Malignant pheochromocytoma: current status and initiatives for future progress

Pheochromocytomas are rare catecholamine-producing neuroendocrine tumors that are usually benign, but which may also present as or develop into a malignancy. Predicting such behavior is notoriously difficult and there are currently no curative treatments for malignant tumors. This report follows fro...

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Veröffentlicht in:Endocrine-related cancer 2004-09, Vol.11 (3), p.423-436
Hauptverfasser: Eisenhofer, Graeme, Bornstein, Stefan R, Brouwers, Frederieke M, Cheung, Nai-Kong V, Dahia, Patricia L, de Krijger, Ronald R, Giordano, Thomas J, Greene, Lloyd A, Goldstein, David S, Lehnert, Hendrik, Manger, William M, Maris, John M, Neumann, Hartmut P H, Pacak, Karel, Shulkin, Barry L, Smith, David I, Tischler, Arthur S, Young, William F
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container_end_page 436
container_issue 3
container_start_page 423
container_title Endocrine-related cancer
container_volume 11
creator Eisenhofer, Graeme
Bornstein, Stefan R
Brouwers, Frederieke M
Cheung, Nai-Kong V
Dahia, Patricia L
de Krijger, Ronald R
Giordano, Thomas J
Greene, Lloyd A
Goldstein, David S
Lehnert, Hendrik
Manger, William M
Maris, John M
Neumann, Hartmut P H
Pacak, Karel
Shulkin, Barry L
Smith, David I
Tischler, Arthur S
Young, William F
description Pheochromocytomas are rare catecholamine-producing neuroendocrine tumors that are usually benign, but which may also present as or develop into a malignancy. Predicting such behavior is notoriously difficult and there are currently no curative treatments for malignant tumors. This report follows from a workshop at the Banbury Conference Center, Cold Spring Harbor, New York, on the 16th–18th November 2003, held to review the state of science and to facilitate future progress in the diagnosis and treatment of malignant pheochromocytoma. The rarity of the tumor and the resulting fragmented nature of studies, typically involving small numbers of patients, represent limiting factors to the development of effective treatments and diagnostic or prognostic markers for malignant disease. Such development is being facilitated by the availability of new genomics-based tools, but for such approaches to succeed ultimately requires comprehensive clinical studies involving large numbers of patients, stringently collected clinical data and tumor samples, and interdisciplinary collaborations among multiple specialist centers. Nevertheless, the well-characterized hereditary basis and the unique functional nature of these neuroendocrine tumors provide a useful framework that offers advantages for establishing the pathways of tumorigenesis and malignancy. Such findings may have relevance for understanding the basis of other more common malignancies where similar frameworks are not available. As the relevant pathways leading to pheochromocytoma are established it should be possible to take advantage of the new generation of drugs being developed to target specific pathways in other malignancies. Again the success of this will require well-designed and coordinated multicenter studies.
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subjects Adrenal Gland Neoplasms - diagnosis
Adrenal Gland Neoplasms - pathology
Adrenal Gland Neoplasms - therapy
Forecasting
Humans
Pheochromocytoma - diagnosis
Pheochromocytoma - pathology
Pheochromocytoma - therapy
Reviews
title Malignant pheochromocytoma: current status and initiatives for future progress
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