Pancreatic Cancer: Complete Guide
Quick Facts
- Fourth leading cause of cancer death
- 5-year survival rate: 12% overall
- Often diagnosed at advanced stage (80% unresectable)
- Median age at diagnosis: 70 years
- Slightly more common in men than women
- Smoking increases risk by 2-3 fold
- Only 20% of patients are surgical candidates at diagnosis
- Rapid progression and early metastasis common
What is Pancreatic Cancer?
Pancreatic cancer begins when cells in the pancreas develop mutations in their DNA and grow uncontrollably. The pancreas is a 6-inch long organ located behind the stomach that produces enzymes for digestion and hormones (including insulin) that regulate blood sugar.
Key Points
- Most pancreatic cancers (90%) are exocrine tumors (adenocarcinomas)
- Often called a "silent disease" due to lack of early symptoms
- Aggressive cancer with tendency for early spread
- Difficult to detect early due to pancreas location deep in abdomen
- Treatment advances are improving outcomes for some patients
Pancreas Anatomy
The pancreas has three main parts:
- Head: Widest part, near duodenum (60-70% of cancers)
- Body: Middle section (15-20% of cancers)
- Tail: Narrow end near spleen (5-10% of cancers)
The pancreas has two main functions:
- Exocrine function: Produces digestive enzymes
- Endocrine function: Produces hormones like insulin and glucagon
Types of Pancreatic Cancer
Exocrine Tumors (95%)
Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma (90%)
- Most common type
- Arises from ductal cells
- Also called pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC)
- Aggressive with poor prognosis
Other Exocrine Tumors
- Acinar cell carcinoma: 1-2% of cases, slightly better prognosis
- Adenosquamous carcinoma: Very rare and aggressive
- Colloid carcinoma: From IPMN, better prognosis
- Hepatoid carcinoma: Extremely rare
- Signet ring cell carcinoma: Very rare, poor prognosis
- Undifferentiated carcinoma: Very aggressive
Neuroendocrine Tumors (5%)
- Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PNETs): Better prognosis than adenocarcinoma
- Functional tumors: Produce hormones
- Insulinomas (most common)
- Gastrinomas
- Glucagonomas
- VIPomas
- Somatostatinomas
- Non-functional tumors: Don't produce hormones
Cystic Tumors
- Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs): Can become malignant
- Mucinous cystic neoplasms (MCNs): Primarily in women, can progress to cancer
- Serous cystadenomas: Usually benign
- Solid pseudopapillary neoplasms: Rare, mostly in young women
Signs and Symptoms
Early Symptoms (Often Vague)
- Abdominal pain that radiates to back
- Loss of appetite
- Unexplained weight loss
- Fatigue
- New-onset diabetes or worsening blood sugar control
- Digestive problems
Advanced Symptoms
Head of Pancreas Tumors
- Jaundice: Yellowing of skin and eyes (70% of head tumors)
- Dark urine
- Light-colored or greasy stools
- Itchy skin
- Pain in upper abdomen or mid-back
- Nausea and vomiting
- Enlarged gallbladder (Courvoisier's sign)
Body/Tail Tumors
- Pain (more common presentation)
- Weight loss
- Often no jaundice
- May present later with larger tumors
Paraneoplastic Syndromes
- Trousseau syndrome: Blood clots (10% of patients)
- Depression: May precede diagnosis
- Panniculitis: Fat necrosis causing skin nodules
⚠️ Red Flag Symptoms
Seek immediate medical evaluation for:
- Painless jaundice
- Unexplained weight loss >10% body weight
- New-onset diabetes after age 50
- Persistent upper abdominal pain
- Sudden worsening of chronic pancreatitis symptoms
⚠️ Medical Emergency
Seek immediate care for:
- Severe abdominal pain with fever (possible infection)
- Signs of blood clot (leg swelling, chest pain, shortness of breath)
- Severe jaundice with confusion
- Uncontrolled vomiting
Causes and Risk Factors
Modifiable Risk Factors
- Smoking:
- Doubles risk
- Accounts for 20-30% of cases
- Risk decreases after quitting
- Obesity: BMI ≥30 increases risk by 20%
- Diet: High in red/processed meat, low in fruits/vegetables
- Alcohol: Heavy consumption (>3 drinks/day)
- Occupational exposures: Pesticides, dyes, chemicals
Non-Modifiable Risk Factors
- Age:
- Average age at diagnosis: 70
- Rare before age 45
- Gender: Slightly more common in men
- Race: Higher incidence in African Americans
- Family history: 5-10% have familial component
- Genetic syndromes (5-10%):
- BRCA1/BRCA2 mutations
- Lynch syndrome
- Familial atypical multiple mole melanoma (FAMMM)
- Peutz-Jeghers syndrome
- Hereditary pancreatitis
- Li-Fraumeni syndrome
- Ataxia-telangiectasia
Medical Conditions
- Chronic pancreatitis: 5% lifetime risk
- Diabetes:
- Long-standing: 2x risk
- New-onset: May be early sign
- Cystic lesions: IPMNs, MCNs
- H. pylori infection: Possible increased risk
- Hepatitis B: Possible association
Diagnosis
Initial Evaluation
- Complete medical history
- Physical examination
- Blood tests:
- Complete blood count
- Comprehensive metabolic panel
- Liver function tests
- Bilirubin levels
Tumor Markers
- CA 19-9:
- Elevated in 80-85% of cases
- Not specific (can be elevated in other conditions)
- Useful for monitoring treatment response
- Very high levels (>1000 U/mL) suggest advanced disease
- CEA: Less sensitive than CA 19-9
- CA 125: May be elevated
Imaging Studies
CT Scan (Pancreatic Protocol)
- Triple-phase with thin slices
- Assesses tumor size and vascular involvement
- Evaluates for metastases
- Determines resectability
MRI/MRCP
- Better for cystic lesions
- Evaluates bile duct and pancreatic duct
- Alternative when CT contraindicated
Endoscopic Ultrasound (EUS)
- Most sensitive for small tumors
- Allows fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy
- Evaluates vascular invasion
- Assesses lymph nodes
PET/CT
- Detects distant metastases
- Not routine but helpful in select cases
Tissue Diagnosis
- EUS-FNA: Preferred method, 85-95% sensitivity
- CT-guided biopsy: For larger masses
- ERCP with brushings: For strictures
- Laparoscopy: Detects peritoneal disease (20-30% of cases)
⚠️ Note on Biopsy
Tissue diagnosis not always required before surgery if:
- Classic imaging findings
- Resectable disease
- No evidence of metastases
Staging
TNM Staging (8th Edition)
| Stage | T | N | M | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stage IA | T1 | N0 | M0 | Tumor ≤2 cm, confined to pancreas |
| Stage IB | T2 | N0 | M0 | Tumor >2 cm but ≤4 cm |
| Stage IIA | T3 | N0 | M0 | Tumor >4 cm |
| Stage IIB | T1-3 | N1 | M0 | 1-3 positive lymph nodes |
| Stage III | T1-3 | N2 | M0 | ≥4 positive lymph nodes |
| T4 | Any N | M0 | Involves celiac axis, SMA, or common hepatic artery | |
| Stage IV | Any T | Any N | M1 | Distant metastasis |
Resectability Status
Resectable (15-20%)
- No distant metastases
- No arterial involvement (celiac, SMA, hepatic)
- No SMV/portal vein involvement or <180° involvement without irregularity
Borderline Resectable (10%)
- No distant metastases
- Venous involvement potentially reconstructable
- Arterial abutment <180° without stenosis
- Consider neoadjuvant therapy
Locally Advanced (30%)
- No distant metastases
- >180° arterial encasement
- Unreconstructable venous occlusion
Metastatic (40-50%)
- Distant organ metastases
- Most common: liver, peritoneum, lungs
Treatment Options
Treatment by Stage
Resectable Disease
- Surgery (see surgical procedures section)
- Adjuvant chemotherapy (standard):
- mFOLFIRINOX (preferred if fit)
- Gemcitabine + capecitabine
- Gemcitabine monotherapy
- 5-FU/leucovorin (if cannot tolerate above)
- Consider clinical trials
Borderline Resectable
- Neoadjuvant therapy:
- FOLFIRINOX (preferred)
- Gemcitabine + nab-paclitaxel
- Consider radiation (controversial)
- Restaging
- Surgery if resectable
- Adjuvant therapy
Locally Advanced
- Systemic chemotherapy (4-6 months)
- Restaging - consider surgery if converted to resectable
- Chemoradiation or SBRT (selected patients)
- Maintenance therapy
Metastatic Disease
- First-line chemotherapy:
- FOLFIRINOX (fit patients, ECOG 0-1)
- Gemcitabine + nab-paclitaxel
- Gemcitabine monotherapy (poor performance status)
- Second-line options:
- Gemcitabine-based if prior FOLFIRINOX
- 5-FU-based if prior gemcitabine
- Liposomal irinotecan + 5-FU/leucovorin
Chemotherapy Regimens
FOLFIRINOX
- 5-FU + leucovorin + irinotecan + oxaliplatin
- Median OS: 11.1 months (metastatic)
- High toxicity - requires good performance status
- Modified versions with dose reductions often used
Gemcitabine + nab-paclitaxel
- Median OS: 8.5 months (metastatic)
- Better tolerated than FOLFIRINOX
- Peripheral neuropathy common
Targeted Therapy
- Erlotinib: Modest benefit with gemcitabine (historical)
- Olaparib: BRCA-mutated, maintenance after platinum
- Larotrectinib/Entrectinib: NTRK fusion-positive (rare)
- Pembrolizumab: MSI-H/dMMR tumors (1-2%)
Radiation Therapy
- Role controversial and evolving
- Options:
- Conventional fractionation with chemotherapy
- SBRT (stereotactic body radiation)
- Proton therapy (investigational)
- May be used for:
- Borderline resectable (neoadjuvant)
- Positive margins after surgery
- Locally advanced disease
- Palliation of pain or bleeding
Supportive Care
- Pain management: Often requires opioids, celiac plexus block
- Pancreatic enzymes: For exocrine insufficiency
- Diabetes management: May need insulin
- Nutritional support: Dietitian consultation essential
- Biliary drainage: Stenting for obstruction
- Anticoagulation: Consider for thrombosis risk
- Palliative care: Early integration improves outcomes
Surgical Procedures
Pancreaticoduodenectomy (Whipple Procedure)
For tumors in head of pancreas:
- Removes:
- Head of pancreas
- Duodenum
- Gallbladder
- Common bile duct
- Part of stomach (classic) or pylorus-preserving
- Reconstructs digestive tract
- Mortality: <2% at high-volume centers
- Morbidity: 30-40%
- Complications:
- Pancreatic fistula (10-20%)
- Delayed gastric emptying (15-20%)
- Wound infection
- Hemorrhage
Distal Pancreatectomy
For body/tail tumors:
- Removes tail and body of pancreas
- Usually includes splenectomy
- Lower morbidity than Whipple
- Risk of pancreatic fistula
Total Pancreatectomy
- Removes entire pancreas
- Results in diabetes and complete exocrine insufficiency
- Reserved for extensive disease or IPMN
Vascular Resection
- Portal vein/SMV reconstruction possible
- Arterial resection controversial
- Requires experienced surgeon
High-Volume Centers
Surgery should be performed at centers doing >15-20 cases/year:
- Lower mortality (2% vs 10%)
- Better long-term outcomes
- More likely to receive appropriate adjuvant therapy
Prognosis and Survival
Overall Survival
- 1-year survival: 35%
- 5-year survival: 12%
- 10-year survival: <5%
By Stage
- Localized (resectable): 5-year survival 40-45% with treatment
- Regional (node-positive): 5-year survival 15-20%
- Distant (metastatic): 5-year survival 3%
Prognostic Factors
Favorable
- Complete surgical resection (R0)
- Well-differentiated tumor
- No lymph node involvement
- CA 19-9 normalization after treatment
- Good performance status
- Ability to receive adjuvant therapy
Unfavorable
- Positive margins (R1/R2)
- Poorly differentiated
- Lymph node involvement
- Perineural invasion
- High CA 19-9 (>1000 U/mL)
- Large tumor size
Long-term Survivors
Characteristics of 5+ year survivors:
- Early-stage disease at diagnosis
- Complete surgical resection
- Receipt of multimodality therapy
- BRCA mutations (better response to platinum)
- Exceptional responders to therapy (rare)
Clinical Trials and Research
Active Areas of Research
- Immunotherapy combinations: Checkpoint inhibitors + vaccines
- KRAS inhibitors: Targeting KRAS G12C, G12D
- Stromal modification: Breaking down tumor stroma
- CAR-T therapy: Engineered T cells
- Liquid biopsies: Early detection and monitoring
- Precision medicine: Molecular profiling for targeted therapy
- Metabolic targeting: Exploiting cancer metabolism
Important Clinical Trials
- Neoadjuvant therapy optimization
- Maintenance therapy strategies
- Novel drug combinations
- Early detection biomarkers
- High-risk screening protocols
Clinical Trial Participation
Consider clinical trials at all stages of disease. Benefits include:
- Access to novel therapies
- Close monitoring
- Contributing to research
- Potential for better outcomes
Living with Pancreatic Cancer
Physical Symptoms Management
- Pain: Multimodal approach, consider nerve blocks
- Nausea: Anti-emetics, small frequent meals
- Weight loss: High-calorie supplements, appetite stimulants
- Fatigue: Energy conservation, gentle exercise
- Diarrhea: From fat malabsorption, needs enzyme replacement
Nutritional Support
- Pancreatic enzyme replacement with meals
- Small, frequent meals
- Low-fat diet if steatorrhea
- Vitamin supplementation (fat-soluble vitamins)
- Monitor and treat diabetes
- Consider nutritional supplements
Psychological Support
- High rates of depression and anxiety
- Individual counseling
- Support groups
- Family counseling
- Spiritual support if desired
Advance Care Planning
- Early discussions about goals of care
- Advance directives
- Healthcare proxy designation
- Palliative care integration
- Hospice referral when appropriate
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is pancreatic cancer so deadly?
Several factors contribute: late diagnosis due to lack of early symptoms, aggressive biology with early spread, location near vital structures, dense stroma limiting drug delivery, and high rate of treatment resistance.
Are there screening tests for pancreatic cancer?
No routine screening exists for average-risk individuals. High-risk individuals (strong family history, genetic syndromes) may undergo surveillance with MRI/EUS, but this is not standardized.
What are the warning signs I should watch for?
New-onset diabetes after 50, unexplained weight loss, persistent upper abdominal or back pain, jaundice, changes in stool, and loss of appetite. These symptoms warrant medical evaluation.
Is pancreatic cancer hereditary?
About 5-10% have hereditary component. Risk increases with family history: 2x risk with one affected relative, 6x with two, 32x with three. Genetic testing may be recommended.
What is the Whipple procedure?
Major surgery removing head of pancreas, duodenum, gallbladder, and part of stomach. It's the standard surgery for head of pancreas tumors. Recovery takes 6-8 weeks.
Can pancreatic cancer be prevented?
While not entirely preventable, risk can be reduced by not smoking, maintaining healthy weight, limiting alcohol, and managing diabetes. High-risk individuals may benefit from surveillance.
What is CA 19-9?
A blood marker often elevated in pancreatic cancer but not specific. Used to monitor treatment response and detect recurrence. Not reliable for screening as it can be normal in early disease.
Should I seek a second opinion?
Yes, particularly for treatment planning. Pancreatic cancer is complex, and treatment at high-volume centers improves outcomes. Second opinions are standard practice.
What about alternative treatments?
No alternative treatments have proven effective against pancreatic cancer. Some complementary therapies may help with symptoms. Always discuss with your oncologist to avoid interactions.
Are there long-term survivors?
Yes, though uncommon. About 10% of resected patients survive 5+ years. Some patients with favorable biology or exceptional treatment response become long-term survivors.
Related Topics
Medical Disclaimer
This information is for educational purposes only and should not replace professional medical advice. Always consult with qualified healthcare providers for diagnosis and treatment decisions. Pancreatic cancer treatment is rapidly evolving, and newer options may be available through clinical trials.
Sources
- National Cancer Institute. Pancreatic Cancer Treatment (PDQ) - Health Professional Version. Updated January 2026.
- American Cancer Society. Pancreatic Cancer Statistics. 2026.
- NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines. Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma. Version 1.2026.
- Mizrahi JD, et al. Pancreatic cancer. Lancet. 2025.
- ASCO Clinical Practice Guidelines. Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer. 2025 Update.
- Tempero MA. NCCN Guidelines Insights: Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma. J Natl Compr Canc Netw. 2025.
- Park W, et al. Pancreatic Cancer: Review of Epidemiology, Diagnosis, and Treatment. JAMA. 2025.