Professional care
We spoke to people who had pancreatic cancer about the care they had. People were keen to praise the care they had in the NHS...
Here people talk about the signs and symptoms they had when their pancreatic cancer returned. It may come back in the pancreas (recurrence) or spread to other parts of the body. A tumour formed by cells that have spread is a secondary or ‘metastatic tumour or a ‘metastasis’.
Some people found out their cancer came back from a routine check-up. Other people had symptoms like they’d had before. People told us about:
Routine follow-up tests might show that cancer has returned, even before you have any new symptoms. This happened to Audrey after she had recovered from her initial treatment, which included a Whipple’s operation, chemotherapy and radiotherapy.
Michael’s recurrence was spotted on a routine CT scan done in his follow-up.
You might experience the symptoms of recurrence much like the signs and symptoms of the previous diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. However, there may be other symptoms too.
Symptoms can be small and match the symptoms of many other conditions that have nothing to do with the cancer. Ann had a Whipple’s operation, followed by chemotherapy. She felt well most of the time but wondered many times whether the cancer had come back.
The bowel symptoms came back that Ann had before the first diagnosis. At this point she was very sure that her cancer had recurred. She went to her GP, who arranged for a CT scan.
David had a Whipple’s operation, then chemotherapy and radiotherapy. After his treatment he felt very well for two years. Then he started to feel unwell again. He felt sick, off his food and had diarrhoea. He had CT scans and blood tests but they looked normal. David felt ill for over a year. Eventually he had more CT scans and a PET scan and this time the doctors could see that his cancer had come back.
Helen had a Whipple’s operation in 2007 and hoped that she had been cured. However she later felt exhausted and suspected something was wrong, so asked for an earlier check-up appointment. A CT scan revealed ‘secondary tumours’ in the liver.
John had a Whipple’s operation followed by chemotherapy. After that he went back to work in the ship building business for a while then retired. Four years after the first diagnosis, he got a pain under his rib cage. He went back for more tests, including a Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scan.
By looking at the PET scan doctors could see that John had cancer in both his lungs, which they suspected had spread from his pancreas. The lung specialist did a bronchoscopy (looking into the major air passages). He wanted to biopsy one of the tumours in John’s lungs but was unsuccessful, so could not confirm that they had spread from the pancreas.
Some people had not had surgery. They’d had chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Peter, for example, had chemotherapy and CyberKnife treatment. After this treatment Peter hoped that his cancer had gone. He enjoyed a full life which included playing golf. However, eleven months later Peter developed jaundice and doctors discovered that his cancer had come back and had spread. He had to start chemotherapy again.
People reacted to the news their cancer had come back in many different ways including shock, disappointment, sadness, acceptance and optimism.
Some people we talked to had family members who died from pancreatic cancer. They had developed different symptoms before they died.
We spoke to people who had pancreatic cancer about the care they had. People were keen to praise the care they had in the NHS...
Here people share how they reacted when they found out that their cancer had come back (also known as a 'recurrence'). People reacted to the...