Here we talk to people who had pancreatic cancer about the symptoms they had when the disease became more advanced. We also spoke to partners or adult children of people who had died. They talked about symptoms that people had mentioned during their last months. These included:
- Pain
- Swollen tummy
- Swollen feet
- Dizziness
- Feeling sick
- Diarrhoea
Saba’s mum had pancreatic cancer that couldn’t be treated and died 11 months later. She had swollen feet and felt very tired.
John’s first wife died of pancreatic cancer. Surgery failed and the cancer spread to her liver. She had a lot of pain towards the end of her life.
Other men who had lost their wives to pancreatic cancer also talked about symptoms they’d had at the end of life.
Symptoms that people have at the end of their lives may include weight-loss, muscle atrophy, extreme tiredness, weakness, major loss of appetite and excess fluid in the abdomen (tummy) (see
‘Symptoms of more advanced disease’).
People may also develop a bowel obstruction due to tumour growth or a deep vein thrombosis of the upper or lower extremities (Trousseau’s syndrome). They may also have more pain than in the earlier stages of the disease, but doctors have many ways of controlling pain (see
‘Pain management and other palliative care’). People often die from a secondary medical problem, such as pneumonia.