M. Del Chiaro
Karolinska Institutet
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Featured researches published by M. Del Chiaro.
Digestive and Liver Disease | 2013
Marco Del Chiaro; Caroline S. Verbeke; Roberto Salvia; Günter Klöppel; Jens Werner; Colin J. McKay; Helmut Friess; Riccardo Manfredi; Eric Van Cutsem; Matthias Löhr; Ralf Segersvärd; L. Abakken; M. Adham; N. Albin; A. Andren-Sandberg; U. Arnelo; M. Bruno; Djuna L. Cahen; C. Cappelli; Guido Costamagna; M. Del Chiaro; G. Delle Fave; I. Esposito; M. Falconi; H. Friess; P. Ghaneh; I. P. Gladhaug; S. Haas; T. Hauge; J. R. Izbicki
Cystic lesions of the pancreas are increasingly recognized. While some lesions show benign behaviour (serous cystic neoplasm), others have an unequivocal malignant potential (mucinous cystic neoplasm, branch- and main duct intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm and solid pseudo-papillary neoplasm). European expert pancreatologists provide updated recommendations: diagnostic computerized tomography and/or magnetic resonance imaging are indicated in all patients with cystic lesion of the pancreas. Endoscopic ultrasound with cyst fluid analysis may be used but there is no evidence to suggest this as a routine diagnostic method. The role of pancreatoscopy remains to be established. Resection should be considered in all symptomatic lesions, in mucinous cystic neoplasm, main duct intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm and solid pseudo-papillary neoplasm as well as in branch duct intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm with mural nodules, dilated main pancreatic duct >6mm and possibly if rapidly increasing in size. An oncological partial resection should be performed in main duct intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm and in lesions with a suspicion of malignancy, otherwise organ preserving procedures may be considered. Frozen section of the transection margin in intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm is suggested. Follow up after resection is recommended for intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm, solid pseudo-papillary neoplasm and invasive cancer.
Gut | 2016
B. Jais; V. Rebours; Giuseppe Malleo; Roberto Salvia; M. Fontana; Laura Maggino; Claudio Bassi; Riccardo Manfredi; R. Moran; Anne Marie Lennon; A. Zaheer; Christopher L. Wolfgang; Ralph H. Hruban; Giovanni Marchegiani; C. Fernandez del Castillo; William R. Brugge; Y. Ha; Mi-Jung Kim; D. Oh; Ichiro Hirai; Kimura W; Jin Young Jang; Sun Whe Kim; W. Jung; H. Kang; S. Y. Song; C. M. Kang; W. J. Lee; Stefano Crippa; Massimo Falconi
Objectives Serous cystic neoplasm (SCN) is a cystic neoplasm of the pancreas whose natural history is poorly known. The purpose of the study was to attempt to describe the natural history of SCN, including the specific mortality. Design Retrospective multinational study including SCN diagnosed between 1990 and 2014. Results 2622 patients were included. Seventy-four per cent were women, and median age at diagnosis was 58 years (16–99). Patients presented with non-specific abdominal pain (27%), pancreaticobiliary symptoms (9%), diabetes mellitus (5%), other symptoms (4%) and/or were asymptomatic (61%). Fifty-two per cent of patients were operated on during the first year after diagnosis (median size: 40 mm (2–200)), 9% had resection beyond 1 year of follow-up (3 years (1–20), size at diagnosis: 25 mm (4–140)) and 39% had no surgery (3.6 years (1–23), 25.5 mm (1–200)). Surgical indications were (not exclusive) uncertain diagnosis (60%), symptoms (23%), size increase (12%), large size (6%) and adjacent organ compression (5%). In patients followed beyond 1 year (n=1271), size increased in 37% (growth rate: 4 mm/year), was stable in 57% and decreased in 6%. Three serous cystadenocarcinomas were recorded. Postoperative mortality was 0.6% (n=10), and SCNs related mortality was 0.1% (n=1). Conclusions After a 3-year follow-up, clinical relevant symptoms occurred in a very small proportion of patients and size slowly increased in less than half. Surgical treatment should be proposed only for diagnosis remaining uncertain after complete workup, significant and related symptoms or exceptionally when exists concern with malignancy. This study supports an initial conservative management in the majority of patients with SCN. Trial registration number IRB 00006477.
Cancer Treatment Reviews | 2015
Caroline S. Verbeke; Matthias Löhr; J. Severin Karlsson; M. Del Chiaro
An increasing number of studies investigate the use of neoadjuvant treatment for ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. While a strong rationale supports this approach, study results are difficult to interpret and compare due to marked variance in multiple aspects of study design and performance. Divergence in pathology examination and reporting as a cause for heterogeneity and incomparability of study results has not been brought into this discussion yet, despite the fact that several key outcome measures for neoadjuvant treatment are pathology-based. This article discusses areas of controversy and difficulty regarding the evaluation of the extent of residual tumour tissue, grading of tumour regression and assessment of the margins, and explains the important clinical implications of the present uncertainty and divergence in pathology practice.
Gut | 2018
M. Del Chiaro; Mg Besselink; L Scholten; Mj Bruno; Dl Cahen; Tm Gress; van Hooft Je; Mm Lerch; Julia Mayerle; Thilo Hackert; S Satoi; A Zerbi; David Cunningham; C Angelis; M. Giovannini; E De-Madaria; Péter Hegyi; Jonas Rosendahl; H. Friess; R Manfredi; Philippe Lévy; Fx Real; A Sauvanet; M Abu Hilal; Giovanni Marchegiani; Irene Esposito; Paula Ghaneh; Engelbrecht; Paul Fockens; van Huijgevoort Nc
Evidence-based guidelines on the management of pancreatic cystic neoplasms (PCN) are lacking. This guideline is a joint initiative of the European Study Group on Cystic Tumours of the Pancreas, United European Gastroenterology, European Pancreatic Club, European-African Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Association, European Digestive Surgery, and the European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy. It replaces the 2013 European consensus statement guidelines on PCN. European and non-European experts performed systematic reviews and used GRADE methodology to answer relevant clinical questions on nine topics (biomarkers, radiology, endoscopy, intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN), mucinous cystic neoplasm (MCN), serous cystic neoplasm, rare cysts, (neo)adjuvant treatment, and pathology). Recommendations include conservative management, relative and absolute indications for surgery. A conservative approach is recommended for asymptomatic MCN and IPMN measuring <40 mm without an enhancing nodule. Relative indications for surgery in IPMN include a main pancreatic duct (MPD) diameter between 5 and 9.9 mm or a cyst diameter ≥40 mm. Absolute indications for surgery in IPMN, due to the high-risk of malignant transformation, include jaundice, an enhancing mural nodule >5 mm, and MPD diameter >10 mm. Lifelong follow-up of IPMN is recommended in patients who are fit for surgery. The European evidence-based guidelines on PCN aim to improve the diagnosis and management of PCN.
British Journal of Surgery | 2016
Srinivas Sanjeevi; Tommy Ivanics; Lars Lundell; Nikolaos Kartalis; Åke Andren-Sandberg; John Blomberg; M. Del Chiaro
Locoregional pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) may progress rapidly and/or disseminate despite having an early stage at diagnostic imaging. A prolonged interval from imaging to resection might represent a risk factor for encountering tumour progression at laparotomy. The aim of this study was to determine the therapeutic window for timely surgical intervention.
British Journal of Surgery | 2016
J. Insulander; Srinivas Sanjeevi; Maryam Haghighi; Tommy Ivanics; A. Analatos; Lars Lundell; M. Del Chiaro; Åke Andrén-Sandberg
Resection with curative intent has been shown to prolong survival of patients with locoregional pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). However, up to 33 per cent of patients are deemed unresectable at exploratory laparotomy owing to unanticipated locally advanced or metastatic disease. In these patients, prophylactic double bypass (PDB) procedures have been considered the standard of care. The aim of this study was to compare PDB with exploratory laparotomy alone in terms of impact on postoperative course, chemotherapy and overall survival.
Updates in Surgery | 2016
Stefania Marconi; L Pugliese; M. Del Chiaro; R. Pozzi Mucelli; Ferdinando Auricchio; Andrea Pietrabissa
Annals of Oncology | 2018
M Kordes; Matthias Löhr; Linnéa Malgerud; Sajo Kaduthanam; J-E. Frödin; M Karimi; J Yachnin; C Fernadez Moro; Sam Ghazi; Rainer Heuchel; V Wirta; Carolin Hülsewig; Katrin Stecker; M. Del Chiaro; Arne Östman; Lars Engstrand; Stephan Brock; M Gustafsson-Liljefors
Hpb | 2016
M. Del Chiaro; Ralf Segersvärd; Linda Nilsson; John Blomberg; Elena Rangelova; Raffaella Pozzi-Mucelli; Nikolaos Kartalis; Matthias Löhr; Caroline S. Verbeke
Hpb | 2016
M. Del Chiaro; Ralf Segersvärd; Caroline S. Verbeke; Elena Rangelova; Lars Lundell; John Blomberg