Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Morbidity and mortality in endocrine gastro-enteropancreatic (GEP) tumours are mainly related to the clinical consequences of tumoral peptide hypersecretion. Surgical resection at an early stage is the only curative treatment. However, most tumours are detected only when the hypersecretory state reflects the presence of metastases; surgery and chemotherapy then give only palliative results counterbalanced by serious side-effects. Somatostatin inhibits most endocrine secretions of the GEP tract and thus can alleviate invalidating symptoms. Its use is limited by its short half-life (2 min), the necessity of i.v. infusion and the possibility of a rebound phenomenon. Octreotide, a synthetic somatostatin analogue with a long duration of action, is administered subcutaneously and allows ambulatory treatment. In our series of 78 patients we observed about 80 percent of excellent or good clinical results, enabling the patients to resume normal life. Only minor and transient side-effects were noted. The overall tolerance of the drug was considered excellent or good. Prolonged administration of octreotide is a safe and effective symptomatic treatment in patients without any restriction of anti-tumoral procedures. Furthermore, it prevents the severe carcinoid crises that occur during surgery or embolization in patients with carcinoid syndromes.
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PMID:[Use of octreotide in the treatment of digestive endocrine tumors. A French multicenter study]. 137 76

Tyr-3-Octreotide is a synthetic derivative of somatostatin and a somatostatin-receptor analogue. The iodine-123-labelled compound localizes somatostatin-receptor-positive tumours. In this paper two patients are reported in whom somatostatin receptors were demonstrated in vitro. In a 60-year-old female with an islet cell carcinoma of the pancreas, multiple liver metastases and previously unrecognized bone metastases in the right acetabulum could be diagnosed as the reason for a persistent hypoglycaemia. In a 60-year-old male an islet cell carcinoma of the pancreas was localized with 123I-Tyr-3-octreotide. The somatostatin receptors were demonstrated in vitro and the tumour was successfully treated with somatostatin. These studies demonstrate that 123I-Tyr-3-octreotide offers the possibility of localizing somatostatin-receptor-positive tumours and their metastases. Moreover the method makes it possible to determine the receptor status of a tumour in vivo.
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PMID:Octreotide scintigraphy localizes somatostatin receptor-positive islet cell carcinomas. 168 23

The effects of octreotide in vivo and in vitro on hormone release, in vivo [123I]Tyr3-octreotide scanning, and in vitro [125I]Tyr3-octreotide autoradiography were compared in five patients with endocrine pancreatic tumors. [123I]Tyr3-octreotide scanning localized the primary tumor and/or previously unknown metastases in four of the five patients. The patient with a negative scan had an insulinoma that did not respond to octreotide in vivo. No Tyr3-octreotide-binding sites were subsequently found at autoradiography of the tumor, whereas somatostatin-14 receptors were present at a high density. In parallel, culture studies with the cells prepared from this adenoma showed that insulin release was not affected by octreotide, while both somatostatin-14 and -28 significantly suppressed hormone release. Culture studies of the tumor cells from two gastrinomas showed a dose-dependent inhibition of gastrin release by octreotide. Octreotide exerted direct antiproliferative effects in one of these gastrinomas, which had been shown to be rapidly growing in vivo. Both gastrinomas had specific somatostatin receptors, as measured by in vitro receptor autoradiography. Somatostatin release by the cultured somatostatinoma cells from one of these patients was suppressed by octreotide. In conclusion, 1) the [123I]Tyr3-octreotide scanning procedure is valuable in the localization of primary endocrine pancreatic tumors as well their often clinically not yet recognized metastases; 2) the in vitro detection of somatostatin receptors in those tumors that were also visualized in vivo after injection of [123I] Tyr3-octreotide indicates that the ligand binding to the tumor in vivo indeed represents binding to specific somatostatin receptors; and 3) the parallel between the presence of somatostatin receptors on tumors and in in vivo and in vitro effects of octreotide on hormonal release from these tumors indicate that a positive scan predicts a good suppressive effect of octreotide on hormonal hypersecretion by these tumors.
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PMID:Parallel in vivo and in vitro detection of functional somatostatin receptors in human endocrine pancreatic tumors: consequences with regard to diagnosis, localization, and therapy. 216 29

The effect of an octapeptide analogue of somatostatin, octreotide, on tumor blood flow was evaluated with angiography in eight patients with hepatic endocrine tumors; one patient had primary intrahepatic gastrinoma, two patients had hepatic metastases from gastrinomas, two patients had VIPomas (vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-secreting tumor), and three patients had carcinoid tumors. Octreotide caused a marked decrease in tumor blood flow in two patients with gastrinomas and two with VIPomas. One patient could not be evaluated due to the lack of a tumor blush on a control angiogram. In patients with carcinoid tumors, octreotide caused a slight reduction in blood flow through the tumors in two patients, while there was no change in one patient. Octreotide markedly decreased gastrin and gastric acid secretion in two of three patients with gastrinomas, lowered VIP and stopped the diarrhea in patients with VIPomas, and controlled symptoms in two of three patients with carcinoid tumors. The vasoactive effect of octreotide on hepatic endocrine tumors may be a direct action on tumor blood supply or secondary to inhibition of the endocrine tumor cell secretion and consequent decreased blood flow.
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PMID:Effect of somatostatin analogue (octreotide) on blood flow to endocrine tumors metastatic to the liver: angiographic evaluation. 217 Oct 15

Effective palliation of patients with incurable neuroendocrine tumors requires both control of hormonal overproduction symptoms as well as control of tumor growth. Several important advances have been made in recent years toward these two goals. Octreotide and omeprazole have both been extremely effective in ameliorating hormonal symptoms of carcinoids, islet cell tumors and medullary thyroid carcinoma. Newer cytotoxic chemotherapy regimens and interferon have increased response rates over traditional therapy. More aggressive surgical extirpation of metastatic disease has also been beneficial.
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PMID:Palliative treatment of neuroendocrine tumors. 750 18

High numbers of high-affinity somatostatin binding sites have been found on carcinoid tumors, gastrinomas, small cell lung cancers and the majority of medullary thyroid cancers, enabling in vivo visualization of these tumors with octreotide scintigraphy. A comparison of the results obtained at our institution and another 15 centers in Europe show a few remarkable similarities and differences. The overall sensitivity of octreotide receptor scintigraphy to detect the primary GEP tumor and its metastases is high, e.g. 80-90%. The main difference was found in gastrinomas and to a lesser extent in insulinomas. These differences might be attributed to different scanning protocols. Furthermore, octreotide scintigraphy also has a high sensitivity to localize the primary tumor and its metastases causing Cushing's syndrome by ectopic production of ACTH or CRH. Octreotide scintigraphy is a new, sensitive and noninvasive technique to localize somatostatin receptor expressing endocrine tumors and their metastases.
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PMID:Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy in carcinoids, gastrinomas and Cushing's syndrome. 769 38

An account is given of the results observed with I-131 MIBG scintigraphy in four patients (1 bladder pheochromocytoma, 3 neuroblastomas) chosen on account of their particular clinical and diagnostic interest from a series of 41 apudoma patients examined by means of this technique. In the first patient, the unusual site of the tumor in the posterior wall of the bladder meant that its detection by I-131 MIBG was only possible after catheterization of the bladder. In the second patient, uptake in the metastasis was only evident after removal of the primary tumor. In the third patient, the scintiscan revealed several metastases (some in bone) not detected by CT. In the fourth patient (congenital neuroblastoma), enhanced uptake accompanied the appearance of high plasma catecholamine and urinary vanillylhandelic acid values, suggesting a functional switch from a nonsecreting to a secreting form. a supplementary In-111 DTPA-Octreotide (OCT) scintiscan of this patient demonstrated the presence of somatostatin receptors on the neuroblasts. Thus, this examination would seem particularly useful for the differentiation of nonsecreting neuroblastomas. Its employment in assessment of the therapeutic capacity of OCT itself is also suggested.
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PMID:I-131 MIBG scintigraphy of neuroectodermal tumors. Comparison between I-131 MIBG and In-111 DTPA-octreotide. 775 Feb 19

We evaluated octreotide scintigraphy in 81 untreated patients who were suspected of having bronchial carcinoma. Octreotide scintigraphy visualized the primary tumour in all of 40 patients with non-small-cell lung carcinoma (non-SCLC), and all of 26 patients with SCLC. In the remaining patients, other bronchial disease and metastases from extrapulmonary carcinomas were also visualized. Mediastinal lymph node involvement and distant metastases were recognized in 5 of 15 and 1 of 7 patients with non-SCLC, respectively. In vitro, none of the non-SCLCs were shown to bear somatostatin receptors. We postulate that the visualization of non-SCLC during octreotide scintigraphy is caused by binding of labelled octreotide to activated leucocytes or to proliferating neuroendocrine cells around the tumours. In patients with SCLC, radiologically suspected lymph node involvement was visualized for 21 of 25 sites. Distant metastases, especially to the liver and abdomen, were missed for 14 of 20 sites, most probably because no laxatives were administered and single photon emission tomography of the abdomen was not performed. The failure to recognize liver metastases is most probably due to a comparable uptake of radioactivity by the surrounding normal liver tissue. In 15 of 26 patients, previously unrecognized tumour sites were suggested during octreotide scintigraphy, leading to a downstaging of 5 of 14 patients with limited disease. Unexpected cerebral metastases were suggested in five patients with either limited or extensive disease. In all four of these for whom follow-up was available, cerebral metastases became manifest 5-8 months after octreotide scintigraphy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The value of octreotide scintigraphy in patients with lung cancer. 782 21

Rats were administered the somatostatin analogue octreotide 15 micrograms intraperitoneally twice daily for 4 weeks after intraportal injection of somatostatin receptor-positive pancreatic tumour cells (CA-20948) and somatostatin receptor-negative colonic tumour cells (CC531). Octreotide significantly inhibited the growth and development of somatostatin receptor-positive tumour cells in the liver. The median number of liver tumours was 286 (range 146 to greater than 500) in the treated animals and more than 500 (range 250 to in excess of 500) in the controls (P < 0.05). This significant difference in tumour load was also represented in the mean(s.e.m.) liver weight (14.5(3.7) g in animals given octreotide versus 17.9(3.0) g in the controls). No effect of octreotide treatment was found on the growth and development of somatostatin receptor-negative tumour cells in the liver. The median (range) number of tumours was 6.5 (0-425) in the treated animals and 11.0 (0-475) in the controls. Mean(s.e.m.) liver weights were 14.0(5.7) g and 11.8(4.5) g respectively. There was no difference in serum levels of growth hormone, prolactin and insulin-like growth factor between control and octreotide-treated rats. The growth inhibition of somatostatin receptor-positive tumour cells was unlikely to be the result of suppressed secretion of one of these tumour growth factors. Octreotide may be useful for the treatment of patients with somatostatin receptor-positive hepatic metastases, which can be demonstrated by somatostatin receptor scintigraphy.
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PMID:Somatostatin receptor-dependent growth inhibition of liver metastases by octreotide. 795 4

Five patients with hepatic metastases of midgut carcinoid underwent somatostatin receptor scintigraphy with indium-111 pentetreotide before and during treatment with octreotide. Octreotide treatment changed the biodistribution of 111In-pentetreotide significantly. Whereas the radioactivity in liver, spleen and kidney decreased, hepatic metastases showed increased contrast. In one patient, liver metastases could only be detected during octreotide treatment. These data suggest that the diagnostic reliability of somatostatin receptor scintigraphy in carcinoid liver metastases is not necessarily compromised by octreotide therapy. Because of different biodistributions, the detection of liver metastases may even be improved during octreotide therapy.
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PMID:Improved visualization of carcinoid liver metastases by indium-111 pentetreotide scintigraphy following treatment with cold somatostatin analogue. 810 Jan 92


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