Detection of an Activating Mutation of the Thyrotropin Receptor in a Case of an Autonomously Hyperfunctioning Thyroid Insular Carcinoma1
Author(s) -
Diego Russo,
Dario Tumino,
Franco Arturi,
Paolo Vigneri,
Giuseppe Grasso,
Alfredo Pontecorvi,
Sébastiano Filetti,
Antonino Belfiore
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
the journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.206
H-Index - 353
eISSN - 1945-7197
pISSN - 0021-972X
DOI - 10.1210/jcem.82.3.3838
Subject(s) - thyrotropin receptor , mutation , thyroid , psychology , endocrinology , biology , genetics , graves' disease , gene
Thyroid carcinomas, even when well differentiated, usually appear as hypofunctioning at scintigraphy. We report a case of an aggressive insular thyroid carcinoma presenting as an autonomously functioning thyroid nodule and causing severe thyrotoxicosis. The tumor was metastatic to a cervical lymph node and both lungs. An activating mutation of the TSH receptor gene in both the primary tumor and the lymph node metastasis was found, due to a base substitution at codon 633 (normal guanine at position 1896 replaced by cytosine CAC for GAC causing aspartic acid substitution by histidine). Other known oncogenes (gsp, ras, PTC/ret, trk, met, and p53) were not involved. This is the first description of an activating TSH receptor mutation in a thyroid hyperfunctioning carcinoma in which an aggressive malignant phenotype coexisted with activation of the cAMP cascade and differentiated thyroid functions.
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