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ACTA ONCOLOGICA LECTURE

Pancreatic cancer: Progress made

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Pages 407-417 | Received 30 Jul 2009, Accepted 27 Oct 2009, Published online: 08 Jan 2010
 

Abstract

Pancreatic cancer remains a deadly disease. Despite advances on many fronts, surgeons play a leading role in the diagnosis and management of pancreatic cancer. Preoperative staging is best provided by “pancreas-protocol” abdominal CT, although endoscopic ultrasound and diagnostic laparoscopy can add value in selected patients. Surgical resection, which remains the only curative option, is now accomplished with uniformly low perioperative mortality in high-volume centers (<3%), although complications remain frequent. Unfortunately, the long-term prognosis for pancreatic cancer remains poor with 5-year survival rates only 15–23% with median survival of 13 to 18 months. Recent data from randomized trials have supported the role for adjuvant chemotherapy and questioned the traditional role of radiation. Early diagnosis and targeted multimodality treatments would appear essential to optimizing the results of surgical therapy.

Acknowledgements

Presented as the Acta Oncologica Lecture at the XL Nordic Meeting of Gastroenterology.

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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