Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
i n N e u ro e n d o c r i n e Tu m o r s
a,b a,c,
David L. Chan, MBBS, FRACP , Simron Singh, MD, MPH, FRCPC *
KEYWORDS
Chemotherapy Neuroendocrine tumors Metastatic
KEY POINTS
Advanced grade 3 (G3) poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas (NECs) are usu-
ally treated with platinum/etoposide chemotherapy in the first-line setting.
There is no consensus regarding “well-differentiated G3 gastroenteropancreatic neuroen-
docrine tumors”; a platinum doublet or capecitabine (CAPTEM) are reasonable options in
this setting.
Chemotherapy is not routinely used as first-line therapy for G1 to G2 neuroendocrine tu-
mors (NETs). The combination of CAPTEM and temozolomide shows promise in this
setting as later-line therapy.
There is little evidence for adjuvant chemotherapy for resected G1 to G2 NETs; adjuvant
platinum/etoposide is often given for resected G3 NETs.
INTRODUCTION
The incidence of neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) has increased over the past 30 years,1
and they are the second most prevalent gastrointestinal tumor behind colorectal can-
cer. NETs are heterogeneous neoplasms that most commonly arise from the gastro-
intestinal tract, pancreas, and lung. Their biological behavior can vary widely, and for
this reason characterization of NETs relies as much on their histologic grading as the
primary site of disease. Grade 1 (G1) NETs may display extremely indolent behavior,
whereas grade 3 (G3) NETs may grow over a matter of weeks and require urgent treat-
ment. Gastrointestinal tumors are graded using the World Health Organization (WHO)
2010 system, using a combination of the mitotic count and Ki-67 index. The WHO
Disclosure Statement: D.L. Chan has received travel support from Novartis and honoraria from
Ipsen. S. Singh has received honoraria and travel funding from Ipsen, Pfizer and Novartis.
a
Department of Medical Oncology, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, 2075 Bayview Avenue,
Toronto, ON M4N3M5, Canada; b Department of Medical Oncology, Royal North Shore Hospi-
tal, Level 1 ASB, Reserve Road, St Leonards, New South Wales 2065, Australia; c Department of
Medicine, University of Toronto, Odette Cancer Centre, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre,
King’s College Cir, Toronto, ON M5S 1A8, Canada
* Corresponding author. Odette Cancer Centre, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, 2075 Bay-
view Avenue, Toronto, Ontario M4N3M5, Canada.
E-mail address: Simron.singh@sunnybrook.ca
2017 system published earlier this year provides minor modifications to the grading
cutoffs, as well as separating G3 pancreatic NETs into well-differentiated and poorly
differentiated tumors.2 This is due to new evidence showing that patients with G3
poorly differentiated pancreatic neuroendocrine carcinomas (PDNECs) have worse
outcomes, even though the Ki-67 index of these tumors overlaps considerably with
G3 well-differentiated NETs (WDNETs).3,4
NETs are generally treated by a multidisciplinary team, as treatments are complex
and varied.5 These may include surgery (both curative and debulking), external
beam radiotherapy and peptide receptor radionuclide treatment (PRRT), liver-
directed therapies (embolization, radiofrequency ablation), systemic treatments, and
clinical trials. Sequencing of these modalities is a major clinical and logistical challenge
due to the number of services involved. Although surgery is the standard of care for
resectable NETs, up to 50% of patients present with metastatic or unresectable dis-
ease,6 and systemic therapy is the mainstay of therapy for these patients.
Chemotherapy was one of the few systemic treatments available for NETs for much
of the twentieth century. The development of other systemic treatments (such as so-
matostatin analogs and the targeted agents everolimus and sunitinib) have decreased
the prominence of chemotherapy in the treatment of low-grade (G1–G2) NETs; how-
ever, it is still the first-line treatment of choice in high-grade NETs. Cytotoxic chemo-
therapy disrupts the mitotic processes of dividing cells and thus is more likely to affect
rapidly proliferating malignancies. Different classes of agents exist, alkylating agents
(cisplatin, temozolomide), topoisomerase inhibitors (etoposide), and thymidylate syn-
thase inhibitors (capecitabine), for instance, with the possibility of synergistic efficacy
between different classes. There remains considerable debate over the utility and
sequencing of chemotherapy in the role of systemic therapy in NETs overall.
PFS- PFS- OS OS
Study Intervention Comparator Intervention Comparator P Intervention Comparator P
Engstrom Doxorubicin STZ 1 5-FU — — — 12.0 mo 16.1 mo P 5 .25
et al,58 1984
Moertel et al,59 STZ 1 Cyclophosphamide STZ 1 5-FU 7 mo 6.5 mo NS 11.5 mo 6.8 mo Not reported
1979
Moertel et al,60 STZ15FU STZ — — NS 26 mo 16.4 mo NS
1980
Moertel et al,8 STZ 1 Dox STZ 1 5-FU 19 mo (TTP) 5 mo (TTP) P<.01 26.4 mo 16.8 mo P<.01
1992a
Moertel et al,8 Chlorozotocin STZ 1 5-FU 3 mo (TTP) 5 mo (TTP) NS 18 mo 16.8 mo NS
1992
Sun et al,9 2005 STZ 1 Dox STZ 1 5-FU 4.5 mo 5.3 mo P 5 .17 24.3 mo 15.7 mo P 5 .027
Dahan et al,61 IFNa-2A STZ 1 5-FU 14.1 mo (6.7–21.2) 5.5 mo (2.9–25) P 5 .25 44.3 mo 30.4 mo P 5 .83
Abbreviations: 5-FU, 5-fluorouracil; CI, confidence interval; Dox, doxorubicin; HR, hazard ratio; IFN, interferon; NS, not significant; OS, overall survival; PFS,
progression-free survival; STZ, streptozocin; TTP, time to progression.
a
Moertel 1992 was a three-armed trial; adapted here to show comparisons against STZ/5-FU.
Data from Wong MH, Chan DL, Lee A, et al. Systematic review and meta-analysis on the role of chemotherapy in advanced and metastatic neuroendocrine tumor
(NET). PLoS One 2016;11(6):e0158140; with permission.
605
606 Chan & Singh
The benefit from cytotoxic chemotherapy for G1-2 GEPNET remains murky and uncer-
tain, and its role in management of GEPNETs is a matter of ongoing debate. Classi-
cally, treatments including agents such as streptozocin, 5-FU, doxorubicin, and
more recently capecitabine, have all been used. However, randomized trials in the
past 20 years have demonstrated the efficacy of the first somatostatin analogs12,13
and then the targeted agents everolimus14 and sunitinib.15 Somatostatin analogs
(SSAs) remain the mainstay of treatment of G1 to G2 NETs. These agents have
been used preferentially to cytotoxic chemotherapy, because of the randomized
data for their efficacy, as well as their superior side-effect profile and patient prefer-
ence. No randomized trial has shown the benefit of chemotherapy over best support-
ive care, and most randomized trials of chemotherapy in G1-2 GEPNETS failed to
show a significant difference in PFS or OS between different regimens (see Table 1).
More recently, the orally administered combination of capecitabine, a prodrug of 5-
FU, and temozolomide, an alkylating agent (CAPTEM), has shown some promise in
this setting. Temozolomide is pharmacologically related to dacarbazine, another alky-
lating agent with known activity in pancreatic NETs, and capecitabine was postulated
to be active due to its continuous release in a slowly proliferating tumor, with synergis-
tic activity demonstrated in the BON1 neuroendocrine cell line.16
A single-center retrospective study of 30 patients receiving first-line CAPTEM for
metastatic well-differentiated pancreatic NETs (pNETs) demonstrated a response
rate of 70% and median PFS of 18 months.17 Another retrospective study showed a
response rate of 61% in 18 heavily pretreated patients with different gastrointestinal
primaries (39% pancreatic). More recent retrospective series report similar results,
although there are still relatively few data regarding nonpancreatic gastrointestinal
NETs.18,19
There are mixed data and subsequent controversy regarding the role of O6-methyl-
guanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) status as a predictive biomarker for temozo-
lomide efficacy. MGMT is an enzyme that effects DNA repair at O6-guanine DNA sites
targeted by alkylating agents such as temozolomide, and its absence (via methylation
of the promoter gene) is associated with temozolomide efficacy in gliomas.20 Two
early studies suggested that patients with MGMT-deficient tumors may respond bet-
ter to temozolomide-based treatment.21,22 However, a subsequent study of 143 pa-
tients with advanced pNET showed no correlation between MGMT methylation and
response.23
The National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines24 recommend consider-
ation of chemotherapy (such as 5-FU, capecitabine, dacarbazine, oxaliplatin, streptozo-
cin, and temozolomide) in patients with progressive disease and no other treatment
options. The European Neuroendocrine Tumor Society (ENETS) guidelines recommend
consideration of chemotherapy in bulky or progressive pancreatic NETs, and certain
nonpancreatic NETs (Ki-67 >15%, aggressive clinical behavior or somatostatin receptor
[SSTR] negative).25 Both the North American Neuroendocrine Tumor Society (NANETS)
and the Canadian consensus guidelines recommend CAPTEM or streptozocin-based
therapy (especially in the setting or rapid growth) for pNETs.26,27 All these guidelines
Current Chemotherapy Use in NETs 607
are unfortunately more based on consensus rather than available level 1 evidence. We
agree that chemotherapy (apart from CAPTEM for pNETs) should be considered only
after failure of other systemic options, such as SSAs and targeted agents.
Chemotherapy plays a more prominent role in G3 GEPNETS compared with their G1-2
counterparts, as the higher proliferative index of these tumors means more cells are
susceptible to the effects of chemotherapy. There are no randomized data to date
regarding chemotherapy in G3 GEPNETs, with regimens being extrapolated from the
setting of small cell lung cancer (SCLC). For example, some patients with locally
advanced disease may be treated for chemoradiation with cisplatin/etoposide, despite
the paucity of evidence in GEPNETs. Platinum-based doublets remain the standard of
care, but there have been increasing data regarding the efficacy of other regimens.
There is increasing evidence pointing to the difference between well-differentiated
G3 neuroendocrine tumors (so-called WDNETs) and poorly differentiated neuroendo-
crine carcinomas (NECs). WDNETS may be morphologically and clinically distinct
from NECs, with superior clinical outcomes and potentially differing responses to
cytotoxic chemotherapy. Most studies to date in this field have investigated pancre-
atic NETs, leading to its reclassification in the WHO 2017 schema.2
Bronchial NETs can be classified as typical carcinoid (TC), atypical carcinoid (AC), and
neuroendocrine carcinoma–large cell (LCNEC) and small cell (otherwise known as
SCLC). There are no randomized data to guide use of chemotherapy in this setting.
There is no role for adjuvant therapy after resection of TC or AC, although adjuvant
platinum/etoposide therapy improves outcomes in LCNEC.48 As for SCLC, its poten-
tial to disseminate widely means that surgery is rarely carried out. The benefit for
Current Chemotherapy Use in NETs 609
Table 2
Selected trials in grade 3 gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors
Histology Overall
(No. Patients Response Survival,
Trial Name Treated) Regimen Rate, % mo
1. First-line studies
Moertel et al,29 “Anaplastic Cisplatin/etoposide 67 19.0
1991 neuroendocrine
carcinoma” (18)
Mitry et al,28 1999 PDNEC (41) Cisplatin/etoposide 42 15.0
Sorbye et al,30 2013 GEPNEN (252) Mostly cisplatin/ 31 11.0
etoposide or
carboplatin/
etoposide
Yamaguchi et al,34 PDNEC, MiNEN, or Cisplatin/etoposide 28 7.3
2014 clinical NEC (258) Cisplatin/irinotecan 50 13.0
Nakano et al,35 2012 PDNEC (28 first-line, Cisplatin/irinotecan 50 16.0
16 second-line or
beyond)
Du et al,42 2013 GEPNEC (11) FOLFIRI 64 13.0
Bajetta et al,43 2007 PDNEC (13) XELOX 23 5.0
Walter et al,44 2017 GEPNEC (152) Platinum/etoposide 50 11.6
(cisplatin in 113,
carboplatin in 39)
2. Second (and subsequent)-line studies
Hentic et al,45 2012 G3 NEC (19) FOLFIRI 31 18.0
Hadoux et al,46 2015 G3 PDNEC (20; 12 FOLFOX 29 9.9
GEPNEC, 4 thoracic)
Welin et al,39 2011 PDNEC (25) Temozolomide, 33 22.0
CAPTEM, some with
bevacizumab
For trials before 2010, poorly differentiated tumors (and relevant subgroups from trials investi-
gating wide populations) were used as a surrogate for G3 disease.
Abbreviations: CAPTEM, capecitabine; FOLFIRI, 5-fluorouracil/leucovorin/irinotecan; FOLFOX,
5-fluorouracil/leucovorin/oxaliplatin; G3, grade 3; GEPNEC, gastroenteropancreatic neuroendo-
crine carcinoma; GEPNEN, gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasm; MiNEN, mixed
neuroendocrine-nonneuroendocrine neoplasms; NEC, neuroendocrine carcinoma; PDNEC, poorly
differentiated pancreatic neuroendocrine carcinoma; XELOX, capecitabine/oxaliplatin.
Neuroendocrine tumors may occur less commonly in other anatomic sites, such as the
thymus and cervix. Considering their low incidence, there are understandably few data
regarding the efficacy of chemotherapy in these NET subtypes. Small retrospective
series support the use of temozolomide in thymic carcinoid,50,54 as well as regimens
such as cisplatin/etoposide in small cell NET of the cervix (where adjuvant chemo-
therapy is often combined with radiation).55 As in GEPNETs, the degree of differenti-
ation (or grade) should be considered when considering chemotherapy.
SUMMARY
Chemotherapy has had a reduced role in treatment of G1-2 GEPNETs and well-
differentiated bronchial carcinoids, but remains important in the treatment of G3 GEP-
NETs and bronchial NECs. Platinum/etoposide and capecitabine/temozolomide are
the most commonly used regimens in current practice. Further biomarker research
will help predict clinical benefit from these agents and optimize the benefit gained
from these therapies.
REFERENCES
1. Hallet J, Law CHL, Cukier M, et al. Exploring the rising incidence of neuroendo-
crine tumors: a population-based analysis of epidemiology, metastatic presenta-
tion, and outcomes. Cancer 2015;121(4):589–97.
2. Lloyd RV, Osamura RY, Klöppel G, et al, editors. WHO classification of tumours of
endocrine organs. 4. Auflage. Lyon (France): International Agency for Research
on Cancer; 2017.
3. Tang LH, Untch BR, Reidy DL, et al. Well-differentiated neuroendocrine tumors
with a morphologically apparent high-grade component: a pathway distinct
Current Chemotherapy Use in NETs 611
20. Hegi ME, Diserens A-C, Gorlia T, et al. MGMT gene silencing and benefit from
temozolomide in glioblastoma. N Engl J Med 2005;352(10):997–1003.
21. Walter T, van Brakel B, Vercherat C, et al. O6-Methylguanine-DNA methyltransfer-
ase status in neuroendocrine tumours: prognostic relevance and association with
response to alkylating agents. Br J Cancer 2015;112(3):523–31.
22. Kulke MH, Hornick JL, Frauenhoffer C, et al. O6-methylguanine DNA methyltrans-
ferase deficiency and response to temozolomide-based therapy in patients with
neuroendocrine tumors. Clin Cancer Res 2009;15(1):338–45.
23. Cives M, Ghayouri M, Morse B, et al. Analysis of potential response predictors to
capecitabine/temozolomide in metastatic pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors. En-
docr Relat Cancer 2016;23(9):759–67.
24. Kulke MH, Shah MH, Benson AB, et al. NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in
Oncology, Neuroendocrine Tumours, Version 3.2017 - June 13, 2017. 2017. Avail-
able at: https://www.nccn.org/professionals/physician_gls/pdf/neuroendocrine.
pdf. Accessed September 6, 2017.
25. Pavel M, O’Toole D, Costa F, et al. ENETS consensus guidelines update for the
management of distant metastatic disease of intestinal, pancreatic, bronchial
neuroendocrine neoplasms (NEN) and NEN of unknown primary site. Neuroendo-
crinology 2016;103(2):172–85.
26. Kunz PL, Reidy-Lagunes D, Anthony LB, et al. Consensus guidelines for the man-
agement and treatment of neuroendocrine tumors. Pancreas 2013;42(4):557–77.
27. Singh S, Dey C, Kennecke H, et al. Consensus recommendations for the diag-
nosis and management of pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors: guidelines from
a Canadian National Expert Group. Ann Surg Oncol 2015;22(8):2685–99.
28. Mitry E, Baudin E, Ducreux M, et al. Treatment of poorly differentiated neuroendo-
crine tumours with etoposide and cisplatin. Br J Cancer 1999;81:1351–5.
29. Moertel CG, Kvols LK, O’Connell MJ, et al. Treatment of neuroendocrine carci-
nomas with combined etoposide and cisplatin. Evidence of major therapeutic ac-
tivity in the anaplastic variants of these neoplasms. Cancer 1991;68(2):227–32.
30. Sorbye H, Welin S, Langer SW, et al. Predictive and prognostic factors for treat-
ment and survival in 305 patients with advanced gastrointestinal neuroendocrine
carcinoma (WHO G3): the NORDIC NEC study. Ann Oncol 2013;24(1):152–60.
31. Rossi A, Di Maio M, Chiodini P, et al. Carboplatin- or cisplatin-based chemo-
therapy in first-line treatment of small-cell lung cancer: the COCIS meta-
analysis of individual patient data. J Clin Oncol 2012;30(14):1692–8.
32. Kim HK, Ha SY, Lee J, et al. The impact of pathologic differentiation (well/poorly)
and the degree of Ki-67 index in patients with metastatic WHO grade 3 GEP-
NECs. Oncotarget 2017. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.18168.
33. Hijioka S, Hosoda W, Matsuo K, et al. Rb Loss and KRAS mutation are predictors
of the response to platinum-based chemotherapy in pancreatic neuroendocrine
neoplasm with grade 3: a Japanese Multicenter Pancreatic NEN-G3 Study. Clin
Cancer Res 2017;23(16):4625–32.
34. Yamaguchi T, Machida N, Morizane C, et al. Multicenter retrospective analysis of
systemic chemotherapy for advanced neuroendocrine carcinoma of the digestive
system. Cancer Sci 2014;105(9):1176–81.
35. Nakano K, Takahashi S, Yuasa T, et al. Feasibility and efficacy of combined
cisplatin and irinotecan chemotherapy for poorly differentiated neuroendocrine
carcinomas. Jpn J Clin Oncol 2012;42(8):697–703.
36. Niho S, Kenmotsu H, Sekine I, et al. Combination chemotherapy with irinotecan
and cisplatin for large-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the lung: a multicenter
phase II study. J Thorac Oncol 2013;8(7):980–4.
Current Chemotherapy Use in NETs 613
37. Garcia-Carbonero R, Rinke A, Valle JW, et al. ENETS consensus guidelines for
the standards of care in neuroendocrine neoplasms: systemic therapy—chemo-
therapy. Neuroendocrinology 2017;105(3):281–94.
38. von Pawel J, Schiller JH, Shepherd FA, et al. Topotecan versus cyclophospha-
mide, doxorubicin, and vincristine for the treatment of recurrent small-cell lung
cancer. J Clin Oncol 1999;17(2):658–67.
39. Welin S, Sorbye H, Sebjornsen S, et al. Clinical effect of temozolomide-based
chemotherapy in poorly differentiated endocrine carcinoma after progression
on first-line chemotherapy. Cancer 2011;117(20):4617–22.
40. Bajetta E, Catena L, Biondani P, et al. Activity of a three-drug combination
including cisplatin (CLOVER regimen) for poorly differentiated neuroendocrine
carcinoma. Anticancer Res 2014;34(10):5657–60.
41. Zhu J, Strosberg JR, Dropkin E, et al. Treatment of high-grade metastatic pancre-
atic neuroendocrine carcinoma with FOLFIRINOX. J Gastrointest Cancer 2015;
46(2):166–9.
42. Du Z, Wang Y, Zhou Y, et al. First-line irinotecan combined with 5-fluorouracil and
leucovorin for high-grade metastatic gastrointestinal neuroendocrine carcinoma.
Tumori 2013;99(1):57–60.
43. Bajetta E, Catena L, Procopio G, et al. Are capecitabine and oxaliplatin (XELOX)
suitable treatments for progressing low-grade and high-grade neuroendocrine
tumours? Cancer Chemother Pharmacol 2007;59(5):637–42.
44. Walter T, Tougeron D, Baudin E, et al. Poorly differentiated gastro-entero-
pancreatic neuroendocrine carcinomas: are they really heterogeneous? Insights
from the FFCD-GTE national cohort. Eur J Cancer 2017;79:158–65.
45. Hentic O, Hammel P, Couvelard A, et al. FOLFIRI regimen: an effective second-
line chemotherapy after failure of etoposide-platinum combination in patients with
neuroendocrine carcinomas grade 3. Endocr Relat Cancer 2012;19(6):751–7.
46. Hadoux J, Malka D, Planchard D, et al. Post-first-line FOLFOX chemotherapy for
grade 3 neuroendocrine carcinoma. Endocr Relat Cancer 2015;22(3):289–98.
47. Strosberg JR, Coppola D, Klimstra DS, et al. The NANETS consensus guidelines
for the diagnosis and management of poorly differentiated (high-grade) extrapul-
monary neuroendocrine carcinomas. Pancreas 2010;39:799–800.
48. Iyoda A, Hiroshima K, Moriya Y, et al. Prospective study of adjuvant chemo-
therapy for pulmonary large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma. Ann Thorac Surg
2006;82(5):1802–7.
49. Kujtan LA, Muthukumar V, Toor M, et al. The role of adjuvant therapy in the man-
agement of resected large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC) of the lung: a
National Cancer Database (NCDB) analysis. J Clin Oncol 2017;35(15_suppl):
8529.
50. Crona J, Fanola I, Lindholm DP, et al. Effect of temozolomide in patients with met-
astatic bronchial carcinoids. Neuroendocrinology 2013;98(2):151–5.
51. Granberg D, Eriksson B, Wilander E, et al. Experience in treatment of metastatic
pulmonary carcinoid tumors. Ann Oncol 2001;12(10):1383–91.
52. Sun J-M, Ahn M-J, Ahn JS, et al. Chemotherapy for pulmonary large cell neuro-
endocrine carcinoma: similar to that for small cell lung cancer or non-small cell
lung cancer? Lung Cancer 2012;77(2):365–70.
53. Igawa S, Watanabe R, Ito I, et al. Comparison of chemotherapy for unresectable
pulmonary high-grade non-small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma and small-cell
lung cancer. Lung Cancer 2010;68(3):438–45.
614 Chan & Singh