pasireotide and Nesidioblastosis

pasireotide has been researched along with Nesidioblastosis* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for pasireotide and Nesidioblastosis

ArticleYear
A Case Report of Insulinoma Relapse on Background Nesidioblastosis: A Rare Cause of Adult Hypoglycemia.
    The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism, 2019, 03-01, Volume: 104, Issue:3

    Nesidioblastosis is a rare cause of adult hypoglycemia. Current medical therapy can mitigate disease symptoms. However, side effects and limited efficacy may prevent long-term disease management.. A 63-year-old white woman presented at our institution on April 2017 with a history of distal spleno-pancreatectomy for well-differentiated insulinoma in 2013. Hypoglycemic events did not resolve after surgery, and residual nesidioblastosis near the pancreatic resection margins was identified. Hypoglycemic episodes increased in frequency and severity despite high-dose diazoxide (DZX) therapy. On April 2016, octreotide was introduced but soon discontinued for inefficacy. When the patient arrived at our attention, add-on pasireotide was started and glucose levels monitored by subcutaneous sensor. Compared with DZX, 225 mg/d alone, sensor glucose during pasireotide + DZX 75 mg/d showed occurrence of severe hypoglycemia. Pasireotide was discontinued, and the instrumental workup (68Ga-DOTATOC CT/positron emission tomography, 99mTc-nanocolloid scintigraphy and echo-endoscopy + fine-needle aspiration biopsy) identified an insulinoma relapse. Subtotal pancreatectomy was performed without further recurrence of hypoglycemia over 9 months of follow-up.. Although insulinoma relapses on background nesidioblastosis rarely occur, they should be considered as an alternate diagnosis when medical therapy fails to prevent hypoglycemia. Further studies are warranted to test whether the immunophenotypic signature of nesidioblastosis/insulinoma may provide insights for a tailored use of pasireotide.

    Topics: Diazoxide; Female; Humans; Hypoglycemia; Insulinoma; Middle Aged; Neoplasm Recurrence, Local; Nesidioblastosis; Pancreas; Pancreatectomy; Pancreatic Neoplasms; Somatostatin; Splenectomy; Treatment Outcome

2019
Successful Medical Treatment of Adult Nesidioblastosis With Pasireotide over 3 Years: A Case Report.
    Medicine, 2016, Volume: 95, Issue:14

    Nesidioblastosis is a rare cause of endogenous hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia in adults. Diagnosis is often challenging and therapeutic options are scarce.In 2009, a 46-year-old female patient presented with recurrent severe hypoglycemia and immediate recovery after glucose ingestion. Although 72-h-fasting test was positive, various imaging technologies (sonography, computed tomography, somatostatin receptor scintigraphy, dopamine receptor positron emission tomography [DOPA-PET]) were negative. Endoscopic ultrasound revealed a lesion in the pancreatic corpus, whereas selective arterial calcium stimulation test, portal venous sampling and GLP-1-receptor scintigraphy were indicative of a lesion in the pancreatic tail, which was surgically removed. The histopathologic examination revealed beta cell hyperplasia and microadenomas expressing glucagon. After surgery, the patient was free of symptoms for 6 months, after which hypoglycemic episodes recurred. After unsuccessful treatment with corticosteroids and somatostatin analogs, treatment with pasireotide, a novel somatostatin analog with high affinity to somatostatin receptor 5 and a possible side effect of hyperglycemia, was initiated (0.6 mg BID). To date, our patient has been free of severe hypoglycemic episodes ever since. Yearly repeated imaging procedures have shown no abnormities over the last 3 years.We report for the first time that pasireotide was successfully used in the treatment of adult nesidioblastosis.

    Topics: Female; Humans; Middle Aged; Nesidioblastosis; Remission Induction; Somatostatin; Time Factors

2016