Posted on 12/09/2022 3:28:13 PM PST by ConservativeMind
New research showcases chemotherapy treatment before and after surgery for pancreatic cancer as the most effective combination for patients.
"It's critical to have large scale data that doctors can use to make decisions about chemotherapy plans for patients who qualify for pancreatic cancer surgery," said author Marco Del Chiaro, MD.
The study showed overall survival was significantly longer in patients who received adjuvant chemotherapy after neo-adjuvant chemotherapy followed by surgery, compared to the group of patients that did not receive it.
This was the case for all patients independent of their lymph node status and resection margins.
"The success of adjuvant chemotherapy used to be unclear, with varied data available for doctors to consider. Our study suggests that adjuvant chemotherapy after surgery should be implemented no matter the biological stage of the cancer," adds Del Chiaro.
The researchers conducted a nationwide, retrospective study examining the overall survival of patients who received adjuvant chemotherapy and those who did not. To do so, they used data from the National Cancer Database and included nearly 900 patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PDAC) diagnosed between 2010 to 2018.
They found adjuvant chemotherapy was associated with better survival in patients with any pathological N stage and margin status.
"It's important to continue to move forward research in pancreatic cancer care to improve the survival rate. By conducting the largest study of its kind and analyzing data using multiple models, we're able to improve the knowledge in this paper for doctors and patients to inform their plans and help prolong survival in many cases," said lead researcher Sugawara.
Sugawara and his team investigated the interactions between pathological findings and adjuvant chemotherapy in separate multivariable Cox regression models. Their findings suggest that tumors with aggressive biology benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy even after surgery.
(Excerpt) Read more at medicalxpress.com ...
It’d be nice if they could find a way to diagnose this disease earlier. Lost my Step-Dad, favorite Uncle and a Cousin to Pancreatic Cancer.
All were diagnosed too late to do much for them. :(
lost my best friend...stage 4 when they found it..she was 65.
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