Literature DB >> 15369446

Malignant pheochromocytoma: current status and initiatives for future progress.

Graeme Eisenhofer1, Stefan R Bornstein, Frederieke M Brouwers, Nai-Kong V Cheung, Patricia L Dahia, Ronald R de Krijger, Thomas J Giordano, Lloyd A Greene, David S Goldstein, Hendrik Lehnert, William M Manger, John M Maris, Hartmut P H Neumann, Karel Pacak, Barry L Shulkin, David I Smith, Arthur S Tischler, William F Young.   

Abstract

Pheochromocytomas are rare catecholamine-producing neuroendocrine tumors that are usually benign, but which may also present as or develop into a malignancy. Predicting such behavior is notoriously difficult and there are currently no curative treatments for malignant tumors. This report follows from a workshop at the Banbury Conference Center, Cold Spring Harbor, New York, on the 16th-18th November 2003, held to review the state of science and to facilitate future progress in the diagnosis and treatment of malignant pheochromocytoma. The rarity of the tumor and the resulting fragmented nature of studies, typically involving small numbers of patients, represent limiting factors to the development of effective treatments and diagnostic or prognostic markers for malignant disease. Such development is being facilitated by the availability of new genomics-based tools, but for such approaches to succeed ultimately requires comprehensive clinical studies involving large numbers of patients, stringently collected clinical data and tumor samples, and interdisciplinary collaborations among multiple specialist centers. Nevertheless, the well-characterized hereditary basis and the unique functional nature of these neuroendocrine tumors provide a useful framework that offers advantages for establishing the pathways of tumorigenesis and malignancy. Such findings may have relevance for understanding the basis of other more common malignancies where similar frameworks are not available. As the relevant pathways leading to pheochromocytoma are established it should be possible to take advantage of the new generation of drugs being developed to target specific pathways in other malignancies. Again the success of this will require well-designed and coordinated multi-center studies.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15369446     DOI: 10.1677/erc.1.00829

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Endocr Relat Cancer        ISSN: 1351-0088            Impact factor:   5.678


  100 in total

1.  Evil lurks in the heart of man: cardiac paraganglioma presenting as recurrent dyspnoea and chronic cough.

Authors:  Jessica Moline; Joanne Ngeow; Prabhakar Rajiah; Charis Eng
Journal:  BMJ Case Rep       Date:  2011-12-20

2.  Extraadrenal pheochromocytoma and vagal paraganglioma.

Authors:  Andrew W Jennings; John T Preskitt; Raphaelle D Vallera
Journal:  Proc (Bayl Univ Med Cent)       Date:  2012-04

3.  Malignant pheochromocytoma: new malignancy criteria.

Authors:  Pierre de Wailly; Luigi Oragano; Francois Radé; Anthony Beaulieu; Vincent Arnault; Pierre Levillain; Jean Louis Kraimps
Journal:  Langenbecks Arch Surg       Date:  2011-11-09       Impact factor: 3.445

Review 4.  Genetic analysis of high altitude paragangliomas.

Authors:  Marion Jech; I Alvarado-Cabrero; J Albores-Saavedra; P L M Dahia; A S Tischler
Journal:  Endocr Pathol       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 3.943

5.  [Adrenalectomy after snowboard fall. A pheochromocytoma becomes clinically apparent in an unusual way].

Authors:  T Gramann; B Stamm; P Buchmann
Journal:  Unfallchirurg       Date:  2007-04       Impact factor: 1.000

Review 6.  Review: the role of neural crest cells in the endocrine system.

Authors:  Meghan Sara Adams; Marianne Bronner-Fraser
Journal:  Endocr Pathol       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 3.943

7.  Pheochromocytoma: time to stamp out "malignancy"?

Authors:  Arthur S Tischler
Journal:  Endocr Pathol       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 3.943

8.  Clinically silent chromaffin-cell tumors: Tumor characteristics and long-term prognosis in patients with incidentally discovered pheochromocytomas.

Authors:  S Grozinsky-Glasberg; A Szalat; C A Benbassat; A Gorshtein; R Weinstein; D Hirsch; I Shraga-Slutzky; G Tsvetov; D J Gross; I Shimon
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2010-05-17       Impact factor: 4.256

9.  Malignant giant pheochromocytoma: a case report and review of the literature.

Authors:  Cristina Torres Arcos; Virgilio Ruiz Luque; José Aguilar Luque; Pablo Martínez García; Antonia Brox Jiménez; Macarena Márquez Muñoz
Journal:  Can Urol Assoc J       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 1.862

10.  Sodium butyrate activates Notch1 signaling, reduces tumor markers, and induces cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in pheochromocytoma.

Authors:  Max A Cayo; Ashley K Cayo; Sarah M Jarjour; Herbert Chen
Journal:  Am J Transl Res       Date:  2009-01-31       Impact factor: 4.060

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