| Literature DB >> 35890290 |
Shista Priyadarshini1, Derek B Allison2,3, Aman Chauhan3,4.
Abstract
Somatostatin receptors (SSTR) are expressed in various neoplasms and can be targeted for both diagnostics as well as therapeutics. This systematic review aims to compile and discuss the prevalence of somatostatin receptor expression in various neoplasms. We performed a literature search from Google Scholar and PubMed using relevant keywords to look for all publicly available data regarding SSTR expression in various cancers. Both histopathological and radiographical studies were included for SSTR assessment. We found that many cancers express SSTR with varying prevalence. SSTR is now a well-established theranostics biomarker. We now have highly sensitive and specific diagnostic modalities like gallium 68 DOTATATE and copper 64 DOTATATE scans to screen for SSTR-2 and then target it therapeutically with lutetium 177 DOTATATE. A thorough understanding of SSTR expression in other tumors will open the channels for exploring potential SSTR targeting.Entities:
Keywords: SSTR; somatostatin receptor; somatostatin receptor prevalence
Year: 2022 PMID: 35890290 PMCID: PMC9325105 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14071394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.525
Figure 1Illustration of somatostatin receptor.
Figure 2PRISMA flow diagram.
Tabular presentation of somatostatin receptor prevalence in various cancers. (The name of the study, number of patients in the study and the analysis are included in parenthesis).
| Cancers | SSTR5 | SSTR4 | SSTR3 | SSTR2 | SSTR1 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MALT-type lymphoma | Gastric and extragastric origin | 50% | 18% | 35% | 27% | 2% |
| Gastric lymphoma | Higher SSTR3, SSTR4, and SSTR5 expression than extragastric tumors. | |||||
| Extragastric tumor | SSTR5 negativity: inversely associated with patient outcome | |||||
| Endometrial cancer | Ectopic endometrium (15) | 96.7% | 50% | 53.3% | 70% | 43.3% |
| Normal endometrium (15) | 64.3% | 28.6% | 21.4% | 7.1% | 7.1% | |
| Prostate cancer | Werner et al. (276, protein) [ | 10.5% | 0.7% | 9.1% | 0% | |
| Halmos et al. | 64% | 14% | 86% | |||
| Gastric cancer | Romiti et al. (51, protein) [ | SSTR2A | ||||
| Hu et al. | 62.5% (normal gastric mucosa). | |||||
| 25% (gastric cancer) | ||||||
| Merkel cell cancer | Gardair et al. | 44.9% | SSTR2A | |||
| Papotti et al. | 90% | |||||
| Thyroid carcinoma and thymoma | Normal thyroid (5) | 60 | 0 | 100 | 60 | 20 |
| Follicular Adenoma (2) | Present | None | Dominant | Present | Dominant | |
| Papillary CA (5) | Faint | Faint | Faint | Faint | Faint | |
| Anaplastic CA (2) | Variable | Very few | Variable | Faint | Variable | |
| Normal Thymus (3) | Strongly positive | Strongly positive | Strongly positive | |||
| Thymoma (1) | Strongly positive | |||||
| Lung cancer | 71.4% | |||||
| Meningioma | 75% | |||||
| Pheochromocytoma and | Leijon et al. | 0% | 0% | 78% | 74% | 0% |
| Parvizi et al. | 95% | |||||
| Kaemmerer et al. (55, uptake) [ | 47% | 14% | 35% | SST2A 89% | 35% | |
| Head and neck cancer | Misawa et al. | 64% | ||||
| Schartinger et al. | 82% | Rare | Rare | 54% | 69% | |
| Laryngeal cancer | Significant association and independent prognostic factor | |||||
| Nasopharyngeal cancer | 75% | |||||
| Breast cancer | Zou et al. | 44.4% | 71.3% | 41.9% | 34.4% | 90% |
| Kumar et al. (98, mRNA) [ | 68% | 68% | 89% | 79% | 84% | |
| Ovarian cancer | Hall et al. | 71% | 29% | 77% | 76% | |
| Schulz et al. | 21% | 17% | 42% | 28% | 19% | |
| Malignant melanoma | 9% | 57% | 61% | 83% | 96% | |