Cancer Diary: Why Pancreatic Cancer Hides So Well
Some cancers announce themselves early. Pancreatic cancer does not. It is one of the quietest, most secretive diseases we face, and by the time it speaks, it often speaks in a whisper. That is why it feels so especially cruel: not because it is uniquely unstoppable, but because it is uniquely hidden. Most people are diagnosed only after the cancer has already spread. More than 80% of cases are found at an advanced stage. The five‑year survival rate remains low not because medicine has failed, but because detection comes too late for medicine to do what it can do. So the question becomes: Why is it caught so late? And more importantly: What can ordinary people do? The Pancreas Lives in the Shadows The pancreas sits deep in the abdomen, tucked behind the stomach, sheltered by ribs, organs, and blood vessels. You cannot feel it. A doctor cannot palpate it. A tumor can grow there for months or years without announcing itself. By the time symptoms appear, they are rarely dramatic. Th...