315 Background: Because of the high incidence of local recurrence and liver metastasis, long-term outcomes of patients following resection of advanced pancreatic cancer are extremely poor. Facilitation of curative resection and prevention of micrometastasis are the goals of neoadjuvant therapy. We evaluated the feasibility and efficacy of our neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (NACRT) protocol for borderline resectable pancreatic cancer patients. Methods: During the period between 2003 and 2011, 24 patients with borderline resectable pancreatic cancers underwent NACRT comprising 5-FU (300 mg/body/day, day 1−5/week for 4 weeks), cisplatin (10mg/body day2, 9, 16, 23), mitomycin C (4mg/body/day, day 1, 8, 15, and 22), heparin (6000 IU/body/day for 4 weeks), and radiation (2 Gy/day, day 1−5/week for 4 weeks, total 40 Gy). They were reevaluated for resectability after therapy. Primary endpoints were toxicity and overall patient and disease-free survivals. Secondary endpoint was the ratio of microscopically margin negative resection. Results: All 24 patients completedNACRT. Grade 3−4 hematological adverse events were observed in 9 (38%) patients but none developed severe gastrointestinal toxicity. In 7 (29%) patients, restaging revealed distant metastasis or local disease progression not amenable to curative resection. The remaining 17 patients (71%) underwent surgery (pancreatoduodenectomy, 13 and distal pancreatectomy, 4) with zero 30-day postoperative or in-hospital mortality. The 5-year overall all patient and disease-free survival rates after pancreatectomy were 52.6% and 36.3%, respectively. Postoperative histopathological evaluation demonstrated a marked degenerative change in the specimen, achieving negative surgical margins in 15/17 (88%) patients and pathological complete response in the remaining 2 (12%) patients. Conclusions: Our NACRT protocol is feasible with a low toxicity profile and an excellent curative resection rate in the treatment of borderline resectable pancreatic cancer. It is a promising regimen associated with improved long-term prognoses than historical controls.