| Literature DB >> 30538745 |
Xinzhe Yu1,2, Jichun Gu3, Haoxuan Wu1, Deliang Fu3, Ji Li3, Chen Jin3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Nonsurgical therapies, including biotherapy, chemotherapy, and liver-directed therapy, provided a limit survival benefit for PNET patients with hepatic metastases. With the development of liver resection technique, there was a controversy on whether to perform a liver resection for these patients.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30538745 PMCID: PMC6261248 DOI: 10.1155/2018/6273947
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Figure 1PRISMA Flowchart describing literature search history.
Basic study characteristics of included trials.
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| Birnbaum et al | 2015 | France | 1995-2012 | 118 | 60 (31-82) | 57 (20-83) | 62/56 | 48/43/13 | 27/91 | 10/17 | 27/0 | 7 |
| Xu et al | 2015 | China | 2008-2013 | 36 | 49.9 ± 11.0 | 56.5 ± 12.5 | 14/22 | 6/26/4 | 26/10 | 25/11 | NR | 6 |
| Partelli et al | 2015 | Italy | 2000-2011 | 93 | 50 (45-59) | 51.5 (43-63) | 53/40 | 21/51/20 | 18/75 | 13/80 | 93/0 | 7 |
| Zerbi et al | 2013 | Italy | 2004-2007 | 45 | 56.9 | 60.6 | 26/19 | 13/19/11 | 9/36 | NR | NR | 6 |
| Kleine et al | 2011 | German | 1990-2009 | 15 | 55 (20-77) | NR | NR | 9/6 | NR | 15/0 | 7 | |
| Mayo et al | 2011 | America | 1985-2010 | 753 | 56 ± 12.6 | 57 ± 12.8 | 391/362 | NR | 339/414 | 223/530 | 273/480 | 8 |
| House et al | 2006 | America | 1988-2003 | 31 | 52 (31-71) | 41 (31-52) | 15/16 | NR | 26/5 | NR | NR | 9 |
| Osborne et al | 2006 | America | 2000-2004 | 120 | 56 ± 11.6 | 58 ± 11.1 | 64/56 | NR | 61/59 | NR | NR | 6 |
| Musunuru et al | 2006 | America | 1996-2004 | 48 | 56 (27-85) | NR | NR | 13/35 | 14/34 | 28/20 | 7 | |
| Touzios et al | 2005 | America | 1990-2004 | 42 | 58 ± 3 | 59 ± 3 | 17/25 | NR | 19/23 | 15/27 | 32/10 | 6 |
| Solorzano et al | 2001 | America | 1988-1999 | 100 | NR | NR | 56/44 | NR | 20/80 | NR | NR | 7 |
| Chamberlain et al | 2000 | America | 1992-1998 | 85 | 50 (20-79) | 54 (23-79) | 37/48 | NR | 34/51 | 14/71 | 63/22 | 7 |
| Chen et al | 1998 | America | 1984-1995 | 38 | 54 ± 4 | 59 ± 3 | 24/14 | NR | 15/23 | 17/21 | NR | 7 |
NR indicates no report.
Figure 2Forest plot for the occurrence time of hepatic metastases (synchronous/metachronous) of liver resection group and nonliver resection group in patients with liver metastases from pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor. There is no significant difference between two groups.
Figure 3Forest plot for the Grade classification (G1&G2/G3) of liver resection group and nonliver resection group in patients with liver metastases from pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor. There is no significant difference between two groups.
Figure 4Forest plot for the site of hepatic metastases (unilobar/bilobar) of liver resection group and nonliver resection group in patients with liver metastases from pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor. Liver resection group have more unilobar hepatic metastases.
All included literatures review.
| Study ID | Morbidity | 30-day mortality | Postoperative adjuvant therapy Rate | Median OS (m) | Median follow-up (m) | Non-liver resection treatments | Conclusion | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hepatic resection | Non-liver resection | |||||||
| Birnbaum 2015 | 44.00% | 5.00% | NR | 90 | NR | NR | Resection of primary tumors | Resection of liver metastases improve survival |
| Xu 2015 | NR | NR | NR | 57.2 | 54.8 | 32 | Somatostatin analogues and chemotherapy | Resection of liver metastases could not prolong OS but could improve PFS |
| Partelli 2015 | 44.44% | NR | 68.00% | 97 | 36 | 41 | Somatostatin analogues, PRRT, chemotherapy | Resection of liver metastases improve survival |
| Zerbi 2013 | NR | NR | 48.68% | NR | 20.5 | 21 | Somatostatin analogues, PRRT, ablation, chemotherapy | Resection of liver metastases could be the first-choice treatment for malignent PNET |
| Kleine 2011 | 22.22% | NR | NR | NR | 37.8 | 40 | Resection of primary tumors | Resection of liver metastases may prolong OS |
| Mayo 2011 | NR | NR | NR | 123 | 33 | 26 | Intra-arterial therapy and resection of primary tumors | Hepatectomy most benefited those patients with low-volume ( <25%) liver metastasis or those with symptomatic high-volume liver metastasis |
| House 2006 | 25.00% | 0.00% | 11.54% | 78 | 17 | NR | Somatostatin analogues, chemotherapy, chemoembolization and resection of primary tumors | There is a survival benefit from complete surgical resection of metastatic islet cell tumors originating from the pancreas |
| Osborne 2006 | 3.28% | 1.64% | 65.57% | NR | NR | NR | Somatostatin analogues and chemotherapy, PRRT, embolization | Patients who undergo surgical cytoreduction of symptomatic neuroendocrine hepatic metastases enjoy prolonged survival when compared with their medically treated counterparts |
| Musunuru 2006 | NR | NR | 8.00% | NR | NR | 20 | Systemic hormonal and chemotherapy, ablation, hepatic artery embolization | In patients with liver-only neuroendocrine metastases, surgical therapy is associated with improved survival |
| Touzios 2005 | 42.00% | 5.30% | 36.00% | >96 | NR | NR | Somatostatin analogues, chemotherapy, PRRT, ablation and resection of primary tumors | Resection has been shown to be an excellent treatment and accumulating data document improved survival with resection of these tumors |
| Solorzano2001 | NR | NR | 60.00% | 36 | 21.6 | 32 | Chemotherapy, hepatic artery embolization | Aggressive management should probably be restricted to younger patients with limited extrahepatic disease |
| Chamberlain 2000 | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | 27 | Hepatic artery embolization, Somatostatin analogues and chemotherapy and resection of primary tumors | Hepatic resection has a role in the man-agement of patients with NET metastases and may prolong survival |
| Chen 1998 | NR | NR | 0.00% | NR | 27 | 27 | Chemoembolization, chemotherapy, PRRT and resection of primary tumors | Hepatic resection for metastatic neuroen-docrine tumors may prolong survival |
Survival outcomes of liver resection group versus nonliver resection group.
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| 1-year overall survival | 13 | 571/616 | 702/908 | 3.31 | 2.34, 4.67 | <0.001 | 0.55, 0% | Fixed |
| 3-year overall survival | 12 | 467/607 | 357/872 | 4.29 | 2.71, 6.80 | <0.001 | 0.02, 52% | Random |
| 5-year overall survival | 12 | 410/607 | 232/872 | 5.30 | 3.24, 8.67 | <0.001 | 0.02, 53% | Random |
Figure 5Forest plot for the symptom relief (hormonal symptoms and mechanical symptoms) of liver resection group and nonliver resection group in patients with liver metastases from PNET (functioning or nonfunctioning). Liver resection group have a higher symptom relief rate.
Figure 6Funnel plot for evaluating publication bias-results from 13 studies.