STAT

Muscle and fat loss may offer clues to pancreatic cancer’s deadly ways

Muscle and fat loss might offer clues to understanding pancreatic cancer and diagnosing it earlier, a new study suggests.
Pancreatic cancer cells

Of all the places to get cancer, the pancreas may be the worst. Difficult to detect and nearly impossible to treat, pancreatic cancer is the only major cancer with a five-year survival rate below 10 percent. New research, published Wednesday in Nature, challenges some widely held assumptions about the disease and could eventually help doctors diagnose patients earlier, when treatments are most effective.

The study’s findings came from investigating how early pancreatic tumors affect peripheral tissues — mainly muscle and fat — in both mice and humans.

Doctors have long observed that many pancreatic cancer patients experience debilitating tissue wasting. Researchers have been working to stop or even reverse such loss, although they still

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from STAT

STAT2 min readChemistry
STAT+: Pharmalittle: We’re Reading About Fake Studies, AbbVie Investing In Psychedelics, And More
Fake studies have flooded publishers of top scientific journals,. leading to thousands of retractions and millions of dollars in lost revenue.
STAT2 min read
STAT+: Pharmalittle: We’re Reading About FDA Dithering On Pharma Patents, WHO Pandemic Talks, And More
When it comes to a crucial controversy over patents for drug-and-device combination products, the FDA has been MIA.
STAT1 min read
Opinion: STAT+: How AI Can Help Satisfy FDA’s Drug, Device Diversity Requirements
To meet the Food and Drug Omnibus Reform Act, companies must rethink their current clinical trial strategies. Including AI and machine learning approaches can help.

Related Books & Audiobooks