The study has two goals:
- To provide follow-up care to individuals identified as high risk for the disease. “What often happens is that these patients are identified as being at risk for pancreatic cancer, but are not followed in a consistent manner. We want to make sure that patients in this study are being monitored with the collaboration of a multidisciplinary team,” Dr. Borazanci said.
- Develop ways to detect pancreatic cancer early. “We want to develop better analytic tools to understand why someone gets the cancer and why someone doesn’t,” Dr. Borazanci said.
Information about patients in the study is entered into a database, but their personal information is masked. Researchers look for patterns in the data to better refine an individual’s risk for developing pancreatic cancer.
“The hope for the future is that we’ll be able to detect different types of cancers in the blood or even urine before we see them on traditional scans,” Dr. Borazanci said.
The model he’s using to monitor and detect early pancreatic cancer is expanding to other cancer types. An HonorHealth Research Institute colleague, Jasgit Sachdev, MD, is starting a similar study to follow patients at elevated risk for ovarian and breast cancers based on genetic and personal risk factors.
“We’d like to create a more comprehensive risk assessment that offers patients a better understanding of their overall cancer risk and a personalized plan for monitoring and reducing that risk,” Dr. Sachdev said.