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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The members of four generations of a family with
Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome
(
VHL
) have been followed by one of us (I.P.) for 30 years. The disease was proved in four members of this family, in three of them associated with pheochromocytoma. The grandmother (I-1) died at the age of 16 years two months after her first birth. The cause of death was not established. Her daughter (II-1) had 9 births with 5 children alive. Paresthesia and difficulties in walking followed by paraparesis and paraplegia were the first signs of the disease at the age of 58 years. The surgical treatment was performed because of an expansive lesion at the level of Th 3-4. Pathohistological examination was not done. It seems that a haemangioblastoma might be the cause of her disease. Diagnosis of pheochromocytoma was documented in a female patient (III-2) in 1972. Two years later she was successfully operated on. Pathohistological examination proved clinical diagnosis. She had also diabetes mellitus, cholelithiasis and cardiomyopathy. She died at the age of 56 years. A right-sided pheochromocytoma was diagnosed in a next female patient (III-4) at the age of 22 years. Her surgical treatment was successful. Retinal haemangioblastomatosis was established 7 years later in this patient. She was blind at the end of her life. Haemangioblastomatosis cerebelli was diagnosed soon, and she died at the age of 51 years. A 12- year old boy (IV-3) presented severe hypertension (36/24 kPa). Left-sided pheochromocytoma was removed in this patient one year later. Right-sided pheochromocytoma was operated on in the same patient at the age of 24 years. An elevated level of urinary dopamine was documented four years after the second operation. A malignant right-sided pheochromocytoma was operated on in the same patient 15 years later. At the same time
metastases
were found in the lower part of the right lung lobe. A 131-I-MIBG therapy could not be realized. He died at the age of 41. Pathohistological examinations proved the clinical diagnosis in this patient after all of three surgical treatments. MEN 2 syndrome was excluded by proper genetical analyses on the RET-protooncogen. Genetical analyses are in the course to identify the possible mutations of
VHL
-tumour-suppressor gene through the living members of the family. Multidisciplinary approach is mandatory in diagnosis, follow up and treatment of this specific group of patients. A collaboration among specialists of different fields of medicine (internal medicine, ophthalmology, neurology, radiology, urology, neurosurgery, biochemistry, pathology and genetics) is suggested.
...
PMID:[The von Hippel-Lindau syndrome with pheochromocytoma]. 1258 97
Although renal cell carcinoma accounts for only 3% of adult malignancies, it has been increasing in incidence by 2-4% per year since the 1970's. Cigarette smoking, obesity and end-stage renal disease are important risk factors. Genetic syndromes such as von
Hippel
-Lindau disease are also associated with an increased incidence of renal cell carcinoma. Localized disease should be treated with surgical resection. However, approximately 30% of patients present with
metastatic disease
. Complete resection of
metastases
can result in long-term survival in some individuals. Removal of the primary renal tumor in patients with unresectable disseminated disease has also been shown to improve survival in selected good performance status patients receiving systemic immunotherapy. While chemotherapy has been relatively ineffective in the treatment of renal cell carcinoma, biologic therapy with interleukin-2 or interferon does lead to responses in a minority of patients, with occasional long-term survivors. Recently, promising results have been reported with allogeneic stem cell transplantation using a non-myeloablative conditioning regimen. However, therapy for metastatic renal cell carcinoma remains inadequate. Ongoing trials with novel approaches such as anti-angiogenesis agents, cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors, and tumor vaccines will hopefully lead to improved outcomes in this disease.
...
PMID:Renal cell carcinoma: current status and future directions. 1260 28
The therapy of renal cell carcinoma remains a challenge for medical oncologists and urologists. During the past 10 years, the molecular abnormalities occurring in various subtypes of renal cancer, such as clear cell renal carcinoma, have been well described. The genetic abnormalities found in clear cell tumours involve chromosome 3p and, additionally, hypermethylation of the von
Hippel
-Lindau (VHL) gene can be detected. The VHL protein is involved in the angiogenic cascade in non-hypoxic conditions, and the possible role of mutant or hypermethylated VHL protein in promoting angiogenesis is, therefore, of interest. The majority of patients with renal cell carcinoma who receive treatment, such as IL-2 and/or IFN, fail and develop progressive disease. Therapy is therefore inadequate and novel approaches, such as those inhibiting angiogenesis, are of interest. The agent AE-941 (Neovostat trade mark; AEterna) was developed based on the observation that shark cartilage may contain biologically active inhibitors of angiogenesis. A variety of in vitro and in vivo activities of this preparation have been identified. At the molecular level, AE-941 appears to exhibit four different potential mechanisms of action: modulation of matrix proteases; inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor binding to its receptor; induction of endothelial cell apoptosis; and stimulation of angiostatin production. The antitumour effects of AE-941 are seen in multiple murine models and involve not only effects on primary tumour growth but also on development of
metastases
. AE-941 is administered orally and has an excellent toxicity profile. Of interest are the findings in patients with renal cell carcinoma. Preliminary trials in this setting have suggested that responses to AE-941 occur and that patients receiving higher doses of this agent may have improved survival. Based on these preliminary data, a large, multi-institutional, randomised, Phase III trial of this agent has now been conducted in patients with metastatic clear cell carcinoma of the kidney. Over 300 patients have been entered into this trial, accrual is complete and results still remain preliminary. The clinical studies in a malignancy such as renal cell carcinoma will provide sentinel and potentially important observations on the clinical effectiveness of this agent.
...
PMID:AE-941, a multifunctional antiangiogenic compound: trials in renal cell carcinoma. 1288 25
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is the tenth most common cancer although the incidence is increasing. The main clinical problems stem from the relatively late presentation of many patients due to the often asymptomatic nature of the illness, and the relative insensitivity of
metastatic disease
to conventional chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Despite increasing knowledge of some of the genetic changes underlying sporadic renal cancer such as those involving the
Von Hippel
Lindau (VHL) gene, many of the underlying pathophysiological changes are ill-defined and there remains a need for the identification of disease markers for use in diagnosis and prognosis or as potential therapeutic targets. This study has used a proteomic approach, based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry, to compare the protein profiles of conventional RCC tissue with patient-matched normal kidney cortex. Sequencing of 32 protein spots with significantly increased expression in RCC samples (>/= 4/6 patients) and 41 proteins whose levels decreased (6/6 patients) confirmed several previously known RCC-associated changes such as increases in Mn-superoxide dismutase, lactate dehydrogenase-A, aldolase A and C, pyruvate kinase M2, and thymidine phosphorylase. Additionally, several previously unknown changes were identified, including increased expression of three members of the annexin family and increased levels of the actin depolymerisation factor cofilin. The Warburg effect was also demonstrated with the identification of increases in proteins involved in the majority of steps in the glycolytic pathway and decreases in the gluconeogenic reactions, together with a parallel decrease in several mitochondrial enzymes. A number of the alterations seen were further confirmed in additional samples by immunohistochemistry, Western blotting, and laser capture microdissection.
...
PMID:Proteomic changes in renal cancer and co-ordinate demonstration of both the glycolytic and mitochondrial aspects of the Warburg effect. 1292 86
We present a case of a papillary tumour of the petrous bone. The established terminology for this rare neoplasm is endolymphatic sac tumour (ELST) but the true origin remains controversial. ELSTs are associated with von
Hippel
-Lindau disease. They are locally invasive, highly vascular and often require endovascular embolization prior to surgery. Both radiologically and histologically ELSTs are easily mistaken for other more common tumours such as paragangliomas and renal or papillary thyroid carcinoma
metastases
. This is important because local excision is curative.
...
PMID:Endolymphatic sac tumours. 1295 28
Organ-specific metastasis is governed, in part, by interactions between chemokine receptors on cancer cells and matching chemokines in target organs. For example, malignant breast cancer cells express the chemokine receptor CXCR4 and commonly
metastasize
to organs that are an abundant source of the CXCR4-specific ligand stromal cell-derived factor-1alpha (ref. 1). It is still uncertain how an evolving tumour cell is reprogrammed to express CXCR4, thus implementing the tendency to
metastasize
to specific organs. Here we show that the von
Hippel
-Lindau tumour suppressor protein pVHL negatively regulates CXCR4 expression owing to its capacity to target hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) for degradation under normoxic conditions. This process is suppressed under hypoxic conditions, resulting in HIF-dependent CXCR4 activation. An analysis of clear cell renal carcinoma that manifests mutation of the
VHL
gene in most cases revealed an association of strong CXCR4 expression with poor tumour-specific survival. These results suggest a mechanism for CXCR4 activation during tumour cell evolution and imply that
VHL
inactivation acquired by incipient tumour cells early in tumorigenesis confers not only a selective survival advantage but also the tendency to home to selected organs.
...
PMID:Chemokine receptor CXCR4 downregulated by von Hippel-Lindau tumour suppressor pVHL. 1367 99
Treatment of advanced renal cancer has made little progress in the past 30 yr. Most clinical efforts have incorporated cytokine-based therapy. The presumption has been that the cytokines may trigger a host immune response against the renal cancer. Only IFN-alpha and high-dose IL-2 seemed to have positive effects on patient outcomes. IFN has prolonged the lives of patients by a few months, and high-dose IL-2 is capable of inducing very prolonged remissions (>5 yr) for a small number of patients. Nephrectomy in the presence of
metastatic disease
has been established as an effective procedure for select patients, providing palliation and prolonging survival. Finally, enthusiasm has focused on the use of nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation and donor leukocyte infusion for the induction of graft versus tumor effects. Early results are both provocative and promising. A number of agents that target the critical gene products downstream from pVHL and hypoxia-inducible factor-1, such as vascular endothelial growth factor, PDGF, EGF receptor, and TGF-alpha, have recently become available. The new agents are capable of inhibiting specific cellular targets, and the biologic characteristics of clear cell carcinoma of the kidney support their application. If the correct targets are carefully selected for inhibition in tumors in which the targets are present (clear cell histologic features and loss of
VHL
expression), then results should resemble those others have observed with targeted therapy, such as the use of STI-571 (Gleevec; Novartis Pharmaceuticals, East Hanover, NJ) for treatment of chronic myelogenous leukemia and gastrointestinal stromal tumors or anti-HER2/neu (Herceptin; Genentech, South San Francisco, CA) for treatment of breast cancer.
...
PMID:Targeting of the VHL-hypoxia-inducible factor-hypoxia-induced gene pathway for renal cell carcinoma therapy. 1456 78
The entity which has come to be known as an endolymphatic sac tumor (ELST) has, in the past, been known as adenocarcinoma of endolymphatic sac origin, aggressive papillary tumor of the temporal bone and Heffner's tumor. ELSTs arise in the vicinity of the inner ear and may extend to involve both the posterior fossa as well as the middle ear and the external ear canal, which may complicate the differential diagnosis ELSTs are typically seen in adults, with only rare descriptions in pediatric patients. They may be sporadic tumors or they may arise as part of the symptom complex of von
Hippel
-Lindau disease. Clinical signs at presentation range from a mass in the external ear canal to sensorineural deafness to cranial nerve palsies. Imaging studies reveal a destructive lesion of the petrous bone which is heterogeneous on MR scanning. Light microscopy reveals two chief patterns: a follicular pattern, reminiscent of thyroid parenchyma; and a papillary/solid pattern. Both patterns are often admixed in the same tumor, and the individual tumor cells are cytologically bland. Immunohistochemically, ELSTs are typically keratin-, vimentin- and epithelial membrane antigen-positive; they are often S-100 protein-positive and neuron-specific enolase-positive as well. ELSTs are difficult to extirpate surgically (owing to their locally aggressive nature); nevertheless, surgical excision remains the mainstay of current therapy. These are slow-growing (albeit locally aggressive) tumors which have only rarely been reported to
metastasize
; as such, they remain principally a problem of local control.
...
PMID:Endolymphatic sac tumor (low-grade papillary adenocarcinoma) of the temporal bone. 1471 Sep 2
Haemangioblastoma (HBs) may occur sporadically in the central nervous system, or in association with von
Hippel
-Lindau (VHL) disease. Haemangioblastoma of the central nervous system is often seen in the posterior cranial fossa. VHL is an autosomaly dominant disorder. In sporadic HBs tumours, VHL alleles are reported to be inactive in up to 50% of tumours. Five patients with tumours of the posterior cranial fossa were examined by scyntygrapghy, computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Metastases
were initially diagnosed by neuroimaging examinations in two patients, and HBs in the remaining cases. In four patients, tumours were removed neurosurgically. Two patients had evidence of VHL disease. All resected tumours and autopsy materials were studied histologically and immunohistologically. Most antibodies that were used showed positive immunoreactions with stromal, endothelial, and pericyte or macrophage cells in tumours diagnosed as haemangioblastoma. Preoperative diagnosis of haemangioblastoma is mostly precise with MRI or magnetic resonance angiograghy. The surgical treatment of HBs is only a part of the complex therapeutical process. Diagnosis based on the gene analysis can be very useful in early detection or protection against potential recurrence of this disease in patients and their families.
...
PMID:Haemangioblastoma of the posterior cranial fossa: clinico-neuropathological study. 1497 56
Pheochromocytoma is one of the potentially fatal causes of childhood hypertension. The study aims to analyze the results of our experiences in pheochromocytomas and the long-term results of its surgical treatment in children. The records of 15 children (11 boys, 4 girls) treated for pheochromocytoma in our unit during the period of 1984 and 2002 were reviewed retrospectively. The average age at surgery was 11.7 yr (range 6 yr 9 months-15 yr 7 months). Localized disease is defined as the cases without the invasion of surrounding tissue, regional disease as the invasion of surrounding tissue and
metastatic disease
as distant
metastases
. The mean follow-up after pheochromocytoma excision was 95 months (range 5 to 221 months). Tumors were located in the adrenal gland in 11 (bilaterally in 4) and extra-adrenally in 4. Localized disease occurred in 14 patients and regional disease in one. Only one patient was associated with von
Hippel Lindau syndrome
. Adrenalectomy or total excision of extra adrenal tumor was performed. Four patients (26.7%) recurred after the first operation (at 2 yr 9 months to 14 yr) and regional disease recurred in one patient three times. Early diagnosis, surgical excision, and long-term follow up are most important for the appropriate treatment of childhood pheochromocytoma.
...
PMID:Experience with surgical excision in childhood pheochromocytoma. 1520 7
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