Updates in the diagnosis and management of ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas.
1/5 보강
PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 2/4)
유사 논문P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
환자: an otherwise poor prognosis
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
추출되지 않음
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
It seems that the biological mechanisms underlying the disease determine the effectiveness of any therapeutic effort. Thus, further research at the molecular level must focus on novel treatments to prevent the growth, invasion, and spread of cancer cells.
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is characterized by high aggressiveness, poor prognosis, and unsatisfactory survival rates.
APA
Pavlidis ET, Galanis IN, Pavlidis TE (2025). Updates in the diagnosis and management of ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas.. World journal of clinical oncology, 16(6), 105601. https://doi.org/10.5306/wjco.v16.i6.105601
MLA
Pavlidis ET, et al.. "Updates in the diagnosis and management of ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas.." World journal of clinical oncology, vol. 16, no. 6, 2025, pp. 105601.
PMID
40585824
Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is characterized by high aggressiveness, poor prognosis, and unsatisfactory survival rates. The incidence of PDAC is increasing annually, and thus, the number of deaths due to PDAC is increasing worldwide. Modern imaging modalities, including multidetector computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging-cholangiopancreatography, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, positron emission tomography-computed tomography, endoscopic ultrasound and tumor markers, have made significant contributions to the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. However, early diagnosis remains challenging despite progress in liquid biopsy (tumor DNA, tumor parts or cells), miRNAs, genomic analysis, MTA (metastasis-associated) proteins or circulating cancer-derived exosomes. Early diagnosis and radical surgical excision offer a unique chance of long-term survival in patients with an otherwise poor prognosis. However, surgery alone is insufficient, and multimodal treatment is needed. Novel treatment modalities, , immunotherapy, vaccines, targeted gene therapy, extracellular vesicles (particularly exosomes), new chemotherapy, novel radiotherapy and angiogenesis-restricting biological agents, were applied with promising outcomes. It seems that the biological mechanisms underlying the disease determine the effectiveness of any therapeutic effort. Thus, further research at the molecular level must focus on novel treatments to prevent the growth, invasion, and spread of cancer cells.