Location of a VIPoma by iodine-123-vasoactive intestinal peptide scintigraphy.

A major problem in patients with small endocrine tumors is the difficulty in localizing the primary tumor site. Many endocrine tumors possess larger amounts of high affinity vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) binding sites compared with normal tissue or blood cells. We used radiolabeled VIP to localize the tumor site in a patient with Verner-Morrison syndrome (VMS). Under octreotide therapy, the VIP levels had declined in this patient, but a tumor site could not be detected by conventional techniques or by radiolabeled octreotide. However, using 123I-VIP, the tumor was detectable in the pancreatic tail. Surgical resection of the tumor was followed by complete remission of the VMS. Expression of VIP binding sites in the tumor was confirmed by a radioreceptor assay and showed cross-competition between VIP and octreotide. The identity of the VIP binding site in the tumor was analyzed by Northern blotting and revealed the expression of somatostatin receptor subtype 3, which binds both somatostatin-14 and VIP with higher affinity than octreotide. Iodine-123-VIP scintigraphy would be an effective tracer to identity the tumor site in VMS patients.