Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Surprise Finding: Pancreatic Cancers
progress to Lethal Stage slowly
Newswise, October 2010 — Pancreatic cancer
develops and spreads much more slowly than
scientists have thought, according to new
research from Johns Hopkins investigators.
The finding indicates that there is a
potentially broad window for diagnosis and
prevention of the disease.
“For the first time, we have a quantifiable
estimate of the development of pancreatic
cancer, and when it would be best to
intervene,” according to Christine Iacobuzio-Donahue,
M.D., Ph.D., associate professor of
pathology and oncology at Hopkins’ Sol
Goldman Pancreatic Cancer Research Center,
“so there is potentially a very broad window
for screening.” Right now, however, she
adds, “pretty much everybody is diagnosed
after that window has closed.”
Pancreatic cancer is notoriously difficult
to detect in its early stages because there
are frequently few symptoms and current
imaging techniques are not specific for
cancer.
Bert Vogelstein, M.D., professor and
director of the Ludwig Center for Cancer
Genetics & Therapeutics at the Johns Hopkins
Kimmel Cancer Center and an investigator at
the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, says
the results show that “many pancreatic
cancer cases have a long lag time before
they are detected through conventional
tests. This leaves room to develop new
early, diagnostic tools and intervene with
potentially curative surgery.”
The Hopkins work, published in the October
28 issue of the journal Nature,
suggests that it takes at least a decade for
the first cancer-causing mutation that
occurs in a cell in a pancreatic lesion to
turn into a full-fledged cancer cell. At
this point, the lesion is called
“high-grade” and should be removed, much
like polyps are removed from the colon.
After the first cancer cell appears, it
takes an average of nearly seven years for
that cell to turn into the billions that
make up a cancerous tumor the size of a
plum, after which at least one of the cells
within the tumor has the potential and
ability to spread to other organs. Patients
die an average of two and a half years after
this metastasis.
The results contradict the idea that
pancreatic cancers metastasize very early in
their development, says Iacobuzio-Donahue.
For the study, scientists collected tissue
samples during autopsies of seven patients
who died from pancreatic cancer that had
metastasized to other organs. Because the
tissue samples were taken within six hours
of each patient’s death, the scientists were
able to keep some of the cells alive long
enough to extract the DNA and sequence the
series of chemical “letters” that form
genes.
In all patients, metastatic deposits were
found in two or more sites in the body, most
often the liver, lung and peritoneum (lining
of the abdomen). The researchers found
similar mutations present in both the areas
of metastasis and in the primary pancreatic
tumors from which the metastases arose.
They also identified and classified the
types of mutations – ones that occur before
metastasis and others that happen after the
cancer has spread. Both types of mutations
were present within the primary tumor years
before the metastases became clinically
evident, according to Iacobuzio-Donahue.
Using mathematical models to study the
timing of pancreatic cancer progression, the
scientists conservatively estimated an
average of 11.7 years before the first
cancer cell develops within a high-grade
pancreatic lesion, then an average of 6.8
years as the cancer grows and at least one
cell has the potential to spread, and
finally, an average of 2.7 years from then
until a patient’s death.
The Hopkins scientists say the goal is
develop a pancreatic cancer screening method
similar to the protocol used for breast and
colon cancer. Though early stages of
pancreatic cancer cause no symptoms,
Iacobuzio-Donahue says, perhaps at a certain
age people should undergo an endoscopy to
screen for pancreatic cancer. Endoscopy is a
procedure allowing doctors to look inside
the body through the use of an instrument
that has a tiny camera attached to a long,
thin tube.
Another study published in the same issue of
Nature, directed by British researchers at
the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in
collaboration with Iacobuzio-Donahue, used
cell lines and tissue samples from the same
pancreatic cancer patients as the Johns
Hopkins study to look for rearrangements of
genetic material. They found more than half
of specific rearrangements occurred in all
metastases and primary tumors.
The genome sequencing work was supported by
the National Institutes of Health, the Bill
and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Uehara
Memorial Foundation, the AACR-Barletta
Foundation, the John Templeton Foundation,
the Sol Goldman Pancreatic Cancer Research
Center, the Michael Rolfe Pancreatic Cancer
Foundation, the George Rubis Endowment for
Pancreatic Cancer Research, the Joseph C.
Monastra Foundation for Pancreatic Cancer
Research, the Alfredo Scatena Memorial Fund,
Sigma Beta Sorority, the Skip Viragh
Foundation, the Virginia and the D.K. Ludwig
Fund for Cancer Research, the Joint Program
in Mathematical Biology and J. Epstein.
Other scientists involved in the research
were Shinichi Yachida, Siān Jones, Rebecca
Leary, Baojin Fu, Mihoko Kamiyama, Ralph H.
Hruban, James R. Eshleman, Victor E.
Velculescu, and Kenneth W. Kinzler of
Hopkins; Ivana Bozic and Martin A. Nowak of
Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass.; and
Tibor Antal of Harvard and the University of
Edinburgh, Scotland.