← Return to Lanreotide eventually becomes less effective, why?

Discussion
Comment receiving replies
Profile picture for Turkey, Volunteer Mentor @tomrennie

@dadcue To date, there is no medical evidence showing that prednisone causes neuroendocrine cancer. Neuroendocrine cancer develops from hormone producing cells. It can be functioning like mine, so the tumors can create excessive amounts of hormones. Do you know if your neuroendocrine tumor is functioning?

Jump to this post


Replies to "@dadcue To date, there is no medical evidence showing that prednisone causes neuroendocrine cancer. Neuroendocrine cancer..."

@tomrennie

My CgA, serotonin, insulin, pancreastatin and gastrin levels are all elevated but I can't say I feel that bad. None of these levels are super high but I'm told my levels aren't good.

They say my "neuroendocrine cells" are producing too many hormones. I only have a couple of actual "tumors" with a primary one in my small intestine. I don't know what is functional or where the hormones are coming from. They said that having elevated pancreastatin, insulin and gastrin levels doesn't mean there are cancerous cells in my pancreas and stomach.

I know there are visible "localized" metastatic lesions and one "distant" metastatic lesion. I was told there might be microscopic lesions in my liver and pancreas that can't be seen.
---------------------
I didn't mean to imply that Prednisone caused cancer. I'm worried that the immunosuppression from prednisone weakened my immune system making it less effective at finding and destroying early cancer cells. Chronic systemic inflammation probably didn't help the situation. Maybe Prednisone "contributed" but nobody ever knows.