Senthil Kumar: Systemic Treatment for Advanced/Metastatic Gastrointestinal and Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors
Senthil Kumar, Medical Oncologist at Red Hills Chennai, shared on X:
“Systemic Treatment for Advanced/Metastatic Gastrointestinal and Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors (GEP-NETs)
—
Classification and Diagnostic Overview
Types:
G1: Ki-67 <3%
G2: Ki-67 3–20%
G3: Ki-67 >20% (Well-differentiated G3 NETs and poorly differentiated NECs)
Functionality:
Functional
Non-functional
Common Sites:
Small intestine, stomach, pancreas, colon, rectum, appendix
Diagnosis:
Histopathology: Confirms NET morphology.
Immunohistochemistry (IHC): Chromogranin A, Synaptophysin, Ki-67 proliferation index.
Imaging: CT, MRI, 68Ga-DOTATATE PET/CT (for SSTR expression)
Molecular Profiling: optional , NGS for MEN1, DAXX, ATRX, mTOR mutations
—
Prognostic and Predictive Factors
Age, Performance Status (PS), Comorbidities
Tumor Grade and Differentiation (Ki-67 index)
Tumor Burden and Disease Tempo
Symptomaticity (due to tumor bulk or hormone secretion) Somatostatin Receptor (SSTR) Expression
Metastatic Spread: Liver, bone, peritoneum involvement
Molecular Alterations: MEN1, DAXX, ATRX, mTOR pathway mutations
—
Surgical and Locally Directed Therapies
Surgical Resection Complete Resection:
Recommended when both primary tumor and metastases are fully resectable.
Incomplete Cytoreduction (Debulking):
Considered if ≥90% of total tumor burden can be removed.
Primary Tumor Resection Alone:
Indicated for symptomatic relief due to bulk, carcinoid syndrome, obstruction, or ischemia.
Liver Metastases Resection/Ablation: Considered for low-volume, unilobar liver disease with preserved liver function and symptomatic burden.
Liver-Directed Therapies
Ablation (RFA/MWA), Surgery, TACE, Radioembolization are effective for hepatic-dominant disease.
Best suited for:
Unilobar, limited liver metastases
Preserved liver function Symptomatic patients (due to bulk or hormone secretion)
Liver Transplantation (OLT):
Investigational in unresectable liver metastases.
—
First-Line Treatment
Somatostatin Analogs (SSAs)
Octreotide LAR (PROMID Trial):
Time to Progression (TTP): 14.3 vs. 6 months (midgut NETs)
Drug: Octreotide LAR (30 mg IM every 4 weeks)
Lanreotide (CLARINET Trial):
Progression-Free Survival (PFS): 32.8 vs. 18 months (non-functional GEP-NETs)
Drug: Lanreotide Autogel (120 mg SC every 4 weeks)
Indication: G1/G2 well-differentiated NETs, SSTR-positive, symptomatic patients
—
Second-Line Treatment
Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy (PRRT)
177Lu-DOTATATE (Lutathera)
NETTER-1 Trial:
PFS: 28.4 vs. 8.5 months Median
OS: 48 vs. 36 months (not statistically significant)
ORR: 18%
Adverse Effects:
Hematologic Toxicity:
Thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, anemia
Renal Toxicity: Nephrotoxicity (mitigated by amino acid infusions)
Nausea, Vomiting Secondary Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS)/Leukemia (rare)
Indication: Progressive, SSTR-positive, well-differentiated G1/G2 NETs
NETTER-2 Trial Indication:
Progressive, high-grade (G2/G3) SSTR-positive GEP-NETs.
PFS: Significantly prolonged with PRRT vs. high-dose SSA. (23 vs 8.5 months )
ORR: Higher response rates in earlier use. OS: Data pending.
— Targeted Therapy Everolimus (mTOR Inhibitor)
RADIANT-3 (Pancreatic NETs):
PFS: 11.0 vs. 4.6 months Median
OS: 44 months (not significant) RADIANT-4 (Non-functional GI/Lung NETs):
PFS: 11.0 vs. 3.9 months Sunitinib (Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor)
SUN1111 Trial (pNETs):
PFS: 11.4 vs. 5.5 months
ORR: 9.3% Bevacizumab (Anti-VEGF Antibody)
Role: Anti-angiogenic therapy in NETs.
Clinical Trials: Bevacizumab + Octreotide LAR improved PFS over interferon + Octreotide.
ECOG E2211: Studied in combination with CAPTEM.
Usage: Limited to investigational settings.
—
Third-Line and Refractory Treatment
Chemotherapy CAPTEM (Capecitabine + Temozolomide)
(G1/G2 Pancreatic NETs) ECOG-ACRIN E2211 Trial:
PFS: 22.7 vs. 14.4 months Median
OS: 58 months (not significant)
ORR: 30–70%. “
-
ESMO 2024 Congress
September 13-17, 2024
-
ASCO Annual Meeting
May 30 - June 4, 2024
-
Yvonne Award 2024
May 31, 2024
-
OncoThon 2024, Online
Feb. 15, 2024
-
Global Summit on War & Cancer 2023, Online
Dec. 14-16, 2023