Symptoms of more advanced disease
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...
If your pancreatic cancer comes back, it can be in the pancreas or it can spread somewhere else, like the liver or the lungs. Your doctor may offer you more treatment to:
(also see ‘Pain management and other palliative care’).
Most people we spoke to had chemotherapy when their cancer came back. Some of them had it in a clinical trial. The chemotherapy drugs used to treat disease recurrence or spread were sometimes different than they’d had before.
Chemotherapy can damage your bone marrow and cause a drop in the number of blood cells. You are then more likely to get an infection, anaemia, bleeding or bruising. If your blood count is low, there may be a delay to your chemotherapy.
Some people carried on with chemotherapy. Others had stopped it after a few months because their tumours had shrunk or they were having bad side effects.
People whose tumours had shrunk had periods of ‘watchful waiting’. More treatment was given if necessary. Bob’s cancer was not suitable for surgery. He was given chemotherapy which helped to control his pain. He was expecting to stop this treatment soon.
After David’s cancer came back, he took part in a clinical trial that involved three different chemotherapy drugs. He vomited blood and had bleeding from his bottom. The bleeding could have been due to the drugs. As the treatment went on, he found it harder to put up with the side effects.
Some people had radiotherapy as well as chemotherapy after a recurrence. Audrey had both at the same time in the hope that it would keep the symptoms under control. It stopped her pain.
David had radiotherapy after finishing his chemotherapy. Adrian had one session of radiotherapy for the pain from a secondary tumour at the top of his leg. Others had Sterotactic Ablative Radiotherapy (SABR).
Vicky had a rare type of pancreatic cancer, a neuroendocrine tumour. When it spread to her liver she had radiofrequency ablation which uses heat to destroy cancer cells.
Helen also hoped to have radiofrequency ablation for a tumour in her liver. However, a CT scan showed that another tumour had appeared in her liver. The consultant couldn’t consider this treatment as an option until he was sure that no more tumours would appear. This upset Helen so she joined a chemotherapy clinical trial instead. When we spoke to her she had been having chemotherapy on that for 9 months.
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...
When pancreatic cancer can't be cured or when the disease becomes more advanced, you may need specialist help to deal with the symptoms. Here people...