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X-Linked Acrogigantism (X-LAG) syndrome: Clinical profile and therapeutic responses

Authors :
Beatriz Santamaría
Roberto Salvatori
Philippe A. Lysy
Edward H. Oldfield
Andrew Cotterill
Vincent Bours
Maya Lodish
Luciana Ansaneli Naves
Chiara Villa
Misu Lee
James R. Lupski
J F Bonneville
Nalini S. Shah
Nadia Mazerkina
Adrian Daly
Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea
Albert Beckers
Tim Cheetham
Jacques Young
Ee Mun Lim
Natalia Strebkova
Natalia S. Pellegata
Jean-Hubert Caberg
Prashant Chittiboina
Emilie Castermans
Maria Chaira Zatelli
Elisa Verrua
Sebastian J C M M Neggers
Daniel Metzger
Giampaolo Trivellin
Liliya Rostomyan
Catherine S. Choong
Giovanna Mantovani
Stephan Gaillard
Luis Augusto Casulari
Maria Rosaria Ambrosio
Michael T. Collins
Bo Yuan
Constantine A. Stratakis
Margaret Zacharin
Fabio R. Faucz
Patrick Petrossians
Pengfei Liu
Wouter W. de Herder
Martha Quezado
Gustavo Barcelos Barra
Sabina Zacharieva
Internal Medicine
Source :
Endocr. Relat. Cancer 22, 353-367 (2015), Endocrine-Related Cancer, 22(3), 353-367. Bioscientifica Ltd, Endocrine-related cancer, vol 22, iss 3
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Bioscientifica Ltd, 2015.

Abstract

X-linked acrogigantism (X-LAG) is a new syndrome of pituitary gigantism, caused by microduplications on chromosome Xq26.3, encompassing the geneGPR101, which is highly upregulated in pituitary tumors. We conducted this study to explore the clinical, radiological, and hormonal phenotype and responses to therapy in patients with X-LAG syndrome. The study included 18 patients (13 sporadic) with X-LAG and microduplication of chromosome Xq26.3. All sporadic cases had unique duplications and the inheritance pattern in two families was dominant, with all Xq26.3 duplication carriers being affected. Patients began to grow rapidly as early as 2–3 months of age (median 12 months). At diagnosis (median delay 27 months), patients had a median height and weight standard deviation scores (SDS) of >+3.9 SDS. Apart from the increased overall body size, the children had acromegalic symptoms including acral enlargement and facial coarsening. More than a third of cases had increased appetite. Patients had marked hypersecretion of GH/IGF1 and usually prolactin, due to a pituitary macroadenoma or hyperplasia. Primary neurosurgical control was achieved with extensive anterior pituitary resection, but postoperative hypopituitarism was frequent. Control with somatostatin analogs was not readily achieved despite moderate to high levels of expression of somatostatin receptor subtype-2 in tumor tissue. Postoperative use of adjuvant pegvisomant resulted in control of IGF1 in all five cases where it was employed. X-LAG is a new infant-onset gigantism syndrome that has a severe clinical phenotype leading to challenging disease management.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13510088
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Endocr. Relat. Cancer 22, 353-367 (2015), Endocrine-Related Cancer, 22(3), 353-367. Bioscientifica Ltd, Endocrine-related cancer, vol 22, iss 3
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8e96f56e7e550d65b290eed3ba48eeb