Resolution of Breast Cancer in a Patient With Thyroid Stimulating Hormone-Secreting Pituitary Neuroendocrine Tumor With the Combination of Chemotherapy and Lanreotide

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Published on Friday, 13 September 2024

Abstract

Thyroid stimulating hormone-secreting pituitary neuroendocrine tumor (TSH-PitNET) is a rare disease in which pituitary adenomas secrete excessive amounts of TSH, and TSH is not suppressed despite high blood levels of thyroid hormone.

Somatostatin analogs (SSAs) like lanreotide are used to control TSH secretion and manage symptoms in cases where surgery is not fully effective or feasible.

The treatment of choice for human epidermal growth factor 2 receptor (HER2)-positive metastatic breast cancer is generally chemotherapy and anti-HER2 therapy.

A 52-year-old woman was diagnosed with Graves' disease 26 years ago and stopped going to the hospital after several years of treatment with thiamazole. She had a right breast mass two years prior and visited the Department of Breast and Endocrine Surgery in our hospital one year prior, where she was diagnosed with T3N3M1, stage 4 breast cancer with a mass 52 mm in diameter in the right breast and metastasis in the 12th thoracic vertebra. Breast cancer receptor status was negative for the estrogen receptor, negative for the progesterone receptor, and positive for HER2. She was also found to have an enlarged thyroid gland, palpitations, inappropriate TSH secretion, and a 6 mm nodule on the pituitary gland, which was diagnosed as a TSH-PitNET.

She was treated for breast cancer with trastuzumab deruxtecan therapy and for TSH-PitNET with lanreotide. One month after starting lanreotide, pituitary, and thyroid function improved to normal, and four months later, the breast mass was significantly reduced to 16 mm in diameter and a mastectomy was performed. The size of the pituitary adenoma remained unchanged during observation. Remarkably, the mastectomy specimen was free of cancer cells and showed a pathologically complete response.

Needle biopsy specimens at the time of breast cancer diagnosis were positive for somatostatin receptor 2 (SSTR2) and insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF-1R) immunostaining. However, both were negative in the mastectomy specimen.

Recently, SSTR2 and IGF-1R were reported to be expressed in breast cancer, and several clinical trials of SSAs for breast cancer have been conducted. SSAs are effective in improving pituitary and thyroid functions against TSH-PiTNET, and in combination with chemotherapy, they may have synergistic antitumor effects in patients with SSTR2-positive breast cancer.

 



About this publication.


The Di Bella's Method: Use of Somatostatin analogues and/or derivatives and pseudo-Metronomic Chemotherapy (together with others chemical compounds) in Breast Cancer and Head/Neck cancer:

- The Synergism of Somatostatin, Melatonin, Vitamins Prolactin and Estrogen Inhibitors Increased Survival, Objective Response and Performance Status In 297 Cases of Breast Cancer;

- Complete objective response, stable for 5 years, with the Di Bella Method, of multiple-metastatic carcinoma of the breast;

- Evaluation of the safety and efficacy of the first-line treatment with somatostatin combined with melatonin, retinoids, vitamin D3, and low doses of cyclophosphamide in 20 cases of breast cancer: a preliminary report;

- The Di Bella Method (DBM) improved survival, objective response and performance status in a retrospective observational clinical study on 122 cases of breast cancer;

- Complete objective response to biological therapy of plurifocal breast carcinoma;

- The Di Bella Method DBM improved survival objective response and performance status in a retrospective observational clinical study on 23 tumours of the head and neck;

 

See also: 

- Official Web Site: The Di Bella Method;


 


- The Di Bella Method (A Fixed Part - Somatostatin, Octreotide, Sandostatin LAR, analogues and/or derivatives);

- Somatostatin in oncology, the overlooked evidences - In vitro, review and in vivo publications;

- Publication, 2018 Jul: Over-Expression of GH/GHR in Breast Cancer and Oncosuppressor Role of Somatostatin as a Physiological Inhibitor (from Di Bella's Foundation);

- Publication, 2018 Sep: The over-expression of GH/GHR in tumour tissues with respect to healthy ones confirms its oncogenic role and the consequent oncosuppressor role of its physiological inhibitor, somatostatin: a review of the literature (from Di Bella's Foundation);

- Publication, 2019 Aug: The Entrapment of Somatostatin in a Lipid Formulation: Retarded Release and Free Radical Reactivity (from Di Bella's Foundation);

- Publication, 2019 Sep: Effects of Somatostatin and Vitamin C on the Fatty Acid Profile of Breast Cancer Cell Membranes (from Di Bella's Foundation);

- Publication, 2019 Sep: Effects of somatostatin, curcumin, and quercetin on the fatty acid profile of breast cancer cell membranes (from Di Bella's Foundation);

- Publication, 2020 Sep: Two neuroendocrine G protein-coupled receptor molecules, somatostatin and melatonin: Physiology of signal transduction and therapeutic perspectives (from Di Bella's Foundation);

- The Di Bella Method (A Fixed Part - Cyclophosphamide 50mg tablets and/or Hydroxyurea 500mg tablets, one or two per day);

- The Di Bella Method (A Fixed Part - Calcium, 2 grams per day, orally);

- The Di Bella Method (A Fixed Part - Bromocriptine and/or Cabergoline);

- Prolactin inhibitors in oncology - In vitro, review and in vivo publications;


 


The Di Bella's Method: Use of Somatostatin analogues and/or derivatives and pseudo-Metronomic Chemotherapy - together with others chemical compounds - in several Oncological Pathologies:

- A retrospective observational study on cases of anaplastic brain tumors treated with the Di Bella Method: A rationale and effectiveness;

- Recurrent Glioblastoma Multiforme (grade IV – WHO 2007): a case of complete objective response achieved by means of the concomitant administration of Somatostatin and Octreotide – Retinoids – Vitamin E – Vitamin D3 – Vitamin C – Melatonin – D2 R agonists (Di Bella Method – DBM) associated with Temozolomide;

- Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia: Long-Lasting Remission with Combination of Cyclophosphamide, Somatostatin, Bromocriptine, Retinoids, Melatonin, and ACTH;

- Somatostatin, retinoids, melatonin, vitamin D, bromocriptine, and cyclophosphamide in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer patients with low performance status;

- Somatostatin, retinoids, melatonin, vitamin D, bromocriptine, and cyclophosphamide in chemotherapy-pretreated patients with advanced lung adenocarcinoma and low performance status;

- Observations on the Report of a case of pulmonary adenocarcinoma with lymph node, hepatic and osseus metastasis;

- Pleural Mesothelioma: clinical records on 11 patients treated with Di Bella's Method;

- Malignant pleural mesothelioma, stage T3-T4. Consideration of a case study;

- Excellent result in a Mesothelioma case treated exclusively with Di Bella Method for over 4 years and still treatment with positive results;

- A case of advanced Multiple Myeloma treated with Di Bella Method (DBM) into total remission for 13 years;

- Neuroblastoma: Complete objective response to biological treatment;

- Cyclophosphamide plus Somatostatin, Bromocriptin, Retinoids, Melatonin and ACTH in the Treatment of Low-grade Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphomas at Advanced Stage: Results of a Phase II Trial;

- Relapse of High-Grade Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma After Autologous Stem Cell Transplantation: A Case Successfully Treated With Cyclophosphamide Plus Somatostatin, Bromocriptine, Melatonin, Retinoids, and ACTH;

- Low-grade Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma at Advanced Stage: A Case Successfully Treated With Cyclophosphamide Plus Somatostatin, Bromocriptine, Retinoids, and Melatonin;

- The Di Bella Method (DBM) improved survival, objective response and performance status in a retrospective observational clinical study on 55 cases of Lymphomas;

- Large B-cells Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma, Stage IV-AE: a Case Report;

- Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma, Stage III-B-E: a Case Report;

- Oesophageal squamocellular carcinoma: a complete and objective response;

- Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma: clinical records on 17 patients treated with Di Bella's Method;

- The Di Bella Method Increases by the 30% the survival rate for Pancreas tumors and for this reason should be proposed as first line therapy for this type of cancer;

- The Di Bella Method (DBM) in the treatment of prostate cancer: a preliminary retrospective study of 16 patients and a review of the literature;

- A retrospective observational study on cases of Osteosarcomas treated with a multitherapy: The rationale and effectiveness;

- A Retrospective Observational Study on Cases of Sarcoma Treated with the Di Bella Method: Rationale and Effectiveness;

- Congenital fibrosarcoma in complete remission with Somatostatin, Retinoids, Vitamin D3, Vitamin E, Vitamin C, Melatonin, Calcium, Chondroitin sulfate associated with low doses of Cyclophosphamide in a 14-year Follow Up.