Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
324
result(s) for
"Insulinoma - diagnosis"
Sort by:
Approach to the Patient: Insulinoma
by
de Herder, Wouter W
,
Feelders, Richard A
,
Refardt, Julie C
in
Cancer
,
Chemotherapy
,
Computed tomography
2024
Abstract
Insulinomas are hormone-producing pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasms with an estimated incidence of 1 to 4 cases per million per year. Extrapancreatic insulinomas are extremely rare. Most insulinomas present with the Whipple triad: (1) symptoms, signs, or both consistent with hypoglycemia; (2) a low plasma glucose measured at the time of the symptoms and signs; and (3) relief of symptoms and signs when the glucose is raised to normal. Nonmetastatic insulinomas are nowadays referred to as “indolent” and metastatic insulinomas as “aggressive.” The 5-year survival of patients with an indolent insulinoma has been reported to be 94% to 100%; for patients with an aggressive insulinoma, this amounts to 24% to 67%. Five percent to 10% of insulinomas are associated with the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 syndrome. Localization of the insulinoma and exclusion or confirmation of metastatic disease by computed tomography is followed by endoscopic ultrasound or magnetic resonance imaging for indolent, localized insulinomas. Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor positron emission tomography/computed tomography or positron emission tomography/magnetic resonance imaging is a highly sensitive localization technique for seemingly occult, indolent, localized insulinomas. Supportive measures and somatostatin receptor ligands can be used for to control hypoglycemia. For single solitary insulinomas, curative surgical excision remains the treatment of choice. In aggressive malignant cases, debulking procedures, somatostatin receptor ligands, peptide receptor radionuclide therapy, everolimus, sunitinib, and cytotoxic chemotherapy can be valuable options.
Journal Article
Comparison of benign and malignant insulinoma
2021
How malignant insulinomas present relative to benign insulinomas is unknown.
A single-institution retrospective study identified patients with insulinoma. Malignancy was defined by distant metastases, positive lymph node(s), T stage of 4, direct invasion into surrounding peripancreatic tissue, or presence of lymphovascular invasion. Wilcoxon Rank Sum tests and Kaplan-Meier analysis were used.
A total of 311 patients were identified: 51 malignant and 260 benign. Patients with malignant insulinoma presented with higher levels of insulin, proinsulin, and c-peptide. Malignant lesions were larger: 4.2 ± 3.2 vs 1.8 ± 0.8 cm in benign lesions, p < 0.01. Overall survival at 5 years was 66.8% vs 95.4% for malignant and benign insulinoma respectively, p < 0.01.
Larger size of insulinoma and increased serum β-cell polypeptide concentrations were associated with malignancy. Malignant insulinoma has poorer survival. Further work-up to rule out malignancy may be indicated for larger pancreatic lesions and for patients with higher pre-operative insulin and pro-insulin.
•Malignant and benign insulinoma differ in clinical features at presentation.•Malignant insulinoma is associated with higher serum β-cell polypeptide concentrations.•Malignant insulinoma lesions tend to be larger than benign lesions.•Malignant insulinoma has significantly worse survival compared to benign.
Journal Article
Targeted near-infrared imaging utilizing a cathepsin-activated fluorophore for the intraoperative detection of canine insulinoma
by
Singhal, Sunil
,
Verrelle, Jillian
,
Huck, Jennifer L.
in
Abdomen
,
Animal diseases
,
Animal models
2026
The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of cathepsin-activated intraoperative near-infrared (NIR) imaging to detect insulinomas in dogs, a spontaneous large animal model for human disease.
A prospective, pilot clinical trial was performed on dogs with naturally occurring insulinomas undergoing exploratory laparotomy. Each dog underwent routine preoperative diagnostic assessment, and a cathepsin-activated fluorophore (VGT-309) was administered intravenously 1-2 days preoperatively. All intraoperative findings with visible light and NIR imaging were recorded and mean NIR fluorescence intensity of tumors and grossly normal pancreas were quantified. Excision of any identified primary tumor and suspected metastatic lesions was performed. All excised tissues underwent histologic evaluation and immunohistochemistry (IHC) for cathepsin B expression. Descriptive statistics were calculated, and differential fluorescence intensity and cathepsin B expression between the pancreatic mass and adjacent grossly normal pancreatic tissue were assessed for statistical significance via paired t tests with p < 0.05 used for significance.
Six dogs were enrolled. No adverse events occurred secondary to administration of the imaging agent. In situ, insulinomas had significantly greater mean fluorescence intensities than the surrounding pancreas, and the median tumor to background ratio was 1.906 (range 1.286-2.556). One dog had an occult pancreatic mass that was identified intraoperatively with NIR guidance. Background fluorescence of liver and lymph nodes was observed in all cases, and one dog was diagnosed with nodal and hepatic metastasis. Histologic tumor margins correlated with margins of NIR fluorescence. Cathepsin B expression was determined to be significantly greater in the pancreatic tumor compared to adjacent non-neoplastic pancreas via IHC, and there was no overlap in the range of median IHC-positive proportion values for these tissues. However, there was overlap in the range of IHC-positive proportion values for neoplastic pancreatic samples and lymph node and liver tissues.
The findings of this pilot study support further investigation of cathepsin-activated NIR imaging to enhance intraoperative canine insulinoma localization and margin evaluation. Future studies are needed to further characterize and optimize the utility of targeted NIR imaging, particularly to identify metastatic lesions, for canine insulinoma, which may serve as an effective translational model for humans with pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors.
Journal Article
Malignant Insulinoma: A Rare Form of Neuroendocrine Tumor
by
Vella, Adrian
,
Thompson, Geoffrey B.
,
Habermann, Elizabeth B.
in
Abdominal Surgery
,
Cardiac Surgery
,
General Surgery
2020
Introduction
Due to the rarity of malignant insulinoma, a lack of the literature describing factors affecting outcomes exists. Our aim was to review malignant insulinoma incidence, characteristics and survival trends.
Methods
We identified all patients with malignant insulinoma in the SEER registries from 1973 to 2015. Incidence, neoplasm characteristics and factors affecting cancer-specific survival (CSS) were described.
Results
A total of 121 patients were identified. The crude annual overall incidence was low (range 0.0–0.27 cases per million person years). The largest proportion had localized disease (40%), while 16% had regional disease, 39% distant metastatic disease, and stage was unreported in 5%. Most neoplasms were in the body/tail of the pancreas, followed by the head of the pancreas. Grade was reported in 40% of patients; only a single patient reported as having grade IV with the remainder all grades I/II. Surgical resection was performed in 64% of patients. Within surgical patients, the median primary neoplasm size was 1.8 cm. Regional lymph nodes were examined in 57.1% of surgical patients, while 34% of examined nodes were positive. The median CSS was 183 months. On multivariable analysis, surgical resection, male sex and absence of metastatic disease were associated with superior survival.
Conclusion
While the greatest proportion of patients with malignant insulinoma present with localized disease, regional lymph node involvement was found in 34% of whose nodes were tested. Further studies are needed to assess the role of lymph node dissection in improving survival and preventing recurrence given the observed frequency of lymph node involvement.
Journal Article
Clinical signs, management, and survival of 278 dogs diagnosed with insulinoma under primary veterinary care in the United Kingdom
by
Kraai, Kasper
,
O’Neill, Dan G
,
Buishand, Floryne O
in
Animals
,
Cohort Studies
,
Dog Diseases - diagnosis
2026
Abstract
Background
Insulinoma is the most commonly diagnosed endocrine tumor of the pancreas in dogs. Current literature has predominately focused on referral management of insulinoma in dogs.
Hypothesis/Objectives
To describe clinical signs, management, and survival and to explore risk factors associated with clinical management undertaken for insulinoma in dogs under primary veterinary care in the United Kingdom.
Animals
Two hundred seventy-eight insulinoma cases identified from 225 0741 VetCompass study dogs within the United Kingdom in 2019.
Methods
Nested cohort study. Insulinoma cases were identified by manual review of electronic health records. Multivariable logistic regression was used to identify risk factors associated with clinical management. The Kaplan–Meier method with log rank test and multivariable Cox regression were used to identify risk factors associated with survival.
Results
Epileptiform seizures, weakness, collapse/syncope, and muscle fasciculations were the most commonly reported clinical signs. Spaniel breed dogs (OR 2.43, 95% CI 1.02-5.79), dogs with epileptiform seizures (OR 2.15, 95% CI 1.15-4.02) and referred dogs (OR 4.85, 95% CI 2.42-9.72) had increased odds of undergoing surgery, compared to non-spaniel breed dogs, dogs without epileptiform seizures, and non-referred dogs. Compared to dogs treated solely medically, dogs treated surgically had a lower hazard (HR 0.49, 95% CI 0.32-0.77) of dying. Referred dogs had a longer median survival time (673 days, IQR 221-1139) than non-referred dogs (275 days, IQR 55-735) (P < .001).
Conclusions and clinical importance
This study identified that referral and surgical treatment are associated with improved clinical outcomes for dogs with insulinoma presenting to primary veterinary care.
Journal Article
Incidence and risk factors for insulinoma diagnosed in dogs under primary veterinary care in the UK
2025
Insulinoma is the most common pancreatic tumor diagnosed in dogs. This study aimed to report incidence risk, breed predispositions and other demographic risk factors for insulinoma diagnosed in dogs under primary veterinary care in the UK. The VetCompass Program supports research on anonymized electronic health records (EHRs) from dogs under UK veterinary care. This study included all VetCompass EHRs from dogs under primary veterinary care during 2019. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to evaluate demographic risk factors for insulinoma diagnosis. Of 2,250,741 study dogs, 278 were confirmed as insulinoma cases at any date. The estimated 2019 incidence risk was 0.003% (95% CI 0.002–0.004%). Compared to crossbreeds, predisposed breeds included Dogue de Bordeaux, German Pointer, Flat Coated Retriever, Boxer and West Highland White Terrier. The Labrador Retriever showed decreased odds for insulinoma diagnosis. Additionally, being a terrier breed and being a breed predisposed to other endocrine cancers were associated with increased odds for insulinoma diagnosis. Other risk factors associated with increased odds for insulinoma diagnosis included being female neutered, being 9 - <15 years of age, having an adult median bodyweight of 20 - <30 kg and having a bodyweight above the median for the sex/breed. This is the first study to report the epidemiology of canine insulinoma in dogs under primary veterinary care, resulting in crucial leads for further research in the epidemiology and etiology of canine insulinoma and possible links of canine insulinoma with other canine endocrine cancers. Additionally, the results can aid veterinarians to identify dogs at greater risk of insulinoma.
Journal Article
Localization of Insulinoma Using 68Ga-DOTATATE PET/CT Scan
2017
Précis:We studied 68Ga-DOTATATE PET/CT imaging in patients with insulinoma and found it identifies most tumors and should be considered as an adjunct imaging study.AbstractContext:Reliable localization of insulinoma is critical for successful treatment.Objective:This study compared the accuracy of 68Gallium DOTA-(Tyr3)-octreotate (Ga-DOTATATE) positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) to anatomic imaging modalities, selective arterial secretagogue injection (SASI), and intraoperative ultrasound (IO ultrasound) and palpation for localizing insulinoma in patients who were biochemically cured.Design, Setting, and Patients:We conducted a retrospective analysis of 31 patients who had an insulinoma. The results of CT, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), ultrasound, IO ultrasound, 68Ga-DOTATATE PET/CT, SASI, and operative findings were analyzed.Intervention, Main Outcome Measures, and Results:The insulinomas were correctly localized in 17 out of 31 (55%) patients by CT, in 17 out of 28 (61%) by MRI, in 6 out of 28 (21%) by ultrasound, and in 9 out of 10 (90%) by 68Ga-DOTATATE. In 29 of 31 patients (93.5%) who had IO ultrasound, an insulinoma was successfully localized. Thirty patients underwent SASI, and the insulinoma was regionalized in 28 out of 30 patients (93%). In 19 out of 23 patients (83%), manual palpation identified insulinoma. In patients who had all 4 noninvasive imaging studies, CT was concordant with 68Ga-DOTATATE in 6 out of 9 patients (67%), MRI in 8 out of 9 (78%), ultrasound in 0 out of 9; the lesion was only seen by 68Ga-DOTATATE in 1 out of 9 (11%).Conclusions
68Ga-DOTATATE PET/CT identifies most insulinomas and may be considered as an adjunct imaging study when all imaging studies are negative and when a minimally invasive surgical approach is planned.
Journal Article
Homeostasis Model Assessment of β-Cell Function for Diagnosis of Insulinoma
2024
Abstract
Context
Diagnosis of insulinoma is based on different criteria from the 72-hour fasting test according to current guidelines (Endocrine Society [ES], European [ENETS], and North American [NANETS] Neuroendocrine Tumor Societies), including assessment of β-cell function by glucagon stimulation test.
Objective
This study tested whether the homeostasis model assessment of insulin secretion, including assessment of β-cell function, (HOMA-B) at the end of the fasting test provides comparable efficacy for insulinoma diagnosis.
Methods
In 104 patients with suspected insulinoma, 72-hour fasting tests were performed with frequent assessment of glucose, insulin, and C-peptide in venous blood. HOMA-B values using insulin and C-peptide were calculated at the end of the fasting test, as defined by the lowest glucose concentration from each participant.
Results
HOMA-B was more than 6.5-fold higher in patients with (n = 23) than in those without (n = 81) insulinoma (insulin and C-peptide; both P < .001). HOMA-B (cutoff using insulin >253 a.u. and C-peptide >270 a.u.) had a sensitivity of 0.96, 0.78 to 1.00, and a specificity of 0.96 or greater (≥0.89-0.99) for insulinoma diagnosis. ES and ENETS/NANETS criteria reached a diagnostic sensitivity of less than or equal to 0.96 (≤0.78-1.00) and ≤0.83 (≤0.61-0.95) as well as specificity of ≤0.85 (≤0.76-0.92) and less than or equal to 1.00 (≤0.96-1.00) for insulin, and C-peptide, respectively. Using insulin for HOMA-B, sensitivity tended to be higher compared to ENETS/NANETS criteria (P = .063) and specificity was higher compared to ES criteria using insulin and C-peptide (both P < .005).
Conclusion
HOMA-B, as calculated at the end of the fasting test employing defined cutoffs for insulin and C-peptide, provides excellent diagnostic efficacy, suggesting that it might represent an alternative and precise tool to diagnose insulinoma.
Journal Article
Surgical Management, Preoperative Tumor Localization, and Histopathology of 80 Patients Operated on for Insulinoma
2019
Diagnosis and pathological classification of insulinomas are challenging.
To characterize localization of tumors, surgery outcomes, and histopathology in patients with insulinoma.
Patients with surgically resected sporadic insulinoma were included.
Eighty patients were included. Seven had a malignant tumor. A total of 312 diagnostic examinations were performed: endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS; n = 59; sensitivity, 70%), MRI (n = 33; sensitivity, 58%), CT (n = 55; sensitivity, 47%), transabdominal ultrasonography (US; n = 45; sensitivity, 40%), somatostatin receptor imaging (n = 17; sensitivity, 29%), 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/CT (n = 1; negative), percutaneous transhepatic venous sampling (n = 10; sensitivity, 90%), arterial stimulation venous sampling (n = 20; sensitivity, 65%), and intraoperative US (n = 72; sensitivity, 89%). Fourteen tumors could not be visualized. Invasive methods were used in 7 of these 14 patients and localized the tumor in all cases. Median tumor size was 15 mm (range, 7 to 80 mm). Tumors with malignant vs benign behavior showed less staining for insulin (3 of 7 vs 66 of 73; P = 0.015) and for proinsulin (3 of 6 vs 58 of 59; P < 0.001). Staining for glucagon was seen in 2 of 6 malignant tumors and in no benign tumors (P < 0.001). Forty-three insulinomas stained negative for somatostatin receptor subtype 2a.
Localization of insulinomas requires many different diagnostic procedures. Most tumors can be localized by conventional imaging, including EUS. For nonvisible tumors, invasive methods may be a useful diagnostic tool. Malignant tumors showed reduced staining for insulin and proinsulin and increased staining for glucagon.
Journal Article
Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Versus Somatostatin Receptor Targeting Reveals 2 Distinct Forms of Malignant Insulinomas
2011
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor imaging is superior to somatostatin receptor subtype 2 (sst(2)) imaging in localizing benign insulinomas. Here, the role of GLP-1 and sst(2) receptor imaging in the management of malignant insulinoma patients was investigated.
Eleven patients with malignant insulinoma were prospectively included. (111)In-[Lys(40)(Ahx-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid [DTPA])NH(2)]-exendin-4 SPECT/CT, (68)Ga- DOTATATE PET/CT, and in vitro receptor autoradiography were performed to assess the receptor status and to evaluate the detection rate.
GLP-1 receptor targeting was positive in 4 of 11 patients, and sst(2) receptor expression was positive in 8 of 11. In only 1 patient were both receptors expressed. In 1 patient, GLP-1 receptor imaging was the only method that successfully localized the primary tumor in the pancreas. In 3 patients with sst(2)-expressing tumors, DOTATATE radiotherapy was effectively applied.
As opposed to benign insulinomas, malignant insulinomas often lack GLP-1 receptors. Conversely, malignant insulinomas often express sst(2), which can be targeted therapeutically.
Journal Article