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Management of advanced neuroendocrine tumors with hepatic metastasis

journal contribution
posted on 2009-10-01, 00:00 authored by Mustafa Khasraw, A Gill, T Harrington, N Pavlakis, I Modlin
Neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) in general and specifically these gastroenteropancreatic-neuroendocrine tumors often present a considerable diagnostic and therapeutic challenge, especially those that behave in an aggressive fashion. The majority of tumors are diagnosed at a stage that the only curative treatment, radical surgical intervention, is no longer an option and thus long-term therapy with somatostatin analogs is focused on symptom amelioration and in the improvement of quality of life. Although biotherapy is currently the most efficient treatment to achieve palliation, conventional chemotherapy may have some utility in undifferentiated or highly proliferating neuroendocrine carcinomas and pancreatic NETs. Hepatic metastases, depending on size, location, and number may be amenable to surgical resection or radiofrequency ablation. If surgery is not feasible, embolization either alone (bland), in combination with chemotherapeutic agents, or using radioactive microspheres can be used. Peptide receptor targeted radiotherapy using radiolabeled octapeptide analogs (90Yttrium or 177Lutetium-octreotide) may lead to reduction in tumor size, but in most circumstances has a tumor stabilizing effect. A variety of antiangiogenesis and growth factor-targeted agents have been evaluated, but to date, the results have failed to meet our expectations.

History

Journal

Journal of clinical gastroenterology

Volume

43

Pagination

838 - 847

Location

Philadelphia, Pa.

ISSN

0192-0790

eISSN

1539-2031

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins