multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1
TRANSCRIPT
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Multiple endocrine neoplasia Type 1
Abhilash
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Introduction
• Rare hereditary cancer syndrome.
• “Wermer’s syndrome”
• Tumors of
1. Parathyroid gland(95% of cases)
2. Endocrine gastroenteropancreatic tract (30-80% cases)
3. Anterior pituitary (15-90% cases)
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• Other neoplasms
– Adrenocortical tumors
– Thyroid tumors.
– Visceral and cutaneous lipomas.
– Meningiomoas.
– Facial angiofibromas
– Collagenomas
– Thymic, gastric and bronchial carcinoids.
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• Usually have a family history of MEN1.
• Autosomal dominant.
• MEN1 gene mutations -70-95% MEN1 patients.
• Leading cause of mortality – entero-pancreatic gastrinomas, thymic and bronchial carcinoids.
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Epidemiology
• Incidence 1 in 30,000.
• M:F=1:1
• No racial or ethnic predilection.
• Diagnosis before 10 years of age is rare.
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Historical background.
• Erdheim reported 1st case of MEN1 in 1903.
• Cushing and Davidoff reported classical MEN1 triad in 1920s.
• Underdahl – first review of 14 cases of MEN1
• Wermer in 1954 – MEN1 –Autosomal dominant.
• 1988- MEN1 locus mapped to 11q13
• 1997 – MEN1 mutations confirmed to cause MEN1 syndrome.
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Pathogenesis
• Knudsons two hit model for tumor suppressor gene carcinogenesis.
• First hit – heterozygous MEN1 germline mutation inherited from parents.
• Second hit – MEN1 somatic mutation-deletion
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Genetics
• MEN1 gene mutation in 75-90% cases.
• Highly penetrant.
• 50% symptomatic by 20 years of age. 95% are symptomatic by 40 years of age.
• Environmental modifiers unknown.
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Parathyroid glands
• PHPT – most common in MEN1.
• More than 95% by 50 years of age.
• First manifestation in 90%.
• Multiglandular and earlier in onset than sporadic.
• Symptoms of hypercalcemia.
• Hypercalcemia may increase gastrin secretion from gastrinoma
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GEP tract NETs
• Second most common manifestation of MEN1
• 30-80% cases.
• Multiple nodular lesions.
• 2/3rd are functional.
• Gastrinomas 54%, Insulinomas 15%.
• Non functional and insulinomas are present in pancreas. Gastrinomas in submucosa of duodenum and soft tissue around pancreas.
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Gastrinomas
• 54% of GEP NETs• 90% located in duodenum.• ZES – esophagitis, vomiting, epigastric pain,
diarrhea, duodenal ulcers, jejunal ulcers• 40% manifest before age of 40.• Frequently multiple and malignant.• Pancreatic has worse prognosis due to liver
metastasis.• Other poor prognostic factors – very high gastrin
levels, ectopic cushings and liver metastasis
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Insulinomas
• 10% MEN1 patients
• Usually occur in third decade.
• Single or multiple macroadenomas.
• Benign.
• May present with hypoglycemia responsive to glucose.
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Glucogonomas
• Rare.
• Usually as single macroadenoma>3cm.
• Skin rash(necrolytic migratory erythema), venous thrombosis, anemia, diarrhea, anorexia, weight loss, stomatitis, hyperglycemia, hyperglucogonemia.
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VIPomas
• Rare.
• WDHA syndrome.
• Watery diarrhea, hypokalemia, achlorhydria.
PP omas
• Secrete pancreatic polypeptide.
• No clinical significance.
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Anterior pituitary tumors
• Occurs in 15-90% of cases.
• Usually single.
• Invasive in 15-20 %, Malignant change – rare.
• Symptoms – hormone, size related.
• Bitemporal hemianopia and other visual field defects.
• 60%- prolactin, 25% -GH, 3%- ACTH
• Mean age of diagnosis is 40 years.
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Prolactinomas
• Most common pituitary tumors in MEN1.
• Galactorrhoea, amenorrhea, infertility in women, hypogonadism, sexual dysfunction, impotence.
GH secreting tumors
• Second most frequent.
• Gigantism in children and acromegaly in adults.
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Other MEN1 associated tumors
• Adrenocortical tumors – 20-40% of MEN1. Most are non functional.
• Functional tumors can cause hypercortisolism , cushings, hyperaldosteronism.
• Pheochromocytoma - <1% cases. Unilateral.
• Thyroid tumor – adenoma/colloid/carcinoma. In 25%. Association may not be significant.
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Carcinoid tumors
• Occurs in 10% of MEN1.
• GI tract, pancreas, bronchi, thymus.
• Thymic carcinoids are aggressive and often lethal.(mainly male smokers)
• Bronchial carcinoids are indolent.
• Carcinoid syndrome – rare – flushing attacks and dyspnea
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Collagenomas and facial angiofibromas
• Collagenomas >70 % cases – multiple, skin coloured cutaneous nodules. Asymptomatic.
• Multiple facial angiofibromas – 40-90% MEN1.
• Benign tumors. Acneiform papules.
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LIPOMAS
• 20-30% MEN1 cases
CNS
• Meningiomas – 8%
• Ependymomas – 1%
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Diagnosis
• Biochemical abnormalities with clinical features in age <40 years can be suggestive of MEN1.
• Mutational analysis of MEN1 gene
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Parathyroid tumors.
• Serum PTH.
• Serum Calcium.
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GEP NETS
• EUS – most sensitive
• Endoscopy and EUS for duodenal gastrinomas.
• 111In DTPA octreotide scan for pancreatic islet imaging – to assess spread of disease and liver metastasis.
• Functional tumors according to the hormone released.
• Chromogranin A
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Gastrinomas
• Elevated serum fasting gastrin.
• Increased basal gastric acid secretion.
• Secretin stimulated gastrin test.
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Insulinomas
• 72 hour fasting protocol.
• Fasting hypoglycemia reversed with glucose with high insulin, elevated C peptide levels and proinsulin levels.
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Prolactinomas
• MRI
• Fasting prolactin levels 20 fold than upper limit of normal is diagnostic.
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• Adrenocortical tumors – EUS most sensitive.
• Biochemical test – DHEA, normetanephrine, epinephrine, VMA, norepinephrine.
• Pheochromocytoma – Biochemical tests –Increased urinary catecholamines and metabolites.
• Tumor localization by CT/MRI
• Carcinoids – CT or MRI of chest.
• Endoscopy for gastric carcinoids
• Urine 5HIAA, chromogranin A, calcitonin, corticotropin
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Management.
• Surgery is the mainstay for treatment.
• Medications to control hormone secretion.
• Chemotherapy and radiation have minimal role.
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Parathyroid tumors
• Indications for surgery
– Symptomatic PHPT.
– Hypercalciuria, hypercalcemia and presence of gastrinoma.
• Recurrence more common than in sporadic cases.
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• Subtotal parathyroidectomy or total parathyroidectomy.
• Subtotal prevents permanent hypoparathyroidism and reduces temporary post surgical hypocalcaemia.
• Recurrence in subtotal parathyroidectomy -50% after 8-12 years.
• Often surgery of choice – Total parathyroidectomy with autologous graft in brachioradialis .
• Preventive bilateral cervical total thymectomy.
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• Rapid intraoperative PTH assays to ensure no ectopic or supernumerary glands.
• Alternatively total parathyroidectomy followed by life long treatment with VitD analogues.
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• Calcimimetics – calcium sensing receptor agonists. – reduce PTH release and parathyroid hyperplasia.
• Cinacalcet- in patients with recurrence or unfit for operation.
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Gastrinomas
• Non-metastatic gastrinoma – surgery.• PPI and somatostatin analogue.• Chemotherapy with 5FU and streptozotocin.• Surgical resection recommended for non metastatic
tumors.• Duodenal gastrinomas <5mm – longitudinal
duodenectomy and enucleation from submucosa. >5mm- full thickness excision from duodenal wall.
• Tumors more than 2cm have high rate of liver metastasis.
• Whipples procedure.
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Insulinomas
• Chemotherapy with streptozotocin or octreotide for metastatic disease
• Surgical approach by intraoperative localization by palpation or USG followed by enucleation.
• Pancreatic resection if multiple large deep nodules.
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Glucogonomas, VIPomas, Ppomas, somatostatinomas and non functional
GEP tumors• Surveillance by EUS.
• Pancreatic surgery of size of lesion approaches 2 cm.
• No role in the presence of systemic metastasis.
• Medical treatment with streptozotocin, octreotide, corticosteroids , indomethacin , metoclopramide, lithium carbonate.
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Anterior pituitary tumors.
• Transphenoidal resection, endoscopic resection or radioablation are TOC for macroadenomas.
• Dopamine agonists ( cabergoline, bromocriptine, pergolide, quinagolide) – PRL secreting microadenomas.
• Somatostatin analogues for GH secreting microadenomas.
• Non functional adenomas - surgery
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Adrenocortical tumors
• No consensus.
• Larger tumors – surgical removal – due to higher malignant potential.
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Carcinoids.
• Surgery - TOC for bronchial and thymic carcinoids.
• Thymic carcinoids have 100 % recurrence after 1 year of surgery.
• Prophylactic thymectomy at time of neck surgery.
• Gastric type 2 NETS- somatostatin analogues, endoscopic surveillance and gastrectomy once macrolesions are visible.
• Somatostatin analogues – reduce tumor size and reduce gastrin secretion in MEN1.