Commentary

The 5-year survival rate for pancreatic cancer is increasing


 

John Whyte, MD: Hello, I’m Dr. John Whyte, the Chief Medical Officer of WebMD. The American Cancer Society released some encouraging data recently that showed a decline in some cancers. One of those cancers was pancreatic cancer, which historically has had a very low survival rate. What’s going on here? Are we doing better with diagnosis, treatment, a combination?

Joining me today is Dr. Lynn Matrisian. She is PanCAN’s chief science officer. Dr. Matrisian, thanks for joining me today. It’s great to see you.

Lynn Matrisian, PhD, MBA: Great to be here. Thank you.

Dr. Whyte: Well, tell me what your first reaction was when you saw the recent data from the American Cancer Society. What one word would you use?

Dr. Matrisian: Hopeful. I think hopeful in general that survival rates are increasing, not for all cancers, but for many cancers. We continue to make progress. Research is making a difference. And we’re making progress against cancer in general.

Dr. Whyte: You’re passionate, as our viewers know, about pancreatic cancer. And that’s been one of the hardest cancers to treat, and one of the lowest survival rates. But there’s some encouraging news that we saw, didn’t we?

Dr. Matrisian: Yes. So the 5-year survival rate for pancreatic cancer went up a whole percentage. It’s at 12% now. And what’s really good is it was at 11% last year. It was at 10% the year before. So that’s 2 years in a row that we’ve had an increase in the 5-year survival rate for pancreatic cancer. So we’re hopeful that’s a trajectory that we can really capitalize on is how fast we’re making progress in this disease.

Dr. Whyte: I want to put it into context, Lynn. Because some people might be thinking, 1%? Like you’re excited about 1%? That doesn’t seem that much. But correct me if I’m wrong. A one percentage point increase means 641 more loved ones will enjoy life’s moments, as you put it, 5 years after their diagnosis that otherwise wouldn’t have. What does that practically mean to viewers?

Dr. Matrisian: That means that more than 600 people in the United States will hug a loved one 5 years after that diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. It is a very deadly disease. But we’re going to, by continuing to make progress, it gives those moments to those people. And it means that we’re making progress against the disease in general.

Dr. Whyte: So even 1%, and 1% each year, does have value.

Dr. Matrisian: It has a lot of value.

Dr. Whyte: What’s driving this improvement? Is it better screening? And we’re not so great still in screening a pancreatic cancer. Is it the innovation in cancer treatments? What do you think is accounting for what we hope is this trajectory of increases in 5-year survival?

Dr. Matrisian: Right, so the nice thing the reason that we like looking at 5-year survival rates is because it takes into account all of those things. And we have actually made progress in all of those things. So by looking at those that are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in general as a whole, and looking at their survival, we are looking at better treatments. People who are getting pancreatic cancer later are living longer as a result of better treatments.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Link between PCOS and increased risk of pancreatic cancer?
AVAHO
Less than a third of Americans aware of cancer risk from alcohol
AVAHO
Liver cancer exacts high financial toll on older adults
AVAHO
Oncologists may be too quick to refer patients to palliative care
AVAHO
Interval FITs could cut colonoscopies in those at above-average risk
AVAHO
Tucatinib plus trastuzumab approved for HER2+ colorectal cancer
AVAHO
People with cancer should be wary of taking dietary supplements
AVAHO
Canadian guidance recommends reducing alcohol consumption
AVAHO
Colorectal cancer treatment outcomes in older adults
AVAHO
Long-course radiation therapy better at organ-sparing in rectal cancer than short-term therapy
AVAHO