Procedure
Some tumors in the pancreas carry an increased risk of becoming malignant from the outset and thus triggering cancer. Examples include mucinous cystadenoma , which can develop into mucinous cystadenocarcinoma, and intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasia (IPMN). Doctors must always assess exactly how high this risk is. You should therefore have experience with this type of tumor. In these cases, an operation is advisable in which surgeons remove the tumor as completely as possible. In this way, the risk of degeneration can usually be averted.
The insulinoma causes a number of symptoms, some of them very severe, as it grows. The tumor produces increasing amounts of the blood sugar-lowering hormone insulin, which enters the bloodstream. This causes the blood sugar level to drop sharply and, in the worst case, there is a risk of fainting and unconsciousness. Doctors must treat the insulinoma to prevent consequences for the body and mind. They remove the insulinoma during an operation. They do this by peeling the tumor out of the pancreatic tissue. Enucleation is the name of this procedure. It is often possible to peel out the tumor during a laparoscopy. The procedure is minimally invasive (“keyhole surgery”) and a large abdominal incision (open surgery) is not necessary.
Only very rarely is a comprehensive surgical procedure necessary, such as Whipple’s surgery. This applies, for example, if a malignant tumor in the pancreas cannot be ruled out with certainty before the operation. The surgeon removes parts of the stomach, duodenum, pancreatic head, surrounding lymph nodes, gallbladder and the lower part of the common bile duct in one piece.