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)

Bone sialoprotein (BSP) is a small, highly posttranslationally modified integrin binding protein found in the mineral compartment of developing bone. The recent discovery that BSP can be detected in a variety of human cancers, particularly those that metastasize preferentially to the skeleton, shed light on potential new biological functions for this protein. The demonstration of a positive association between BSP expression in primary breast tumors and the development of bone metastases suggests that this glycoprotein could play a role in the selective implantation of breast cancer cells in bone. BSP is also expressed in most lung and prostate cancers as well as in multiple myeloma, three other osteotropic malignancies. Because thyroid carcinoma also metastasizes preferentially to the skeleton, we decided to look at the expression of BSP in a collection of 145 thyroid malignant lesions including 24 follicular thyroid carcinomas (FTCs), 55 papillary thyroid carcinomas (PTCs), 19 medullary thyroid carcinomas (MTCs), 23 anaplastic carcinomas (ACs), and 24 poorly differentiated carcinomas (PDCs). BSP expression was evaluated by immunoperoxidase technique using two specific polyclonal antibodies. Most of the thyroid carcinomas (72%) examined expressed high levels of BSP. Expression of BSP was significantly lower in FTCs and MTCs compared with PDCs, which are more aggressive (p = 0.0009 and 0.0003, respectively). Our study demonstrates for the first time that ectopic BSP expression is a common feature of thyroid cancer. The prognostic value of BSP detection in thyroid adenocarcinoma and the potential role of BSP in the propension of this type of cancer to metastasize to bone are currently under investigation.
Thyroid 1998 Aug
PMID:Ectopic expression of bone sialoprotein in human thyroid cancer. 973 56

Thyroid follicular carcinoma are divided in three subgroups: 1) minimally invasive well differentiated encapsulated follicular carcinoma; 2) invasive well differentiated follicular carcinoma; 3) moderately differentiated follicular carcinoma. Usually diagnosis between encapsulated well differentiated follicular carcinoma and atypical adenoma is difficult. Apart the presence of metastases, histologic criteria to separate these entities are often insufficient. Insofar as all these tumours have a very good prognosis, we think that they could be brought together under the same terminology. Actual morphological differences would be expressed, like in some others localizations, in a histologic grading. This way of classifying appears more consistent with reality and could allow to assume in better conditions, diagnostic uncertainty which exists in this field.
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PMID:[Follicular carcinoma]. 975 59

Clinical characteristics and prognosis of 80 patients (53 women and 27 men) with sporadic medullary thyroid carcinomas (MTC), less than 1 cm in size (micro-MTC), operated on between 1971 and 1996 are reported (73 total and 7 partial thyroidectomies). These patients, obtained from a national database of 899 patients with MTC, were compared with 357 cases of sporadic MTC greater than 1 cm and 149 subjects with familial MTC less than 1 cm (familial micro-MTC). Median age at surgery was 52.5 years, a distribution similar to larger sporadic MTC. Micro-MTC was identified due to elevated calcitonin (47.5%), clinically identified lymph node (10.0%), distant metastases (6.3%) or pathologic finding at surgery (36.2%). Diarrhea and/or flushing were observed in 6 patients including 4 with clinically identified lymph node. Among patients who had lymph node dissection at surgery (68.8%), lymph node involvement with tumor was observed in 30.9%, and was significantly more frequent in multifocal (7/11) than in unifocal micro-MTC (p < 0.03). All sporadic micro-MTC were unilateral. Survival rate was 93.9% +/- 4.4% (SE) at 10 years, greater than that observed in sporadic macro-MTC (p = 0.04). Normal postoperative basal calcitonin (CT) was obtained in 71.1% of micro-MTC patients versus 33.6% in sporadic macro-MTC (p < 0.01). Sporadic micro-MTC is much more frequent than expected, 15% of MTC in our series. Although specific survival rate and percentage of biological cure in micro-MTC are significantly better than for larger tumors, the frequency of lymph node involvement, however, justifies an aggressive surgical approach including total thyroidectomy and bilateral central lymph node dissection.
Thyroid 1998 Nov
PMID:Sporadic medullary microcarcinoma of the thyroid: a retrospective analysis of eighty cases. 984 20

Cutaneous metastases from thyroid cancers are rare. We report the case of an otherwise asymptomatic 81-year-old woman with an enlarging scalp lesion. Her solitary skin metastasis was the presenting feature of thyroid carcinoma. Routine histopathology of the lesion was notable for an atypical clear cell neoplasm. Immunohistochemistry was positive for thyroglobulin. Subsequent resection of the thyroid gland identified separate foci (< 1 cm) for both papillary and follicular carcinoma. Although such immunohistochemical staining has been used previously, it has never been reported to provide the definitive diagnosis for a solitary cutaneous metastasis from the thyroid. Previous tumors had anatomic features in a clinical context that permitted identification by routine light microscopy. Clear cell features found in the follicular focus of carcinoma in the thyroid suggest that it is the primary. A worldwide literature review reveals that follicular carcinoma has a greater preponderance than papillary carcinoma for cutaneous metastasis and that the majority of skin metastases from either papillary or follicular thyroid cancer are localized to the head and neck.
Thyroid 1998 Nov
PMID:Papillary and follicular thyroid carcinoma metastatic to the skin: a case report and review of the literature. 984 21

Technetium-99m methoxyisobutyl isonitrile (99mTc-MIBI) scintigraphy has recently been used in clinical application for detecting thyroid cancer metastases, its role being considered supplementary to serum thyroglobulin (Tg) measurements and radioactive iodine (131I) whole-body scans (WBS). The present retrospective study was designed to elucidate the role of 99mTc-MIBI scans in localizing metastatic lesions by assessing sensitivity and specificity of the scan results obtained in a group of 68 thyroidectomized thyroid cancer patients. Presence or absence of thyroid cancer was judged with other diagnostic modes including serum Tg measurements, 131I WBS, bone scans, chest x-rays, computed tomography (CT), ultrasonography, histopathology, and evolution of disease during follow-up. All scans were read on lesion basis for detecting neck, lung, and bone metastases and also on region basis, namely head-neck, chest, and abdomen-pelvis-extremities (ab-p-ex) areas. The sensitivity of detection was 94.4% (17/18) for neck, 78.4% (40/51) for lung, and 92.8% (64/69) for skeletal lesions. Positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) were 96.3% (26/27) and 97.7% (43/44) for head-neck; 94.7% (71/75) and 50.0% (12/24) for chest; 100.0% (25/25) and 93.1% (54/58) for ab-p-ex regions, respectively. For all scan sites taken together, PPV and NPV were 96.1% (122/127) and 86.5% (109/126), respectively. In conclusion, the present study reveals that 99mTc-MIBI can be proposed as a first-line diagnostic agent for the follow-up protocol of thyroid cancer patients, although the ability to detect small lung metastases is somewhat limited.
Thyroid 1998 Dec
PMID:Diagnostic value of technetium-99m methoxyisobutyl isonitrile (99mTc-MIBI) scintigraphy in detecting thyroid cancer metastases: a critical evaluation. 992 Mar 63

Determining the primary site of a cerebral metastatic adenocarcinoma is complicated by the histologic similarity of most adenocarcinomas. Thyroid Transcription Factor-1 (TTF-1) is a highly specific marker of peripheral airway cell neoplasms. Formalin fixed tissue from 30 patients with brain metastasis whose primary sources were clinically and histologically known with certainty were analyzed for immunoreactivity to TTF-1. There were 18 cases of metastatic lung adenocarcinoma. Other metastases were from breast (6), colon (1), prostate (1), kidney (1), paranasal sinus (1), melanoma (1), and intestinal carcinoid (1). No patients with carcinoma of the thyroid were found. Positivity was regarded as intense nuclear reactivity. Twelve (67%) metastatic lung adenocarcinomas stained for TTF-1. None of the cerebral metastases from other body sites showed positivity. In addition, normal brain tissue and astrocytic tumors did not stain for TTF-1. These data show that TTF-1 is a highly specific and reasonably sensitive marker for peripheral airway cell metastasis to the brain.
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PMID:Determination of lung as the primary site of cerebral metastatic adenocarcinomas using monoclonal antibody to thyroid transcription factor-1. 1006 94

The value of whole body PET-FDG in the evaluation of metastases has been demonstrated in a wide variety of tumors. In this report, we present the case of a patient with antecedent of papillary thyroid carcinoma, who was operated twelve years ago, and submitted to an ablative dose of residual thyroid tissue through 131I, being the levels of thyroglobulin normals. After twelve years of evolution, the patient refers bag pain and respiratory trouble, appearing in the CT image suspicious of metastases in right pulmonary base. The levels of thyroglobulin were shown increased, being the 131I scan negative. A whole body PET-FDG study was performed in order to exclude metastases of his malignant process, showed multiple high FDG uptake focus in brain, cerebellum, neck, chest, lymphatic nodes and bone, suggestive of dedifferentiated disease These findings were confirmed subsequently in the clinic evolution. Therefore, whole-body PET-FDG is a complementary diagnostic technique for study patients with CDT (Thyroid Differentiated Carcinoma) with 131I scan negative and rising thyroglobulin levels.
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PMID:[PET-FDG in thyroid cancer with high thyroglobulin levels and negative 131-I scan. A case report]. 1007 19

Genetic screening for germline RET proto-oncogene mutation in hereditary medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) is accurate and allows for preventive total thyroidectomy to be performed early in patients who are gene carriers. We report 3 children who underwent preventive total thyroidectomy based on the finding of a RETgene germline mutation, but who had no evidence of MTC or C-cell hyperplasia on permanent histology, even after calcitonin immunostaining. Review of the English literature of patients undergoing preventive thyroidectomy for a positive RETgene germline mutation, shows that 3.4% of these patients (a total of 209 patients) had normal thyroid glands. Also, 8.6% of patients undergoing preventive total thyroidectomy with prophylactic central neck node dissection had cervical node metastases. We conclude that preventive thyroidectomy in patients screened early for germline RETgene mutation allows for earlier diagnosis and treatment of patients, sometimes even before any hyperplasia or neoplasia can be demonstrated because cervical node metastases can occur early and be demonstrated even with small tumors (< 1 cm), we recommend prophylactic central neck node dissection at the time of preventive thyroidectomy.
Thyroid 1999 Feb
PMID:Normal thyroid pathology in patients undergoing thyroidectomy for finding a RETgene germline mutation: a report of three cases and review of the literature. 1009 Mar 11

Neuroendocrine tumors (NET) of the thyroid gland are rare. Apart from medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC), metastases of gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) NET may also occur. Features of six patients (five men, one female: age range, 39-67 years) with thyroid metastases from a GEP-NET are described. Thyroid metastases were bilateral in all patients and were associated with enlarged neck lymph nodes in five. In four cases, the thyroid tumor was either the first sign of the disease (n = 2) or was an isolated site of recurrence (n = 2). The tumors were well (n = 3) or poorly differentiated (n = 3). Five tumors for which the primary site could be determined corresponded to foregut-derived tumors (3 lungs, 1 thymus and 1 pancreatic NET). One tumor demonstrated calcitonin (CT) production as shown by immunohistochemistry and elevated plasma CT levels. However, the disease history and the clinical features strongly favored a metastasizing GEP-NET. No tumoral RET proto-oncogene mutation was found in this patient. The differential diagnosis between metastatic GEP-NET and MTC is crucial because prognosis, work-up, and treatment differ greatly.
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PMID:Gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumor metastases to the thyroid gland: differential diagnosis with medullary thyroid carcinoma. 1021 12

Twenty-five patients from a marginally iodine-deficient area with differentiated thyroid cancer who were referred to our unit between 1991 and 1997 had a residual thyroid uptake (RTU) at 24 hours of 5% or more after surgery. None of them underwent reoperation: 8 of 25 had RTU between 5% and 10% and were considered at low risk for both local recurrences and/or distant metastases; 17 of 25 had RTU greater than 10% and up to 30% and refused re-intervention. After detection of their cervical uptake by using a 131I tracer dose of 3.7 MBq (100 microCi), all 25 were treated with 1110 MBq (30 mCi) of 131I. A whole-body scan (WBS) performed 5 days later revealed 131I uptake corresponding to metastatic lymph nodes in the anterior part of the neck in 1 patient and the persistence of only RTU in 24 of 25 patients. RTU and thyroglobulin (Tg) levels were reevaluated 6 months later in all patients and compared to preradioiodine treatment values. RTU, ranging at presentation between 5% and 30%, decreased to below 1% in all but one patient. Serum Tg values, ranging between 1.6 and 108 ng/mL before radioiodine treatment, decreased to below 1.6 ng/mL in all but 4 of them (whose serum Tg was between 2 and 3.4 ng/mL). Our data indicate that 1,110 MBq of 131I can permit complete ablation of 80% of thyroid remnants concentrating up to 30% of radioiodine activity. A relation between this high success rate and iodine deficiency can be hypothesized because an increasing uptake of radioiodine by thyroid remnants could result in overestimation of their size. Therefore, our observations suggest that in iodine deficient areas, a hasty decision to carry out complete thyroidectomy should be avoided, even in the case of thyroid remnants with RTU up to 30%.
Thyroid 1999 Apr
PMID:Short-term effectiveness of low-dose radioiodune ablative treatment of thyroid remnants after thyroidectomy for differentiated thyroid cancer. 1031 46


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