Abstract

Due to improvements in imaging modalities the diagnosis of branch duct intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (BD-IPMN) has been significantly increased in recent years. A BD-IPMN is frequently diagnosed as an incidental finding in asymptomatic patients. The optimal management of BD-IPMN is the subject of controversial discussions. Numerous studies have shown that an individualized therapeutic strategy with afollow-up observation of most BD-IPMNs is feasible and safe, considering age, comorbidities and patient preference. An accurate evaluation of BD-IPMN with adetailed anamnesis, high-resolution imaging techniques and endoscopic ultrasound is necessary. Symptomatic patients as well as patients with so-called high-risk stigmata should undergo resection. Asymptomatic patients with so-called worrisome features can either undergo surveillance or surgical resection, taking age and comorbidities into account. For BD-IPMN patients without high-risk stigmata and worrisome features and showing no symptoms, surveillance of the pancreatic lesion is the preferred approach. The high prevalence of BD-IPMN, limitations in differential diagnostics, an overestimation of the risk of malignancy due to an overrepresentation of symptomatic and suspected BD-IPMN in resected cohorts, an overestimated role of BD-IPMN as precursor lesions for pancreatic carcinoma and evidence of the safety of follow-up surveillance, underline the enormous importance of surveillance. Based on this and considering the background of anotable mortality and morbidity of pancreatic surgery, aggressive management with prophylactic surgical resection is not justified for all BD-IPMN, in particular for low-risk lesions.

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