Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm

specific

A usually slow-growing epithelial neoplasm with ductal differentiation that arises from the exocrine pancreas and grows mostly within the pancreatic ducts. Grossly, it is characterized by the presence of intraductal masses. Morphologically, there is proliferation of mucin-producing cells within the pancreatic ducts, intraductal accumulation of mucin, and a papillary growth pattern. It may be associated with the presence of an invasive carcinoma. It usually occurs in older patients. Signs and sym

13

Centers

3

Active Trials

$24M

Cancer Funding

Top Centers for Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm(13)

Ranked by research excellence score (trials · grants · publications). Methodology →

#CenterScore
1
NCI Comprehensive
High-Volume Research Center
87.3
2
NCI Comprehensive
Active Research Program
62.1
3
NCI Comprehensive
Active Research Program
59.4
4
NCI Comprehensive
Active Research Program
59.0
5
Active Research Program
59.0
6
NCI Comprehensive
Active Research Program
56.7
7
NCI Comprehensive
Active Research Program
54.0
8
NCI Comprehensive
Active Research Program
51.3
948.7
10
NCI Comprehensive
Active Research Program
46.0
11
NCI Comprehensive
Active Research Program
43.3
1236.5
1336.5

Research tier badges reflect trial volume, NIH grant funding, and publication impact — not clinical outcomes or patient satisfaction. Learn about our methodology →