Management of pancreatic pseudocysts in pediatric oncology patients

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Yousef El-Gohary, Sara Mansfield, Jessica Staszak, Abdelhafeez Abdelhafeez, Lindsay Talbot, Ching-Hon Pui, Robert Gold, Andrew J. Murphy, Andrew M. Davidoff Published:

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Yousef El-Gohary, Sara Mansfield, Jessica Staszak, Abdelhafeez Abdelhafeez, Lindsay Talbot, Ching-Hon Pui, Robert Gold, Andrew J. Murphy, Andrew M. Davidoff

Topic overview

Abstract

Background

Management of children with pancreatic pseudocysts has historically been adopted from the adult experience where pancreatic pseudocysts greater than 6 cm are unlikely to resolve without intervention. We reviewed the clinical course of pediatric oncology patients with pancreatic pseudocysts.

Methods

A retrospective review of patients treated over a 15-year period was performed. Variables evaluated included cancer type, medications administered, clinical and imaging characteristics of the pancreatic pseudocysts, treatment and outcome.

Results

A total of 132 patients with a median age of 13 (IQR, 9–17) years were identified with pancreatitis. Thirty-one (23.5%) patients developed a pancreatic pseudocyst, of which 84% were associated with PEG-asparaginase treatment. The median pseudocyst size was 7.6 (IQR, 4.4–9.9) cm with 59% being greater than 6 cm. Twenty-two (71%) patients with a pancreatic pseudocyst underwent successful conservative management, while only 9 (29%) required procedural intervention including six percutaneous drainage, one of whom recurred and required surgical cyst-enteric drainage. Two other patients had primary surgical cyst-enteric drainage and one patient underwent endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with stenting. The indication for intervention was worsening pain rather than pseudocyst imaging characteristics, size or serum amylase/lipase.

Conclusion

Most medication-induced pancreatic pseudocysts in children being treated for cancer, regardless of pseudocyst size, can be managed non-operatively or with transgastric percutaneous drainage. The need for intervention can be safely dictated by patient symptoms.

Level of evidence

III

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