From 1951 through December, 1985, a total of 89 patients underwent total pancreatectomy for ductal adenocarcinoma. Of the 89 patients, 54 were male and 35 were female; their average age was 60.0 years. Histologic grading (Broders') demonstrated that 56% of the patients had a grade 2 tumor and 38%, a grade 3 tumor. None of the patients had grade 4 tumors. Peripancreatic lymph nodes were positive in 47% of the patients at the time of resection. Multicentricity was noted in 32.5% of patients. The operative mortality was 10.1%; however, for the patients who had surgery after January, 1980, the operative mortality was 6.2%. At the completion of the study, 78 patients had died and 11 were alive. The principal cause of death was recurrent malignancy. The median duration of survival, including the duration of survival in patients who had operative deaths, was 1.03 years. The influence of sex, tumor grade and size, multicentricity, and nodal status was evaluated multivariately with Cox's proportional hazard model.
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