Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0684249 (lung carcinoma)
23,830 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung often present with symptoms suggestive of hyperthyroidism i.e. weight loss without anorexia. Consequently [125I]T4 and [131I]T3 turnover was studied using simultaneously iv bolus injection and noncompartmental analysis in 6 patients with untreated small cell carcinoma of the lung and 14 normal subjects of comparable ages. Both T4 and T3 production rates were enhanced, T4 production being in median 135 nmol.day-1.70 kg-1 (range 111-200) in patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung vs 98 nmol.day-1.70 kg-1 (range 69-134) in controls (P less than 0.01), and T3 production being 46 nmol.day-1.70 kg-1 (range 33-65) vs 31 nmol.day-1.70 kg-1 (range 24-45) (P less than 0.01). The mean transit time was shortened for both T4 and T3, T4 mean transit time being 5.9 days (3.9-8.0 days) vs 8.3 days (6.1-11.2 days) in controls (P less than 0.01), and T3 mean transit time being 0.74 days (0.36-0.98 days) vs 1.03 days (0.81-1.45 days) in controls (P less than 0.01). Serum total and free T4 and T3 levels were unchanged. Basal serum TSH levels and the TSH response to iv TRH were also normal. Thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulins were only present in the serum in 1 of 6 patients. Thus, thyroid hormone production seemed under pituitary regulation. The peripheral effect of thyroid hormones was evaluated measuring serum sex hormone binding globulin levels, which were increased to in median 270% (77-310%) (P less than 0.01) of that in controls, suggesting some degree of hyperthyroidism in liver tissue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Thyroid hormone turnover in patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung. 283 48

We have previously demonstrated enhanced daily turnover of thyroid hormones in patients with hypermetabolic symptoms due to malignant haematologic disorders or small cell carcinoma of the lung. We hypothesized that some of these symptoms might be due to enhanced peripheral effects of T3. We therefore studied the nuclear T3 receptor binding in circulating mononuclear blood cells in 5 patients with malignant haematologic disorders, 5 with untreated small cell carcinoma of the lung, and 11 healthy controls. Maximal binding capacity of T3 (MBC) was increased 2.5 times in the diseased patients, (median (range)) 110 fmol/mg DNA (75-519) in the haematologic group (p < 0.01), 106 fmol/mg DNA (47-490) (p < 0.10) in small cell carcinoma patients, as compared to 43 fmol/mg DNA (26-94) in controls. The affinity constant Ka of bound T3 was reduced to one-third in the diseased patients. No differences were found between serum thyroid hormone or TSH levels. It is hypothesized, that previously demonstrated enhanced turnover of thyroid hormones in these states of disease might in part be due to increased peripheral consumption of thyroid hormones, including enhanced receptor binding of T3.
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PMID:Nuclear 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine receptor binding in mononuclear blood cells from patients with malignant blood diseases and small cell carcinoma of the lung. 752 33

Multiple transcripts derived from the gene encoding rat thyroid-specific enhancer-binding protein (T/EBP)/thyroid-specific transcription factor-1 (TTIF-1) were identified by complementary DNA cloning and sequencing, and Northern blotting analyses. Six different types of complementary DNAs were identified that differ at their 5' noncoding regions; four contain an intron of different lengths, whereas the other two possess no intron. Ribonuclease protection analyses revealed that multiple promoters are scattered throughout the upstream region, and the usage of these different promoters together with alternative splicing leads to a family of T/EBP messenger RNA (mRNA) species. A similar pattern of expression was also found in the human T/EBP gene expressed in a lung carcinoma cell line. Longer T/EBP mRNAs are more abundant in rat FRTL-5 thyroid cells maintained in the absence of TSH (-TSH) than in cells maintained in the presence of TSH (+TSH). Transfection analyses using the rat T/EBP gene DNA upstream of the ATG initiation codon connected to the luciferase reporter plasmid showed a similar relative activity profile between -TSH and +TSH culture conditions, suggesting that the abundance of longer mRNAs in -TSH conditions may not directly correlate with differences in promoter activities. Rather, TSH status might have a role in maintaining the physiological state of the cells. The upstream DNA of the rat and human T/EBP genes share a cluster of high and low sequence similarities, and both possess respectively 24 and 18 putative T/EBP-binding sites throughout. Cotransfection analyses of the T/EBP promoter-reporter constructs with a T/EBP expression vector into human HepG2 cells, which do not express T/EBP, suggested that autoregulation may be involved in controlling both rat and human T/EBP gene expression.
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PMID:Multiple transcripts encoded by the thyroid-specific enhancer-binding protein (T/EBP)/thyroid-specific transcription factor-1 (TTF-1) gene: evidence of autoregulation. 952 87

The authors review the most common situation concerning oncological patients with concomitant thyroid disease. In case of unknown origin of metastasis and nodular goitre the ultrasound examination with fine needle aspiration biopsy confirms or excludes the thyroid origin. The euthyroid sick syndrome is often diagnosed in oncological patient as a consequence of oncological disease and it doesn't mean hypothyroidism. If oncological patients prove to have a thyroid functional failure the endocrinologist must correct the function as fast as possible to enable oncological treatment. There is no evidence that chemotherapy can influence the thyroid function, but radiotherapy can cause thyroiditis with later hypofunction. The interferon therapy causes thyroid dysfunction in 10% of patients and the recommendation to examine not only TSH and FT4 but also thyroid antibodies is warranted. Lymphoma of the thyroid gland occurs most often on the basis of lymphocytic thyroiditis and lymphocytic thyroiditis may be a risk factor for papillary carcinoma of the thyroid as well. Women with breast carcinoma were proved to have lymphocytic thyroiditis with minor thyroid hypofunction more often than the corresponding group of women with colon cancer or control group of healthy women. In case of renal tumor (Grawitz), breast or lung carcinoma the thyroid can be attacked with metastasis, and ultrasound with fine needle biopsy can reliably differentiate between primary or secondary thyroid involvements. The thyroid can be involved in some diseases: multiple endocrine neoplasia, Carney, Cowden and Gardner's syndromes.
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PMID:[Thyroid diseases in oncological patients]. 1617 5