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Publication year
2006Source
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1073, (2006), pp. 138-48ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Internal Medicine
Pathology
Journal title
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Volume
vol. 1073
Page start
p. 138
Page end
p. 48
Subject
IGMD 5: Health aging / healthy living; NCEBP 14: Cardiovascular diseases; NCMLS 3: Growth and differentiation; UMCN 1.2: Molecular diagnosis, prognosis and monitoring; UMCN 2.2: Vascular medicine and diabetesAbstract
Pheochromocytomas (PCCs) are neuroendocrine tumors of chromaffin tissue that produce catecholamines. They are usually located in the adrenal medulla, although in about 10% the tumors arise from extra-adrenal chromaffin tissue. The majority of PCCs arise sporadically, but PCCs occur also in the context of hereditary cancer syndromes. Familial PCC is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait alone or as a component of the multiple endocrine neoplasia Type 2 (MEN2) syndrome (RET gene), Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease (VHL gene), neurofibromatosis Type 1 (NF1 gene), or familial pheochromocytoma-paraganglioma (PCC-PGL) syndrome (SDHD/B and C genes). It has been reported that 24% of apparently sporadic PCCs patients harbor germline mutations in these PCC-causing genes. We investigated the contribution of the inherited PCC-causing genes in a partly retrospectively and partly prospectively obtained series of 213 apparently sporadic PCCs. Mutation analysis was performed for RET (56 cases), VHL (136 cases), and SDHD (126 cases) and SDHB (47 cases). No germline RET mutations, six (4.4%) germline VHL mutations, two (1.5%) germline SDHD mutations, and one germline (1.6%) SDHB mutation were found. In total we found germline mutations in about 7.5% of the investigated apparently sporadic PCCs. Although 7.5% germline mutations in a series of apparently sporadic PCCs are far less than the more than 20% reported in the literature, the figure is significant enough to consider germline mutation testing for each patient with PCC.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [243984]
- Electronic publications [130695]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [92811]
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