| Literature DB >> 25459566 |
Michael Scharf1, Daniela Mueller1, Ute Koenig1, Andreas Pfestroff2, Wilhelm Nimphius3, Jens Figiel4, Anja Rinke1, Alexander Koenig1, Thomas Gress5.
Abstract
Insulinomas represent the most common functional neuroendocrine tumor of the pancreas. They are usually solitary, benign, well differentiated (G1/G2) and curable by surgery. We describe the case of a 45 year old male Caucasian with a unique malignant, metastasized pancreatic insulinoma (Ki 67 of 70%, G3). To control excessive insulin production emanating in refractory hypoglycemia and growth of the highly proliferating tumor a multimodal therapeutic approach including the consecutive use of tumor debulking surgery, chemotherapy, TACE, SIRT, PRRT as well as a drug therapy with diazoxide, somatostatin analogs and everolimus was employed. Chemotherapy with carboplatin/etoposide plus everolimus provided the longest normoglycemic period. After progress chemotherapy with dacarbazine had the most positive effect, while debulking approaches such as surgery and liver directed therapies, as well as PRRT were less efficient with only transient success.Entities:
Keywords: G3; Liver directed therapies; Malignant insulinoma; Neuroendocrine pancreatic tumor; PRRT; Refractory hypoglycemia
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25459566 DOI: 10.1016/j.pan.2014.07.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pancreatology ISSN: 1424-3903 Impact factor: 3.996