United European Gastroenterol J. 2026 Apr;14(3):e70199. doi: 10.1002/ueg2.70199.
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION: Resection of intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN) aims to prevent progression to invasive pancreatic cancer. However, the risks of pancreatic surgery and frequent findings of low-grade dysplasia (LGD) raise concerns about overtreatment. This EAHPBA-endorsed multinational study evaluated short- and long-term overall survival (OS) following preventive resection for IPMN (without pre-operative signs of cancer).
METHODS: Adult patients with resected IPMN showing LGD, high grade dysplasia (HGD) or T1-staged invasive carcinoma from 2008-2023 were identified from the OPTIMAL-IPMN database. Estimated OS rates at one, five and 10 years in patients undergoing preventive pancreatic resection were assessed using Kaplan-Meier analyses and predictors for mortality were evaluated using parametric survival regressions.
RESULTS: Among 2275 patients in the OPTIMAL-IPMN database, 1728 (77%) had undergone preventive pancreatic resection for IPMN. Of those were 61% resected without prior surveillance. Final pathology revealed LGD in 63%, HGD in 27% and T1a-c-staged invasive cancer in 10% (7.3% T1a-b, 2.8% T1c). Estimated 1-year OS rate was 97%. Estimated 5-year OS rates (landmark analysis at 1 year) for LGD, HGD, T1a-b, and T1c was 97%, 99%, 96% and 91% respectively. Independent predictors for long-term mortality included age ≥ 75 versus < 75 years (HR 1.97) and T1c versus LGD (HR 8.12).
CONCLUSION: This multinational study confirms excellent survival after preventive IPMN resection but reveals many upfront resections yielding LGD with unknown survival benefit. Future studies should aim to determine which patients can be followed safely with monitoring to avoid unnecessary immediate resection.
PMID:41874453 | DOI:10.1002/ueg2.70199