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Can our experience with surveillance for inherited pancreatic cancer help to identify early pancreatic cancer in the general population?

J-Matthias LöhrDaniel ÖhlundEmma SöreskogEmil AnderssonMiroslav VujasinovicNiklas ZethraeusMalin Sund
Published in: Familial cancer (2024)
Screening of the general population for cancer is a matter of primary prevention reducing the burden of disease. Whilst this is successful for several cancers including breast, colon and prostate, the situation to screen and hence prevent pancreatic cancer is different. The organ is not as accessible to simple physical exam or biological samples (fecal or blood test). Neither exists a blood test such as PSA that is cost-effective. Reviewing the evidence from screening risk groups for pancreatic cancer, one must conclude that there is no rational at present to screen the general population, for a lack of appropriate tests.
Keyphrases
  • prostate cancer
  • high throughput
  • public health
  • physical activity
  • mental health
  • radical prostatectomy
  • young adults