Abstract

e15685 Background: Morbidity and mortality associated with surgical resection of pancreatic adenocarcinoma remains high, and prognosis is poor even after R0 resection. Preoperative chemoradiation, previously only indicated to downstage borderline-resectable disease, has been increasingly used even in cases that appear resectable at time of diagnosis. Response to therapy can be prognostic and guide clinical decision-making. We investigated significant trends over time in neoadjuvant treatment of patients within the National Surgical Quality Improvement Project (NSQIP) database treated surgically for pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Methods: We queried NSQIP data for patients who underwent pancreaticoduodenectomy or subtotal pancreatectomy for pancreatic adenocarcinoma in 2015-2017. We examined differences by year in neoadjuvant treatment use with Chi-square test. Results: There were 8626 patients included. Use of neoadjuvant treatment (chemotherapy or chemoradiotherapy) increased over the study period, and complication by pancreatic fistula and delayed gastric emptying decreased qualitatively over the same time (12% to 9%; 14% to 12%). This increase in use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy was significant among patients with T1, T2, and T3 tumors (Table 1). However, despite NCCN/ASCO guidelines recommending neoadjuvant for all patients with T4 tumors, only about a quarter of these patients received it, and this proportion did not change over time. Conclusions: Preoperative chemotherapy is particularly important in ≥T3 disease because of low rates (50%) of adjuvant therapy, likely secondary to postoperative morbidity. The NSQIP data reflects the trend toward increasing neoadjuvant therapy in lower-T stage disease, but not among patients with T4 disease. This may be because NSQIP data largely reflects community hospital populations, and this practice was first adopted by academic institutions. Based on our findings, it is important that medical oncology be involved early in the multidisciplinary care of patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma.[Table: see text]

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