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Dive into the research topics where Luciana A. Naves is active.

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Featured researches published by Luciana A. Naves.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Clinical characteristics and therapeutic responses in patients with Germ-line AIP mutations and pituitary adenomas : An international collaborative study

Adrian Daly; Maria A. Tichomirowa; Patrick Petrossians; Elina Heliövaara; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Anne Barlier; Luciana A. Naves; Tapani Ebeling; Auli Karhu; Antti Raappana; Laure Cazabat; Ernesto De Menis; Carmen Fajardo Montañana; Gérald Raverot; Robert J. Weil; Timo Sane; Dominique Maiter; Sebastian Neggers; Maria Yaneva; Antoine Tabarin; Elisa Verrua; Eija Eloranta; Arnaud Murat; Outi Vierimaa; Pasi I. Salmela; Philippe Emy; Rodrigo A. Toledo; María Isabel Sabaté; Chiara Villa; Marc Popelier

CONTEXT AIP mutations (AIPmut) give rise to a pituitary adenoma predisposition that occurs in familial isolated pituitary adenomas and less often in sporadic cases. The clinical and therapeutic features of AIPmut-associated pituitary adenomas have not been studied comprehensively. OBJECTIVE The objective of the study was to assess clinical/therapeutic characteristics of AIPmut pituitary adenomas. DESIGN This study was an international, multicenter, retrospective case collection/database analysis. SETTING The study was conducted at 36 tertiary referral endocrine and clinical genetics departments. PATIENTS Patients included 96 patients with germline AIPmut and pituitary adenomas and 232 matched AIPmut-negative acromegaly controls. RESULTS The AIPmut population was predominantly young and male (63.5%); first symptoms occurred as children/adolescents in 50%. At diagnosis, most tumors were macroadenomas (93.3%); extension and invasion was common. Somatotropinomas comprised 78.1% of the cohort; there were also prolactinomas (n = 13), nonsecreting adenomas (n = 7), and a TSH-secreting adenoma. AIPmut somatotropinomas were larger (P = 0.00026), with higher GH levels (P = 0.00068), more frequent extension (P = 0.018) and prolactin cosecretion (P = 0.00023), and occurred 2 decades before controls (P < 0.000001). Gigantism was more common in the AIPmut group (P < 0.000001). AIPmut somatotropinoma patients underwent more surgical interventions (P = 0.00069) and had lower decreases in GH (P = 0.00037) and IGF-I (P = 0.028) and less tumor shrinkage with somatostatin analogs (P < 0.00001) vs. controls. AIPmut prolactinomas occurred generally in young males and frequently required surgery or radiotherapy. CONCLUSIONS AIPmut pituitary adenomas have clinical features that may negatively impact treatment efficacy. Predisposition for aggressive disease in young patients, often in a familial setting, suggests that earlier diagnosis of AIPmut pituitary adenomas may have clinical utility.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2009

Expression of aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) and AHR-interacting protein in pituitary adenomas: pathological and clinical implications

Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; M. Angelini; Donatella Gargano; Maria A. Tichomirowa; Adrian Daly; Jean François Vanbellinghen; Emanuela D'Innocenzo; Anne Barlier; Felice Giangaspero; Vincenzo Esposito; L. Ventura; Antonietta Arcella; Marily Theodoropoulou; Luciana A. Naves; Carmen Fajardo; Sabina Zacharieva; V. Rohmer; Thierry Brue; Alberto Gulino; Giampaolo Cantore; Edoardo Alesse; Albert Beckers

Germline mutations of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR)-interacting protein (AIP) gene confer a predisposition to pituitary adenomas (PA), usually in the setting of familial isolated PA. To provide further insights into the possible role of AIP in pituitary tumour pathogenesis, the expression of AIP and AHR was determined by real-time RT-PCR and/or immunohistochemistry (IHC) in a large series of PA (n=103), including 17 with AIP mutations (AIP(mut)). Variable levels of AIP and AHR transcripts were detected in all PA, with a low AHR expression (P<0.0001 versus AIP). Cytoplasmic AIP and AHR were detected by IHC in 84.0 and 38.6% of PA respectively, and significantly correlated with each other (P=0.006). Nuclear AHR was detected in a minority of PA (19.7%). The highest AIP expression was observed in somatotrophinomas and non-secreting (NS) PA, and multivariate analysis in somatotrophinomas showed a significantly lower AIP immunostaining in invasive versus non-invasive cases (P=0.019). AIP expression was commonly low in other secreting PA. AIP immunostaining was abolished in a minority of AIP(mut) PA, with a frequent loss of cytoplasmic AHR and no evidence of nuclear AHR. In contrast, AIP overexpression in a subset of NS PA could be accompanied by nuclear AHR immunopositivity. We conclude that down-regulation of AIP and AHR may be involved in the aggressiveness of somatotrophinomas. Overall, IHC is a poorly sensitive tool for the screening of AIP mutations. Data obtained on AHR expression suggest that AHR signalling may be differentially affected according to PA phenotype.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2011

High prevalence of AIP gene mutations following focused screening in young patients with sporadic pituitary macroadenomas

Maria A. Tichomirowa; Anne Barlier; Adrian Daly; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Cristina Ronchi; Maria Yaneva; Jonathan D. Urban; Patrick Petrossians; Atanaska Elenkova; Antoine Tabarin; R. Desailloud; Dominique Maiter; T. H. Schurmeyer; Renato Cozzi; Marily Theodoropoulou; Caroline Sievers; Ignacio Bernabeu; Luciana A. Naves; Olivier Chabre; Carmen Fajardo Montañana; Vaclav Hana; Georges Halaby; B. Delemer; José Ignacio Labarta Aizpún; E. Sonnet; Ángel Ferrández Longás; Marie Thérèse Hagelstein; Philippe Caron; Günter K. Stalla; Vincent Bours

BACKGROUND Aryl hydrocarbon receptor interacting protein (AIP) mutations (AIPmut) cause aggressive pituitary adenomas in young patients, usually in the setting of familial isolated pituitary adenomas. The prevalence of AIPmut among sporadic pituitary adenoma patients appears to be low; studies have not addressed prevalence in the most clinically relevant population. Hence, we undertook an international, multicenter, prospective genetic, and clinical analysis at 21 tertiary referral endocrine departments. METHODS We included 163 sporadic pituitary macroadenoma patients irrespective of clinical phenotype diagnosed at <30 years of age. RESULTS Overall, 19/163 (11.7%) patients had germline AIPmut; a further nine patients had sequence changes of uncertain significance or polymorphisms. AIPmut were identified in 8/39 (20.5%) pediatric patients. Ten AIPmut were identified in 11/83 (13.3%) sporadic somatotropinoma patients, in 7/61 (11.5%) prolactinoma patients, and in 1/16 non-functioning pituitary adenoma patients. Large genetic deletions were not seen using multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. Familial screening was possible in the relatives of seven patients with AIPmut and carriers were found in six of the seven families. In total, pituitary adenomas were diagnosed in 2/21 AIPmut-screened carriers; both had asymptomatic microadenomas. CONCLUSION Germline AIPmut occur in 11.7% of patients <30 years with sporadic pituitary macroadenomas and in 20.5% of pediatric patients. AIPmut mutation testing in this population should be considered in order to optimize clinical genetic investigation and management.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2007

Variable pathological and clinical features of a large Brazilian family harboring a mutation in the aryl hydrocarbon receptor-interacting protein gene.

Luciana A. Naves; Adrian Daly; Jean François Vanbellinghen; Luiz Augusto Casulari; Cristina Spilioti; Albino Verçosa de Magalhães; Monalisa Ferreira Azevedo; Leonardo Giacomini; Paula P. Nascimento; Rousielysson O. Nunes; João Willy Corrêa Rosa; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Vincent Bours; Albert Beckers

BACKGROUND Germline aryl hydrocarbon receptor-interacting protein (AIP) mutations occur in 15% of familial isolated pituitary adenoma (FIPA) cases. To date, studies have focused on the identification of such mutations in large international cohorts. Detailed genetic and clinical studies within AIP mutation-positive families have been limited. AIM To undertake a comprehensive study of a large Brazilian FIPA kindred with an E174 frameshift (E174fs) AIP mutation to assess clinical, hormonal, and radiological features in mutation carriers. METHODS The kindred included 122 subjects across six generations; all underwent clinical examination. Genetic studies were performed to identify E174fs mutation carriers. E174fs-positive subjects underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and hormonal assessments. RESULTS Of the ten germline AIP mutation carriers, three had pituitary tumors, while seven were asymptomatic carriers. Three patients with pituitary tumors showed variability in terms of tumor phenotype (two with acromegaly, one with prolactinoma, or mixed prolactin/GH-secreting tumor) and age at diagnosis; both patients with acromegaly had poor responses to octreotide. Tumor AIP immunohistochemistry from the operated patient showed decreased expression when compared with normal tissue. Two adult subjects with normal MRI had elevated IGF-I in the absence of other causes. A 2-year-old child with the E174fs mutation and a normal MRI had premature thelarche, ovarian development, and advanced bone age in the absence of other underlying causes. CONCLUSIONS The penetrance of pituitary tumors in AIP mutation-positive adult subjects was 33.3%, while clinical/hormonal features were variable. The features noted in AIP-mutation carriers in this kindred suggest that clinical characteristics of such carriers may extend beyond pituitary tumors.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Selenoprotein-Related Disease in a Young Girl Caused by Nonsense Mutations in the SBP2 Gene

Monalisa Ferreira Azevedo; Gustavo Barcelos Barra; Luciana A. Naves; Lara Franciele Ribeiro Velasco; Patrícia Castro; Luiz Claudio Castro; Angélica Amorim Amato; Angela Miniard; Donna M. Driscoll; Lutz Schomburg; Francisco de Assis Rocha Neves

CONTEXT Selenoproteins are essential for life, and their biosynthesis requires the incorporation of the rare amino acid selenocysteine (Sec) in a process mediated by the Sec insertion sequence-binding protein 2 (SBP2). Although SBP2 is considered a rate-limiting factor mediating Sec incorporation, there has been little evidence so far linking SBP2 dysfunction to widespread selenoprotein-related disease. OBJECTIVE The objective of the study was to report the discovery of novel truncation mutations in the SBP2 gene (R120X/R770X) in a female adolescent and the clinical consequences of the combined deficiency of selenoproteins. SUBJECTS AND METHODS A 12-yr-old girl who presented with a syndrome of abnormal thyroid hormone metabolism, delayed bone maturation, congenital myopathy, and impaired mental and motor coordination development and her family were studied. The coding region of the SBP2 gene was analyzed by sequencing, and gel shift assays were performed to address the in vitro binding properties of the mutant SBP2 protein. RESULTS Serum levels of selenium and glutathione peroxidase in the proband were reduced, and selenoprotein P levels were undetectable. DNA sequencing of the SBP2 gene revealed a compound heterozygous mutation (R120X/R770X). The R120X mutation disrupted all functional motifs and the R770X inhibited the binding of SBP2 to Sec insertion sequence elements. Interestingly, selenium supplementation normalized serum selenium and glutathione peroxidase but not selenoprotein P levels and did not restore thyroid hormone metabolism dysfunction. CONCLUSIONS This distinctive phenotype can only be explained by the combined deficiency of functionally important selenoproteins and pinpoints the clinical relevance of selenoproteins and selenium economy in human development.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2015

X-linked acrogigantism syndrome: clinical profile and therapeutic responses.

Albert Beckers; Maya Lodish; Giampaolo Trivellin; Liliya Rostomyan; Misu Lee; Fabio R. Faucz; Bo Yuan; Catherine S. Choong; Jean-Hubert Caberg; Elisa Verrua; Luciana A. Naves; Tim Cheetham; Jacques Young; Philippe A. Lysy; Patrick Petrossians; Andrew Cotterill; Nalini S. Shah; Daniel Metzger; Emilie Castermans; Maria Rosaria Ambrosio; Chiara Villa; Natalia Strebkova; Nadia Mazerkina; Stephan Gaillard; Gustavo Barcelos Barra; Luis Augusto Casulari; Sebastian Neggers; Roberto Salvatori; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Margaret Zacharin

X-linked acrogigantism (X-LAG) is a new syndrome of pituitary gigantism, caused by microduplications on chromosome Xq26.3, encompassing the gene GPR101, 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.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2012

Prolactinomas resistant to standard doses of cabergoline: a multicenter study of 92 patients

Laurent Vroonen; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Patrick Petrossians; G. Tamagno; Philippe Chanson; Lucio Vilar; Françoise Borson-Chazot; Luciana A. Naves; Thierry Brue; Blandine Gatta; B. Delemer; Enrica Ciccarelli; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Philippe Caron; Adrian Daly; Albert Beckers

BACKGROUND Dopamine agonist resistance in prolactinoma is an infrequent phenomenon. Doses of cabergoline (CAB) of up to 2.0 mg/week are usually effective in controlling prolactin (PRL) secretion and reducing tumor size in prolactinomas. The clinical presentation, management, and outcome of patients that are not well controlled by such commonly used doses of CAB-resistant patients are poorly understood. DESIGN AND METHODS A multicenter retrospective study was designed to collect a large series of resistant prolactinoma patients, defined by uncontrolled hyperprolactinemia on CAB ≥2.0 mg weekly. RESULTS Ninety-two patients (50 F, 42 M) were analyzed. At diagnosis, most had macroprolactinomas (82.6%); males were significantly older than females (P=0.0003) and presented with a more aggressive disease. A genetic basis was identified in 12 patients. Thirty-six patients (39.1%) received only medical therapy, most underwent surgery (60.9%, including multiple interventions in 10.9%), and 14.1% received postoperative radiotherapy. Eight patients developed late CAB resistance (8.7%). The median maximal weekly dose of CAB (CAB(max/w)) was 3.5 mg (2.0-10.5). Despite a higher CAB(max/w) in patients treated with multimodal therapy (P=0.003 vs exclusive pharmacological treatment), a debulking effect of surgery was shown in 14 patients, with a higher rate of PRL control (P=0.006) and a significant reduction in CAB(max/w) (P=0.001) postoperatively. At last follow-up (median 88 months), PRL normalization and tumor disappearance were achieved in 28 and 19.9% of the patients respectively, with no significant sex-related difference observed in CAB(max/w) or disease control. Mortality was 4.8%, with four patients developing aggressive tumors (4.3%) and three a pituitary carcinoma (3.3%). CONCLUSION CAB-resistant prolactinomas remain a serious concern. Surgical debulking, newer therapeutic strategies, and early diagnosis of genetic forms could help to improve their outcome.


Hormone Research in Paediatrics | 2004

Nelson’s Syndrome: Complete Remission with Cabergoline but Not with Bromocriptine or Cyproheptadine Treatment

Luiz Augusto Casulari; Luciana A. Naves; Paulo Andrade de Mello; Aldo Pereira Neto; Carla Papadia

A woman affected by Cushing’s disease underwent bilateral adrenalectomy followed by radiotherapy of the hypothalamic-pituitary area when she was 18 years old. Thereafter, she used hydrocortisone acetate replacement therapy (35.5 mg divided into two daily doses). At the age of 26 years, the patient exhibited the clinical signs of the Nelson’s syndrome, i.e. skin and gingival hyperpigmentation accompanied by amenorrhea, and elevated ACTH plasma levels (2,850 pg/ml, normal range 15–80 pg/ml). The magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) analysis of the sellar region evidenced a pituitary macroadenoma, measuring 14 × 13 mm. The patient was initially treated with cyproheptadine hydrochloride (12 mg/day) for 18 months. There was a partial improvement of the symptoms, with a reduction of the ACTH plasma levels to 112 pg/ml, but without any modification of the tumor mass. Due to sleepiness and weight gain, the cyproheptadine treatment was interrupted and substituted by a cabergoline (0.5 mg twice a week) therapy. Soon after cabergoline was applied an improvement of the clinical symptoms and signs was observed such as a regression of the tumor mass and the normalization of the ACTH plasma titers (38 pg/ml). Later, cabergoline was substituted by bromocriptine (7.5 mg/day) and the plasma levels of ACTH increased again (247 pg/ml), and headache and cutaneous hyperpigmentation were recorded. When cabergoline was reintroduced there was a clinical improvement and normalization of ACTH plasma levels (64 pg/ml). The MRI analysis of the sella region demonstrated a complete remission of the pituitary adenoma. The results obtained show for the first time that a long-term treatment with cabergoline also brings about a complete remission of Nelson’s syndrome in the presence of a pituitary macroadenoma.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2015

Clinical and genetic characterization of pituitary gigantism: an international collaborative study in 208 patients

Liliya Rostomyan; Adrian Daly; Patrick Petrossians; Emil Nachev; Anurag Lila; Anne Lise Lecoq; Beatriz Lecumberri; Giampaolo Trivellin; Roberto Salvatori; Andreas G. Moraitis; Ian Holdaway; Dianne J. Kranenburg-Van Klaveren; Maria Chiara Zatelli; Nuria Palacios; Cécile Nozières; Margaret Zacharin; Tapani Ebeling; Marja Ojaniemi; Liudmila Rozhinskaya; Elisa Verrua; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Silvia Filipponi; Daria Gusakova; Vyacheslav Pronin; Jérôme Bertherat; Zhanna Belaya; Irena Ilovayskaya; Mona Sahnoun-Fathallah; Caroline Sievers; Günter K. Stalla

Despite being a classical growth disorder, pituitary gigantism has not been studied previously in a standardized way. We performed a retrospective, multicenter, international study to characterize a large series of pituitary gigantism patients. We included 208 patients (163 males; 78.4%) with growth hormone excess and a current/previous abnormal growth velocity for age or final height >2 s.d. above country normal means. The median onset of rapid growth was 13 years and occurred significantly earlier in females than in males; pituitary adenomas were diagnosed earlier in females than males (15.8 vs 21.5 years respectively). Adenomas were ≥10 mm (i.e., macroadenomas) in 84%, of which extrasellar extension occurred in 77% and invasion in 54%. GH/IGF1 control was achieved in 39% during long-term follow-up. Final height was greater in younger onset patients, with larger tumors and higher GH levels. Later disease control was associated with a greater difference from mid-parental height (r=0.23, P=0.02). AIP mutations occurred in 29%; microduplication at Xq26.3 - X-linked acrogigantism (X-LAG) - occurred in two familial isolated pituitary adenoma kindreds and in ten sporadic patients. Tumor size was not different in X-LAG, AIP mutated and genetically negative patient groups. AIP-mutated and X-LAG patients were significantly younger at onset and diagnosis, but disease control was worse in genetically negative cases. Pituitary gigantism patients are characterized by male predominance and large tumors that are difficult to control. Treatment delay increases final height and symptom burden. AIP mutations and X-LAG explain many cases, but no genetic etiology is seen in >50% of cases.


Arquivos Brasileiros De Endocrinologia E Metabologia | 2007

Pitfalls in the diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome

Lucio Vilar; Maria da Conceição Freitas; Manuel dos Santos Faria; Renan Magalhães Montenegro; Luiz Augusto Casulari; Luciana A. Naves; Oscar D. Bruno

Among endocrine disorders, Cushings syndrome (CS) is certainly one of the most challenging to endocrinologists due to the difficulties that often appear during investigation. The diagnosis of CS involves two steps: confirmation of hypercortisolism and determination of its etiology. Biochemical confirmation of the hypercortisolaemic state must be established before any attempt at differential diagnosis. Failure to do so will result in misdiagnosis, inappropriate treatment, and poor management. It should also be kept in mind that hypercortisolism may occur in some patients with depression, alcoholism, anorexia nervosa, generalized resistance to glucocorticoids, and in late pregnancy. Moreover, exogenous or iatrogenic hypercortisolism should always be excluded. The three most useful tests to confirm hypercortisolism are the measurement of 24-h urinary free cortisol levels, low-dose dexamethasone-suppression tests, and determination of midnight serum cortisol or late-night salivary cortisol. However, none of these tests is perfect, each one has different sensitivities and specificities, and several are usually needed to provide a better diagnostic accuracy. The greatest challenge in the investigation of CS involves the differentiation between Cushings disease and ectopic ACTH syndrome. This task requires the measurement of plasma ACTH levels, non-invasive dynamic tests (high-dose dexamethasone suppression test and stimulation tests with CRH or desmopressin), and imaging studies. None of these tests had 100% specificity and their use in combination is usually necessary. Bilateral inferior petrosal sinus sampling is mainly indicated when non-invasive tests do not allow a diagnostic definition. In the present paper, the most important pitfalls in the investigation of CS are reviewed.

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Lucio Vilar

Federal University of Pernambuco

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Anne Barlier

Aix-Marseille University

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