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The early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer and diabetes: what’s the relationship?

  
@article{JGO2936,
	author = {Changsong Zhang and Guangshun Yang and Yang Ling and Guihua Chen and Tianbao Zhou},
	title = {The early diagnosis of pancreatic cancer and diabetes: what’s the relationship?},
	journal = {Journal of Gastrointestinal Oncology},
	volume = {5},
	number = {6},
	year = {2014},
	keywords = {},
	abstract = {Pancreatic cancer (PC) has a dismal prognosis as cancer-specific symptoms occur only at an advanced stage. If the cancer is to be discovered early, it will have to be done in asymptomatic individuals. Since the incidence of PC is low, screening for asymptomatic cancer in the general population will not be feasible. Screening will have to be restricted to subjects at high risk for PC. The proportion of PC patients who also have hyperglycemia or diabetes has previously been under appreciated; new data show that up to 80% are either hyperglycemic or diabetic and this can be evident in the pre-symptomatic phase. Diabetes improves following PC resection suggesting that diabetes is caused by the cancer. Conversely, older subjects with new-onset diabetes have an approximately eight fold higher risk of having PC compared to the general population. Recognition of new-onset diabetes as an early manifestation of PC could lead to diagnosis of asymptomatic, early stage PC. However, primary type 2 diabetes is common and PC is relatively uncommon in the general population and the two forms of diabetes are clinically indistinguishable. The success of the strategy to use new-onset hyperglycemia and diabetes as a screening tool to identify subjects with a high likelihood of having asymptomatic PC will depend largely on our ability to differentiate PC-associated diabetes from the more common type 2 diabetes using a (serologic) biomarker.},
	issn = {2219-679X},	url = {https://jgo.amegroups.org/article/view/2936}
}