ANNOUNCER: Several studies have shown Sandostatin, was effective in curbing serious cases of chemotherapy-induced diarrhea.
STEPHEN ROSENOFF, MD: And in these trials, whereas the conventional Lomotil and Imodium work 15-20% of the time in Grade 3 and 4 diarrhea, the Sandostatin was effective within two to three days in stopping the diarrhea in between 85-95% of the patients. A dramatic difference.
ANNOUNCER: That result came with a form of Sandostatin that's given by injection several times a day.
Doctors are also investigating a long-acting version of the drug, which is given just once a month.
STEPHEN ROSENOFF, MD: My study examines the first 10 patients that I treated with the long-acting Sandostatin, the Sandostatin LAR.
In all of these patients, they had resolution of the diarrhea, improvement of their quality of life, prompt resolution of the cramping pain that is really so miserable for the patients. All of this is very, very important. And this allowed them to complete their therapy without decreasing the dose.
ANNOUNCER: Right now, most doctors use Sandostatin against diarrhea only after other therapies have failed. New studies may show hormonal agents can effective at onset of diarrhea. Or even earlier to prevent diarrhea in the first place. Any decrease in cases of diarrhea among cancer patients would be welcome, for psychological as well as physiological reasons.
STEPHEN ROSENOFF, MD: When they get severe chemotherapy-induced diarrhea, this will often knock the props out from underneath them. This will tell them: This is a horrible treatment, this is a horrible disease, and I might die from this. So it's very depressing.
In the patients thereafter that have treated with the long-acting somatostatin, the Sandostatin LAR, they have reported to me that they would never have finished their treatment without it. It's allowed them to go out with their family. It's allowed them to go to dinner.
ANNOUNCER: Larger, well-controlled studies are necessary before researchers really understand the full value of hormonal therapy in treating chemotherapy-induced diarrhea.
But if early evidence holds up, doctors say hormonal agents could improve the quality of life for many patients on chemotherapy. And that, in turn could save lives, because it would help many of those patients stick with difficult anti-cancer treatment.