Octreotide for Cancer of the Liver and Biliary Tree

Abstract
Inoperable liver tumors have an unfavorable natural course despite various therapeutic modalities. Octreotide, a somatostatin analog, has shown considerable antitumor activity on animal models of various hepatic tumors and on isolated cell culture lines. In this paper, a review of the experimental evidence is presented. Moreover clinical papers of case reports of uncontrolled studies of patients are also reviewed. The majority of clinical studies provide evidence of a clinical and biochemical response of liver endocrine tumors while regression of tumor size is a rare event. A randomized controlled trial of octreotide in the treatment of advanced hepatocellular carcinoma has shown a significant survival benefit in the treated patients. Literature reports indicate a stimulatory effect of octreotide on Kupffer cells as a possible antitumor mechanism, but other antiproliferative actions of octreotide have been suggested but not proved. Finally the question of the presence and affinity of somatostatin receptors on liver tumor tissue is discussed. In conclusion, according to our experience, octreotide administration is the best available treatment for advanced inoperable hepatocellular carcinoma and future better patient selection, based on receptor subtypes, might further improve the results.