Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0268596 (EMA)
2,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pituicytoma is a rare low-grade (WHO grade I) sellar region glioma. Among sellar tumors, pituitary adenomas, mainly prolactinomas, may show amyloid deposits. Gelsolin is a ubiquitous calcium-dependent protein that regulates actin filament dynamics. Two known gene point mutations result in gelsolin amyloid deposition, a characteristic feature of a rare type of familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP), the Finnish-type FAP, or hereditary gelsolin amyloidosis (HGA). HGA is an autosomal-dominant systemic amyloidosis, characterized by slowly progressive neurological deterioration with corneal lattice dystrophy, cranial neuropathy, and cutis laxa. A unique case of pituicytoma with marked gelsolin amyloid deposition in a 67-year-old Chinese woman is described. MRI revealed a 2.6-cm well-circumscribed, uniformly contrast-enhancing solid sellar mass with suprasellar extension. Histologically, the lesion was characterized by solid sheets and fascicles of spindle cells with slightly fibrillary cytoplasm and oval nuclei with pinpoint nucleoli. Surrounding brain parenchyma showed marked reactive piloid gliosis. Remarkably, conspicuous amyloid deposits were identified as pink homogeneous spherules on light microscopy that showed apple-green birefringence on Congo red with polarization. Mass spectrometric-based proteomic analysis identified the amyloid as gelsolin type. Immunohistochemically, diffuse reactivity to S100 protein and TTF1, focal reactivity for GFAP, and no reactivity to EMA, synaptophysin, and chromogranin were observed. HGA-related mutations were not identified in the tumor. No recurrence was noted 14 months after surgery. To the knowledge of the authors, amyloid deposition in pituicytoma or tumor-associated gelsolin amyloidosis has not been previously described. This novel finding expands the spectrum of sellar tumors that may be associated with amyloid deposition.
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PMID:Pituicytoma with gelsolin amyloid deposition. 2381 95

Improvement of therapeutic strategies for peripheral neuropathies requires multicentric clinical trials. For chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP), a randomized controlled multicentric study compared IgIV to pulses of methylprednisolone (MP) given for 6 months. The primary endpoint was treatment discontinuation due to inefficacy or intolerance; 45 patients were enrolled: more patients had interrupted MP than IVIg, usually because of inefficacy. A multicentric randomized clinical trial (PREDICT) evaluated long-term remission of CIDP after short-term corticosteroid therapy (pulses of dexamethasone or prednisolone); 39 patients were enrolled: 26% achieved cure or remission, a relapse occurred in 50% after a delay of 11 to 17 months. Differential diagnosis was identified in 58% of patients who had not responded to any therapy. For refractory CIDP, a retrospective study showed the possibility of functional improvement in 24% of cases after adjunction of an immunomodulatory agent; cyclosporine was associated with the highest rate of adverse events or side effects. In familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy, a multicentric controlled study against placebo with tafamidis, an akinetic stabilizer of transthyretin (TTR) 20mg/d, in early stage of Val30MetTTR showed efficiency in the evaluable group and led to marketing authorization by the EMA in stage 1 to slow the progression of the neuropathy. A Cochrane database system review showed that there are no randomized or quasi-randomized controlled clinical trials of treatment for POEMS syndrome, for neuropathies with anti-MAG antibodies, or multifocal motor neuropathy on which to base practice. This review underlines the usefulness of multicentric randomized trials to assess treatments in peripheral neuropathies.
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PMID:[Review of the recent literature on peripheral neuropathies: therapeutic advances]. 2426 10