A new study finds tobacco may act as an environmental trigger for patients with an inherited genetic predisposition to
pancreatic cancer. The authors of the report say the findings underscore the importance of strongly counseling patients with
a family history of pancreatic cancer to avoid smoking. The study will be published in the December 15, 2004 issue of CANCER,
a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. A free abstract of this study will be available via the CANCER News
Room (interscience.wiley/cancer-newsroom) upon online publication.
Pancreatic cancer is rare and poorly studied. What is known is that pancreatic cancer is aggressive, with a five-year
survival rate of only 4 percent. A small percentage of patients with pancreatic cancer have first-degree relatives with
pancreatic cancer. Smoking has been identified as the single most important risk factor in familial pancreatic cancer.
Despite genetic characterization of other hereditary cancers, the genetic component of pancreatic cancer remains a mystery.
With such little known about what is now called familial pancreatic adenocarcinoma (FPAC), researchers led by Ted A. James,
M.D. of the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, New York investigated the clinical course and outcome of FPAC compared
to sporadic pancreatic cancer.
Retrospective review of 826 patients with pancreatic cancer found 30 had the familial form (3.6 percent). Earlier age at
diagnosis and a smoking history were marked features among the familial group. The mean age of diagnosis was younger in the
hereditary cohort than among those with the sporadic form (57.1 years old versus 61 years old), and more FPAC patients were
diagnosed before the age of 50 (36.7 percent versus 18.3 percent). Moreover, patients with FPAC were more likely to smoke
than those who had sporadic pancreatic cancer (87 percent versus 66 percent).
The authors of the report conclude, "Patients with a family history of pancreatic cancer must be strongly counseled against
smoking, and smokers with a family history of pancreatic cancer should be informed of their increased risk and offered
enrollment into a smoking cessation program."
Article: "Risk Factors Associated with Earlier Age of Onset for Familial Pancreatic Cancer," Ted A. James, David G. Sheldon,
Ashwani Rajput, Boris W. Kuvshinoff, Milind M. Javle, Hector R. Nava, Judy L. Smith, and John F. Gibbs, CANCER; Published
Online: November 8, 2004 (DOI: 10.1002/cncr.20700); Print Issue Date: December 15, 2004.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc