Beyond the Knife: A Review of the Burden of Localized Recurrent Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma and the Potential Role of Intraoperative Radiation Therapy
Jared Mount, Brandon Mount, Michael Rutenberg, John A. StaufferBackground: Pancreatic resection (Pancreatoduodenectomy, PD, distal pancreatectomy, DP, or total pancreatectomy, TP) is the standard of care for resectable pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Despite advances in multimodal therapy, recurrence rates remain high, approaching 80%, and continue to drive poor overall survival. Objective: This review evaluates the burden and clinical significance of localized recurrence in PDAC and critically examines the potential role of intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) in improving locoregional disease control. Results: Distant recurrence remains the predominant pattern of failure, occurring in 55–75% of patients, most commonly involving the liver, lungs, and peritoneum. However, isolated local recurrence, observed in approximately 17–32% of patients, represents a clinically meaningful subset associated with significant morbidity and potential for subsequent metastatic progression. IORT, delivered as a single high-dose radiation treatment to the tumor bed at the time of surgery, enables precise targeting of areas at highest risk for residual microscopic disease while minimizing radiation exposure to adjacent radiosensitive structures. Retrospective and meta-analytic data, while limited, suggest that IORT is associated with improved local control and modest survival benefit without a significant increase in perioperative morbidity, though interpretation is limited by study heterogeneity and lack of randomized control trials. Conclusion: IORT represents a rational adjunct in the multimodal management of PDAC, particularly for patients at high risk of locoregional failure, including those with borderline resectable or locally advanced disease, nodal involvement, perineural invasion, or concern for margin positivity. Prospective studies are needed to better define optimal patient selection and to clarify the role of IORT in the modern treatment paradigm.