| Literature DB >> 24213230 |
Anja Rinke1, Patrick Michl, Thomas Gress.
Abstract
Treatment of the clinically and prognostically heterogeneous neuroendocrine neoplasms (NEN) should be based on a multidisciplinary approach, including surgical, interventional, medical and nuclear medicine-based therapeutic options. Medical therapies include somatostatin analogues, interferon-a, mTOR inhibitors, multikinase inhibitors and systemic chemotherapy. For the selection of the appropriate medical treatment the hormonal activity, primary tumor localization, tumor grading and growth behaviour as well as the extent of the disease must be considered. Somatostatin analogues are mainly indicated in hormonally active tumors for symptomatic relief, but antiproliferative effects have also been demonstrated, especially in well-differentiated intestinal NET. The efficacy of everolimus and sunitinib in patients with pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNET) has been demonstrated in large placebo-controlled clinical trials. pNETs are also chemosensitive. Streptozocin-based chemotherapeutic regimens are regarded as current standard of care. Temozolomide in combination with capecitabine is an alternative that has shown promising results that need to be confirmed in larger trials. Currently, no comparative studies and no molecular markers are established that predict the response to medical treatment. Therefore the choice of treatment for each pNET patient is based on individual parameters taking into account the patient's preference, expected side effects and established response criteria such as proliferation rate and tumor load. Platin-based chemotherapy is still the standard treatment for poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas. Clearly, there is an unmet need for new systemic treatment options in patients with extrapancreatic neuroendocrine tumors.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24213230 PMCID: PMC3712673 DOI: 10.3390/cancers4010113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
WHO classification of neuroendocrine neoplasms of the gastroenteropancreatic system [4].
| WHO 2000 | WHO 2010 |
|---|---|
| 1. Well-differentiated endocrine tumour (WDET) | 1. NET G1 (carcinoid) NET G2 (carcinoid) * |
| 2. Well-differentiated endocrine carcinoma (WDEC) | |
| 3. Poorly differentiated endocrine carinoma/small cell carcinoma (PDEC) | 2. NEC G3 large or small cell type |
| 4. Mixed exocrine-endocrine carcinoma (MEEC) | 3. Mixed adenoneuroendocrine carcinoma (MANEC) |
| 5. Tumour-like lesions (TLL) | 4. Hyperplastic and preneoplastic lesions |
* In case that the Ki67 index exceeds 20%, this NET may be labelled G3.
Summary of studies reporting antiproliferative effects of somatostatin analogues.
| First Author and Year | Patients | SSA/Dose | Progression Prior to Treatment | PR(%) | SD(%) | Additional Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vinik 1989 [ | 14; carcinoid and pNET | Oct sc100 µg–250 µgq 6–12 h | no | 20 * | 50 | * any regression |
| Öberg 1991 [ | 23 midgut carcinoids | Oct sc 50 µg–100 mgq 12 h | no | 28 | 36 | |
| Saltz 1993 [ | 34 carcinoid and pNET | Oct 150 µg–250 µg t.i.d. | yes | 0 | 50 | |
| Arnold 1996 [ | 103 GEPNET | Oct sc 200 µg–500 µgt.i.d. | in 50% | 0 | 37 a/54 b | a in patients with documented progression |
| di Bartolomeo 1996 [ | 58 GEPNET | Oct sc 500 mg–1000 mgt.i.d. | yes | 3 | 47 | |
| Tomassetti 1998 [ | 18 GEPNET | Lan i.m. 30 mg q 10 d | no | 0 | 78 | |
| Wymenga 1999 [ | 55 functioning GEPNET | Lan i.m. 30 mg q 14 d to q 7 d | no | 6 | 81 | |
| Faiss 1999 [ | 30 GEPNET | Lan sc 5000 µg t.i.d. | yes | 6.6 | 37 | |
| Ricci 2000 [ | 15 GEPNET | Oct LAR 20 mg q 28 d | yes | 7 | 40 | |
| Tomassetti 2000 [ | 16 GEPNET | Oct LAR 20 mg q 28 d | no | 0 | 87.5 | |
| Aparicio 2001 [ | 35 GEPNET | Oct sc 100 µg t.i.d. or Lan i.m. 30 mg q 14 d to q 7 d or both | yes | 2.9 | 57.1 | |
| Shojamanesh 2002 [ | 15 gastrinoma | Oct sc or Oct LAR | yes | 6 | 47 | |
| Faiss 2003 [ | 25 GEPNET | Lan sc 1000 µg t.i.d. | yes | 4 | 28 | |
| Bajetta 2006 [ | 30 GEPNET | LAN MP 60 q 21 d | no | 3.6 | 64.3 | |
| 30 GEPNET | LAN AG 120 q 42 d | 0 | 67.9 | |||
| Panzuto 2006 [ | 21 pNET | Oct LAR 30 mg q 28 d | yes | 0 | 45 | |
| Rinke 2009 [ | 85 midgut NET | Oct LAR 30 mg q 28 d
| no | 2.4 a | 67 a | a at 6 months of treatmentPFS 14.5
|
SSA: somatostatin analogue; PR: partial remission; SD: stable disease; pNET: pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor; Oct: octreotide; sc: subcutaneous application; Lan: lanreotide; GEPNET: gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumor; i.m.: intramuscular application.
Overview on studies with targeted therapies in patients with neuroendocrine tumors.
| First Author and Year | patients | Number of Patients | Regimen | PD Prior to Treatment | Design | PR | TTP/PFS | Additional Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hobday 2007 [ | carcinoid | 50 | sorafenib 400 mg bid | no | phase II | 10% | 7.8 months | 43% grade 3/4 toxicity |
| pNET | 43 | 11.9 months | ||||||
| Yao 2008 [ | carcinoid | 22 | octreotide + bevacizumab | no | randomized phase II | 18% | 95% at week 18 | |
| 22 | octreotide + PEGIFN | 0% | 68% at week 18 | |||||
| Kulke 2008 [ | carcinoid | 41 | sunitinib 37.5 mg | no | phase II | 2.4% | 10.2 months | |
| pNET | 66 | 16.7% | 7.7 months | |||||
| Raymond 2011 [ | pNET | 171 | sunitinib 37.5 mg | yes | randomized phase III, placebo-controlled | 9.3% | 11.4 months | 340 planned patients; survival advantage |
| Phan 2010 [ | carcinoid | 20 | octreotide + pazopanib 800 mg | no | phase II | 0% | 12.7 months | grade 3/4 hypertension 11.7% |
| pNET | 31 | 19% | 11.7 months | |||||
| Duran 2006 [ | GEPNET | 37 | temsirolimus | yes | phase II | 6% | 6 months | |
| Yao 2008 [ | carcinoid | 30 | 5–10 mg everolimus + octreotide | no | phase II | 17% | 63 weeks | trend to better results at 10 mg dose level |
| pNET | 30 | 27% | 50 weeks | |||||
| Yao 2010 [ | pNET | 115 | 10 mg everolimus | yes | phase II | 9.7% | 9.7 months | 2 strata, no randomization |
| 45 | 10 mg everolimus + octreotide | 4.4% | 17 months | |||||
| Yao 2011 [ | pNET | 410 | 10 mg everolimus
| yes | randomized phase III, placebo-controlled | 5% | 11.4 months
| |
| Pavel 2010 [ | carcinoid syndrome | 429 | 10 mg everolimus + octreotide | yes | randomized phase III, placebo-controlled | 16.4 months | only 50% intestinal primary, mixed population |
PD: progressive disease; PR: partial remission; TTP: time to progression; PFS: progression-free survival; GEPNET: gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumor; pNET: pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor; PEGIFN: pegylated interferon-α.