| Literature DB >> 33841328 |
Tae Nakano-Tateno1, Kheng Joe Lau2, Justin Wang3, Cailin McMahon3, Yasuhiko Kawakami3,4, Toru Tateno1, Takako Araki2.
Abstract
Up to 35% of aggressive pituitary tumors recur and significantly affect mortality and quality of life. Management can be challenging and often requires multimodal treatment. Current treatment options, including surgery, conventional medical therapies such as dopamine agonists, somatostatin receptor agonists and radiotherapy, often fail to inhibit pituitary tumor growth. Recently, anti-tumor effects of chemotherapeutic drugs such as Temozolomide, Capecitabine, and Everolimus, as well as peptide receptor radionuclide therapy on aggressive pituitary tumors have been increasingly investigated and yield mixed, although sometimes promising, outcomes. The purpose of this review is to provide thorough information on non-surgical medical therapies and their efficacies and used protocols for aggressive pituitary adenomas from pre-clinical level to clinical use.Entities:
Keywords: CAPTEM; PRRT (Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy); Temozolomide; aggressive pituitary tumors; non-surgical therapy; pituitary carcinomas
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33841328 PMCID: PMC8033019 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.624686
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1(A) One cycle of Temozolomide (TMZ) protocol. TMZ is given twice daily (150–200 mg/m2/day) for 5 consecutive days every 28 days (=1 cycle). After three cycles of TMZ, MRI is taken for treatment evaluation. Continue TMZ at least six cycles in total for responder patients. (B) One cycle of Capecitabine (pro-drug of 5-Fluorouracil) + Temozolomide (CAPTEM) protocol. Oral capecitabine (CAP) is given (1,500 mg/m2/day) on days 1 through 14 divided into two doses, and TMZ is given twice daily (150 to 200 mg/m2/day) on days 10 through 14. This 2-week regimen is followed by 2 weeks off treatment. Continue CAPTEM at least 12 cycles in total for responder patients.
Temozolomide (TMZ) treatment response in pituitary tumors and carcinomas from published case series of 5 or more patients.
| response in tumor growth with medication | TMZ (cycles) follow-up(months) | follow-up (months) | recurrent rate (%) and occurred timing after treatment (month) | MGMT correlations | case numbers (cancer) | ref, year [ref no] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CR/PR;51% | 2–24 | 16 | 46%; after 5 months | No | 43 (14) | Lasolle ( |
| PR/CR;29%, SD;58%, PD14% | 2–13 | ns | ns | No | 7 (2) | Bush ( |
| CR/PR/SD; 38% | 3–24 | ns | ns | No | 8 (5) | Raverot ( |
| CR/PR;33%, SD;33%, PD;33% | 3–12 | 22.5 | 33%; after 6 months | Yes | 6 (1) | Losa ( |
| CR/PR;31%, SD;15%, PD;54% | 3–24 | ns | 46%; after 10.5 months | No | 13 (10) | Hirohata ( |
| CR/PR;33% | 3–6 | ns | ns | ns | 6 (1) | Bruno ( |
| CR/PR;43% | 1–23 | 32.5 | 33% | Yes | 21 (8) | Bengtsson ( |
| PR;40%, SD;20%, PD;40% | 3–24 | ns | ns | ns | 5 (0) | Ceccato ( |
| CR/PR;36%, SD;45%, PD;19% | 3–12 | 43 | 52%; after cessation | No | 31 (6) | Losa ( |
| CR;6%, PR;31%, SD;33%, PD;30% | 1–36 | 21 | 38%; after 12 months | Yes | 166 (40) | McCormack ( |
| TMZ-based therapy was associated with the longest PFS (71%) and long disease control | −12 | 28 | 62% | ns | 13 (13) | Santos ( |
| CR/PR;20%, SD;17%, PD;63% | 1-26 | 32 | 63%; after 16 months | No | 47 (13) | Elbelt ( |
ns, not stated; CR complete response; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease; PD, progressive disease; PFS, progression free survival.
Published cases of Capecitabine (pro-drug of 5-Fluorouracil) + Temozolomide (CAPTEM) (TMZ naïve) for aggressive pituitary tumors and carcinomas.
| Response in tumor growth/PFS (month) | CAPTEM (cycles) | Tumor subtype | Pathology | Previous treatment | Side effects | Age/sex | Ref, year [ref no] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PR, PFS (22) | 12 | ACTH | MGMT: ns | ns | ns | 44/M | McCormack ( |
| PR, PFS (6) | 6 | ACTH | MGMT: ns | ns | ns | 49/M | McCormack ( |
| PD | 18 | PRL-CA | MGMT: ns | ns | ns | 38/M | McCormack ( |
| SD, PFS (54+) | 30 | ACTH | MGMT:low, | TSS, BAD, RT | thrombocytopenia | 50/M | Zacharia ( |
| CR, PFS (32+) | 32 | ACTH | MGMT:low, | TSS, RT | lymphopenia | 46/F | Zacharia ( |
| CR, PFS (45+) | 45 | Silent ACTH | MGMT:low, | TSS, RT | none | 44/M | Zacharia ( |
| PR, extra-axial met | 12 | Silent ACTH-CA | MGMT: low, | TSS, RT | mild constipation | 54/M | Nakano-Tateno ( |
| PR, PFS (34+) | 12 | ACTH | MGMT: low, | TSS, RT | nausea | 48/M | Nakano-Tateno ( |
| PD | 3 | PIT1-CA | MGMT: ns, | TSS, RT | ns | 23/F | Alshaikh ( |
| PR for 24 mo, then liver met | 4 | ACTH-CA | MGMT+ (liver) | TSS, BAD, RT) | thrombocytopenia | 35/F | Lin ( |
| PR, PFS (5.5) | 4 | ACTH-CA | MGMT: ns, | TSS, BAD, RT | none | 50/M | Thearle ( |
| PR,spine and pelvic met | 8 | ACTH-CA | MGMT:ns, Ki-67:19-50%, p53+ | TSS, RT | thrombocytopenia | 46/F | Donovan ( |
| SD, PFS (8) | 8 | ACTH-CA | MGMT:ns, | TSS, RT | ns | 49/F | Joehlin-Price ( |
ns, not stated; CR, complete response; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease; PD, progressive disease; PFS, progression free survival; CA, carcinoma TSS, transsphenoidal surgery; BAD, bilateral adrenalectomy; RT, external beam radiotherapy; mo, months; met, metastasis.
Published cases of peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) for pituitary tumors and carcinomas.
| Response in tumor growth | Hormone reduction | PFS (month) | Tumor subtype | Initial tumor volume (ml) | Total radiation dose/(number of cycles) | Type of radionuclide | Previous treatment | Age/sex | Ref, year [ref no] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n/a | ns | 5 | NFPA | ns | ns | 177Lu-DOTATE | TMZ | 59/F | Bengtsson ( |
| PD | ns | 8 | GH-CA | ns | ns | 90Y-DOTATE | TMZ | 46/M | Bengtsson ( |
| PD | ns | 8 | PRL | ns | ns | 68Gallium DOTATE | TMZ | 23/M | Bengtsson ( |
| n/a | ns | ns | NFPA-CA | 4.1ml | 0.15 GBq (one dose) | 177Lu-DOTATE | none | 71/F | Kumar ( |
| decreased 95% over 8 years | PRL decreased | ns | PRL | 63 mL | 37 GBq (5) | 111In-DTPA-octreotide | TSS, RT, octreotide | 58/F | Baldari ( |
| SD over 8 years | ns | 96 | NFPA | ns | 0.6 GBq (3) | 177Lu-DOTATE | TSS | 55/M | Komor ( |
| Decreased 60.5% over 12 months | IGF decreased | 12 | GH | 23.1ml | 0.4 GBq (0.1 GBq every 3 mo) | 90Y-DOTATE | TSS, RT, octreotide, lanreotide | 26/M | Waligórska-Stachura ( |
| Pituitary: SD, met volume: decrease | ns | 40 | NFPA-CA | ns | 29.6 GBq (one dose) | 177Lu-DOTATE | TSS, RT | 63/M | Maclean ( |
| PD | ns | ns | GH/PRL | ns | 15.3 GBq (2) | 177Lu-DOTATE | TSS, RT, TMZ, lanreotide | 42/M | Maclean ( |
| PD | ns | ns | ACTH | ns | ns (one dose) | 177Lu-DOTATE | TSS, RT, TMZ | 32/M | Maclean ( |
| SD over 1 year, then pituitary apoplexy | GH decreased, IGF persistently high | 12 | GH | 31.8ml | 22.2 GBq (3) | 177Lu-DOTATE | surgical attempt | 48/M | Assadi ( |
| SD over 4 years | ns | 48 | NFPA-CA | ns | 22.2 GBq (3) | 177Lu-DOTATE | TSS, RT | 68/M | Novruzov ( |
| PD | ns | ns | PRL | 20.2 ml | 12.6 GBq (2) | 177Lu-DOTATOC | TSS, RT, TMZ | 54/M | Giuffrida ( |
| PD | ns | ns | NFPA | 7.7 mL | 29.8 GBq (5) | 177Lu-DOTATOC | TSS, RT, TMZ | 53/F | Giuffrida ( |
| PD | ns | <12 | ACTH-CA | ns | 0.2 GBq (one dose) | 90Y-DOTATOC | TSS, RT | 16/F | Kovács ( |
ns, not stated; NFPA, non-functioning pituitary adenoma; CA, carcinoma; TSS, transsphenoidal surgery; RT, radiation therapy; CR, complete response; PR, partial response; SD, stable disease; PD, progressive disease; PFS, progression free survival; mo, months.
Published cases of Everolimus (EVE) treatments for pituitary tumors and carcinomas.
| Response in tumor growth | EVE treatment | Duration (month) | Tumor subtype | Pathology | Previous treatments | Age/sex | Ref, year [ref no] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PD | EVE | ns | ns | ns | TMZ | ns | McCormack ( |
| PD | EVE | ns | ns | ns | TMZ | ns | McCormack ( |
| PD | EVE | ns | ns | ns | TMZ | ns | McCormack ( |
| tumor size: SD for 12+mon, hormone reduction: PR for 8 mon | EVE+OCT | 12+ | PRL | Ki-67: 30%, p53+ | Surgery, RT, CAB | 62/M | Zhang ( |
| PD | EVE | ns | ACTH-CA | Ki-67: 10% | Surgery, BAD, RT, TMZ | 49/F | Alshaikh ( |
| PD | EVE+OCT | 1 | ACTH-CA | Ki-67: low, mitoses+ | TMZ | 45/M | Jouanneau ( |
| SD for 5 mon then PD | EVE+paliative RT, EVE+Capecitabine | 8 | ACTH-CA | Ki-67: 19-50%, p53+ | Surgery, BAD, RT, CAB, CAPTEM | 46/F | Donovan ( |
ns, not stated; CA, carcinoma; BAD, bilateral adrenalectomy; RT, radiation therapy; SD, stable disease; PD, progressive disease.
Published cases of Immunotherapy treatments for pituitary tumors and carcinomas.
| Response in tumor growth | Hormone reduction | Treatment | Tumor subtype | Pathology | Previous treatment | Age/sex | Ref, year [ref no] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| intracranial: | Decreased ACTH by 100% | IPI and NIV 5 cycles followed by NIV only | ACTH-CA | Liver: mitotic index 50%, PDL-1 <1% | TSS, RT BAD, TMZ | 41/F | Lin ( |
| SD | Decreased ACTH by 30%, am cortisol by 64%, UFC by 74% | IPI and NIV 4 cycles, then NIV maintenance and ketoconazole | ACTH-CA | Ki-67:<1% | TSS, RT, TMZ | 41/M | Sol ( |
| PD | PD | PEM 4 cycles | ACTH | MIB>3%, | TSS, RT, TMZ | 66/M | Caccese ( |
| Pituitary: decreased by 15%, liver met: decreased by 57–69%. PD after 12 months | Decreased ACTH by >93% then PD | IPI and NIV 5 cycles followed by NIV 21 cycles | ACTH-CA | Ki-67: 5%, | TSS, RT, TMZ | 60/F | Duhamel ( |
| PD | PD | IPI and NIV 2 cycles | PRL | Ki-67: 25% | TSS, RT, TMZ | 68/M | Duhamel ( |
NFPA, non-functioning pituitary adenoma; CA, carcinoma; TSS, transsphenoidal surgery; RT, radiation therapy; BAD, bilateral adrenalectomy; PEM, pembrolizumab; IPI, ipilimumab; NIV, nivolumab; HR, hormonal response; SD, stable disease; PD, progressive disease; UFC, urinary free cortisol.
Summary of conventional therapies for aggressive prolactinomas, Cushing’s disease, and acromegaly and non-functional pituitary adenomas.
| Tumor subtype | Response in tumor growth | Hormone reduction | Treatment | Duration | Case numbers | Ref, year [ref no] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PRL | 38% | 0% | 2.5 mg/day BRC, 20 mg/day TAM | 5 days | 8 | Lamberts ( |
| ns | 58% | 2.5–7.5 mg/day BRC, 10–20 mg/day TAM | 4 weeks | 12 | Volker ( | |
| 100% | 100% | 4 mg/week CAB, 20 mg three times daily TAM | 8 months | 1 | Christian ( | |
| 100% | 100% | 15 mg/day BRC, 1.5g/day MET | 12 to 14 months | 2 | Liu ( | |
| 0% | 100% | 3 mg/week CAB, 20 mg/month OCT | 12 months | 1 | Fusco ( | |
| 40% | 0% | 3–7.5 mg/week CAB, 20 mg/month OCT | 6 to 13 months | 5 | Sosa-Eroza ( | |
| NFPA | 32% | ns | 2 mg/week CAB | 6 months | 19 | Garcia ( |
| 0% | ns | 1 mg/week CAB | 12 months | 12 | Lohmann ( | |
| 44% | ns | 1–3 mg/week CAB | 12 months | 9 | Pivonello ( | |
| 67% | ns | 3 mg/week CAB | 6 months | 9 | Vieira Neto ( | |
| 29% | ns | 3.5 mg/week CAB | 24 months | 59 | Batista ( | |
| 35% | ns | 0.5–3.5 mg/week CAB or 2.5–10 mg/day BRC | ns | 79 | Greenman ( | |
| GH | ns | 39% | 1 to 3.5 mg/week CAB, 30 mg/28 days OCT | 3 to 18 months | 13 | Cozzi ( |
| ns | 50% | 1 to 3.5 mg/week CAB, 60 mg/28 days LAN | 3 to 18 months | 6 | Cozzi ( | |
| 0% | 56% | 1.5 or 3.5 mg/week CAB, 20–30 mg/28 days OCT | 2 to 12 months | 34 | Jallad ( | |
| ns | 40% | 1 to 3 mg/week CAB, 30 mg/28 days OCT | 6 months | 52 | Vilar ( | |
| 11% | 22% | 0.25–2 mg/week CAB, 20–40 mg/month OCT | 8.1 to 80.5 months | 9 | Suda ( | |
| ns | 9% | 0.5–3.5 mg/week CAB, 40 mg/28 days OCT | 8 months | 32 | Colao ( | |
| 0% | 50% | 1.5–3 mg/week CAB, 60-90 mg/month LAN | 3 months | 10 | Marzullo ( | |
| ns | 44% | 1.8 mg/week on average CAB, 30 mg/month OCT | 8.44 months average | 9 | Gatta ( | |
| ns | 40% | 1–10 mg three times daily BRC, 30 µg/month depot OCT | 7 to 29 months | 5 | Selvarajah ( | |
| ns | 50% | 1–1.5 mg/week CAB, 30 µg/month depot OCT | 7 to 29 months | 4 | Selvarajah ( | |
| ns | 37% | 2 or 3.5 mg/week CAB, 30 mg/month OCT | 18 weeks | 19 | Mattar ( | |
| 0% | 100% | 30 mg/month OCT, 40 mg/day PEG | 18 months | 1 | van der Lely ( | |
| 5% | 58% | 120 mg/month LAN, 40–80 mg/week or 40 or 60 mg twice/week PEG | 7 months | 57 | van der Lely ( | |
| 0% | 62% | median 30 mg/28 days OCT, median 15 mg/day PEG | 9 months | 29 | Trainer ( | |
| 0% | 56% | 30 mg/28 days OCT, average 17.9 mg/day PEG | median 30 months | 27 | Bianchi ( | |
| 12% | 97% | 30 mg/28 days OCT or 120 mg/28 days LAN, median 80 mg/week PEG | median 59 months | 112 | Neggers ( | |
| 0% | 100% | 2.25 mg/week CAB, 60 mg/month PAS, 20 mg six times a week PEG | 6 months | 1 | Ciresi ( | |
| ACTH | 0% | 67% | 0.5 to 3mg/week CAB, 200–600 mg/day KCZ | 12 months | 6 | Barbot ( |
| ns | 67% | 2–3 mg/week CAB, 200–400 mg/day KCZ | 6 months | 9 | Vilar ( | |
| ns | 33% | 0.5 mg every other day CAB, 250 µg three times daily PAS | 33 days | 12 | Feelders ( | |
| ns | 75% | 0.5 mg every other day CAB, 250 µg three times daily PAS, 200 mg three times daily KCZ | 21 days | 8 | Feelders ( |
NFPA, non-functioning pituitary adenoma; ns, not stated; BRC, bromocriptine; TAM, tamoxifen; CAB, cabergoline; MET, metformin; OCT, octreotide; LAN, lanreotide; PEG, pegvisomant; KCZ, ketoconazole; PAS, pasireotide.