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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
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103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The production of ACTH-like material by tumours arising in non-endocrine tissue may initiate severe adrenocortical hyperfunction. The pathogenesis and clinical and laboratory features of
Cushing's syndrome
associated with such tumours are characteristic. The autonomous production by the tumour of ACTH-like material cannot be suppressed by exogenous corticoids. The onset of clinical symptoms is rapid; muscle wasting, general weakness, thirst and peripheral edema predominate, and the classical signs of
Cushing's syndrome
may be absent. High levels of plasma 17-hydroxycorticosteroids and urinary 17-hydroxycorticosteroids and 17-ketosteroids, usually with normal levels of urinary aldosterone, commonly occur. Hypokalemic alkalosis unresponsive to replacement therapy may cause death. In the case reported herein, the intriguing possibility exists that two hormone-like substances were produced by the primary growth and its
metastases
: one, ACTH-like, to account for the adrenal hyperplasia and
Cushing's syndrome
; and another, gastrin-like, giving rise to the ulcerogenic diathesis.
...
PMID:ISLET-CELL CARCINOMA (ZOLLINGER-ELLISON SYNDROME) WITH FULMINATING ADRENOCORTICAL HYPERFUNCTION AND HYPOKALEMIA. 1432 54
Adrenocortical tumours have to be differentiated from cortical hyperplasias, medullary tumours and extra-adrenal tumours or
metastases
. These diagnoses are mostly possible using routine paraffin sections. In some cases, immunostaining for differing cortical and medullary tumours and
metastases
are necessary. Adrenal hyperplasias can be congenital or acquired. They are diffuse, micronodular or macronodular and may be inactive or induce a cortical hyperfunction. Very rarely, macronodular hyperplasias may transform into autonomous adenomas. Primary, pigmented adrenocortical disease is a rare, special type of primary adrenal
Cushing's syndrome
, showing many small tumours with pleomorphic cells and an atrophic surrounding cortical tissue. Adrenal adenomas are mostly unilateral and solitary tumours weighing less than 50 g. Adrenal cortical carcinomas are mostly larger. Like the adenomas, they may be inactive and may induce a hypercortisolism, a hyperandrogenism or (very rarely in carcinomas) a hyperaldosteronism. Differentiating cortical adenomas and carcinomas is difficult in some cases but is possible using a diagnostic algorithm. Myelolipomas are benign, inactive tumours composed of mature fat cells and bone marrow cells. They have to be differentiated from adenomas with myelolipomatous metaplasia. Further, rare primary cortical tumours are mentioned.
...
PMID:[Adrenocortical tumours]. 1451 74
A 56-year-old man with recurrent thymic atypical carcinoid presented with
Cushing's syndrome
only in the terminal stage. Eighteen months after the resection of an anterior mediastinal mass, he presented with hypernatremia and hypokalemia with high serum levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone and cortisol, and died two months later. An autopsy demonstrated multiple
metastases
of the tumor to the mediastinum, lungs, heart, liver, kidneys, bone, pituitary gland, and ocular muscles. The adrenocorticotropic hormone level of the tumor tissue was 26,000 pg/g.
...
PMID:Thymic atypical carcinoid with Cushing's syndrome manifesting in the terminal stage. 1452 58
Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare neoplasm with poor prognosis. Patients present with signs of steroid hormone excess (e.g.
Cushing's syndrome
, virilization) or an abdominal mass. Tumour size at presentation (mean diameter at diagnosis > 10 cm) is the most important indicator of malignancy. In addition, computed tomography (CT) typically demonstrates an inhomogeneous adrenal lesion with irregular margins and variable enhancement of solid components after intravenous contrast media. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is equally effective as CT and is particularly helpful to visualize invasion into large vessels. Complete tumour removal (R0 resection) offers by far the best chance for long-term survival and therefore surgery is the treatment of choice in stage I-III ACC. Despite tumour resection for cure most patients will eventually develop local recurrence or distant
metastases
. Thus adjuvant treatment options need to be evaluated in high-risk patients (e.g. radiation therapy of the tumour bed and/or chemotherapy). In tumour recurrence re-operation should always be considered. In
metastatic disease
(stage IV ACC) not amenable to surgery mitotane (o,p'DDD) remains the first-line therapy. Drug monitoring is needed for effective treatment aiming at concentrations between 14 and 20 mg/l. Patients not responding to mitotane may benefit from cytotoxic chemotherapy (23% partial remissions, 4% complete remissions). Only large prospective multicentre trials comparing different treatment options will allow to make systematic progress in the management of ACC.
...
PMID:Management of adrenocortical carcinoma. 1500 91
Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)-independent hypercortisolism accounts for 15%-20% of cases of
Cushing syndrome
and always arises from primary adrenal disease. Computed tomographic (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging findings in 37 patients with primary adrenal
Cushing syndrome
were analyzed and correlated with pathologic findings. Hyperfunctioning adenomas (n = 24), together with functioning carcinomas (n = 10), accounted for 92% of cases. Adenomas had a significantly smaller mean size (3.5 vs 14.5 cm) and lower mean unenhanced CT attenuation value (11 vs 28 HU) than did carcinomas. The presence of necrosis, hemorrhage, and calcification favored a diagnosis of carcinoma. Six of 10 carcinoma patients had
metastases
at presentation. Two adenomas were seen within a myelolipoma, which was recognized at both CT and MR imaging due to its fat content, and two adenomas were of uncertain malignant potential. Bilateral disease--primary pigmented nodular adrenal dysplasia (PPNAD) (n = 2) and ACTH-independent macronodular adrenal hyperplasia (AIMAH) (n = 1)--had characteristic imaging features. In PPNAD, multiple tiny (2-5-mm) nodules were visible bilaterally, with no overall glandular enlargement and normal intervening adrenal tissue. In AIMAH, both glands were grossly enlarged and contained nodules up to 3 cm in diameter. Familiarity with the range of imaging appearances of the adrenal glands in primary adrenal
Cushing syndrome
may help establish the underlying diagnosis.
...
PMID:CT and MR imaging of the adrenal glands in ACTH-independent cushing syndrome. 1502 92
Endocrine surgeons should maintain a high index of suspicion when patients are diagnosed with clinical signs or symptoms of parathyroid carcinoma. Although rare, the best chance for cure of these patients is at the time of the initial operation. Surgical resection of recurrent disease can provide effective palliation and can sometimes be assisted using gamma-probe directed dissection of sestamibi-labeled tumor tissue. Treatment of hyperparathyroidism in the setting of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN-1), particularly in the reoperative setting, can be aided by using the rapid intraoperative parathyroid hormone assay to judge the adequacy of parathyroid debulking. In addition, in selected cases, the gamma probe can assist in identifying the location of ectopic or autografted sestamibi-labeled parathyroid tissue. Patients with incidental adrenal masses rarely require fine needle aspiration to exclude
metastatic cancer
. Fine needle aspiration, if performed, should never precede hormone evaluation to exclude pheochromocytoma. Patients who are diagnosed with incidental adrenal masses in the setting of a prior or concurrent cancer diagnosis are equally likely to have a primary adrenal mass as they would be to have
metastatic cancer
in the adrenal gland. Pheochromocytomas occasionally develop in patients with MEN-1. In suspicious cases, molecular identification of an MEN-1 mutation can be used to confirm the diagnosis. Preoperative hormone evaluation of a patient with an adrenal incidentaloma should include evaluation for subclinical
Cushing's syndrome
through an overnight 1-mg dexamethasone suppression test. Identification of this condition allows for safe peri- and postoperative steroid hormone replacement, with very slow withdrawal of exogenous steroids to allow the opposite adrenal gland to recover and avoid postoperative Addisonian crisis. Paragangliomas are more commonly multifocal and malignant compared to pheochromocytomas. Evaluation of patients with paragangliomas should include radiographic staging for multifocality and
metastatic disease
, and postoperative hormone and radiographic follow-up evaluation should be performed. Consideration should be given to genetic testing for von Hippel-Lindau and succinate dehydrogenase mutations. Surgical treatment of rare functioning pancreatic and duodenal endocrine tumors, such as metastatic sporadic insulinoma and MEN-1-associated gastrinoma, can provide effective palliation. Surgical treatment should be integrated into a comprehensive treatment scheme that recognizes the natural history of the disease and incorporates appropriate adjunctive therapies and follow-up strategies.
...
PMID:Unusual functioning endocrine tumors. 1523 9
Cushing's syndrome
secondary to ectopic adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) secretion is rarely observed in breast carcinoma and only four cases have been previously published. We report here the case of a 50-year-old woman who presented with a history of diffuse bone pain associated with multiple hepatic, pulmonary, and bone metastases. A core needle biopsy specimen revealed an invasive ductal carcinoma in the right breast. The patient subsequently developed an ACTH-dependent paraneoplastic
Cushing's syndrome
and she died of arrhythmia and heart failure, despite treatment. At autopsy, immunohistochemical staining showed chromogranin A and ACTH positivity in the breast tumor and a lung metastasis. The mRNA expression of the pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) gene was detected in tumoral cells by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). This is the first case of
Cushing's syndrome
secondary to ectopic ACTH secretion where the presence of ACTH by immunohistochemistry and the expression of the POMC gene by RT-PCR have both been demonstrated in a breast carcinoma with
metastases
. The clinical history and the pathologic findings are presented with the methods and results of the molecular analysis. This case illustrates an example of ectopic ACTH syndrome in a breast carcinoma with neuroendocrine (NE) differentiation. This NE phenotype is directly related to the synthesis of ACTH by the tumoral cells. It should be kept in mind that an ectopic ACTH syndrome may be produced not only by small cell carcinoma or endocrine tumors but also by breast cancer. No relationship has been established between NE features and prognostic factors or patient outcome for this peculiar type of breast carcinoma. The demonstration of mRNA POMC in breast carcinoma with NE features suggests a depression and/or an activation of the POMC gene linked to the NE differentiation.
...
PMID:Pro-opiomelanocortin expression in a metastatic breast carcinoma with ectopic ACTH secretion. 1523 95
We present a 54-yr-old woman with ectopic corticotropin syndrome caused by a neuroendocrine tumor of the pancreas. At initial presentation, the patient suffered from diarrhea, heartburn, and nonspecific abdominal pain. There was no evidence of
Cushing's syndrome
. A neuroendocrine tumor in the head of the pancreas with
metastases
into peripancreatic lymph nodes was diagnosed and completely resected. Fourteen months later, abdominal computed tomography and scintigraphy with (111)In-labeled octreotide suggested relapse of the tumor. The patient again had no evidence of
Cushing's syndrome
. A second in toto tumor resection was performed. Another 8 months later, the patient developed forgetfulness, depressive episodes, muscle weakness, new-onset hypertension, hypokalemia, plethora, diabetes mellitus, polyuria, and weight loss. Endocrine testing suggested a source of ectopic ACTH production. An octreotide scan showed an intense uptake ventromedial of the left kidney, an area that showed a mass lateral of the superior mesenteric artery on abdominal magnetic resonance imaging. A complete pancreatectomy with splenectomy and left-sided adrenalectomy were performed. At this second relapse, this neuroendocrine tumor clinically had changed its hormonal profile. Immunohistochemically, in contrast to primary tumor and first relapse, we found strong immunostaining for ACTH in tumor cells of the second relapse and a MIB-1 index greater than 20%. To our knowledge, this is the first report describing a pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor that started to secrete ACTH de novo at the time of the second relapse after two former complete tumor resections. This case underscores the pluripotency of neuroendocrine tumor cells and the importance of keeping in mind a possible shift in hormone production during tumor evolution and progression.
...
PMID:Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor with ectopic adrenocorticotropin production upon second recurrence. 1529 97
In patients with cancer, adrenal enlargement due to either
metastatic disease
or diffuse non-metastatic hyperplasia is increasingly recognized with modern imaging techniques. Dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, characterized by non-suppressible hypercortisolism, has also been described in neoplasia in the absence of ectopic adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) production. In the majority of cases of malignancy-associated hypercortisolism, it might be expected that the presence of malignant disease would be clinically apparent, thus rendering a detailed endocrinological evaluation of the HPA axis unnecessary. However, in the present case we describe a patient with occult malignancy presenting with bilateral adrenocortical enlargement and non-suppressible hypercortisolism that was not due to the ectopic ACTH syndrome. There were no clinical Cushingoid features other than hypertension and new-onset diabetes mellitus. Detailed diagnostic investigations for the possibility of
Cushing's syndrome
were performed before the underlying diagnosis of gastric adenocarcinoma eventually became apparent. Characteristics and potential mechanisms of non-suppressible hypercortisolism in cancer are discussed. We believe that this scenario will occur with greater frequency in the future, given the increasing early use of sophisticated high-resolution imaging for the evaluation of suspected intra-abdominal pathology.
...
PMID:Bilateral adrenal enlargement and non-suppressible hypercortisolism as a presenting feature of gastric cancer. 1558 43
Rare cases of nonhepatocytic mixed stromal and epithelial tumors of the liver with associated calcification and ossification have been described previously. We report 6 similar cases in children, including 2 cases associated with ectopic ACTH production. The patients were between 2 and 14 years of age at diagnosis. All tumors presented as a solitary liver mass with no extrahepatic involvement. Two adolescent females with palpable abdominal tumors presented with
Cushing syndrome
that abated after excision of the tumors. The other children had tumors identified incidentally on imaging studies or at laparotomy. All tumors were well circumscribed, ranging in size from 4.0 to 30.0 cm in greatest diameter. Histologically, they shared an organoid arrangement of cellular nests that were comprised of an admixture of both spindled and epithelioid cells. These cellular nests were surrounded by a band of delicate myofibroblasts and set in a dense fibrous stroma that contained slit-like to dilated blood vessels. A variable proliferation of bile ducts extended from the fibrous stroma and focally surrounded the cellular nests. One case showed a sheet-like overgrowth of the nested cells with associated necrosis. The cellular nest cells were immunoreactive for EMA, CD56, neuron specific enolase, pan-cytokeratin (4 of 6 cases), vimentin (5 of 6 cases), and WT-1 amino terminus (4 of 6 cases). Cytokeratin and EMA stained mostly epithelioid nest cells, with vimentin and WT-1 staining predominantly the spindled nest cells. The 3 cases from adolescent females showed immunoreactivity for ACTH in the nested cell population but not in the surrounding stromal cells. Immunohistochemical stains for synaptophysin and chromogranin were negative in all cases. Psammomatous calcifications were present focally in 2 cases and were extensive in 3 cases. Ossification or osteoid formation was present in 4 cases. The 1 patient whose tumor had sheet-like overgrowth of the nested cell population had a local recurrence with multiple hepatic nodules 1 year following the original resection. A 2-year-old patient has been subsequently diagnosed with nephroblastomatosis and Wilms tumor of the kidney. Follow-up information was available in an additional 3 patients with no tumor recurrence or
metastatic disease
at 2, 3, and 14 years.
...
PMID:Nested stromal epithelial tumor of the liver: six cases of a distinctive pediatric neoplasm with frequent calcifications and association with cushing syndrome. 1561 52
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