Pancreatic and Liver Disease Deaths Rise Due to Advancements in Other Cancer Care

Pancreatic and Liver Disease Deaths Rise Due to Advancements in Other Cancer Care
(Shutterstock*)
5/21/2014
Updated:
2/13/2022

Money changes everything. To date, lung, breast, prostate and colorectal cancers have accounted for the largest number of cancer deaths. In response, these cancers currently receive the most research funding from the National Cancer Institute and are highlighted through public health campaigns, special event fundraising and celebrity spokespeople.

And the extra money and attention is working to end those cancers and move other cancers up in frequency of cause of death.

Cancer Research reports that “by 2030 more people will be diagnosed with breast, prostate and lung cancers than with pancreatic cancers, but more pancreatic cancer and liver cancer patients will die of their disease.”

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What should people do? Get screened if you are at risk.

“Primary liver cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma, is curable when caught early, so if you have high risk factors such as cirrhosis, particularly cirrhosis from hepatitis C virus, you should get screened,” says Steve Scaglione, MD, board certified hepatologist at Loyola University Health System. Hepatologists are specialists in treating liver disease. “Unlike a colonoscopy, liver cancer screening is non-invasive; just an ultrasound, every six months.” If liver cancer is diagnosed, curative treatment options are available and include surgery and liver transplantation.

There are more than 100 kinds of liver disease including cirrhosis, alcoholic induced, fatty and hepatitis. Hepatitis C is the leading cause of liver cancer in America. More than 5 million people are living with hepatitis, called a silent epidemic because it often is not detected until it has spread to the liver.

Screening measures for hepatitis C are not only recommended by public health organizations such as the Centers for Disease Control but are now mandated by lawmakers. In Colorado, a bill was signed into law on May 20, 2014 funding hepatitis screening. Specifically, hepatitis C testing is recommended for Baby Boomers (those born between 1945 and 1965) because they are estimated to be five times more likely to contract the disease.

The Loyola hepatology team offers treatment at 11 Loyola locations located in Illinois and also conducts research and research trials to improve prevention and treatment. “As new resources are devoted to these less common, but more deadly forms of cancer there is a higher likelihood of research advances to improve patient outcomes,” says Susan Uprichard, PhD, associate professor and director of hepatology research at Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine. “Patients who seek treatment from an academic medical center such as Loyola have the advantage of not only receiving the most progressive care but they also have the potential to participate in life saving research trials.”

*Image of “purple ribbon“ via Shutterstock
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