| Literature DB >> 22851969 |
Gabriele Parenti1, Benedetta Zampetti, Elena Rapizzi, Tonino Ercolino, Valentino Giachè, Massimo Mannelli.
Abstract
Malignant pheochromocytomas/paragangliomas are rare tumors with a poor prognosis. Malignancy is diagnosed by the development of metastases as evidenced by recurrences in sites normally devoid of chromaffin tissue. Histopathological, biochemical, molecular and genetic markers offer only information on potential risk of metastatic spread. Large size, extraadrenal location, dopamine secretion, SDHB mutations, a PASS score higher than 6, a high Ki-67 index are indexes for potential malignancy. Metastases can be present at first diagnosis or occur years after primary surgery. Measurement of plasma and/or urinary metanephrine, normetanephrine and metoxytyramine are recommended for biochemical diagnosis. Anatomical and functional imaging using different radionuclides are necessary for localization of tumor and metastases. Metastatic pheochromocytomas/paragangliomas is incurable. When possible, surgical debulking of primary tumor is recommended as well as surgical or radiosurgical removal of metastases. I-131-MIBG radiotherapy is the treatment of choice although results are limited. Chemotherapy is reserved to more advanced disease stages. Recent genetic studies have highlighted the main pathways involved in pheochromocytomas/paragangliomas pathogenesis thus suggesting the use of targeted therapy which, nevertheless, has still to be validated. Large cooperative studies on tissue specimens and clinical trials in large cohorts of patients are necessary to achieve better therapeutic tools and improve patient prognosis.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22851969 PMCID: PMC3407645 DOI: 10.1155/2012/872713
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Pheochromocytoma of the adrenal gland scoring scale (PASS) [38].
| Items | Value |
|---|---|
| Nuclear hyperchromasia | 1 |
| Profound nuclear pleomorphism | 1 |
| Capsular invasion | 1 |
| Vascular invasion | 1 |
| Extension into adipose tissue | 2 |
| Atypical mitotic figures | 2 |
| Greater than 3 of 10 mitotic figures high-power field | 2 |
| Tumor cell spindling | 2 |
| Cellular monotony | 2 |
| High cellularity | 2 |
| Central or confluent tumor necrosis | 2 |
| Large nests or diffuse growth (>10% of tumor volume) | 2 |
|
| |
| Total | 20 |
Correlations between gene mutations and clinical phenotype.
| Syndrome | Gene | PCCs (%) | Sympathetic PGL | Parasympathetic PGL | Bilateral/multifocal neoplasia | Malignancy (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MEN 2A |
| ~50 | Very rare | Extremely rare | + | <3 |
| MEN 2B |
| ~50 | Very rare | Extremely rare | + | <3 |
| VHL |
| 10–20 | + | Rare | + | 5 |
| NF1 |
| 5 | − | − | − | 11 |
| PGL1 |
| + | + | + | + | ~5 |
| PGL2 |
| − | − | + | + | Not known |
| PGL3 |
| − | Rare | + | − | Not known |
| PGL4 |
| Rare | + | Rare | + | ~40 |
| PGL5 |
| − | + | − | Not known | Not known |
| TMEM127 mutation carriers |
| 100 | − | − | + | ~5 |
| MAX mutation carriers |
| 100 | + | Extremely rare | + | ~10 |
PCCs: pheochromocytomas; PGL: paragangliomas; +: present; −: absent.