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[Pancreatic cancer in the elderly: guidelines and individualized therapy].

The considerable increase of the aged population in western civilisation within the next years will result in a rising incidence of pancreatic cancer. Until the year 2020 an increment of 20  % of patients beyond 65 years old can be anticipated. Therefore, the focus will be on management of old and geriatric surgical patients leading to strategical re-evaluation of surgical indications under critical consideration of feasibility and purpose. Even under modern interdisciplinary therapy concepts the prognosis of ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas remains poor with an overall 5-year survival rate of less than 5  %. The surgical resection is still considered as the only potential curative treatment option with extended life expectancy; however, it is technically demanding and furthermore associated with significant morbidity. In particular, the quality of surgery of the now interdisciplinary therapy of pancreatic cancer is markedly improved when performed at a high-volume centres. Until now only a few retrospective data analyses evaluating the perioperative and long-term outcome after pancreatic tumor resections in geriatric patients exist. The available results, however, support radical surgical procedures even beyond the age of 75 years.

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