| Literature DB >> 30009041 |
Inbal Uri1, Simona Grozinsky-Glasberg1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) are rare neoplasms, with an estimated annual incidence of ~ 6.9/100,000. NETs arise throughout the body from cells of the diffuse endocrine system. More than half originate from endocrine cells of the gastrointestinal tract and the pancreas, thus being referred to as gastroenteropancreatic NETs (GEP NETs). The only treatment that offers a cure is surgery, however most patients are diagnosed with metastatic disease, and curative surgery is usually not an option.Since the majority of patients are not candidate for curative surgery, they can be offered long-term systemic treatment, for both symptomatic relief and tumor growth suppression. Evidence based treatment options include somatostatin analogues, everolimus (an mTOR inhibitor), sunitinib (a tyrosine kinase inhibitor), peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT), chemotherapy, etc., alone or combined with cytoreductive procedures (surgery or liver directed procedures). However, there is an increasing need for novel therapies. Other treatment options being investigated are immunotherapy and epigenetic assessment that may lead to more personalized interventions. Following first line therapy with somatostatin analogues, there is no clear information to date indicating a preferred treatment sequence, and therefore the treatment approach should be individualized based on each NET patient characteristics.Entities:
Keywords: Neuroendocrine tumor; Treatment
Year: 2018 PMID: 30009041 PMCID: PMC6042326 DOI: 10.1186/s40842-018-0066-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Diabetes Endocrinol ISSN: 2055-8260
Fig. 1Ga68-DOTATATE-PET/CT images of a patient with metastatic G1 intestinal NET to the liver, bones and lymph nodes – showing high uptake be the tumor, in correlation with increased expression of somatostatin receptors, mainly SSTR2
A summary of currently used therapy modalities (systemic and liver loco-regional) for advanced GEP NETs, indicating reference studies for each one, and frequent side effects
| Drug | Study | Population (n) | Design | Primary end-point | Main Outcome | Major side effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Octreotide LAR | Rinke et al. 2009 [ | Intestinal NETs F/NF (85) | Randomized phase III | PFS | 14.3 months vs 6 months with placebo | Diarrhea, flatulence, cholelithiasis |
| Lanreotide autogel | Caplin et al. 2014 [ | NF Intestinal/ Pancreatic NETs (204) | Randomized phase III | PFS | Median not reached vs 18 months with placebo | Diarrhea, flatulence, cholelithiasis, hyperglycemia |
| Interferon | Oberg et al. 2012 [ | GEP NETs, carcinoid syndrome | Review | Clinical and biochemical response, tumor effect | Symptoms relief up to 70%, biochemical response 50–60%, SD up to 70% | Flu-like symptoms, chronic fatigue, liver toxicity, bone marrow suppression, depression, autoimmune-related conditions |
| Everolimus | Yao et al., 2008 [ | PNET (160) | Single-arm (± sandostatin) phase II | Response rate | 8.7% objective response rate; 84.7% stable disease | |
| Pavel et al., 2011 [ | Intestinal NETs (420) | Randomized phase III | PFS | 16.4 months vs 11.3 months with placebo | Stomatitis, rash, fatigue, diarrhea, nausea, infections, fever, cytopenia, edema, hyperglycemia, dyspnea, pneumonitis | |
| Yao et al., 2011 [ | PNETs (410) | Randomized phase III | PFS | 11 months vs 4.6 months with placebo | ||
| Yao et al. 2016 [ | Lung/Intestinal NETs (302) | Randomized phase III | PFS | 11 months vs 3.9 months with placebo | ||
| Sunitinib | Raymond et al. 2011 | Pancreatic NETs (171) | Randomized phase III | PFS | 11.4 months vs 5.5 months with placebo | Diarrhea, nausea, asthenia, vomiting, fatigue, HTN, neutropenia, stomatitis, palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia |
| Telotristat ethyl | Pavel et al. 2015 [ | Carcinoid syndrome (135) | Randomized phase III | Reduction in daily bowel movements | Mean reduction of 1.7–2.1 BM/day (dose dependent) vs 0.9 with placebo | Nausea, abdominal pain, vomiting, fatigue, infections, increased LFTs |
| PRRT | Strosberg et al. 2017 [ | Intestinal NETs (229) | Randomized phase III | PFS | PFS at 20 months 65.2% vs 10.8% with SSA alone | Nausea, vomiting, renal impairment, marrow toxicity |
| STZ-5FU | Dilz et al. 2015 [ | pNETs (96) | Retrospective | PFS | 19.4 months | Nausea, fatigue, kidney toxicity, bone marrow suppression |
| CAPTEM | Strosberg et al. 2011 [ | pNETs (30) | Retrospective | PFS | 18 months | Fatigue, nausea, myelosuppression, palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia |
| TACE | Grozinsky-Glasberg et al. 2018 [ | NETs (57) | Retrospective | PFS | 14 months | Fever, leukocytosis, abdominal pain, nausea, elevated liver enzymes (post embolization syndrome), carcinoid crisis, liver failure, cholecystitis, liver abscess |
| SIRT | Kennedy et al. [ | NETs (158) | Retrospective | Imaging response | SD 22.7%, PR 60.5%, CR 2.7%, PD 4.9% | Fatigue, nausea, pain, ascites, |
F functioning, NF non-functioning, PFS progression free survival, PRRT peptide receptor radionuclide therapy, STZ-5FU streptozotocin + 5-fluorouracil, CAPTEM capecitabin + temozoomide, TACE trans-arterial chemoembolization, SIRT selective interval radiation therapy, HTN hypertension, LFT liver function tests
Fig. 2Possible algorithm for treatment approach in patients with GEP-NETs