Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0178874 (tumor progression)
40,807 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The long-acting somatostatin analog (octreotide) was administered to a 37-yr-old woman with the ectopic ACTH syndrome. The patient had diffuse metastatic spread of a nonpituitary tumor, presumably of pancreatic origin, and severe and rapidly progressive hypercortisolism with extreme myopathy, hypokalemia, and diabetes mellitus. Plasma ACTH and lipotropin levels and 24-h urinary cortisol excretion were greatly elevated [218 pg/mL (48 pmol/L), 1340 pg/mL (220 pmol/L), and up to 830 micrograms/24 h (2290 nmol/day), respectively]. Urinary cortisol excretion decreased to normal within 3 days after the initiation of octreotide therapy (150, 300, and 600 micrograms/day), and plasma ACTH and lipotropin levels also decreased. Urinary cortisol excretion remained normal for 2 months during chronic octreotide therapy, and her general condition improved dramatically. The only side-effect was a slight increase in the number of bowel movements. Tumor progression, however, was not controlled, and she eventually died of hepatic insufficiency. These data indicate that octreotide can be a highly effective treatment for patients with the ectopic ACTH syndrome.
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PMID:Suppression of ectopic adrenocorticotropin secretion by the long-acting somatostatin analog octreotide. 256 15

The clinical course of a patient with Cushing's syndrome secondary to metastatic medullary carcinoma of the thyroid was documented with serial calcitonin and cortisol assays and tumor immunohistochemistry studies. Cortisol levels were originally markedly elevated but returned to normal after total thyroidectomy. These levels rose again when the patient developed liver metastases but normalized during chemotherapy, never to rise again despite the appearance of cervical lymph node metastasis. Calcitonin levels remained elevated throughout the course. The original tumor was composed of two cell lines: one containing both calcitonin and ACTH and another containing only calcitonin-reacting cells. However, the cervical metastasis showed a marked decrease in both cell lines with fever than 1% of cells reacting to ACTH, and only 25% to calcitonin. The almost total disappearance of ACTH-reacting cells may have been therapeutically induced or may represent a consequence of tumor progression.
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PMID:ACTH-secreting medullary carcinoma of the thyroid: monitoring of clinical course with calcitonin and cortisol assays and immunohistochemical studies. 625 51

Ectopic ACTH secretion is a rare cause of hypercortisolism. Induced metabolic disturbances are often serious, and the management of such patients may be difficult. We report here our experience with four medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) patients with distant metastases in whom an ectopic ACTH syndrome occurred. The clinical presentation was significant by the severity and the rapidity of the hypercortisolism. Diagnosis and follow-up were realized by measurements of plasma cortisol, urinary free cortisol, urinary 17-hydroxycorticosteroid, plasma ACTH, plasma LPH, serum calcitonin and carcino-embryonic antigen. Initial treatment with adrenalytic medical therapy failed to control the disease. Only bilateral adrenalectomy cured the excessive cortisol production, and for a long time despite tumor progression. In conclusion, bilateral adrenalectomy should be considered in MTC patients with Cushing's syndrome even at the stage of distant spread. In fact, with regard to the slow growth rate of most MTC's, they may survive for years.
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PMID:Cushing's syndrome in medullary thyroid carcinoma. 761 3

The ACTH precursor pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) undergoes specific endoproteolytic cleavages in the anterior pituitary gland to give ACTH-(1-39). ACTH precursors circulate in normal subjects and are high both in the ectopic ACTH syndrome and in patients with aggressive pituitary adenomas. This study examines plasma levels of ACTH precursors and ACTH in 24 patients with post-adrenalectomy Cushing's disease, in 10 of whom computed tomography showed evidence of tumor progression. ACTH precursors were higher in post-adrenalectomy Cushing's disease (median 97.5 pmol/L, range 26-647 pmol/L) than in untreated Cushing's disease (median 29 pmol/L, range 9-104 pmol/L) and normal controls (5-40 pmol/L) (P < 0.001) and were significantly higher in patients with larger tumors (median 175 pmol/L, range 52-647 pmol/L) than in the remainder (median 41 pmol/L, range 26-510 pmol/L) (P = 0.02). Surprisingly, pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) processing to ACTH was enhanced in post-adrenalectomy patients (ratio 1 +/- 0.5) compared with Cushing's disease (5.6 +/- 0.8) and normal subjects (5.3 +/- 0.9). After hydrocortisone ACTH precursors rose in 36% of post-adrenalectomy patients (increase 15-78%) and remained within 10% of basal levels in 46%. Six patients had a rise in precursors and a fall in ACTH suggesting differential regulation of these peptides. In conclusion, whereas ACTH precursors are high in post-adrenalectomy Cushing's disease and higher levels correlate with tumor progression, processing of precursors to ACTH is enhanced.
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PMID:Elevated levels of adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) precursors in post-adrenalectomy Cushing's disease and their regulation by glucocorticoids. 762 38

Little is known about the molecular mechanisms of tumor progression in the pituitary. However, animal studies suggest that the Rb gene may be involved in the development of pituitary carcinoma. Pathologic examination of a pituitary tumor that included both benign and malignant components provided insight into this mechanism. Both benign and malignant tumors were immunoreactive for ACTH. The benign adenoma showed strong nuclear immunoreactivity for Rb, however, both the adjacent sellar carcinoma and its metastases were Rb-negative. This study suggests that loss of Rb may in some cases be important in the progression of pituitary adenoma to carcinoma.
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PMID:Loss of Rb expression in an ACTH-secreting pituitary carcinoma. 958 68

Proopiomelanocortin (POMC) is a 31 kDa prohormone that is processed to various bioactive peptides, including adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), melanotropins (alpha, beta, gamma-MSH), lipotropins, and endorphins. POMC is expressed not only in the pituitary gland but also in a variety of nonpituitary organs and tumors, including melanomas. We previously showed that normal human melanocytes produce and secrete alpha-MSH and ACTH, and furthermore, that advanced melanoma cells generally produce higher amounts of POMC peptides that correlate with tumor progression. To elucidate the mechanism of this upregulation, the expression of genes encoding corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) and its receptor, CRH-R, as well as POMC and the MSH receptor (MC1-R), was evaluated by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction using cultured human melanoma cells, nevus cells, and normal melanocytes. Our results show that all melanocytic cells express CRH, CRH-R, POMC, and MC1-R, with highest intensities in melanoma cells. Furthermore, immunohistochemistry shows that CRH as well as POMC is strongly expressed in advanced melanomas, such as vertically growing lesions of acral lentiginous, nodular and metastatic melanomas, in contrast to negative expression in nevus cells. These results indicate that tumor progression accentuates CRH, CRH-R, and POMC expression by melanoma cells.
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PMID:Expression of proopiomelanocortin, corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), and CRH receptor in melanoma cells, nevus cells, and normal human melanocytes. 1053 83

Interleukins and their receptors are expressed intrinsically in the anterior pituitary and regulate hormone production and cell proliferation. It has previously been shown that interleukin-6 (IL-6) regulates hormone secretion in normal pituitary cells and cell lines. Here we examined the effects of IL-6 on propiomelanocortin (POMC) expression and ACTH production in corticotroph adenoma cells in vitro. We found that IL-6 stimulates both ACTH secretion and POMC gene expression in corticotroph adenoma cell cultures. This first demonstration of the stimulatory action of IL-6 on human corticotroph adenoma cell function provides further evidence for a direct action of IL-6 on corticotroph pituitary cells. We have confirmed previous reports of IL-6 production by corticotroph adenoma cells and in addition, demonstrated for the first time that the synthetic glucocorticoid dexamethasone is a potent suppressor of intratumoral IL-6 production. This intratumoral produced IL-6 may be in part responsible, in an autocrine manner, for the stimulation of ACTH synthesis and secretion. Our results suggest that IL-6 might play a role in the pathogenesis of Cushing's disease. However, elevated glucocorticoid levels in patients with Cushing's disease may prevent excessive action of IL-6 on ACTH production and tumor progression of corticotroph adenomas in vivo.
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PMID:Interleukin-6 is inhibited by glucocorticoids and stimulates ACTH secretion and POMC expression in human corticotroph pituitary adenomas. 1092 17

Adrenalectomy is a radical therapeutic approach to control hypercortisolism in some patients with Cushing's disease. However it may be complicated by the Nelson's syndrome, defined by the association of a pituitary macroadenoma and high ACTH secretion after adrenalectomy. This definition has not changed since the end of the fifties. Today the Nelson's syndrome must be revisited with new to criteria using more sensitive diagnostic tools, especially the pituitary magnetic resonance imaging. In this paper we will review the pathophysiological aspects of corticotroph tumor growth, with reference to the impact of adrenalectomy. The main epidemiological data on the Nelson's syndrome will be presented. More importantly, we will propose a new pathophysiological and practical approach to this question which attempts to evaluate the Corticotroph Tumor Progression after adrenalectomy, rather than to diagnose the Nelson's syndrome. We will discuss the consequences for the management of Cushing's disease patients after adrenalectomy, and will also draw some perspectives.
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PMID:The Nelson's syndrome... revisited. 1613 3

Galectin-3 (Gal-3), a beta galactoside-binding protein, has been implicated in a variety of biological functions including cell growth, differentiation, tumor cell adhesion, angiogenesis, tumor progression, and metastasis. We recently reported that Gal-3 was expressed in a subset of normal pituitary cells and tumors including PRL, ACTH, and in folliculo-stellate (FS) cells and tumors and that Gal-3 had an important regulatory role in pituitary cell proliferation. We further investigated the expression of Gal-3 protein in ACTH- and PRL-producing tumors and the expression of various galectin mRNAs by RT-PCR in pituitary adenomas and normal pituitary. Most silent ACTH subtypes 1 and 2 adenomas were negative or only focally positive for Gal-3 expression compared to functioning ACTH tumors from patients with Cushing's disease and Nelson's syndrome. In the normal pituitary, Gal-3 was expressed in less than 1% of the basophil-invading cells (ACTH cells present in the posterior pituitary) and in a subset of the anterior lobe ACTH-positive cells. RT-PCR analyses showed that many members of the galectin family including galectins 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 were expressed in normal pituitary and in functioning ACTH- and PRL-producing tumors. These results indicate that Gal-3 is associated with functioning ACTH and PRL tumors and is expressed infrequently in silent ACTH adenomas, suggesting that Gal-3 protein and/or gene is altered in non-functioning ACTH tumors. The use of ACTH and Gal-3 immunostaining should help in the diagnosis of silent ACTH adenomas.
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PMID:Galectin-3 Expression in Functioning and Silent ACTH-Producing Adenomas. 1619 95

Pituitary adenomas, almost invariably adenomas, account for 10% to 15% of all intracranial neoplasms and are incidentally detected in up to 27% of non selected autopsies. They are morphologically classified as microadenomas (diameter < 1 cm) or macroadenomas, which can be enclosed, invasive and/or expansive. Functionally, they are classified as secreting adenomas (PRL, GH, ACTH, TSH, LH, and FSH, and those co-secreting two or more hormones), and clinically non secreting or "non functioning" tumors. Diagnosis is based on the hypersecretion phenotype (acromegaly, Cushing, etc), and on mass effect of macroadenomas leading to neurological disturbances, mainly visual complaints and headache. Pituitary tumorigenesis mechanisms include those of primary hypothalamic versus pituitary origin, the latter is supported by evidence of pituitary adenoma monoclonality, as well as the absence of hyperplastic tissue surrounding the surgically removed tumor, and the relative independence of tumor hypothalamic control. Nevertheless, a permissive role of the hypothalamus on tumor progression is also postulated. Several molecular mechanisms involved in pituitary tumorigenesis have been unraveled including oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes and growth factors involved in neoplastic development, and will be described in this review.
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PMID:[Pituitary tumorigenesis]. 1644 45


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