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If one or more of the signs and symptoms described here is
present, certain exams and tests may be done to find out whether they
are caused by pancreatic cancer or by some other disease.
Signs and symptoms of pancreatic cancer
Jaundice
Jaundice is a yellowing of the eyes and skin. It occurs in at
least half of all people with pancreatic cancer and in all cases of
ampullary cancer.
Jaundice is caused by the buildup of bilirubin in the body.
Bilirubin is a dark yellow -- brown substance that is made in the
liver. Normally, the liver excretes bilirubin into bile. Bile goes into
the intestines and eventually leaving the body in the stool. When the
common bile duct becomes blocked, bile can't reach the intestines, and
the level of bilirubin builds up.
Cancers that begin in the head of the pancreas are near the
common bile duct. These cancers can compress the duct while they are
still fairly small. This can lead to jaundice, which may allow these
tumors to be found in an early stage. But cancers that begin in the
body or tail of the pancreas do not compress the duct until they have
spread through the pancreas. By this time, the cancer may have also
spread beyond the pancreas.
Sometimes, the first sign of jaundice is darkening of the
urine from bilirubin. As bilirubin levels in the blood increase, the
urine becomes brown in color.
If the bile duct is blocked, bile (and bilirubin) can't get
through to the bowel. When this happens, a person may notice their
stools becoming lighter in color.
When bilirubin builds up in the skin, it turns yellow and
starts to itch.
Cancer is not the most common cause of jaundice. Other causes,
such as gallstones, hepatitis, and other liver diseases, are much more
common.
Abdominal or back pain
Pain in the abdomen or back is common in advanced pancreatic
cancer. Cancers that start in the body or tail of the pancreas may grow
fairly large and start to compress on other nearby organs, causing
pain. The cancer may also spread to the nerves surrounding the
pancreas, which often causes back pain. The pain may be constant or it
may come and go. Of course, pancreatic cancer is not a common cause of
pain in the abdomen or back. It is more often caused by a non-cancerous
diseases or even another type of cancer.
Weight loss and poor appetite
Unintended or unexpected weight loss is very common in
patients with pancreatic cancer. These people also complain of being
very tired and having little or no appetite.
Digestive problems
If cancer blocks the release of the pancreatic juice into the
intestine, a person may not be able to digest fatty foods. The
undigested fat may cause stools to be unusually pale, bulky, greasy,
and to float in the toilet. The cancer may also wrap around the far end
of the stomach and partly block it. This can cause nausea, vomiting,
and pain that tends to be worse after eating.
Gallbladder enlargement
If the cancer blocks the bile duct, bile can build up in the
gallbladder, which then becomes enlarged. Sometimes a doctor can feel
this enlargement during the physical exam. It can also be detected by
imaging studies.
Blood clots or fatty tissue abnormalities
Sometimes, the first clue that there is a pancreatic cancer is
the development of a blood clot in a large vein, often a vein in the
leg. This is called a deep venous thrombosis or DVT. Sometimes a clot
breaks off and travels to the lungs, making it hard to get enough air.
A blood clot in the lungs is called a pulmonary embolism or PE. Still,
having a blood clot does not usually mean that you have cancer. Most
blood clots are caused by other things.
Another clue that there may be pancreatic cancer is the
development of uneven texture of the fatty tissue underneath the skin.
This is caused by the release of the pancreatic enzymes that digest
fat.
Diabetes
Rarely, exocrine cancers of the pancreas cause diabetes (high
blood sugar) because they destroy the insulin-making cells. More often,
there are slight problems with sugar metabolism that do not cause
symptoms of diabetes but can still be recognized by certain blood
tests.
History and physical exam
A thorough medical history will be taken to check for any
pancreatic cancer risk factors, and to obtain information about pain
(how long it has been present, its severity, its location, and what
makes it worse or better), appetite, weight loss, tiredness, and other
symptoms.
A thorough physical exam will focus mostly on the abdomen to
check for any masses or fluid buildup. The skin and the white part of
the eyes will be checked for jaundice (yellow color). Cancers that
block the bile duct may also cause the gallbladder to become enlarged,
which can sometimes be felt on physical exam. Pancreatic cancer may
spread to the liver, causing it to enlarge.
The cancer can also spread to lymph nodes above the collarbone
and other locations. These areas will be looked at carefully for
swelling that might indicate spread of a cancer.
Imaging tests
Computed tomography (CT, CAT) scan
The CT scan is an x-ray procedure that produces detailed
cross-sectional images of your body. Instead of taking one picture,
like a standard x-ray, a CT scanner takes many pictures as it rotates
around you. A computer then combines these pictures into images that
resemble slices of the part of your body being studied.
Before any pictures are taken, you may be asked to drink 1 to
2 pints of a liquid called oral contrast. This helps outline the
intestine so that certain areas are not mistaken for tumors. You may
also receive an IV (intravenous) line through which a different kind of
contrast dye (IV contrast) is injected. This helps better outline
structures in your body.
The injection can cause some flushing (redness and warm
feeling that may last hours to days). A few people are allergic to the
dye and get hives. Rarely, more serious reactions like trouble
breathing and low blood pressure can occur. Medicine can be given to
prevent and treat allergic reactions. Be sure to tell the doctor if you
have ever had a reaction to any contrast material used for x-rays.
CT scans take longer than regular x-rays. You need to lie
still on a table while they are being done. During the test, the table
moves in and out of the scanner, a ring-shaped machine that completely
surrounds the table. You might feel a bit confined by the ring you have
to lie in when the pictures are being taken.
CT scans are often used to diagnose pancreatic cancer and are
helpful in staging the cancer (determining the extent of its spread).
CT scans show the pancreas fairly clearly and often can confirm the
location of the cancer. CT scans can also show the organs near the
pancreas, as well as lymph nodes and distant organs where the cancer
might have spread. The CT scan can help to determine whether surgery is
a good treatment option.
CT scans can also be used to guide a biopsy needle precisely
into a suspected area of spread. For this procedure, called a CT-guided needle biopsy,
the patient remains on the CT scanning table as a radiologist advances
a biopsy needle toward the location of the mass. CT scans are repeated
until the doctors are sure that the needle is within the mass. A biopsy
sample is then removed and looked at under a microscope.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
MRI scans use radio waves and strong magnets instead of
x-rays. The energy from the radio waves is absorbed by the body and
then released in a pattern formed by the type of body tissue and by
certain diseases. A computer translates the pattern into a detailed
image of parts of the body. Not only does this produce cross-sectional
slices of the body like a CT scanner, it also produces slices that are
parallel with the length of the body. A contrast material might be
injected just as with CT scans, this but is used less often.
Most doctors prefer CT scans to look at the pancreas, but an
MRI may sometimes provide more information. MRI scans are also
particularly helpful in looking at the brain and spinal cord.
MRI scans are a little more uncomfortable than CT scans. They
take longer -- often up to an hour. You may have to lie inside a narrow
tube, which is confining and can upset people with a fear of enclosed
spaces. Newer, "open" MRI machines can help with this if needed. The
MRI machine makes loud noises that you may find disturbing. Some places
provide headphones with music to block this out.
Positron emission tomography (PET) scan
PET scans involve injecting glucose (a form of sugar) that
contains a radioactive atom into the blood. Because cancer cells in the
body are growing rapidly, they absorb more of the radioactive sugar
than the normal cells. A special camera can then create a picture of
areas of radioactivity in the body. The picture is not finely detailed
like a CT or MRI scan, but it provides helpful information. This test
is useful to see if the cancer has spread to lymph nodes. PET scans are
also useful when your doctor thinks the cancer has spread, but doesn't
know to where.
PET/CT scans
combine a CT scan and a PET scan to even better pinpoint the tumor.
This test may be especially useful for spotting cancer that has spread
beyond the pancreas and wouldn't be treatable by surgery. It may be a
useful test for staging the cancer. It may even be able to spot early
cancers.
Ultrasonography (ultrasound or US)
Ultrasound uses sound waves to produce images of internal
organs such as the pancreas. For an abdominal ultrasound, a wand-shaped
probe called a transducer
is placed on the skin of the abdomen. It emits sound waves and detects
the echoes as they bounce off internal organs. The pattern of echoes is
processed by a computer to produce an image on a screen.
The echoes made by most pancreatic tumors differ from those of
normal pancreas tissue. Different echo patterns can help distinguish
some types of pancreatic tumors from one another.
If signs and symptoms indicate that a pancreatic cancer is
likely, a CT scan is often more useful than ultrasound for an accurate
diagnosis. But if it's not clear whether certain other diseases may
account for the patient's signs or symptoms, ultrasound may be done.
Endoscopic
ultrasound is more accurate than abdominal ultrasound and
is probably the best way to diagnose pancreatic cancer. This test is
done with an ultrasound probe that is attached to an endoscope -- a
thin, lighted, flexible, fiber optic tube that doctors use to look at
the inside of the intestinal tract. Patients are first sedated (given
medicine to make them sleepy). The probe is then passed through the
mouth or nose, through the esophagus (also known as the "food pipe")
and stomach, and into the first part of the small intestine. The probe
can then be pointed toward the pancreas, which sits next to the small
intestine. The probe is on the tip of the endoscope, so it can get very
close to the area where the tumor is to take pictures. This is a very
good way to look at the pancreas. It is better than CT scans for
spotting small tumors. If a tumor is seen, it can be biopsied during
this procedure.
Endoscopic retrograde
cholangiopancreatography (ERCP)
For this procedure, an endoscope (a thin, lighted, flexible
tube) is passed down the patient's throat, through the esophagus and
stomach, and into the first part of the small intestine. The doctor can
see through the endoscope to find the ampulla of Vater (the place where
the common bile duct is connected to the small intestine). The doctor
guides a catheter (a very small tube) from the end of the endoscope
into the common bile duct. A small amount of dye (contrast material) is
then injected through the tube into the common bile duct and x-rays are
taken. This dye helps outline the bile duct and pancreatic duct. The
x-ray images can show narrowing or blockage of these ducts that might
be due to pancreatic cancer. The doctor doing this test can also put a
small brush through the tube to remove cells for a biopsy (to view
under a microscope to see whether or not they look like cancer). This
procedure is usually done while the patient is sedated.
ERCP can also be used to place a stent (small tube) into the
bile duct to keep it open if a nearby tumor is pressing on it. This is
described in more detail in the section on palliative surgery (see the
section, "How
is pancreatic cancer treated?").
Angiography
This is an x-ray procedure for looking at blood vessels. A
small amount of contrast material is injected into an artery to outline
the blood vessels. After this, x-rays are taken.
Angiography can show whether blood flow in a particular area
is blocked or compressed by a tumor. It can also show any abnormal
blood vessels (feeding the cancer) in the area. This test can be useful
in finding out if a pancreatic cancer may have grown through the walls
of certain blood vessels. Mainly, it helps surgeons decide whether the
cancer can be completely removed without damaging vital blood vessels
and helps them plan the operation.
Angiography can be an uncomfortable procedure because the
radiologist who performs it has to put a small catheter into the artery
leading to the pancreas. Usually the catheter is put into an artery in
your inner thigh and threaded up to the pancreas. A local anesthetic is
often used to numb the area before inserting the catheter. Then the dye
is injected quickly to outline all the vessels while the x-rays are
being taken.
Blood tests
Several types of blood tests may be used to help diagnose
pancreatic cancer or to help determine treatment options if it is
found.
Blood tests that look at levels of different kinds of
bilirubin (a chemical made by the liver) are useful to decide whether a
patient's jaundice is due to a disease of the liver or to blockage (by
a gallstone, a tumor, or other disease) of bile flow.
Elevated blood levels of the tumor markers CA 19-9 and
carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) may point to a diagnosis of pancreatic
cancer, but these tests aren't always accurate (see the section, "Can
pancreatic cancer be found early?").
Other blood tests can help evaluate a patient's general state
of health (such as liver, kidney, and bone marrow function). These
tests can also help determine whether they'll be able to withstand the
stress of a major operation.
Biopsy
A patient's history, physical exam, and imaging test results
may strongly suggest pancreatic cancer, but the only way to be sure is
to remove a small sample of tumor and look at it under the microscope.
This procedure is called a biopsy.
There are several types of biopsies. The procedure used most
often to diagnose pancreatic cancer is called a fine needle aspiration (FNA)
biopsy. For this test, a doctor inserts a thin needle
through the skin and into the pancreas. The doctor uses CT scan images
or endoscopic ultrasonography to view the position of the needle and
make sure that it is in the tumor.
Doctors can also biopsy the tumor by using the endoscopic
ultrasound to place the needle directly through the wall of the
duodenum into the tumor. In either case, small tissue samples can be
removed through the needle. The main advantages of the test are that
the patient does not require general anesthesia (is not "asleep")
during the test, and major side effects are rare.
In the past, surgical biopsies were performed more commonly.
This type of biopsy requires a laparotomy
(a large incision through the skin into the wall of the abdomen to
examine internal organs). Areas that look or feel abnormal can be
sampled by removing a small portion of tissue with a scalpel or a
needle. The surgeon may use a thin needle (as in a fine needle
aspiration biopsy). More commonly, surgeons use a wider needle that
removes a cylindrical core of tissue about 1/2 inch long and less than
1/8 inch in diameter (called a core
needle biopsy). The main drawback of this type of biopsy
is that the patient must have general anesthesia and remain in the
hospital for a period of time to recover.
Laparotomy is now rarely recommended. Doctors prefer to use laparoscopy
(sometimes called keyhole surgery) as a way of looking at and perhaps
taking a piece of the pancreas with a biopsy. Patients are usually
sedated for this procedure. The surgeon makes several small incisions
in the abdomen and inserts small telescope-like instruments into the
abdominal cavity. One of these is usually connected to a video monitor.
The surgeon can view the abdomen and see how big the tumor is and
whether it has spread, and may take tissue samples as well.
Most doctors who treat pancreatic cancer try to avoid surgery
unless imaging tests suggest that an operation might be able to remove
all of the visible cancer. Even after doing imaging tests and
laparoscopy, there are times when the surgeon begins an operation with
the intent of removing the cancer but finds during surgery that it has
spread too far to be removed completely. In these cases, a sample of
the cancer is taken only to confirm the diagnosis, and the rest of the
planned operation is stopped.
Last Medical Review: 10/02/2008 Last Revised: 10/02/2008
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