Pancreatic Cancer

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Pancreatic cancer formation PanIN1 is "just" hyperplasia of ductal epithelium, PanIN3 is carcinoma in situ (intact basal membrane)

Pancreatic cancer is the malignant tumor arising mostly from the epithelium of the pancreatic ducts, therefore most of them are adenocarcinomas (96%). Most of such cancers are diagnosed in advanced states, thus resulting in high mortality.

Epidemiology[edit | edit source]

Pancreatic cancer became a serious problem in western countries and Japan. It is the 2nd commonest gastrointestinal cancer and the 5th most common cancer death in the USA. 12% of all diagnosed patients survive 1 year, and 2% survive 5 years[1].

Risk factors[edit | edit source]

Pancreas

Pathology[edit | edit source]

Pancreatic cancer is an adenocarcinoma arising from the exocrinous part of the pancreas. 90–95% of them arise in the ductal epithelium, and 5–10% are acinous. Other histological forms are rare (papillary cystadenocarcinoma, adenosquamous carcinoma or gian cell carcinoma). The most often localization is in the head of pancreas (70%) then in body (20%) and tail (10%)[2].

Clinical features[edit | edit source]

Symptomatology depends on localization of the tumor. Carcinomas localized in the head of pancreas can very often cause jaundice. It can be the earliest or the only symptom. Tumors localized in the tail grow very slowly and their first manifestation can be pain or weight loss.

  • Jaundice – usually painless jaundice, only pancreatic head tumors, which cause biliary obstruction (in 80% pancreatic head tumors)[2].
  • Pain – typically visceral abdominal pain, very often radiating to back (75% patients)[2], more in body and tail tumors.
  • Weight loss – caused by anorexia (75% patients), malabsorption is very rare[2].
  • Courvoisier’s sign – enlarged palpable gallblader, in patients with pancreatic head tumors (< 50%).
  • Migratory thrombophlebitis.
  • Glucose intolerance.

Diagnostic Methods[edit | edit source]

  • Laboratory: higher bilirubin, tumormarker CA 19–9 (but is not specific, can be found in patients with colon cancer or biliary obstruction);
  • USG: in clasical ultrasonography need not to be found small tumors of pancreas (or even pancreas);
  • EUSG: endoscopic sonography is better methode for finding of pathologies in pancreas than clasical abdominal USG;
  • ERCP (endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography) is the best methode for therapeutic intervention of biliary obstruction (stent)[1];
  • CT: computer tomography is always neccesary in staging of pancreatic cancer, results of CT will decide about the therapy.

Therapy[edit | edit source]

Just only 15% of patients with diagnosed pancreatic cancer can undergo curative therapy which is always surgery[1]. It is because of late diagnosis of this disease. All the other patients can be treated only with paliative therapy.

Curative Therapy[edit | edit source]

Surgery[edit | edit source]

  • Whipple’s operation (partial pancreatico-duodenectomy) – pancreatic head tumors[1];
  • total pancreatico-duodenectomy (with gastro-jejunoanastomosis), then is neccesary pancreatic enzymes and hormones substitution;
  • resection of the tail of pancreas (just only in pancreatic tail tumors).

Chemotherapy[edit | edit source]

There is no chemotherapy bringing better resultes than 6–8 months survival time. At this time is used:

  • 5FU – 5 fluoruracil;
  • gemcitabine.

Palliative Therapy[edit | edit source]

Palliative therapy is based on patients symptoms:

  • therapy of painanalgetics, epidural analgesia or coeliac ganglion destruction[1];
  • therapy of biliary obstruction – metalic stents via ERCP or hepatico-jejuno anastomosis (surgery)[1];
  • therapy of gastrointestinal obstruction (especially duodenal obstuction by pancreatic head tumor) – gastro-jejuno anastomosis.


Links[edit | edit source]

Related articles[edit | edit source]

Sources[edit | edit source]

  • KUMAR, – CLARKS,. Clinical Medicine. 7th edition. 2009. ISBN 9780702029929.

References[edit | edit source]

  1. a b c d e f BURKITT, H. George – QUICK, Clive R. G. Essential surgery :  problems, diagnosis and management. 4. edition. Edinburgh ; New York : Churchill Livingstone, 2007. 793 pp. pp. 369-373. ISBN 9780443103469.
  2. a b c d KASPER, Dennis L – FAUCI, Anthony S – LONGO, Dan L, et al. Harrison's principles of Internal Medicine. 16th edition. New York : McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc, 2005. 2607 pp. pp. 537-539. ISBN 0-07-139140-1.