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Daily London > World Affairs > One disease wiped out Steph’s beloved family within a year. Survival rates have barely changed
World Affairs

One disease wiped out Steph’s beloved family within a year. Survival rates have barely changed

Daily London
By Daily London
Published: November 19, 2025
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Daily London

Exclusive: For anyone, having a loved one diagnosed with cancer is devastating.

Especially when it’s one of the least survivable kinds.

But Steph McGuire, 31, lost her mother, father and aunt to the same kind of cancer over just 12 months.

Steph McGuire, 31, has lost her mother, father and aunt to the same kind of cancer in just 12 months. (Supplied)

“It’s hard to know what to feel it’s just so surreal,” McGuire, from Melbourne, said.

“When mum got it, obviously it hit hard.

“Then a few months later, my dad got diagnosed, which was horrible.

“It was stage four, my mum was stage three.

“Then my aunty got diagnosed a year or so later.

“You’re like, ‘Surely it’s not the same.'”

The mother to Harvey, four, and Hazel, 10 months, with husband Shaydan, is now worried about her own health.

Her mum, Vicki Jackson, who worked at a law firm, died aged 65 in July 2024, just over two years after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.

Her early symptom was itching palms, a sign of bile in the bloodstream.

Steph’s father died from pancreatic cancer a year after her mother. (Supplied)

Her former CEO father, Steve, who was given the devastating news that he too had pancreatic cancer just months after his wife’s diagnosis, died a year after that, aged 66.

He had bowel issues, which flagged a problem, though he defied expectations to live for three years after chemo and a trial treatment.

In between losing her parents, Steph’s aunt and her mother’s sister, Valerie Boyd, was also diagnosed with and died from the disease.

She had diabetes, which can be an indicator.

Steph is now doing genetic testing to see if she’s likely to develop it, though testing done on her parents indicated it was not a genetic type.

An early diagnosis is crucial to surviving.

“It definitely freaks me out, once the symptoms are there, it’s really too late,” she says.

Advocates are also pushing for more money to help save lives.

Steph’s mother Vicki, right, and her aunt Valerie both died from the disease. (Supplied)

Michelle Stewart, CEO of Pankind, said earlier detection and faster treatment – as well as funding for research – is needed.

“Survival has improved, but not fast enough and when several members of a family are diagnosed, it underscores the urgent need to understand familial and genetic risk,” Stewart said.

Pankind has a family health checker online so Aussies can assess their risk.
Last month, a new study for a screening program was announced, trialling surveillance methods for those at higher risk.

It aligns Australia with the global PRECEDE study, which aims to lift five-year survival rates from 13 to 50 per cent within a decade.

A spokesman for the Department of Health, Disability and Ageing said the Australian Government supports health and medical research with $650 million annually from the Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) and around $1 billion a year through the National Health and Medical Research Council’s (NHMRC) Medical Research Endowment Account (MREA).

It has invested more than $13 million for research focused on pancreatic cancer in the past decade, he said.

“Between 2015 and 2024, the NHMRC has expended $41.5 million towards research relevant to pancreatic cancer.

“On 2 May 2024, Minister (Mark) Butler announced the MRFF Low Survival Cancers Mission (LSCM).

“It will provide $150 million over 10 years, from 2027-28, for research to improve care and health outcomes for people with low survival cancers, including pancreatic cancer.”

Health Minister Mark Butler has announced more money for cancer. (Getty)
Pancreatic cancer is the third-leading cause of cancer death in Australia.

Symptoms include abdominal and back pain, jaundice, loss of appetite, unexplained weight loss, fatty stool, new onset or hard to manage diabetes and nausea.

Patients diagnosed have just a 13 per cent chance of surviving for five years, according to Pankind.

Only three out of 10 people diagnosed will be alive after a year.

It’s a number which has not increased for 15 years, unlike the figures for other cancers such as breast cancer, which is now at a 93 per cent five-year survival rate.

World Pancreatic Cancer Day today, November 20.

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