Imaging tests might be used to help learn more about the cancer. One of the most important things your doctors will look for is whether the cancer can be removed by surgery. Surgery is often the preferred treatment, if it can be done.
CT scan
A CT scan uses X-rays taken from different angles and a computer to get detailed 3D pictures of the inside of your body. A CT scan might be done to look inside your chest, belly (abdomen), or pelvis. The pictures help your doctor see where the cancer is. They can also show if the cancer has spread to nearby lymph nodes or to other organs, like your liver.
To have the test, you'll lie still on a table as it slowly slides through the center of the ring-shaped CT scanner. A CT scan is painless. Before the scan, you may be given contrast material, either by mouth (oral) or through a vein (intravenous, or I.V.), or both. It helps tumors and other changes show up better on the scan. The contrast material will slowly pass through your system. Then it will exit through your urine and bowel movements.
MRI
An MRI uses powerful magnets, radio waves, and a computer to make detailed pictures of the inside of your body. It doesn't use X-rays. An MRI can show small tumors and the extent of your cancer. It's also used to see if the cancer has spread to other parts of your body. If it has, an MRI can also show the size and extent of the spread. Your doctor may also do an MRI if the results of an X-ray or CT scan aren't clear. You may be given contrast material before the scan to help make the pictures clearer.
MRIs aren't painful. But they take a long time, up to an hour or so. During that time, you'll lie still on a table that slides into a long, narrow tube. Some people say the test makes them feel closed in (claustrophobic). If you've had problems with enclosed spaces in the past, tell your doctor before the test. They may give you medicine (a sedative) to help you stay calm during the test. Newer, more open MRI machines can sometimes be used instead. But the images may not be as sharp. The equipment also makes loud banging noises. You can ask for earplugs if you think the noise will bother you.
PET scan
Your doctor may use a PET scan to look for the spread of cancer to lymph nodes or other parts of your body. A PET scan can also help if your doctor thinks the cancer may have spread but doesn't know where. This is because it scans your whole body. The picture is not as detailed as a CT scan. But it's often used along with a CT scan to look for tumors. This is called a PET-CT scan.
For this test, you're given a mildly radioactive sugar called a tracer about an hour before the scan. Cancer cells absorb more of this sugar than normal cells. The radioactive material then shows up on the image from the scan. To have the scan, you'll lie still on a table that's pushed into the PET scanner. The process may take several hours. A PET scan is painless and the machine doesn't touch you. But if you're sensitive to the sugar, you may have side effects. These can include a headache, nausea, or vomiting. The tracer passes out of your body in your urine.
CT or MR angiography
An angiogram is a test that looks at blood vessels in and around the pancreas. This type of test can help show if a pancreatic cancer has grown into nearby major blood vessels. This can help your care team decide if the tumor can be removed without damaging the blood vessels. It can also help them plan the surgery.
In the past, this test was often done by threading a small tube (catheter) through an artery (often in your inner thigh) to the pancreas and then injecting a dye. Then X-rays were taken of the area. Today this test is more often done using a CT scanner (CT angiography) or an MRI scanner (MR angiography). A catheter in the artery isn't needed to complete the test. But you may need contrast material put through an I.V. line in your hand or arm during the test.
ERCP or MRCP
These tests look at your bile ducts and pancreatic duct to see if there are any blockages. These tests are sometimes used to help plan surgery.
ERCP is a type of X-ray test. Medicines are used to put you into a deep sleep. Then the doctor puts a long, flexible tube (called an endoscope) down your throat, through your stomach, and into your small intestine. The doctor slips a smaller, soft tube (catheter) through the endoscope into the common bile duct. Then contrast material is injected through the tube. It goes into your bile and pancreatic ducts. The doctor then takes X-rays of the area. This is done to look for any areas that may mean there is a blockage by a tumor. If a blocked duct is seen, the doctor may put a small plastic or metal tube (called a stent) into the duct to help keep it open.
MRCP is a lot like ERCP except that it uses an MRI instead of an endoscope. MRCP can show both the bile ducts and the pancreatic duct without the need for an endoscope to be passed into the duct. But unlike ERCP, it does not use contrast material. And this test can't be used to put a stent into a blocked duct.
EUS
A small ultrasound probe is placed on the tip of a flexible tube (endoscope). It is put into your mouth and down into the small intestine. The ultrasound uses sound waves and a computer to form pictures of your pancreas. This helps show where the tumor has grown. A biopsy may also be done at the same time.