Synchronous Operable Pancreatic and Breast Cancer Without Genetic Mutation: A Literature Review and Discussion

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Abstract

Background: Synchronous cancers are rarely detected when working-up a patient for a primary cancer. Neoadjuvant management of synchronous breast and pancreatic cancers, without a germline mutation, has yet to be discussed. Two patients were diagnosed with synchronous breast and pancreatic cancers at our institution over the last decade. A literature review was performed to evaluate the current evidence stance. Results: The first patient was 61-years old and diagnosed with a HER2+ breast cancer. The second patient was 77-years old and diagnosed with a Luminal B breast cancer. The inability to provide concurrent breast and pancreatic neoadjuvant therapy for the HER2+ patient, resulted in upfront surgery. The second patient was able to have both cancers treated simultaneously - neoadjuvant chemotherapy to the pancreas, and neoadjuvant endocrine therapy to the breast. Discuss: There is no single neoadjuvant regimen that treats both pancreatic and breast cancer. The differences in breast cancer sub-types impacted our neoadjuvant options. Our recent experience led us to the hypothesis that breast cancer care dictates treatment, while pancreatic cancer determines survival. There is a significant paucity in the literature regarding synchronous breast and pancreatic cancer.

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APA

Ofri, A., Zuidersma, D., Diakos, C. I., Stevanovic, A., Wong, M., Sood, S., … Mittal, A. (2022). Synchronous Operable Pancreatic and Breast Cancer Without Genetic Mutation: A Literature Review and Discussion. Frontiers in Surgery, 9. https://doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2022.858349

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