EXE prolongs survival time, time to tumor progression, and time to treatment failure compared with MA and offers a well-tolerated treatment option for postmenopausal women with progressive advanced breast cancer who experienced failure of tamoxifen.
Inappropriate secretion of thyrotropin (IST) is characterized by elevated serum free thyroid hormone and unsuppressed thyrotropin (TSH) levels, and results from either a TSH-secreting pituitary tumor (nIST) or a selective resistance to thyroid hormone action (nnlST). Although in most patients TSH levels are definitely high, in a quarter of the cases they are within the ‘normal range’. In some of these cases, TSH had an elevated biologic activity and an apparent molecular weight smaller than in normals. The current availability of ultrasensitive TSH immunoradiometric assay, able to distinguish suppressed from unsuppressed TSH levels enables the recognition of the disease. The distinction between nnlST and nIST rests on clinical, neuroradiological, and biochemical criteria, the most useful of which are the α-subunit:TSH molar ratio (increased in nIST), and the evaluation of the TSH responses to thyrotropin-releasing hormone and high doses of 3,5,3′-triiodothyronine, both qualitatively normal in nnlST, while absent in nIST. The therapy of choice for patients with nIST is pituitary surgery, followed by irradiation in case of surgical failure. Chronic administration of bromocriptine is effective in a minority of cases. The long-acting somatostatin analogue SMS 201–995 has given promising results in 2 patients. In nnlST, bromocriptine is frequently uneffective, while small doses of 3,5,3′-triiodothyronine or 3,5,3′-triiodothyroacetic acid, a thyroid hormone derivative with a strong inhibitory effect on TSH secretion but poor thyromimetic activity on peripheral tissues, are effective in controlling TSH hypersecretion.
A 40-yr-old man who had acromegaly and hyperthyroidism due to a GH/TSH-secreting pituitary adenoma is described. Serum free T4 was 2.8 ng/dl, free T3 was 1.1 ng/dl, and TSH was 1.2-1.5 microU/ml; the latter was measured in an immunoradiometric assay with a sensitivity of 0.07 microU/ml. Serum TSH was immunologically identical to standard TSH and did not decrease during a T3 suppression test. Serum free alpha-subunit and the molar alpha-subunit to TSH ratio were high (6.1 ng/ml and 31.2, respectively). TRH administration induced significant increases in both GH (+129%) and alpha-subunit (+156%) levels. Conversely, dopamine infusion resulted in a decrease in serum GH (-66%) and alpha-subunit (-43%) levels, and subsequent administration of the dopamine antagonist sulpiride induced significant increases in both GH and alpha-subunit (+393% and +106%, respectively). Similarly, somatostatin infusion inhibited GH (-43%) and alpha-subunit (-61%) secretion. Serum TSH levels were not affected by TRH, dopamine, or somatostatin. The biological to immunological activity ratio of serum TSH purified by immunoaffinity chromatography and measured in an adenylate cyclase assay was significantly increased compared to that in serum from hypothyroid or euthyroid subjects [biological to immunological activity ratio, 6.9 +/- 0.2 (+/- SD) vs. 4.4 +/- 1.1; P less than 0.001]. In gel chromatography, the apparent mol wt of the patient's TSH was smaller than that of the controls. After adenomectomy, all of the altered parameters of pituitary function became normal. Double gold particle immunostaining of the adenomatous tissue showed that all of the cells contained secretory granules positive for GH and alpha-subunit, while very few cells were positive for TSH beta as well as GH and alpha-subunit. These data indicate that in this patient serum TSH had an apparent mol wt smaller than that of normal TSH and an increased biological activity which, along with the autonomous TSH secretion, account for hyperthyroidism in the presence of low normal TSH levels; alpha-subunit originated from the same adenomatous cells that secreted GH but not TSH, thus explaining the in vivo observation that alpha-subunit responses to several agents were dissociated from TSH responses and parallel to GH responses; and TSH and GH were colocalized in a minority of the neoplastic cells.
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