64 bit algebra is not really required.
The double floats used by perl internally can represent 53 bit integers on most CPU architectures, enough to store the 12 decimal digits:
my $md5 = ...;
my $dd = 0;
$dd = ($dd * 256 + ord) % 1e12
for split //, $md5;
print "$dd\n";
(actually, the biggest number that can appear in this algorithm is 2.56E+14, that can be represented in 48 bits)
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