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Zollinger-Ellison syndrome

From Surgopaedia

Clinical triad consisting of

  • Gastric acid hypersecretion
  • Severe PUD
  • Gastrin-producing neuroendocrine tumours ('gastrinomas')

Epidemiology

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  • Mean age at diagnosis 50yo

Pathophysiology

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  • The clinical syndrome caused by pancreatic/duodenal gastrinoma-secreting neuroendocrine tumours
  • Most (80%) of gastrinomas are within the 'gastrinoma triangle', which is between the cystic duct-CBD junction, the pancreas body-neck junction, and the junction between D2 and D3
  • Can metastasise to lymph nodes or liver, but slow-growing
  • 20-30% of patients with ZES have MEN 1, and 50% of patients with MEN 1 have ZES


Presentation

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  • Symptoms are produced by hypergastrinaemia
    • Abdominal pain/PUD (>80%)
      • ZES is associated with multiple ulcers, ulcers distal to D2, and PPI resistance
    • Diarrhoea
    • Weight loss
    • Steatorrhoea
    • Oesophagitis
  • Responsible for somewhere less than 1% of PUD
  • Gastroscopy:
    • D2 ulcers
    • Thickened gastric folds, erosions (often duodenal), oesophagitis, hypervascular mucosa
    • Nodular lesions can be carcinoid tumours


Investigation for suspected ZES

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  • Indications:
    • Intractable peptic ulcers (D2, and especially jejunal)
    • Severe oesophagitis
    • Persistent secretory diarrhoea
  • Fasting serum gastrin >10x ULN (>1000pg/mL) and gastric pH <2 is diagnostic
    • Note that serum gastrin is falsely elevated with H2 blockers/PPIs on board, and in H. pylori infection and renal failure. Generally try to stop PPI for 2/52 prior.
    • Achlorhydria can also impact results - that's why you need to check stomach pH
      • pH >3 excludes ZES, while pH<2 is consistent
    • Provocative tests (before and after IV secretin) are generally not required, but can be done with equivocal results. An increase >200pg/mL above basal levels is suggestive of gastrinoma.
  • Endoscopy
    • Prominent gastric rugal folds (due to trophic effect of hypergastrinaemia on fundus)

Investigation of diagnosed ZES

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  • Workup for MEN 1 - pituitary and hyperparaythyroidism
    • Serum parathyroid
    • Calcium
    • Prolactin
  • CT triple-phase
    • Low sensitivity with tumours <1cm
  • DOTATATE PET
  • EUS sometimes helpful
  • If still unable to localise, can do surgical exploration


Management

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  • Medical
    • High-dose PPI
    • Good for unresectable or metastatic disease
  • Surgical
    • All patients with sporadic gastrinoma but no unresectable mets should have an exploratory curative laparotomy
      • If not localised pre-operatively, explore the entire abdomen, from underside of diaphragm to the pelvic floor, with particular attention to the liver, right subhepatic and paraduodenal area, and pelvic cul-de-sac and ovaries, and small bowel and colon. Perform intra-operative USS and check duodenum.
      • Excise regional nodes too - aim for >10
    • In more advanced disease, cytoreductive surgery is worth considering. Can do stuff like ablation of mets
  • Radiotherapy
    • Possibly useful in palliative patients
  • Chemotherapy
    • Indications
      • Unresectable or recurrent disease
    • Somatostatin analogues and/or a streptozocin/doxorubicin-based CTX regime
  • Treatment of mets
    • Consider liver-directed therapies - RFA, cryoablation, embolisation, resection, or transplantation
  • Patients with MEN 1
    • Parathyroidectomy should be done prior to gastrinomaectomy
    • In patients with MEN1 - only resect if identifiable gastrinoma >2cm

Prognosis

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  • If bilobar liver mets, 15% ten year survival (better predictor of survival than lymph node metastases)
  • Long-term cure rates after curative resection of non-metastatic tumours are ~50%
  • However patients have been known to live >20 years with residual disease