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. 2018 Feb 14;24(6):671–679. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v24.i6.671

Table 1.

Summary of studies investigating psychological symptoms in patients with neuroendocrine tumours

Ref. Primary disease site Correlation with treatment Treatment Number of patients with carcinoid syndrome/total patients Method of investigation Key results
Major et al[17] 1972 Metastatic carcinoid No Not reported 22/22 Not reported 50% displaying depressive symptoms
Larsson et al[11] 2001 Midgut carcinoid Yes – prior to and following 12 mo of treatment with somatostatin analogues Somatostatin analogues 20/24 Questionnaire – EORTC- QLQC301 Anxiety scores significantly lower at 12 mo than baseline, depression scores significantly higher at 9 mo
Russo et al[29] 2003 Metastatic mid-gut carcinoid No. Experimental tryptophan depletion 12 patients somatostatin analogues, 2 patients no treatment 14/14 Cambridge Neuropsychological tests automated battery (CANTAB): intra-/extra- dimensional shift task, matching to sample visual search, rapid visual information processing and spatial working memory. Impaired sustained attention. Not mimicking patients with depression
Larsson et al[27] 2003 Carcinoid tumour Yes Somatostatin analogues or interferon 19/19 Semi-structured interview Fatigue, diarrhoea, worry about diagnosis and limited physical ability most commonly reported symptoms
Russo et al[19] 2004 Mid-gut carcinoid tumour with carcinoid syndrome No 14 patients on somatostatin analogues, 2 patients on interferon 2 patients no active treatment. 2 patients on somatostatin analogues + interferon 20/20 Semi-structured psychiatric interview Impulse dysregulation leading to diagnosis of personality change secondary to a medical disorder in 15 patients (75%)
1

European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) health-related quality of life QLQ-C30 questionnaire.