Wesley Research Institute
Donate
Now

This study aims to establish a useful imaging tracer for pancreatic cancer patients.

Research Objectives

Status

Completed

Recruitment

Closed

Patient Group

Pancreatic Cancer patients

Study location

Wesley Research Insitute, I-MED

Study type

Investigator Initiated

Lead investigator

  • A/Prof David Wong

Experienced investigator

  • Dr Sepinoud Firouzmand

About this research project

Pancreatic cancer is a very aggressive cancer, often associated with poor prognosis usually due to patients being diagnosed when the disease is advanced. Cancer staging / re-staging is the process of determining how much cancer is in the body and where it’s located. This process is critical in ensuring patients receive the most appropriate treatment for their cancer. This is done by a variety of methods including using a tracer in PET / CT imaging. However pancreatic cancer is notoriously difficult to image using this method. At this time there is no alternative tracer for sensitive and specific imaging of pancreatic cancer. This study aims to establish a useful imaging tracer for pancreatic cancer patients. This will mean these patients will have an effective imaging option which will better inform their treatment planning, compared to current standard care.

 

Findings

The key finding of this study was that the imaging tracer demonstrated increased uptake in both primary pancreatic cancer lesions and metastatic lesions. More studies involving larger populations are now required to provide additional evidence on the efficacy and accuracy of this new tracer. To date, these results indicate a promising step toward enhancing our understanding and potentially improving diagnostic practices in pancreatic cancer. 

Latest News

Queensland claims world-first Chair in Spatial Medicine  

In a landmark move in diagnosing and treating chronic disease, Queensland has unveiled the world’s first Chair in Spatial Medicine – a prestigious, philanthropically-funded research leadership position appointed to Associate Professor Arutha Kulasinghe. 

Gluten Threshold Study Findings

WRI researchers have made a groundbreaking discovery showing that even extremely small amounts of gluten can trigger measurable immune activation in people with treated coeliac disease – findings that could help refine international food labelling standards.  

How Kira is Helping to Shape Global Coeliac Research

When Kira was invited to participate in the Gluten Threshold Study, led by Coeliac Disease & Immune Health Research Program Clinical Director Dr James Daveson, Kira didn’t hesitate. The study’s findings are expected to influence international food labelling standards – an outcome that gives Kira a genuine sense of purpose. 
1 2 3 34
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram