| Literature DB >> 34873567 |
Argyrios Periferakis1, Georgios Tsigas1, Aristodemos-Theodoros Periferakis1, Ioana Anca Badarau1, Andreea-Elena Scheau2, Mircea Tampa3,4, Simona Roxana Georgescu3,4, Andreea Cristiana Didilescu5, Cristian Scheau1, Constantin Caruntu1,6.
Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common primary liver cancer and affects about 8% of cirrhotic patients, with a recurrence rate of over 50%. There are numerous therapies available for the treatment of HCC, depending on cancer staging and condition of the patient. The complexity of the treatment is also justified by the unique pathogenesis of HCC that involves intricate processes such as chronic inflammation, fibrosis, and multiple molecular carcinogenesis events. During the last three decades, multiple in vivo and in vitro experiments have used somatostatin and its analogs (SSAs) to reduce the proliferative and metastatic potential of hepatoma cells by inducing their apoptosis and reducing angiogenesis and the inflammatory component of HCC. Most experiments have proven successful, revealing several different pathways and mechanisms corresponding to the aforementioned functions. Moreover, a correlation between specific effects and expression of somatostatin receptors (SSTRs) was observed in the studied cells. Clinical trials have tested either somatostatin or an analog, alone or in combination with other drugs, to explore the potential effects on HCC patients, in various stages of the disease. While the majority of these clinical trials exhibited minor to moderate success, some other studies were inconclusive or even reported negative outcomes. A complete evaluation of the efficacy of somatostatin and SSAs is still the matter of intense debate, and, if deemed useful, these substances may play a beneficial role in the management of HCC patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34873567 PMCID: PMC8643256 DOI: 10.1155/2021/1840069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Cell Pathol (Amst) ISSN: 2210-7177 Impact factor: 2.916
Classification of therapeutic actions of somatostatin on HCC.
| Level | Effect type | Mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cellular | Antiproliferative | MAP kinase pathway—G1 phase arrest | [ |
| Other mechanisms (specific receptors) | [ | ||
| Trophic factor secretion inhibition | [ | ||
| Apoptotic | p53-dependent | [ | |
| p53-independent | [ | ||
| Trophic factor secretion inhibition | [ | ||
| Fas-Fas ligand expression increase | [ | ||
| Systemic | Antineoplastic | Immune pathway modulation | [ |
| Reduction of oxidative stress | [ | ||
| Reduction of NO production | [ | ||
| Anti-inflammatory | Decrease of proinflammatory cytokine levels | [ | |
| Potential direct effect on stellate cells | [ | ||
| Reduction of Kupffer cell-related MMP activity | [ |
Specific effects of SSTR stimulation and associated signaling pathways [66, 86–93].
| Receptor | Strongest agonist | Signaling pathway | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SSTR1 | All SSAs | Tyrosine phosphatase SHP-2 stimulation | Cell cycle arrest | [ |
| SSTR2 | Vapreotide | Modulation of the ERK1/2 pathway and activation of SHP-1, SHP-2, and PTP | Apoptosis | [ |
| SSTR3 | Lanreotide | Adenylyl cyclase modulation | Apoptosis | [ |
| SSTR4 | Octreotide | MAP kinase pathway, Ca2+-channels, K+-channels, and Na+-H+ antiporter | Cell cycle arrest | [ |
| SSTR5 | Octreotide | Guanylate cyclase inhibition and MAP kinase-ERK pathway | Cell cycle arrest | [ |
In vitro experiments with SSAs and their results.
| Somatostatin analog | Cell line | Mechanism | Result | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SSA RC-160+CCK | Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells | Inhibition of CCK-induced intracellular cGMP formation and activation of p42-MAP kinase phosphorylation and activity | Inhibition of cell proliferation in response to the administration of cholecystokinin | [ |
| Lanreotide | Human HepG2 cells | Potential action through the SST3 and/or insulin and IGF | Antiproliferative effect proportional to the SSA dose established | [ |
| Octreotide | Human BEL-7402 cells | Potentially correlated to the antineoplastic effect of SSA | Antiproliferative effect proportional to the SSA dose established | [ |
| Octreotide | SMMC-7721 HCC cells | Antineoplastic action potentially attributable to decreased DNA synthesis | Antiproliferative and apoptotic effect and also decreased tumor growth in xenografted mice | [ |
| SSA RC-160 | Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) DG-44 cells | A Gi/o protein-coupled receptor inhibits cell proliferation via ERK signaling | Inhibition of cell proliferation | [ |
| Octreotide | Human HepG2, SMMC-7721, and L-02 cells | Some mechanism most probably associated with SST3 | Antiproliferative effect proportional to the SSA dose established | [ |
| Receptor agonists | Human HepG2, HuH7, and hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) | Signaling pathways linked to SSTs | Reduced migration of cancer cells but no antiproliferative effect observed | [ |
| Octreotide±lamivudine | Human HepG2 and HepG2x | Signaling pathways linked to SSTR2 and SSTR5 | Increased apoptotic effect on the HepG2 cell line | [ |
| L-779,976 | HEK 293 cell clone | Inhibiting adenylate cyclase, activating ERK1/2, and inducing the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27(Kip1) | Inducement of cell cycle arrest | [ |
| Octreotide | SMMC-7221 cells | Activation of the Fas-FasL ligand system | Inducement of apoptosis | [ |
| Octreotide | Human Bel-7402 | Some mechanisms linked to SSTR2 | No antiproliferative effect but no xenografted HCC development | [ |
| Octreotide | Human HepG2 cells | Caspase-mediated signaling pathways | Inhibition of proliferation at high octreotide doses and proliferation of promotion at low octreotide doses | [ |
| Octreotide | Rat hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) | A mechanism related to the cytokine environment of HSCs | Varied effect. General reduction in collagen synthesis related to PDFG and TGFb1 | [ |
| Octreotide, lanreotide, SOM230 | Human Bel-7402 cells | Some mechanisms linked to SSTR expression variation | Apoptotic effect observed and improved survivability and life quality after the xenograft on mice | [ |
Clinical trials evaluating the role of SSAs in the treatment of HCC.
| Somatostatin analog | Trial type | Trial length | Patients/controls | Result | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Octreotide | R | ≤4 years | 28/30 | [P] Median survival levels of treated patients increased significantly | [ |
| Lanreotide | NR | Variable | 21/0 | [N] Insignificant improvement in most patients; minor life quality improvement of some patients | [ |
| Octreotide | R | Variable | 12/13 | [P] Overall increase in the survivability of treated patients | [ |
| Octreotide | R | 7 mo. | 35/35 | [N] No tumor regression, and no improvement in life quality of the patients | [ |
| Octreotide/lanreotide | NR | n/a | 32/27 | [P] Overall improved survival rate of the SSA-treated patients and superior life quality | [ |
| Octreotide | NR | 6 mo. | 63/0 | [N] No significant prolongation of survival observed | [ |
| Octreotide+tamoxifen | R | 3 mo. | 24/15 | [P] Response of 43% of the patients treated with octreotide and doubling of their survival | [ |
| Octreotide | R | Variable | 32/33 | [P] Improvement of the survival rate of the treated group | [ |
| Octreotide | NR | Variable | 30/0 | [P] Increase of survivability and life quality of patients | [ |
| Octreotide | R | Variable | 20/25 | [P] Improvement of the survival rate of the treated group | [ |
| Octreotide | NR | 32 mo. | 41/33 | [N] Similar survivability between the treated patients and the control group treated with TACE | [ |
| Octreotide | NR | 2 years | 26/0 | [N] Very limited beneficial response to treatment | [ |
| Octreotide | NR | ≤12 mo. | 63/0 | [N] No improvement of patient life quality and minor anticancer activity of octreotide | [ |
| Octreotide±rofecoxib | R | min. 6 mo. | 71/0 | [P] Increased survivability in patients with high IGF and VEGF levels | [ |
| Octreotide | R | 3 years | 31/30 | [P] Response of those patients expressing SSTRs and doubling of the survival rate | [ |
| Octreotide+tamoxifen | R | Variable | 56/53 | [N] No clear benefits in patient survival | [ |
| Octreotide | R | Variable | 60/59 | [N] No significant improvement and no objective tumor regression | [ |
| Octreotide | R | Variable | 16/14 | [P] Moderate increase of the survival rate of the treated group | [ |
| Octreotide | NR | 54 mo. | 35/0 | [P] Significant tumor regression (14%) and clear clinical benefits (80%) in association with VEGF levels | [ |
| Octreotide | NR | 72 mo. | 95/0 | [P] Positive results for the group receiving the octreotide treatment | [ |
| Octreotide | NR | 30 mo. | 22/0 | [P] Positive results for 6 patients of Asian descent who had hepatitis B-induced cirrhosis | [ |
| Octreotide | R | 2 years | 135/137 | [N] No improvement in patient survival rate and negative consequence on patient life quality | [ |
| Octreotide+sorafenib | NR | Variable | 50/0 | [P] Slightly positive results on the survivability of some patients | [ |
| Octreotide | R | Variable | 21/24 | [P] Increase of survival rate of the treated group and significant 1-year survival increase | [ |
| Octreotide+sorafenib | NR | Variable | 50/0 | [P] Reduction of oxidative stress in the treated group, potentially signifying an antineoplastic effect | [ |
| Octreotide+heparin | NR | 1 year | 84/63 | [P] Significant reduction in tumor metastasis of the treated group | [ |
| Octreotide | NR | 5 years | 99/0 | [P] Higher survivability in patients with higher SSTR expression | [ |
| Pasireotide+everolimus | NR | Variable | 24/0 | [N] No clear benefit from the combination of pasireotide and everolimus was discerned | [ |
| Octreotide+celecoxib | R | 3 years | 35/36 | [P] Prolonged overall survival, enhanced tumor response, and reduced postembolization syndrome of the treated patients | [ |
| Pasireotide | NR | ≤54 mo. | 20/0 | [N] Limited clinical benefit of pasireotide as a second- or third-line treatment | [ |
Abbreviations: [P]: positive results; [N]: negative results; R: randomized study; NR: nonrandomized study; mo.: months; n/a: not available.