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Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (
somatostatin
)
22,083
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Neuroendocrine tumors are rare neoplasms. In most cases conventional imaging techniques (US,CT,RMN) are not able to identify primitive tumors. This fact conditions the approach to the treatment of these tumors. 111In-Pentetreotide scintigraphy (Octreoscan) permits to visualize occult
primary tumor
by
somatostatin
receptors, changing the clinical history of patients. This method can be used in guided surgery with a hand-held gamma probe allowing to improve the detection of occult tumor (inverse square law), giving to the patient further possibilities of survival. Intraoperative gamma probe was still utilized with success in the management of other tumors, as relapsed colorectal cancer, while reports about gamma probe in neuroendocrine tumors are poor because of the rarity of disease. In two cases we have utilized a gamma probe (ORIS model 2) in neuroendocrine tumors: in a case we have observed liver recurring localizations originating from pancreas, with high proliferative index (Ki-67 = 2033 x 10 HPF), and in a case liver metastatic carcinoid of lung. The difference between tumor and background counts was significant exceeds 2 standard deviation count rate. Gamma probe permits a radical cure in many cases and completes intraoperative ultrasound in order to provide the surgeon with other information on the intraoperative staging of the patient.
...
PMID:[Radioguided surgery in the treatment of gastro-entero-pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors] . 1114 Jan 6
We have evaluated survival and tumor-related symptoms in the presence of mesenteric lymph node and liver metastases in relation to surgical procedures in 314 patients (148 women, mean age at diagnosis 61 years; 249 with liver metastases) treated for midgut carcinoid tumors. Of the operated patients, 46% presented with severe abdominal pain and intestinal obstruction and were operated on before the diagnosis. Medical treatment (
somatostatin
analogs, interferon-a) was initiated in 67% and 86%, respectively. Surgical attempts included small intestine or ileocecal/right-sided colon resection with excision of mesenteric lymph node metastases. Most of the patients (n = 286) had mesenteric lymph node metastases; 33% of them had unresectable mesenteric lymph node metastases and underwent surgery without mesenteric dissection. Patients who underwent resection for the
primary tumor
had a longer survival than those with no resection (median survival 7.4 vs. 4.0 years; p <0.01). Patients who underwent successful excision of mesenteric metastases had a significantly longer survival than those with remaining lymph node metastases. Patients operated on for a
primary tumor
but with remaining lymph nodes but no liver metastases and who subsequently received interferon and
somatostatin
analog treatment had a median survival of 7.4 years. Resection of the
primary tumor
and the mesenteric lymph node metastases led to a significant reduction in tumor-related symptoms. Surgery to remove the primary intestinal tumor including mesenteric lymph node metastases is supported by the present results, even in the presence of liver metastases. Liver metastases and significant preoperative weight loss are identified as major negative prognostic factors for survival.
...
PMID:Effect of surgery on the outcome of midgut carcinoid disease with lymph node and liver metastases. 1201 80
Carcinoid tumors are very rare and originate mainly in the gastrointestinal tract. The tumor histology is ambiguous and malignancy is determined by metastases. Carcinoid tumors affect both sexes equally and have been found in all age groups. Many carcinoid tumors are found incidentally or from symptoms related to the hormones that the tumor produces. Carcinoid syndrome occurs when vast quantities of hormones are produced from GI carcinoid metastases or a non-GI
primary tumor
. The classic "carcinoid triad" associated with the syndrome includes flushing, diarrhea, and cardiac involvement. The hormone largely responsible for most of these symptoms is serotonin. Treatment consists of a wide-resection for local primaries and usually palliative, medical support for patients with metastases. The tumors are very slow-growing and patients have lived for up to 30 years after metastasis is diagnosed.
Somatostatin
analogue (lanreotide and octreotide) administration controls many of the carcinoid symptoms.
Somatostatin
is a naturally occurring gastrointestinal peptide (hormone) which can augment or counteract a wide variety of other peptides. This article provides an overview of carcinoid tumor and carcinoid syndrome including diagnosis and treatment. Aspects important to patient care will also be addressed.
...
PMID:Carcinoid tumors and syndrome. 1205 78
Patients with clinically evident medullary thyroid cancer should have a total extracapsular thyroidectomy with bilateral central neck dissection and an ipsilateral prophylactic or therapeutic modified (functional) radical neck dissection when the
primary tumor
is greater than 1 cm and when the central neck nodes are positive. A prophylactic contralateral neck dissection should be done when the
primary tumor
is bilateral and when there is extensive lymphadenopathy on the side of the
primary tumor
. Patients who have gross, unresectable residual medullary thyroid cancer should receive postoperative external radiotherapy. Patients who are carriers of germ-line RET proto-oncogene point mutations or have an elevated (basal or stimulated) calcitonin levels on screening should have a prophylactic total thyroidectomy before age 6 years. In patients with an elevated basal or stimulated plasma calcitonin level and an intrathyroidal nodule on ultrasound, a total thyroidectomy and central neck lymph node dissection should be done. Patients with persistent or recurrent medullary thyroid cancer should have a complete thyroidectomy (if not done initially) and bilateral central and modified radical neck dissection, including upper mediastinal lymphadenectomy. Patients who are symptomatic from distant medullary thyroid cancer metastases (diarrhea, flushing, weight loss, or bone pain) should be treated with
somatostatin
analogs. Bone metastases should be resected if possible, and symptomatic lesions that are unresectable should be treated with external radiotherapy. Cytoreductive procedures such as radiofrequency ablation or cryoablation for liver metastases should be considered in symptomatic patients to reduce tumor burden. Localized pulmonary metastases should be resected. Chemotherapy or radioactive immunotherapy (iodine 131 labeled carcinoembryonic antigen monoclonal antibody) protocols should be considered in patients with nonoperative widely metastatic progressing medullary thyroid cancer.
...
PMID:Medullary thyroid cancer. 1205 61
A case of
somatostatin
-producing pancreatic tumor associated with severe insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and ketoacidotic coma is reported. The tumor, a 10-cm expansile mass arising from the pancreatic tail of a 70-yr-old woman, was first detected by ultrasonography, performed because of abdominal pain, and subsequently confirmed by computed tomography and fine-needle tumor aspiration. Pathologic investigation showed a predominantly solid-trabecular structure with scattered microacini and psammomatous bodies. A large proportion of tumor cells expressed
somatostatin
and/or calcitonin. Following resection of the
primary tumor
and three peripancreatic lymph nodes with metastases, the patient recovered rapidly from her diabetic syndrome and remained in substantially good health during a subsequent 8-yr follow-up period, without evidence of tumor recurrence.
...
PMID:Metastatic Psammomatous Somatostatinoma of the Pancreas Causing Severe Ketoacidotic Diabetes Cured by Surgery. 1211 94
Cytoreductive therapy is effective in the management of metastatic neuroendocrine tumors to the liver, independent of their functioning status. In functioning tumors, clinical endocrinopathies are relieved in most patients and this response usually lasts for several months. Major morbidity and mortality are not greater than the average complication rate for resection for nonneuroendocrine metastatic tumors at major centers; therefore, surgical outcomes appear to justify operative intervention. Patients whose
primary tumor
can be controlled, whose metastases outside the liver are limited, and who have a reasonable performance status are candidates for resection. The authors' data support the previous statements. The current mortality rate of 1.2% and major morbidity rate of 15% clearly represent the success of the operative approach in such complex cases (54% of patients received a resection of at least one lobe) [9]. A symptomatic response in the 95% range with a median response of 45 months adds many months of symptom-free survival to the lives of most patients [9]. In the literature reviewed for this article, more than half of the patients also underwent a major hepatic resection and 40% of them had concurrent resection of the
primary tumor
. These data confirm that resection in selected patients is not more complicated or risky than resection for other metastatic tumors. Endocrinopathies have not increased anesthetic or operative risk in this population; however, these results are the product of managing these patients over time, becoming familiar with their clinical syndromes, and being active in the prevention of life-threatening endocrine complications (i.e., carcinoid crisis). The authors have learned over time that patients with valvular disease are not good candidates for surgery. These patients develop right-sided heart failure with an increase in the central venous pressure. This condition can result in massive hemorrhage during the liver resection because of the difficulty in controlling backbleeding from the hepatic veins [26]. Correction of valvular disease is warranted for safe liver resection. The authors' current policy is to rule out valvular disease in every patient with carcinoid tumors and repair the valves prior to hepatic resection when indicated [27]. This policy clearly has decreased the complication rate. Even though liver transplantation seems to be very attractive as a means of eradicating the disease, this has not been common in clinical practice because of the shortage of allografts, and the overall costs and complications of the procedure override its benefits, especially when compared with partial hepatectomy. Current methods to detect the spread of disease that were not readily available in the past, such as MRI and indium-111 pentetreotide (Octreoscan), may expand the applications of transplantation and allow for better selection of candidates. The option of transplantation is still open for improvement and is dependent on organ availability and better staging of the disease. Metastases from neuroendocrine tumors are hypervascular, favoring the application of MRI as the single imaging method; MRI not only evaluates the location and characteristics of the lesions but also determines the relationship with major vessels and bile ducts. Spiral CT scan has been used extensively in the past with acceptable results. Indium-111 pentetreotide functions on the base of
somatostatin
receptors present in these tumors, but its use has not been established definitely in the work-up of these patients. Perhaps the best use of indium-111 pentetreotide is in the evaluation of disease beyond the primary and liver locations, including bone metastases; its use therefore will likely affect the preoperative work-up of candidates for transplantation [28]. Once the patient has been deemed to have resectable disease by the preoperative work-up, several steps need to be completed prior to surgery to decrease the effect of specific endocrinopathies. For patients with symptoms related to carcinoid tumors, preoperative preparation with 150 to 500 micrograms of
somatostatin
decreases the chances of carcinoid crisis, which is manifested by hemodynamic instability [29]. The use of this medication intraoperatively should be kept in mind because a carcinoid crisis can occur despite anesthetic premedication. For islet cell tumors, treatment of underlying endocrinopathy has been initiated before referral for surgical treatment in most patients. Surgery is appropriate for patients with metastatic neuroendocrine tumors for the following two reasons: (1) many of them still have the
primary tumor
in place and resection should be undertaken to avoid acute complications and (2) the addition of adjunctive ablative therapies to surgical resection accomplishes the control of greater than or equal to 90% of the bulk of the tumor. If preoperative evaluation indicates that less than 90% of the tumor is treatable, surgical therapy is contraindicated. Last, even when complete resections are performed, the recurrence rate for these tumors is extremely high. In practical terms, patients with metastatic neuroendocrine tumors are seldom cured. The best hope physicians can offer these patients is an extended survival period with minimal endocrine symptoms and decreased requirements of
somatostatin
analogs.
...
PMID:Hepatic surgery for metastases from neuroendocrine tumors. 1273 41
To investigate
somatostatin
receptors (SSTRs) in primary or metastatic high-grade osteosarcoma, 18 patients (12 without metastases, 4 with synchronous lung, and 2 with metachronous bone metastases) underwent SSTR scintigraphy. After intravenous (i.v.) injection of 200-250 MPq of 111In-pentreotide, images were recorded at 4 and 24 hours. All patients underwent 99mTc-methylene diphosphonate (MDP) bone scan (BS). Scans were interpreted both with qualitative evaluation and with semiquantitative image processing, by means of tumor-to-background ratio modification over time. Primary tumor: SSTR scintigraphy was positive in 12 (75%) patients: 10 (83%) of the 12 nonmetastatic patients, and 2 (50%) of those with synchronous metastases. Metastases: SSTR scintigraphy was positive only in one (17%) of the six patients with metastatic disease. No relation was found between SSTR scintigraphy results and gender, histologic subtype, site, and size of the tumor. After primary chemotherapy, 15 patients underwent surgery of
primary tumor
; a good histologic response was found in 7 (64%) of the 11 patients with positive SSTR scintigraphy versus 1 (25%) of the 4 patients with negative SSTR scintigraphy. High-grade osteosarcoma exhibits
somatostatin
receptors, usually detectable in the
primary tumor
, but not in the metastatic lesions. The different expression of
somatostatin
receptors observed in primary and metastatic lesions, and in patients with tumors having different chemosensitivity, could indicate a possible relation between
somatostatin
receptors and biological behavior of the tumor.
...
PMID:Somatostatin receptor (SSTR) scintigraphy in patients with osteosarcoma. 1462 33
In the last decade important progresses have been obtained in the diagnosis and therapy of endocrine gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) tumors, mainly derived from the
somatostatin
receptors characterization and the introduction of long acting
somatostatin
analogues. Receptorial scintigraphy with radio-labeled analogues (Octreoscan) is the first choice investigation for staging and follow-up of endocrine GEP tumors, thanks to the high sensitivity in revealing the
primary tumor
and metastases, and for its capability to reveal lesions that are not identified by other imaging methods. Moreover,
somatostatin
analogues uptake by tumors allow us to use radiopharmaceutical compounds for advanced disease treatment. Between the radio-labeled drugs until now studied, interesting results have been obtained by DOTA-lanreotide (MAURITIUS), DOTA0 Tyr3-octreotide (DOTATOC) and DOTA0 Tyr3-octreotate, bound to beta-emitting radio-isotope suitable for therapeutic use. In the field of the pharmacological therapy of GEP tumors, the clinical trials show that
somatostatin
analogues reduce the symptoms related to functionally active tumors and stabilize or slow tumor growth improving the patient quality of life. Although
somatostatin
analogues alone could not be able to cure GEP tumors, their early utilization in association with surgical debulking of
primary tumor
and metastases, embolization or chemoembolization, and interferon, chemotherapy and radio-metabolic therapy (mainly directed to the destruction of micrometastases), increases the possibility of a radical therapeutic intervention. The continuous evolution of pharmacological research provides always new analogues (octreotide LAR, lanreotide, vapreotide, BIM-23244, BN 81644, PTR-3173, BIM-23A387, SOM-230, etc.) with different pharmacokinetic and receptorial properties and acting with more effectiveness in the different individual clinical situations. In this context there have been recently introduced also the "chimeric" analogues. On the other hand, the widespread utilization of molecular biology and immunohistochemical methods can allow, in perspective, to better define the receptorial pattern of individual endocrine tumors, after their surgical removal. The necessity to integrate endocrinological, nuclear medicine, surgical, oncologic and laboratory competencies behaves a multidisciplinary approach based on the utilization of diagnostic-therapeutic protocols supplying comparable results. It does not appear unjustified to expect, in the future, a scenery of more "individual" and more effective therapies for patients affected by GEP tumours.
...
PMID:[New perspectives in diagnosis and therapy of endocrine gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) tumors with somatostatin analogues]. 1475 99
Merkel cell carcinomas (MCC) belong to the family of neuroendocrine tumors. In addition to other markers, they express
somatostatin
receptors. They are uncommon, highly malignant skin tumors with an aggressive clinical course. They develop in sun-exposed areas of the skin, mostly in elderly patients. In addition to frequent locoregional recurrences, there is a high incidence of distant metastases. Treatment is stage dependent and consists of operation and chemo- and/or radiotherapy, respectively. The advanced age of patients often impedes adequate therapy. (90)Y-DOTATOC is a novel radiolabeled
somatostatin
analogue containing the active octapeptide of
somatostatin
. It is very well tolerated and offers the option of treating somatostatin receptor-positive tumors by targeted radiotherapy. We report the case of an 83-year-old woman with recurrent MCC of the left cheek. The
primary tumor
and several relapses were treated with surgery and locoregional radiotherapy. After the 3rd relapse, she was treated 4 times with (90)Y-DOTATOC and two complete remissions were achieved. The fourth administration after the 2nd relapse was ineffective and conventional chemotherapy was started. There were no side effects of the (90)Y-DOTATOC. We conclude that due to its good tolerability, (90)Y-DOTATOC therapy should be evaluated further as a new therapy for somatostatin receptor-positive MCC.
...
PMID:Successful targeted radiotherapy with 90Y-DOTATOC in a patient with Merkel cell carcinoma. A Case Report. 1513 69
Few clinical studies have demonstrated an anti-proliferative activity of
somatostatin
(
SST
) analogs in carcinoids. We report the case of a woman with liver metastases of neuroendocrine tumor and no evidence of the
primary tumor
. The liver metastases were characterized by high proliferation index, immunoreactiviy for somatostatin receptor (SSTR)-1, 2, 3 and 5 and positive octreoscan. Urinary 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid, serum serotonin and chromogranin A were elevated. Slow release lanreotide (SR-LAN) therapy for 3 mo controlled clinical and biochemical signs of carcinoid tumor and caused a clear-cut reduction in the diameter of two liver metastases and disappearance of another lesion, with further reduction after 6 and 18 mo. We demonstrated a clear-cut long-lasting anti-proliferative effect of SR-LAN on liver metastases of occult carcinoid with high proliferation index and immunoreactivity for SSTR-1, 2, 3, and 5. Immuno-histochemistry for SSTRs could be a suitable method for the selection of patients with metastatic carcinoid that may benefit from
SST
analog therapy.
...
PMID:Regression of liver metastases of occult carcinoid tumor with slow release lanreotide therapy. 1580 Oct 4
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