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Title: Cancer Education Slides


1
Cancer Education Slides
  • Pancreatic Cancer

2009
2
What is Cancer?
  • A group of 100 different diseases
  • The uncontrolled, abnormal growth of cells
  • Cancer may spread to other parts of the body

3
What is Pancreatic Cancer?
  • Fourth leading cause of cancer death in men and
    women
  • An estimated 42,470 people diagnosed in the
    United States in 2009
  • A disease in which normal cells in the pancreas
    grow uncontrollably
  • Most cases arent detected until the cancer has
    metastasized (spread) beyond the pancreas to
    other areas of the body

4
What is the Function of the Pancreas?
  • Pear-shaped gland located in the abdomen between
    the stomach and spine
  • Comprised of the head (where pancreatic cancer is
    most commonly diagnosed), the body, and the tail
  • Helps the body digest food and produces hormones,
    such as insulin
  • The most common type of pancreatic cancer is
    ductal adenocarcinoma, which occurs in cells
    lining pancreatic ducts

5
What are the Risk Factors for Pancreatic Cancer?
  • Age
  • Gender Men at higher risk than women
  • Race Black people at increased risk
  • Smoking
  • Obesity and diet
  • Diabetes
  • Family history
  • Chronic pancreatitis (inflammation of the
    pancreas)
  • Exposure to pesticides, benzene, certain dyes,
    and petrochemicals

6
Pancreatic Cancer and Early Detection
  • No tests are recommended for screening the
    general population
  • Often called the silent disease because it
    usually doesnt cause symptoms in early stages

7
What are the Symptoms of Pancreatic Cancer?
  • Jaundice (yellow skin and eyes, darkened urine,
    clay-colored stool)
  • Pain in upper abdomen or upper back
  • Burning feeling in the stomach
  • Floating stools with an especially bad odor
  • Weakness
  • Loss of appetite
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Weight loss with no known explanation

8
How is Pancreatic Cancer Diagnosed?
  • Physical examination laboratory tests
  • Diagnosis is confirmed with a biopsy
  • Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography
    (ERCP), a test that checks the bile ducts and
    pancreatic ducts for blockage
  • Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS), a test using a thin,
    lighted tube to get images of the pancreas using
    sound waves
  • Other imaging tests, such as computerized
    tomography (CT) scans

9
Pancreatic Cancer Staging
  • Staging is a way of describing a cancer, such as
    the size of a tumor and if or where it has spread
  • Staging is the most important tool doctors have
    to determine a patients prognosis
  • Pancreas cancer is most commonly classified as
  • Resectable (able to be surgically removed)
  • Locally advanced (cancer confined to the area
    around the pancreas, but not resectable because
    of extension/invasion into surrounding vessels
    and organs)
  • Metastatic (cancer has spread to other organs)
  • Treatment depends on the stage of the cancer
  • Recurrent cancer is cancer that comes back after
    treatment

10
How is Pancreatic Cancer Treated?
  • Treatment depends on the stage of cancer more
    than one treatment may be used
  • Surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy may
    be used at any stage of the disease
  • Has a much higher chance of being successfully
    treated if detected at an early stage
  • People with pancreatic cancer may consider
    enrolling in a clinical trial

11
Cancer Treatment Surgery
  • May involve removing all or part of the pancreas
  • Cancer at the pancreatic head Whipple resection
    (pancreatoduodenectomy)
  • Cancer at the pancreatic body or tail distal
    pancreatectomy
  • Surgeons sometimes start with a diagnostic
    laparoscopy, a less invasive surgical procedure
    to get a more accurate sense of the disease stage
  • Surgery may be combined with radiation therapy or
    chemotherapy before or after surgery (adjuvant
    therapy)
  • Prescription hormones and enzymes can be given to
    replace those lost by pancreas removal

12
Cancer Treatment Radiation Therapy
  • The use of high-energy x-rays to destroy cancer
    cells
  • Most common type is external-beam outside the
    body
  • May be used before, during, or, after surgery is
    often given at the same time as chemotherapy
  • Also used to relieve pain associated with
    pancreatic cancer
  • Newer techniques, such as stereotactic
    radiosurgery (Cyberknife), are still considered
    experimental

13
Cancer Treatment Chemotherapy
  • Use of drugs to kill cancer cells
  • Most common treatment drug for pancreatic cancer
    is gemcitabine (Gemzar)
  • Two large clinical trials have shown a survival
    advantage using a combination of gemcitabine and
    another drug for advanced pancreatic cancer
  • Gemcitabine combined with erlotinib (Tarceva)
  • Gemcitabine combined with capecitabine (Xeloda)
  • One recently reported study showed that the
    combination of fluorouracil (5-FU) and
    oxaliplatin (Eloxatin) is effective in some
    patients as a second-line treatment if the tumor
    continues to grow.
  • Patients well enough to consider more aggressive
    therapy may consider enrolling in a clinical
    trial

14
Cancer Treatment Advanced Pancreatic Cancer
  • Treatments can help patients with advanced
    pancreatic cancer live longer
  • Treatment options include palliative (symptom
    relief) surgery, radiation therapy, and
    chemotherapy
  • In rare cases, chemotherapy and radiation therapy
    may shrink the tumor enough in patients with
    locally advanced cancer so it can be surgically
    removed (downstaging)
  • Patients with advanced pancreatic cancer may
    consider enrolling in a clinical trial

15
Current Research
  • New tools for early detection
  • Studies of pancreatic cancer genes
  • Other chemotherapy agents new formulations of
    paclitaxel (Taxol)
  • Biologic therapy
  • Targeted therapy
  • Multidrug therapy

16
The Role of Clinical Trials for the Treatment of
Pancreatic Cancer
  • Clinical trials are research studies involving
    people
  • They test new treatment and prevention methods to
    determine whether they are safe, effective, and
    better than the standard treatment
  • The purpose of a clinical trial is to answer a
    specific medical question in a highly structured,
    controlled process
  • Clinical trials can evaluate methods of cancer
    prevention, screening, diagnosis, treatment,
    and/or quality of life

17
Clinical Trials Patient Safety
  • Informed consent participants should understand
    why they are being offered entry into a clinical
    trial and the potential benefits and risks
    informed consent is an ongoing process
  • Participation is always voluntary, and patients
    can leave the trial at any time
  • Other safeguards exist to ensure ongoing patient
    safety

18
Clinical Trials Phases
  • Phase I trials determine the safety and dose of a
    new treatment in a small group of people
  • Phase II trials provide more detail about the
    safety of the new treatment and determine how
    well it works for treating a specific type of
    cancer
  • Phase III trials take a new treatment that has
    shown promising results when used to treat a
    small number of patients with cancer and compare
    it with the standard treatment for that disease
    phase III trials involve a large number of
    patients

19
Clinical Trials Resources
  • Coalition of Cancer Cooperative Groups
    (www.CancerTrialsHelp.org)
  • CenterWatch (www.centerwatch.com)
  • National Cancer Institute (www.cancer.gov/clinical
    _trials)
  • EmergingMed (www.emergingmed.com)

20
Coping with Side Effects
  • Side effects are treatable talk with the doctor
    or nurse
  • Fatigue is a common, treatable side effect
  • Pain is treatable non-narcotic pain-relievers
    are available
  • Antiemetic drugs can reduce or prevent nausea and
    vomiting
  • For more information, visit www.cancer.net/sideeff
    ects

21
After Treatment
  • Talk with the doctor about developing a follow-up
    care plan
  • For patients who have had surgery, doctors
    visits every three to six months
  • Blood tests
  • In some cases, a CT scan may be appropriate

22
Where to Find More InformationCancer.Net Guide
to Pancreatic Cancer(www.cancer.net/pancreatic)
  • Overview
  • Medical Illustrations
  • Risk Factors
  • Symptoms
  • Diagnosis
  • Staging
  • Treatment
  • Clinical Trials
  • Side Effects
  • After Treatment
  • Current Research
  • Questions to Ask the Doctor
  • Patient Information Resources

23
Cancer.Net (www.cancer.net)
  • Comprehensive, oncologist-approved cancer
    information
  • Guides to more than 120 types of cancer and
    cancer-related syndromes
  • Coping resources
  • Survivorship information
  • Cancer information in Spanish
  • Weekly feature articles
  • The latest cancer news
  • For patient information resources, please call
    888-651-3038
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