A set of results from a phase 3 clinical trial reports that daraxonrasib, an experimental oral medication for advanced pancreatic cancer, nearly doubles patient survival compared with standard chemotherapy. Multiple outlets describe pancreatic cancer as one of the deadliest major cancers with limited effective options, especially when detected after it has spread. The trial focuses on participants with activating RAS mutations who have previously received chemotherapy. Reported outcomes include longer overall survival—described in coverage as rising from roughly six months with chemotherapy to about 13 months with daraxonrasib in the overall previously treated group—and a reduced risk of death, with one summary figure indicating about a 60% reduction compared with chemotherapy. Tumor responses are also reported, including higher rates of cancer shrinkage or disappearance among patients treated with daraxonrasib than among those receiving chemotherapy, and longer periods of tumor control for certain genetic subgroups such as those with the G12 variant. Coverage also notes common side effects and that the drug is still experimental. Experts quoted across outlets call the findings highly encouraging and potentially practice-changing, while questions remain about access and side-effect management.