Pancreatic Can:cer: Two Early Signs of an Often Fa:tal Can:cer

12 weeks. That’s all it took for pancreatic cancer—one of the deadliest cancers worldwide—to take my father’s life. It is often called a silent killer for good reason: the disease advances quietly, with few early symptoms, until treatment options are limited.

A Silent and Aggressive Can:cer
Pancreatic cancer receives little media attention compared to lung, breast, or colon cancer. Yet it remains one of the most serious, ranking 4th in cancer-related deaths.

In France alone, nearly 16,000 new cases are diagnosed each year (Santé Publique France, 2023).
Worldwide, incidence is rising by 2–3% annually.
The five-year survival rate is still below 10%.
Diagnosis typically comes late: the average age at detection is 71 for men and 74 for women. By then, more than three-quarters of tumors are already inoperable. Only complete surgical removal offers a chance at long-term survival—making early recognition critical.

The Two Symptoms We Missed
Looking back, there were two clear warning signs we should have taken more seriously.

1. Persistent Abdominal or Back Pain

Continue reading on the next page >>