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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twelve active acromegalic patients (10 women, 2 men) were chronically treated with a long-acting microcapsulated preparation of octreotide (
Sandostatin LAR
, Novartis). In each case, a growth hormone-producing pituitary adenoma was responsible for the development of acromegaly (microadenomas in 3 and macroadenomas in the rest of the patients). Treatment with long-acting octreotide was indicated for those patients who had not reacted satisfactorily upon previous therapeutic procedures or proved to be unsuitable for irradiation therapy and/or surgery or refused both of these therapies. The preparation was given intramuscularly in every fourth week, generally in a dose of 20-30 mg. After a 6-month treatment, the daily mean of serum growth hormone became suppressed below 2.5 ng/ml in 58.3% of the patients, whereas the growth hormone nadir during oral glucose tolerance test was found at or below 2.5 ng/ml in an even higher proportion of patients (70%). During a 2-year period, the growth hormone-suppressive effect of long-acting octreotide remained stable in all but one patient. The size of the pituitary adenomas remarkably decreased in 50% of this patient cohort. The medication with this preparation was well tolerated. As adverse events, asymptomatic cholelithiasis was detected in 2 patients and biliary sludge-formation in 1 patient. The total number of patients with glucose metabolism disturbances increased only moderately, however, the occurrence of manifest
diabetes mellitus
became doubled. On the basis of relevant literature data, it can be stated that the mortality rate of successfully treated acromegalics significantly improves. The present retrospective study yields evidence for the microcapsulated octreotide to be an effective tool in the modern therapy of acromegaly.
...
PMID:[Current alternative in the pharmacotherapy of acromegaly: the long-acting somatostatin analogue octreotide]. 1206 61
Depot somatostatin analogs are now increasingly being prescribed as adjuvant and primary therapy for the treatment of acromegaly. Previous studies have shown them to be both effective and safe, suppressing GH levels to less than 2 micro g/liter in 50-65% of cases and normalizing serum IGF-I levels in 65%. However, published data on their long-term efficacy and safety is scanty. We analyzed data from 22 patients (16 female and 6 male) treated with
Sandostatin LAR
or Lanreotide for an average of 41 months (range 12-89). Three patients had previously been treated with surgery, two with radiotherapy, and seven with both. Ten patients had received primary medical therapy. Mean pretreatment GH levels were 13.1 +/- 3.4 micro g/liter, and IGF-I levels were 592.9 +/- 53.9 micro g/liter. Results after 12 months of therapy indicated reduction in GH (3.2 +/- 0.7 micro g/liter; P < 0.0001) and IGF-I (321.9 +/- 33.9 micro g/liter; P < 0.001) concentrations, and this was sustained at latest follow-up. Using GH criteria (serum GH < 2 micro g/liter), 46% of subjects achieved a cure at 12 months, and 36% achieved a cure long-term. Fifty-two percent achieved normal IGF-I values at 12 months, and 67% long-term. Mean fasting and 2-h plasma glucose concentrations were similar at latest follow-up and at 12 months to baseline values. Three patients developed impaired glucose tolerance within 12 months of treatment, one going on to develop frank
diabetes mellitus
. However, glucose tolerance improved in five patients. Five patients developed gallstones while on treatment. In summary, this study reports the long-term efficacy of the depot somatostatin analogs as either adjuvant or primary therapy. Although overall glucose tolerance did not change, the development of impaired glucose tolerance in three patients at a time when GH levels were not changing highlights the ongoing need to monitor the long-term safety of these preparations.
...
PMID:Long-term safety and efficacy of depot long-acting somatostatin analogs for the treatment of acromegaly. 1221 62
The orexigenic peptide, ghrelin, is regulated by acute and chronic nutritional state. Although exogenously administered ghrelin stimulates pituitary GH secretion, little is known about the role of ghrelin in endogenous GH secretion or how high GH and IGF-I levels in acromegaly could affect ghrelin secretion and vice versa. Therefore, we evaluated fasting and post oral glucose tolerance test serum ghrelin levels in 19 patients with active acromegaly at baseline and after either surgery in 9 of these or administration of long-acting octreotide (
Sandostatin LAR
) in the other 10 patients. After surgical cure, fasting ghrelin rose from 312 +/- 56 pg/ml to 548 +/- 97 pg/ml (P = 0.013). Fasting serum ghrelin levels were higher in all patients after surgery and ranged between 112% and 349% of presurgery levels. Ghrelin levels fell significantly during long-acting octreotide therapy from 447 +/- 34 pg/ml to 206 +/- 15 pg/ml (P < 0.0001); ghrelin levels on octreotide ranged between 26% and 70% of baseline levels. Serum ghrelin levels were suppressed significantly during the oral glucose tolerance test in both groups. Pretherapy ghrelin levels correlated negatively with serum insulin levels (r = -0.494; P = 0.03) and insulin resistance as estimated by the homeostasis model assessment score (r = -0.573; P = 0.01). In patients without
diabetes mellitus
, serum insulin levels in the surgical group were 19.7 +/- 5.4 microU/ml before surgery and fell to 9.7 +/- 0.93 microU/ml after surgery (P = 0.05); levels in the octreotide group were 13.9 +/- 2.8 microU/ml before and fell to 11.2 +/- 2.8 microU/ml on octreotide (P = 0.03). Pretherapy ghrelin levels did not correlate with weight or body mass index, but after therapy in the surgery group ghrelin correlated negatively with weight (r = -0.823, P = 0.012) as has been demonstrated by others in healthy subjects. Ghrelin secretion is dysregulated in active acromegaly; lowered serum levels of ghrelin in active acromegaly rise along with the postsurgery normalization of GH and IGF-I and improved insulin resistance. In contrast to surgical therapy, long-acting octreotide therapy persistently suppressed serum ghrelin levels. It remains to be determined whether altered circulating ghrelin concentrations could impact on body composition changes in acromegaly.
...
PMID:Serum ghrelin levels in acromegaly: effects of surgical and long-acting octreotide therapy. 1272 51
We report the clinical outcome of a 46-year-old diabetic patient with cystoid macular edema treated with Sandostatin long-acting release (LAR). Because cystoid changes in both eyes were refractive to conventional treatment (i.e., vitrectomy and periocular steroids), the patient was treated with
Sandostatin LAR
20 mg every four weeks. One year later the patient maintained corrected visual acuity of 20/40 in the right eye and 20/100 in the left eye, the cystoid changes had disappeared in the right eye and had greatly decreased in the left eye. In addition, the intraocular pressure had declined and no other complications were found. Thus,
Sandostatin LAR
may be considered for the treatment of diabetic patients with cystoid macular edema.
Diabetes
Res Clin Pract 2004 Apr
PMID:Sandostatin LAR for cystoid diabetic macular edema: a 1-year experience. 1503 29
Rationale.
Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) are rare neoplasms that develop from the endocrine tissues of the pancreas. They have a better overall prognosis than pancreatic adenocarcinoma. However, all commonly used classification systems reflect a separation between more indolent, well-differentiated tumors and far more aggressive poorly differentiated types that behave clinically more like small-cell carcinoma of the lung.
Objective.
To present the case of a 62-year-old man with an aggressive pancreatic NET, with liver, splenic and bone metastases who underwent multidisciplinary treatment including several lines of chemotherapy, somatostatin analogs and radiotherapy.
Methods and Results.
The patient is a smoker and an occasional drinker, known with type two
diabetes mellitus
(DM), receiving insulin therapy. He was diagnosed by contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) in January 2015 with a locally invasive pancreatic body mass, intraabdominal adenopathies and liver nodules, suggestive of metastases. Histopathological diagnosis was obtained through liver biopsy: neuroendocrine tumor with a 10-15% Ki67 proliferation index. Palliative chemotherapy with oxaliplatin and capecitabine was started in March 2015. In June 2015,
Sandostatin LAR
was added. In March 2016, he had progressive disease. Subsequently, in September 2016, bone metastasis was found within the T10 vertebra. He underwent radiotherapy for multiple bone metastases in February 2017. Progressive disease was again found during a CT examination in May 2017. His performance status has gradually worsened since then and he died in July 2017.
Discussion.
As a group, well-differentiated gastroenteropancreatic NETs are generally indolent malignancies with prolonged natural history. Intermediate-grade NETs have a slightly worse prognosis than low-grade tumors.
Abbreviations:
NETs - neuroendocrine tumors, NEC - neuroendocrine carcinoma, CT - computed tomography, MRI - magnetic resonance imaging, DM -
diabetes mellitus
, WHO - World Health Organisation, HCV - hepatitis C virus, CEA - carcinoembryonic antigen, AFP - alpha-fetoprotein, 5-HIAA - 5-Hydroxyindoleacetic acid, IHC - immunohistochemistry, EUS - endoscopic ultrasonography, EUS FNA - endoscopic ultrasonography with fine needle aspiration, CgA - chromogranin A, PRRT - peptide receptor radioligand therapy.
...
PMID:Metastatic neuroendocrine pancreatic tumor - Case report. 2969 66