Diagnosis and Management Pearls PANCREATIC LESIONS Diagnosis and Management Pearls Presented by: Vivek Batra MD April 19, 2017
Case Presentation 55 year old female CC: abdominal pain 6 months of dull pain, constipation, anorexia, halitosis, dark urine Saw PCP and GI, with “negative” workup Occasional ethanol, no smoking or drugs
HPI Used ginger pills for symptoms relief No weight loss, jaundice, melena, hematochezia, hematemesis or fevers No risk factors for liver disease or HIV No blood transfusion No recent travel 2 weeks ago, had viral illness, resolved
Pertinent History PMHx: Remote shoulder/elbow surgery Medications: Naproxen Family History: No history of malignancy Exam: mild epigastric pain, mild jaundice
Laboratory Data
Investigation - Hepatitis serologies - HIV Tylenol level <15 - Ceruloplasmin, - AMA,- CK,-Anti-Smooth muscle +aldolase, +ANA
US
CT Scan
MRCP
Pancreatic Mass
EUS Role of EUS Diagnosis, FNA Staging Tumor localization, celiac plexus neuro-lysis, EUS drainage and ablation
Tumor Markers Ca19-9 626 U/ml (0-34) CEA 3.5 ng/ml (0-3)
Pancreatic cancer
Clinical Course EUS Pathology: Pancreatic adenocarcinoma Borderline resectable ERCP with CBD stent for jaundice ERCP induced pancreatitis Neoadjuvant: FOLFIRINOX vs gemcitabine, and Abraxane. Port, fever, chemotherapy Plan for Whipple
Whipple Surgery 1960: 25% mortality, 5% 5-year survival 1% mortality Minimally invasive 1 week post-op Morbidity Diagnosis 20% turn benign
Role of hospitalist or PCP Diagnosis Age and functional status Co-morbidities Appropriate referral Pancreatic cyst = majority are benign Pancreatic cyst = Asymptomatic bacteruria vs UTI. Infiltrate vs. true pneumonia Incidentaloma vs Real (in physics, blackbox) Around 20%, turn benign even after Whipple
Black-box A device, system, or object which can be viewed in terms of its inputs and outputs, without any knowledge of its internal workings
Richard Feynman
MEDICINE IS SCIENCE OF UNCERTAINTY AND ART OF PROBABILITY
11/27/2017
THANK YOU!