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. 2021 Apr;22(6):685-693.
doi: 10.1080/14656566.2020.1845651. Epub 2020 Nov 11.

Perspectives on the current pharmacotherapeutic strategies for management of functional neuroendocrine tumor syndromes

Affiliations

Perspectives on the current pharmacotherapeutic strategies for management of functional neuroendocrine tumor syndromes

Tetsuhide Ito et al. Expert Opin Pharmacother. 2021 Apr.

Abstract

Introduction: In the past, controlling the hormone-excess-state was the main determinant of survival in Functional-Neuroendocrine-Neoplasm-syndromes (F-NENs). This was difficult because the pharmacological-armamentarium available was limited. Recently, new therapeutic strategies have increased but it also generated controversies/uncertainties.Areas covered: The authors briefly review: established/proposed F-NENs; the rationale for treatments; the recommended initial-pharmacotherapeutic-approach to controlling F-NENs hormone-excess-state; the secondary-approaches if the initial approach fails or resistance develops; and the approach to deal with the malignant nature of the NEN. Also discussed are controversies/uncertainties related to new treatments.Expert opinion: Unfortunately, except for patients with insulinomas (>90-95%), gastrinomas (<20-40%), a minority with the other F-panNENs and 0-<1% with Carcinoid-syndrome is curative-surgery possible. Except for insulinomas, gastrinomas, and ACTHomas, long-acting somatostatin-analogs are the initial-pharmacological-treatments for hormone-excess-state. For insulinomas prior to surgery/malignancy, diazoxide is the initial drug-treatment; for gastrinomas, oral PPIs; and for ACTHomas, steroidogenesis inhibitors. There are now several secondary pharmacotherapeutic treatments. Surgery and liver-directed therapies also have a role in selected patients. Particularly promising is the recent results with PRRT for the hormone-excess-state, independent of its anti-growth effect. The sequence to use various agents and the approach to syndrome diagnosis while taking various agents remains unclear/controversial in many cases.

Keywords: Pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms; carcinoid syndrome; ectopic cushing’s syndrome; everolimus; glucagonoma; insulinoma; prrt; somatostatin analogue; vipoma; zollinger-ellison syndrome.

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Conflict of interest statement

8. Conflicts of Interest

The authors have no other relevant affiliations or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in or financial conflict with the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript apart from those disclosed.

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