Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (somatostatin)
22,083 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Our report describes a 46-yr-old woman who presented with watery diarrhea in the presence of multiple endocrine neoplasia type I (MEN I) syndrome. Of various potential pancreatic endocrine hormones, only serum levels of pancreatic polypeptide were elevated. Radiologic imaging failed to identify a pancreatic tumor; her diarrhea was therefore managed with subcutaneous administration of somatostatin. Three years later she developed gallstone pancreatitis with the subsequent development of a pancreatic pseudocyst. At exploration for drainage of the pseudocyst, intraoperative ultrasound identified a 6-mm tumor in the distal pancreas that was resected. Final pathology documented a pancreatic endocrine tumor with immunohistochemical staining demonstrating the presence of pancreatic polypeptide. The present case illustrates the symptomatology that may be associated with pancreatic polypeptide-secreting endocrine tumors of the pancreas.
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PMID:Symptomatic pancreatic polypeptide-secreting tumor of the distal pancreas (PPoma). 1279 52

A 59-year-old Japanese man was incidentally discovered to have multiple polyps in the duodenum by endoscopy during a health checkup. Laboratory studies showed an elevated level of serum somatostatin. The mutation of the MEN1 gene was not observed. An endoscopic examination revealed multiple polypoid lesions in the bulbus and in the second portion of the duodenum. An upper gastrointestinal series also showed the multiple polypoid lesions in the bulbus, and in the descending and horizontal portions of the duodenum. The biopsy specimen showed small monotonous cells with round nuclei compatible with a carcinoid tumor. The tumor cells were positive for somatostatin and gastrin. Based on the clinical diagnosis of multiple carcinoids of the duodenum, a pancreas-sparing duodenectomy was performed. Macroscopic findings showed about 30 polypoid lesions throughout the duodenum. The biggest one was not over 10 mm in size. A histological examination revealed well-demarcated carcinoid tumors located in the submucosal layer. Immunohistochemically, the tumors were diffusely positive for somatostatin and were scatteringly positive for gastrin. The patient's postoperative course of treatment was uneventful and his postoperative serum somatostatin went down to normal range. The pancreas-sparing duodenectomy is a safe and effective treatment in patients with multiple carcinoids of the duodenum, that are smaller than 1 cm in size.
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PMID:Multiple somatostatin- and gastrin-containing carcinoids of the duodenum: report of a case treated by pancreas-sparing duodenectomy. 1282 67

Zollinger-Ellison syndrome is characterised by refractory peptic ulcer disease, severe diarrhoea and gastric acid hypersecretion associated with an islet-cell tumour of the pancreas (gastrinoma). The true incidence and prevalence of this rare disease is unknown; in the US, the frequency is one per one million people and the age at presentation varies from 7 to 90 years. Zollinger-Ellison syndrome is sporadic in 62-80% of cases and in 20-38% of cases is associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN 1). The diagnosis of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome is certain when the plasma gastrin is >1000 pg/mL and the basal acid output is >15 mEq/h in patients with an intact stomach, >5 mEq/h in gastrectomised patients, or when this hypergastrinemia is associated with a pH <2. The treatment is based on control of gastric acid hypersecretion and of the malignant tumour and its possible metastases. Proton pump inhibitors are the most effective antisecretory drugs and can be administered in the elderly at high dosages without drug-related adverse effects. As an initial therapy, daily dosages of omeprazole 80-100 mg or pantoprazole 40-160 mg are employed. In long-term treatment the doses can be greatly reduced once effective control of the gastric output has been established. Intravenous proton pump inhibitors may be administered when patients cannot take oral therapy, particularly in acute conditions. All sporadic localised gastrinomas should be excised if possible. When liver metastases are also present, their debulking may improve symptoms and survival, and facilitate medical treatment. There is some controversy as to the surgical approach for gastrinomas associated with MEN 1. Somatostatin analogues can be useful in reducing gastric acid hypersecretion, serum gastrin and gastric enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells and can thus contribute to treating the disease more effectively. Their antiproliferative effect can be used in treating liver metastases. Chemotherapy is not the therapy of choice in patients with gastrinomas and is indicated only in those with malignant progressive disease; interferon alpha, embolisation and chemoembolisation are not advisable for the elderly. The treatment of elderly Zollinger-Ellison syndrome patients, similarly to all elderly oncological patients, should be based on the use of comprehensive geriatric assessment. This will enable the clinician to define the functional status of the elderly person, to decide whether the patient can tolerate surgery and/or the stress of antineoplastic therapy, and finally, to determine whether this patient can tolerate an aggressive treatment for Zollinger-Ellison syndrome or whether the only possible choice is palliative relief of symptoms.
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PMID:Optimal treatment of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and related conditions in elderly patients. 1465 42

Carcinoid tumors originate from the neuroendocrine cells throughout the body and are capable of producing various peptides. Their clinical course is often indolent but can also be aggressive and resistant to therapy. We examined all aspects of carcinoid tumors including the molecular biology oncogenesis, role of angiogenesis, recent advances in imaging, and therapy. The Medline and Cancerlit databases were searched using carcinoid as the keyword. English language manuscripts were reviewed and relevant references from a total of 7741 were found. All titles were screened and all the relevant manuscripts were analyzed; we found 307 references pertinent to the history, epidemiology, clinical behavior, pathology, pathophysiology, molecular biology, radiologic imaging, supportive care of carcinoid syndrome, and results of therapeutic clinical trials. Management of patients with carcinoid tumors requires an understanding of the disease process and a multimodality approach. Introduction of long-acting somatostatin analogues has resulted in significant advances in the palliative care of patients with carcinoid syndrome. However, advanced carcinoid tumor remains incurable. Existing therapies for advanced disease have low biologic activity, high toxicity, or both. Clearly, more research is necessary in the areas of molecular biology, targeted therapy, and development of new drugs Future advances in this field need to focus on clinical and biological predictors of outcome. Early works in the area of tumor biology such as the role of p53, bcl-2, bax, MEN1, FGF TGF PDGF and VEGF expression are of interest and need to be explored further.
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PMID:Carcinoid--a comprehensive review. 1469 Jan 53

The gastroenteropancreatic endocrine tumor is relatively rare tumor that originate from pancreas, duodenum, and a variety of neuroendocrine cells. The differential diagnosis and preoperative localization of the tumor are important, because surgical resection of the tumor is the first choice of treatment. Of these tumors, insulinomas and gastrinomas are usually small in size (less than 2.0 cm), and methods of preoperative localization such as ultrasonography, computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging often fail to identify them. These tumors often malignant, and tumors as small as 1 to 2 mm might develop lymph node metastases especially in gastrinomas. Recent studies have shown that selective arterial calcium stimulation test and hepatic venous sampling using intraarterial calcium injection as the insulin secretagogue are useful for detection of small insulinomas, and the selective intraarterial injection of secretin test combined with venous sampling (Imamura technique), for detection of small gastrinomas. In addition, somatostatin-receptor scintigraphy is widely used in Western countries. Moreover, detection of the tumor during operation using ultrasonography delivered much better results than preoperative diagnoses. These tumors may be associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1, and MEN1 gene mutation analysis is necessary in those patients.
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PMID:[The diagnosis and treatment of insulinoma and gastrinoma]. 1504 36

The role of endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) in the evaluation of entero-pancreatic endocrine tumours has evolved in conjunction with advances in other imaging methods. The high spatial resolution of this technique allows the detection of very small lesions and their precise anatomical localisation. In patients with biochemically proven insulinoma, EUS can be effectively used as a first line investigation, with a sensitivity of 94%. Combined with thin section CT, the sensitivity rises to 100%. There is also high sensitivity in diagnosing intrapancreatic gastrinomas but lower for those arising in the duodenal wall which require detailed duodenal evaluation at surgery. EUS in conjunction with Somatostatin Receptor Scanning (SRS) has a combined sensitivity of 93% for gastrinomas. EUS is recommended for screening of asymptomatic patients with genetically proven MEN1. There is a limited role for EUS guided biopsy in pancreatic endocrine tumours.
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PMID:Endoscopic ultrasound in the localisation of pancreatic islet cell tumours. 1576 94

Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES) is characterised by refractory peptic ulcer disease, severe diarrhoea and gastric acid hypersecretion associated with an islet-cell tumor of the pancreas (gastrinoma). ZES is sporadic in 62-80% of cases and in 20-38% of cases is associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN 1). The diagnosis of ZES is certain when the plasma gastrin is >1000 pg/mL and the basal acid output is >15 mEq/h in patients with an intact stomach, >5 mEq/h in gastrectomised patients, or when the hypergastrinemia is associated with a pH <2. Treatment is based on the control of gastric acid hypersecretion and of the malignant tumor and its possible metastases. Proton pump inhibitors are the most effective antisecretory drugs and can be administered at high dosages without drug-related adverse effects. All sporadic, localised gastrinomas should be excised if possible. When liver metastases are also present, their debulking may improve symptoms and survival, and facilitate medical treatment. There is some controversy as to the surgical approach for gastrinomas associated with MEN 1. Somatostatin analogues can be useful in reducing gastric acid hypersecretion, serum gastrin and gastric enterochromaffin-like cells, and can thus contribute to treating the disease more effectively. Their antiproliferative effect can be used in treating liver metastases. Chemotherapy and/or interferon are indicated only in patients with malignant progressive disease. Embolisation and chemoembolisation are effective in controlling clinical symptoms; however, they do not seem to improve survival.
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PMID:Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Diagnosis and therapy. 1617 61

In this article, we have reviewed the main therapeutic measures for the treatment of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES). Review of the literature was based on computer searches (Pub-Med, Index Medicus) and personal experiences. We have evaluated all the measures now available for treating patients with sporadic gastrinomas or gastrinomas associated with Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type 1, (MEN 1) including medical therapy such as antisecretory drugs and somatostatin analogs (SST), chemotherapy and chemoembolization, and surgical procedures. In ZES patients, the best therapeutic procedure is surgery which, if radical, can be curative. Medical treatment can be the best palliative therapy and should be used, when possible, in association with surgery, in a multimodal therapeutic approach.
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PMID:Treatment of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. 1622 31

Endocrine pancreatic tumors (EPTs) are uncommon tumors, representing 1-2% of all pancreatic neoplasms. They are categorized on the basis of their clinical features into functioning and non-functioning tumors. EPTs may be part of the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN 1), an autosomal dominant syndrome due to inactivating germline mutation of the menin gene. Somatic mutations of menin are present in about 20% of sporadic neoplasms, particularly gastrinomas and insulinomas. 30-75% of patients with MEN1 have EPTs. The most prevalent are the gastrinomas (20-60%), then the insulinomas (5-10%), the glucagonamas and VIPomas (6-10%), whereas the nonfunctioning EPTs are present in 20-40% of patients. The most important biochemical screening marker for EPTs is chromogranin A, as it increases in 50-80% of patients. The most important negative prognostic factors are the presence of metastases, the gross invasion of adjacent organs, the angioinvasion, the perineural invasion and an immunopositivity for Ki-67 > 2%. Among the different imaging techniques, echoendoscopy, computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are indicated for the detection of the primary tumor, but (III)In-octreotide scintigraphy has the highest sensitivity for detecting metastases. The choice of treatment is still debated and is different when the tumor occurs as a part of the MEN syndrome. The surgical treatment is the first choice for insulinomas and is more controversial for gastrinomas. The medical treatment includes somatostatin analogues (SA), chemotherapy and interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha). SA seem to improve the symptoms and have an antiproliferative effect, the most striking effect being seen in patients with VIPomas. Chemotherapy, which is generally proposed as a combination of streptozotocin (STZ) and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) or doxorubicin, is indicated when the tumors tend to grow. Interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) stimulates the immune system, blocks the tumor cells in the G1/S-phase of the cell cycle, inhibits protein and hormone synthesis and inhibits angionenesis. Treatment with IFN has been shown to produce symptomatic response in 40-60% of patients, a biochemical response in 30-60% and tumor shrinkage in 10-15%.
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PMID:[Endocrine tumors of the pancreas (EPTs) in multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN1): up-date on prognostic factors, diagnostic procedures and treatment]. 1796 53

Cross sectional imaging in the assessment of gastrinomas has three major applications: Tumor localization (sporadic gastrinoma, MEN I) in patients undergoing primary or secondary surgery. Staging of metastasized tumors, especially assessment of lymph nodes and liver metastases, possibly including a risk analysis prior to liver resection. Post-surgery follow-up and monitoring of bio- or chemotherapy. Detection of primary tumors is strongly correlated with their size. However, the sensitivity of surgical assessment of the mostly small tumors by experienced surgeons is much higher than that of any imaging modality. Of all imaging modalities, endoultrasonography (EUS) followed by Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy (SRS) is the most sensitive modality for the assessment of pancreatic tumors in asymptomatic patients suffering from a MEN-I syndrome. Scintigraphy has the highest sensitivity in tumors of symptomatic patients and in the assessment of metastases. CT and MRI are only second line diagnostic modalities. Their sensitivity is largely dependent on the selection of patients. As a potential application, 3D reconstruction of nearly isotropic CT data sets for the risk assessment prior to liver resection is currently developing. Due to the absent radiation exposure, MRI is increasingly utilized to monitor the response of metastases under systemic therapy, e.g. in clinical trials.
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PMID:Localisation and staging of gastrin producing tumours using cross-sectional imaging modalities. 1798 93


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