Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors report a case of primary malignant meningioma of meninges in the right frontal area with metastases to meninges in the right temporal area and left atrial endocardium and with emboli composed of malignant cells in the vessels of the myocardium, spleen, liver, lungs and pancreas in a 49-year-old woman after commissurotomy performed for rheumatic valvular heart disease.
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PMID:[Malignant meningioma with extracranial metastases]. 95 91

Many clinicians prefer to avoid surgery in patients with carcinoid neoplasia, because of its slow growth and relatively favourable prognosis. Nevertheless, the commonest cause of death in patients with carcinoid is advanced metastatic disease, and both clinical and epidemiological data indicate that the more effectively the disease is ablated, the more long-lasting the benefit. Multidisciplinary management of patients with carcinoid must consider inherited risk, possible multiple carcinoids and/or synchronous non-carcinoid cancer, and the use of a range of investigations that also evaluate the 10% of patients with carcinoid syndrome with or without valvular heart disease. Although primary size is correlated with the presence of nodal with or without liver metastases, carcinoid tumours <1 cm in diameter may be metastatic at presentation, particularly those arising within the small intestine. In the jejunum and ileum, resection of all sizes of carcinoid with local and regional nodes is preferred, to prevent nodal dissemination causing mesenteric ischaemia with or without infarction. Resection of nodal metastases should be undertaken in those with persistent or recurrent nodal disease if possible. Appendiceal and right colonic carcinoids are most effectively treated by right hemicolectomy with local and regional nodal clearance, as for adenocarcinoma. However, for most appendiceal carcinoids which are <1 cm in diameter and non-invasive, appendicectomy alone is sufficient. For appendiceal carcinoids 1-2 cm in diameter, histopathological assessment helps to determine the need for hemicolectomy. Liver resection has been followed by prolonged 5 year survival in several series and is recommended in appropriate patients to attempt cure or to debulk metastatic disease. Liver transplantation has had only qualified success in highly selected patients without extra-hepatic disease in whom other therapies have failed.
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PMID:Surgery for midgut carcinoid. 1471 60

Carcinoid tumors are malignancies of neuroendocrine tissue. Metastasis, most commonly to the liver, is associated with the carcinoid syndrome characterized by secretory symptoms and right-sided valvular heart disease. We report a case of previously unidentified pericardial metastasis, in the absence of any valvular disease, thus, reflecting an unusual cardiac complication of this tumor. A 50-year-old patient with histologically confirmed carcinoid syndrome underwent screening transthoracic echocardiography that demonstrated a large mass posterior to the interatrial septum. The location of this mass was confirmed by transesophageal echocardiography and magnetic resonance imaging to be entirely within the pericardial space without evidence of myocardial involvement. The mass was removed at thoracotomy and histology confirmed metastatic carcinoid disease. Although patients with carcinoid syndrome are at risk of cardiac valvular complications, and should be screened, this case demonstrates an unusual and previously unidentified site of metastatic disease.
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PMID:Intrapericardial carcinoid metastasis. 1516 42

Midgut carcinoids developing in the small intestine represent the most common cause of the carcinoid syndrome, with severe symptoms of flush, diarrhoea, and fibrotic valvular heart disease. The tumours may be histologically identified with specific chromogranin A or synaptophysine immunostainings, and by serotonin reactivity, which supports a midgut origin. Urinary 5-HIAA excretion and serum chromogranin A measurements are used as biochemical tumour markers for clinical diagnosis, and as important monitors of treatment effects and prognostic predictors. The midgut carcinoids have typically slow proliferation and extended disease course, and surgical treatment has become increasingly important for their management. Surgery should aim to remove primary tumours and mesenteric metastases, which may cause long-term abdominal complications, by typical fibrotic intestinal entrapment and small bowel ischaemia due to encasement of mesenteric vessels. Attempts should also be made to surgically remove or ablate liver metastases, since this may significantly contribute to palliation of the carcinoid syndrome. In patients with this syndrome surgery is combined with continuous biotherapy with long-acting somatostatin analogues and interferon, which may alleviate symptoms and cause stable disease with slow progression. Favourable survival and life-quality can be expected with this treatment also in patients with advanced midgut carcinoids.
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PMID:Management of midgut carcinoids. 1571 73

Carcinoids are the most common neuroendocrine tumours. They are usually slowly growing, located in the small intestine, secrete serotonin, and are characterized by long survival of patients, so prognosis is generally good. The most frequently encountered clinical presentations of carcinoids are intermittent abdominal pain and carcinoid syndrome (diarrhoea and flushing). Metastases worsen the prognosis and limit the survival of the patients. We report a case of carcinoid tumour with primary focus in the ileum, with an appendix infiltration, in a thirty-two-year-old woman with acute appendicitis symptoms only. Carcinoid was diagnosed postoperatively by histopathological examination. Nowadays, twenty-five years after the surgery, there is evidence of nearly asymptomatic numerous metastases. Only intermittent abdominal pain for about 1-2 years was reported. Partial metastases resection was performed, followed by chemotherapy, (90)Y-DOTATATE and then long-acting release octreotide analogue therapy. In the meantime, severe chronic heart failure (NYHA IV) due to tricuspid combined valvular heart disease and pulmonary hypertension was diagnosed. Combined therapy, typical for chronic heart failure, together with long-acting octreotide analogue highly improved the patient's heart sufficiency and reduced carcinoid syndrome symptoms. The only adverse events of octreotide therapy were hyperbilirubinaemia and itching. Long-term survival is typical for carcinoids, but 30-years survival has not been described in the literature yet.
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PMID:Long-term survival and nearly asymptomatic course of carcinoid tumour with multiple metastases (treated by surgery, chemotherapy, (90)Y-DOTATATE, and LAR octreotide analogue): a case report. 1988 12

Neuroendocrine (NE) or carcinoid tumors of the small intestine (SI) frequently metastasize and produce the hormone serotonin, causing significant morbidity and mortality. A member of the ETS oncogene family of transcription factors, Fev, acts with the homeodomain transcription factor Nkx2.2 in the development of serotonin neurons in mice. In this study, we investigated the role of Fev in normal and neoplastic SI. In NE tumors (NETs) of the SI, serotonin stimulates tumor growth and causes debilitating symptoms, such as diarrhea, flushing, wheezing, and right-sided valvular heart disease (i.e. carcinoid syndrome). Compared with those in the matched normal human SI, FEV expression levels were significantly elevated in primary NETs (20-fold, P<0.0001), lymph node metastases (35-fold, P=0.004), and NET liver metastases (22-fold, P<0.0001) resected from patients with serotonin excess. Fev is expressed in the wild type but not in Nkx2.2 (-/-) mouse SI, in which cells producing serotonin are absent. Using recombination-based cell lineage tracing, we found that FEV-positive cells give rise to serotonin-producing cells in the SI. In Fev (-/-) mouse SI, we observed no difference in the number of cells producing serotonin or other hormones. We conclude that FEV expression identifies serotonin-producing cells in normal and neoplastic SI and is a novel target for diagnosis of patients with NETs of the SI.
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PMID:The ETS oncogene family transcription factor FEV identifies serotonin-producing cells in normal and neoplastic small intestine. 2004 18

Carcinoid heart disease (CHD) is a rare form of valvular heart disease characterized by right-sided heart valve dysfunction. Carcinoid heart disease occurs most frequently when carcinoid tumour cells metastasize from a primary site in the gut to the liver, so that vasoactive substances produced by the tumour are able to reach the systemic circulation. By contrast, in ovarian carcinoid tumours carcinoid heart disease develops in the absence of liver metastasis, because vasoactive substances can be released directly into the systemic circulation, bypassing the first-pass metabolism of the liver. There are only a few case reports in the world literature of carcinoid heart disease caused by ovarian carcinoid tumour. We report a case of an 85-year-old woman with carcinoid heart disease caused by a bilateral ovarian carcinoid tumour metastasized from a primary ileal site.
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PMID:An unusual cause of carcinoid heart disease. 2130 82

The prevalence of intestinal neuroendocrine tumours, also known as carcinoid tumours, has increased significantly over the past three decades. Tumours of the distal small intestine (midgut) are often indolent, but are characterized by a high potential to metastasize to the small-bowel mesentery and liver. Patients with distant metastases are prone to development of the carcinoid syndrome, a constellation of symptoms which includes flushing, diarrhoea, and valvular heart disease. The carcinoid syndrome is caused by secretion of serotonin and other vasoactive substances into the systemic circulation. Treatment options for metastatic intestinal NETs have expanded in recent years. Of particular importance has been the development of somatostatin-analogue therapies. Somatostatin analogues were originally introduced for palliation of the carcinoid syndrome; however recent clinical trials have demonstrated that they can exert an inhibitory effect on tumour growth. Other novel agents targeting the VEGF and mTOR pathways have recently been evaluated in phase III trials, however their role in the management of small-intestinal NETs remains controversial. This article examines the biological characteristics of small intestinal NETs, summarizes current guidelines on classification, staging and grading, and reviews developments in locoregional and systemic therapy.
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PMID:Neuroendocrine tumours of the small intestine. 2358 17

Gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (GEP-NETs) are rare, generally indolent neoplasms that can arise throughout the gastrointestinal system. Some GEP-NETs, known as functional, secrete hormones that can lead to a complex of symptoms. Classical carcinoid syndrome is associated with flushing, diarrhea, bronchospasm, and symptoms of valvular heart disease. GEP-NETs are classified according to the primary tumor site, functionality of the disease, and histology. Treatment is guided by the resectability of the tumor, the location and extent of metastases, and the presence of clinical symptoms. Typically, first-line treatment of patients with unresectable disease includes the use of somatostatin analogs, such as octreotide LAR depot or lanreotide depot/autogel, which was recently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for treatment of GEP-NETs. Somatostatin analogs can improve the severe diarrhea/flushing episodes that may be associated with metastatic carcinoid tumors. For patients with pancreatic NETs, additional approved treatment options include the targeted agents everolimus and sunitinib, which have demonstrated antitumor activity. Chemotherapy may also have a selective role, particularly in pancreatic NETs. Localized approaches, including cytoreductive surgery, hepatic arterial embolization, and ablative therapies, may be used for palliative treatment in patients with liver metastases.
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PMID:New and Emerging Treatment Options for Gastroenteropancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors. 2643 Sep 56

Small bowel neuroendocrine tumors (SBNETS) are slow-growing neoplasms with a noted propensity toward metastasis and comparatively favorable prognosis. The presentation of SBNETs is varied, although abdominal pain and obstructive symptoms are the most common presenting symptoms. In patients with metastases, hypersecretion of serotonin and other bioactive amines results in diarrhea, flushing, valvular heart disease, and bronchospasm, termed carcinoid syndrome. The treatment of SBNETs is multimodal and includes surgery, liver-directed therapy, somatostatin analogues, targeted therapy, and peptide receptor radionuclide therapy.
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PMID:Management of Small Bowel Neuroendocrine Tumors. 3215 57


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