Objective: Treatment by octreotide has been suggested in medullary thyroid carcinoma patients with post-surgery metastases. The purpose of this study was to evaluate if the tumoral regression could be improved by a high dose and by prolonged octreotide treatment.
Design: Fourteen thyroidectomized patients were studied. All patients had persistently elevated plasma calcitonin levels with normal or elevated carcino-embryonic antigen levels. Five hundred micrograms/day of octreotide were administered by continuous subcutaneous infusion for 90 days.
Measurements: Plasma calcitonin and carcino-embryonic antigen levels were determined at days -30, -20, -2, -1, 0, +30, +60, +90, +120; morphological extension was evaluated every month.
Results: Continuous infusion of octreotide did not induce any significant decrease of calcitonin levels, or any morphological improvement, and had no major undesirable effect. However, in 4/14 patients calcitonin levels fell during treatment (-43, -50, -15, -20%), and in 9 patients calcitonin increased (+22 to +130%) after cessation of therapy.
Conclusion: Biological or morphological parameters of medullary thyroid carcinoma are not significantly improved in a large series of patients treated by octreotide.