Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
5th Annual Mid-Winter Neuroendocrine Tumor Conference WELCOME Overview of neuroendocrine tumors and adrenocortical carcinoma Stephen Leong, MD, MMedSci Neuroendocrine Tumors and Adrenal Cancers Stephen Leong MD Associate Professor, SOM University of Colorado Cancer Center Sat Feb 4 2017 Learning Objectives • Know the difference of Neuroendocrine Tumor vs Neuroendocrine Cancer • What is the “Grade” of Neuroendocrine Tumor? • What is the “Stage” of NET? Tumor vs Cancer • Tumor and cancer are often used interchangeable but that is not correct. • Not all cancers are tumors. Not all tumors are cancer. • A tumor is the Latin word for ”swelling”. Therefore tumor is defined as a “swelling or abnormal mass of tissue – it may solid or fluid.” Tumor vs Cancer • A cancer is a term for a group of diseases in which abnormal cells divide without control and can invade nearby tissues. Cancer cells can also spread to other parts of the body through the blood and lymph system. What is the Neuroendocrine System? • The neuroendocrine system is made up of a network of cells that are distributed throughout the body. • The word neuroendocrine refers to 2 qualities of these cells: they have a similar structure to nerve cells (neurons) and produce hormones like endocrine cells. • The neuroendocrine system is formed by the – diffuse neuroendocrine system and the – endocrine system. Diffuse Neuroendocrine System • Neuroendocrine cells in the digestive system regulate intestinal movements and the release of digestive enzymes. • Neuroendocrine cells in the respiratory system are believed to play a role in the developmental stages of the respiratory organs. They also regulate respiratory function. • There are small neuroendocrine organs, known as paraganglia, along the spinal column. They include the adrenal medulla inside the adrenal gland and paraganglia outside the adrenal gland. They produce the hormones epinephrine and norepinephrine. These hormones control blood pressure and heart rate. • Neuroendocrine cells are also found in non-neuroendocrine glands and are scattered in the skin, thymus, prostate and other tissues. Neuroendocrine Tumors • Gastrointestinal and pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor and carcinomas (GEP) – Well differentiated NET/NEC, poorly differentiated • Lung neuroendocrine tumor and carcinomas – Carcinoid, atypical carcinoid, small cell and large cell • Merkel cell carcinoma • NET of endocrine system – Pituitary adenoma, thyroid medullary, thymus, parathyroid, pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma, adrenal tumors Classification of NET • In 2010, the World Health Organization (WHO) updated its classification of NET based on tumor site of origin, clinical syndrome, and differentiation. • The grade of a tumor refers to its biologic aggressiveness. – Low-grade tumors are characterized by low proliferative indices and are considered indolent in nature. – High-grade tumors tend to be poorly differentiated, have high proliferative indices, and are thus very aggressive. Klimstra et al, Pancreas Aug 2010 Differentiation • NET can also be classified based on differentiation, which refers to the extent to which cancerous, or neoplastic, cells resemble normal cells. • Well-differentiated NET are usually of low or intermediate grade; • Poorly differentiated NET are usually high grade. Neuroendocrine Tumor GRADE Low Well differentiated G1 Carcinoid Intermediate Well differentiated G2 Carcinoid Atypical Carcinoid High Well differentiated G3 Poorly Differentiated Small Cell Large Cell NET GRADING Staging • • • • Reflects of the extent of disease and is based on TMN criteria T – size of the tumor and the extent of local invasion N – Nodal involvement M – Evidence of metastases • Each organ has its own specific TMN classification TMN STAGING – SMALL BOWEL Why is this important? • The Grade, Differentiation and Stage contributes the prognosis of one’s carcinoid. • It also contributes to one’s management decision of one’s NET. • These are not the only factors we need to consider for the management of one’s cancer: symptoms, clinical history etc.. Gastrointestinal NET • Estimated to represent 55% of all NET • 8,000 people/yr in the United States are diagnosed with a neuroendocrine tumor that starts in the gastrointestinal tract: small intestine (45%), rectum (20%), appendix (16%), colon (11%) and gastric (7%) • Generally they are well-differentiated Pancreatic NET • • • • • 1,000 people/yr in the US have pancreatic NET Represent about 3% of all pancreatic cancers Vast majority are well-diffentiated 50-75% are non-functioning 25% functioning tumors: insulin; gastrin, glucagonoma, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) Presentations • Early stage GEP-NET do not usually have symptoms • Clinical symptoms may be general, or they may correlate with the location of the tumor and be organ related. • Symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome (eg, flushing and diarrhea) typically occur in patients with metastatic carcinoid tumors of the small bowel. • Rarely, the carcinoid syndrome is observed in non-metastatic tumors, which can release hormones directly into the systemic circulation (eg, lungs, ovaries). LUNG NET • Bronchial neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) account for approximately 1 to 2 percent of all lung malignancies in adults and roughly 20 to 30 percent of all NETs • Well differentiated: Carcinoid, atypical carcinoid • Poorly differentiated NET: Small Cell, Large Cell • Most patients with a bronchial NET have a centrally-located tumor and are symptomatic from the tumor mass with coughing, hemoptysis, wheezing, or a recurrent post-obstructive pneumonia. • Peripheral lesions present most often as an asymptomatic solitary pulmonary nodule ADRENAL GLAND Adrenal Cortex Tumors • Adrenal tumors are common • The majority (85%) of adrenocortical tumors are benign, nonfunctioning adenomas that are discovered incidentally on abdominal imaging studies • Benign, hormone-secreting adenomas (15%)- Cushing's syndrome, primary aldosteronism, or much less commonly, virilization. • Adrenocortical carcinomas (ACCs) are rare (200-300 pts), often aggressive tumors that may be functional and cause Cushing's syndrome and/or virilization, or nonfunctional and present as an abdominal mass or an incidental finding Adrenal Cancer Staging The European Network for The Study of Adrenal Tumors (ENSAT) with estimated five-year disease-specific survival rates: ●Stage I – Confined to the adrenal gland without local invasion or distant metastases; greatest tumor dimension ≤5 cm (T1N0M0): 82 percent ●Stage II – Same as stage I but with tumor size >5 cm without risk factors (T2N0M0): 61 percent ●Stage III – Tumor of any size with at least one of the following factors: tumor infiltration in surrounding tissues (T3), tumor invasion into tumor thrombus in the vena cava or renal vein (T4), positive lymph nodes (N1) but no distant metastases: 50 percent ●Stage IV – Distant metastases: 13 percent European Network for The Study of Adrenal Tumors Pheochromocytoma / Paraganglioma Pheochromocytoma • NET of the chromaffin cells • Location – 90% occurred in the adrenal medulla – 10% are outside of the adrenal gland. They are known as paraganglioma or extra-adrenal pheochromocytomas • 90% are benign; 10% are malignant • Symptoms include high blood pressure, headaches, excessive sweating, and/or heart palpitations. Paraganglioma • 97% are benign; 3% are malignant • Presentation: – Most are asymptomatic or present as a painless mass. – 1-3% of cases is secretion of hormones (catecholamines) A Dazzle of Zebras Nuclear Medicine imaging and therapeutics Erik Mittra, MD, PhD Theranostics: Ga68 imaging and Lu177 therapy for NET Erik Mittra, MD, PhD Clinical Associate Professor Radiology / Nuclear Medicine MIPS MIPS Molecular Imaging Program Molecular at Stanford Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department School ofofMedicine, Radiology Department of Radiology Outline 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. MIPS Theranostics Imaging of NETs Therapy of NETs (Lutathera, PRRT) NETTER-1 trial results Practical aspects Future directions Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Outline 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. MIPS Theranostics Imaging of NETs Therapy of NETs (Lutathera, PRRT) NETTER-1 trial results Practical aspects Future directions Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Thera(g)nostics: Therapy + Diagnosis MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford systems.hanyang.ac.kr Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Targeted Molecular Imaging and Therapy THERANOSTICS The Key-Lock Schematic Representation of a Drug for Principle Imaging and Targeted Therapy pharmacokinetic/biodistribution modifier Target Lock Target • Antigens (e.g. CD20, HER2) • GPCRs • Transporters Ligand Key Molecular Address • Antibodies, minibodies, Affibodies, SHALs, Aptamers • Regulatory peptides and analogs thereof • Amino Acids Chelator Linker 68Ga, 90Y, 177Lu Reporting Unit • • 64Cu, 68Ga • Gd3+ Cytotoxic Unit • • MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford 99mTc, 111In, 67Ga Courtesy Richard Baum, Helmut Mäcke (modified) 90Y, 177Lu, 213Bi 105Rh, 67Cu, 186,188Re Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Outline 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. MIPS Theranostics Imaging of NETs Therapy of NETs (Lutathera, PRRT) NETTER-1 trial results Practical aspects Future directions Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Imaging of NETs • • • • • • • CT MRI Ultrasound Endoscopy OctreoScan Ga68-PET/CT 18F-FDG PET/CT MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Imaging of NETs • • • • • • • CT MRI Ultrasound Endoscopy OctreoScan Ga68-PET/CT 18F-FDG PET/CT MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Imaging of NETs • • • • • • • CT MRI Ultrasound Endoscopy OctreoScan Ga68-PET/CT 18F-FDG PET/CT MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Imaging of NETs • • • • • • • CT MRI Ultrasound Endoscopy OctreoScan Ga68-PET/CT 18F-FDG PET/CT MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Imaging of NETs • • • • • • • CT MRI Ultrasound Endoscopy OctreoScan Ga68-PET/CT 18F-FDG PET/CT MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Somatostatin and NETs MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Types of Radiation Beta MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Alpha Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Gamma cameras (Anger) MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Inside a gamma camera MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology OctreoScan Imaging of NETs MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Somatostatin and NETs MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Positron Emission Tomography/CT MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology OctreoScan vs Ga68-DOTA-TATE PET MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford 111In Octreoscan® (4 hours) 111In Octreoscan® (24 hours) Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology OctreoScan vs Ga68-DOTA-TATE PET MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford 111In Octreoscan® (4 hours) 111In Octreoscan® (24 hours) 68Ga DOTATATE (1 hour) Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology OctreoScan vs Ga68-DOTA-TATE PET 111In MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Octreoscan® (24 hours) Images courtesy of Andrei Iagaru, MD Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology OctreoScan vs Ga68-DOTA-TATE PET 111In MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Octreoscan® (24 hours) 68Ga DOTATATE (1 hour) Images courtesy of Andrei Iagaru, MD Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Outline 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. MIPS Theranostics Imaging of NETs Therapy of NETs (Lutathera, PRRT) NETTER-1 trial results Practical aspects Future directions Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy (PRRT) • PRRT started with [111In]-DTPA0-octreotide (1990s) • Next: [90Y]-DOTA0-Tyr3-octreotide (mid 2000s) • Most recent: [177Lutetium]-DOTA0-Tyr3-octreotate (Lutathera®) (late 2000s) MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford ENJM (2012). 39 (S1): S103-S112 Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Physical Properties of Radionuclides Used for PRRT MIPS Isotope t1/2 (days) Energy (keV) Path length (mm) Gamma (keV) 177Lutetium 6.7 133 2 113 (6.6%) 208 (11%) 90Yttrium 2.7 935 12 - Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Lutathera® Mechanism of Action Intravenous injection MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Concentration Lutathera into sites of binds to NET somatostatin receptor type 2 (sstr2) overexpresse d by NETs Lutathera is Lutathera internalized in delivers the NET cell radiation within the cancer cell Radiation induces DNA strand breaks causing tumor cell death Stanford 59 of Medicine, Department of Radiology School Outline 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. MIPS Theranostics Imaging of NETs Therapy of NETs (Lutathera, PRRT) NETTER-1 trial results Practical aspects Future directions Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology NETTER-1 MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology NETTER-1 Sites MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology NETTER-1 US Sites MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology NETTER-1 Study Design MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology NETTER-1 Objectives MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology NETTER-1 Eligibility Criteria MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology NETTER-1 Progression Free Survival MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology NETTER-1 Results MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology NETTER-1 Overall Survival MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology NETTER-1 Adverse Events MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Global Health Status (EORTC QLQ-C30) † † * * In mean, during the study, global health status was : §improved in 28% of the patients in Lutathera arm (Lu) vs. 15% in the Octreotide LAR arm (Oct) §worsened in 18% of the patients in Lutathera arm (Lu) vs. 26% in the Octreotide LAR arm (Oct) * Statistically significant difference between the arms † ≥ 10% change from baseline 71 Diarrhea (EORTC QLQ-C30) * In mean, during the study, diarrhea: § § improved in 39% of the patients in Lutathera arm (Lu) vs. 23% in the Octreotide LAR arm (Oct) worsened in 19% of the patients in Lutathera arm (Lu) vs. 23% in the Octreotide LAR arm (Oct) * Statistically significant difference between the arms. 72 Pain In mean, during the study, pain: § § improved in 41% of the patients in Lutathera arm (Lu) vs. 28% in the Octreotide LAR arm (Oct) worsened in 17% of the patients in Lutathera arm (Lu) vs. 25% in the Octreotide LAR arm (Oct) 73 Flushing/sweats In mean, during the study, flushing/sweats: § § improved in 42% of the patients in Lutathera arm (Lu) vs. 38% in the Octreotide LAR arm (Oct) worsened in 22% of the patients in Lutathera arm (Lu) vs. 19% in the Octreotide LAR arm (Oct) * Statistically significant difference between the arms. 74 NETTER-1 Summary and Conclusions • Final analysis : In this first prospective randomized study in patients with progressive metastatic midgut NETs, 177Lu-Dotatate was superior to Octreotide 60 mg in terms of: − PFS (Not Reached vs 8.4 months, p<0.0001) − ORR (18% vs 3%, p=0.0008) • • • • Interim analysis suggests increased OS (14 vs 26 deaths), to be confirmed by final analysis 177Lu-Dotatate demonstrates a favorable safety profile, with no clinically relevant findings especially regarding hematological and renal and parameters Consistent benefits seen across prognostic subgroups Preliminary QOL analysis suggests evidence of benefit in key domains that are pertinent to midgut NETs, including global health and diarrhea. No clear evidence of benefit in flushing/sweats vs. high-dose octreotide. 19 Outline 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. MIPS Theranostics Imaging of NETs Therapy of NETs (Lutathera, PRRT) NETTER-1 trial results Practical aspects Future directions Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Practical Considerations MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Photos by Paulo Castaneda Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Practical Considerations MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Photos by Paulo Castaneda Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Practical Considerations MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Photos by Paulo Castaneda Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Practical Considerations MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Photos by Paulo Castaneda Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology PRRT Administration • • • • • Requires team effort between NM and oncology, and nursing Location? Lutathera infused i.v. over 30 minutes Amino acids infused i.v. over 4-6 hours Anti-nausea medication and titration of AAs are very important MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Radiation/Release Considerations • Limited emitted exposure – 2 mR/hr @ 1m at end of first day – 1 mR/hr @ 1m the next morning • Excreted exposure may be more significant • Routine precautions if patient goes home though not as strict as I-131 • And if patient cannot go home? Admission or hotel? MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Patient selection issues • Pathology – Grade, Ki-67, functional/non-functional • Receptor density – OctreoScan or Ga68-DOTATATE PET • Kidney function – Serum creatinine, creatine clearance, MAG3 • Other – Hemoglobin, platelets, bilirubin, albumin MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Outline 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. MIPS Theranostics Imaging of NETs Therapy of NETs (Lutathera, PRRT) NETTER-1 trial results Practical aspects Future directions Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Future Directions of PRRT • • • • DUO-PRRT, TANDEM-PRRT Repeat-PRRT Intra-arterial PRRT Combined PRRT: – – – – TACE, SIRT, RFA Chemotherapy (e.g. Capecitabine, Doxorubicin, Evorolimus) Kinase inhibitors (e.g. Sunitinib, Sorafenib) Antibodies (e.g. Bevacizumab) • Improved peptides (e.g. antagonists) • Improved dosimetry and radioprotection MIPS Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Acknowledgements MIPS • • • • • • • • Patients (you!) Pam Kunz, MD Other Stanford MDs Other NETTER-1 sites Technologists Research coordinators Nurses AAA Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department of Radiology -- Thank you – Questions? MIPS MIPS Molecular Imaging Program Molecular at Stanford Imaging Program at Stanford Stanford Stanford School of Medicine, Department School ofofMedicine, Radiology Department of Radiology Hereditary cancer syndromes associated with NETs and ACC and what to expect at a Medical Genetics visit Lisen Axell, MS Cathy Klein, MD Hereditary Cancer Syndromes Associated with Neuroendocrine Tumors What Happens at a Medical Genetics Visit Lisen Axell, Genetic Counselor Catherine Klein, MD Overview • Genetics of Cancer • Inherited Cancer syndromes with neuroendocrine tumors • MEN • Hereditary pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma • Li-Fraumeni • Von Hippel-Lindau • Others • The Hereditary Cancer Clinic, Cancer Risk Assessments and Genetic Testing • Inheritance and implications for family members DAD MOM Common Diseases • Cancer • Heart disease • Diabetes • Hypertension • Stroke • Alzheimer's • Arthritis • Osteoporosis Common Risk Factors for Disease • Age • Family history • Ethnicity • Lifestyle • Diet • Alcohol • Smoking What is Cancer? All cancer is genetic, BUT most cancer is NOT inherited Cancer Risk Based on Family History Sporadic 70% Familial 25% Hereditary 5% Inherited Cancer Dx 55 Dx 35 43 Dx 45 Dx 65 • Cancer in young individuals (less than age 50) • Many generations affected with the same type or related cancer on the same side of the family • Two primary cancers or two related cancers in same individual Is the Cancer in My Family Hereditary? • Cancers diagnosed younger than average • Multiple family members with similar or related cancers, e.g. Parathyroid and Pheochromocytoma • Rare cancers, e.g. paraganglioma • People diagnosed with cancer more than once • Multiple generations affected by related cancers What are some of the hereditary syndromes we look for? Neuroendocrine tumors with hereditary syndromes Joakim Crona, and Britt Skogseid Eur J Endocrinol 2016;174:R275-R290 Petr Sem Oncol 2016; 43:582-90 Pheochromocytoma/Paraganglioma • Paraganglioma: NET that arise outside the adrenal from paraganglia (cells that can secrete catecholamines) • Sympathetic PG usually secrete CA and arise in the thorax, abd, pelvis • Parasympathetic PG usually don’t secrete CA and arise in the neck and base of skull • Pheochromocytomas: paraganglioma arising in the adrenal gland • Both can secrete CA and cause HT, HA, sweating and fast heart rate Pheochromocytoma/Paraganglioma Underlying germline mutation common • Apparently sporadic: 11% may have germline mutation • • • • No family history of PPGL No syndromic features No bilateral disease No metastatic disease • More common (50%) with • bilateral or multifocal disease • diagnosis before the age of 45 • extra adrenal location (paraganglioma) Pheochromocytoma/Paraganglioma Most are sporadic 1/3 are associated with an inherited syndrome Guidelines recommend genetic testing be considered for all cases Pheochromocytoma/Paraganglioma Genetics SDHB 10% SDHD 8% SDHA 1% VHL 7% no mutation 61% RET 6% NF1 3% MAX 1% TMEN127d 1% Paraganglioma syndromes Gene Pheochro mocytoma Paragangliom a (thoracoabdominal Paragangliom a (head and neck) Multi- Malignant focal Renal other Cell Carcino ma SDHD Paternally inherited 10-25% 20-25% 85% 5560% ~4% SDHAF2 Paternally inherited 0 0 100% 0 0 0 SDHC 0 Rare ? 0 Rare GIST SDHB 20-25% 50% 20-30% 1520% 2025% ~30% ~14% SDHA Rare Rare Rare Rare Rare 0 GIST Pituitary adenom a ~8% GIST Pituitary adenom a GIST Pituitary adenom a Screening Pheo’s or paragangliomas SDHB Age to begin screening (years) 5-10 24-hour urinary fractionated metanephrines and catecholamines Annually Physical exam and blood pressure MRI-CT of abdomen, thorax, and pelvis MRI-CT of skull base and neck Periodic MIBG scintigraphy Screening for renal cell carcinoma SDHC SDHD VHL Every 6-12 months Annually Annually Annually after age 11 Annually 5-10 5-10 Every 6-12 months Every 6-12 months Annually Annually Every 6–24 Month Every 1–4 years Every 1– 4 years Every 2-4 years Every 6-36 months Every 2-4 years Every 1-4 years Consider 5 Every 6-36 months Every 1-4 years Abdominal u/s or MRI annually after 16 MEN2 8-20 Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia 2 MEN2 • Autosomal dominant condition, very high penetrance. 1:30,000 • Subdivided into • MEN2A: Medullary thyroid cancer (MTC), pheo and 1o hyperpara • • • • MEN2A (peak MTC age in 30’s) MEN2A with cutaneous lichen amyloidosis (CLA) MEN2A with Hirschsprung disease (HD) FMTC variant • MEN2B: MTC, pheo, • Peak incidence of MTC 20s • Virtually all will get medullary thyroid cancer, as early as 9 months of age • 1 hyperpara: multiglandular, usually mild • Pheos occur in about 50%, generally are found later than MTC • Many are bilateral • Uncommonly malignant RET Mutations in MEN2 • • • • • • Genetic mistake causing MEN2 is the RET oncogene Specific mutation can impact prognosis Age of onset of MTC Risk for pheo Risk for primary hyperparathyroidism Risk of Hirschsprung disease (colon disease) Managing MEN2 patients: • Remove thyroid before cancer is diagnosed • In highest risk group: surgery by age 1 • Less high: monitoring starts at age 5, surgery by age 11 • Monitor with US of the neck, physical exam and serum calcitonin • Screening for pheo • Age 11 in high-risk, others by about age 16 • Plasma and urine testing • Screening for hyperparathyroidism • Usually mild • Average age at diagnosis: 33 • Begin screening at age 11 for high risk patients Von Hippel-Lindau • Rare, autosomal dominant condition. 1:36,000 • Can show up in children, adolescents, adults • Average age: 26 • Diagnosis is established by finding a genetic mutation in VHL • • • • Testing should be considered for anyone with 2 of the tumors listed Anyone with Pheo/para, CNS hemangioblastoma, ELST Anyone with CCRC younger than age 40 >1 pancreatic serous cystadenoma or neuroendocrine tumor • We are learning more about what effect different mutations have on the clinical picture • Surveillance protocols begin at age 1 • www.VHL.org is a good source Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome (VHL) • Retinal and CNS hemangioblastomas, • Pheochromocytomas • Paragangliomas • Renal clear cell carcinomas • Renal cysts • Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors • Pancreatic cysts • Endolymphatic sac tumors Pheochromocytoma/Paraganglioma Neurofibromatosis type 1 • Neurofibromas • Multiple café au lait spots, • Axillary and inguinal freckling, • Lisch nodules, • Bony abnormalities, • CNS gliomas, • Macrocephaly • Cognitive defects Pheochromocytoma/Paraganglioma MEN2 MEN1 • Rare autosomal dominant condition. 2/100,000 • Condition is defined as 2 or more of the primary MEN1 tumors • Only one tumor necessary if the syndrome is known to be in the family • MEN1 gene mutations are found in about 75% of families • Other tumors appear more commonly • • • • Duodenal gastrinomas Bronchial carcinoids ACC Lipomas Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia type 1: MEN1 • The three P’s • Parathyroid glands(95%) • the anterior pituitary (20-40%) • the endocrine calls of the pancreas and duodenum(40-80%) • Neuroendocrine tumors of the foregut are also common (brochial, thymic and gastric tumors) • Rare cases of adrenocortical carcinomas • 90% penetrance by age 40 • Due to mutations in the MEN1 gene Thymic/Brochial carcinoid • Part of MEN1 syndrome with a penetrance of less than 10% Adrenocortical cancer (ACC) • RARE: 4-12:1,000,000 • Can be a functioning or nonfunctioning tumor. • May produce more than 1 hormone. Adrenocortical tumors (ACC) Genetics Childhood ACC • LiFraumeni syndrome • Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome Adult ACC • 4-6% due to LiFraumeni syndrome • 3.2% Lynch syndrome • 1-2% MEN1 • Possible in Familial Adenomatous Polyposis • In patients with MEN1 1.4% developed ACC No mutation LiFraumeni Lynch MEN1 ACC: Li-Fraumeni Syndrome ACC: Li-Fraumeni • Rare autosomal dominant condition • Germline mutations in TP53 • Many cancer types, many in children • In kids, the most common are osteosarcoma and ACC • In adults: breast cancer, sarcomas, ACC brain tumors • Important issues: • When to do genetic testing in kids • Cancer surveillance: • • • • Whole body MRI increasingly recommended Early breast cancer screening (about age 20-25) with MRI Colonoscopy starting at about age 25 Careful attention to general health Small intestinal NET • No known underlying germline gene mutations Neuroendocrine tumors with hereditary syndromes Joakim Crona, and Britt Skogseid Eur J Endocrinol 2016;174:R275-R290 If I Have a Personal and/or Family History of Cancer, How May a Medical Genetics Appointment Play a Role? Who Do We See? •Individuals with cancer •Making surgical and/or treatment decisions •Concerns for additional cancers •Individuals with previous diagnosis of cancer •Individuals with no cancer, but + family hx •Assessing risk for cancer(s) •Making screening/surgical decisions What do we discuss? •Likelihood: •developing cancer based on family history •inherited cancer syndrome •detectable mutation •Medical management recommendations •Recommendations for at risk family members •Discussion of genetic testing and if patient wants to pursue testing The Complexities of Genetic Testing GENPET Pheos/ Paraganglio ma Thyroid ACC Parathyroid • Each cancer site is associated with numerous hereditary cancer syndromes • Testing options may include single gene, cancer-specific panel, or large, multi-cancer panel Genetic Testing vs. Genomic Tumor Profiling Genetic testing Done on blood or saliva Inherited from parent Cancer Predisposition – may inform risk for cancer and risk to other family members May impact cancer screening recommendations Occasionally used in cancer treatment decisions Genomic tumor profiling Done on tumor block Not inherited Malignant transformation of initially normal cells May be used in cancer treatment decisions Genetic Testing - Why Know?????? Cancer Risk Based on Family History Sporadic 70% Familial 25% Hereditary 5% Classification: Who Needs What? Family History Sporadic Risk: Average General population screening recommendations Familial Risk: Moderate Personalized screening recommendations Inherited Risk: High Genetic evaluation/testing Personalized screening and risk reduction recommendations Benefits of Genetic Testing – What if Testing is Positive? • Helps identify cause of cancer • Determines other cancer risks • MOST cancer syndromes associated with multiple cancer risks • changes screening recommendations • Identify family members at risk Implications for family members Autosomal Dominant Most Hereditary Cancer syndromes are NOT associated with 100% Cancer Risk Family History Lifestyle Cancer Risk Environment Genes What if Genetic Testing is Negative or is NOT Done? • If a mutation has NOT yet been identified and testing is negative = Uninformative Or…. • If testing is not done =screening recommendations are based off of the family history • If there is a known mutation in the family and testing is negative = True Negative Myths about Inherited Cancer • “Even if I have the mutation, I can’t do anything about it.” •Early detection and risk reduction can change outcome. • “Cancer runs in my family, so I •Only a 50% risk to inherit a know I have the mutation.” family mutation. • “I‘ve already had cancer, so shy •There may be risk for other is knowing whether or not I cancers. have the genetic mutation important Exception: SDHD mutations • Maternally imprinted • Children on women may be carriers of the SDHD mutation but will not develop tumors • Only children who inherit the SDHD mutation from their father are at risk to develop tumors Insurance • No clinical criteria for genetic testing • No insurance criteria for genetic testing for neuroendocrine tumors. Clinical recommendation • Laboratories do insurance preverification prior to testing • Will notify of total out of pocket expense • For individuals for whom insurance doesn’t cover genetic testing, Invitae offers $475 out-of pocket option Invitae • Genetic testing for up to 14 genes associated with hereditary paragangliomapheochromocytoma syndrome (PGL/PCC). GENES TESTED: • Primary Panel: MAX, NF1, RET, SDHA, SDHAF2, SDHB, SDHC, SDHA, SDHD, TMEM127, VHL, • Add-on preliminary-evidence genes: EGLN1, FH, KIF1B, MEN1 Ambry • PGLFirst, a comprehensive non-syndromic hereditary PGL/PCC panel. • Genes on this panel include MAX, SDHA, SDHAF2, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD, TMEM127. • PGLNext is a comprehensive syndromic and non-syndromic hereditary PGL/PCC panel of 12 genes. • Genes on this panel include FH, MAX, MEN1, NF1, RET, SDHA, SDHAF2, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD, TMEM127, VHL. GINA – Prohibits: Genetic Information Non-Discrimination Act (2008) • Use of genetic information in setting eligibility or premiums • Health insurers from requesting a genetic test • Use of genetic information in employment decisions • Employers from requesting genetic information We can’t change our genes…. But ...... we can potentially change the outcome!!! For more information about the Risk Assessment Program at University of Colorado Cancer Center or to set up an appointment, call 720-848-1030. Hormones and endocrine tumors Lauren Fishbein, MD, PhD, MTR Hormones and Neuroendocrine Tumors Lauren Fishbein MD, PhD, MTR Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Colorado Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Diabetes Division of Biomedical Informatics and Personalized Medicine Neuroendocrine Tumor and ACC patient conference February 4, 2017 Overview • What are endocrine glands? • What is a hormone? • Hormones in neuroendocrine tumors and adrenocortical carcinoma Endocrine Glands Master Gland • Organs in our body that make hormones Metabolism Energy BP/HR Immune Gland Gut/GI tract Energy BP Metabolism Skin Food breakdown and metabolism Signals for energy usage and stores Lung Female hormones https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/5e/eb/a4/5eeba4d996ec972d35980896fe5bb654.jpg Male hormones What is a hormone? • Any thoughts? What is a hormone? • Hormones are chemical messengers in the body • Send messages about a particular function from one cell to another Pancreas Hormone Liver Receptor Can you name some hormones? Common examples • Thyroid hormone • Estrogen • Progesterone • Testosterone • FSH Hormones made by NETs and ACC PNETS Pheo/Para Insulin Glucagon Somatostatin Gastrin Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) GI-NETs Serotonin Gastrin Glucagon Adrenaline (metanephrines/catecholamines) Lung NETs Serotonin ACTH ACC Cortisol Aldosterone Androgen (Testosterone) Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors (PNETs) • 25-50% of PNETs are “functional” • Overtime hormone profiles can change Pancreas http://biocrine.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/DAD2.png http://quasargroupconsulting.com/anatomy/pancreaseCells.gif Pancreas Hormones – Pancreas messengers Releases enzymes to help breakdown food http://quasargroupconsulting.com/anatomy/pancreaseCells.gif Insulin Blood sugar Blood sugar Pancreas Insulin Blood sugar Blood sugar Blood sugar Blood sugar Liver Receptor Muscle • Insulinoma– low blood sugar, confusion, vision changes, unusual behavior, rapid heart beat, sweating, shakiness, amnesia, eating every few hours, waking up at night to eat to avoid symptoms. Glucagon Blood sugar Liver Pancreas Glucagon Receptor Blood sugar • Glucagonoma – blood sugar too high causing diabetes, weight loss, blood clots and a specific rash called necrolytic migratory erythema. Blood Blood sugar sugar Somatostatin Pancreas Pancreas Somatostatin insulin glucagon Receptor Nerve Decrease acid Slow motility • Somatostatinoma – results in dysregulation of many endocrine hormones. Lowers insulin leading to diabetes. Slows GI motility which can lead to gallstones, intolerance to fat in the diet and leads to fatty diarrhea. Secrete pituitary hormones Pituitary picture from https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/236x/3d/45/12/3d4512b044af3b0e5877a78499114d4e.jpg Vasoactive Intestinal Polypeptide (VIP) Pancreas Energy Liver VIP glycogen Receptor bicarb • VIPoma – causes huge amounts of very watery diarrhea leading to dehydration, low potassium and chloride Pancreas Stomach and Small Intestine Gastrin Pancreas Stomach Acid Small intestine • Gastrinoma – Zollinger Ellison Syndrome – causes peptic ulcer disease and diarrhea Hormones made by NETs and ACC PNETS Pheo/Para Insulin Glucagon Somatostatin Gastrin Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) GI-NETs Serotonin Gastrin Glucagon Adrenaline (metanephrines/catecholamines) Lung NETs Serotonin ACTH ACC Cortisol Aldosterone Androgen (Testosterone) GI-NETS • About 10% of patients with carcinoid (bowel NETs) will have carcinoid syndrome • Neuroendocrine cells make serotonin that cannot be broken down properly Serotonin • Neurotransmitter (message signal from a nerve) plays a role in mood regulation, pain perception, GI function. serotonin Nerve ending Too much serotonin https://pearlpoint.org/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/carcinoid_syndrome.png?itok=fIdBQO4s Somatostatin Pancreas Somatostatin Receptor Slow motility Somatostatin analogs help control carcinoid syndrome Decreases diarrhea and flushing Pituitary picture from https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/236x/3d/45/12/3d4512b044af3b0e5877a78499114d4e.jpg Hormones made by NETs and ACC PNETS Pheo/Para Insulin Glucagon Somatostatin Gastrin Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) GI-NETs Serotonin Gastrin Glucagon Adrenaline (metanephrines/catecholamines) Lung NETs Serotonin ACTH ACC Cortisol Aldosterone Androgen (Testosterone) Adrenal gland http://cf.ydcdn.net/1.0.1.66/images/main/A5adrenalgland.jpg Pheochromocytoma and Paraganglioma • The majority are “functional” • Exception being the head and neck paragangliomas which rarely make hormones Adrenaline (metanephrines catecholamines) Flight or flight response • Pheochromocytoma – leads to high blood pressure, rapid heart rate, sweating, headache, anxiety, tremors, increased blood sugar Adrenaline (metanephrines catecholamines) Nerve signaling • Paraganglioma – leads to high blood pressure, rapid heart rate, sweating, headache, anxiety, tremors, increased blood sugar https://classconnection.s3.amazonaws.com/839/flashcards/464839/png/screen_shot_2012-01-18_at_2.18.07_pm1326932318702.png Adrenal gland http://cf.ydcdn.net/1.0.1.66/images/main/A5adrenalgland.jpg Aldosterone Cortisol Androgens (Testosterone) androgen cortisol aldosterone Salt/water balance Control BP Steroid hormone Controls immune system, BP, metabolism, bone health, … Male physical characteristics A malignant neuroendocrine tumor in the adrenal cortex is called adrenocortical carcinoma Adrenocortical carcinoma The majority of ACCs are “functional” Aldosterone Salt/water balance Control BP Cortisol Steroid in body Controls immune system, BP, metabolism, bone health, … Androgens Male physical characteristics • Aldosterone over producing – can lead to high BP and low potassium • Cortisol over producing – can lead to high BP, weight gain in a certain pattern, low potassium, easy bruising • Androgen over producing – can lead to male pattern hair growth in women Hormones made by NETs and ACC PNETS Pheo/Para Insulin Glucagon Somatostatin Gastrin Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) GI-NETs Serotonin Gastrin Glucagon Adrenaline (metanephrines/catecholamines) Lung NETs Serotonin ACTH ACC Cortisol Aldosterone Androgen (Testosterone) Lung neuroendocrine tumors (bronchial carcinoids) Rarely functional but can be Lung serotonin ACTH = neuroendocrine cells in the lung Carcinoid syndrome cortisol Hormones made by NETs and ACC PNETS Pheo/Para Insulin Glucagon Somatostatin Gastrin Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) GI-NETs Serotonin Gastrin Glucagon Adrenaline (metanephrines/catecholamines) Lung NETs Serotonin ACTH ACC Cortisol Aldosterone Androgen (Testosterone) Medullary thyroid carcinoma Merkel cell carcinoma (skin) Thymoma Ovarian NET Neuroendocrine Tumors and Hormones Gut/GI tract Skin Lung https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/5e/eb/a4/5eeba4d996ec972d35980896fe5bb654.jpg University of Colorado precision medicine initiative Biobank initiative Kathleen Barnes, PhD Personalized Medicine: It’s about the patient…not the disease Kathleen Barnes, PhD Director Colorado Center for Personalized Medicine February 4, 2017 What is Personalized Medicine? Personalized medicine is a young but rapidly advancing field of healthcare that is informed by each person's unique clinical, genetic, genomic, and environmental information One size doesn’t fit all Percentage of the patient population for which a particular drug in a class is effective, on average Nature 30 April 2015 “The right dose of the right drug for the right patient at the right time” Personalized medicine is integrating patient health record data with “omics” data (i.e., genetic information) to make predictions about how a patient will respond to therapy, and to make decisions about the most effective treatment Responds to normal dose Responds to lower dose Responds to higher dose Responds to alternative medication How does it work? How do we make Personalized Medicine work in the clinical setting? CYP2D6 Tamoxifen and Antidepressants poor metabolizer CYP2C19 Plavix poor metabolizer CYP2C19 Plavix Rapid metabolizer CYP2C9 Coumadin slow metabolizer SLCO1B1 Statin myopathy CYP2C9 Coumadin ultra slow metabolizer VKORC1 Coumadin dose IL28 Hepatitis C therapy The Vanderbilt way: a 250-gene variant chip, $42/panel (16 cents/variant) Personalized medicine’s greatest strides have been in cancer Center for Cancer Research What are the advantages? • Detection, Prediction & Prevention: development of biomarkers to clarify specific patient populations has benefits beyond guiding/ tailoring treatments to match patient populations, including: • Earlier, more sensitive, specific diagnosis promotes curative vs. disease modifying intervention • Accurate monitoring of the disease state • Efficiency: Tailoring treatment to patients improves the efficacy/ side effect proposition inherent in any therapeutic intervention (i.e., HER2 & breast Ca treatment) • Reducing healthcare costs • Improving the efficiency of clinical development (i.e., by enabling specific patient population selection, a smaller sample can be powered to show requisite benefit reducing trial costs and time) What have we built so far? If you sequenced the genes of the 1.65 million Americans who are going to be diagnosed with cancer this year just once, and then you add clinical and imaging data from their electronic health records, you'd have 4 exabytes of data. That is the equivalent of all of the data that's in the Library of Congress. Five exabytes represents the digitization of all human words every spoken. Eric Dishman, PMI Director What to do with all of these data???!!! A river of data You are here • State-of-the art instrumentation/robotics • Scalable to accommodate 500,000 samples/yr * *Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium Courtesy of A Monte Population Ancestry Information Resource (PAIR) • Create a CCPM ‘deliverable’ of non-clinical data to all biobank participants leveraging ancestry data from the MEGA chip “An individual patient’s ailments represent a particular point in time at the convergence of ancestries, environment, and exposures, like the tips of growing and changing trees whose branches intermingle through time but stay mostly out of sight” Antolin et al. 1 Evolution 66-6: 1991–2006 Research at University of Colorado in neuroendocrine tumors and adrenocortical carcinoma Katja Kiseljak-Vassiliades, DO Research at University of Colorado in neuroendocrine tumors and adrenocortical carcinoma Katja Kiseljak-Vassiliades, D.O. Assistant Professor Division of Endocrinology The Key Points of Medical Science To prevent To diagnose To treat Disease Benign vs Malignant Tumor Characteristics Benign Malignant Morphology and Differentiation Structure similar to tissue Structure often atypical origin different than tissue of origin Local invasion No Invasion Cohesive growth Capsule often present Rate and pattern of growth Metastasis Damage to human body Prognosis Slow, progressive expansion Slow to rapid growth; erratic growth rate No metastasis Frequent metastasis (definitive criteria for malignancy) Relatively smaller Good Local Invasion Infiltrative growth Usually no capsule Relatively bigger Bad Goals and Tasks of Diagnostic Medicine • Determine: Nature and name of disease (neoplasm) • Determine: grading and staging • Report: molecular changes and biomarkers Benign vs Malignant Tumor Characteristics Benign Malignant Morphology and Differentiation Structure similar to tissue Structure often atypical origin different than tissue of origin Local invasion No Invasion Cohesive growth Capsule often present Rate and pattern of growth Metastasis Damage to human body Prognosis Slow, progressive expansion Slow to rapid growth; erratic growth rate No metastasis Frequent metastasis (definitive criteria for malignancy) Relatively smaller Good Local Invasion Infiltrative growth Usually no capsule Relatively bigger Bad Terms for Neoplasm • Neoplasm — the new growth • Tumor — the term was originally applied to the swelling caused by inflammation, but by long precedent, the term is now equated to neoplasm • Cancer — the common term for all malignant tumors • Dysplasia — recognizable morphologic changes in cells that indicate the presence of genetic mutations beginning the development of a neoplasm Where does the cancer start? New tumor growth starts with a MUTATION …..but what is really a mutation? DNA • • • • • DNA looks like a twisted ladder. The rungs of the ladder are made from four types of “blocks” called bases which pair up. The bases are abbreviated as the letters A, T, C and G It takes about 3 billion pairs of As, Ts, Cs and Gs to write the human genome. The sequence of the blocks matter because it makes up the instructions for how the body functions Understanding DNA • Try reading this: odaytayisebruaryfayourthfay • It’s difficult unless you know the code: Today is february fourth Same is true for DNA Slide courtesy of Lauren Fishbein Understanding DNA • If you know the “genetic code,” you can decipher DNA sequence. • We break up the sequence into three letter “words.” ATTCAGGGTCTAATGATCGTG ATT CAG GGT CTA ATG ATC GTG • The three letter words go together to make “sentences”, or genes • Each gene tells the cell how to make a specific protein • Genes make a message called RNA which is then translated into a protein • Proteins are the building blocks of the human body • Tens of thousands of proteins are needed to build a human Slide courtesy of Lauren Fishbein http://www.genome.gov/Pages/Education/AllAbouttheHumanGenomeProject/GuidetoYourGenome07.pdf Understanding Variation in DNA • All of us have slight variations in our DNA sequence which have little or no impact on our health. Variant • Think of it as the American vs British way of spelling a word: Theater vs Theatre or Labor vs Labour They mean the same thing despite slight variation • But sometimes a variation in our DNA can change the meaning. In other words, it causes the formation of a damaged protein which will not work properly. Mutation • Think of it as this example: State vs Slate or Eat vs Seat Single letter variation makes completely different meaning Slide courtesy of Lauren Fishbein How does CHEMO work? -chemo targets cancer cells as well normal cells of the body http://www.lymphoma.ca/lymphoma/patient-journey/treatment/general-chemotherapy-treatment Traditional model of cancer treatment If tumor still present or comes back BENEFIT Same therapy NO BENEFIT ADVERSE EFFECTS Cancer research in 21st century http://precisionmedicine.ucsf.edu/elements-precision-medicine Goals of cancer treatment in 21st century Same therapy BENEFIT NO BENEFIT ADVERSE EFFECTS Challenges in NET and ACC research • Limited or no human cell cultures • No animals models • Research funding is difficult to obtain especially for rare cancers UC research projects • Clinical Research • Database and tumor tissue collection • Retrospective studies (to identify new clinical markers of disease) • Clinical trials (growing) • Laboratory and genetic studies • New research model development • Identifying new pathways to target in tumors in cells and mice • High-throughput studies with newly identified inhibitors in collaboration with School of Pharmacy New Research Models • Development of human PDX (patient derived xenograft) models in mice • Development of new human cell line • Projecting to develop new 3D cell lines which resembele tumor function but easier to use than mice ACC001 Identifying new pathways to target in tumors in cells and mice High throughput screening Summary • There is a wide spectrum of neoplasia • In the new era of precision medicine and bioinformatics there are new and exciting discoveries in human tumors • At UC we are interested in NET and ACC, where research and progress is needed by: • Developing new cell lines • Generating new animal models • Studying new pathways that are abnormal in people with NET and ACC tumors with the goal of translating our laboratory research into clinical trials