| dc.description.abstract |
P
haeochromocytoma is a rare, neuroendocrine, chromaffin
staining tumour that usually arises within the adrenal
medulla, although extra-adrenal phaeochromocytomas
also appear in ganglia of the sympathetic nervous system.
Approximately 10% of phaeochromocytomas are hereditary1
and may be found in association with von Hippel-Lindau dis ease, multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2, or neurofibromato sis type 1.1¿3 Familial paraganglioma (PGL) is a inherited dis order characterised by the development of highly vascular
tumours in the head and neck. Recent studies have related the
presence of mutations on structural (SDHC, SDHD) and cata lytic (SDHB) succinate dehydrogenase subunits to familial
and sporadic phaeochromocytoma and/or paraganglioma sus ceptibility. While the SDHD locus is maternally imprinted,
SDHB has classical autosomal dominant inheritance. Since
Baysal et al4 first described SDHD mutations as being
associated with PGL, the screening of such alterations has
become routine in the diagnosis of paraganglioma and
phaeochromocytoma.5 Astuti et al6 reported the first known
mutations in the SDHB gene that caused susceptibility to
familial phaeochromocytoma alone and to familial phaeo chromocytoma with head and neck paraganglioma. A recent
study reported mutations in the SDHB gene in ¿20% cases of
PGL and ¿3% of sporadic paragangliomas. With regard to
SDHC, only one study has identified a germline SDHC
mutation in all the affected members of a family as being the
underlying cause of PGL3.8
To investigate further the involvement of SDHB and SDHC in
paraganglioma and phaeochromocytoma susceptibility, we
searched for germline mutations in 22 patients, 17 with
phaeochromocytoma, three with paraganglioma, and two
cases with both (table 1). |
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