ObjectiveTo review the current clinical application of Beger procedure and Frey procedure for benign disease or low-grade malignant potential lesion of pancreas. MethodsRelevant literatures about current advance of clinical application of Beger procedure and Frey procedure published recently of domestic and abroad were collected and reviewed. ResultsWith the concept of organ-preserving operations was adopted in recent years, Beger procedure and Frey procedure were applied generally. Beger procedure and Frey procedure were associated with tolerable perioperative risk, postoperative complications, and good outcomes in the aspects of preservation of function and curability in these lesions compared to conventional pancreatectomy, with preservation of the physiological food passage, thus patients gained weight faster, had less pain, and demonstrated better exocrine and endocrine pancreatic function postoperatively and an improvement in the quality of life. Both procedures had reached an international position as a standard operation for the treatment of benign disease or low-grade malignant potential lesion of pancreas. But after long-term following-up early advantages were no longer present. ConclusionsBeger procedure and Frey procedure are safe and effective in providing good outcomes in the aspects of preservation of function and curability in benign disease or low-grade malignant potential lesion of pancreas. Organ-preserving pancreatectomy could become a new organ-preserving standard operation.
ObjectiveTo explore the value of duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection for benign lesions in pancreatic head. MethodsClinical data of 14 patients with benign lesions in pancreatic head who were underwent duodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection from Jan. 1995 to Dec. 2012 were retrospectively analyzed, to explore the value of the surgery. ResultsAll surgeries of the 14 patients were success. The operation time were 4.0-6.5 hours (5.2 hours on average), the intraoperative blood loss were 100-1 000 mL (450 mL on average). Postoperative complications happened in 3 patients (21.4%), including pancreatic fistula in 2 patients and biliary fistula in 1 patient, which were cured with non-surgical treatment. No deaths happened during surgery and hospitalization. Of the 14 patients, 13 patients were followed-up for 6 months to 2 years with no recurrence, diabetes, postoperative gastric emptying disorders, and other long-term complications happened. ConclusionDuodenum-preserving pancreatic head resection is the safe and effective treatment of benign lesions in the head of pancreas.