is regarded as beneficial, the diagnostic yield increases to 3.7% (eight of 214 patients), and surveillance of FPC might also be considered effective,” wrote Dr. Hans Vasen, professor in the department of gastroenterology and hepatology at the Leiden University Medical Center, the Netherlands, and colleagues. “The value of surveillance of FPC is still not clear, and the main effect seems to be prevention of PDAC by removal of” precursor lesions, they added (J Clin Oncol. 2016 Apr 25. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2015.64.0730).

The retrospective evaluation of an ongoing prospective follow-up study included 411 high-risk individuals: 178 with CDKN2A mutations, 214 with familial pancreatic cancer, and 19 with BRCA1/2 or PALB2 mutations. The study was conducted at three expert centers in Marburg, Germany; Leiden, the Netherlands; and Madrid.

In the BRCA1/2 and PALB2 mutation cohort, one individual (3.8%) with a BRCA2 mutation developed PDAC and underwent surgery; 17 months after the surgery this patient died of liver metastasis. Two others underwent surgery for cystic lesions and are in good health at 10 and 21 months after surgery.

In the cohort of CDKN2A mutation carriers, the mean age at the start of surveillance was 56 years (range, 37-75) and the mean follow-up time was 53 months (range, 0-169): in total, 866 MRIs and 106 endoscopic ultrasounds were conducted. In the FPC group, the mean age was 48 years (range, 27-81), and the mean follow up was 2.8 years (range, 0-10.8): 618 MRIs and 402 endoscopic ultrasounds were conducted. Among BRCA1/2 and PALB2 mutation carriers, the mean age was 52.6 years (range, 25-70), and the mean follow up was 32.7 months (range, 1-119).

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Surveillance finds pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ at resectable stage
Display Headline
Surveillance finds pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ at resectable stage
Click for Credit Status
Active
Article Source

FROM THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY

Disallow All Ads
Alternative CME
Vitals

Key clinical point: Surveillance of high-risk individuals was relatively successful in detecting pancreatic ductal carcinoma in situ (PDAC) at a resectable stage.

Major finding: The detection rate in CDKN2A mutation carriers was 7.3% and the resection rate for screen-detected PDAC was 75%, compared with previous reports of 15%-20% for symptomatic PDAC; the PDAC detection rate in individuals with familial prostate cancer was much lower at 0.9%.

Data source: Evaluation of an ongoing prospective follow-up study at three European centers included 411 individuals: 178 with CDKN2A mutations, 214 with familial pancreatic cancer, and 19 with BRCA1/2 or PALB2 mutations.

Disclosures: Dr. Vasen and most coauthors reported having no disclosures. Five coauthors reported financial ties to industry sources.

VIDEO: Newer MRI hardware, software significantly better at detecting pancreatic cysts

Newer MRIs much better at detecting pancreatic cysts
Article Type
Changed
Fri, 01/18/2019 - 15:45
Display Headline
VIDEO: Newer MRI hardware, software significantly better at detecting pancreatic cysts

As magnetic resonance imaging technology continues to advance year after year, so does MRI’s ability to accurately detect pancreatic cysts, according to a new study published in the April issue of Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology (doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2015.08.038).

“To our knowledge, this is the first study to analyze the relationship between the technical improvements in imaging techniques (specifically, MRI) and the presence of incidentally found PCLs [pancreatic cystic lesions],” said the study authors, led by Dr. Michael B. Wallace of the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla.

 

 

Dr. Michael B. Wallace
Dr. Michael B. Wallace

Dr. Wallace and his coinvestigators launched this retrospective descriptive study selecting the first 50 consecutive abdominal MRI patients at the Jacksonville Mayo Clinic during January and February of each year from 2005 through 2014, for a total of 500 cases who met inclusion criteria included in the study. Patients were excluded if they had preexisting symptomatic or asymptomatic pancreatitis, either acute or chronic, pancreatic masses, pancreatic cysts, pancreatic surgery, pancreatic symptoms, or any pancreas-related indications found by MRI.

The clinic underwent periodic MRI updates over the course of the 10-year study, along with requisite software updates to “take advantage of the new hardware technology,” the study explains. Major hardware improvements, provided by Siemens Medical Solutions USA, were Symphony/Sonata, Espree/Avanto, and Aera/Skyra, while software updates corresponding to each hardware update were VA, VB, and VD, respectively.

 

 

SOURCE: AMERICAN GASTROENTEROLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

Furthermore, each software update had other, smaller upgrades, leading to a total of 20 combinations of MRI hardware and software on which MRIs were performed over the 10 years. Every MRI taken included “an axial and a coronal T2-weighted single-shot (HASTE) pulse sequence [with] TR 1400-1500 ms, TE 82-99 ms, and slice thickness 5-7 mm (gap, 0.5-0.7 mm).” Each MRI was analyzed by a pancreatic MRI specialist to find incidental cysts.

The number of patients found with pancreatic cysts increased incrementally from 2005 to 2014, with 2010 being the year with the highest number. A total of 208 subjects (41.6%) were found to have incidental cysts, but only 44 of these cases were discovered in the original MRI. The presence of cysts was associated with older age in patients who had them; only 20% of all subjects under 50 years of age had cysts, compared to 32.4% of those between 50 and 60 years, 54.9% of those between 60 and 70 years, and 61.5% of those over the age of 70 years (P less than .01).

Additionally, 56.4% of all subjects with diabetes (P less than .01), 59.0% of subjects with nonmelanoma skin cancer (P less than .03), and 58.1% of those with hepatocarcinoma (P less than .02) were also found to have cysts. Most striking, however, is that newer hardware and software permutations were able to detect cysts in 56.3% (Skyra) of patients who had them, compared with only 30.3% (Symphony) of patients who underwent MRI on older technology.

“The variable field strength” (1.5 T vs. 3 T) was not significantly related to the presence of PCLs,” Dr. Wallace and his coauthors concluded. “We believe this may be secondary to the lack of power of the analysis, because only 6% of the examinations were 3-T studies. Therefore, we speculate that this relationship may be confirmed if the number of 3-T studies increased.”

Males and females each made up roughly 50% of the study population, with a median age of 60 years and 85% being white. Additionally, 4% of subjects had a family history of pancreatic cancer, 12% had a personal history of solid organ transplant, and 53% had a personal history of smoking.

This study was funded by the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Wallace disclosed that he has received grant funding from Olympus, Boston Scientific, and Cosmo Pharmaceuticals, and travel support from Olympus. No other authors reported any financial disclosures.

dchitnis@frontlinemedcom.com

Body

The increasing prevalence of pancreatic cystic lesions on MRI scanning may provide an important opportunity for detection of early precursors of pancreatic cancer – or may represent just another insignificant incidental finding. What is the implication of a small asymptomatic cyst?

MRI scanning of the pancreas has revolutionized our ability to detect early cystic neoplasms of the pancreas. Pancreatic cysts appear as well-defined, small, round fluid-filled structures within the pancreas. The inner structures – such as septations, nodules, and adjacent masses – offer clues as to the type of cyst and the risk of malignancy. But the real strength of pancreatic MRI scanning is the ability to detect and portray small cysts and the adjacent main pancreatic duct.  

The size, number, and distribution of cysts over time can be tracked with MRI surveillance. By tracking the diameter of cysts and calculating the rate of growth of cysts, clinicians may be able to predict the development of malignancy in intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms.

How should these patients be managed clinically? Once a cyst has been identified, are clinicians obligated to notify the patient, monitor the cyst with an established surveillance program, or biopsy the cyst? If the cyst is very small and benign appearing, can the clinician ignore the finding and perhaps not notify the patient?  

Once again, we are watching dilemmas unfold as technology outstrips our understanding of diseases and their management. We are going to need some good correlations between imaging and tissue of pancreatic cystic lesions. In the meantime, it is important to reserve the use of pancreatic MRI scanning to high-risk patients or patients with CT scan abnormalities.

Dr. William R. Brugge, AGAF, is professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, and director, Pancreas Biliary Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, both in Boston. He is a consultant with Boston Scientific.

Publications
Topics
Legacy Keywords
MRI, hardware, software, technology, pancreatic, cysts
Sections
Body

The increasing prevalence of pancreatic cystic lesions on MRI scanning may provide an important opportunity for detection of early precursors of pancreatic cancer – or may represent just another insignificant incidental finding. What is the implication of a small asymptomatic cyst?

MRI scanning of the pancreas has revolutionized our ability to detect early cystic neoplasms of the pancreas. Pancreatic cysts appear as well-defined, small, round fluid-filled structures within the pancreas. The inner structures – such as septations, nodules, and adjacent masses – offer clues as to the type of cyst and the risk of malignancy. But the real strength of pancreatic MRI scanning is the ability to detect and portray small cysts and the adjacent main pancreatic duct.  

The size, number, and distribution of cysts over time can be tracked with MRI surveillance. By tracking the diameter of cysts and calculating the rate of growth of cysts, clinicians may be able to predict the development of malignancy in intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms.

How should these patients be managed clinically? Once a cyst has been identified, are clinicians obligated to notify the patient, monitor the cyst with an established surveillance program, or biopsy the cyst? If the cyst is very small and benign appearing, can the clinician ignore the finding and perhaps not notify the patient?  

Once again, we are watching dilemmas unfold as technology outstrips our understanding of diseases and their management. We are going to need some good correlations between imaging and tissue of pancreatic cystic lesions. In the meantime, it is important to reserve the use of pancreatic MRI scanning to high-risk patients or patients with CT scan abnormalities.

Dr. William R. Brugge, AGAF, is professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, and director, Pancreas Biliary Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, both in Boston. He is a consultant with Boston Scientific.

Body

The increasing prevalence of pancreatic cystic lesions on MRI scanning may provide an important opportunity for detection of early precursors of pancreatic cancer – or may represent just another insignificant incidental finding. What is the implication of a small asymptomatic cyst?

MRI scanning of the pancreas has revolutionized our ability to detect early cystic neoplasms of the pancreas. Pancreatic cysts appear as well-defined, small, round fluid-filled structures within the pancreas. The inner structures – such as septations, nodules, and adjacent masses – offer clues as to the type of cyst and the risk of malignancy. But the real strength of pancreatic MRI scanning is the ability to detect and portray small cysts and the adjacent main pancreatic duct.  

The size, number, and distribution of cysts over time can be tracked with MRI surveillance. By tracking the diameter of cysts and calculating the rate of growth of cysts, clinicians may be able to predict the development of malignancy in intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms.

How should these patients be managed clinically? Once a cyst has been identified, are clinicians obligated to notify the patient, monitor the cyst with an established surveillance program, or biopsy the cyst? If the cyst is very small and benign appearing, can the clinician ignore the finding and perhaps not notify the patient?  

Once again, we are watching dilemmas unfold as technology outstrips our understanding of diseases and their management. We are going to need some good correlations between imaging and tissue of pancreatic cystic lesions. In the meantime, it is important to reserve the use of pancreatic MRI scanning to high-risk patients or patients with CT scan abnormalities.

Dr. William R. Brugge, AGAF, is professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, and director, Pancreas Biliary Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, both in Boston. He is a consultant with Boston Scientific.

Title
Newer MRIs much better at detecting pancreatic cysts
Newer MRIs much better at detecting pancreatic cysts

As magnetic resonance imaging technology continues to advance year after year, so does MRI’s ability to accurately detect pancreatic cysts, according to a new study published in the April issue of Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology (doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2015.08.038).

“To our knowledge, this is the first study to analyze the relationship between the technical improvements in imaging techniques (specifically, MRI) and the presence of incidentally found PCLs [pancreatic cystic lesions],” said the study authors, led by Dr. Michael B. Wallace of the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla.

 

 

Dr. Michael B. Wallace
Dr. Michael B. Wallace

Dr. Wallace and his coinvestigators launched this retrospective descriptive study selecting the first 50 consecutive abdominal MRI patients at the Jacksonville Mayo Clinic during January and February of each year from 2005 through 2014, for a total of 500 cases who met inclusion criteria included in the study. Patients were excluded if they had preexisting symptomatic or asymptomatic pancreatitis, either acute or chronic, pancreatic masses, pancreatic cysts, pancreatic surgery, pancreatic symptoms, or any pancreas-related indications found by MRI.

The clinic underwent periodic MRI updates over the course of the 10-year study, along with requisite software updates to “take advantage of the new hardware technology,” the study explains. Major hardware improvements, provided by Siemens Medical Solutions USA, were Symphony/Sonata, Espree/Avanto, and Aera/Skyra, while software updates corresponding to each hardware update were VA, VB, and VD, respectively.

 

 

SOURCE: AMERICAN GASTROENTEROLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

Furthermore, each software update had other, smaller upgrades, leading to a total of 20 combinations of MRI hardware and software on which MRIs were performed over the 10 years. Every MRI taken included “an axial and a coronal T2-weighted single-shot (HASTE) pulse sequence [with] TR 1400-1500 ms, TE 82-99 ms, and slice thickness 5-7 mm (gap, 0.5-0.7 mm).” Each MRI was analyzed by a pancreatic MRI specialist to find incidental cysts.

The number of patients found with pancreatic cysts increased incrementally from 2005 to 2014, with 2010 being the year with the highest number. A total of 208 subjects (41.6%) were found to have incidental cysts, but only 44 of these cases were discovered in the original MRI. The presence of cysts was associated with older age in patients who had them; only 20% of all subjects under 50 years of age had cysts, compared to 32.4% of those between 50 and 60 years, 54.9% of those between 60 and 70 years, and 61.5% of those over the age of 70 years (P less than .01).

Additionally, 56.4% of all subjects with diabetes (P less than .01), 59.0% of subjects with nonmelanoma skin cancer (P less than .03), and 58.1% of those with hepatocarcinoma (P less than .02) were also found to have cysts. Most striking, however, is that newer hardware and software permutations were able to detect cysts in 56.3% (Skyra) of patients who had them, compared with only 30.3% (Symphony) of patients who underwent MRI on older technology.

“The variable field strength” (1.5 T vs. 3 T) was not significantly related to the presence of PCLs,” Dr. Wallace and his coauthors concluded. “We believe this may be secondary to the lack of power of the analysis, because only 6% of the examinations were 3-T studies. Therefore, we speculate that this relationship may be confirmed if the number of 3-T studies increased.”

Males and females each made up roughly 50% of the study population, with a median age of 60 years and 85% being white. Additionally, 4% of subjects had a family history of pancreatic cancer, 12% had a personal history of solid organ transplant, and 53% had a personal history of smoking.

This study was funded by the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Wallace disclosed that he has received grant funding from Olympus, Boston Scientific, and Cosmo Pharmaceuticals, and travel support from Olympus. No other authors reported any financial disclosures.

dchitnis@frontlinemedcom.com

As magnetic resonance imaging technology continues to advance year after year, so does MRI’s ability to accurately detect pancreatic cysts, according to a new study published in the April issue of Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology (doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2015.08.038).

“To our knowledge, this is the first study to analyze the relationship between the technical improvements in imaging techniques (specifically, MRI) and the presence of incidentally found PCLs [pancreatic cystic lesions],” said the study authors, led by Dr. Michael B. Wallace of the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla.

 

 

Dr. Michael B. Wallace
Dr. Michael B. Wallace

Dr. Wallace and his coinvestigators launched this retrospective descriptive study selecting the first 50 consecutive abdominal MRI patients at the Jacksonville Mayo Clinic during January and February of each year from 2005 through 2014, for a total of 500 cases who met inclusion criteria included in the study. Patients were excluded if they had preexisting symptomatic or asymptomatic pancreatitis, either acute or chronic, pancreatic masses, pancreatic cysts, pancreatic surgery, pancreatic symptoms, or any pancreas-related indications found by MRI.

The clinic underwent periodic MRI updates over the course of the 10-year study, along with requisite software updates to “take advantage of the new hardware technology,” the study explains. Major hardware improvements, provided by Siemens Medical Solutions USA, were Symphony/Sonata, Espree/Avanto, and Aera/Skyra, while software updates corresponding to each hardware update were VA, VB, and VD, respectively.

 

 

SOURCE: AMERICAN GASTROENTEROLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

Furthermore, each software update had other, smaller upgrades, leading to a total of 20 combinations of MRI hardware and software on which MRIs were performed over the 10 years. Every MRI taken included “an axial and a coronal T2-weighted single-shot (HASTE) pulse sequence [with] TR 1400-1500 ms, TE 82-99 ms, and slice thickness 5-7 mm (gap, 0.5-0.7 mm).” Each MRI was analyzed by a pancreatic MRI specialist to find incidental cysts.

The number of patients found with pancreatic cysts increased incrementally from 2005 to 2014, with 2010 being the year with the highest number. A total of 208 subjects (41.6%) were found to have incidental cysts, but only 44 of these cases were discovered in the original MRI. The presence of cysts was associated with older age in patients who had them; only 20% of all subjects under 50 years of age had cysts, compared to 32.4% of those between 50 and 60 years, 54.9% of those between 60 and 70 years, and 61.5% of those over the age of 70 years (P less than .01).

Additionally, 56.4% of all subjects with diabetes (P less than .01), 59.0% of subjects with nonmelanoma skin cancer (P less than .03), and 58.1% of those with hepatocarcinoma (P less than .02) were also found to have cysts. Most striking, however, is that newer hardware and software permutations were able to detect cysts in 56.3% (Skyra) of patients who had them, compared with only 30.3% (Symphony) of patients who underwent MRI on older technology.

“The variable field strength” (1.5 T vs. 3 T) was not significantly related to the presence of PCLs,” Dr. Wallace and his coauthors concluded. “We believe this may be secondary to the lack of power of the analysis, because only 6% of the examinations were 3-T studies. Therefore, we speculate that this relationship may be confirmed if the number of 3-T studies increased.”

Males and females each made up roughly 50% of the study population, with a median age of 60 years and 85% being white. Additionally, 4% of subjects had a family history of pancreatic cancer, 12% had a personal history of solid organ transplant, and 53% had a personal history of smoking.

This study was funded by the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Wallace disclosed that he has received grant funding from Olympus, Boston Scientific, and Cosmo Pharmaceuticals, and travel support from Olympus. No other authors reported any financial disclosures.

dchitnis@frontlinemedcom.com

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
VIDEO: Newer MRI hardware, software significantly better at detecting pancreatic cysts
Display Headline
VIDEO: Newer MRI hardware, software significantly better at detecting pancreatic cysts
Legacy Keywords
MRI, hardware, software, technology, pancreatic, cysts
Legacy Keywords
MRI, hardware, software, technology, pancreatic, cysts
Sections
Article Source

FROM CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY

Disallow All Ads
Alternative CME
Vitals

Key clinical point: Newer MRI technology is more effective at detecting pancreatic cysts, particularly in patients with diabetes or advanced age.

Major finding: Newer MRI hardware and software detected pancreatic cysts in 56.3% of patients, compared with only 30.3% on older MRI hardware and software.

Data source: Retrospective, descriptive study of 500 patients undergoing MRI for nonpancreatic indications during January and February of 2005-2014.

Disclosures: Study funded by the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Michael B. Wallace disclosed relationships with Olympus, Boston Scientific, and Cosmo Pharmaceuticals.

Increased prevalence of pancreatic cysts due to MRI improvements

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 06/23/2017 - 14:07
Display Headline
Increased prevalence of pancreatic cysts due to MRI improvements

The apparent increase in the prevalence of incidental pancreatic cysts in recent years may be tied to improvements in MRI scanning technology, results of a study suggest.

Researchers conducted a retrospective analysis of data from 500 patients who underwent an MRI for nonpancreatic indications at a single center between 2005 and 2014; 50 were sampled from each year in chronological order.

 

© parisvas/Thinkstockphotos.com

A total of 208 patients (41.6%) were found to have an incidental cyst, of which less than a quarter were described in the original MRI report, according to a paper published online in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

Analysis showed a very strong association between the type of imaging hardware and software, and the presence of cysts; older hardware found pancreatic cysts in 30.3% of patients and the newest hardware found cysts in 56.3% of patients.

However, MRI field strength was not associated with the frequency of lesion discovery (Clin Gastro Hepatol. 2015 Sep 11. doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2015.08.038).

Most cysts were relatively small, with a median size of 4 mm. Nearly half of the patients with a cyst only had one described.

Nearly two-thirds of these cysts (62%) had an uncertain diagnosis, but 35% of patients were diagnosed with an intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm, and one patient showed radiologic evidence of subacute pancreatitis.

When compared to the rest of the cohort, individuals with pancreatic cysts were more likely to be older, have diabetes mellitus, or have a personal history of cancer, particularly nonmelanoma skin cancer and hepatocellular carcinoma.

“Our study demonstrates the relationship between the higher trend of incidental pancreatic cysts observed in the recent years and the improvements in the technical features of MRIs,” wrote Dr. Maria Moris and colleagues from the Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville.

The authors said the real prevalence of pancreatic cystic lesions is estimated to range from 0.2% to 44.7%.

Their finding of a prevalence of 41.6% was higher than that found in similar imaging studies, but the authors suggested some of this may be due to the lack of a size cutoff in their study, as opposed to a 5-mm cutoff used in one earlier study that found a prevalence of 10%.

“Moreover, we believe that we may have even underestimated the real prevalence because of the absence of magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography sequences (only 19% of the examinations), and the lack of 3-T studies (6% of the MRIs),” they wrote.

The median size of the lesions was lower than those found in previous studies.

“This smaller size was unexpected because, as a result of the exclusion criteria applied, the technical features of the MRIs were not the most specific for [pancreatic cystic lesion] PCL visualization,” the authors wrote, suggesting that this may have been due to the radiologist’s experience in this field.

The study was funded by the Joyce E. Baker Foundation for Research at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville. One author disclosed grants or travel support from Olympus, Boston Scientific, and Cosmo Pharmaceuticals. There were no other conflicts of interest declared.

AGA Resource

Review the AGA guideline on the management of asymptomatic pancreatic neoplastic cysts at http://www.gastro.org/guidelines/2015/5/29/pancreatic-cysts.

Publications
Topics

The apparent increase in the prevalence of incidental pancreatic cysts in recent years may be tied to improvements in MRI scanning technology, results of a study suggest.

Researchers conducted a retrospective analysis of data from 500 patients who underwent an MRI for nonpancreatic indications at a single center between 2005 and 2014; 50 were sampled from each year in chronological order.

 

© parisvas/Thinkstockphotos.com

A total of 208 patients (41.6%) were found to have an incidental cyst, of which less than a quarter were described in the original MRI report, according to a paper published online in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

Analysis showed a very strong association between the type of imaging hardware and software, and the presence of cysts; older hardware found pancreatic cysts in 30.3% of patients and the newest hardware found cysts in 56.3% of patients.

However, MRI field strength was not associated with the frequency of lesion discovery (Clin Gastro Hepatol. 2015 Sep 11. doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2015.08.038).

Most cysts were relatively small, with a median size of 4 mm. Nearly half of the patients with a cyst only had one described.

Nearly two-thirds of these cysts (62%) had an uncertain diagnosis, but 35% of patients were diagnosed with an intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm, and one patient showed radiologic evidence of subacute pancreatitis.

When compared to the rest of the cohort, individuals with pancreatic cysts were more likely to be older, have diabetes mellitus, or have a personal history of cancer, particularly nonmelanoma skin cancer and hepatocellular carcinoma.

“Our study demonstrates the relationship between the higher trend of incidental pancreatic cysts observed in the recent years and the improvements in the technical features of MRIs,” wrote Dr. Maria Moris and colleagues from the Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville.

The authors said the real prevalence of pancreatic cystic lesions is estimated to range from 0.2% to 44.7%.

Their finding of a prevalence of 41.6% was higher than that found in similar imaging studies, but the authors suggested some of this may be due to the lack of a size cutoff in their study, as opposed to a 5-mm cutoff used in one earlier study that found a prevalence of 10%.

“Moreover, we believe that we may have even underestimated the real prevalence because of the absence of magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography sequences (only 19% of the examinations), and the lack of 3-T studies (6% of the MRIs),” they wrote.

The median size of the lesions was lower than those found in previous studies.

“This smaller size was unexpected because, as a result of the exclusion criteria applied, the technical features of the MRIs were not the most specific for [pancreatic cystic lesion] PCL visualization,” the authors wrote, suggesting that this may have been due to the radiologist’s experience in this field.

The study was funded by the Joyce E. Baker Foundation for Research at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville. One author disclosed grants or travel support from Olympus, Boston Scientific, and Cosmo Pharmaceuticals. There were no other conflicts of interest declared.

AGA Resource

Review the AGA guideline on the management of asymptomatic pancreatic neoplastic cysts at http://www.gastro.org/guidelines/2015/5/29/pancreatic-cysts.

The apparent increase in the prevalence of incidental pancreatic cysts in recent years may be tied to improvements in MRI scanning technology, results of a study suggest.

Researchers conducted a retrospective analysis of data from 500 patients who underwent an MRI for nonpancreatic indications at a single center between 2005 and 2014; 50 were sampled from each year in chronological order.

 

© parisvas/Thinkstockphotos.com

A total of 208 patients (41.6%) were found to have an incidental cyst, of which less than a quarter were described in the original MRI report, according to a paper published online in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

Analysis showed a very strong association between the type of imaging hardware and software, and the presence of cysts; older hardware found pancreatic cysts in 30.3% of patients and the newest hardware found cysts in 56.3% of patients.

However, MRI field strength was not associated with the frequency of lesion discovery (Clin Gastro Hepatol. 2015 Sep 11. doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2015.08.038).

Most cysts were relatively small, with a median size of 4 mm. Nearly half of the patients with a cyst only had one described.

Nearly two-thirds of these cysts (62%) had an uncertain diagnosis, but 35% of patients were diagnosed with an intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm, and one patient showed radiologic evidence of subacute pancreatitis.

When compared to the rest of the cohort, individuals with pancreatic cysts were more likely to be older, have diabetes mellitus, or have a personal history of cancer, particularly nonmelanoma skin cancer and hepatocellular carcinoma.

“Our study demonstrates the relationship between the higher trend of incidental pancreatic cysts observed in the recent years and the improvements in the technical features of MRIs,” wrote Dr. Maria Moris and colleagues from the Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville.

The authors said the real prevalence of pancreatic cystic lesions is estimated to range from 0.2% to 44.7%.

Their finding of a prevalence of 41.6% was higher than that found in similar imaging studies, but the authors suggested some of this may be due to the lack of a size cutoff in their study, as opposed to a 5-mm cutoff used in one earlier study that found a prevalence of 10%.

“Moreover, we believe that we may have even underestimated the real prevalence because of the absence of magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography sequences (only 19% of the examinations), and the lack of 3-T studies (6% of the MRIs),” they wrote.

The median size of the lesions was lower than those found in previous studies.

“This smaller size was unexpected because, as a result of the exclusion criteria applied, the technical features of the MRIs were not the most specific for [pancreatic cystic lesion] PCL visualization,” the authors wrote, suggesting that this may have been due to the radiologist’s experience in this field.

The study was funded by the Joyce E. Baker Foundation for Research at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville. One author disclosed grants or travel support from Olympus, Boston Scientific, and Cosmo Pharmaceuticals. There were no other conflicts of interest declared.

AGA Resource

Review the AGA guideline on the management of asymptomatic pancreatic neoplastic cysts at http://www.gastro.org/guidelines/2015/5/29/pancreatic-cysts.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Increased prevalence of pancreatic cysts due to MRI improvements
Display Headline
Increased prevalence of pancreatic cysts due to MRI improvements
Article Source

FROM CLINICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY

Disallow All Ads
Alternative CME
Vitals

Key clinical point: The apparent increase of the prevalence of incidental pancreatic cysts in recent years may be tied to improvements in MRI scanning technology.

Major finding: Older MRI hardware found pancreatic cysts in 30.3% of patients and the newest hardware found cysts in 56.3% of patients.

Data source: A retrospective analysis of data from 500 patients who underwent an MRI for nonpancreatic indications.

Disclosures: The study was funded by the Joyce E. Baker Foundation for Research at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla. One author disclosed grants or travel support from Olympus, Boston Scientific, and Cosmo Pharmaceuticals. There were no other conflicts of interest declared.

P2X7 receptor implicated in visceral pain caused by chronic pancreatitis

A ‘cautionary message’
Article Type
Changed
Fri, 06/23/2017 - 14:07
Display Headline
P2X7 receptor implicated in visceral pain caused by chronic pancreatitis

A subtype of purinergic receptor on spinal microglial cells mediated visceral pain hypersensitivity in rats with chronic pancreatitis, and pharmacologic or genetic inhibition of this receptor improved hyperalgesia, according to a report in the November issue of Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

“Our study may be the first to identify that P2X7 receptors in spinal microglia are upregulated in chronic pancreatitis, and that this upregulation is associated with the development of visceral hyperalgesia,” said Dr. Pei-Yi Liu at National Yang-Ming University in Taipei, Taiwan, and her associates. A common laboratory dye known as brilliant blue G, which is an antagonist of P2X7R, “not only attenuated but also prevented CP-related chronic visceral hyperalgesia,” the researchers reported.

Chronic pancreatitis causes intense, recurrent epigastric pain that is “difficult and frustrating” to control and can lead to malnutrition, narcotic analgesic addiction, and social and financial problems, said the researchers. Previously, they had linked visceral pain in murine CP to activation of spinal microglia, the main effector immune cells in the central nervous system. The molecular pathways remained unclear, but some research had implicated extracellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) as well as purinergic receptors in the CNS. Because a purine receptor subtype known as P2X7 had been linked to neuropathic and inflammatory pain, the researchers wondered if it also facilitated visceral pain (Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2015 Jul 22. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2015.07.008). To explore that question, they created a CP model by injecting 2% trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid into the pancreatic ducts of male rats. They measured behavioral responses to mechanical and electrical stimulation and quantified spinal cord P2X7R levels with the help of standard laboratory assays. They also watched for changes in pain-related behaviors after blocking spinal cord P2X7R with brilliant blue G or knocking it down with short interfering RNA (siRNA).

Spinal P2X7R expression rose significantly after CP induction, as did levels of the OX-42 microglial marker in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord, said the investigators. Brilliant blue G and genetic knock down suppressed P2X7R expression, inhibited activation of spinal microglia, and “significantly attenuated” nociceptive behaviors, they added.

The researchers also pretreated some rats with brilliant blue G before inducing CP and saw that these rats exhibited significantly lower pain responses to mechanical and electrical stimuli compared with other CP rats. In fact, the nociceptive responses of the pretreated CP rats resembled those of non-CP control rats, the investigators said. Spinal tissue from pretreated rats also lacked signs of P2X7R upregulation, they noted.

Taken together, the data “indicate a critical role of P2X7R expressed in the spinal cord in the development of chronic visceral pain in CP,” concluded the researchers. Brilliant blue G inhibits voltage-gated sodium channels, which are known to contribute to chronic visceral pain, and “may represent an effective drug for the treatment of chronic pain in chronic pancreatitis patients,” they added.

The study was funded by Taipei Veterans General Hospital, National Science Council of Taiwan, and the Taiwan Ministry of Education Aim for Top University Grant. The investigators declared no competing interests.

Body

The traditional approach to treating pain in chronic pancreatitis is as if it were a “plumbing” problem – problems with ductal drainage. More recently, the emphasis has been on sensitization of the sensorineural system (“wiring”), in which the pain responses are greatly exaggerated. An additional consideration is whether this sensitization occurs in peripheral nerves that directly innervate the pancreas, or in the central nervous system, or both. This is clinically important because treatments directed at the periphery, e.g., pancreatectomy, may not be effective in patients in whom central sensitization is dominant.

 

Dr. Pankaj Jay Pasricha

The findings of Dr. Lui and colleagues show that spinal (hence central) sensitization is important in chronic pancreatitis pain, and that this may be mediated by nonneuronal cells (microglia) in the spinal cord via P2X7R, a nucleotide receptor. This is not surprising, given that this signaling system has shown to be important in other forms of chronic pain. However, some questions remain – is peripheral sensitization driving these changes?

Clearly the “drug” they have used (BBG) is relatively harmless, but it is not practical because it may not be safe in humans (apart from coloring them blue). BBG also affects other channels, notably neuronal voltage-dependent sodium channels. Nevertheless, this study does offer new insight into the pathogenesis of pain in chronic pancreatitis and by itself is an important cautionary message for the growing enthusiasm for total pancreatectomy. It also identifies potential new therapeutic targets for treatment of pain and will, it is hoped, stimulate engagement from the pharmaceutical industry that is developing drugs directed toward glial activation and in particular the P2X7 receptor.

Dr. Pankaj Jay Pasricha, AGAF, is professor of medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, director of Johns Hopkins Center for Motility Disorders and Digestive Diseases, and professor of innovation management, The Carey Business School, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. He has no conflicts of interest.

Publications
Topics
Sections
Body

The traditional approach to treating pain in chronic pancreatitis is as if it were a “plumbing” problem – problems with ductal drainage. More recently, the emphasis has been on sensitization of the sensorineural system (“wiring”), in which the pain responses are greatly exaggerated. An additional consideration is whether this sensitization occurs in peripheral nerves that directly innervate the pancreas, or in the central nervous system, or both. This is clinically important because treatments directed at the periphery, e.g., pancreatectomy, may not be effective in patients in whom central sensitization is dominant.

 

Dr. Pankaj Jay Pasricha

The findings of Dr. Lui and colleagues show that spinal (hence central) sensitization is important in chronic pancreatitis pain, and that this may be mediated by nonneuronal cells (microglia) in the spinal cord via P2X7R, a nucleotide receptor. This is not surprising, given that this signaling system has shown to be important in other forms of chronic pain. However, some questions remain – is peripheral sensitization driving these changes?

Clearly the “drug” they have used (BBG) is relatively harmless, but it is not practical because it may not be safe in humans (apart from coloring them blue). BBG also affects other channels, notably neuronal voltage-dependent sodium channels. Nevertheless, this study does offer new insight into the pathogenesis of pain in chronic pancreatitis and by itself is an important cautionary message for the growing enthusiasm for total pancreatectomy. It also identifies potential new therapeutic targets for treatment of pain and will, it is hoped, stimulate engagement from the pharmaceutical industry that is developing drugs directed toward glial activation and in particular the P2X7 receptor.

Dr. Pankaj Jay Pasricha, AGAF, is professor of medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, director of Johns Hopkins Center for Motility Disorders and Digestive Diseases, and professor of innovation management, The Carey Business School, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. He has no conflicts of interest.

Body

The traditional approach to treating pain in chronic pancreatitis is as if it were a “plumbing” problem – problems with ductal drainage. More recently, the emphasis has been on sensitization of the sensorineural system (“wiring”), in which the pain responses are greatly exaggerated. An additional consideration is whether this sensitization occurs in peripheral nerves that directly innervate the pancreas, or in the central nervous system, or both. This is clinically important because treatments directed at the periphery, e.g., pancreatectomy, may not be effective in patients in whom central sensitization is dominant.

 

Dr. Pankaj Jay Pasricha

The findings of Dr. Lui and colleagues show that spinal (hence central) sensitization is important in chronic pancreatitis pain, and that this may be mediated by nonneuronal cells (microglia) in the spinal cord via P2X7R, a nucleotide receptor. This is not surprising, given that this signaling system has shown to be important in other forms of chronic pain. However, some questions remain – is peripheral sensitization driving these changes?

Clearly the “drug” they have used (BBG) is relatively harmless, but it is not practical because it may not be safe in humans (apart from coloring them blue). BBG also affects other channels, notably neuronal voltage-dependent sodium channels. Nevertheless, this study does offer new insight into the pathogenesis of pain in chronic pancreatitis and by itself is an important cautionary message for the growing enthusiasm for total pancreatectomy. It also identifies potential new therapeutic targets for treatment of pain and will, it is hoped, stimulate engagement from the pharmaceutical industry that is developing drugs directed toward glial activation and in particular the P2X7 receptor.

Dr. Pankaj Jay Pasricha, AGAF, is professor of medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, director of Johns Hopkins Center for Motility Disorders and Digestive Diseases, and professor of innovation management, The Carey Business School, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. He has no conflicts of interest.

Title
A ‘cautionary message’
A ‘cautionary message’

A subtype of purinergic receptor on spinal microglial cells mediated visceral pain hypersensitivity in rats with chronic pancreatitis, and pharmacologic or genetic inhibition of this receptor improved hyperalgesia, according to a report in the November issue of Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

“Our study may be the first to identify that P2X7 receptors in spinal microglia are upregulated in chronic pancreatitis, and that this upregulation is associated with the development of visceral hyperalgesia,” said Dr. Pei-Yi Liu at National Yang-Ming University in Taipei, Taiwan, and her associates. A common laboratory dye known as brilliant blue G, which is an antagonist of P2X7R, “not only attenuated but also prevented CP-related chronic visceral hyperalgesia,” the researchers reported.

Chronic pancreatitis causes intense, recurrent epigastric pain that is “difficult and frustrating” to control and can lead to malnutrition, narcotic analgesic addiction, and social and financial problems, said the researchers. Previously, they had linked visceral pain in murine CP to activation of spinal microglia, the main effector immune cells in the central nervous system. The molecular pathways remained unclear, but some research had implicated extracellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) as well as purinergic receptors in the CNS. Because a purine receptor subtype known as P2X7 had been linked to neuropathic and inflammatory pain, the researchers wondered if it also facilitated visceral pain (Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2015 Jul 22. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2015.07.008). To explore that question, they created a CP model by injecting 2% trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid into the pancreatic ducts of male rats. They measured behavioral responses to mechanical and electrical stimulation and quantified spinal cord P2X7R levels with the help of standard laboratory assays. They also watched for changes in pain-related behaviors after blocking spinal cord P2X7R with brilliant blue G or knocking it down with short interfering RNA (siRNA).

Spinal P2X7R expression rose significantly after CP induction, as did levels of the OX-42 microglial marker in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord, said the investigators. Brilliant blue G and genetic knock down suppressed P2X7R expression, inhibited activation of spinal microglia, and “significantly attenuated” nociceptive behaviors, they added.

The researchers also pretreated some rats with brilliant blue G before inducing CP and saw that these rats exhibited significantly lower pain responses to mechanical and electrical stimuli compared with other CP rats. In fact, the nociceptive responses of the pretreated CP rats resembled those of non-CP control rats, the investigators said. Spinal tissue from pretreated rats also lacked signs of P2X7R upregulation, they noted.

Taken together, the data “indicate a critical role of P2X7R expressed in the spinal cord in the development of chronic visceral pain in CP,” concluded the researchers. Brilliant blue G inhibits voltage-gated sodium channels, which are known to contribute to chronic visceral pain, and “may represent an effective drug for the treatment of chronic pain in chronic pancreatitis patients,” they added.

The study was funded by Taipei Veterans General Hospital, National Science Council of Taiwan, and the Taiwan Ministry of Education Aim for Top University Grant. The investigators declared no competing interests.

A subtype of purinergic receptor on spinal microglial cells mediated visceral pain hypersensitivity in rats with chronic pancreatitis, and pharmacologic or genetic inhibition of this receptor improved hyperalgesia, according to a report in the November issue of Cellular and Molecular Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

“Our study may be the first to identify that P2X7 receptors in spinal microglia are upregulated in chronic pancreatitis, and that this upregulation is associated with the development of visceral hyperalgesia,” said Dr. Pei-Yi Liu at National Yang-Ming University in Taipei, Taiwan, and her associates. A common laboratory dye known as brilliant blue G, which is an antagonist of P2X7R, “not only attenuated but also prevented CP-related chronic visceral hyperalgesia,” the researchers reported.

Chronic pancreatitis causes intense, recurrent epigastric pain that is “difficult and frustrating” to control and can lead to malnutrition, narcotic analgesic addiction, and social and financial problems, said the researchers. Previously, they had linked visceral pain in murine CP to activation of spinal microglia, the main effector immune cells in the central nervous system. The molecular pathways remained unclear, but some research had implicated extracellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) as well as purinergic receptors in the CNS. Because a purine receptor subtype known as P2X7 had been linked to neuropathic and inflammatory pain, the researchers wondered if it also facilitated visceral pain (Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2015 Jul 22. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2015.07.008). To explore that question, they created a CP model by injecting 2% trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid into the pancreatic ducts of male rats. They measured behavioral responses to mechanical and electrical stimulation and quantified spinal cord P2X7R levels with the help of standard laboratory assays. They also watched for changes in pain-related behaviors after blocking spinal cord P2X7R with brilliant blue G or knocking it down with short interfering RNA (siRNA).

Spinal P2X7R expression rose significantly after CP induction, as did levels of the OX-42 microglial marker in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord, said the investigators. Brilliant blue G and genetic knock down suppressed P2X7R expression, inhibited activation of spinal microglia, and “significantly attenuated” nociceptive behaviors, they added.

The researchers also pretreated some rats with brilliant blue G before inducing CP and saw that these rats exhibited significantly lower pain responses to mechanical and electrical stimuli compared with other CP rats. In fact, the nociceptive responses of the pretreated CP rats resembled those of non-CP control rats, the investigators said. Spinal tissue from pretreated rats also lacked signs of P2X7R upregulation, they noted.

Taken together, the data “indicate a critical role of P2X7R expressed in the spinal cord in the development of chronic visceral pain in CP,” concluded the researchers. Brilliant blue G inhibits voltage-gated sodium channels, which are known to contribute to chronic visceral pain, and “may represent an effective drug for the treatment of chronic pain in chronic pancreatitis patients,” they added.

The study was funded by Taipei Veterans General Hospital, National Science Council of Taiwan, and the Taiwan Ministry of Education Aim for Top University Grant. The investigators declared no competing interests.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
P2X7 receptor implicated in visceral pain caused by chronic pancreatitis
Display Headline
P2X7 receptor implicated in visceral pain caused by chronic pancreatitis
Sections
Article Source

FROM CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY

Disallow All Ads
Alternative CME
Vitals

Key clinical point: A subtype of purinergic receptor on spinal microglial cells mediated visceral pain hypersensitivity in rats with chronic pancreatitis.

Major finding: Spinal P2X7R expression rose significantly after CP induction, and pharmacologic inhibition and genetic knock down inhibited activation of spinal microglia and “significantly attenuated” nociceptive behaviors.

Data source: Controlled, prospective, molecular and behavioral study of rats with chemically induced chronic pancreatitis.

Disclosures: The study was funded by Taipei Veterans General Hospital, National Science Council of Taiwan, and the Taiwan Ministry of Education Aim for Top University Grant. The investigators declared no competing interests.