This book provides a comprehensive, state-of-the-art overview of imaging modalities used in the diagnosis, staging, and management of pancreatic cancer. In addition to profiling the most commonly-used imaging modalities for pancreatic cancer, the text reviews recent advances in endoscopic ultrasound, staging characteristics utilized in determining appropriate treatment options, and reviews the role of imaging in pancreatic cancer screening in specialized patient populations. The book also spotlights the use of radiation therapy for pancreatic cancer in patients who cannot have surgery, as well as when fiducial marker placement should be considered in targeting a malignancy.
Written by experts in the field, Imaging Diagnostics in Pancreatic Cancer: A Clinical Guide is a valuable resource for gastroenterologists, surgeons, oncologists, radiologists, and other practitioners who manage patients with pancreatic cancer.
I. Imaging Modalities Used in the Diagnosis and Staging of Pancreatic Cancer
1. Multi-detector CT Scan
2. MRI and MRCP
3. Endoscopic Ultrasound
4. The Role of ERCP in Pancreatic Cancer
5. PET/CT in Pancreatic Neoplasms
6. Imaging Diagnostics from the Perspective of the Oncologist
7. Radiation Therapy in the Management of Pancreatic Cancer
II. Imaging Modalities Used to Screen For Pancreatic Cancer
8. Pancreatic Cancer Screening
Naveen Anand, MD
Director of Advanced Endoscopy
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Medicine
Norwalk Hospital, Nuvance Health
Clinical Instructor, Yale University School of Medicine
Norwalk, CT
USA
Peter Darwin, MD
Professor of Medicine
Director, Therapeutic Endoscopy
University of Maryland
Baltimore, MD
USA
This book provides a comprehensive, state-of-the-art overview of imaging modalities used in the diagnosis, staging, and management of pancreatic cancer. In addition to profiling the most commonly-used imaging modalities for pancreatic cancer, the text reviews recent advances in endoscopic ultrasound, staging characteristics utilized in determining appropriate treatment options, and reviews the role of imaging in pancreatic cancer screening in specialized patient populations. The book also spotlights the use of radiation therapy for pancreatic cancer in patients who cannot have surgery, as well as when fiducial marker placement should be considered in targeting a malignancy.
Written by experts in the field, Imaging Diagnostics in Pancreatic Cancer: A Clinical Guide is a valuable resource for gastroenterologists, surgeons, oncologists, radiologists, and other practitioners who manage patients with pancreatic cancer.