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

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

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.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Neuroendocrine Tumors* / drug therapy
  • Pancreatic Neoplasms*
  • Somatostatin

Substances

  • Somatostatin