4.7 Review

Pancreatic cancer-A disease in need: Optimizing and integrating supportive care

Journal

CANCER
Volume 125, Issue 22, Pages 3927-3935

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.32423

Keywords

abdominal pain; advance care planning; back pain; cholestasis; early involvement; palliative care; pancreatic neoplasms; patient-reported outcome measures; terminal care; venous thromboembolism

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute Cancer Center [P30CA008748]

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Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is an aggressive malignancy that continues to be challenging to treat. PDAC has the lowest 5-year relative survival rate compared with all other solid tumor malignancies and is expected to become the second-leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States by 2030. Given the high mortality, there is an increasing role for concurrent anticancer and supportive care in the management of patients with PDAC with the aims of maximizing length of life, quality of life, and symptom control. Emerging trends in supportive care that can be integrated into the clinical management of patients with PDAC include standardized supportive care screening, early integration of supportive care into routine cancer care, early implementation of outpatient-based advance care planning, and utilization of electronic patient-reported outcomes for improved symptom management and quality of life. The most common symptoms experienced are nausea, constipation, weight loss, diarrhea, anorexia, and abdominal and back pain. This review article includes current supportive management strategies for these and others. Common disease-related complications include biliary and duodenal obstruction requiring endoscopic procedures and venous thromboembolic events. Patients with PDAC continue to have a poor prognosis. Systemic therapy options are able to palliate the high symptom burden but have a modest impact on overall survival. Early integration of supportive care can lead to improved outcomes.

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