Title
Real-world Study on Adjuvant Octreotide Therapy in pNETs
Real-world Effectiveness of Adjuvant Octreotide Therapy in High Recurrence Risk Patients With Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors
Phase
N/ALead Sponsor
Changhai HospitalStudy Type
InterventionalStatus
Completed No Results PostedIndication/Condition
Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumor G2Intervention/Treatment
Octreotide LARStudy Participants
411Adjuvant therapy in pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (pNETs) after radical resection lacks evidence-based data and is controversial. Real-world data were clustered to validate whether the long-acting octreotide is a potential candidate for adjuvant therapy in high recurrence risk G2 pNET patients.
Adjuvant therapy for pNETs was proposed as an unmet clinical need by the European Neuroendocrine Tumor Society Group in 2016.1The Clinical Practice Guidelines for pNETs in China recommended initiation of clinical trials to investigate the role of adjuvant therapy for patients with a high-risk of recurrence. To address this unmet clinical need, the investigators initiated this real-world study. The aim of the current study was to assess the impact of octreotide LAR as an adjuvant therapy in reducing recurrence and prolonging survival in Chinese non-metastatic pNETs patients at risk for recurrence.
Octreotide LAR (Sandostatin® LAR, Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation) treatment by deep intramuscular injection at a dose of 30 mg every 28 days for 6-12 months。
Patients in the octreotide group received octreotide LAR (Sandostatin® LAR, Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation) treatment by deep intramuscular injection at a dose of 30 mg every 28 days for 6-12 months, with the start of clinical intervention following surgery.
No adjuvant therapy after surgery.
Inclusion Criteria: pNETs lesions pathologically classified as WHO grade 2 Complete surgical resection (R0 or R1 was achieved) Adjuvant treatment was performed within 12 weeks after surgery Exclusion Criteria: Stage IV Other oncological history Previous antineoplastic systemic therapy Lack of information/details on recurrence or death.