Pancreatic cancer is projected to become the second-deadliest cancer by 2030. By the time it’s diagnosed, it’s often difficult to treat. So, for both individual patients and the general population, fighting pancreatic cancer can feel like a race against time. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) Professor and Cancer Center Director David Tuveson offers a telling analogy:
“We all have moles on our skin. Most of your moles are fine. But some of your moles you have a dermatologist looking at to make sure it’s always fine. They may take it out and send it to the pathologist to ask, ‘Is this an early melanoma, a melanoma in situ?’ Now, that’s just what you can see. Imagine that in your pancreas-because that’s the reality. We all have early versions of cancer in many tissues at all times.”
Now imagine…