Chronic pancreatitis can be a debilitating disease. Resection for complicated disease and in those patients with intractable pain is a major component of therapy. There are potentially important physiological advantages with the pylorus preserving Kausch-Whipple (P-KW) compared to the standard Kausch-Whipple (KW) resection but further prospective studies are required to show this unequivocally. The Beger's operation also represents a significant theoretical advance. Indeed it permits resection in a proportion in whom a PP-KW or KW would not be possible technically because of severe fibrosis around the intra-pancreatic portal venous system. Although we have adopted the Beger's operation on our unit, large comparative studies are required against the KW and PP-KW procedures to properly establish its value. The hidden malignancy is an important issue, which undermines the routine use of the Beger's operation.