Gene/Protein
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UNIPROT:P42345 (
mTOR
)
26,049
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Parathyroid carcinoma (PC) is a rare neoplasia difficult to diagnose preoperatively. It mainly occurs as a sporadic disease but also as part of familial PHPT. At variance with patients with the benign counterpart, the phenotype of these patients is characterized by a severe
primary hyperparathyroidism
(PHPT). The clinical features are mostly due to the effects of the excessive secretion of PTH by the functioning tumor and hypercalcemia rather than to the tumor burden. The prognosis is poor and unmanageable hypercalcemia accounts for death in the majority of cases. The best chance of cure is surgery, although persistent or recurrent disease occurs in about 50% of patients. Somatic loss-of-function mutations of CDC73 gene, encoding parafibromin, are the most frequent genetic alterations occurring in PCs. Mutations of the PRUNE2 gene, alterations of the PI3K/AKT/
mTOR
pathway and amplification of the CCND1 gene have been recently detected in PCs. Alteration of microRNA profile and methylation pattern have been identified in PCs. The recent studies have better defined the genomic landscape of PCs and represent major progress toward a full molecular characterization of this neoplasia and development of novel therapeutic options.
...
PMID:Parathyroid carcinoma: a clinical and genetic perspective. 2894 21
Parathyroid carcinoma (PC) is a rare endocrine malignancy, accounting for <1% of all cases of sporadic
primary hyperparathyroidism
(PHPT) and up to 15% in the hereditary hyperparathyroidism-jaw tumor syndrome. Genomic alterations identified in PC are mostly represented by CDC73 gene mutations, codifying for a loss-of-function protein termed parafibromin. Whole exome sequencing identified mutations in other genes, such as
mTOR
, KMT2D, CDKN2C, THRAP3, PIK3CA, and EZH2 genes, CCND1 gene amplification. The diagnosis of PC is quite difficult due to the lack of reliable clinical diagnostic criteria, and in the majority of cases is made postoperatively at histological examination. The clinical manifestations of PC are primarily due to the excessive secretion of PTH by the tumor rather than spread to local or distant organs. En bloc resection of the parathyroid tumor represents the initial mainstay treatment of patients with PC. Multiple surgical procedures may be required, although surgical morbidity should be taken into account. A 5- and 10-year survival between 77-100 and 49-91%, respectively, has been reported. When the tumor is no more resectable, medical treatment of hypercalcemia has a pivotal role in the management of these patients.
...
PMID:Parathyroid Carcinoma. 3064 23