Corticotropin-releasing hormone- and adrenocorticotropin-producing pituitary carcinoma with metastases to the liver and lung in a patient with Cushing's disease.
Journal: 1990/October - Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
ISSN: 0021-972X
Abstract:
A 53-yr-old man with Cushing's disease was found to have a pituitary carcinoma with metastases to the liver and lung which produced both CRH and ACTH simultaneously. Despite removal of the pituitary tumor, his Cushing's disease worsened. Endocrinological examination then demonstrated elevated plasma CRH and markedly elevated plasma ACTH, beta-lipotropin, and cortisol concentrations, increased urinary 17-hydroxycorticosteroid and 17-ketosteroid excretion, and no suppression of serum cortisol after low or high dose dexamethasone administration. Urinary 17-hydroxycorticosteroid excretion increased in response to metyrapone, and lysine vasopressin elicited a striking increase in plasma ACTH. A computed tomographic scan of abdomen revealed multiple hypodense areas in the liver and bilateral adrenal hyperplasia. Postmortem histological examination revealed a necrotic hemorrhagic pituitary carcinoma with metastases to the liver, lung, and olfactory bulb. Immunohistochemical staining, gel filtration, and Northern blot analysis of liver and lung metastases revealed evidence of the production of both CRH and ACTH in these metastases. We concluded that the patient's pituitary carcinoma produced both CRH and ACTH.
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