What lies behind paraneoplastic hypercalcemia secondary to well-differentiated neuroendocrine neoplasms? a systematic review of the literature

HIGHLIGHTS

SUMMARY

    Hypercalcemia is associated with different neoplasms, may occur in up to 20-30% of all cancer patients, and is related to a poor prognosis. Constipation is the least frequent gastrointestinal symptom, complained about by only 9.4% of patients. Regarding medical therapy, somatostatin analogues (SSAs) were used in 37.9% of patients, chemotherapy was employed in 32.6% of patients, peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) was administered in 10.5% patients, and target therapy with sunitinib and everolimus were both employed in five cases. This observation is particularly interesting if the authors consider that . . .

     

    Logo ScioWire Beta black

    If you want to have access to all the content you need to log in!

    Thanks :)

    If you don't have an account, you can create one here.

     

Scroll to Top

Add A Knowledge Base Question !

+ = Verify Human or Spambot ?