More About Steve Jobs and Pancreatic Cancer

Dear Dr. B: I read your column on Steve Jobs and pancreatic cancer. I am puzzled. You say that most people with pancreatic cancer survive only few months after the diagnosis. So how did Jobs, who was diagnosed in the fall of 2003 – and who revealed it publicly in 2004 – manage to survive for eight years? Is it because he could afford to buy good health care?

Answer: That is what it looks like. But the real story is different. Jobs had a rare form of pancreatic cancer, known as neuroendocrine cancer, which grows more slowly and is easier to treat. It is not unusual for patients to survive several years with this type of cancer.

Most common cancer of the pancreas is adenocarcinoma.. My sister had adenocarcinoma. So did Nobel Prize winner immunologist Ralph Steinman, actor Patrick Swayze and football great Gene Upshaw. They all died within a few months of diagnosis. Jobs, with his vast fortune, and Steinman, with his use of experimental immunological treatments, could not forestall indefinitely the dismal outcome of the disease. In the end, both kinds of pancreatic cancers are incurable.

What is the difference between adenocarcinomas and neuroendocrine (NE) tumours?

The pancreas has two distinct kinds of tissue, hence two very different types of cancer. About 95 per cent of pancreatic cancers are adenocarcinomas arising from exocrine glands of the pancreas. These glands produce enzymes to digest fat in our diet.

Scattered in that larger organ are thousands of tiny islands. These are islands of endocrine tissue which makes hormones like insulin that are secreted into the blood. Tumours in these cells are known as islet cells tumours or NE tumours. Jobs had NE cancer.

Approximately half of NE tumours are functioning and half are nonfunctioning. That means patients who have functioning tumours exhibit characteristic syndromes caused by the uncontrolled secretion of insulin, gastrin and other hormones. Consequently, functioning tumours are typically diagnosed when they are smaller than nonfunctioning tumours.

Unfortunately, most patients who have NE carcinomas have locally advanced or metastatic disease. Treatment is directed towards the metastatic disease of the liver. Surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and immunotherapy have been tried. None of them are curative. But palliation and prolongation of life can be gained by few years.

Patients who have locally advanced disease have a median survival of about five years. One form of treatment that is not recommended for most pancreatic cancer is a liver transplant. There is speculation that the liver transplant Jobs received in 2009 had been necessary because the cancer had spread to his liver. In Jobs’ case, did liver transplant prolong his life?

Medical research suggests that patients should be considered for liver transplant if all or most (more than 90 per cent) of NE liver metastases can be resected. Liver resection is safe (operative mortality less than six per cent) and effectively palliates pain and hormonal symptoms in most patients.

Liver transplant may prolong survival but it is not curative because the disease recurs in most patients despite apparent complete resection. Patients who receive liver transplants must take immunosuppressant drugs for the rest of their lives to limit their risk for rejection. But while these drugs serve their purpose, a compromised immune system can leave patients vulnerable to other diseases. Liver transplantation must therefore be considered with great caution.

Steve Jobs was a controversial and complex man when he was alive. After his death, he continues to create speculation and controversy. May his soul rest in peace!

Start reading the preview of my book A Doctor's Journey for free on Amazon. Available on Kindle for $2.99!

Celebrating Column No.500

Five hundred columns for Medicine Hat News! That is hard to believe.

It was the summer of 1998, when I had a meeting with Gordon Wright, the then Managing Editor of the Medicine Hat News. With his help and encouragement, the first column appeared in the News on August 13, 1998.

People ask me: How do you do it, doctor?

With a busy practice and family life, not to mention all the time I spend on golf courses in summer months and little bit of skiing here and there in winter months, the joy of writing never leaves my mind, body or soul. Sounds poetic? May be. But that is the truth. My mind is always buzzing with ideas. Occasionally, I fire a letter to the editor if something is bugging me too much.

My columns also appear in Oyen Echo, Brooks Bulletin and I believe in the Commentator. Occasionally, I have written for the Medical Post and the Globe and Mail. I have been fortunate enough to have one book published (A Doctor’s Journey). There are many more projects on my list. Let us see how many I can accomplish.

My desire to write (and my ego) is also boosted by all the wonderful comments I get from the readers. They come by emails, letters, verbally on the golf course, ski area lift chairs, restaurants, shopping malls and from the patients in the office. These comments are highly appreciated. I also learn from people who write to me disagreeing with what I write.

My columns and interesting clinical photographs are also posted on my website (nbharwani.com). You can see some columns generate a lot of discussion worldwide. It is amazing how people use Internet to find solutions to their health problems because doctors cannot fix everything. I also admire their desire to share their ideas with others. I find such feedback a learning experience for me as well.

And I would not be able to write and get published if it wasn’t for the wonderful editors I work with at the News. They are always kind and accommodating.

Why do I like to write?

To explain this, I will borrow what Charley Reese of Orlando Sentinel wrote on December 27, 1998.

My purpose in writing a column….. is to stimulate people to think about what I consider fairly important issues. It does not matter to me if people agree or disagree. I don’t pretend to be omniscient, and, in fact, I am no smarter than anybody else.

There are other reasons too. I try to help the reader understand the various aspects of health care spiced with a local touch and some humour.

I try to explain to readers why it is important to take certain proactive preventive measures to live a happy, stress free and healthy life.

I try to explain that medicine is not a perfect science and doctors are like any human beings – from time to time vulnerable and prone to making mistakes.

Writing the column has also been a selfish endeavor. Teaching is the best way to learn. Sharing knowledge is the best way to improve one self. In the process I have learnt a lot about myself, my health and my own deficiencies.

One change at a time has added up to a better and satisfactory lifestyle so far for me. Rome wasn’t built in a day. So there is still hope to achieve nirvana – an ideal condition of rest, harmony, stability, and joy. We can continue our journey together.

Start reading the preview of my book A Doctor's Journey for free on Amazon. Available on Kindle for $2.99!

Inflammation of the Pancreas Should Not be Ignored

In the last column we discussed about pancreatic cancer. Today, we will briefly discuss inflammation of the pancreas which can be serious too.

The pancreas lies in the upper abdomen behind the stomach. Its function is to produce digestive enzymes and hormones such as insulin.

Pancreatitis is a chemical inflammation of the pancreas caused by its own digestive enzymes. Pancreatitis has two forms: acute and chronic.

Most common causes of pancreatitis are gallstones and alcohol abuse. Sometimes no cause can be found. That leaves the patient and the doctor frustrated.

Patients with acute pancreatitis present with abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, fever and a rapid pulse. The diagnosis is made by a blood test to measure blood level of enzyme lipase. All pancreatitis patients require intravenous fluids, oxygen and pain killers to stabilize their condition. If the condition is due to gallstones then the patient will need surgical removal of the gallbladder.

An abdominal ultrasound is taken to look for gallstones and a CAT (computerized axial tomography) scan to look for inflammation or destruction of the pancreas. CAT scans are also useful in detecting cyst formation in the pancreas.

In about 20 percent of cases, acute pancreatitis can be severe, with many complications. Severe cases may cause dehydration and low blood pressure and the condition may become life threatening. The vital organs such as heart, lungs, or kidneys may fail. If bleeding occurs in the pancreas, shock and sometimes even death follow.

Chronic pancreatitis can present as episodes of acute inflammation in a previously damaged pancreas. There is intermittent or persistent abdominal pain. The chronic destruction of pancreatic tissue causes malabsorption of fat and diabetes.

Chronic pancreatitis is most often caused by alcoholism and alcohol abuse. Sometimes the cause of chronic pancreatitis cannot be determined. But any condition that causes repeated episodes of acute pancreatitis may result in chronic pancreatitis.

Start reading the preview of my book A Doctor's Journey for free on Amazon. Available on Kindle for $2.99!

Steve Jobs – a Victim of Pancreatic Cancer

Pancreatic cancer has taken another life. The prognosis for pancreatic cancer is dismal. The overall five year survival rate is less than two percent, the worst of any cancer. Only 20 percent of the patients will be diagnosed at a stage where surgery may offer hope.

Last time I wrote about pancreatic cancer was in 1996. That was the year my sister, Gulshan, age 60, passed away within three months of diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. Steve Jobs was 56. He lived for four years after having had a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer. He also received a liver transplant.

It has been 15 years since my sister died. Has anything changed to improve the prognosis of patients diagnosed with pancreatic cancer?

Before we look into that, let us look at some numbers. The Canadian Cancer Society’s document “Canadian Cancer Statistics 2010” says that in 2010, Canada will continue to see an increase in the number of individuals diagnosed with and dying from cancer. Every hour of every day, an average of 20 people will be diagnosed with some type of cancer and eight people will die from cancer.

Fifty per cent of the newly diagnosed cancer patients will be suffering from lung, colorectal, prostate and breast cancers. Cancer of the pancreas is 12th on the list of estimated number of new cases. About 4,000 new cases will be diagnosed – this will be equally divided amongst males and females. Almost the same number of people will die of pancreatic cancer each year. Death from pancreatic cancer is fifth on the list after lung, colorectal, breast and prostate.

An article in the Scientific American (January 2011) says that one of the reasons why the prognosis is so dismal in pancreatic cancer is that the disease is not typically diagnosed until 15 years after the first cancer-causing mutations appear, by which point the cancer has spread and become highly aggressive.

What does that mean? That means there may be plenty of time for doctors to intervene before pancreatic cancer becomes lethal. Then the tumour can be successfully removed and the prognosis can be improved with appropriate chemotherapy and radiotherapy, if indicated.

The article says researchers from John Hopkins found that cancer cells appear 10 years after the first cancer-causing mutation arises and that another five years pass before the cancer cells spread and become deadly. Research like this and many others gives hope for the future. In the last two years scientists have brought screening techniques for pancreatic cancer closer to reality.

The article says that these technologies are not available commercially but progress is expected to increase in the next decade. In the meantime, doctors should consider using CT and MRI scans to screen patients who are at high risk because of family history of the disease. Is that practical or economically feasible? There is no defined protocol for this and there are advantages and disadvantages of using CT or MRI scans as a screening tool in otherwise healthy individuals.

What causes pancreatic cancer? The precise cause is unknown. Smoking and chronic inflammation are suspected in the causation of the disease. An estimated 5-10 percent of pancreatic cancers are inherited and additional 10-20 percent may have other significant genetic influence. Most patients present with jaundice, abdominal pain, weight loss, or no appetite. By that time it is too late.

Start reading the preview of my book A Doctor's Journey for free on Amazon. Available on Kindle for $2.99!