A disease that was once a death sentence is increasingly treatable: Pancreatic Cancer

Ruxandra Teslo in Works in Progress:

Pancreatic cancer has the highest mortality rate of all major cancers. Although its five-year survival rate has improved from roughly 4 percent in the mid-1990s to around 13 percent today, it remains among the deadliest of all cancer types.

Survival is so poor partially because pancreatic cancer is typically diagnosed late: the pancreas sits deep in the abdomen, symptoms are vague and late to appear, and by the time most patients are diagnosed, the cancer has already spread. This feature has earned pancreatic cancer the name ‘silent killer’. Metastatic cases, where the tumor has already spread to other organs, represent more than half of all new diagnoses. For these patients in particular there has been minimal improvement in outcomes over recent decades, with just 2 to 3 percent still alive five years after their diagnosis.

More here.

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