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1/63. Identification of a novel PTEN mutation (L139X) in a patient with Cowden disease and sjogren's syndrome.

    Cowden disease is an autosomal dominant disorder associated with an increased risk of breast, thyroid, and skin cancer in which germline mutations in a candidate tumour suppressor gene (PTEN) have been identified previously. sjogren's syndrome is a chronic inflammatory and autoimmune disorder of exocrine glands for which the genetic basis is unknown. This report describes a novel PTEN mutation (L139X) in a patient with Cowden disease and sjogren's syndrome. This observation raises the possibility of a link between mutations in the PTEN gene and sjogren's syndrome.
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keywords = thyroid
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2/63. Transcatheter embolization of arteriovenous malformations in Cowden disease.

    A patient with Cowden disease and multiple arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) that resulted in high output heart failure is described. Cowden disease is a familial syndrome characterized by endodermal, mesodermal and ectodermal dysplasia causing benign and malignant tumors of the skin, breast, gastrointestinal tract, and thyroid gland. Our patient had gastrointestinal polyposis, a right renal tumor, a left lung tumor, an adenomatous goiter, and typical dermatologic findings such as facial papules, acral keratosis, gingival papillomatosis and hemangiomas. AVMs were observed in the pelvis, cervical vertebra, liver, and right supraclavicular area. Transcatheter embolization was performed 7 times for the pelvic AVMs, but the effect decreased with repetition and the patient died of heart failure 2 years after the first embolization. The serum levels of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and transforming growth factor beta1 were high, suggesting that these angiogenic molecules may play a role in the pathogenesis of AVMs in Cowden disease.
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keywords = thyroid
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3/63. Pulmonary abnormalities in Cowden's disease.

    Cowden's disease is an inheritable multiple neoplastic syndrome represented by benign and malignant lesions of skin, digestive tract, mucosae, breast and thyroid. The syndrome, first described by Lloyd and Dennis in 1963, includes benign lung lesions, described in the literature only as hamartomas. The unusual condition of our case consists of multiple and bilateral lipomatous lesions of the lung and of adipose colonic polyps, diagnosed respectively by video assisted mini-thoracotomy and by endoscopic biopsies.
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keywords = thyroid
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4/63. An overlap of Cowden's disease and Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome in the same family.

    We describe a family with the unusual association of Cowden's disease and Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome. The father has characteristic mucocutaneous features that are palmoplantar keratoses, multiple facial papules, oral papillomatoses, lipomas, and vitiligo with involvement of the thyroid and digestive tract. The son presents with pigmented macules of the penis, macrocephaly, and a lipoma that are typical for Bannaya-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome. Recent studies have demonstrated that these 2 diseases are allelic disorders at the PTEN locus on chromosome 10q.
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ranking = 1
keywords = thyroid
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5/63. Expression of CD34 in sclerotic ("plywood") fibromas.

    CD34 antigen is expressed in normal human skin on endothelium, in spindle cells located around adnexal structures, and in a subset of interstitial cells in the reticular dermis. CD34 expression has also been identified in a number of fibrohistiocytic neoplasms, such as dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans and solitary fibrous tumors of soft tissue. CD34 expression has not previously been described in sclerotic, or "plywood" fibromas. Here presented are three lesions from three patients, in which histologic examination revealed a well-circumscribed dermal nodule composed of spindled cells with focal nuclear pseudo-inclusions. There was extensive fibrosis with hypocellular, storiform areas, characteristic of sclerotic fibroma. The spindled cells strongly expressed CD34, but not factor xiiia or markers of melanocytic, neural, or muscular differentiation. A diagnosis of Cowden syndrome was considered in one of the cases. These cases provide evidence that CD34 expression can occur in sclerotic fibromas, either solitary or associated with Cowden syndrome. When diagnosing a sclerotic fibroma, one should comment in the report regarding the possibility of Cowden syndrome.
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ranking = 0.011623776672962
keywords = nodule
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6/63. Cowden's disease diagnosed through mucocutaneous lesions and gastrointestinal polyposis with recurrent hematochezia, unrevealed by initial diagnosis.

    A 51-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of hematochezia and painful keratotic plaques involving both hands. He had gastrointestinal polyposis, and a history of liver hemangiomas and thyroid tumor. Numerous papules on the face and papillomatosis on the oral mucosa were present. A diagnosis was made as a typical case of Cowden's disease according to the criteria proposed by Salem and Steck (J Am Acad Dermatol 8: 686, 1983). The patient was not correctly diagnosed initially in spite of typical manifestations of Cowden's disease, mainly due to his concomitant manifestations which occurred chronologically.
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keywords = thyroid
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7/63. Male breast cancer in Cowden syndrome patients with germline PTEN mutations.

    Cowden syndrome (CS) (OMIM 158350) is a multiple hamartoma syndrome associated with germline mutations in the PTEN tumour suppressor gene. While CS is characterised most commonly by non-cancerous lesions (mucocutaneous trichilemmomas, acral and palmoplantar keratoses, and papillomatous papules), it is also associated with an increased susceptibility to breast cancer (in females) and thyroid cancer, as well as non-cancerous conditions of the breast and thyroid. Here we report two cases of male breast cancer occurring in patients with classical CS phenotypes and germline PTEN mutations. The first subject was diagnosed with CS indicated primarily by mucocutaneous papillomatosis, facial trichilemmomas, and macrocephaly with frontal bossing at the age of 31 years. He developed breast cancer at 41 years and subsequently died of the disease. A PTEN mutation, c.802delG, was identified in this subject, yet none of his family members showed evidence of a CS phenotype, suggesting that this PTEN mutation may be a de novo occurrence. The second subject had a CS phenotype including multiple trichilemmomas and thyroid adenoma, developed male breast cancer at 43 years, and died of the disease at 57 years. He was a carrier of a PTEN mutation c.347-351delACAAT that cosegregated with the CS phenotype in affected family members. These two cases of male breast cancer associated with germline PTEN mutations and the CS phenotype suggest that CS may be associated with an increased risk of early onset male as well as female breast cancer.
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ranking = 3
keywords = thyroid
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8/63. Germline mutation of the PTEN gene in a Japanese patient with Cowden's disease.

    Cowden's disease (CD) is an autosomal dominant disorder which confers a high susceptibility to diverse benign and malignant tumors. The PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted in chromosome ten) gene has been identified as a tumor suppressor gene responsible for cancers of the endometrium, ovary, prostate, and glioblastomas. Recently, germline mutations of this gene were also found in patients with CD, and it is now recognized as a gene responsible for this disease. We identified a germline nonsense mutation at codon 130 in exon 5 of PTEN in a 56-year-old Japanese woman with CD. The patient had adenoid facies and mucocutaneous lesions including multiple facial papules, acral keratoses on neck and shoulders, palmoplantar keratoses, multiple oral papillomas, scrotal tongue, mucosal and cutaneous hemangiomas, and a sclerotic fibroma on the arm. She also had benign and malignant polypoid neoplasms throughout the entire digestive tract, including adenocarcinoma of the colon and submucosal lipomas of the rectum, as well as bilateral breast carcinomas, multinodular goiters, an ovarian cyst with a fibroma-like nodule, hepatic hemangiomas, and abdominal hernia. We searched CD cases with the same genotypic PTEN mutation as the present case and compared their phenotypes. Further studies will disclose a better understanding of the role of mutation in the PTEN gene in the course of tumorigenesis of both benign and malignant tumors developed in patients with CD.
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ranking = 0.011623776672962
keywords = nodule
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9/63. Cowden syndrome-diagnostic skin signs.

    Cowden syndrome is a rare autosomal dominant familial cancer syndrome with a high risk of breast cancer. The most important clinical features include carcinomas of the breast and thyroid, and hamartomatous polyps of the gastrointestinal tract. There are characteristic mucocutaneous features which allow early recognition of the disease and are generally present before internal malignancies develop. We report on a woman in whom the diagnosis of Cowden syndrome was first made after she had been treated for both breast cancer and melanoma.
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ranking = 1
keywords = thyroid
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10/63. Papillary carcinoma occurring within an adenomatous goiter of the thyroid gland in Cowden's disease.

    Cowden's disease is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by multiple benign and malignant neoplastic lesions involving many organs. The presence of characteristic cutaneous lesions is crucial for the diagnosis. Thyroid disease is a major extracutaneous manifestation of this disease; however, the histologic characteristics have not been described in detail. We report a case of thyroid tumor associated with Cowden's disease. Grossly, the tumor showed a multinodular appearance, like an adenomatous goiter. Microscopically, it consisted of follicular adenomas with a trabecular pattern. Some of the nodules had a second component resembling papillary carcinoma. This was thought to be a unique histological feature not described previously, and might be specific to thyroid tumor associated with Cowden's disease.
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ranking = 6.011623776673
keywords = thyroid, nodule
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