Early onset pancreatic cancer-exploring contemporary treatment and outcomes using real-world data
Details
Publication Year 2024-05,Volume 130,Issue #9,Page 1477-1484
Journal Title
British Journal of Cancer
Publication Type
Research article
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pancreatic cancer incidence is increasing in younger populations. Differences between early onset pancreatic cancer (EOPC) and later onset pancreatic cancer (LOPC), and how these should inform management warrant exploration in the contemporary setting. METHODS: A prospectively collected multi-site dataset on consecutive pancreatic adenocarcinoma patients was interrogated. Patient, tumour, treatment, and outcome data were extracted for EOPC (≤50 years old) vs LOPC (>50 years old). RESULTS: Of 1683 patients diagnosed between 2016 and 2022, 112 (6.7%) were EOPC. EOPC more frequently had the tail of pancreas tumours, earlier stage disease, surgical resection, and trended towards increased receipt of chemotherapy in the curative setting compared to LOPC. EOPC more frequently received 1st line chemotherapy, 2nd line chemotherapy, and chemoradiotherapy than LOPC in the palliative setting. Recurrence-free survival was improved for the tail of pancreas EOPC vs LOPC in the resected setting; overall survival was superior for EOPC compared to LOPC across the resected, locally advanced unresectable and metastatic settings. CONCLUSIONS: EOPC remains a small proportion of pancreatic cancer diagnoses. The more favourable outcomes in EOPC suggest these younger patients are overall deriving benefits from increased treatment in the curative setting and increased therapy in the palliative setting.
Publisher
Springer Nature
Keywords
Humans; *Pancreatic Neoplasms/therapy/epidemiology/mortality/pathology; Male; Female; Middle Aged; Aged; *Age of Onset; Adult; Treatment Outcome; Prospective Studies; Adenocarcinoma/therapy/epidemiology/pathology/mortality
Department(s)
Medical Oncology; Surgical Oncology
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


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