BACKGROUND Enteropancreatic malignancy is an important cause of morbidity and mortality associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN 1). However, the risk factors and mechanisms of the tumorigenesis of this malignancy are poorly understood. METHODS The authors conducted a retrospective study of factors associated with the development of malignant enteropancreatic tumor in 69 patients with MEN 1 belonging to a single family. RESULTS Metastatic enteropancreatic tumor and gastrinoma were identified in 20% and 36% of patients, respectively. Compared with MEN 1 patients who did not have an immediate family history of enteropancreatic malignancy, MEN 1 patients with a first‐degree relative affected by enteropancreatic malignancy had an increased risk of developing disseminated tumor (odds ratio, 3.7; P < 0.05). In addition, hypergastrinemia and advanced age were both associated with a significant increase in the risk of enteropancreatic malignancy. Elevated serum glycoprotein alpha subunit levels were associated with enterochromaffin‐like cell hyperplasia, gastric carcinoid formation, and disseminated enteropancreatic tumor in hypergastrinemic patients (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS Disease modifier factors act in concert with the MEN 1 gene to modulate the development of enteropancreatic neoplasia. It is possible to identify MEN 1 patients at high risk for developing aggressive enteropancreatic tumors. Heritable disease modifier factor(s) affecting enteropancreatic malignancy appear to reside at loci distinct from that of the MEN 1 gene. Cancer 1998;83:428‐434. © 1998 American Cancer Society.
Patients who are heavily immunosuppressed, such as those undergoing intensive anti-cancer chemotherapy, are at risk for development of accidental engraftment and graft-versus-host disease when they undergo transfusion with cellular blood components, a condition known as transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease (TA-GVHD). To prevent this complication, it is routine to irradiate such blood components prior to their transfusion, although the minimum irradiation dose required is uncertain. The development of probable TA-GVHD is reported in a 10-year-old child following transfusions of platelets and packed red cells that had been irradiated at a nominal dose of 15 Gy. The transfusions were given during treatment for relapse of acute myeloid leukemia. Although the child developed complications including exfoliative dermatitis, delayed bone marrow regeneration, renal failure requiring dialysis, and respiratory failure requiring assisted respiration, she recovered from the episode of TA-GVHD after treatment with high-dose methylprednisolone and antithymocyte globulin. However, her leukemia relapsed, and she died. This experience suggests that the irradiation of cellular blood components at a nominal dose of 15 Gy prior to their transfusion to heavily immunosuppressed patients may be insufficient to prevent TA-GVHD.
Sixty-two patients had evidence of gastrinoma or pancreatic neoplasm. In 19 patients the diagnosis was based on demonstration of a tumor. In 21 patients the diagnosis was based on elevated serum gastrin concentration in the absence of demonstrable tumor. None of these patients required gastric surgery if they first underwent parathyroidectomy. In 18 patients the diagnosis was based on the combination of demonstrated pancreatic tumor plus elevated glucagon (two patients), gastrin (11 patients), or insulin (five patients) concentration. Peptic ulcer was difficult to control in seven of the 11 patients with elevated gastrin concentrations plus demonstrated tumor. Four patients had liver metastases that appeared to be secondary to the pancreatic gastrinoma. In patients with insulinomas, the first symptoms occurred before age 20 years. Elevated serum gastrin concentrations were not seen before age 24 years and were observed to occur for the first time in two patients after age 50 years.
Genetic heterogeneity is a difficulty frequently encountered in the search for genes conferring susceptibility to prostate cancer. To circumvent this issue, we selected a large prostate cancer pedigree for genome-wide linkage analysis from a population that is genetically homogeneous. Selected cases and first-degree relatives were genotyped with Affymetrix 10K SNP arrays, identifying a 14 Mb haplotype on chromosome 5 (5p13-q12) inherited identical-by-descent (IBD) by multiple cases. Microsatellite genotyping of additional deceased case samples confirmed that a total of eight cases inherited the common haplotype (P ¼ 0.0017). Re-sequencing of eight prioritised candidate genes in the region in six selected individuals identified 15 SNPs segregating with the IBD haplotype, located within the ITGA2 gene. Three of these polymorphisms were selected for genotyping in an independent Tasmanian data set comprising 127 cases with familial prostate cancer, 412 sporadic cases and 319 unaffected controls. Two were associated with prostate cancer risk: rs3212649 (OR ¼ 1.67 (1.07 -2.6), P ¼ 0.0009) and rs1126643 (OR ¼ 1.52 (1.01-2.28), P ¼ 0.0088). Significant association was observed in both familial and sporadic prostate cancer. Although the functional SNP remains to be identified, considerable circumstantial evidence, provided by in vivo and in vitro studies, supports a role for ITGA2 in tumour development.
A 36-year-old man with asymptomatic hypertension was shown to have destruction of the right kidney due to renal tuberculosis. The peripheral renin level was normal, but renal vein renin sampling showed predominant renin secretion from the right kidney both in basal samples and after acute stimulation of renin release with intravenous diazoxide. Nephrectomy has resulted in marked reduction of blood pressure without treatment one year after operation. The findings support the predictive value of renal vein renin sampling when hypertension is associated with renal parenchymal disease, even when peripheral renin is normal.
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