The rarity of malignant insulinoma limits reports on therapeutic strategies and outcome. The treatment and follow-up of 10 patients, all presenting an insulinoma with metastatic disease of the liver and newly diagnosed between 1992 and 2002, is reported. Pancreatic surgery with successful removal of the primary tumor preferentially located in the tail was performed in 7 women and 3 men, median age 55 years (range 36-82 years). If appropriate, 5 patients underwent additional hepatic surgery and lymph node resections. Liver metastases as the major cause of postoperatively persistent hypoglycemia were subsequently treated by repeated transarterial hepatic chemoembolization and chemoperfusion protocols using high-dose transhepatic streptozocin perfusions (3-4 g per session). The current median survival time for all 10 patients is 2.6 years (range: 1.6-9.7 years). Six patients are currently alive with a median survival of 3.7 years (1.7-9.7 years), five of them with stable disease and free of hypoglycemia. Four patients died after a median survival of 1.8 years (range: 1.6-7.5 years) from complications of unmanageable hypoglycemia. It is concluded that the necessity to treat debiliating and life-threatening hypoglycemia in metastatic malignant insulinoma warrants the option of radical endocrine surgery in combination with extended and repeated postoperative chemoembolization of liver metastases.
Due to its diagnostic accuracy as well as safe and accurate puncture technique CT can be used advantageously for percutaneous sclerosing therapy of renal cysts. CT-guided sclerosing therapy with pantopaque emulsions was carried out in 100 patients on an outpatient basis with altogether 107 solitary renal cysts. There were indications in all cases. Continuous follow-up of cyst involution in 96 patients with 103 cysts pointed out a reliable sclerosing effect in 95.1% of them. Major complications were neither registered in the puncture technique nor in the late urographic examinations.
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