6533b870fe1ef96bd12d0591
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Sunitinib in patients with pre-treated pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors: A real-world study.
Andrea SpallanzaniGianfranco Delle FaveSergio RicciNicola FazioAntongiulio FaggianoFrancesca SpadaFrancesco PanzutoMassimo FalconiRossana BerardiRiccardo MarconiciniLaura CatenaGiuseppe BadalamentiLorenzo AntonuzzoDaniela FemiaGiovanni SchinzariFabio GelsominoCarlo CarnaghiSara PuscedduMaria Pia BrizziNicole BrighiSara GrittiMaria RinzivilloAlberto BongiovanniDavide CampanaToni IbrahimStefano Partellisubject
0301 basic medicineIndolesEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismNeuroendocrine tumorsPyrroleGastroenterologyTarget therapyEfficacyAntineoplastic Agent0302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyRetrospective StudieSunitinibPancreadiabetes and metabolismSunitinibGastroenterologyPancreatic NeoplasmMiddle AgedDiabetes and MetabolismNeuroendocrine TumorsTreatment OutcomeTolerabilityNeuroendocrine tumors; Pancreas; Progressive disease; Sunitinib; Target therapy; Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism; Hepatology; EndocrinologyItaly030220 oncology & carcinogenesisNeuroendocrine tumorsmedicine.drugHumanAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyAntineoplastic AgentsNeutropenia03 medical and health sciencesNeuroendocrine tumorInternal medicinemedicineHumansPyrrolesProgression-free survivalPancreasCancer stagingAgedRetrospective StudiesHepatologybusiness.industryProgressive diseasemedicine.diseasePancreatic Neoplasms030104 developmental biologyNeuroendocrine tumors; pancreas; progressive disease; Sunitinib; target therapy; endocrinology; diabetes and metabolism; hepatology; endocrinologyIndolebusinessProgressive diseasedescription
Abstract Introduction Besides data reported in a Phase-III trial, data on sunitinib in pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors (panNETs) are scanty. Aim To evaluate sunitinib efficacy and tolerability in panNETs patients treated in a real-world setting. Patients and methods Retrospective analysis of progressive panNETs treated with sunitinib. Efficacy was assessed by evaluating progression-free survival, overall survival, and disease control (DC) rate (stable disease (SD) + partial response + complete response). Data are reported as median (25th–75th IQR). Results Eighty patients were included. Overall, 71.1% had NET G2, 26.3% had NET G1, and 2.6% had NET G3 neoplasms. A total of 53 patients (66.3%) had received three or more therapeutic regimens before sunitinib, with 24 patients (30%) having been treated with four previous treatments. Median PFS was 10 months. Similar risk of progression was observed between NET G1 and NET G2 tumors (median PFS 11 months and 8 months, respectively), and between patients who had received ≥ 3 vs ≤ 2 therapeutic approaches before sunitinib (median PFS 9 months and 10 months, respectively). DC rate was 71.3% and SD was the most frequent observed response, occurring in 43 pts (53.8%). Overall, 59 pts (73.8%) experienced AEs, which were grade 1–2 in 43 of them (72.9%), grade 3 in 15 pts (25.4%), and grade 4 in one patient (1.7%). Six pts (7.5%) stopped treatment due to toxicity. Conclusions The present real-world experience shows that sunitinib is a safe and effective treatment for panNETs, even in the clinical setting of heavily pre-treated, progressive diseases.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2018-01-01 | Pancreatology : official journal of the International Association of Pancreatology (IAP) ... [et al.] |