The concomitant presence of a pituitary adenoma with a second sellar lesion in patients operated upon for pituitary adenoma is an uncommon entity. Although rare, quite a great variety of lesions have been indentified coexisting with pituitary adenomas. In fact, most combinations have been described before, but an overview with information on the frequency of combined pathologies in a large series has not been published. We present a series of eight collision sellar lesions indentified among 548 transsphenoidally resected pituitary adenomas in two Neurosurgical Departments. The histological studies confirmed a case of sarcoidosis within a non-functioning pituitary adenoma, a case of intrasellar schwannoma coexisting with growth hormone (GH) secreting adenoma, two Rathke’s cleft cysts combined with pituitary adenomas, three gangliocytomas associated with GH-secreting adenomas, and a case of a double pituitary adenoma. The pertinent literature is discussed with emphasis on pathogenetic theories of dual sellar lesions. Although there is no direct evidence to confirm the pathogenetic relationship of collision sellar lesions, the number of cases presented in literature makes the theory of an incidental occurrence rather doubtful. Suggested hypotheses about a common embryonic origin or a potential interaction between pituitary adenomas and the immune system are presented.
The aim of the present study was the quantitation of total tau protein (tau(T)), tau phosphorylated at threonine 181 (tau(P-181)) and beta-amyloid(1-42) (Abeta42) in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH), Alzheimer's disease (AD) and controls. Double sandwich ELISAs (Innogenetics) were used for the measurements. Total tau was significantly increased in iNPH and highly increased in AD as compared with the control group, whilst Abeta42 was decreased in both diseases. CSF tau(P-181) levels were significantly increased only in AD, but not in iNPH as compared with the controls. A cut-off level for tau(T) at 300 pg/ml, successfully discriminated AD from normal aging with a 95.8% specificity and 91% sensitivity; whilst the tau(P-181)/tau(T) ratio (cut-off value 0.169) was more specific (100%) but less sensitive (92.5%). For the discrimination of iNPH from AD tau(T) achieved low specificity (77.8%) but high sensitivity (92.5%), whilst tau(P-181) (cut-off value 47.4) was both sensitive and specific (88.7% and 86.7% respectively) for the discrimination of these disorders. The present study, despite being clinical, supports the notion that CSF tau(P-181) alone or in combination with tau(T) may be a useful marker in the discrimination of iNPH from AD.
Summary p53 and the murine double minute 2 (MDM2) oncoprotein expression was evaluated in paraffin-embedded tissue from 61 patients with central nervous system gliomas (53 astrocytomas and eight oligodendrogliomas) and related to proliferation-associated markers [i.e. proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), Ki-67 and nuclear organizer regions (NORs)] and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). We used the monoclonal antibodies PC-1 0, MIB-1, DO-1, 1 Bi 0 and EGFR 113 and the colloid silver nitrate (AgNOR) technique. MDM2 and p53were co-expressed in 28% of cases. A p53-positive/MDM2-negative phenotype was observed in 15% and a p53-negative/MDM2-positive phenotype in 20% of cases. There was a positive correlation of p53 and MDM2 expression with grade and proliferation indices. Univariate analysis in the group of diffuse astrocytomas showed that older age, high histological grade, high PCNA labelling index (LI) and high AgNOR score were associated with reduced overall survival (P < 0.05). p53 LI, Ki-67 LI, AgNOR score, tumour location and grade influenced diseasefree survival (P < 0.05), whereas the only parameters affecting post-relapse survival were histological grade and Ki-67 LI (P < 0.1). Multivariate analysis revealed that age, radiotherapy, PCNA LI and p53 LI were the independent predictors of overall survival. p53 LI, Ki-67 LI, MDM2 LI, EGFR LI, grade and type of therapy were independent predictors of disease-free survival, and grade was the only independent predictor of post-relapse survival. Our results indicate that p53 LI and MDM2 LI, EGFR expression as well as proliferation markers (PCNA and Ki-67) are useful indicators of overall and disease-free survival in diffuse astrocytoma patients.Keywords: proliferating cell nuclear antigen; Ki-67; MIB-1; AgNORs; p53; MDM2; epidermal growth factor receptor; gliomas Central nervous system (CNS) gliomas range in clinical behaviour and histological appearance from indolent well-differentiated lesions to highly anaplastic, rapidly growing neoplasms. A cardinal property of almost all types of gliomas is a propensity to recur and undergo anaplastic change (Russel and Rubinstein, 1989). A major stimulus to the study of cell proliferation in gliomas has been the widely held belief that quantification of this fundamental process will be of value in the objective categorization of these tumours. However, while cell kinetic information is an important aspect of the biology of gliomas, it has become clear that neoplastic evolution towards glioblastoma is a multistep process that involves deregulation of several genes related to both cellular proliferation and differentiation. The molecular determinants of glioma progression are still under investigation, with considerable attention directed towards the tumour-suppressor gene p53. On the basis of findings from molecular genetic analysis, Bigner and Vogelstein (1990)
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