MEN syndromes Flashcards

1
Q

MEN1

A

pituitary adenoma
parathyroid hyperplasia
pancreatic tumors

Wermer syndrome

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2
Q

MEN 2A

A

parathyroid hyperplasia
medullary thyroid carcinoma
Pheochomocytoma

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3
Q

MEN 2B

A

Mucosal neuromas
Marfanoid body habitus
medullary thyroid carcinoma
pheochromocytoma

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4
Q

The MEN syndromes

A

group of inherited diseases resulting in proliferative lesions (hyperplasia, adenomas, and carcinomas) of multiple endocrine organs

-occur at younger ages
- multiple endorine organs, synchronously or metachronously
- often multifocal
- usually preceded by asymptomatic stage of hyperplasia
(MEN-2 usually C-cell hyperplasia in the thyroid parenchyma adjacent to medullary thyroid carcinomas)
- more aggressive and recur in higher proportion of cases than similar sporadic endocrine tumors.

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5
Q

MEN 1: Parathyroid

A

Primary hyperparathyroidism- most common manifestation of MEN-1

initial manifestation of the disorder in most patients, appearing by age 40 to 50.

Both hyperplasia and adenomas.

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6
Q

MEN-1: Pancreas

A

tumors- leading cause of morbidity and mortality in persons with MEN-1.

aggressive, often present with metastatic disease.

multiple “microadenomas” scattered throughout the pancreas in conjunction with one or two dominant lesions.

MEN-1-associated pancreatic endocrine tumors are often functional; however, because pancreatic polypeptide is the most commonly secreted product, many tumors fail to produce an endocrine hypersecretion syndrome. Among those that do, Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (associated with gastrinomas) and hypoglycemia and neurologic manifestations (associated with insulinomas) are most common.

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7
Q

MEN-1: Pituitary

A

The most frequent anterior pituitary tumor encountered in MEN-1 is a prolactinoma; some patients develop acromegaly from somatotrophin-secreting tumors.

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8
Q

MEN-1: beyond the 3Ps

A

spectrum of this disease extends beyond the 3Ps.

The duodenum is the most common site of gastrinomas in individuals with MEN-1 (far in excess of the frequency of pancreatic gastrinomas), and synchronous duodenal and pancreatic tumors may be present in the same individual.

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9
Q

MEN-1 syndrome is caused by

A

germline mutations in the MEN1 tumor suppressor gene, which encodes a protein called menin

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10
Q

The dominant clinical manifestations of MEN-1 usually result from

A

peptide hormones that are overproduced and include such abnormalities as recurrent hypoglycemia due to insulinomas, intractable peptic ulcers in persons with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome, nephrolithiasis caused by PTH-induced hypercalcemia, or symptoms of prolactin excess from a pituitary tumor.

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11
Q

MEN-2 is subclassified into three distinct syndromes

A

MEN-2A, MEN-2B, and familial medullary thyroid cancer

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12
Q

Sipple syndrome

A

MEN-2A

characterized by pheochromocytoma, medullary carcinoma of the thyroid, and parathyroid hyperplasia

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13
Q

MEN-2A caused by

A

germline gain-of-function mutations in the RET proto-oncogene on chromosome 10q11.2

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14
Q

MEN 2B- differences from 2A

A

Patients develop medullary thyroid carcinomas, which are usually multifocal and more aggressive than in MEN-2A, and pheochromocytomas.

primary hyperparathyroidism is not present in MEN-2B.

MEN-2B - accompanied by neuromas or ganglioneuromas involving the skin, oral mucosa, eyes, respiratory tract, and gastrointestinal tract, and a marfanoid habitus, with long axial skeletal features and hyperextensible joints

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15
Q

Familial medullary thyroid cancer

A

a variant of MEN-2A

There is a strong predisposition to medullary thyroid cancer but not the other clinical manifestations of MEN-2A or MEN-2B

Routine genetic testing identifies RET mutation carriers earlier and more reliably in MEN-2 kindreds; all individuals carrying germline RET mutations are advised to undergo prophylactic thyroidectomy to prevent the inevitable development of medullary carcinomas

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