Wow. That is like asking what fish are in the sea. It depends upon where you are, what your tumor type is, where your tumors are located in your body and a host of other things.
The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) lists surgery as the first line defense for Carcinoid/NETs. Surgery can be
Liver
You may go to a doctor and they declare you “inoperable”. First of all…is that doctor the surgeon? Only a surgeon can most accurately predict what can be done surgically. Secondly, not all surgeons or facilities are created equal. The surgeon may have limitations on their skills, they may not have the best equipment available to them, they may have restrictions on what they do
Be sure your surgeon and anesthesiologist follow the current pre-, during and postoperative protocols on using Octreotide for possible Carcinoid Crisis, which can be fatal.
The second line of defense has been recently added to the algorithm by NCCN, the use of Somatostatin
Going beyond this point, the lines begin to diverge depending upon your particular case, needs, and tumor location. Here are some of the options:
Chemotherapy. “Chemo” is a systemic treatment, meaning that it covers the entire body. It is useful for targeting micro tumors that may proliferate through the body, but it also affects every system of the body, some worse than others. Chemo works only on those tumors which are actively dividing at the time of administration (and a few hours after). This is why chemo destroys healthy cells that divide quickly (hair, blood, etc). In Carcinoid/NETs, the tumors are slower growing, so there are fewer tumors dividing when chemo is given, and therefore it is less
Interferon is used, but not as often in the US as it is in Europe.
Interventional radiology therapies. Also called SirSpheres or TheraSpheres this kills
Traditional radiation is found to be of little use for Carcinoid/NETs.
Targeted Drug Therapies. There are several new drugs out, and in trials, which target the pathways by which the cancer cells divide, replicate and die. Some of these are
—Bevacizumab, which blocks angiogenesis (the formation of new blood vessels to feed tumor growth)
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—imatinib, an oral kinase inhibitor
—Sunitinib, a
Can you be cured?
Sadly, most people with this disease are found well after the disease has progressed and spread. However, there are MANY treatment options available, even for advanced cases. With proper management, you have a very good chance of living a long time, with a good quality of life. The best cure is usually with surgery, but it is not what the surgeon can see and remove, it is what he/she can’t see and leaves behind (micro-metastases). Most “cures” are those found by accident during some other medical event.
In general, be sure to consult with a true expert on this disease. Given the complexity, you can see a surgeon and the surgeon will most likely give you a surgical solution. For the same disease, see an oncologist, and they will likely give you an oncology related solution (such as chemotherapy), while an Interventional Radiologist will likely give you a radiology type solution. None of them may be “wrong”, they are simply working within the realm in which they are comfortable, their own specialty.