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Dr. Christos Toumpanakis MD PhD FRCP Consultant in Gastroenterology/Neuroendocrine Tumours

Dr. Christos Toumpanakis MD PhD FRCP Consultant in Gastroenterology/Neuroendocrine Tumours Hon. Senior Lecturer University College of London Neuroendocrine Tumour Unit - ENETS Centre of Excellence ROYAL FREE HOSPITAL, London,UK. NET MASTERCLASS

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Dr. Christos Toumpanakis MD PhD FRCP Consultant in Gastroenterology/Neuroendocrine Tumours

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  1. Dr. Christos ToumpanakisMD PhDFRCP Consultant in Gastroenterology/Neuroendocrine Tumours Hon. Senior Lecturer University College of London Neuroendocrine Tumour Unit - ENETS Centre of Excellence ROYAL FREE HOSPITAL, London,UK NETMASTERCLASS What’s new in 2015: an interactive workshop Carcinoid Heart Disease (CHD)

  2. Carcinoid Syndrome MIDGUT NETs, OVARIAN NETs, BRONCHIAL NETs Flushing, diarrhoea, bronchospasm, Carcinoid Heart Disease • 30 – 40 % of patients with liver metastases • 5% of patients with carcinoid syndrome do not have liver metastases “Carcinoid crisis” Severe symptoms of carcinoid syndrome + hypotension during procedures that involve GA, as well as in TAE, and when the patient is on inotropes

  3. Carcinoid Heart Disease May develop in 30-50% of patients, with carcinoid syndrome (midgut NETs with hepatic or retro-peritoneal metastases, ovarian NETs and bronchial NETs). It represents the development of fibrotic plaques on the heart valves. It DOES NOT mean development of myocardial metastases. Its development is associated with 30 – 50% reduction in the expected survival of those patients. Battacharyya S , Toumpanakis C et al, AJC 2008

  4. How CHD develops? • It is mediated by vasoactive substances secreted by the NETs cells: • 5 hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, serotonin) • Prostaglandins • Histamine • Bradykinin • Substances with fibroblast proliferative properties • Tachykinins: substance P, neurokinin A, neuropeptide K • Transforming growth factor β • Deposition of Endocardial • Plaques Composed of: • Myofibroblasts • Smooth muscle cells • Deposits of ECM(including collagen & • myxoid ground substance) Fox DJ & Khattar RS. Heart 2004;90:1224-8. Bernheim AM et al, Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases, 2007; 49(6): 439-451.

  5. The Pathways Responsible for the Development of CHD Are still uncertain. The disease is likely to be multifactorial. SEROTONIN is a major player and is considered to be a major initiator of the fibrotic process, by targeting the 5-HT2B receptor. A three-dimensional 5-HT2B receptor R. Dobson et al., International Journal of Cardiology 2014; 173: 29-32. Gustafsson BI et al, International Journal of Cardiology 2008; 129: 318-324.

  6. Endocardial deposits of fibrous tissue • occur primarily on the downstream side of the valve leaflets (on the ventricular aspect of the tricuspid valve and the pulmonary arterial side of the pulmonary valve) - preferentially right-sided lesions. • the lungs filter the vasoactive peptides, inactivating them in the pulmonary circulation before they reach the left atrium Left-sided valvular pathology (5-10%) -seen only in patients with bronchial carcinoid or patent foramen ovale or in those with poorly controlled, severe carcinoid syndrome that overwhelms the pulmonary degradative capacity. Palaniswamy C et al., Cardiol Rev 2012;20:167-76. Gustafsson BI et al., Int J Cardiol 2008;129(3):318-24.

  7. “Carcinoid Plaque” - composed of smooth muscle cells & myofibroblasts forming a white fibrous layer lining on the endocardial surface of cardiac valves, superficial to normal valve. Bhattacharyya S et al. Circ Cardiovasc Imaging. 2010;3:103-111.

  8. The disease is characterized by retraction & fixation of predominantly the right-sided valve leaflets, leading to a combination of valvular regurgitation & stenosis, which ultimately can progress to right heart failure. A. Dilated right heart, with thickened, retracted tricuspid valve leaflets B. Colour flow Doppler revealing severe jet of TR filling a dilated right atrium. C. Continuous wave Doppler showing dense jet of TR. Bernheim AM et al., Prog Cardiovasc Dis 2007;49(6):439-51.

  9. Clinical Features of CHD • Asymptomatic period - variable • Dyspnea, fatigue • Ascites and peripheral edema - Cardiac - Hepatic - Nutritional - Combination

  10. NET Biomarkers for screening / diagnosis • 24h urine 5-HIAA levels Significantly higher in patients with CHD. Patients with CHD have on average, 2 to 4-fold higher values of serum serotonin, and platelets serotonin. Low specificity. • Chromogranin-A (CgA) Sensitivity of CgA to predict severe CHD was 100%, but specificity was only 30%. A level of 784mcg/L resulted in specificity of 75% and sensitivity of 73%. CHD No CHD 5-HIAA Lundin et al, Circulation 1988 Zuetenhorst et al, Cancer, 2003 Korse et al, J Clin Oncol 2009

  11. NET biomarkers for prediction of development and / or progression of CHD 71 patients 23 patients, 8 had / developed CHD • Development and progression of CHD were linked to 5-HIAA levels. • 5-HIAA > 300 μmol/L is independent predictor for development and progression of CHD (2-3 fold increase in risk). Multivariate model, in a prospective study of 252 patients. • No significant value was noted for Chromogranin-A. Denney et al, J Am Coll Cardiol 1998 Moller et al, NEJM 2003 Bhattacharyya et al, Am J cardiol 2011

  12. Natriuretic peptides for screening / diagnosis of CHD NT pro-BNP NT pro-BNP CHD 200 pts were screened, 39 had CHD. No CHD CHD ANP No CHD Median NT pro- BNP was significantly higher. Cut-off level : 260 pg/ml, sensitivity 92% & specificity 91%. • Negative and positive predictive values : 0.98 & 0.71 respectively. • Good correlation with CHD ECHO score and functional NYHA class. ANP levels were higher in CHD, but no statistically significant. Zuetenhorst et al, Br J Cancer, 2004 Bhattacharyya et al, Am J Cardiol 2008

  13. NT pro-BNP as a predictor of survival • Worse survival in raised levels. • Patients with raised NT proBNP and CgA levels have a 16% survival probability in 5 years. Zuetenhorst et al, Br J Cancer, 2004 Korse et al, J Clin Oncol 2009

  14. Central role of c. ECHO for diagnosis • TheECHO spectrum is wide. • Patients with diffuse thickening of valve leaflets or isolated thickening of asingle valve leaflet without significant reduction in leaflet mobility or the development of valvular regurgitationmay represent the early stages of carcinoid heart disease. • Advanced techniques such as 3D TTE or 3D TEE arehelpful in identifying and assessing valve pathology, particularlyin the pulmonary and tricuspid valves, because allleaflets may not be visualized on 2D echocardiography. S. Bhattacharyya et al. Circ Cardiovasc Imaging. 2010

  15. CMR can be a valuable adjunct where echocardiographic windows are poor or structures such as the pulmonary valve are difficult to visualize. Morphological features of severe carcinoid heartdisease can be delineated with assessment of valvular regurgitation, stenosis, and quantification of ventricularvolumes. CMR enables measurement of size of metastasesand is able to offer information regarding extension into extracardiac structures, which is not available on echocardiographictechniques. Complementary role of cardiac MRI S. Bhattacharyya et al. Circ Cardiovasc Imaging. 2010

  16. Complementary role of CT - Assessment of cardiac valves and RV function - Pre-surgical assessment of coronary arteries • Assessment of myocardial metastases and their relationship with affected cardiac valves O.Lazoura presentation, 1st International CHD Symposium, London, 09/2014

  17. Medical Management of CHD • Watchful waiting for symptoms • Diuretics for edema – loop or thiazide - May reduce cardiac output - Fatigue may worsen • Limited alternative medical options - Digoxin or ACE Bernheim AM, Connolly HM, Pellikka PA. Curr Treat Options Cardiovasc Med. 2007

  18. Surgical management of severe CHD Indications: Individualized • Symptomatic right heart failure • Fatigue, dyspnoea  oedema, ascites • Progressive RV enlargement / dysfunction • Prior to hepatic surgery Will valve surgery with inherent risks (mortality 10-25%) result in symptomatic improvement and survival benefit? Askew JW, Connolly HM. Curr Treat Options Cardiovasc Med. 2013

  19. Functional Improvement following valve surgery for CHD Significant functional improvement after surgery. Erasmus University Medical Centre, Rotterdam, The Netherlands EJCTS 2012

  20. Survival of Patients with Symptomatic Carcinoid Heart Disease Surgical Rxcompared with historical medical controls Survival (%) 26 Surgical Pt 40 Medical Pt Years Connolly et al; JACC 1995

  21. Timing of Operation Prosthesis & Surgical Risks Progressive Debility

  22. SURGICAL MANAGEMENT of CHDChoice of Valve Prosthesis • More controversial. • No large series have compared the choice of valve prosthesis. • Biological valves are usually preferred because: - They have an acceptable lifespan. - Somatostatin analogues and other antitumour therapies may theoretically protect the valve from deposition of further carcinoid plaques. - They do not require anticoagulation and consequently lower the risk of bleeding in patients with hepatic dysfunction and also reduce the risk of valve thrombosis (mechanical valve thrombosis is 4% per year). Raja SG et al, Future Cardiol. 2010

  23. Non – surgical, interventional options • Percutaneous catheter-based interventions clearly improve the therapeutic options in CHD by minimizing invasiveness, avoiding general anesthesia and allowing staged procedures. • Feasible mainly for aortic valve, potentially for pulmonary valve and closure of PFO. • Not suitable for mitral valve. • Not suitable for tricuspid valve. However, heterotopic single or dual caval valve implantation, for severe TR seems feasible and safe..

  24. Exclude other causes Carcinoid syndrome Resistant to SSTA Radiological progression No radiological progression • Optimize SSTs • Add interferon • Clinical trials (TelotristatEtiprate) • Debulking surgery • PRRT • ? Everolimus Predominantly Liver disease TAE RFA ? SIRT

  25. Take Home Messages • CHD may develop in 30-50% of patients, with carcinoid syndrome and its development may decrease survival. • Aggressive carcinoid syndrome treatment may prevent the development and progression of CHD. • NT pro-BNP seems to be a good screening biomarker. • Cardiac ECHO remains the diagnostic modality of choice. • Limited medical therapeutic options. • It is important to identify the “right” time for valve replacement. • Advances in surgical treatment improved survival. • Percutaneous catheter-based interventions seem to be promising alternatives in poor surgical candidates. • Experienced multidisciplinary team required for state-of-the-art management.

  26. 1st International Symposium for Carcinoid Heart Disease – London 4/9/2014 89 delegates from 10 different countries UK, US, Germany, France, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Netherlands, Ireland, Israel 36 :40% NET physicians 53 :60% Cardiologists (Consultants, Trainees, Technicians)

  27. Thank you very much

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