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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thrombosis of the left subclavian vein occurred in a 44-year-old man. It was found to be caused by an atypical thymus carcinoid of the anterior mediastinum without carcinoid syndrome. Primary resection was not possible, but it was removed after three cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with doxorubicin, cisplatin, vincristine and cyclophosphamide. Increased concentrations of alkaline phosphatase and parathormone were then noted. Subtotal parathyroidectomy revealed hyperplastic parathyroids. A
gastrinoma
was suspected from a history of peptic ulcer for many years which had persisted despite a Billroth II gastric resection 10 years ago. Serum gastrin, analysis of gastric secretion and a secretin-stimulating test confirmed the diagnosis. Recurrent episodes of weakness and syncope, in the presence of low blood sugar levels and a positive C-peptide suppression test, were interpreted as due to an insulinoma. There was no evidence of increased hypophyseal or adrenal function. Finally, in the absence of a family history, multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN 1) was diagnosed with co-existing primary hyperparathyroidism,
gastrinoma
, insulinoma and thymus carcinoid.
Somatostatin
-receptor scintigraphy provided localization of the MEN 1 with enrichment in the thorax and abdomen.
...
PMID:[Thymus carcinoid in multiple endocrine neoplasms type I]. 790 23
Extrapulmonary small cell and small cell neuroendocrine tumors of unknown primary site are, in general, aggressive neoplasms with a short median survival. Like small cell lung cancer (SCLC), they often are responsive to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Small cell lung cancer and well differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas of the gastrointestinal tract and pancreas tend to express
somatostatin
receptors. These tumors may be localized in patients by scintigraphic imaging using radiolabeled
somatostatin
analogues. A patient with anaplastic neuroendocrine small cell tumor arising on a background of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 syndrome is reported. The patient had a known large pancreatic gastrinoma and previously treated parathyroid adenopathy. At presentation, there was small cell cancer throughout the liver and skeleton. Imaging with a radiolabeled
somatostatin
analogue, 111In-pentetreotide (Mallinckrodt Medical B. V., Petten, Holland), revealed all sites of disease detected by routine biochemical and radiologic methods. After six cycles of chemotherapy with doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, and etoposide, there was almost complete clearance of the metastatic disease. 111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy revealed uptake consistent with small areas of residual disease in the liver, the abdomen (in mesenteric lymph nodes), and posterior thorax (in a rib). The primary
gastrinoma
present before the onset of the anaplastic small cell cancer showed no evidence of response to the treatment. The patient remained well for 1 year and then relapsed with brain, lung, liver, and skeletal metastases. Despite an initial response to salvage radiotherapy and chemotherapy with carboplatin and dacarbazine, the patient died 6 months later.
...
PMID:A metastatic neuroendocrine anaplastic small cell tumor in a patient with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 syndrome. Assessment of disease status and response to doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, etoposide chemotherapy through scintigraphic imaging with 111In-pentetreotide. 792 88
The localization of islet cell tumours presents a challenge to the radiologist and requires meticulous attention to detail in both technique and interpretation. As several imaging techniques are capable of demonstrating the tumour and none is absolutely accurate, a rational approach to the localization of these tumours requires a careful consideration of cost, sensitivity and the availability of special expertise. In almost all cases, initial imaging is performed with a combination of transabdominal ultrasound and CT. This will demonstrate the tumour and any hepatic metastases in about 40% of gastrinomas, 80% of insulinomas and almost all other functioning and non-functioning tumours. Where these tests are negative or equivocal, arteriography (which may be combined with ASVS) is the next line of investigation. If the tumour remains undetected, it is likely to be a small insulinoma or
gastrinoma
. Further investigation is dependent on local practice and the tumour type. Endoscopic ultrasound is rapidly emerging as a technique of high sensitivity in detecting small pancreatic tumours and may also demonstrate extrapancreatic gastrinomas. Transhepatic venous sampling and somatostatin receptor imaging have the advantage that they are not directly dependent on tumour size and they are particularly applicable to difficult cases where other imaging modalities are negative. TPVS is invasive and, while sensitive for insulinomas, is frequently unhelpful in gastrinomas.
Somatostatin
receptor scintigraphy, on the other hand, is more sensitive for gastrinomas. In future, MRI may prove to be at least as accurate as CT but as yet its exact role is uncertain. At the time of surgery, intraoperative ultrasound is a useful adjunct to palpation, and may avoid a standard distal pancreatectomy in patients with insulinoma.
...
PMID:Imaging islet cell tumours. 801 89
The difficult and controversial diagnostic and therapeutic management of patients having
gastrinoma
or insulinoma with multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN-I) has been discussed by reference to the literature and a personal series of 45
gastrinoma
/MEN-I patients followed consecutively at Bichat Hospital. In both
gastrinoma
/ and insulinoma/MEN-I patients, anatomic distribution and morphology of tumoral process(es) are usually multiple, diffuse, of small size, and associated with endocrine cell hyperplasia and even nesidioblastosis. These features enhance the difficulty of tumor localization and eradication. Despite the dramatic development of modern medical imagery and surgical experience, the real possibility, on a long-term basis, of curing the patients from their disease remains limited, especially in the
gastrinoma
/MEN-I patients. In the latter group, according to our experience, persistence or recurrence of the disease after surgery is usual, and metachronous hepatic metastasis development is frequently observed when the follow-up is long enough. Patients with liver metastases, however, seem to undergo a more indolent course than sporadic
gastrinoma
cases. In insulinoma/MEN-I patients, removal of the functionally dominant islet cell area(s) is essential. Various preoperative and intraoperative localization techniques allow efficacious selective pancreatic surgery in many cases. The latter refinements and the promises of long-acting
somatostatin
analogs, if confirmed, might restrict to exceptional circumstances the indication of near-total or total pancreatectomy.
...
PMID:Current approach to the management of gastrinoma and insulinoma in adults with multiple endocrine neoplasia type I. 810 51
Somatostatin
receptor scintigraphy (SRS) was performed in 14 patients (five men, nine women; mean age 51.5 [20-71] years) with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES), a
gastrinoma
proven in 7 and suspected on clinical or biochemical grounds in 7. The results were compared with those obtained by other methods (ultrasound, computed tomography, angiography). All 12 known tumour manifestations were demonstrated by SRS in seven patients with histologically confirmed
gastrinoma
. In four patients previously non-localized tumour was revealed by SRS, while in seven other patients the procedure led to modification of the treatment (primary tumour resection: n = 3, resection of metastases: n = 2, percutaneous radiation or chemoembolization: one each). These results suggest the following indications for SRS: (1) staging or re-staging in histologically proven
gastrinoma
and (2) search for primary tumour in clinically and biochemically suspected ZES.
...
PMID:[Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy in the primary diagnosis and follow-up care of gastrinoma]. 813 15
Carcinoids of the stomach, duodenum, and pancreas are represented by a variety of tumors with variable histologic and clinical features. Multicentric gastric carcinoids and concomitant nonantral argyrophilic hyperplasia are common in chronic atrophic gastritis, more rarely due to a multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN)-related Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES). These tumors are infrequently associated with metastases and may generally be dealt with by repeated endoscopic fulguration. Sporadic carcinoids tend to be larger, invasive, and more often metastatic, especially in the presence of atypical histology. Small tumors may be removed by endoscopy, but larger lesions need to be surgically excised. In association with metastases a histamine-related atypical carcinoid syndrome may evolve and require treatment with a
somatostatin
analog. Poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas of the stomach constitute markedly aggressive tumors that rarely are suitable for radical surgery.
Gastrinomas
are the most prevalent duodenal carcinoids and a common cause of ZES especially in MEN-I. Despite a marked tendency for regional lymph node dissemination, liver metastases occur late and duodenal gastrinomas are often excisable, thereby offering favorable odds for cure in ZES. Unusual
somatostatin
-rich carcinoids in the ampulla of Vater relate to von Recklinghausen's disease and may be the cause of obstructive jaundice; depending on their size, these tumors may be removed by local excision or pancreaticoduodenectomy. Gangliocytic paragangliomas are unusual, generally benign lesions of the duodenum. Rare pancreatic tumors with serotonin immunoreactivity may be classified as carcinoids and constitute an unusual cause of the carcinoid syndrome.
...
PMID:Management of carcinoid tumors of the stomach, duodenum, and pancreas. 866 14
Long-acting
somatostatin
analogs, such as octreotide, comprise the therapeutic modality of choice for the symptomatic relief of flush and diarrhea in patients with carcinoid syndrome. The sequelae of gastric acid hypersecretion in patients with gastrin-producing duodenal carcinoids (
gastrinoma
) are perfectly controlled by proton pump inhibitors. Antiproliferative medical strategies to control the growth of metastatic carcinoid tumors include long-acting
somatostatin
analogs, interferon alpha, and the combination of the two. However, the success rate is less than 50%, and it is questionable whether true tumor regression can be expected. Controlled prospective studies are mandatory to address the question whether interferon or
somatostatin
analogs or the combination of the two should be used as first-line medical strategies and if hepatic artery embolization in patients with liver metastases should be performed before beginning medical therapy. Chemotherapy, including etoposide and cisplatin, has been shown to be effective only for purely differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas and not for slowly growing carcinoids.
...
PMID:Medical treatment of metastasizing carcinoid tumors. 866 18
Recently radiolabeled
somatostatin
analog, [111In]pentetreotide, was developed and its usefulness for the diagnosis and localization of neuroendocrine tumors has been described. In this paper, we reported the results of [111In]pentetreotide scintigraphy in four patients with gastroenteropancreatic endocrine tumors. Two patients with metastatic
gastrinoma
, one patient with gastric carcinoid, and one patient suspected with
gastrinoma
, were injected with 119-156 MBq of [111In]pentetreotide. Planar and SPECT images were obtained 4, 24, and 48 hours postinjection. Both primary and metastatic tumors were well visualized in patients with metastatic
gastrinoma
. Especially in one patient small liver metastases which were not detected by CT or MRI were imaged. We could not obtain positive images in the other two patients. Four-hour or 24-hr images were better than 48-hr images because of higher count density and lower gut activity. No significant adverse effect were seen in any patient. [111In]pentetreotide scintigraphy is a useful procedure for the localization of gastroenteropancreatic endocrine tumors.
...
PMID:[Imaging of somatostatin receptor using 111In-pentetreotide]. 868 86
Successful treatment of neuroendocrine tumor disease of the gastroenteropancreatic system requires a multimodal approach. Radical tumor surgery is required before other therapies are initiated. So far, only surgery has proven to be curative. If surgical intervention is not possible or a tumor-free state cannot be achieved, biotherapy with the
somatostatin
analogues octreotide or lanreotide should then be preferably carried out in patients with functional tumors. Interferon-alpha can alternatively be given. In patients with
gastrinoma
, therapy with proton pump inhibitors (e.g., omeprazol) is the initial treatment of choice. In patients with nonfunctional tumors, indication for treatment is only given in cases of documented tumor progress. In case of progressive tumor disease or functionality under the above-mentioned therapies, treatment with
somatostatin
analogues can be intensified by dose escalation or alternatively by a combination therapy with interferon-alpha and a
somatostatin
analogue. On the basis of the less favorable response of neuroendocrine foregut tumors to biotherapy, chemotherapy should be initiated after failure of biotherapy in documented tumor progression. A combination of streptozotocin and 5-fluorouracil, possibly combined with D,L-folinic acid, is the treatment of choice, considering the response and side effect rates. In case of predominantly anaplastic neuroendocrine tumors in advanced stages, good tumor response rates with a chemotherapeutic scheme consisting of cisplatin and etoposide can be achieved. Since the chemotherapy scheme is less effective in patients with midgut or hindgut tumors, chemoembolization of liver metastases should follow biotherapy. The response to chemoembolization may be increased by simultaneous systemic chemotherapy. Attention should always be paid to an adequate analgesic drug administration.
...
PMID:Drug therapy in metastatic neuroendocrine tumors of the gastroenteropancreatic system. 889 42
Somatostatin
-receptor imaging is an effective method for localizing and staging neuroendocrine tumors. We describe patients with gastroenteropancreatic endocrine tumors who underwent preoperative indium In 111 pentetreotide scintigraphy. In 3 patients without prior resections, the results of a 111In pentetreotide scan were positive because of unsuspected regional lymph node metastases without localization of the primary tumors. In these patients, an extensive intraoperative search was required to identify the primary tumors, despite the positive preoperative scan results. In a fourth patient, who had previously undergone resection of a duodenal
gastrinoma
, 2 regional nodal metastases were identified by a 111In pentetreotide scan.
...
PMID:Preferential localization of regional metastases from gastroenteropancreatic endocrine tumors with somatostatin-receptor scintigraphy. 895 77
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