4. Discussion
In this study, the pancreatic fat fraction measured quantitatively by MRI was found to be significantly and independently associated with the presence of IPMN. Compared with the control group, the IPMN group exhibited significantly higher fat fractions in the head, body and tail regions of the pancreas. Furthermore, multivariable logistic regression analyses demonstrated that age, together with pancreatic fat fraction, was an independent predictor of the presence of IPMN. In ROC analysis, the mean pancreatic fat fraction showed the highest diagnostic performance, with a sensitivity of 91.7% and a specificity of 95.0%, suggesting that pancreatic fat accumulation may represent a promising imaging biomarker for the identification of individuals with IPMN. Several mechanisms may explain the observed association between pancreatic steatosis and IPMN. Excessive fat accumulation within the pancreatic parenchyma promotes chronic low-grade inflammation through the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines and adipokines, induces oxidative stress and fibrosis, and contributes to insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia, leading to activation of IGF-1–related signaling pathways that may favor neoplastic transformation and epithelial proliferation (7-9). Furthermore, adipose tissue-derived inflammatory mediators may remodel the pancreatic microenvironment and create conditions conducive to tumor initiation and progression (10,11).
In recent years, the relationship between pancreatic steatosis and pancreatic neoplasms has attracted increasing attention. Pancreatic fat accumulation has been shown to represent not only a metabolic condition but also a pathological process associated with chronic inflammation, fibrosis, insulin resistance, and pancreatic carcinogenesis. In particular, MRI-based studies have demonstrated that the amount of pancreatic fat strongly correlates with histopathological fat infiltration and can reflect pancreatic microstructural changes. Therefore, pancreatic steatosis is currently regarded not only as a metabolic finding but also as a potential risk phenotype for the development of pancreatic malignancy(1-3).
One of the most important findings of our study was the significantly higher fat fraction observed in all anatomical segments of the pancreas in patients with IPMN. This finding is consistent with the results of current MRI studies investigating the relationship between pancreatic parenchymal characteristics and IPMN risk stratification. Maeba et al. reported that quantitative MRI parameters are associated with IPMN risk stratification and may reflect pancreatic parenchymal alterations as well as lesion biology. Similarly, our study demonstrated a strong association between pancreatic fat infiltration and the presence of IPMN (9).
In regional analyses, the fat fraction in the pancreatic head demonstrated the strongest independent association with IPMN. Multivariable analysis showed that each 1% increase in the pancreatic head fat fraction was associated with an approximately 1.8-fold increase in the likelihood of IPMN. Considering that IPMN lesions are most commonly located in the pancreatic head, this finding is clinically noteworthy. It may be hypothesized that regional fat infiltration alters the local inflammatory microenvironment and facilitates neoplastic transformation (12). Nevertheless, whether this relationship is causal cannot be determined based on the current study design.
The identification of age as an independent risk factor in all models was an expected finding. Previous epidemiological studies have demonstrated that the prevalence of pancreatic cystic lesions, particularly IPMNs, increases significantly with advancing age (13). In an abdominal MRI prevalence study, the frequency of pancreatic cysts was shown to increase markedly with age, and approximately half of the detected lesions were reported to be IPMNs. Similarly, recent meta-analyses have shown that the prevalence of IPMN is higher in older populations (14). Notably, in our study, pancreatic fat fraction remained significant even after adjustment for age. This finding suggests that pancreatic steatosis may not simply be a consequence of aging but may also have an independent association with the presence of IPMN
Although serum glucose, HDL, and LDH levels differed significantly between the groups in the univariate analysis, these associations disappeared after adjustment for pancreatic fat fraction and age. One possible explanation is that these metabolic abnormalities are systemic manifestations of pancreatic steatosis rather than independent determinants of IPMN. Pancreatic fat accumulation is closely associated with insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, chronic inflammation, and oxidative stress, which may alter circulating glucose and lipid metabolism while simultaneously promoting a pro-neoplastic pancreatic microenvironment. Consequently, pancreatic fat fraction may better reflect the local pathological process than circulating biochemical markers alone, attenuating the independent effects of glucose, HDL, and LDH in multivariable models (8,9; 15,16).
The finding that the mean pancreatic fat fraction yielded an AUC value of 0.968 in the ROC analysis is particularly noteworthy. These findings suggest that MRI-derived quantitative pancreatic fat fraction measurements may provide high diagnostic accuracy for identifying patients with IPMN. Current studies indicate that the PDFF method is a reliable and reproducible technique for the assessment of pancreatic steatosis (17). The optimal cut-off value of 8.81% identified in our study may serve as a clinically useful reference threshold for identifying individuals at increased risk of IPMN in future studies.
The present study has several strengths. First, it provides a relatively comprehensive evaluation of the association between quantitatively measured MRI-derived pancreatic fat fraction and the presence of IPMN. By assessing fat deposition in the head, body, tail, and whole pancreas, the study offers a detailed regional analysis of pancreatic steatosis. Second, the association between pancreatic fat fraction and IPMN remained significant after adjustment for demographic and metabolic variables, supporting the consistency of the observed findings. Third, the excellent diagnostic performance demonstrated in the ROC analysis, particularly for the mean pancreatic fat fraction, suggests that quantitative MRI-based pancreatic fat assessment may have potential utility as a non-invasive imaging marker for identifying individuals at increased risk of IPMN. Finally, the use of quantitative MRI-derived fat fraction measurements provides an objective and reproducible method for evaluating pancreatic steatosis, which may facilitate future investigations into the relationship between ectopic pancreatic fat accumulation and pancreatic cystic neoplasms.
This study has several limitations. First, due to its retrospective and single-center design, selection bias cannot be completely excluded. Second, although the IPMN group had a higher prevalence of diabetes than the control group, suggesting a potential confounding effect, pancreatic fat fraction remained independently associated with IPMN after multivariable adjustment. However, pancreatic fat fraction remained independently associated with IPMN after multivariable adjustment, suggesting that the observed association was not solely explained by differences in diabetes prevalence. Third, histopathological confirmation was not available for all cases. Finally, because long-term follow-up data were unavailable, the impact of pancreatic steatosis on malignant transformation or disease progression could not be evaluated.