About Carcinoid Tumor
Carcinoid tumours are well-differentiated (grade 1–2) neuroendocrine neoplasms most commonly arising in the small intestine, appendix, rectum, and bronchus, characterised by expression of neuroendocrine markers (synaptophysin, chromogranin A) and, in functional tumours, excessive production of serotonin and other vasoactive peptides. The carcinoid syndrome — episodic flushing, diarrhoea, and bronchospasm — occurs when vasoactive mediators bypass hepatic metabolism, typically indicating hepatic metastases or a primary bronchial carcinoid with direct systemic venous drainage. Long-acting somatostatin analogues (octreotide LAR, lanreotide) are the cornerstone of symptom control and have demonstrated antiproliferative activity in midgut NETs.
Common Clinical Features
Clinical Trial Eligibility Tips
What to know before applying to Carcinoid Tumor trials.
Biochemical documentation with plasma chromogranin A and 24-hour urinary 5-HIAA (or plasma 5-HIAA) is required for most functional NET trials; ensure values are obtained while off proton pump inhibitors (which falsely elevate chromogranin A).
Somatostatin receptor expression confirmed by 68Ga-DOTATATE PET-CT is required for PRRT (peptide receptor radionuclide therapy) trials and for somatostatin analogue-related protocols — recent functional imaging within the protocol-specified window is essential.
Ki-67 proliferation index and WHO grade (G1: Ki-67 <3%, G2: 3–20%, G3: >20%) must be documented from the most recent biopsy as they determine eligibility for graded therapy protocols and may change over time with tumour progression.
Patient Resources
Find recruiting Carcinoid Tumor trials
Search 500,000+ studies from ClinicalTrials.gov, filtered for Carcinoid Tumor. Updated daily.