Our study confirms the high specificity and sensitivity of CgA in diagnosing an endocrine tumor. It is necessary to use a cutoff range of 84 to 87 U/L to obtain a high specificity in diagnosing NETs, with the aim of excluding patients in whom the CgA was elevated as a result of other non-neoplastic diseases.
Tumor resection, the absence of liver and lymph node metastases, and the presence of MEN 1 syndrome are related to a better survival rate. Radical surgery continues to have a central role in the therapeutic approach to endocrine tumors of the pancreas.
Gastric endocrine tumors associated with autoimmune chronic atrophic gastritis (gastric carcinoid type I) are almost exclusively benign lesions with little risk of deep invasion of the gastric parietal wall. For this reason, the role of octreotide in the treatment of these neoplastic lesions is controversial. Nine patients with more than five type I gastric endocrine tumors each !1 cm in size, without invasion of the muscularis propria and with Ki-67 index lower than 3%, were treated with long-acting somatostatin analogs for 12 months. After 6 months and again after 12 months, all the patients underwent upper gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopy with multiple biopsies. The plasma chromogranin A (CgA) levels and the gastrin levels in the serum were also determined. In all patients, the gastric neoplastic lesions disappeared after 12 months of somatostatin analog therapy. We also observed a significant reduction of CgA and gastrin levels at 6 and at 12 months of therapy as compared with the baseline values. We demonstrate that somatostatin analog treatment provokes the pathological regression of type I gastric carcinoids. This therapeutic approach should be considered as a valid option in selected patients with multiple type I gastric endocrine tumors.
Aim: To evaluate the most important factors correlated with survival in patients with endocrine tumors of the ileum, both at the time of diagnosis and during the follow-up period. Methods: Fifty-nine patients with ileal endocrine tumors diagnosed in our institution between 1990 and 2004 were studied. Results: The study included 36 men (61%) and 23 women (39%). The median age of the patients at the time of diagnosis was 61.4 (range 18–83) years. The median follow-up period was 71.9 (range 5–287) months. Forty patients (67.8%) were still alive at the end of the study; the median survival time was 172 months, and the 5-year survival rate was 78.9%. By univariate analysis, the survival rate was significantly related to female sex (p = 0.024) and flushing alone (p = 0.028) and associated with diarrhea at diagnosis (p = 0.015), weight loss at diagnosis (p = 0.038), Ki-67 level (p = 0.025), stage of disease at diagnosis (p = 0.012), presence of liver metastases at follow-up (p = 0.005), presence of diffuse metastases at diagnosis (p = 0.005) and at follow-up (p = 0.007), and type of surgical approach (overall: p = 0.018; not operated vs. radical surgery: p = 0.008; not operated vs. palliative surgery: p = 0.045). Using multivariate analysis, only female gender (p = 0.012) and the presence of liver metastases at follow-up (p = 0.004) were significantly related to survival. Conclusion: In the present study, female gender and the appearance of liver metastases at follow-up seem to be the main conditions which determine the poor prognosis of patients with ileal endocrine tumors.
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