Risk Score Helps Predict Pancreatic Cancer Recurrence, Study Says |
FRIDAY, Dec. 19, 2025 (HealthDay News) — A new risk score can help predict which pancreatic cancer survivors are more likely to suffer a recurrence of their cancer, researchers said. The score could help better manage the follow-up care for patients who’ve had pancreatic tumors surgically removed, and whose cancers have not spread to their lymph nodes, researchers wrote Dec. 17 in JAMA Surgery. “We now have a way to identify patients whose higher risk of recurrence may have been previously overlooked,” senior researcher Dr. Cristina Ferrone, chair of surgery at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, said in a news release. “This gives us the opportunity to change the way we care for this patient population in a meaningful way.” The score helps people with pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors, which are a less common and typically less aggressive form of pancreatic cancer. Patients whose cancer has not spread outside the pancreas, to either the lymph nodes or surrounding organs, have a 91% five-year survival rate following surgery, researchers said in background notes. For the new study, researchers analyzed data from 770 pancreatic cancer patients across five major hospitals. Results showed about 10% of patients whose cancer hasn’t spread to the lymph nodes will nonetheless experience a recurrence of the cancer, most often in their liver. With this data, researchers developed a 13-point risk score that relies on four key factors that increase the odds of recurrence:
This score will allow doctors to place patients into low-, moderate- and high-risk groups, and then monitor their progress accordingly. “The current guidelines leave clinicians with a ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach, but it’s clear from our research that not all patients require the same intensity of surveillance,” Ferrone said. “The results address a critical gap in current practice and will hopefully influence future guideline development for well-managed, individualized and cost-effective care.” More information The American Cancer Society has more on pancreatic cancer. SOURCE: Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, news release, Dec. 17, 2025 By Dennis Thompson HealthDay ReporterCopyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved. A.D.A.M. content is best viewed in IE9 or above, Firefox and Google Chrome browser. |