20 results match your criteria: "Department of Endocrinology and National Reference Center for Rare Adrenal Disorders[Affiliation]"

Shoulder osteoarthritis facilitating the diagnosis of acromegaly.

BMJ Case Rep

November 2024

Paris Cité University, Department of physical medicine and rehabilitation, Hôpital Cochin - Assistance Publique- Hôpitaux de Paris, Paris, Île-de-France, France.

Article Synopsis
  • - A 50-something man experienced chronic shoulder pain and reduced motion without any prior trauma, leading to imaging that showed osteophytosis but no severe joint issues.
  • - A second consultation revealed swelling in his hands and feet, raising suspicion of acromegaly, which was confirmed by further tests and an MRI showing a sellar tumor.
  • - The shoulder pain was linked to undiagnosed acromegalic arthropathy, prompting treatment through surgery and medication, emphasizing the importance of early acromegaly diagnosis to prevent complications.
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Article Synopsis
  • This study aimed to improve the identification of malignancy risk and genetic status in patients with primary paraganglioma or pheochromocytoma (PPGL) by assessing various biomarkers.
  • Conducted over four years with 231 patients, the study found that tumor analysis was better than germline testing for determining genetic status, with specific biomarkers like plasma succinate levels and miR-483-5p showing promise in predicting metastasis.
  • The combination of biomarkers, such as SDHB immunostaining and TERT promoter methylation, significantly enhanced the predictive accuracy for both SDHx genetic status and metastatic potential.
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Bilateral macronodular adrenocortical disease (BMAD) is an uncommon cause of Cushing's syndrome leading to bilateral macronodules. Isolated BMAD has been classified into three molecular groups: patients with ARMC5 alteration, KDM1A alteration, and patients without known genetic cause. The aim of this study was to identify by NGS, in a cohort of 26 patients with BMAD, the somatic alterations acquired in different nodules after macrodissection from patients with germline ARMC5 or KDM1A alterations and to analyze potential somatic alterations in a panel of five other genes involved in adrenal pathology (GNAS, PDE8B, PDE11A, PRKAR1A, and PRKACA).

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Diagnosis and management of children and adult craniopharyngiomas: A French Endocrine Society/French Society for Paediatric Endocrinology & Diabetes Consensus Statement.

Ann Endocrinol (Paris)

July 2024

Department of Endocrinology, CHU Bordeaux, Hôpital Haut Lévêque, Neurocentre Magendie, Physiopathologie de la Plasticité Neuronale, Université de Bordeaux, Pessac, France.

Article Synopsis
  • * The French Endocrine Society and associated organizations created a reference document to address the complexities of managing these tumors, which can recur and lead to serious health issues, including impaired quality of life for patients, especially those with hypothalamic syndrome.
  • * Recent research has identified two tumor types—papillary and adamantinomatous—with different molecular signatures and treatment strategies, prompting ongoing developments in therapeutic options, including new medications for associated symptoms like hyperphagia.
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Since the first description of Nelson syndrome 60 years ago, the way to consider corticotroph pituitary neuroendocrine tumors (PitNETs) after bilateral adrenalectomy has evolved. Today, it is globally acknowledged that only a subset of corticotroph PitNETs is aggressive.After adrenalectomy, corticotroph tumor progression (CTP) occurs in about 30 to 40% of patients during a median follow-up of 10 years.

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Carney complex (CNC) is an ultrarare disorder causing cutaneous and cardiac myxomas, primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease, hypophyseal adenoma, and gonadal tumours. Genetic alterations are often missed under routine genetic testing. Pathogenic variants in PRKAR1A are identified in most cases, while large exonic or chromosomal deletions have only been reported in a few cases.

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Bilateral macronodular adrenocortical disease (BMAD) is characterized by the development of adrenal macronodules resulting in a pituitary-ACTH independent Cushing's syndrome. Although there are important similarities observed between the rare microscopic descriptions of this disease, the small series published are not representative of the molecular and genetic heterogenicity recently described in BMAD. We analyzed the pathological features in a series of BMAD and determined if there is correlation between these criteria and the characteristics of the patients.

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Patients with primary bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia (PBMAH) usually present bilateral benign adrenocortical macronodules at imaging and variable levels of cortisol excess. PBMAH is a rare cause of primary overt Cushing's syndrome but may represent up to one-third of bilateral adrenal incidentalomas with evidence of cortisol excess. The increased steroidogenesis in PBMAH is often regulated by various G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) aberrantly expressed in PBMAH tissues; some receptor ligands are ectopically produced in PBMAH tissues, creating aberrant autocrine/paracrine regulation of steroidogenesis.

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Objective: Pneumocystis pneumonia (PcP) is an opportunistic infection occurring in immunocompromised patients. Cushing's syndrome (CS) impairs the immune system, and several authors have reported PcP in patients with CS. The present study aimed to characterize PcP occurring in a CS context and its management in French tertiary centers, in order to highlight the similarities in clinical presentation and treatment according to whether prophylaxis is implemented or not.

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is a tumor suppressor gene frequently mutated in primary bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia (PBMAH), an adrenal cause of Cushing's syndrome. The function of ARMC5 is poorly understood, aside from the fact that it regulates cell viability and adrenal steroidogenesis by mechanisms still unknown. Tumor suppressor genes play an important role in modifying intracellular redox response, which in turn regulates diverse cell signaling pathways.

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Transsphenoidal surgery is the first-line treatment for Cushing's disease to selectively remove the tumor. The rate of postoperative remission is estimated around 70%-80% in expert centers. However, the long-term remission rate is lower because of recurrence during follow-up that can be observed in 15% to 25% of the patients depending on the studies and duration of follow-up.

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Primary bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia (PBMAH) is an adrenal cause of Cushing syndrome. Nowadays, a PBMAH diagnosis is more frequent than previously, as a result of progress in the diagnostic methods for adrenal incidentalomas, which are widely available. Although some rare syndromic forms of PBMAH are known to be of genetic origin, non-syndromic forms of PBMAH have only been recognized as a genetic disease in the past 10 years.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on primary bilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia (PBMAH), a condition linked to adrenal macronodules and excess cortisol levels, highlighting the role of ARMC5 gene mutations as a key factor.
  • Out of 352 patients analyzed, 52 (14.8%) were found to have ARMC5 mutations, exhibiting significantly higher cortisol levels and larger adrenal glands compared to non-mutated patients.
  • The research identifies specific criteria—bilateral adrenal involvement and autonomous cortisol secretion—that are highly predictive of ARMC5 mutations, suggesting that these criteria should guide genetic testing and help refine diagnostic standards for PBMAH.
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KDM1A inactivation causes hereditary food-dependent Cushing syndrome.

Genet Med

February 2022

Institut Cochin, Inserm U1016, CNRS UMR8104, Université de Paris, Paris, France; Department of Endocrinology and National Reference Center for Rare Adrenal Disorders, Hôpital Cochin, Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris, Paris, France. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • The study looked into the genetic causes of a condition called food-dependent Cushing syndrome (FDCS) in patients with a specific type of adrenal gland problem.
  • Researchers analyzed samples from 36 patients to find out more about their genes.
  • They discovered that a gene called KDM1A is important for understanding FDCS, and testing for both KDM1A and another gene called ARMC5 can help doctors diagnose and treat patients better.
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Approximately one-tenth of the general population exhibit adrenal cortical nodules, and the incidence has increased. Afflicted patients display a multifaceted symptomatology-sometimes with rather spectacular features. Given the general infrequency as well as the specific clinical, histological, and molecular considerations characterizing these lesions, adrenal cortical tumors should be investigated by endocrine pathologists in high-volume tertiary centers.

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Described for the first time in 1985, Carney complex (CNC) is a rare dominantly inherited multiple neoplasia syndrome with almost full penetrance and characterized by both endocrine - primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease with Cushing's syndrome, acromegaly and thyroid tumors - and non-endocrine manifestations such as cardiac, cutaneous and mucosal myxomas, pigmented cutaneous lesions, psammomatous melanotic schwannoma, osteochondromyxoma and a wide range of other tumours with potential malignancy. The pathophysiology of CNC is a model of dysregulation of the cAMP/PKA signalling in human diseases. As described 20 years ago, inactivating heterozygous mutations of PRKAR1A formerly known as CNC1, encoding the regulatory subunit 1α of protein kinase A, are identified in more than 70% of the index cases, while inactivating mutations of genes encoding phosphodiesterases are found in rare and particular forms of the complex.

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