Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (somatostatin)
22,083 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Neuroendocrine tumors are rare and slowly progressing malignancies developing predominantly in the gastrointestinal tract. Often symptoms caused by excessive hormone production lead to diagnosis, especially when active metabolites are released from hepatic metastases to reach the systemic circulation before they are inactivated in the liver. Preoperative diagnosis of specific tumors relies on demonstration of the respective hormones in serum or urine than on histological diagnosis. Localization of primaries or their metastases can be accomplished by CT-AP, somatostatin receptor scintigraphy, SPECT or PET studies with high sensitivity. At the time of diagnosis more than 60% of tumors have already spread to the liver. Potentially curative resection of liver metastases can achieve 5-year survival rates of more than 60%. Since excess hormone production may be incapacitating and even life-threatening, effective palliation is highly important. Five-year survival following palliative liver resection was calculated to be the almost 40%. Palliative liver resection may therefore be considered an alternative to liver transplantation with 5-year survival of 34% in a collected series. If liver resection is not possible, at least temporary palliation of symptoms and retardation of tumor growth can effectively be achieved with somatostatin analogues.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and therapy of liver metastases of neuroendocrine tumors]. 915 77

The extent of apoptosis identified by in situ DNA nick end labelling (TUNEL) on tissue samples obtained from patients with neuroendocrine tumors was correlated with the clinical outcome in patients treated with high-dose somatostatin analog (lanreotide 12 mg/day), n = 8, or other biotherapy including interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha), n = 4, low-dose somatostatin analog (octreotide or lanreotide), n = 3, or a combination of both, n = 1. Biopsies were obtained before the start of treatment and/or after 6 months and 12 months. After 6 months of treatment, 5 patients receiving high-dose somatostatin analog showed a biochemical response (decrease in different neuroendocrine tumor markers) and 4 of these showed an increase in apoptotic index (AI: percentage of apoptotic cells) by 1.94 +/- 1.71%. At 12 months, AI was also increased in patients with a biochemical response (4.22 +/- 3.93%). However, none showed a decrease in tumor size on computerized tomography (CT) and none of the patients treated with low-dose somatostatin analog or IFN-alpha showed any significant increase in AI during treatment. In an experimental model, nude mice were xenografted with the neuroendocrine cell line (BON-1). From the 2nd day of tumor implantation, they received treatment with either placebo, high-dose octreotide, IFN-alpha, or a combination of both, for 28 days. In mice receiving treatment with high-dose octreotide (300 microg/kg, t.i.d) there was a threefold increase in apoptotic cells as compared to the placebo group (p = 0.0084), while the combination group had few cells with ultra-structural changes indicating apoptosis and the IFN-alpha treated group showed no significant changes. However, tumor growth inhibition was more pronounced in the combination group (p = 0.0011). This probably denotes that tumor growth inhibition could be achieved more efficiently by blocking the cell cycle than by inducing apoptosis. We concluded that treatment with high-dose somatostatin analogs may induce apoptosis in neuroendocrine tumors, while this is not found during treatment with low-dose somatostatin analogs or IFN-alpha. We also found that an increase in AI during high-dose somatostatin analog treatment was correlated with the biochemical response, but not with the tumor size as detected by CT in patients or with the tumor mass in the experimental model.
...
PMID:Induction of apoptosis in neuroendocrine tumors of the digestive system during treatment with somatostatin analogs. 940 51

To create cytotoxic hybrid analogs of somatostatin (SST), octapeptides RC-160 (D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp- Lys-Val-Cys-Trp-NH2) and RC-121 (D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp- Lys-Val-Cys-Thr-NH2) were linked to doxorubicin (DOX) or its superactive derivative, 2-pyrrolino-DOX (AN-201). The conjugation was performed by coupling N-9-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl (N-Fmoc)-DOX-14-O-hemiglutarate or 2-pyrrolino-DOX-14-O-hemiglutarate to the amino terminus of [Lys(Fmoc)5]RC-160 yielding AN-163 and AN-258, respectively, after deprotection. The respective cytotoxic conjugates of RC-121 (AN-162 and AN-238) were prepared similarly. In vitro tests on human cancer cell lines-MKN-45 gastric cancer, MDA-MB-231 breast cancer, PC-3 prostate cancer, and MIA PaCa-2 pancreatic cancer-demonstrated that the antiproliferative activity of the cytotoxic radicals in these conjugates was virtually retained. In H-345 human small cell lung carcinoma cell line, conjugates of RC-121 preserved the cytotoxic activity of their radicals, but the hybrids with RC-160 showed approximately 10 times lower activity. The ability of the carriers and the hybrids to inhibit the binding of 125I-labeled RC-160 to receptors for SST on rat pituitary membrane preparation was also determined. The cytotoxic conjugates inhibited 50% of the specific binding of the radioligand in the nanomolar concentration range (IC50 < 80 nM). When SST-like activities of AN-238 and its carrier, RC-121, were compared in the rat pituitary superfusion system, both compounds were found to suppress a stimulated growth hormone release at nanomolar concentrations. Preliminary studies in animal models of breast and prostate cancers showed that AN-238 is less toxic than AN-201 and more potent in inhibiting tumor growth. These highly active cytotoxic analogs of SST have been designed as targeted antitumor agents for the treatment of various cancers expressing receptors for SST octapeptides.
...
PMID:Synthesis and biological evaluation of cytotoxic analogs of somatostatin containing doxorubicin or its intensely potent derivative, 2-pyrrolinodoxorubicin. 946 96

Gastrointestinal neuroendocrine tumors are slowly growing and metastases are often limited to the liver. As a result of their favorable biological behavior these tumors have a relatively good prognosis even in metastatic stage. Due to a variety of therapeutic options patients with malignant neuroendocrine tumors may survive for extended periods of time up to ten years. Often a combination of different treatments and also alternation between the different therapeutic regimes is needed. A patient with excessive WDHA-syndrome and severe metabolic disturbances due to a pancreatic VIPoma with metastatic spread into the liver and abundant hormonal secretion is presented. Cytotoxic agents (streptozocin, 5-fluorouracil and adriamycin) were able to alleviate clinical symptoms and to control tumor growth for six years. Analogues of somatostatin (octreotide) and interferon alpha had been very useful in controlling clinical symptoms and tumor progress for 18 months. Cytotoxic agents or octreotide were not able, however, to achieve any permanent cure. Eventually, treatment failure occurred with dramatic progression of symptoms and tumor growth, unresponsive to any medical therapy. Consequently, total hepatectomy and liver transplantation together with extirpation of the pancreatic primary tumor was performed and succeeded in providing a normal life to the patient. In our opinion the overall outcome of patients with metastatic VIPoma may be improved best by maintaining the patients on medical therapy until treatment failure occurs. In case of extended hepatic metastases orthotopic liver transplantation might be considered for patients with symptomatic disease who no longer respond to conventional treatment modalities.
...
PMID:Metastatic pancreatic VIPoma: deteriorating clinical course and successful treatment by liver transplantation. 957 8

When rats bearing the 13,762 mammary carcinoma were treated with intravenously administered creatine analogs, cyclocreatine, beta-guanidinopropionic acid or creatine phosphate on days 4 through 8 and 14 through 18 post tumor implantation, the tumor growth delay produced varied with whether the animals were drinking water or sugar water over the course of the study. The tumor growth delays increased when the animals drank sugar water from 9.3, 1.6 and 7.6 days for cyclocreatine, beta-guanidinopropionic acid and creatine phosphate, respectively, to 15.0, 6.3 and 12.6 days. Blood glucose was decreased over the course of the creatine analog treatment regimen and the skeletal muscle transport protein GLUT-4 increased 1.5 to 2-fold with the creatine analog treatments. Plasma insulin was profoundly decreased to 20-25% of normal by the creatine analog treatment while plasma glucagon levels were increased. Plasma somatostatin increased 3- to 4-fold during the administration of the creatine analogs. These results implicate alterations in pancreatic hormone balance in the antitumor activity of these creatine analogs.
...
PMID:Antitumor activity of creatine analogs produced by alterations in pancreatic hormones and glucose metabolism. 962 6

Long-acting somatostatin analogs have recently become supplemental drugs in the treatment of neurofibroma because of their marked tumor growth inhibitory effect. Somatostatin is currently under extended evaluation in other cancers as a possible supplemental drug to the treatment protocols in use. The mode of action is not known. Somatostatin has been shown to cause glucose intolerance by inhibiting glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) in fish liver. Recent data generated in our laboratory indicate that it is this pathway and the transketolase reactions of the pentose cycle (PC) which are directly involved in the ribose synthesis process of pancreatic adenocarcinoma cells. In cell culture, somatostatin alone inhibited glucose carbon recycling through the PC by 5.7%, which was increased to 19.8% in combination with oxythiamine, a competitive inhibitor of transketolase. Oxythiamine produced strong apoptosis in in-vitro hosted tumor cells. We hypothesize that somatostatin- and oxythiamine-induced antiproliferative action is mediated by the inhibition of G6PD, transketolase, or both.
...
PMID:Inhibition of the oxidative and nonoxidative pentose phosphate pathways by somatostatin: a possible mechanism of antitumor action. 971 Mar 24

Receptors for somatostatin (SST) that are found on prostate cancers might be used for targeting of chemotherapeutic agents. Thus, doxorubicin derivative 2-pyrrolinodoxorubicin (AN-201) can be linked to SST analogue RC-121 (D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Thr-NH2) to form targeted cytotoxic SST analogue AN-238. In this study, we evaluated the effects of AN-238 on the growth of SST receptor (SSTR)-positive androgen-independent Dunning R-3327-AT-1 prostate cancers in Copenhagen rats. The dose range and tumor growth-inhibitory effects of AN-238 and AN-201 were investigated in preliminary experiments. Administration of cytotoxic radical AN-201 at single i.v. doses of 110, 125, and 150 nmol/kg resulted in 0, 77.7, and 100% mortality, respectively, within 6-10 days. Four weeks after the injection of 110 nmol/kg AN-201, mean tumor volume was reduced by 35.1 % (P < 0.05), as compared with controls. In contrast, a single i.v. injection of analogue AN-238 at a dose of 300 nmol/kg was nontoxic and remarkably potent in inhibiting the growth of Dunning AT-1 tumors, resulting in a 85.9% (P < 0.01) reduction in tumor volume after 4 weeks. Treatment with AN-238 extended the survival time of tumor-bearing rats from 52.0+/-3.75 to 91.8+/-3.70 days, corresponding to a 76.5% (P < 0.01) increase. In a comprehensive experiment, we compared the effects of radical AN-201 at 115 nmol/kg, analogue AN-238 at 115 and 300 nmol/kg, carrier SST analogue RC-121 at 300 nmol/kg, and a mixture of AN-201 and RC-121 at doses of 300 nmol/kg administered i.v. Administration of AN-201 at 115 nmol/kg led to 90.0% mortality in 12 days, but animals treated with 115 nmol/kg of AN-238 showed no signs of toxicity, their tumor volume was reduced by 40.0% (P < 0.05), and their tumor weight was reduced by 42.8% (P < 0.01) after 4 weeks, as compared with controls. The dose of 300 nmol/kg of AN-238 was also nontoxic and diminished tumor volume by 80.9% (P < 0.01) and tumor weight by 82.0% (P < 0.01). No reduction in tumor growth or toxic effects was observed with carrier RC-121, but after the injection of unconjugated mixture of AN-201 and RC-121 at doses of 300 nmol/kg, all rats died within 4 days. Specific high-affinity receptors for SST were found on Dunning R-3327-AT-1 tumor membranes by radioligand binding assay and were identified by reverse transcription-PCR as SSTR2. Our study indicates that cytotoxic SST analogue AN-238 can be targeted to SSTRs on tumors and produces a powerful inhibition of the growth of Dunning-AT-1 rat prostate cancer at doses that are nontoxic, whereas its cytotoxic component, 2-pyrrolinodoxorubicin, is toxic and ineffective.
...
PMID:Targeted cytotoxic analogue of somatostatin AN-238 inhibits growth of androgen-independent Dunning R-3327-AT-1 prostate cancer in rats at nontoxic doses. 975 25

Analogs of somatostatin (SRIF) such as octreotide exert antiproliferative effects that are mediated directly by tumoral SRIF receptors or indirectly by down-modulation of factors that stimulate tumor growth. Direct and indirect antiproliferative effects have been demonstrated in certain SRIF receptor-positive and -negative human breast cancer models in nude mice, respectively. These antiproliferative mechanisms are also being explored in other cancer types including pancreatic cancer. While clinical pilot studies have indicated that a fraction of pancreatic adenocarcinomas respond to high-dose octreotide treatment, it is known from receptor autoradiographic and scintigraphic studies that human pancreatic carcinomas fail to express SRIF receptors, in contrast to rat pancreatic carcinomas or human endocrine pancreatic cancer. Studies on the potential anticancer effect of octreotide on the growth of experimental human pancreatic cancer and its SRIF receptor status have been controversial. Therefore, we investigated in vivo the effects of octreotide on the growth of MIA PaCa-2 human pancreatic carcinomas raised from cultured cells with a low passage number after receipt from the American Type Culture Collection. Nude mice bearing MIA PaCa-2 tumors were treated with a single injection of the recently developed octreotide long-acting release formulation, "SMS pa LAR." This treatment was well tolerated and resulted in a highly significant inhibition of tumor growth during weeks three and eight after administration. MIA PaCa-2 tumors were removed after eight weeks and processed for RT-PCR analysis using probes specific for each of the five somatostatin receptor subtypes sst1-sst5. This analysis revealed that MIA PaCa-2 tumors, like human pancreatic adenocarcinomas, do not express any of the five SRIF receptor subtypes, suggesting an indirect mode of tumor growth inhibition. In summary, the depot formulation SMS pa LAR exerted long-lasting antiproliferative effects in SRIF receptor-negative human pancreatic carcinomas in nude mice.
...
PMID:Indirect antiproliferative effect of the somatostatin analog octreotide on MIA PaCa-2 human pancreatic carcinoma in nude mice. 982 82

We evaluated whether AN-238, the cytotoxic analogue of somatostatin (SST) consisting of the radical 2-pyrrolinodoxorubicin (AN-201) linked covalently to the SST octapeptide carrier RC-121 (D-Phe-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Thr-NH2), could be used for targeting human primary and metastatic prostate carcinomas that express SST receptors (SSTRs). The antitumor activity and toxicity of AN-238 and its components were first characterized in nude mice bearing s.c. xenografts of PC-3 human androgen-independent prostate cancer. In experiment 1, AN-238 was injected once i.v. at 200 nmol/kg when the mean volume of s.c. tumors was about 30 mm3. Administration of AN-238 inhibited tumor growth, as shown by a 74% decrease in tumor volume and by a 71% reduction in tumor weight after 7 weeks as compared with the control group. AN-201 at an equimolar dose did not show any antitumor activity. The mortality was 14.3% (one of seven mice) in the AN-238-treated group and 47% (three of seven mice) in mice that received AN-201. In experiment 2, two i.v. injections of AN-238 at 150 nmol/kg were given 10 days apart when the tumors measured 65-70 mm3. A significant inhibition of tumor volume (62.3%; P < 0.001) and tumor weight (61.1%; P < 0.01) was observed after 4 weeks of treatment. AN-201, given alone at the same dose or coadministered with RC-121, had no significant effect on PC-3 tumors. The suppression of tumor growth induced by AN-238 was accompanied by a significant enhancement of apoptosis (P < 0.01). There were similar side effects in all treated groups, which included a transient loss of body weight and leukopenia. The effectiveness of AN-238 in a metastatic model was then investigated in animals implanted orthotopically with 2 x 10(6) PC-3 cells. Two i.v. injections of AN-238 or AN-201 at 150 nmol/kg were administered 10 days apart at 10 weeks after intraprostatic inoculation of PC-3 cells. After 4 weeks of treatment, the mean weight of primary tumors in animals receiving AN-238 was 77% lower (P < 0.01) than that in controls. This reduction was also significantly greater (P < 0.05) than that in animals given AN-201, which showed only a 34% inhibition (nonsignificant versus controls). All control animals and four of six (67%) mice treated with AN-201 developed metastases in the lymph nodes; however, no lymphatic spread of cancer was found in the AN-238-treated group. Using reverse transcription-PCR analysis, we demonstrated the expression of SSTR2 and SSTR5 in intraprostatic tumors and their metastases in lymph nodes as well as in s.c. tumors. The present study demonstrates the high efficacy of SSTR-targeted chemotherapy in a model of advanced human androgen-independent prostatic carcinoma, as shown by the inhibition of primary tumors and their metastases by the cytotoxic SST analogue AN-238.
...
PMID:Inhibition of PC-3 human androgen-independent prostate cancer and its metastases by cytotoxic somatostatin analogue AN-238. 1021 5

This report describes two patients with pancreatic cholera caused by vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)-producing tumors, which originated in the pancreas and showed metastases in both hepatic lobes at time of diagnosis. However, the two tumors displayed remarkably disparate clinical courses. Due to the protracted but progressive course over more than 10 years, a multifaceted therapeutic approach was performed to control symptoms and to improve quality of life. The long-acting somatostatin analog octreotide was the most effective treatment for relieving symptoms and correcting fluid and electrolytes disturbances. The effects of complementary treatments, including systemic chemotherapy and hyperselective chemoembolization, as well as concurrent application of octreotide and prednisolone or interferon with respect to clinical symptoms, VIP levels, and tumor growth are reviewed. Our experience, although small, emphasizes the need for an expert, well-planned, adaptive, and multidisciplinary approach in the care of these complex patients.
...
PMID:Long-term survival after diagnosis of hepatic metastatic VIPoma: report of two cases with disparate courses and review of therapeutic options. 1038 87


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>