4.6 Article

Orchestrating Treatment Modalities in Metastatic Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors-Need for a Conductor

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 14, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14061478

Keywords

neuroendocrine tumors; pancreatic; liver metastasis; surgery; liver transplantation; timing

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This review provides an updated view on treatment options for metastatic pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNETs) and emphasizes the importance of selecting the right timing for surgery in the context of multimodal treatment.
Simple Summary Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNET) are a heterogeneous and challenging entity, and today's guidelines offer a variety of treatment modalities, while surgery has a clear role for patients with resectable tumors and early stages, advanced, or metastatic pNET may benefit from treatments that were evaluated in randomized controlled studies during the last year. With this review, we aim to provide an updated view on treatment options for metastatic pNET. Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNETs) are a vast growing disease. Over 50% of these tumors are recognized at advanced stages with lymph node, liver, or distant metastasis. An ongoing controversy is the role of surgery in the metastatic setting as dedicated systemic treatments have emerged recently and shown benefits in randomized trials. Today, liver surgery is an option for advanced pNETs if the tumor has a favorable prognosis, reflected by a low to moderate proliferation index (G1 and G2). Surgery in this well-selected population may prolong progression-free and overall survival. Optimal selection of a treatment plan for an individual patient should be considered in a multidisciplinary tumor board. However, while current guidelines offer a variety of modalities, there is so far only a limited focus on the right timing. Available data is based on small case series or retrospective analyses. The focus of this review is to highlight the right time-point for surgery in the setting of the multimodal treatment of an advanced pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor.

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