Recent diagnosis: Have questions about treatment options?
I am getting diagnosed with pancreatic cancer after an abdominal CT last week. I’m 45 male, South Asian, and married with 8yo twins. I have a healthy lifestyle, run half marathons, and have no family history of cancer among my parents, grandparents or uncles/aunts. I’m still in denial. I started having back pain 1.5 months and abdomen pain 1 month back. The doctor prescribed an abdomen CT scan which found a mass on the pancreatic head 27mm * 24mm. By the time the diagnosis came out, I also developed jaundice (4.9 total bilirubin) although my bilirubin levels have always been elevated (in the range of 1.5 and 3 going back 11 years). They did an ERCP procedure to put in a stent in the bile duct and biopsy the mass. The biopsy results came back inconclusive.
The cancer marker (CA 19-9) measured 153 as of last week. So far, all doctors have said it’s cancer and most likely pancreatic cancer. It seems locally advanced from the CT and MRI. I’m shocked by the grim cure rate / survival rate.
I have seen two surgeons so far. The first surgeon at Univ of Pennsylvania says it’s borderline resectable —so he wants me to get up to 6 months of chemo before attempting surgery / Whipple procedure. The second surgeon at MSK (Memorial Sloan Kettering) ordered a repeat CT scan with focus on pancreas after which he feels comfortable that he can remove it right away and is asking me to go for surgery first.
I have a few questions and would really appreciate your help:
- Could this be anything else?
- Which approach sounds better for overall survival as well as short-term survival: Chemo first then surgery (U Penn) or surgery first (MSK)?
- MSK surgeon has given me surgery appointment for 3 weeks out which is his earliest available. Do you think it’s too risky to wait that long?
Thanks!
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@mrajat Agreed. Lots of good opinions here, mostly consistent; you may not even get consistent opinions from drs.
MSK is very good. I live in California, but if I could do it all over again I would consider Mayo Rochester; but you have to go with what is reasonable as far as distance in regards to your time family and/or work responsibilities. Two important points have been brought up so far that I see: 1) the location of tumor and if there is any vein or artery involvement (only very advanced facilities deal with the latter), 2) what are your mutations (were they able to test them following biopsy?); some mutations are more aggressive than others (mine are kras12D and TP53 and maybe ATM). My mutations were aggressive and I saw how quickly my father passed with his pancreatic cancer so I knew I wanted surgery right away. I was told it would take a minute to get everything scheduled so I decided to leave voicemails on scheduler’s phones (BTW it was very difficult to speak with them in person) saying I had 2 college age kids (yours are much younger and I really sympathize with that) that I wanted to be around for and that I saw my father pass with it very quickly so I wanted to get in to see them ASAP. Also, make sure you are working with a surgeon who has done many surgeries be yours pancreatic or abdominal. Mine had only done 30 in 2 years and though he was good as far as taking most of my pancreas out and testing as many surrounding lymph nodes as he could, I did have complications that weren’t good and took me out for my post surgery chemo longer than it should have. My surgery was in 2022 and in the mid and tail sections of the pancreas. You are asking the right questions and how smart of you to come to this forum. I wish you a great journey and successful journey.
mrajat,
Another part of your discussion I wanted to respond to is the “grim cure rates”. Pancreatic cancer is difficult to cure; I won’t try and sugarcoat that; however the statistics you are seeing are averages and very nonspecific to age, mutations, a positive attitude, your physical health, etc. I’m not even listing cormobities as I have them and I’m still doing fine in stage 4 now. You could better.
So sorry to hear of your new diagnosis however it appears you may be in the early stages which is a huge plus. I was diagnosed in stage 1b and my treatment was to have 6 rounds of chemo 5FU before the Whipple and 6 rounds 5FU post Whipple. I was 57 years old and in pretty good shape. I was able to handle the 6 pre surgery rounds of chemo pretty well. My surgery also went well with the exception of my stomach being stubborn and not wanting to wake up after the surgery in the time frame expected. I was a bit concerned about the post surgery chemo as I knew my body would not be nearly as strong after the surgery as it was pre surgery. I was blessed in that I was able to get through the 6 rounds of post surgery chemo as easily as the pre chemo rounds. It’s been a year since my treatments ended and I get checked with abdominal, chest, and pelvic scans quarterly and also extensive bloodwork. So far, I show no evidence of cancer and my bloodwork looks great. The treatment plan I went with worked for me. I was serviced at a Pancreatic Cancer COE (IU Health Simon Cancer Center, Indpls IN). I strongly recommend that you stay at a COE as they have a ton of experience in pancreatic cancer and you need that level of experience servicing you. Best of luck!
Been thinking about this since I posted.
I would push hard for consult at Mayo with the multiple tests they will want - figure three days of tests with the consult - WHILE being scheduled at MSK.
If Mayo agrees with MSK, but can't schedule for a couple of months, I would consider continuing with MSK. This is the TIME is critical path.
If Mayo disagrees with MSK, and is insisting on neoadjuvant, then more consideration to this approach.
You need to know which mutations - this should been checked, already.
If you consider the teams at Mayo and MSK to be comparable, it makes sense to consider logistics, airline routings, facilities for living full-time at one or the other. Please do not think that a local team for surgery, oncology, tests, analysis, etc is as competent as a COE. Please move to whichever COE as you start working through this - you will need everything you can.
Thank you for the suggestion! I am thinking of getting a third opinion from Johns Hopkins.
I wish your wife best of luck in her treatment!
Thank you for sharing. That is very informative and helpful! I'm also leaning towards surgery first but wondering whether I should get a repeat biopsy that U. Penn doctor has me scheduled for. I asked both the surgeon at MSK and U. Penn whether PET scan is needed and they both advised against it. I wonder if that was not to disqualify me in lieu of a possible false indication of metastasis.
I am sorry to hear yours turned into Stage 4. What was your CA19-9 marker at the beginning?
I hope you get help from one of vaccines or breakthroughs for Stage 4. Good luck!
Thanks Mike! Those are some great pointers. I'm seeing the Oncologist and U Penn and I'm gonna ask for all the genetic testing. And the surgeon for saving the tumor tissue. I'm enrolling for couple of vaccine studies as well.
Again, thanks a ton!
Thanks for sharing your husband's experience. It's great to hear he is doing well. Good luck to him!
Thanks for sharing! And glad to hear Gemcitabene/Abraxane is shrinking your tumor despite metastasizing.
Thanks for sharing, Carrie! It's very uplifting to hear your experience. I'm going to look into radiation options but so far all my doctors have said chemo--whether before or after the surgery or both. Did you have to go against your oncologist's recommendation to do radiation only or did they support your wishes?