Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is the most common well-differentiated thyroid cancer. Although the great majority of the cases exhibit an indolent clinical course, some of them develop local invasion with distant metastasis, and a few cases transform into undifferentiated/anaplastic thyroid carcinoma with a rapidly lethal course. To identify gene copy number alterations predictive of metastatic potential or aggressive transformation, array-based comparative genomic hybridization (CGH-array) was performed in 43 PTC cases. Formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded samples from primary tumours of 16 cases without metastasis, 14 cases with only regional lymph node metastasis, and 13 cases with distant metastasis, recurrence or extrathyroid extension were analysed. The CGH-array and confirmatory quantitative real-time PCR results identified the deletion of the EIF4EBP3 and TRAK2 gene loci, while amplification of thymosin beta 10 (TB10) and Tre-2 oncogene regions were observed as general markers for PTC. Although there have been several studies implicating TB10 as a specific marker based on gene expression data, our study is the first to report on genomic amplification. Although no significant difference could be detected between the good and bad prognosis cases in the A-kinase anchor protein 13 (AKAP13) gene region, it was discriminative markers for metastasis. Amplification in the AKAP13 region was demonstrated in 42.9% and 15.4% of the cases with local or with distant metastasis, respectively, while no amplification was detected in non-metastatic cases. AKAP13 and TB10 regions may represent potential new genomic markers for PTC and cancer progression.
The authors present a case report and review the literature on Hashimoto encephalopathy. The onset of the disease may be marked by focal and then progressively generalized seizures or other neurological symptoms, but a cognitive decline or various psychiatric symptoms may also emerge. High levels of anti-thyroid peroxidase antibodies and/or anti-thyroglobulin antibodies are present in the serum. Corticosteroid treatment usually results in an improvement of symptoms. The syndrome is frequently overlooked and, therefore, the authors strongly recommend testing serum thyroid autoantibodies in cases with encephalopathy of unknown origin independently on the presence of thyroid disease in the patient or family history. The importance of long-term immunosuppressive treatment should also be stressed.
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