A pilot study of long-acting octreotide for symptomatic malignant ascites

Riferimento: 
Oncology. 2012;82(6):315-20.
Autori: 
Jatoi A, Nieva JJ, Qin R, Loprinzi CL, Wos EJ, Novotny PJ, Moore DF Jr, Mowat RB, Bechar N, Pajon ER Jr, Hartmann LC.
Fonte: 
Oncology. 2012;82(6):315-20.
Anno: 
2012
Azione: 
Octreotide ad azione prolungata (Sandostatina LAR) non sembra efficace nel prolungare il tempo tra successive paracentesi nell'ascite maligna sintomatica.
Target: 
Sandostatina LAR/ascite maligna sintomatica.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:
Effective, non-invasive, palliative strategies for symptomatic malignant ascites are unavailable. This trial explored whether octreotide, an inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor, a putative mediator of ascites, prolongs the interval to next paracentesis.
METHODS:
After a baseline paracentesis and a test of short-acting agent, patients with symptomatic ascites were randomly assigned to long-acting octreotide (Sandostatin LAR®) depot 30 mg intramuscularly every month versus 0.9% sodium chloride administered similarly. Patients were then monitored for recurrent, symptomatic ascites.
RESULTS:
Thirty-three patients were enrolled: 16 assigned to the octreotide and 17 to the control arm. The median time to next paracentesis was 28 and 14 days in the octreotide and placebo arm, respectively (p = 0.17). After adjustment for extracted ascites volume and abdominal girth change, no statistically significant difference between the groups was observed (hazard ratio = 0.52, with a 95% confidence interval of 0.21-1.28; p = 0.15, per Cox model). Octreotide-treated patients described less of abdominal bloating (p = 0.01), abdominal discomfort (p = 0.02), and shortness of breath (p = 0.007) at one month, although other quality of life symptoms were comparable between the arms. Long-acting octreotide was reasonably well tolerated.
CONCLUSION:
As prescribed in this trial, octreotide did not seem effective in prolonging the time to next paracentesis, although improvements in symptoms suggest that vascular endothelial growth factor inhibition merits further investigation.