Exploring Your Options for Pancreatic Cancer Treatment
It is hard to stage pancreatic cancer
accurately by imaging tests.
Doctors must do their best to decide
before surgery whether there is a
good chance the cancer can be completely
removed. Surgeons usually
consider a pancreatic cancer resectable
(completely removable by surgery) if it
is staged as T1, T2, or T3. That means
it doesn’t extend far beyond the pancreas,
especially into nearby large blood
vessels (T4). There is no accurate way
to assess the lymph node spread of the
tumor before surgery.
Treating Resectable Pancreatic
Cancer
If imaging tests show a reasonable
chance of completely removing
the cancer, surgery should be done if
possible, as it offers the only chance to
cure this disease. Based on where the
cancer started, either a pancreaticoduodenectomy
(Whipple procedure) or a
distal pancreatectomy is usually used.
In most but not all cases, either chemotherapy alone or chemotherapy plus radiation therapy (chemoradiation) is used as well. This treatment may be given before or after surgery. Some centers favor giving it before surgery because the recovery after surgery is often long, which can delay or even prevent its use. But it is not yet clear whether this approach is better than giving it after surgery. Many surgeons are concerned about preoperative therapy. They feel that patients may become weakened and are therefore less able to withstand the surgery.
A recent study has shown that giving gemcitabine chemotherapy after surgery can delay the average time before cancer returns by about six months. It also seems to help patients live longer. 5-FU was commonly used in the past after surgery, but now gemcitabine is used more often. There is currently an ongoing study comparing 5-FU and gemcitabine as adjuvant therapy to see if one is better than the other. It is not yet clear whether adding radiation to chemotherapy would result in more of a benefit.
Treating Locally Advanced Pancreatic
Cancer
Locally advanced
cancers of the pancreas are those that
have grown too far to be completely
removed by surgery, but have not yet
reached distant parts of the body. Several
studies have shown that attempts
to partially remove these cancers do
not help patients to live longer. Therefore,
surgery has a limited role in these
cancers. It is used mainly to relieve bile
duct blockage or to bypass a blocked
intestine caused by the cancer pressing
on other organs.
The standard treatment options for locally advanced cancers are chemotherapy with gemcitabine either alone or along with radiation therapy. A recent study showed that combining radiation with gemcitabine helped patients with locally advanced cancers live longer than giving gemcitabine by itself. At some cancer centers, patients with locally advanced disease receive chemotherapy and radiation together and are then re-evaluated to see if the cancer has shrunk enough to be completely removed by surgery. Sometimes, patients are able to have surgery at this point.
Treating Metastatic (Widespread)
Pancreatic Cancer
Because these cancers
have spread through the lymphatic
system or bloodstream, they cannot be
removed by surgery. These cancers
have also spread too far to be treated
by radiation therapy alone. Even when
imaging tests show that the spread is
only to one area of the body, it has to
be assumed that small groups of cancer
cells (too small to be seen on imaging
tests) are already present in other organs
of the body.
Chemotherapy with gemcitabine is the standard treatment for advanced pancreatic cancer. It can cause the cancer to shrink and help patients live longer. People who get chemotherapy also seem to have fewer symptoms related to their cancer. Adding other drugs to gemcitabine may improve the chance the tumors will shrink and may help people live longer. So far, only erlotinib and capecitabine have been shown to help some patients live longer when given along with gemcitabine. Overall, the benefit of giving erlotinib along with gemcitabine was very small (patients lived about two weeks longer). Erlotinib doesn’t seem to help all patients, so experts are trying to find a way to figure out who should get the drug and who should try something else. Capecitabine also only seemed to help some of the people who received it with gemcitabine. Most doctors give chemo with gemcitabine for pancreatic cancer, and consider adding another drug on a case-by-case basis.
Because the treatments now available are largely unsatisfactory, people may want to think about taking part in a clinical trial involving chemotherapy combinations (with or without radiation therapy) and new targeted therapies.
Doctors don’t agree on what is the best therapy to give someone when gemcitabine stops working. If a patient wants more treatment and is strong enough, different chemo drugs may be used. Some patients are given one of the targeted agents. Enrolling in a clinical trial may be the best choice at this point.
Treating Recurrent Pancreatic
Cancer
Cancer that returns after surgery
(recurrent cancer) is essentially
treated the same way as metastatic cancer,
and is likely to include chemotherapy
if the patient can tolerate it.
Treating Cancer of the Ampulla of
Vater
The ampulla of Vater is the area
where the pancreatic duct and the common
bile duct empty their secretions
into the duodenum (the first part of the
small intestine). Cancer of this site can
arise from the pancreatic duct, the duodenum,
or the common bile duct.
Surgery with pancreaticoduodenectomy
(Whipple procedure) is often successful
as cancer treatment with a five-year
survival rate of 30 percent to 50 percent.
More advanced ampullary cancers are
treated like pancreatic cancer. In many
patients, ampullary cancer cannot be
distinguished from pancreatic cancer
until surgery has been done. Postoperative
chemoradiotherapy is often
recommended in patients who have
had successful resection of their ampullary
carcinoma.
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Reprinted by the permission of the American Cancer Society, Inc. from www.cancer.org. All rights reserved.
This article was originally published in Coping® with Cancer magazine, September/October 2009.
Coping® does not endorse or recommend any particular treatment protocol for readers, and this article does not necessarily include information on all available treatments. Articles are written to enlighten and motivate readers to discuss the issues with their physicians. Coping believes readers should determine the best treatment protocol based on physicians’ recommendations and their own needs, assessments and desires.


