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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The medical records and histologic documents of 14 patients treated at our institution for a thymic carcinoid tumor were reviewed. There were 3 women and 11 men with an age range from 35 to 71 years. One patient had a multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome; another had a neurofibromatosis. Twelve tumors were revealed by local symptoms and two were asymptomatic. One patient had
Cushing's syndrome
that appeared secondarily and was related to
metastases
. Tumors ranged from 6 to 20 cm and had the characteristic histologic appearance of atypical carcinoid tumor. Immunohistochemical evaluations were done. Tumors were positive for cytokeratin (92%), neuroendocrine markers (100%), and p53 oncoprotein (29%). S-100 protein antibody revealed numerous sustentacular cells in one case. Overall survival was 46% and 31% at 3 and 5 years, respectively. However, all patients died of the disease within 109 months as a result of local progression (n = 5), local relapse (n = 3), distant
metastases
(n = 8), or a combination of these reasons. Median survival was 71, 30, and 5 months for patients who had total resection (n = 4), partial resection (n = 5), or simple biopsy (n = 4), respectively (p = 0.023). In conclusion, thymic carcinoid tumors can be considered thymic neuroendocrine carcinomas because of their malignant behavior and histologic appearance of atypical carcinoid tumors. Complete surgical resection offers the best hope for long-term survival.
...
PMID:Thymic neuroendocrine carcinoma (carcinoid): a clinicopathologic study of fourteen cases. 855 58
A 57-year-old woman developed features of
Cushing's syndrome
after resection of a Duke's C adenocarcinoma of the sigmoid colon. Biochemical and endocrine investigation indicated ectopic production of adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) as the cause for her condition. Hepatic metastases were detected by computed tomography (CT) scan. Histology of the original tumour displayed neuroendocrine characteristics but no definite evidence of ACTH synthesis. Treatment was instituted to control her hypercortisolism, and chemotherapy initiated to reduce the production of ectopic hormone. A clinical, biochemical and radiological response was obtained with complete resolution of her
Cushing's syndrome
. The tumour relapsed after several months with distant
metastases
, but no further endocrine abnormality was noted. A review of ectopic ACTH producing adenocarcinoma is given along with a discussion of the major pathological and therapeutic features of the case.
...
PMID:Colonic adenocarcinoma associated ectopic ACTH secretion: a case history. 856 74
A 63-year-old man was admitted to Sendai Red Cross Hospital complaining of chest and back pain associated with
Cushing's syndrome
. Based on the abnormally high levels of ACTH, cortisol, and CRH in plasma the patient was suspected of having ectopic ACTH syndrome. Histological examination of an extirpated rib and pleural tumor led to the diagnosis of atypical carcinoid tumor, with ribbon and festoon formation, immunoreactivity to ACTH, NSE, Chg-A, and argyrophilia in the tumor cells. Anti-cancer chemotherapy was not effective, and the patient died within a year after the onset of
Cushing's syndrome
. An autopsy revealed that the patient had an ACTH- and CRH-producing thymic carcinoid with
metastases
to many organs. The pituitary was atrophic with Crooke's hyaline change. There were many CRH-positive cells in the paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus, where no remarkable pathologic changes were seen.
...
PMID:[Thymic carcinoid associated with ectopic ACTH syndrome]. 869 71
Nineteen cases of thymic carcinoma treated in our hospital (mean age 60.0 years, seven males and twelve females) were studied clinically. Thirteen cases (68.4%) had subjective symptom; for example, chest pain, face edema or cough. Two cases (10.5%) had the associated diseases; one had gammaglobulinemia, the other one had
Cushing syndrome
and hypogammaglobulinemia. The histological subtypes were eleven squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) (57.9%), three undifferentiated carcinomas, two small cell carcinomas, one papillary adenocarcinoma and one lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma. The 5 year survival rate of all cases was 42.7%. The 10 years survival rate was 21.4%. The median survival time was 56.1 months. There were one Stage I case, nine stage III cases, four stage IVa cases and five stage IVb cases. More than stage III cases were eighteen (94.7%). Five cases of stage IVb were T2N1M0, T3N1M0, T3N0M1 and T4N0M1. The 5 year survival rate of SCC was 65.6%, and that of the other subtypes was 14.3%. The cases resected completely were only eight cases (42.1%), and the 5 year survival rate of these was 70.0%. On the other hand, the rate of five cases resected incompletely was 53.3%.
Metastasis
occurred in 12 cases (63.2%).
Metastasis
occurred frequently in pleura, lymphnode, lung, bone and liver. The radiotherapy for SCC was effective and the 5 year survival rate was 83.3%. Furthermore, there were some long survivors in the cases undergone incomplete resections by postoperative radiotherapy jointly. On the other hand, the chemotherapy was not effective in our series. However, it was reported recently that the regimen including cisplatin was effective. So it was impressed that the combined therapy including surgery radiotherapy and induction chemotherapy would be important to obtain better results.
...
PMID:[Clinical study of nineteen thymic carcinomas]. 871 65
We report a 73-year-old woman with rapidly developing symptoms and signs of
Cushing's syndrome
and high urinary free cortisol. She was virilized and hirsute with testosterone levels which became exceptionally high. ACTH was suppressed and CT scan of the adrenals and pelvis showed no abnormality. Ultrasound scanning showed enlargement of the left ovary. Venous catheter studies suggested a left ovarian source. A 2-cm diameter lipid cell tumor was removed from the left ovary laparoscopically. Histology was initially benign, and clinical and biochemical cure of
Cushing's syndrome
was rapid. However, the neoplastic nature of the ovarian tumour was demonstrated 12 months later when peritoneal
metastases
were detected and there was then clinical and biochemical relapse.
...
PMID:An ovarian lipid cell tumour causing virilization and Cushing's syndrome. 875 86
The effects of somatostatin and its analogs have been studied in different subclasses of patients with
Cushing's syndrome
(due to Cushing's disease, ectopic corticotropin [ACTH]- and/or corticotropin-releasing hormone [CRH]-secreting tumors, or ACTH-independent
Cushing's syndrome
) and in patients with Nelson's syndrome. In most patients with untreated Cushing's disease, octreotide does not suppress ACTH release, a finding that is supported by in vitro studies. However, octreotide or somatostatin inhibits pathological ACTH secretion in Nelson's syndrome. Short-term octreotide treatment has caused a significant initial response (decreased serum cortisol, ACTH, and cortisoluria) in 24 of 38 (64%) patients with ectopic ACTH/CRH
Cushing's syndrome
, and long-term treatment caused a persistent response in 10 of 14 (71%) cases. Pentetreotide scintigraphy may help to identify those patients with ectopic ACTH/CRH tumors who will have an initial response to octreotide, and is useful for locating ectopic ACTH/CRH-secreting tumors and their
metastases
. To date, octreotide has been shown to temporarily suppress gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP)-induced cortisol secretion in GIP-dependent (ACTH-independent)
Cushing's syndrome
, but has not shown any therapeutic benefit in other forms of ACTH-independent
Cushing's syndrome
.
...
PMID:Is there a role for somatostatin and its analogs in Cushing's syndrome? 876 91
A large number of endocrine tumors express somatostatin receptors, and the use of radiolabeled somatostatin analogs has been recently introduced for their localization. Using in vivo scintigraphy with 111In-pentetreotide, primary tumor localizations were demonstrated in 3/3 carcinoids (2 intestinal carcinoids and 1 lung ACTH-secreting carcinoid; in 2 patients liver metastases larger than 1 cm were visualized), in 1/1 GH-secreting pituitary macroadenoma, and in 1/1 thyroid localization of MTC. Bone and/or lymph node
metastases
were imaged in 2/4 patients previously treated for MTC, with persistently high CT and CEA levels; in the other 2 patients the other scintigraphic techniques were also negative. Octreotide scintigraphy was negative in 2/2 insulinomas and in 2/2 ACT-producing pituitary adenomas. In 2 patients with carcinoid syndrome and 1 patient with
Cushing syndrome
due to ectopic ACTH, octreotide therapy induced a significant decrease in tumoral markers. Our preliminary data are in agreement with the results of larger series reported in literature: octreotide scintigraphy is a useful noninvasive tool to detect endocrine tumors expressing somatostatin receptors, particularly for carcinoids. It is of great use in the differential diagnosis of
Cushing syndrome
due to ectopic ACTH. Moreover, 111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy may be useful in selecting patients who may benefit from octreotide therapy to control hormonal hypersecretion effects.
...
PMID:111In-octreotide scintigraphy in endocrine tumors. Preliminary data. 900 67
Neuroendocrine tumors of the thymus, also known as thymic carcinoids, are rare tumors of the anterior mediastinum. They occur sporadically or in association with MEN I syndrome. We present five patients (four male, one female; age of first manifestation 19-53 years) who were operated on at our hospital between 1984 and 1995 for neuroendocrine thymic tumors. A hormone-producing tumor presented with
Cushing's syndrome
in two patients. Two patients had MEN I syndrome. Only in the female patient the primary tumor was confined to the thymus. We found lymph node
metastases
in three patients and a distant metastasis in one. The neuroendocrine tumors have a high rate of local recurrences and thus we performed 11 operations using a transthoracic or transsternal approach. Since there was no operative mortality and adjuvant therapies are of limited value, we recommend surgery even in case of recurrence.
...
PMID:[Surgical therapy of neuroendocrine tumors of the thymus]. 915 79
Adrenal masses are more and more frequently detected by adrenal ultrasound, computed tomography or nuclear magnetic resonance carried out for a reason other than the suspicion of adrenal disease (incidentalomas). The findings of an incidentaloma still leaves many diagnostic and therapeutic questions open. We report the results of a multicentric retrospective evaluation of patients with adrenal incidentalomas, performed by a Study Group of the Italian Society of Endocrinology. According to the definition of incidentaloma, exclusion criteria a priori were: severe or paroxysmal hypertension, frank hypokalemia and clinical signs of hypercortisolism or hyperandrogenism. 29 centers participated in the study and the data obtained by questionnaire were collected in 2 centers for final elaboration. Center 1 carried out the epidemiological and clinical evaluation. Basal and dynamic hormonal evaluation of 786 among the 1013 cases recruited were performed in our center (center 2). Functional studies included: diurnal rhythm of cortisol, urinary free cortisol (UFC), ACTH, DHEAS, 17-OH progesterone, testosterone, androstenedione, supine and upright plasma renin activity (PRA) and aldosterone, urinary aldosterone, urinary catecholamines and VMA. The hormonal dynamic evaluation included the overnight dexamethasone suppression test (1 mg), CRH test and ACTH test. In our study, 89% (702 patients) of adrenal incidentalomas were non-hypersecretory masses; 6.2% (49 patients) showed a preclinical
Cushing's syndrome
(PCS) (at least two altered parameters of pituitary-adrenal axis); 3.4% (27 patients) were pheochromocytomas; 0.89% (7 patients) were aldosteronomas. One tumor was a masculinizing adrenocortical carcinoma. Two hundred sixty patients underwent surgical exploration and the histological diagnosis showed: 138 adenomas (53%), 32 carcinomas (12%), 26 pheochromocytomas (10%). 16 myelolipomas (8%), 13 cystic lesions (5.5%), 7 tumors of neuronal lineage (3%). 12
metastases
(4%), 13 others (5%). The 138 patients with adenomas had the following hormonal diagnosis: 103 nonfunctional adenomas (74%), 31 PCS (23%) and 4 cases of hyperaldosteronism (3%). In the patients with PCS an abnormal dexamethasone suppression test was found in 86% of cases (37/41 patients). Values for ACTH were low in 78% (32/41 patients). UFC was elevated in 64% of patients, the diurnal rhythm of cortisol evaluated in 14 patients was absent in 7. Only in 50% of cases DHEAS values (12/24 patients) were decreased, whereas they were normal in the other 50%. Interestingly, 8 patients with normal DHEAS and normal UFC showed nonsuppressible cortisol by dexamethasone test (1 mg). Blunted ACTH response to CRH was detected in 9 of 14 patients (64%). Thus our data suggest that the best parameter for evaluating subclinical hypercortisolism seems to be the overnight dexamethasone suppression test. In 27 patients with pheochromocytoma 24-hour urinary catecholamine and VMA levels were elevated in 86 and 46% of cases respectively. In 7 patients with hyperaldosteronism upright PRA was suppressed in 100% of cases and aldosterone plasma levels were elevated in 6 patients (86%); serum potassium level was slightly decreased in 60% of cases. In 86 of 138 histologically proven adenomas, DHEAS levels were: normal in 59% of patients, decreased in 36% and elevated in 4.6%, whereas in 22 of 32 cortical carcinomas evaluated. DHEAS levels were normal in 63% of cases, decreased in 18% and elevated 18%. Post-ACTH 17-OH progesterone levels were elevated in 52% (62/118 patients) of non-functioning adenomas and in 2 of 4 carcinomas. Not enough data are yet available postoperatively. In summary, endocrine evaluation can lead to the identification of a nonnegligible number of cases of clinically unsuspected pheochromocytomas and subtle hypercortisolism (about 3.4 and 6.2%, respectively of all adrenal incidentalomas), while cases of primary subclinical aldosteronism are rarely found. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
...
PMID:Adrenal incidentaloma: an overview of hormonal data from the National Italian Study Group. 916 66
A 50-year-old male presented with diabetes mellitus and
Cushing's syndrome
associated with a large mediastinal mass. The levels of serum cortisol were high (1500-1800 nmol/l) without diurnal variation. Plasma ACTH levels (200-250 ng/l) and urinary excretion of cortisol were also increased. The levels of these hormones did not change in response to stimulation with corticotrophin releasing hormone (CRH) or suppression with high doses of dexamethasone. The patient had an elevated baseline GH level (7.3 mU/l), and the levels of immunoreactive GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) in eight plasma samples were markedly increased (600-1500 ng/l). Circulating levels of IGF-1, chromogranin A and neuropeptide Y (NPY) were also increased. Computer-assisted tomography and octreotide scintigraphy revealed a large mediastinal tumour and
metastases
in the left supraclavicular fossa. During treatment with octreotide, the baseline GH level was decreased (to 4.4 mU/l), while the GH pulse height was unchanged. Surgical removal of most of the tumour tissue resulted in a further decrease in the baseline serum GH level to a value (1.6 mU/l) about 20% of that before treatment, while the pulse height and mean GH were affected to a lesser extent. Postoperatively, circulating levels of cortisol and IGF-1 decreased, and the patient exhibited clinical improvement. Histological examination showed a neuroendocrine tumour with characteristics consistent with a foregut carcinoid of thymic origin. Immunoreactive GHRH, ACTH and NPY, but not immunoreactive GH, were detected in 80-90% of the tumour cells and the three peptides appeared to be co-localized. In primary culture, cells from this tumour displayed calcium influx in response to GHRH or GH releasing peptide-6 (GHRP-6), while there were not such responses by cells from another carcinoid not producing GHRH, ACTH or NPY. These results demonstrate a rare case of ectopic production of GHRH, ACTH and NPY, and indicate that the tumour cells were responsive to GHRH and GHRP-6 as well as octreotide.
...
PMID:Acromegaly and Cushing's syndrome due to ectopic production of GHRH and ACTH by a thymic carcinoid tumour: in vitro responses to GHRH and GHRP-6. 957 39
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