Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical history and autopsy findings of a 22-week fetus with intestinal ganglioneuroblastoma, cardiac anomalies, omphalocele, and ileal atresia are presented. Ganglioneuroblastoma was confined to the large intestine and was not suspected prenatally despite ultrasonographic examination. Although enteric ganglia share neural crest lineage with other sites of congenital neuroblastoma, this is the first report of a primary intestinal ganglioneuroblastoma in a fetus or child. Various hypotheses are discussed to explain the coexistence of cardiac malformation and congenital neuroblastoma in this fetus and other cases in the literature. It is hypothesized that other malformations evident in this fetus were caused by the tumor, possibly as teratogenic effects of neuroblastoma-derived catecholamines during embryogenesis.
...
PMID:Intestinal ganglioneuroblastoma in a 22-week fetus. 140 56

Neuropeptide Y (NPY) was investigated as a possible tumor marker in pediatric patients with tumors of the sympathetic nervous system. Seven patients with neuroblastoma, 3 patients with ganglioneuroblastoma, and 2 with ganglioneuroma, were compared with 12 matched healthy controls and 34 tumor controls. NPY-like immunoreactivity (NPYLI) was analyzed in extracted plasma using a competitive radioimmunoassay. At diagnosis, plasma NPYLI was significantly increased (p less than .001) in the neuroblastoma patients (352 +/- 99 pM; mean +/- SEM) when compared with healthy controls (36 +/- 4 pM) and tumor controls (30 +/- 2 pM). Ganglioneuroblastoma and ganglioneuroma patients had lower levels (57 +/- 8 pM) than neuroblastoma patients but still significantly higher than the controls. In all patients with sympathetic tumors, the NPYLI level was decreased after treatment. Five neuroblastoma patients relapsed; all had increasing NPYLI levels. In 3 of these patients, incresing NPYLI was the first sign of relapse. Plasma NPYLI correlated well to urinary levels of homovanillic acid. NPY in plasma (NPYLI) may be a clinically useful marker of pediatric neuroblastoma for diagnosis and differential diagnosis. NPYLI correlates well with the clinical course and can be the first sign of relapse. Plasma determinations of NPYLI make it possible to monitor rapid alterations of disease.
...
PMID:Neuropeptide Y as a marker in pediatric neuroblastoma. 231 29

We present adult adrenal ganglioneuroblastoma with giant regional lymph node metastasis. The patient was a 21-year-old male, who had a left adrenal tumor diagnosed by ultrasonography incidentally. He was moderately developed and physical examination was almost normal. Blood pressure was within the normal range. Only the value of the vanilmandelic acid, which was 68.7 mg/day, in the urine was abnormal. Other laboratory data were almost normal. Neither chemical nor physical hormonal disorders were present. We carried out the radical surgical treatment by trans-thoracoabdominal approach under the diagnosis of left adrenal neuroblastoma. Pathological diagnosis was ganglioneuroblastoma. After the operation, the patient received both systemic chemotherapy of vincristine and cyclophosphamide and immunotherapy of OK-432 by subcutaneous administration. Furthermore, 40 Gy of the regional irradiation of 60Co to the operative space after the surgery was performed. At eight months after the operation, he is alive with no evidence of disease. Ganglioneuroblastoma is a neuroblastic tumor including neuroblastoma, which commonly occurs in childhood. The prognosis of the neuroblastic tumors which occur either in the adrenal gland of a young child or in an older child is poor. On the other hand, the biological activity of the adult neuroblastic tumors is different from that of the pediatric neuroblastic tumors. In the adult, the adrenal ganglioneuroblastoma does not always have a poor prognosis. The multimodality treatment which we performed is effective for the neuroblastic tumor. Ultrasonography is both effective and adequate for the screening of the retroperitoneal lesion such as in our case.
...
PMID:[Multimodality treatment of adrenal ganglioneuroblastoma: a case report]. 307 Nov 24

Ganglioneuroblastoma a transitional tumor of sympathetic origin has not yet been described as involving orbit. It is characterized by a mixture of cells ranging from primitive neuroblast to well differentiated ganglion cells within a neurofibromatous tissue. The prognosis is uncertain, as the tumor may either undergo maturation into a ganglioneuroma or may metastasize widely and rapidly as in neuroblastoma. We may postulate a relationship between ganglioneuroblastoma and Recklinghausen's neurofibromatosis in view of the development of the tumor in conjunction with the phacomatosis.
...
PMID:[Ganglioneuroblastoma of the orbit]. 392 90

Neuroblastoma, ganglioneuroblastoma, and ganglioneuroma are tumors of the sympathetic nervous system that arise from primitive sympathogonia and are referred to collectively as neuroblastic tumors. They arise wherever sympathetic tissue exists and may be seen in the neck, posterior mediastinum, adrenal gland, retroperitoneum, and pelvis. The three tumors differ in their degree of cellular and extracellular maturation; immature tumors tend to be aggressive and occur in younger patients (median age, just under 2 years), whereas mature tumors occur in older children (median age, approximately 7 years) and tend to behave in a benign fashion. The most benign tumor is the ganglioneuroma, which is composed of gangliocytes and mature stroma. Ganglioneuroblastoma is composed of both mature gangliocytes and immature neuroblasts and has intermediate malignant potential. Neuroblastoma is the most immature, undifferentiated, and malignant tumor of the three. Neuroblastoma, however, may have a relatively benign course, even when metastatic. Thus, these neuroblastic tumors vary widely in their biologic behavior. Features such as DNA content, tumor proto-oncogenes, and catecholamine synthesis influence prognosis, and their presence or absence aids in categorizing patients as high, intermediate, or low risk. Treatment consists of surgery and, usually, chemotherapy. Despite recent advances in treatment, including bone marrow transplantation, neuroblastoma remains a relatively lethal tumor, accounting for 10% of pediatric cancers but 15% of cancer deaths in children.
...
PMID:Neuroblastoma, ganglioneuroblastoma, and ganglioneuroma: radiologic-pathologic correlation. 1211 Jul 23

Neuroblastoma (Nb) is a malignancy of the sympathetic nervous system which affects children in their first decade. It is the most common extra-cranial solid tumor in children with an incidence of approximately 1 in 8-10 000 live births annually and accounts for approximately 10% of all children's cancers. Ganglioneuroblastoma is a relatively benign form of Nb and consists of a mixture of fibrils, mature and maturing ganglion cells, as well as undifferentiated neuroblasts. During routine cytogenetic analysis of patients with different manifestations of neuroblastoma we have identified one patient with ganglioneuroblastoma that carries an apparently balanced t(1:13)(q21:q12) reciprocal translocation. Positional cloning of the translocation breakpoint on chromosome 13 resulted in the mapping of the breakpoint between coding exon 2 and exon 3 of WAVE3, a member of WASP gene family. Although the breakpoint region on chromosome 1 was localized to within 2 kb of genomic sequence, no gene was found to be interrupted on this chromosome. The WAVE3 transcript is mainly expressed in the nervous system and, like all the members of the WASP gene family, WAVE3 is a key element in actin polymerization and cytoskeleton organization. WAVE3, therefore, is important for cell differentiation and motility and its expression is lost in a number of low grade and stage 4S tumors. From analysis of its expression pattern and function, WAVE3 is a candidate tumor suppressor gene, at least in some forms of neuroblastoma.
...
PMID:WAVE3, an actin-polymerization gene, is truncated and inactivated as a result of a constitutional t(1;13)(q21;q12) chromosome translocation in a patient with ganglioneuroblastoma. 1218

Neuroblastic tumours are a group of paediatric cancers with marked morphological heterogeneity. Neuroblastoma (Schwannian stroma-poor) (NB-SP) is composed of undifferentiated neuroblasts. Ganglioneuroblastoma intermixed (Schwannian stroma-rich) (GNBi-SR) is predominantly composed of Schwannian stromal (SS) and neuroblastic (Nb) cells. There are contrasting reports suggesting that SS cells are non-neoplastic. In the present study, laser capture microdissection (LCM) was employed to isolate SS and Nb cells. Chromosome 1p36 deletion and MYCN gene amplification were found to be associated in two out of seven NB-SPs, whereas no abnormalities were observed in five GNBi-SRs. In some cases, loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at 1p36 loci was detected in Nb cells but not in the bulk tumour by LCM; furthermore, LOH was also identified in both SS and tumour tissue of a GNBi-SR. DNA gain and loss studied by comparative genomic hybridization were observed at several chromosome regions in NB-SP but in few regions of GNBi-SR. Finally, gene expression profiles studied using an oligo-microarray technique displayed two distinct signatures: in the first, 32 genes were expressed in NB-SP and in the second, 14 genes were expressed in GNBi-SR. The results show that NB-SP is composed of different morphologically indistinguishable malignant cell clones harbouring cryptic mutations that are detectable only after LCM. The degree of DNA imbalance is higher in NB-SP than in GNBi-SR. However, when the analysis of chromosome 1p36 is performed at the level of microdissection, LOH is also observed in SS cells. These data provide supportive evidence that SS cells have a less aggressive phenotype and play a role in tumour maturation.
...
PMID:Genome analysis and gene expression profiling of neuroblastoma and ganglioneuroblastoma reveal differences between neuroblastic and Schwannian stromal cells. 1617 58

We report a case of a 12-month-old girl with stage 3 neuroblastoma composed of 2 distinct clones in the adrenal primary tumor. One clone showed neuroblastoma, poorly differentiated subtype with a low mitosis-karyorrhexis index (favorable histology), and the other was neuroblastoma, poorly differentiated subtype with a high mitosis-karyorrhexis index (unfavorable histology), according to the International Neuroblastoma Pathology Classification. Fluorescent-labeled in-situ hybridization using the formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded material showed that the MYCN oncogene was amplified in the latter clone but not in the former clone. Lymph nodes from ipsilateral and contralateral sides contained metastatic neuroblastoma of the latter clone. It is well documented that tumors in the Ganglioneuroblastoma, nodular (composite, Schwannian stroma-rich/stroma-dominant and stroma-poor) category are composite and composed of multiple clones. To our knowledge, however, this is the 1st case report of composite tumor with biologically favorable and unfavorable clones in the Neuroblastoma (Schwannian stroma-poor) category.
...
PMID:A case of composite neuroblastoma composed of histologically and biologically distinct clones. 1753 87

Ganglioneuroblastoma is a rare tumor variant of neuroblastoma. Only five cases have been observed in the adult brain, and we report here on two more adult patients with cerebral ganglioneuroblastoma. Additionally, a review was carried out on all 50 published adult cases with ganglioneuroblastoma, located in the adrenal gland (9), mediastinum (8), retroperitoneal area (7), the brain parenchyma (7), or the spinal cord (3). Median age at onset was 39 years, and 52% of patients were female. For extracranial locations, treatment usually consisted of surgery followed by radiotherapy and adjuvant chemotherapy. Of the cases with cerebral involvement only one patient did not receive any treatment. The other six patients underwent surgical resection and radiation therapy, in four cases followed by chemotherapy with temozolomide. The median survival of cerebral ganglioneuroblastomas was 14 months and did not differ from the whole group of ganglioneuroblastomas (12 months). For cerebral ganglioneuroblastoma, the preferred regimen would seem to be neurosurgical removal, followed by chemoradiotherapy including temozolomide.
...
PMID:Cerebral ganglioneuroblastoma of adult onset: two patients and a review of the literature. 2251 May 1

Ganglioneuroblastoma (GNB) is a cancer of the peripheral sympathetic nervous system and represents the 30% of cases of Neuroblastoma. When originates from thoracic ganglia it may appear very late, with severe symptoms like respiratory distress or neurological dysfunctions. We present an incidental diagnosis of thoracic GNB, discovered by a chest radiography during a recurrent wheezing unresponsive to bronchodilators. The early diagnosis allowed a precocious treatment probably improving the outcome.
...
PMID:Incidental diagnosis of thoracic ganglioneuroblastoma in a 3-year-old female with wheezing. 2297 59


1 2 Next >>