What Is Pancreatic Cancer?

Pancreatic cancer happens when malignant (cancerous) cells form in your pancreas. This is an organ located between your stomach and your spine, deep within your abdomen.
Types of Pancreatic Cancer
Pancreatic tumors are either exocrine or neuroendocrine (endocrine) tumors. Knowing the type of tumor is important because each type behaves differently and responds to different treatments.
Exocrine Pancreatic Tumors
Neuroendocrine Pancreatic Tumors
Signs and Symptoms of Pancreatic Cancer
- Bloating and gas
- Gastrointestinal discomfort or burning sensation in the stomach
- Foul-smelling diarrhea or greasy, floating stools
- Nausea or vomiting
- Weakness or fatigue
- Loss of appetite
- Unintended weight loss
- Upper back or upper abdomen pain
- Swelling in an arm or leg
- Signs of jaundice, like yellowing skin and eyes and dark urine
- Chills and sweats
- Fever
Symptoms of pancreatic cancer can vary depending on how advanced the cancer is. People often have no symptoms at all in the early stages.

Causes and Risk Factors of Pancreatic Cancer
While the exact cause of pancreatic cancer isn’t clear, several factors can increase your risk. Some risk factors for pancreatic cancer are related to lifestyle choices and environmental factors and may be modifiable. Other risk factors for pancreatic cancer — such as age and race — can’t be changed.
- Smoking About 25 percent of cases are thought to be caused by cigarette smoking.
- Being Overweight or Having Obesity People with obesity are about 20 percent more likely to develop pancreatic cancer.
- Type 2 Diabetes People who have had type 2 diabetes for five years or more have an increased risk of pancreatic cancer.
- Heavy Alcohol Use Heavy drinking can lead to pancreatitis, or inflammation of the pancreas, which is a risk factor for pancreatic cancer.
- Chronic Pancreatitis Pancreatitis is often tied to heavy drinking and smoking.
- Workplace Exposure to Certain Chemicals Chemicals commonly used in dry cleaning and metal working may increase the risk for pancreatic cancer.
- Inherited Genetic Syndromes These include certain hereditary forms of breast and ovarian cancer, melanoma, and pancreatitis, as well as two rare disorders — Lynch syndrome and Peutz-Jeghers syndrome.
- Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm of the Pancreas (IPMN) This is a typically benign cyst on a pancreatic duct. It's often found by CT scan and may turn cancerous.
How Is Pancreatic Cancer Diagnosed?
- Noninvasive Imaging Tests To get a better look at the pancreas, your doctor may order tests such as an ultrasound, computerized tomography (CT) scans, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or positron emission tomography (PET) scans.
- Endoscopic Ultrasound This test involves inserting a thin, flexible tube into the mouth, through the digestive tract, and into the small intestine, which is close to the pancreas. A probe at the end of the endoscope uses sound waves to create an image of the pancreas that may reveal cancer.
- Biopsy Your doctor may remove a small sample of tissue and examine it under a microscope to see if it contains cancerous cells. This is typically done during an endoscopic ultrasound but can also be performed by inserting a needle through the skin and into the pancreas.
- Blood Tests Blood tests can identify certain proteins — tumor markers shed by cancer cells that can help determine what type of pancreatic cancer you have and what treatment approach is likely to work best.
Once pancreatic cancer is diagnosed, it’s staged. This involves assigning a value to how far the cancer has advanced.
Treatment Options for Pancreatic Cancer
Surgery
The main types of surgery are a Whipple procedure or a pancreatectomy.
Chemotherapy
Radiation
With radiation therapy, a machine delivers high-energy rays to areas of the body where cancer has been found. These rays can help stop cancer cells from continuing to grow and spread.
Tumor Treating Fields
These electrical signals are delivered through adhesive patches placed on your abdomen as appropriate. Unlike other treatments given in a doctor’s office, this device is designed to be worn throughout the day.
Targeted Therapy
Targeted therapies for pancreatic cancer target specific genes or proteins in certain tumors with little to no damage to healthy cells. They can be given via injection, orally, or intravenously.
Immunotherapy
Immunotherapy, delivered intravenously or as an oral medication, enhances the immune system’s ability to attack cancer. This method can be effective for a minority of patients whose cancers have a defective cellular repair system.
Prevention of Pancreatic Cancer
- If you smoke, get help quitting. Smoking is considered the most significant risk factor for pancreatic cancer.
- Stay at a healthy weight. Losing weight if you are overweight or have obesity can help lower your risk of pancreatic cancer.
- Avoid drinking alcohol. Heavy alcohol use is linked to pancreatic cancer; it’s also tied to a condition known as chronic pancreatitis, a known risk factor for the disease.
- Ask your doctor about screening. For patients with inherited familial cancer genes such as BRCA1 or BRCA2, or a benign pancreatic nodule, follow your doctor’s advice on getting recommended cancer screening tests.
Pancreatic Cancer Prognosis
Support for People With Pancreatic Cancer
Some of the organizations that offer online or in-person support groups for pancreatic cancer patients, survivors, and families include:
The Pancreatic Cancer Action Network (PanCan) is a nationwide organization dedicated to patient education and advocacy. PanCan offers an up-to-date list of in-person pancreatic cancer support groups across the country, as well as online support services.
The American Cancer Society offers in-person support groups across the country, as well as online communities like the Cancer Survivors Network, which provides discussion boards and live chats for patients, survivors, and caregivers.
CancerCare is a national organization offering free emotional and practical support for cancer patients and their families. Online and in-person support groups, run by an oncology social worker, are available to people with pancreatic cancer and their loved ones.
The Takeaway
- Pancreatic cancer occurs when cancerous cells form in the pancreas. Because early pancreatic cancer often doesn't cause symptoms, it may have spread to other areas of the body by the time it’s diagnosed.
- People who smoke, drink heavily, have diabetes, or have chronic pancreatitis are at higher risk of developing pancreatic cancer. Genetics and race also affect risk.
- Pancreatic cancer can be treated with chemotherapy, radiation, surgery, and immunotherapy.
- Because it is an aggressive cancer, pancreatic cancer is often fatal, with an overall five-year survival rate of 13 percent.
FAQ
Pancreatic cancer is cancer that forms in the organ known as the pancreas. The pancreas is a gland that produces digestive juices and hormones that aid digestion and help regulate blood sugar.
There are a variety of risk factors for pancreatic cancer, including obesity, smoking, and inherited genetic genes, such as BRCA mutations.
Cancer of the pancreas can be cured if found early, before it has spread outside of the pancreas. Unfortunately, pancreatic cancer is often not detected until it is more advanced, when it has spread or to other organs in the body.
Among the reasons that pancreatic cancer tends to be deadly are that it’s often diagnosed at a late stage, that there is no easy screening test for it, and that it tends to spread easily.
Resources We Trust
- Mayo Clinic: Identifying Inherited Gene Mutations in Pancreatic Cancer Can Lead to Targeted Therapies, Better Survival
- Cleveland Clinic: Pancreatic Cancer Surgery Improvements
- National Cancer Institute: Pancreatic Cancer – Patient
- Johns Hopkins Medicine: Causes and Risk Factors
- Pancreatic Cancer Action Network: Pancreatic Cancer Symptoms
Additional reporting by Christina Frank.
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- Aslanian HR et al. AGA Clinical Practice Update on Pancreas Cancer Screening in High-Risk Individuals: Expert Review. Gastroenterology. July 2020.
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- Radiation Therapy for Pancreatic Cancer. Pancreatic Cancer Action Network.
- FDA Approves First-of-Its-Kind Device to Treat Pancreatic Cancer. U.S. Department of Food and Drug Administration. February 12, 2026.
- Targeted Therapy for Pancreatic Cancer. Pancreatic Action Network.
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Tawee Tanvetyanon, MD, MPH
Medical Reviewer
Tawee Tanvetyanon, MD, MPH, is a professor of oncologic sciences and senior member at H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Morsani College of Medicine at the University of South Florida in Tampa. He is a practicing medical oncologist specializing in lung cancer, thymic malignancy, and mesothelioma.
A physician manager of lung cancer screening program, he also serves as a faculty panelist for NCCN (National Comprehensive Cancer Network) guidelines in non-small cell lung cancer, mesothelioma, thymoma, and smoking cessation. To date, he has authored or coauthored over 100 biomedical publications indexed by Pubmed.

Pamela Kaufman
Author
Pamela Kaufman assigns and edits stories about infectious diseases and general health topics and strategizes on news coverage. She began her journalism career as a junior editor on the health and fitness beat at Vogue, followed by a long stint at Food & Wine, where she rose through the ranks to become executive editor. Kaufman has written for Rutgers University and Fordham Law School and was selected for a 2022 Health Journalism Fellowship from the Association of Health Care Journalists and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Kaufman enjoys going on restaurant adventures, reading novels, making soup in her slow cooker, and hanging out with her dog. She lives in New York City with her husband and two kids.