Pancreatic cancer poses a challenge for science and research as it is still a complex disease, with a high mortality rate, but with an eye on innovative approaches such as vaccines, targeted therapy or the role of the patient’s microbiome and, above all, early diagnosis.
Image of the pancreas from the reference book Pancreatic Cancer: Diet and Quality of Life. Photo courtesy
On occasion World Pancreatic Cancer DayNovember 21, President of Pancreatic Cancer Europe, oncologist Alfredo Carratorecently took part in a conference at the Ramón y Cajal University Hospital in Madrid, organized by Pancreatic Cancer Association (Akanpan)for his tenth anniversary, during which he took an x-ray of this tumor and its problems.
The Spanish Society of Medical Oncology (SEOM) estimates that 9,986 cases of pancreatic cancer will be diagnosed in 2024, a tumor that killed 7,973 people in 2022.
“There is a need to raise public awareness that we are facing a great enemy that will become the second leading cause of cancer death after lung cancer in the coming years,” warns Dr. Carrato.
According to a researcher at the Ramón y Cajal Institute for Medical Research, at the time of diagnosis, only 10% have localized tumors, 29% have spread to the pancreas and 52% have metastases. .
And to combat this cancer, the expert cites some actions in both research and clinical practice, where chemotherapy remains the standard treatment, reaching 35% of long-term survivors.
Problems with pancreatic cancer, a tumor with “unique biology, worse than others.” One reason is that the tumor precursor cells of this tumor are already identified and circulating in the blood before the tumor exists as such in the gland.
“We are trying to make progress against a disease that is the hardest to defeat. It requires greater investment and awareness among policy makers developing health strategies so that there is a network, a useful infrastructure for patients, and they receive the best of treatments,” defends Dr. Alfredo Carrato.
This conference, organized by Acanpan, reflects the work that this association has carried out for ten years to advance research and care for patients with pancreatic cancer.
“Only 8% survive five years after diagnosis,” said Acanpan President Cristina Sandin, citing 2022 data that, although low, represents a 5% increase over the past decade.
For this reason, patients, families, doctors and researchers want to continue to move forward and propose the following goals:
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