The pathophysiological consequences of somatostatin receptor internalization and resistance
January 2003
Article
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Somatostatin receptors expressed on tumor cells form the rationale for somatostatin analog treatment of patients with somatostatin receptor-positive neuroendocrine tumors. Nevertheless, although somatostatin analogs effectively control hormonal hypersecretion by GH-secreting pituitary adenomas, islet cell tumors, and carcinoid tumors, significant differences are observed among patients with respect to the efficacy of treatment. This may be related to a differential expression of somatostatin receptor subtypes among tumors. In addition, the property of somatostatin receptor subtypes to undergo agonist-induced internalization has important consequences for visualizing, as well as for therapy, of receptor-positive tumors using radioisotope- or chemotherapeutic-compound-coupled somatostatin analogs. This review covers the pathophysiological role of somatostatin receptor subtypes in determining the efficacy of treatment of patients with somatostatin receptor-positive tumors using somatostatin analogs, as well as the preclinical and clinical consequences of agonist-induced receptor internalization for somatostatin receptor-targeted radio- and chemotherapy. Herein, the development and potential role of novel somatostatin analogs is discussed.
- Animals
- Drug Resistance
- Humans
- Gene Expression
- Neoplasms/drug therapy/metabolism/radiotherapy
- Radiopharmaceuticals/therapeutic use
- Receptors, Somatostatin/analysis/genetics/*metabolism
- Somatostatin/pharmacology
- Tachyphylaxis
- tumor
- receptor
- somatostatin
- subtype
- patient
- sst subtypes
- treatment
- ss-analog
- octreotide
- internalization
- expression
- cancer
- sst-positive
- study
- effect
- therapy
- analog
- sst-positive tumors
- lambert
- tumor cells