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Home » Gastrointestinal Cancers » Pancreatic Cancer

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PODCAST 

Diagnosing and Treating Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer

By Diane Simeone, MD1 | July 5, 2012
1Director, Pancreatic Tumor Program; Department of Surgery, University of Michigan
Interview conducted by Anna Azvolinsky, PhD


Diane Simeone, MD
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CancerNetwork discusses the treatment and diagnosis of metastatic pancreatic cancer with Dr. Diane Simeone, professor in the department of surgery at the University of Michigan where she is the director of the pancreatic tumor program. Dr. Simeone is involved in both pancreatic cancer clinical trials as well as research to better characterize important pancreatic cancer pathways and identify biomarkers for the disease. Pancreatic cancer is one of the most lethal cancers with an extremely poor prognosis—a median 6 to 10 months for metastatic disease. It is the fourth most common cause of cancer deaths but represents only 3% of all cancer diagnoses. Most pancreatic cancers, about 95%, are adenocarcinomas that arise within the exocrine part of the pancreas. The minority are neuroendocrine tumors that arise from pancreatic islet cells.

CancerNetwork: Dr. Simeone, what are the current advances in the molecular characterization of pancreatic cancer? Do we know what the major driver mutations are for either of the two pancreatic cancer types?

Dr. Simeone: There has been a lot of work done to try to understand the genomic mutational profile in pancreatic tumors. The major drivers, if you will, are common genetic mutations, and in pancreatic adenocarcinomas have actually been known for some time. There has been some recent work that has validated what those dominant mutations are. There are four dominant mutations that are well known. They include mutations in a gene called KRAS, which is an oncogene in pancreatic cancer and in fact is the most common mutation in any human cancer. Almost all pancreatic cancers have a mutation in KRAS. There are other mutations in three different tumor-suppressor genes that are common in most pancreatic cancers. So while we know the genetic mutations, that is different than actually understanding how to treat the cancers. So, understanding the mutations is just one step. One thing we don’t understand is how similar or different, different pancreatic cancers are in their response to treatment.

So really the next phase is going to be looking at the compilation of different genetic mutations within a person’s tumor and figuring out, with all of that information, how can we best treat that patient’s tumor? With regard to other less common types of tumors of the pancreas, there have also been some inroads into understanding the genetic mutations. We now have some understanding of the genetic mutations that are present in pancreatic cystic tumors and we see those with increasing frequency in the clinic. Between 2% to 4% of the people have such cystic tumors. We don’t know what the best predictors are for the cystic tumors that go on and progress to cancer. And so that is an important piece that is missing that will need further work. Lastly, there is a subtype of pancreatic cancer called pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors, and we now are beginning to have an understanding of the genetic mutations that are important in promoting those tumor types, but we still lack an understanding of which of those neuroendocrine tumors are going to become the “bad actors” in how those genetic mutations help inform us of how to treat those patients in the best manner.

CancerNetwork: Are there current techniques to screen for pancreatic cancer? Do most patients who come in already have advanced form of the disease?

Dr. Simeone: Most patients who present in the clinic with pancreatic cancer already have advanced disease. Only about 15% of patients who present to the clinic are candidates for surgical resection which is currently the only way to potentially cure the disease. So why is it discovered at such a late stage? I think there are a number of issues involved. One, is we don’t have a good early screening test. We don’t have a good blood test to figure out if one is at high risk for the development of pancreatic cancer or for the presence of early pancreatic cancer. Additionally, the pancreas is hard to get to. It sits in the back of the abdomen and is not easily accessible with a scope like the colon is. And thirdly, we think, just from a biologic standpoint, pancreatic cancers are inherently more aggressive and metastasize earlier than other cancer types and so that, again, makes these cancers not only harder to detect, but when we do detect them, harder to treat.

CancerNetwork: And are there any symptoms of early-stage pancreatic cancer? And do these maybe coincide with symptoms of other diseases and that may be why the cancer is partly difficult to diagnose?

Dr. Simeone: Unfortunately, I think that is part of the issue. A lot of the early symptoms are fairly nondescript, and so patients may have some symptoms but they are chalked up to be gastritis or dyspepsia or unrelated diagnoses. Really in many patients we see the symptoms have persisted for many months before someone drills down on the fact that the patient may have something as serious as a pancreatic cancer going on. There is some interesting new work that shows that the presence of or the development of types of type II diabetes, especially in people over 50 who otherwise wouldn’t be in a high-risk category, may be a marker for early pancreatic cancer. So that is something we are trying to figure out, how might that best be integrated into the clinic? How do we decide which patients who develop diabetes might go on to have screening for pancreatic cancer?

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