Literature DB >> 9798799

Review article: current treatment and optimal patient management in pancreatic cancer.

A Haycox1, M Lombard, J Neoptolemos, T Walley.   

Abstract

This review analyses the current state of knowledge and understanding concerning the optimum treatment and therapeutic management of patients who suffer from pancreatic cancer. It outlines recent advances in scientific understanding and assesses their potential future value to clinicians in confronting this disease. Despite a significant expansion in scientific knowledge relating to factors underlying the early development of pancreatic carcinoma, the clinician continues to be restricted to a severely limited therapeutic armoury for this disease. Local therapies (surgery and radiation) are inevitably of limited value in the face of a disease that is normally encountered at a stage where metastasis is already highly developed. Despite such limitations, however, surgery performed in specialist units may be of value for 10-20% of patients, with a 5-year survival rate in such units of between 10 and 24%. This may be improved even further by appropriate use of adjuvant treatment. The advanced stage of the disease when normally encountered emphasizes the potential value of systemic treatment in this therapeutic area. Unfortunately systemic treatment (chemotherapy) has been found to be ineffective to date in significantly extending survival, with a low rate and duration of remission being identified in most trials. The challenge for both the health service and the pharmaceutical industry is to harness recent and future developments in scientific knowledge to the practical benefit of clinicians. Where cure is possible it should be vigorously pursued; where it is not, in this field above all others, clinicians have a duty of care. To achieve this it is necessary to abandon the therapeutic nihilism that has characterized the attitudes of clinicians towards this disease in the past. It is time that such nihilism was replaced by a recognition of the challenges and the opportunities available to clinicians in enhancing the quantity and quality of life available to patients. The dictum of 'curing whenever possible but caring always' should be the future therapeutic philosophy used to guide clinicians in this important and rapidly changing therapeutic area.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9798799     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2036.1998.00390.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Aliment Pharmacol Ther        ISSN: 0269-2813            Impact factor:   8.171


  6 in total

Review 1.  Adjuvant therapy in pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  P Ghaneh; J Slavin; R Sutton; M Hartley; J P Neoptolemos
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 5.742

2.  The outcome of laparoscopic gastrojejunostomy in malignant gastric outlet obstruction.

Authors:  Simon M Denley; Susan J Moug; Christopher R Carter; Colin J McKay
Journal:  Int J Gastrointest Cancer       Date:  2005

Review 3.  Trials of gene therapy for pancreatic carcinoma.

Authors:  Christopher M Halloran; Paula Ghaneh; Eithne Costello; John P Neoptolemos
Journal:  Curr Gastroenterol Rep       Date:  2005-06

4.  Guidelines for the management of patients with pancreatic cancer periampullary and ampullary carcinomas.

Authors: 
Journal:  Gut       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 23.059

Review 5.  Fabrication of gold nanoparticles for targeted therapy in pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  Chitta Ranjan Patra; Resham Bhattacharya; Debabrata Mukhopadhyay; Priyabrata Mukherjee
Journal:  Adv Drug Deliv Rev       Date:  2009-11-13       Impact factor: 15.470

6.  A phase II study of raltitrexed and gemcitabine in patients with advanced pancreatic carcinoma.

Authors:  J J Arends; H P Sleeboom; M B L Leys; D Ten Bokkel Huinink; R S de Jong; J M Smit; J W R Nortier; M E T Tesselaar
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2005-02-14       Impact factor: 7.640

  6 in total

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