Journal of Pancreatology (Dec 2020)

The effect of using long-acting octreotide as adjuvant therapy for patients with grade 2 pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors after radical resection

  • Suizhi Gao, MM,
  • Xiaohan Shi, MD,
  • Hongyun Ma, MM,
  • Huan Wang, MM,
  • Bo Li, MM,
  • Bin Song, MD,
  • Shiwei Guo, MD,
  • Gang Jin, MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/JP9.0000000000000058
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 4
pp. 167 – 172

Abstract

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Abstract. Objective:. To investigate the effect of long-acting octreotide as adjuvant therapy in the prevention of tumor recurrence in patients with grade 2 pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNETs) after radical resection. Methods:. The postoperative follow-up data of 130 patients with resectable G2 pNET treated in the Changhai Hospital from 2008 to 2018 were retrospectively analyzed: 59 patients received long-acting octreotide as adjuvant therapy for 6 to 12 months (Oct group) and 71 patients received active follow-up (control group), both of which began after the radical resection, with the primary observation endpoint of disease-free survival (DFS) and the secondary study endpoint of overall survival. Results:. The median age of the patients in the Oct group and control group was 52 and 54 years, respectively. There were 28 male cases (47.5%) and 33 male cases (46.5%) in the 2 groups. The median maximum tumor diameter was 3.5 and 3.0 cm, respectively; lymph node metastasis was positive in 13 cases (22.0%) and 9 cases (12.7%); there was peripancreatic nerve invasion in 11 cases (18.6%) and 6 cases (8.5%). Survival analysis revealed that there were significant differences in 2-year DFS% (98.3% vs 88.7%, P = .0371) and 3-year DFS% (96.6% vs 85.9%, P = .0498) between the Oct group and control group. Long-acting octreotide treatment was found to reduce the risk of 3-year recurrence of G2 pNET after radical resection (HR = 0.2, P = .044) with the application of inverse-probability-of-treatment weighted to balance the limited data bias. Conclusion:. Using long-acting octreotide as adjuvant therapy for G2 pNET patients after radical surgery may improve the rate of 3y-DFS, but the benefit needs to be confirmed in a well-designed random control clinical trial.