JOURNAL ARTICLE
OBSERVATIONAL STUDY
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[Morbimortalidad de la pancreatoduodenectomía en pacientes con cáncer de páncreas y tumores periampulares en el Hospital de Oncología del Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI de 2008 a 2013].

INTRODUCTION: Pancreatic tumors and periampullary tumors have a similar clinical presentation; pancreatoduodenectomy represents the only possibility of cure or of increasing survival; with an average mortality of 5-10% and a morbidity of 20-40%.

OBJECTIVE: To determine the morbidity and mortality secondary to the pancreatoduodenectomy intervention in patients with pancreatic cancer or periampullary tumors in the Oncology Hospital of Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI (Mexico City) from 2008 to 2013.

METHOD: Historical, observational and descriptive cohort carried out in the department of sarcomas and tumors of the upper digestive tube of the Oncology Hospital of Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI, postoperative pancreatoduodenectomy from 2008 to 2013.

RESULTS: We included 71 patients who underwent pancreatoduodenectomy, 47 (66.2%) were female and 24 (33.8%) were male. The average age was 60.3 years. The most common histology was cancer of the Vater's ampulla (66.2%). The resections were R0 in 95.8% of the cases. Mortality was 4.22% and morbidity was 69%. The most frequent complication was pancreatic fistula (23.9%). In the statistical analysis, perioperative transfusion was associated with surgical complications (p < 0.007).

CONCLUSIONS: The morbidity of pancreatoduodenectomy is greater than that reported in the literature, however, it does not influence mortality that is similar to that reported in other centers. The number of lymph nodes resected; as well as the percentage of negative margins are those accepted worldwide; It is concluded that this is derived from the experience of the center where these procedures are performed. No factor with statistical significance was found, only the transfusion that increased the complications.

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