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)

Two cases of breast carcinoma associated with prolactinoma are presented. Literature review reveals only five previous case reports of this association. Both of our cases occurred in women, aged 55 and 34. Both were typical of the reported cases in that they had long histories of amenorrhea before diagnosis of prolactinomas and breast carcinomas. One patient had a three and a half year history of atypical ductal hyperplasia and a prominent intraduct component in the invasive tumor. Both had axillary lymph node metastases. The significance of the association of breast carcinoma with prolactinoma is discussed. Whereas studies in animals have shown prolactin to be an initiator and promoter of breast carcinoma, studies in humans have been inconclusive. Some studies have shown raised levels of prolactin in patients with breast carcinoma and their daughters, while others have not. The paucity of case reports linking breast carcinoma and prolactinoma may indicate that the association is mere coincidence, but studies evaluating the relationship between breast carcinoma and all forms of hyperprolactinemia need to be conducted before a causal link is dismissed. Prolactin may act as a cofactor with, for example, estrogen or stress, to induce breast carcinoma.
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PMID:Two case reports of breast carcinoma associated with prolactinoma. 927 Oct 27

A 49-yr-old woman presented with an extensive prolactinoma (serum PRL > 10,000 mU/L, normal range < 450 mU/L). Over a 5-yr period following transsphenoidal surgery and pituitary irradiation, she became increasingly resistant to high doses of bromocriptine and underwent transfrontal surgery followed by stereotactic radiotherapy. In spite of these treatments, serum prolactin estimations rose progressively to > 100,000 mU/L. Magnetic resonance imaging scanning demonstrated a massive cystic tumor invading the temporal lobes, extending into the cervical and thoracic spine, with metastases to cervical lymph nodes. High-dose cabergoline administration resulted in a 30% decrease in serum PRL. Octreotide was administered as a continuous sc infusion with a profound analgesic effect on facial pain but with no effect on tumor progression. She was treated with a course of chemotherapy consisting of carboplatin and etoposide without any noticeable effect. The patient died 6 months following chemotherapy. Immunocytochemical analysis demonstrated positive nuclear staining for WAF-1, Rb protein, c-myc, and p53 both in the original and metastatic tumors. The metastases but not the primary tumor stained for c-jun. Metastatic prolactinoma remains a therapeutic challenge. It is associated with a variable proto-oncogene expression, which may be coincidental or causal. Cabergoline had no advantage over bromocriptine. Octreotide relieved facial pain but did not alter tumor progression. An effective therapy for metastatic prolactinoma remains to be identified.
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PMID:Metastatic prolactinoma: effect of octreotide, cabergoline, carboplatin and etoposide; immunocytochemical analysis of proto-oncogene expression. 928 27

A 32-year-old female patient with a primary adenohypophyseal neoplasm that rapidly progressed to a fatal outcome is presented. The time interval between her admission to the hospital and her death was 3 months. Despite dopamine agonist therapy, local invasion as well as frontal and spinal cord metastases at Th 10-12 region developed, and four surgical resections were performed. The serum prolactin levels were high. Both the primary pituitary tumour and all the metastatic tumours had the same histological findings and immunohistochemical reactions. Each was composed of pleomorphic chromophobic cells with enlarged nuclei. Mitoses and necroses were frequent. Immunostains revealed prolactin in the tumour cells. A literature review revealed that in most of the pituitary carcinomas as in our case hyperprolactinaemia did not respond to medical therapy and the histopathological appearance of the tumour has not correlated with the aggressive behaviour of the tumour. It may therefore be considered that at least some of the cases with metastases in prolactin secreting pituitary carcinomas could be the result of hyperprolactinaemia itself.
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PMID:Prolactin-secreting carcinoma of the pituitary: clinicopathological and immunohistochemical study of a case with intracranial and intraspinal dissemination. 933 37

Cultured rat pre-T Nb2 lymphoma cell lines have provided a useful model for tumor progression of T-cell cancers. Comparative analysis of the non-metastatic, prolactin (PRL)-dependent parental Nb2-U17 line and its PRL-independent and/or metastatic sublines, can be used in a search for progression-related genomic alterations. In the present study, the PRL-dependent, cloned Nb2-11C and PRL-independent Nb2-Sp sublines were used to examine development of metastatic ability and PRL independence relative to chromosomal alterations. Metastatic ability was determined using Noble rats carrying subcutaneous tumor transplants; PRL dependence/autonomy was checked in culture. Nb2-11C tumor transplants quickly gave rise to morbidity, associated with metastases in kidney and liver. Transplants of the slower growing Nb2-Sp cells showed variable tumorigenicity as metastases developed in only 40% of the rats (in lungs, kidney, stomach). G-banded chromosome analysis showed the Nb2-11C culture had the karyotype of the parental Nb2-U17 line plus an extra chromosome 19, thus, indicating an association between the development of metastatic ability in Nb2-11C cells and trisomy 19. The Nb2-Sp subline was not clonal. Its stemline showed two alterations in the parental karyotype: acquisition of an add(7)(q10) and loss of the extra chromosome add(15)(p12). Additional abnormalities, add(6)(q11) and trisomy 19, occurred in 15% and 5% of the Nb2-Sp population, respectively. Passaging of the Nb2-Sp subline in vivo resulted in generation and/or outgrowth of new sublines, a major one of which showed an apparent transient growth requirement for lactogens. Possible mechanisms underlying the PRL independence and in vivo properties of the Nb2-Sp cells are discussed.
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PMID:Malignant progression of rat Nb2 lymphoma cells: chromosomal alterations and metastatic properties. 1021 59

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
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PMID:Diagnosis, treatment, and outcome of pituitary tumors and other abnormal intrasellar masses. Retrospective analysis of 353 patients. 1042 6

Malignant prolactinomas are very rare pituitary neoplasms which can be identified not from the hystopathologic nor neuroimaging aspects but only retrospectively from the presence of distant metastases. A 32-year-old male patient was diagnosed of a pituitary prolactinoma because of bitemporal hemianopsia on the basis of cranial MRI aspect and raised blood prolactin level. Visual signs improved under bromocriptine treatment but after surgical and X-ray therapies patient developed paralysis of V and XII left cranial nerves and suffered from medulocerebelous angle, vertebrae, spinal epidural space, lung, liver, suprarenal and femoral metastases. Patient died 3 years after the diagnosis time. Prolactin levels raised 2000 ng/ml. This is the first case of malignant prolactinoma described in the spanish literature and the more large one in number of metastatic localizations between the malignant prolactinomas from the literature. These kind of neoplasms can be partially ameliorated under X-ray and bromocriptine treatment but there is not, by the moment, a curative chemotherapy.
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PMID:[Malignant prolactinoma with intra- and extracranial metastasis: clinico-radiologic study]. 1089 70

Four pituitary carcinoma metastases [two adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and prolactin cell tumors each] were studied by comparative genomic hybridization. Chromosomal gains were found in all four carcinoma metastases, but losses only in the two prolactin cell carcinoma metastases. Overall, pituitary carcinoma metastases showed an average of 8.3 chromosomal imbalances per tumor (7 gains vs 1.3 losses), 10 in prolactin cell carcinoma metastases (7.5 gains vs 2.5 losses) and 6.5 in ACTH cell carcinoma metastases (6.5 gains vs 0 loss). The most common changes were gains of chromosome 5, 7p, and 14q (in three tumors each). High-level gains were found on 13q22-qter and 14q (two cases each) and on 1q, 3p, 7, 8, 9p, and 21q (one case each). To date, gains of chromosome 14q have not been reported among pituitary tumors. It remains to be shown whether gain of 14q is associated with malignant progression and metastatic dissemination of pituitary carcinomas.
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PMID:Chromosomal aberrations in pituitary carcinoma metastases. 1156 25

Autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (auto-PBSCT) after high dose chemotherapy is usually offered to breast cancer patients carrying a high risk of relapse or having chemosensitive metastatic disease. Whether progression free and overall survival of such patients is improved after auto-PBSCT compared to conventional chemotherapy is a matter of debate. Currently available results of randomised trials could not uniformly prove or disprove auto-PBSCT being advantageous. Yet such studies have not employed any manipulation of the stem cell graft or any post-transplant immunomodulation exploiting the unique immunological environment for tumour eradication which exists only after auto-PBSCT. Preliminary data have discussed the ex vivo and in vivo generation of cytotoxic effector cells employing IL-2 and/or IFN-alpha/gamma in the auto-PBSCT setting. Other cytokines such as IL-12, IL-15 and prolactin have likewise been considered. Several anticancer vaccine protocols after auto-PBSCT are ongoing using monovalent vaccines or anti-idiotypic antibodies. Polyvalent anticancer vaccines, cytokine secreting tumour cells, tumour pulsed or hybridised dendritic cells (DC) enhanced with cytokines are studied. Monoclonal antibodies (mAb) could assist: unlabelled for pretransplant exvivo purging, post-transplant for enhancing antibody-dependent cell mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) or radioimmunoconjugated as an additive cytotoxic part of the conditioning regimen. Autologous graft versus host induction and allogeneic stem cell transplantation (probably with non-myeloablative conditioning followed by donor lymphocyte infusions) are other approaches. Evaluation of successful combinations, optimal dosages and appropriate timing schedules is the subject of future investigations. Since breast cancer patients belong to countless subgroups, a large number of protocols need to be addressed in order to avoid over treatment and prevent relapse.
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PMID:Blood stem cell transplantation for breast cancer: new approaches using pre- peri- post-transplant immunotherapy. 1172 34

A 54 year old man was referred to the department of neurosurgery for frontal headache and vomiting. The patient was known in the department because of previous multiple surgery for a locally invasive pituitary prolactinoma (eight years, three years, and one year previously). The neurological examination revealed a frontal mass, which adhered to the dura, suggesting a meningioma. One year later, a left temporal metastasis was removed. Three months later, the patient died, with spinal metastases, of massive lung embolism. Histology revealed a progression of adenohypophyseal prolactinoma on neuroendocrine carcinoma, with an increase in proliferating indexes and modification of hormone production. This study documents a 10 year history of a rare prolactin producing pituitary carcinoma, which metastasised via liquoral flow.
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PMID:Progression on metastatic neuroendocrine carcinoma from a recurrent prolactinoma: a case report. 1186 14

Leydig cell tumors of the testis are rare, mostly presenting as a testicular mass or as endocrinological symptoms. Here, three patients who were admitted for investigation of primary infertility and one patient presenting with a testicular mass are reported. The histological features were reviewed and an immunohistochemical study was done using a panel of antibodies against cytokeratin, vimentin, inhibin A, S-100, Ki-67, follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, prolactin, p53, bcl-2, and c-erbB2. The latter case (lost during follow up of metastatic disease) demonstrated massive tumor necrosis, extension through the tunica albuginea, and a high mitotic activity and MIB-1 score. Only this malignant case was bcl-2 positive. Of the two oncogenic markers studied, none of the cases were positive for c-erb2, while p53 was positive in more than 50% of cells in the malignant case and in one case of infertility with a large tumor, hemorrhage, focal necrosis and atypical cytological features. We recommend the evaluation of infertile men for Leydig cell tumors, and we believe that a panel of antibodies, including Ki-67, p53 and bcl-2, used for immunohistochemical analysis could be of diagnostic value in the identification of malignant and borderline cases of Leydig cell tumor.
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PMID:Leydig cell tumor of the testis: comparison of histopathological and immunohistochemical features of three azoospermic cases and one malignant case. 1188 32


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