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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ectopic
acromegaly
is a rare syndrome (less than 1% of acromegalic patients) caused by ectopic growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) or growth hormone (GH)-producing tumors. Its recognition is clinically important because
acromegaly
may be a symptom of an aggressive tumor, and different therapeutic approaches are required. Most cases are caused by either extra- or intracranial GHRH-producing tumors, whereas in rare instances the underlying disease is an ectopic GH-secreting tumor. The routine evaluation of circulating GHRH in all acromegalic patients may allow its early recognition, because plasma levels greater than 0.3 ng/mL are virtually diagnostic of a GHRH-producing tumor (frequently a bronchial or pancreatic carcinoid), whereas suppressed levels may suggest an ectopic GH-producing tumor. In addition to classic imaging techniques, whole body scintiscan with labeled octreotide may help in the localization of ectopic tumors. Surgical removal of the ectopic tumor is the therapy of choice, but it is not always feasible because patients often present with widespread
metastases
. Patients with GHRH-induced
acromegaly
benefit from the administration of the long-acting somatostatin analog, octreotide, which reduces GH, IGF-I, and GHRH, and may shrink the ectopic tumor, its
metastases
, and the secondary pituitary enlargement.
...
PMID:Ectopic acromegaly. 152 13
There are 36 reported cases of metastatic pituitary carcinoma and almost half (44%) of these were associated with syndromes of hormonal hypersecretion. The case of a 56-year-old acromegalic man with cervical lymphatic and spinal
metastases
from a primary pituitary carcinoma is described. Elevated basal levels of plasma growth hormone (GH) and insulin growth factor-1/Somatomedin C (IGF-1/SmC) were found. GH levels did not increase after TRH or LHRH administration but decreased after L-Dopa and glucose. Immunostaining of the metastatic tumor for GH and electron microscopy findings confirmed the diagnosis of pituitary GH-secreting carcinoma. Striking clinical improvement and a 46% decrease in plasma GH levels were observed with bromocriptine treatment, although IGF-1/SmC levels increased during therapy. The clinical course of most reported cases of pituitary adenocarcinoma has been one of progressive intracranial expansion of a pituitary neoplasm. In only 25% were metastatic lesions discovered antemortem, and disabling symptomatology caused by
metastases
was rare. Only four previously reported patients of 36 with pituitary carcinoma had
acromegaly
.
...
PMID:Pituitary adenocarcinoma in an acromegalic patient: response to bromocriptine and pituitary testing: a review of the literature on 36 cases of pituitary carcinoma. 266 75
Long-acting somatostatin analogues such as SMS 201-995 (Sandoz) are being evaluated in a wide range of clinical indications, including gut neuroendocrine tumours and acrogemaly. Long-term continuous SMS 201-995 treatment has achieved useful symptomatic improvement in diarrhoea in 4 patients with metastatic VIPomas who had relapsed following previous treatment. Clinical improvement has outlasted suppression of VIP secretion (suggesting an additional direct antisecretory action of SMS 201-995) and has occurred despite expansion of hepatic
metastases
. In 6 patients with tumours secreting gastrin and/or glucagon, secretion of these peptides was acutely inhibited by SMS 201-995. However, endocrine and clinical responses to chronic treatment have been less consistent. SMS 201-995 is active orally at doses of 4-8 mg and when given thrice-daily to 6 patients with active
acromegaly
, suppressed mean 24-h growth hormone levels by 51-88%. Despite significantly reduced plasma insulin concentrations, glucose tolerance did not deteriorate. SMS 201-995 was also effective in suppressing thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and thyroid hormone secretion in a patient with mild thyrotoxicosis due to non-tumoural inappropriate TSH hypersecretion. In all cases SMS 201-995 treatment has been well tolerated and has few side-effects.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of SMS 201-995. Long-term treatment in gut neuroendocrine tumours, efficacy of oral administration, and possible use in non-tumoural inappropriate TSH hypersecretion. 289 35
We measured the serum concentrations of 2 biochemical markers of bone formation, bone Gla-protein (BGP) and bone alkaline phosphatase (BAP), in 164 normal subjects and 164 patients with metabolic bone disorders. The data were reported as Z scores (deviation in SDs from the sex-specific age regression in normal subjects). Both serum BGP and BAP distinguished abnormalities well (mean Z scores for BGP and BAP, respectively) and gave concordant results in patients with hypoparathyroidism (-1.7, -1.4), hyperthyroidism (+1.1, +1.8), primary hyperparathyroidism (+3.6, +2.5),
acromegaly
(+1.2, +2.8), and postmenopausal osteoporosis (+0.4, +1.9). The 2 markers gave discordant results, however, in patients with glucocorticoid excess (-2.4, +0.9), Paget's disease (+1.8, +41.8), chronic renal failure (+16.3, +0.4), and osteolytic
metastases
(-1.4, +5.9). These discrepancies may have occurred because serum BGP and BAP concentrations reflect different aspects of osteoblast function or because there are differences in their clearance from the circulation. Consequently, more information is derived about the level of bone formation across the wide range of metabolic bone disorders when both biochemical markers are assayed.
...
PMID:Concurrent assays of circulating bone Gla-protein and bone alkaline phosphatase: effects of sex, age, and metabolic bone disease. 325 70
A primary bronchial tumor was diagnosed in six children younger than age 12 years. These cases include four bronchial carcinoids, a low-grade mucoepidermoid carcinoma, and a granular cell tumor ("myoblastoma"). Lobar or segmental resection was performed in each case and remains the treatment of choice. The most common bronchial tumors in childhood are carcinoids with 17 other evaluable cases in the English Literature. This series includes the youngest child to be reported with bilateral choroidal
metastases
leading to blindness; in addition, there were clinical manifestations of gigantism and
acromegaly
possibly related to ectopic hormone production. Low-grade mucoepidermoid carcinomas rank second in frequency to carcinoids and have an excellent prognosis. Judging from the childhood bronchial tumors reported to date, proved examples of bronchogenic carcinoma are vanishingly rare.
...
PMID:Primary bronchial tumors in childhood. A clinicopathologic study of six cases. 629 3
Diagnosis of ectopic
acromegaly
was made in a 21-year-old female patient who 3 years before had undergone a right pneumectomy for a disseminated bronchial carcinoid. Plasma growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) concentrations were markedly elevated (6440 ng/l; normal value < 100 ng/l), as were serum GH (187 micrograms/l; normal < 5 micrograms/l) and plasma insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) levels (6.7 U/ml; normal < 2 U/ml). Retrospective immunohistochemical examination of the carcinoid tumor was positive for GHRH and the tumoral content of GHRH was 2130 ng/g wet weight. Subcutaneous treatment with octreotide was begun and first resulted in a profound inhibition of GH hypersecretion, normalization of plasma IGF-I and only partial reduction of GHRH concentrations. However, the initial dose of 3 x 100 micrograms had to be increased gradually to 4 x 750 micrograms because of a progressive deterioration of the hormonal control. After 15 months of intermittent therapy, octreotide was administered by continuous sc infusion. This treatment improved compliance, allowed the daily dose of octreotide to be reduced to 1500 micrograms and normalized serum GH levels. A near-normalization of the plasma IGF-I concentrations was also obtained, whereas the suppression of plasma GHRH concentrations remained incomplete. Despite favorable evolution of the endocrine parameters, intramedullar
metastases
were diagnosed and required radiation therapy. This observation emphasizes the superiority of continuous over intermittent administration of octreotide in the treatment of ectopic
acromegaly
. It also shows that the somatostatin analog acts more at the pituitary level to inhibit GH secretion than at the site of the neuroendocrine tumor.
...
PMID:Subcutaneous octreotide treatment of a growth hormone-releasing hormone-secreting bronchial carcinoid: superiority of continuous versus intermittent administration to control hormonal secretion. 758 49
The case of a 52-year-old woman with
acromegaly
, diabetes insipidus, and visual impairment caused by a metastatic growth hormone-releasing hormone (GRH)-produced pancreatic tumor is reported. Serum growth hormone (GH) and somatomedin C levels were elevated to 14 ng/ml (normal < 5 ng/ml), and 3.20 U/ml (normal < 1.88 U/ml), respectively. Paradoxical increases were observed in GH levels after glucose tolerance and thyrotropin-releasing hormone-stimulation tests. Biopsy of a pituitary tumor observed on computerized tomography scans and magnetic resonance studies revealed a
metastatic cancer
. When circulating GRH levels were measured, a marked increase in plasma GRH (1145 pg/ml; normal < 4-1 pg/ml) was observed. The patient died of cachexia due to
metastases
. Postmortem examination revealed that a primary tumor, a malignant endocrine lesion, was present in the pancreas, with metastatic tumors in the pituitary, lung, liver, and adrenal glands. Synthesis and production of GRH by the tumor was demonstrated by Northern blotting and immunohistochemical analysis. The pituitary gland showed hyperplastic, but not adenomatous changes. The authors stress the importance of both exploration for an ectopic source of GRH and the search for a GH-producing pituitary adenoma when unusual signs and symptoms are seen in patients with
acromegaly
.
...
PMID:Acromegaly, diabetes insipidus, and visual loss caused by metastatic growth hormone-releasing hormone-producing malignant pancreatic endocrine tumor in the pituitary gland. Case report. 767 23
The authors report their experience with octreotide in 20 patients (median age 57 years, 10 M, 10 F) from 1984 to 1991; 16 had metastatic APUDoma: 1 PPoma with VIPoma, 1 glucagonoma, 5 gastrinoma including 1 associated to PP-oma, 9 mid-gut carcinoid; 3 patients had multiple-endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN-I) with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) and 1 patient a non-metastatic VIPoma. Octreotide (200-750 micrograms/day) was administered bid or tid with regular laboratory controls and morphological assessment. There was a striking improvement of symptoms, particularly in the carcinoid group (reduction of flushing in all patients and of diarrhoea in 3/5), in the patient with gastrinoma +
acromegaly
(regression of congestive heart failure) and in the patient with non-metastatic VIPoma. The hormonal markers were markedly reduced, particularly gastrin, PP (except in the patient with PPoma + VIPoma), VIP, GH and Somatomedin-C and urinary 5HIAA in 4/9 patients with carcinoid. There was only one partial regression of
metastases
(gastrinoma) and 4 apparent stabilizations of tumour growth, in the 16 metastatic cases. Among them, 4 patients died: 1 glucagonoma, 1 PPoma + VIPoma, 2 mid-gut carcinoids after a treatment of 5, 16, 30, 36 months, respectively. The patient with
acromegaly
+ ZES died after 6 years of treatment at age 81. A patient with prolactinoma, resected insulinoma, hyperparathyroidism and ZES was not improved by a short course of octreotide (hypoglycemia); he died later of recurrent insulinoma. In conclusion, octreotide is a useful drug to control most of the symptoms related to gut endocrine tumours; it may inhibit tumour growth.
...
PMID:Use of octreotide in the treatment of digestive neuroendocrine tumours. Seven year experience in 20 cases including 9 cases of metastatic midgut carcinoid and 5 cases of metastatic gastrinoma. 826 71
We reviewed the clinical features, essential laboratory data, pituitary imaging findings (computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging), management, and outcome of 353 consecutive patients with the presumptive diagnosis of pituitary tumor investigated from January 1984 through December 1997 at University Hospital, Lausanne, Switzerland. In 18 cases primary empty sella turcica was diagnosed, and in 13 cases of pseudacromegaly there were no endocrine abnormalities. The remaining 322 patients disclosed abnormal pituitary masses, including 275 pituitary adenomas, 18 craniopharyngiomas, 6 cases of primary pituitary hyperplasia, 6 intrasellar meningiomas, 6 cases of distant
metastases
, 4 intrasellar cysts, 2 chordomas, 1 primary lymphoma, and 1 astrocytoma. Biologic data and immunohistochemical analysis of the excised tissues demonstrated that prolactinomas and nonsecreting adenomas (NSAs) were the most frequent pituitary tumors (40% and 39%, respectively), followed by somatotropic adenomas with
acromegaly
(11%) and Cushing disease (6%). In contrast with the vast majority of NSAs, which significantly expressed glycoprotein hormones in tissue without secreting them, there was a small group of glycoprotein hormone-secreting adenomas (2%), which had a more severe clinical course after surgery. Thirty-eight pituitary masses were incidentally discovered, most of them NSAs. The expansion of pituitary adenomas into the right cavernous sinus was twice as frequent as to the left cavernous sinus. For the differential diagnosis of hyperprolactinemia, basal prolactin (PRL) levels above 85 micrograms/L, in the absence of renal failure and PRL-enhancing drugs, and a PRL increment of less than 30% after thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) accurately ruled out functional hyperprolactinemia due to NSA, and were typical of prolactinomas. For screening and follow-up of
acromegaly
, basal growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) levels, as well as the paradoxical GH response to TRH (present in 2/3 acromegalic patients), could be used as convenient tools, but the most accurate test for diagnosis and prediction of outcome after therapy was GH (lack of) suppression during oral glucose tolerance test. In Cushing disease, single evening plasma cortisol was as good as the overnight dexamethasone suppression test for screening, and a combined dexamethasoneovine corticotropin-releasing hormone (oCRH) test was as accurate as the long dexamethasone suppression test to confirm the diagnosis. Bilateral inferior petrosal sinus catheterization coupled with oCRH test confirmed the pituitary origin of excess adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) in all patients, including those with normal pituitary on magnetic resonance imaging (50% of the cases). However, this procedure failed to predict tumor localization correctly within the pituitary in 21% of patients. Pituitary cysts, meningiomas, and craniopharyngiomas with an intrasellar component were correctly diagnosed based on pituitary imaging in 75%, 67%, and 44% of cases, respectively. The remainder, as well as the cases of pituitary hyperplasia,
metastases
, and other less frequent pathologies, were initially diagnosed as NSAs or as masses of unknown nature. When surgery was indicated, pituitary adenomas and other intrasellar masses were operated on by the transsphenoidal route, with the exception of 100% of meningiomas, 83% of craniopharyngiomas, and 10% of NSAs, which were operated on by the transcranial route. Favorable late surgical outcome of prolactinomas could be predicted by a restored PRL response to TRH. However, dopamine agonist (DA) therapy, usually resulting in satisfactory control of PRL levels and in tumor shrinkage, progressively displaced surgery as primary treatment for prolactinomas throughout the study period. After full-term pregnancy, the size of prolactinoma decreased in 7 of 9 patients, and PRL was normal in 2. Surgery was the first treatment for NSAs, with a tumor rela
...
PMID:Diagnosis, treatment, and outcome of pituitary tumors and other abnormal intrasellar masses. Retrospective analysis of 353 patients. 1042 6
We can define paraneoplastic syndromes as a combination of effects occurring far from the original location of the tumour and independently from the local repercussion of its
metastases
. Paraneoplastic hormonal syndromes depend on the secretion of hormonal peptides or their precursors, cytokines and, more rarely, thyroidal hormones and Vitamin D, which act in an endocrine, paracrine or autocrine way. Sometimes, paraneoplastic syndromes can be more serious than the consequences of the primary tumour itself and can precede, develop in parallel, or follow the manifestations of this tumour. It is important to recognise a paraneoplastic hormonal syndrome for several reasons, amongst which we would draw attention to three: 1) It can lead to the diagnosis of a previously undetected, underlying malign or benign neoplasia; 2) It can dominate the clinical picture and thus lead to errors with respect to the origin and type of primary tumour; and 3) It can follow the clinical course of the underlying tumour and thus be useful for monitoring its evolution. The molecular mechanisms responsible for the development of these syndromes are not well-known, but it is believed that they might be inherent to the mutations responsible for the primary tumour or depend on epigenetic factors such as methylation. In this review, we consider the following paraneoplastic hormonal syndromes: malign hypercalcaemia, hyponatraemia (inappropiate secretion of the antidiuretic hormone), ectopic Cushing's syndrome, ectopic
acromegaly
, hypoglycaemia due to tumours different from those of the islet cells and paraneoplastic gynaecomastia; we make a brief final reference to other hormones (calcitonin, somatostatin, and VIP).
...
PMID:[Paraneoplastic hormonal syndromes]. 1615 18
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