1 / 87

Pancreatic Cancer & the Whipple Procedure

Medical Management & Nutrition Therapy Guidelines. Pancreatic Cancer & the Whipple Procedure. Melissa Jakubowski. Why Pancreatic Cancer???. It is estimated that 1 in 68 men and women born today will be diagnosed with cancer of the pancreas at some point during their lifetime

sauda
Download Presentation

Pancreatic Cancer & the Whipple Procedure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Medical Management & Nutrition Therapy Guidelines Pancreatic Cancer & the Whipple Procedure Melissa Jakubowski

  2. Why Pancreatic Cancer??? • It is estimated that 1 in 68 men and women born today will be diagnosed with cancer of the pancreas at some point during their lifetime • The average life expectancy after pancreatic cancer diagnosis is 3 to 9 months, and the five-year survival rate from point of diagnosis is less than 6%

  3. Agenda • Pancreas Anatomy & Function • Pancreatic Cancer • Medical Nutrition Therapy • Presentation of the Patient • Critical Comments

  4. The Organs of the Visceral Peritoneum

  5. Regions of the Pancreas Gallbladder

  6. The Biliary System

  7. Pancreas Function Endocrine Exocrine Pancreatic acinarcells: synthesize and store inactive forms of digestive enzymes and alkaline fluid and secrete them into the duodenum via the pancreatic duct • The islets of Langerhans: specialized cells that synthesize and secrete various hormones into the bloodstream and are crisscrossed by a dense network of capillaries

  8. Endocrine Cell Types

  9. Endocrine Cell Function • The α (Alpha) Cells: secrete the hormone glucagon, which prevents hypoglycemia • The β (Beta) Cells: secrete the hormone insulin, which prevents hyperglycemia • Secrete amylin, which regulates blood glucose spikes postprandial

  10. The Digestive System

  11. Duodenum: Carbohydrate Digestion DextrinsPancreatic amylase Disaccharides Maltose Maltase Glucose + Glucose Lactose Lactase Glucose + Galactose Sucrose Sucrase Glucose + Fructose

  12. Duodenum: Protein Digestion Polypeptide chains Trypsin & Chymotrypsin Shorter chains Carboxypeptidase & aminopeptidase split off one amino acid at a time, working from the ends of the polypeptides Dipeptidasehydrolyzes fragments of only two to three amino acids long

  13. Duodenum: Fat Digestion • Bile salts from the liver & gallbladder: emulsify fat globules into smaller fat droplets • Fat droplets Pancreatic lipase Fatty acids & glycerol

  14. Pancreatic Cancer: Prevalence • Accounts 44,000 newly diagnosed medical cases annually & 33,000 deaths annually • Significant increasing trend in pancreatic cancer • Fourth most common cause of death from cancer in men and the fifth in women

  15. Tumor Site

  16. Tumor Histology

  17. Prognosis • The average life expectancy after diagnosis is 3 to 9 months

  18. Etiology: Non-modifiable Risk Factors African American Male DNA Geriatrics Genetics

  19. Etiology: Modifiable Risk Factors Obesity Cigarette Smoking Chemical exposure Alcohol abuse DNA Diet Long-standing Diabetes Chronic pancreatitis

  20. Signs and SymptomsPancreatic Exocrine Tumors • Upper abdominal pain or back pain • GI disturbances • Poor appetite • Anorexia • Weight loss • Gallbladder enlargement • Jaundice • Blood clots or fatty tissue abnormalities • The Trousseau sign

  21. The TNM staging system

  22. Simplified Staging System

  23. Diagnosis • By diagnosis, 90% of adenocarcinoma patients have locally advanced tumors that have retroperitoneal structures, spread to regional lymph nodes, or metastasized to the liver or lung • Once metastasized, a distinctive sign is severe upper abdominal pain with weight loss

  24. Signs and Symptoms for DiagnosisAdenocarcinoma

  25. Non-diagnostic Laboratory Tests

  26. Other Blood Tests • Complete Metabolic Panel → to evaluate a patient's general state of health, such as liver, kidney, and bone marrow function • Fat-soluble vitamins: to determine if there is a deficiency associated with fat malabsorption

  27. Biochemical Data: CA 19-9 • A tumor marker released into the blood by exocrine pancreatic cancer cells • Sometimes useful during treatment to determine if a treatment is working or after treatment to see if the cancer has recurred • Test is not recommended for routine screening of people without symptoms or a known diagnosis of cancer

  28. Biochemical Data: CEA • Carcinoembryonicantigen (CEA), another tumor marker • Can help detect advanced pancreatic cancer in some people • Not sensitive enough to find the cancer early and is not recommended for screening

  29. Diagnostic Procedures • Computed tomography (CT, CAT) scan • Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography(MRCP) • Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) • Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography(ERCP)

  30. Diagnostic Procedures

  31. Treatment • Approximately $1.9 billion dollars are spent in the U.S. each year for pancreatic cancer treatment • Treatment may also be completed as part of palliative care • Standard treatment can involve: • Chemotherapy • Radiation therapy • Chemoradiation therapy • Targeted therapy • Surgery

  32. PancreaticoduodenectomyWhipple Procedure • The removal of the: • Head of the pancreas • Duodenum • Lymph nodes near the pancreas • Gallbladder • Part of the common bile duct • Part of the stomach (sometimes)

  33. The Whipple Procedure

  34. Candidacy • Indication: resectable cancer in the head of the pancreas, duodenum, and/or distal bile duct • Contradiction: tumor is too large to be surgically removed • The surgery can sometimes be completed as part of palliative care

  35. Potential Complications of the Whipple Procedure • Fistulas • Infection • Bleeding • Gastroparesis • Abscess inside the abdomen • Pancreatitis • Organ failure • Decreased appetite with consequent unintended weight loss • Decreased ability to digest fats sufficiently • Risk of dumping syndrome • 15-25% increased risk of becoming diabetic

  36. Other Surgeries for Pancreatic Cancer Distal pancreatectomy Total pancreatectomy

  37. Medications • Pain-killers • Antiemetics & antinauseants • Appetite stimulants • Stool softeners or stimulant laxatives • Soluble fiber supplements • Pancreatic enzymes • Proton pump inhibitors • Oral hypoglycemics or SQ insulin

  38. The Role of the RD: Why? Pancreatic Cancer symptoms Treatment side effects Diarrhea Nausea Vomiting Dry mouth Stomatitis Tender gums Sore throat Trouble swallowing/chewing • GI disturbances • Pain • Poor appetite • Anorexia • Weight loss • Diabetes • Steatorrhea

  39. The Role of the RD: Why? Whipple Complications • Diabetes • Weight loss • Dumping syndrome • Steatorrhea • Vitamin deficiency

  40. Nutrition Care Process Assessment (A) Diagnosis (D) Intervention (I) Monitoring (M) Evaluation (E)

  41. Assessment

  42. Needs Assessment Based on the American Nutrition and Dietetics Evidence Library: Calorie Needs • 25-30 kcal/kg for maintenance • 30-35+ for repletion Protein Needs • 1.0-1.2 g/kg for maintenance • 1.2-2.0 g/kg for repletion

  43. Nutrition Diagnosis • Malnutrition related to alteration in gastrointestinal tract structure/function • Secondary diagnoses: inadequate oral or energy intake, unintended weight loss, altered GI function, increased needs

  44. Interventions & Monitoring/Evaluation: Pancreatic Cancer • Reduce and control nausea and vomiting • Prevent or correct weight loss and restore lean body mass • Control side effects of therapies and the disease • Monitor for depression and associated disordered or inadequate eating habits • Address identified micronutrient deficiencies

  45. Intervention & Monitoring/Evaluation: Post-op Whipple • Dietary recommendations: • Small, frequent meals • Low fat diet (40-60 g/day) • No concentrated sweets if experiencing glucose intolerance and/or dumping syndrome • Low-fiber diet 1-2 weeks post-op • At least 64 fluid ounces of fluids per day • Avoid fluid consumption 1 hour pre- and post-prandial • Multi-vitamin supplementation

  46. Post-op Whipple Addressing Vitamin Deficiencies • Fat-soluble vitamins • Vitamin B12 • Calcium • Selenium • Zinc • Iron

  47. Nutrition Support: Route • Preferred method: J-tube • TPN only indicated when the GI tract is nonfunctioning • After a Whipple, GI functionality improves gradually… If the gut works, use it!

  48. Nutrition Support: Formulas • Elemental formulas • Almost entirely amino acid-based, 2-3% calories from fat • Semi-elemental formulas • Peptide-based, MCT-based

  49. Perioperative Nutrition Support • Surgery and trauma state can induce an arginine deficiency • Some evidence indicates that the use of immunomodulatingformulas (IMFs) in enteral feedings both before and after surgery can be beneficial

  50. Presentation of the Patient • Initials: E.C. • Code Status: AND • 81 years old • Female • Caucasian

More Related