Abstract

Background:Most diagnosed pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNETs) are nonfunctioning tumors (90.8%); the remaining 9% are malignant functioning tumors. While surgical resection is the standard of care, alternative management options may be mandated in symptomatic patients who refuse or are ineligible for surgery. We present a case of endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided ethanol ablation of symptomatic insulinoma in a patient who refused surgery.Case Presentation:A 35-year-old man was referred to our facility with suspected insulinoma for EUS evaluation. During a 48-h supervised fast, a plasma glucose of 30 mg/dl was obtained with a corresponding serum insulin level of 235 μIU/mL (normal: 20–80) and C-peptide level of 19.9 ng/mL (normal: 2.8–9.9). Computed tomography abdomen revealed a normal pancreas with no detected masses. On admission, he was on intravenous glucose 25% at an infusion rate of 250 mL/h and octreotide (150 mcg subcutaneously three times daily). EUS examination revealed a small hypoechoic pancreatic tail mass 2 cm ×1.5 cm with no vascular involvement or detected lymph nodes. EUS-fine needle aspiration was done using a 25G needle. Pathological examination was consistent with NET. The patient's family initially refused surgery; EUS-guided ethanol ablation was therefore considered. The lesion was injected with 3 mL of ethanol using 25G needle resulting in a hyperechoic blush within the center of the tumor. Following the procedure, there was partial clinical success with the patient's glucose infusion rate decreased to 100 mL/h. After 3 days, a second session was considered. The lesion was re-injected with 3 mL of ethanol using 22G needle resulting in a hyperechoic blush of the lesion. Again, there was partial clinical success with the patient's glucose infusion rate decreased to 50 mL/h. There were no postprocedural complications. The patient's family decided to do surgery and distal pancreatectomy was done.Discussion:EUS-guided ethanol ablation of functioning pNETs is a less common therapeutic tool. A recent literature review showed 19 patients who underwent EUS-guided ethanol ablation of functioning pNETs from 2006 to 2015 with technical and clinical success in 100% of cases. This case reports another EUS-guided ethanol ablation of functioning insulinoma added to the documented cases, with partial clinical success. Despite partial clinical success, EUS-guided ethanol ablation is feasible and safe when applied to symptom relief in functioning tumors in patients who refuse or are ineligible for surgery.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call