
This morning U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had surgery for pancreatic cancer, the court said today.
The operation took place at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. The attending surgeon, Murray Brennan, said Ginsburg will likely stay in the hospital for a week to 10 days, according to the court.
Ginsburg, 75 years old, had no symptoms before a CT scan found a small tumor — about one centimeter across — in the center of her pancreas during a routine annual check-up at the National Institutes of Health late last month. Ginsburg was treated for colon cancer in 1999.

Brennan, who was chairman of surgery at Sloan-Kettering from 1985 until 2006, is an expert in pancreatic cancer and has held leadership roles in several national medical organizations. A Sloan-Kettering spokeswoman declined to make him available to discuss Justice Ginsburg’s case.
J. Randolph Hecht, a gastroenterologist and medical oncologist at the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, tells the Health Blog that most patients are already inoperable when pancreatic cancer is found.
For those whose tumor is still small enough for surgery, there are a couple of “binary” possibilities, he says. The surgery could cure Ginsburg. Or the tumor could return, which, if it happens, usually occurs between one and three years afterward. Once pancreatic cancer recurs, the patient usually dies within a year.
For most patients, the cancer does come back, Hecht says. But based on the limited information the Supreme Court put out, Hecht says her situation sounds good and “she has a reasonable chance for cure.” Patients in whom the cancer is found before symptoms begin typically do best, he explains.
Most pancreatic cancer cases are a form called adenocarcinoma. Unfortunately, Hecht adds, “this is the most deadly of all the major malignancies.”

Update: The fact that Justice Ginsburg had surgery is a relatively good sign, says Gauri Varadhachary, a pancreatic cancer expert at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. Most patients have progressed to an inoperable stage of the disease by the time pancreatic cancer is diagnosed. Varadhachary isn’t involved in Justice Ginsburg’s care.
http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2009/02/05/understanding-justice-ginsburgs-pancreatic-cancer/