443 Background: Bilimoria et al (2007) reviewed 9,559 patients from the 1995-2004 National Cancer Database (NCDB) showing that 38.2% of patients with early-stage pancreatic cancer without any identifiable contraindications failed to undergo pancreactomy. We used the 2004-2013 NCDB to look at the role of surgery in initial care plans of patients with stage I pancreatic adenocarcinoma. We also assessed differences in practice in this regard at different types of cancer centers. Methods: We analyzed 12,927 patients diagnosed with stage I pancreatic adenocarcinoma between 2004-2013 from the NCDB. Survival differences between patients who received surgery at the primary site versus patients not offered surgery were estimated by the Kaplan-Meier method. Differences in surgery were compared using chi-squared analysis. Results: Of the stage I patients, 27.3% had surgery, 52.8% were not offered surgery, 9.3% were not offered surgery due to risk factors, 4.4% refused surgery. Patients who received surgery had an increased median survival time compared to patients who were not offered surgery (30.2 months versus 7.1 months, p < 0.05). Patients at academic/research programs were most likely to have surgery compared to those at community cancer programs who were least likely to have surgery (39.8% versus 22.9%, p < 0.05). Conclusions: Patients who had surgery of the primary site had a significantly longer median survival time than those that were not offered surgery. Patients were most likely to be offered surgery if they were at an academic/research facility. Future studies should examine other factors that could possibly influence whether a patient is offered surgery or not for early-stage pancreatic adenocarcinoma. [Table: see text]