# Pancreatic Cancer Screening in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: A Narrative Review

**Authors:** Mirela Dănilă, Ana-Maria Ghiuchici, Renata Bende, Iulia Rațiu, Felix Bende

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/medicina62010067 · Medicina · 2025-12-28

## TL;DR

This review explores how new-onset diabetes may signal early pancreatic cancer in type 2 diabetes patients, suggesting targeted screening strategies.

## Contribution

The paper synthesizes evidence on risk factors and screening strategies for pancreatic cancer in type 2 diabetes patients, focusing on new-onset diabetes as a potential biomarker.

## Key findings

- New-onset diabetes may serve as an early biomarker for pancreatic cancer.
- Risk prediction models like ENDPAC can help identify high-risk patients for targeted screening.
- Targeted screening using clinical signs and imaging may improve early diagnosis and prognosis.

## Abstract

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains a high-burden disease worldwide with increasing incidence, poor prognosis, and high mortality. Complete surgical resection is the only potentially curative treatment; however, due to a lack of symptoms in the early stages, most patients have advanced disease when diagnosed. Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a significant health concern characterized by hyperglycemia, insulin resistance, and impairment in insulin secretion. T2DM is linked with PDAC, sharing a complex bidirectional relationship. Therefore, dual causality between the two diseases represents significant challenges in practice, distinguishing existing T2DM as a PDAC risk factor from newly onset, potentially pancreatic cancer-related diabetes (PCRD). Evidence showed that new-onset diabetes (NOD) may serve as a biomarker for early diagnosis of PDAC, and several risk prediction models were developed to identify high-risk patients for further intervention. Although early PDAC detection is important, widespread screening is not currently recommended for T2DM patients due to a lack of cost-effective, efficient screening modalities. However, further risk stratification in diabetic patients is warranted to support a targeted screening strategy with economic viability. Diabetes confers ≈2-fold PDAC risk overall, with the highest relative risk in the first 2–3 years after diagnosis. Strategies using clinical signs (age ≥50–60 years, unintentional weight loss, rapid HbA1c escalation/insulin initiation) and predictive risk scores (e.g., ENDPAC) can triage NOD patients for magnetic resonance imaging/computed tomography (MRI/CT) and endoscopic ultrasound (EUS). A targeted screening approach may allow early diagnosis that could improve the prognosis of PDAC patients. This narrative review aims to synthesize current evidence linking T2DM and PDAC; delineate risk factors within diabetes populations; appraise predictive models and biomarkers for differentiating PCRD from typical T2DM; outline pragmatic, risk-adapted screening strategies, especially for NOD, and identify additional areas where further research is needed.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (MONDO:0005184), Type 2 diabetes mellitus (MONDO:0005148)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** INS (insulin) [NCBI Gene 3630] {aka IDDM, IDDM1, IDDM2, ILPR, IRDN, MODY10}
- **Diseases:** T2DM (MESH:D003924), PCRD (MESH:D010190), hyperglycemia (MESH:D006943), PDAC (MESH:D021441), Diabetes (MESH:D003920), insulin resistance (MESH:D007333), NOD (MESH:C565715), weight loss (MESH:D015431)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12843010/full.md

## References

70 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12843010/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12843010