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pancreatic cancer is diagnosed in over 56,000 people in the US each year. 85% of these are adenocarcinomas.23 Early diagnosis can be difficult because symptoms may be absent or vague in the early stages of the disease. Thus only ∼15–20% of patients have tumours amenable to surgical resection at presentation. The overall five‐year survival rate is less than 10%, but it is higher for patients diagnosed at earlier stages.

      The predominant risk factor is age, although there is a relationship to cigarette smoking. Genetic and general medical conditions such as familial breast cancer, hereditary pancreatitis, chronic pancreatitis, and diabetes are also risk factors.

      Clinical features

      Cancer of the head of the pancreas presents with jaundice, often with epigastric or back discomfort. Later in the clinical course, other symptoms of cholestatic jaundice such as itching, pale stools, and dark urine occur. Anorexia and weight loss are common. Tumours of the body and tail of the pancreas present more insidiously and are often recognized only when distal spread of the disease has occurred.

Photo depicts hypoenhancing lesion with a central cystic component at the pancreatic neck with associated upstream mild dilatation of the pancreatic duct.

      Diagnosis of pancreatic cancer

      Following an initial assessment with blood work, tumour marker CA19‐9, CT scan, and ultrasonography are typically the first imaging steps. Ultrasound may reveal biliary dilation in the setting of a pancreatic head cancer but is otherwise insensitive to the presence of a pancreatic mass in many cases. CT scan is a much more accurate imaging modality and also has the benefit of providing vascular staging information.

      Management of pancreatic cancer

      Surgery alone offers the hope of cure and, even if performed, offers a five‐year survival rate of only 20%. Adjuvant therapy with a fluorouracil‐based chemotherapy protocol (e.g. FOLFIRINOX) is the first‐line systemic therapy. In patients with unresectable disease, chemoradiation can be used. Gemcitabine is the standard of care in locally advanced unresectable pancreatic adenocarcinoma, and the agent may also be used as part of a combined chemotherapy protocol.24

      Despite significant ongoing advances in efficacy and tolerability of treatment approaches, many patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma, including those who could be curable, are not referred for multidisciplinary oncologic evaluation. In general, our recommendation is that even in the elderly or chronically ill patient who may decline treatment, a formal consultation with an oncology team is important to ensure that patients and families are aware of all treatment options, ranging from potentially curative to palliative.

      Key points

       Although pancreatic morphological change occurs in the elderly, it may not correlate with pancreatic dysfunction.

       Acute pancreatitis associated with gallstone disease is the commonest cause of acute pancreatitis in the elderly.

       Pancreatic cysts are found incidentally in up to 40% of cross‐sectional imaging scans, and referral to gastroenterology is reasonable for cysts >1 cm in size.

       Pancreatic cancer remains a challenging condition to treat, but treatment options are expanding rapidly, and elderly patients should be offered formal oncologic consultation.

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