Multidisciplinary standards of care and recent progress in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma

Aaron J. Grossberg(Oregon Health & Science University), Linda C. Chu(Johns Hopkins University), Christopher R. Deig(Oregon Health & Science University), Eliot Fishman(Johns Hopkins University), William L. Hwang(Broad Institute), Anirban Maitra(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Daniel L. Marks(Oregon Health & Science University), Arnav Mehta(Broad Institute), Nima Nabavizadeh(Oregon Health & Science University), Diane M. Simeone(NYU Langone Health), Colin D. Weekes(Harvard University), Charles R. Thomas(Oregon Health & Science University)
CA A Cancer Journal for Clinicians
July 19, 2020
Cited by 513Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Despite tremendous gains in the molecular understanding of exocrine pancreatic cancer, the prognosis for this disease remains very poor, largely because of delayed disease detection and limited effectiveness of systemic therapies. Both incidence rates and mortality rates for pancreatic cancer have increased during the past decade, in contrast to most other solid tumor types. Recent improvements in multimodality care have substantially improved overall survival, local control, and metastasis-free survival for patients who have localized tumors that are amenable to surgical resection. The widening gap in prognosis between patients with resectable and unresectable or metastatic disease reinforces the importance of detecting pancreatic cancer sooner to improve outcomes. Furthermore, the developing use of therapies that target tumor-specific molecular vulnerabilities may offer improved disease control for patients with advanced disease. Finally, the substantial morbidity associated with pancreatic cancer, including wasting, fatigue, and pain, remains an under-addressed component of this disease, which powerfully affects quality of life and limits tolerance to aggressive therapies. In this article, the authors review the current multidisciplinary standards of care in pancreatic cancer with a focus on emerging concepts in pancreatic cancer detection, precision therapy, and survivorship.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis