Abstract

Aims: Pancreatic cancer attracts attention with its increasing frequency among gastrointestinal cancers. It has the worst prognosis of all cancer types. In this study, we aimed to retrospectively evaluate the clinical features and treatment results of our patients with advanced pancreatic cancer. Methods: In this study, 131 patients diagnosed with advanced pancreatic cancer and admitted to the Ankara Numune Training and Research Hospital Medical Oncology Polyclinic between November 2002 and January 2014 were retrospectively analyzed. Demographic characteristics of the patients, smoking, family history, basal CEA and basal CA 19-9 levels, treatment modalities, metastasis sites, progression-free survival, and overall survival times were evaluated. Results: The study population consisted of 131 patients, including 94 males and 37 females. Twenty of the patients were in the locally advanced stage, and 111 were in the metastatic stage. The median age of the patients was 60 years. 53.4% of the patients were smokers, and the median amount of smoking was 30 packs/year. Adenocancer was the most common histopathological subtype. The median basal CEA and Ca 19-9 levels were high at the time of diagnosis. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy was given to all locally advanced patients. The most commonly used chemotherapy regimens were single-agent gemcitabine and gemcitabine-cisplatin combination therapies. While 10 of the locally advanced patients received local treatment (chemotherapy or surgery) after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, the remaining 10 patients could not receive local treatment. The median overall and progression-free survival times were found to be significantly longer in patients with locally advanced disease who received local treatment after neoadjuvant chemotherapy [(18 months vs. 6.5 months; p=0.008), (11.3 months vs. 6.4 months; p=0.05)]. The most common site of metastasis in our patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer was the liver (80%). Cisplatin-gemcitabine was preferred as a KT regimen in 63.4% of metastatic cases. The median overall survival time of the patients in the metastatic stage was 8.1 months, and the median progression-free survival time was 5.7 months. The median progression-free survival of all patients included in the study was 6.2 months, while the median overall survival was 8.8 months. Conclusion: The median overall survival of patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer was significantly longer compared to metastatic patients (18 months vs. 8.1 months; p=0.028). Progression-free survival and overall survival of patients with locally advanced disease who received or did not receive local treatment after neoadjuvant chemotherapy were found to be significantly longer in patients who received local treatment. (11.3 months vs. 6.4 months; p=0.05) (18 months vs. 6.5 months; p=0.008). Response rates of patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer; It was 49% in the gemcitabine-cisplatin combination arm and 30% in the single-agent gemcitabine arm.

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