Yona Greenman
Tel Aviv University
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Featured researches published by Yona Greenman.
Clinical Endocrinology | 2003
Yona Greenman; G. Ouaknine; I. Veshchev; I. I. Reider-Groswasser; Y. Segev; Naftali Stern
background Postoperative management of clinically nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas (NFPA) presents difficult challenges. There are no good serum markers for presence or growth of the tumour, medical treatment is not effective and radiotherapy carries the risk of significant side‐effects.
Clinical Endocrinology | 1998
Yona Greenman; Karen Tordjman; Naftali Stern
Hyperprolactinaemia in humans may be associated with a high prevalence of obesity but the nature of this link is poorly defined. The aim of this study was to establish the relationship between hyperprolactinaemia and body weight in patients with prolactin‐secreting pituitary tumours.
European Journal of Endocrinology | 2009
Marianna Yaron; Yona Greenman; Joseph B. Rosenfeld; Elena Izkhakov; Rona Limor; Etty Osher; Galina Shenkerman; Karen Tordjman; Naftali Stern
OBJECTIVE To assess arterial stiffness in a cohort of hypogonadal males and to investigate the effect of testosterone replacement therapy on arterial properties in this specific group. DESIGN Eighteen male patients with untreated acquired hypogonadism due to either adult-onset idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (n=9) or pituitary tumor (n=9) and 12 age-, sex, and weight-matched eugonadal healthy controls were recruited for the study. Arterial properties, plasma glucose, lipid profile, total, and bioavailable testosterone (BT) levels were measured in fasting state. In the hypogonadal subjects, the effect of transdermal testosterone replacement therapy on arterial properties was studied by repeat noninvasive measurements at baseline, as well as 48 h and 90 days following the initiation of treatment. METHODS Arterial stiffness was evaluated using applanation tonometry and pulse wave analysis by three different standard devices that assess various measures of arterial stiffness: pulse wave velocity (PWV), augmentation index (AIx), and large/small artery compliance (C1 and C2). RESULTS Age- and blood pressure-adjusted PWV was significantly higher in hypogonadal men (8.90+/-2.29 vs 6.78+/-1.16 m/s in the control group; P=0.025). Testosterone therapy increased BT level from 2.01+/-1.04 to 4.68+/-2.43 and 7.83+/-6.2 nmol/l after 48 h and 3 months respectively (P=0.001). PWV decreased from 8.9+/-2.29 to 8.24+/-1.39 and 8.25+/-1.82 m/s after 48 h and 3 months of treatment respectively (P=0.03). CONCLUSIONS Male hypogonadism is associated with increased PWV, which is rapidly but incompletely ameliorated by normalization of circulating testosterone levels.
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2013
Sharon Vaisvaser; Tamar Lin; Roee Admon; Ilana Podlipsky; Yona Greenman; Naftali Stern; Eyal Fruchter; Ilan Wald; Daniel S. Pine; Ricardo Tarrasch; Yair Bar-Haim; Talma Hendler
Stressful experiences modulate neuro-circuitry function, and the temporal trajectory of these alterations, elapsing from early disturbances to late recovery, heavily influences resilience and vulnerability to stress. Such effects of stress may depend on processes that are engaged during resting-state, through active recollection of past experiences and anticipation of future events, all known to involve the default mode network (DMN). By inducing social stress and acquiring resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) before stress, immediately following it, and 2 h later, we expanded the time-window for examining the trajectory of the stress response. Throughout the study repeated cortisol samplings and self-reports of stress levels were obtained from 51 healthy young males. Post-stress alterations were investigated by whole brain resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) of two central hubs of the DMN: the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) and hippocampus. Results indicate a ’recovery’ pattern of DMN connectivity, in which all alterations, ascribed to the intervening stress, returned to pre-stress levels. The only exception to this pattern was a stress-induced rise in amygdala-hippocampal connectivity, which was sustained for as long as 2 h following stress induction. Furthermore, this sustained enhancement of limbic connectivity was inversely correlated to individual stress-induced cortisol responsiveness (AUCi) and characterized only the group lacking such increased cortisol (i.e., non-responders). Our observations provide evidence of a prolonged post-stress response profile, characterized by both the comprehensive balance of most DMN functional connections and the distinct time and cortisol dependent ascent of intra-limbic connectivity. These novel insights into neuro-endocrine relations are another milestone in the ongoing search for individual markers in stress-related psychopathologies.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015
Shlomo Melmed; Vera Popovic; Martin Bidlingmaier; Moisés Mercado; Aart Jan van der Lely; Nienke R. Biermasz; Marek Bolanowski; Mihail Coculescu; Jochen Schopohl; Károly Rácz; Benjamin Glaser; Miklós Góth; Yona Greenman; Peter J Trainer; Emese Mezosi; Ilan Shimon; Andrea Giustina; Márta Korbonits; Marcello D. Bronstein; David L. Kleinberg; Sam Teichman; Irit Gliko-Kabir; Roni Mamluk; Asi Haviv; Christian J. Strasburger
BACKGROUND A novel oral octreotide formulation was tested for efficacy and safety in a phase III, multicenter, open-label, dose-titration, baseline-controlled study in patients with acromegaly. METHODS We enrolled 155 complete or partially controlled patients (IGF-1 <1.3 × upper limit of normal [ULN], and 2-h integrated GH <2.5 ng/mL) receiving injectable somatostatin receptor ligand (SRL) for ≥ 3 months. Subjects were switched to 40 mg/d oral octreotide capsules (OOCs), and the dose escalated to 60 and then up to 80 mg/d to control IGF-1. Subsequent fixed doses were maintained for a 7-month core treatment, followed by a voluntary 6-month extension. RESULTS Of 151 evaluable subjects initiating OOCs, 65% maintained response and achieved the primary endpoint of IGF-1 <1.3 × ULN and mean integrated GH <2.5 ng/mL at the end of the core treatment period and 62% at the end of treatment (up to 13 mo). The effect was durable, and 85 % of subjects initially controlled on OOCs maintained this response up to 13 months. When controlled on OOCs, GH levels were reduced compared to baseline, and acromegaly-related symptoms improved. Of 102 subjects completing the core treatment, 86% elected to enroll in the 6-month extension. Twenty-six subjects who were considered treatment failures (IGF-1 ≥ 1.3 × ULN) terminated early, and 23 withdrew for adverse events, consistent with those known for octreotide or disease related. CONCLUSIONS OOC, an oral therapeutic peptide, achieves efficacy in controlling IGF-1 and GH after switching from injectable SRLs for up to 13 months, with a safety profile consistent with approved SRLs. OOC appears to be effective and safe as an acromegaly monotherapy.
Clinical Endocrinology | 2006
Y. Marcus-Perlman; Karen Tordjman; Yona Greenman; Rona Limor; G. Shenkerman; E. Osher; Naftali Stern
Objectives Salivary cortisol is unaffected by cortisol binding globulin (CBG) and hence allows CBG‐related variations in serum total cortisol to be bypassed. We assessed whether or not salivary cortisol can be used for the low‐dose (1 µg) ACTH test in subjects with presumed normal and elevated levels of CBG.
Cancer Research | 2009
Odelia Cooper; Yen Hao Chen; Song Guang Ren; Yona Greenman; Shlomo Melmed
To investigate the role of p185(her2/neu)/ErbB3 signaling in pituitary tumor function, we examined these receptors in human prolactinomas. Immunofluorescent p185(her2/neu) was detected in almost all (seven of eight), and ErbB3 expression in a subset (four of eight) of tumors (seven adenomas and one carcinoma). Quantitative PCR also showed abundant ErbB3 mRNA in tumor specimens derived from a rarely encountered prolactin-cell carcinoma. Activation of p185(c-neu)/ErbB3 signaling with heregulin, the ErbB3 ligand, in rat lacto-somatotroph (GH4C1) tumor cells specifically induced prolactin (PRL) mRNA expression approximately 5-fold and PRL secretion approximately 4-fold, whereas growth hormone expression was unchanged. Heregulin (6 nmol/L) induced tyrosine phosphorylation and ErbB3 and p185(c-neu) heterodimerization, with subsequent activation of intracellular ERK and Akt. The Akt signal was specific to ErbB3 activation by heregulin, and was not observed in response to epidermal growth factor activation of epidermal growth factor receptor. Gefitinib, the tyrosine kinase inhibitor, suppressed heregulin-mediated p185(c-neu)/ErbB3 signaling to PRL. Heregulin induction of PRL was also abrogated by transfecting cells with short interfering RNA directed against ErbB3. Pharmacologic inhibition of heregulin-induced phosphoinositide-3-kinase/Akt (with LY294002) and ERK (with U0126) signaling, as well as short interfering RNA-mediated mitogen-activated protein kinase-1 down-regulation, showed ERK signaling as the primary transducer of heregulin signaling to PRL. These results show ErbB3 expression in human prolactinomas and a novel ErbB3-mediated mechanism for PRL regulation in experimental lactotroph tumors. Targeted inhibition of up-regulated p185(c-neu)/ErbB3 activity could be useful for the treatment of aggressive prolactinomas resistant to conventional therapy.
European Journal of Endocrinology | 2016
Yona Greenman; Odelia Cooper; Iris Yaish; Eyal Robenshtok; Nadav Sagiv; Tali Jonas-Kimchi; Xiaopu Yuan; Arkadiusz Gertych; Ilan Shimon; Zvi Ram; Shlomo Melmed; Naftali Stern
OBJECTIVE Clinically nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma (NFPA) remains the only pituitary tumor subtype for which no effective medical therapy is available or recommended. We evaluated dopamine agonist (DA) therapy for preventing growth of postsurgical pituitary tumor remnants. DESIGN The study design included historical cohort analysis of clinical results at two pituitary referral centers with different standard practices for postoperative NFPA management: DA therapy or conservative follow-up. METHODS Seventy-nine patients followed for 8.8±6.5 years were treated with DA, initiated upon residual tumor detection on postoperative MRI (preventive treatment (PT) group, n=55), or when tumor growth was subsequently detected during follow-up (remedial treatment (RT) group, n=24). The control group (n=60) received no medication. Tumoral dopamine and estrogen receptor expression assessed by quantitative RT-PCR and immunostaining were correlated with response to treatment. RESULTS Tumor mass decreased, remained stable, or enlarged, respectively, in 38, 49, and 13% of patients in the PT group, and in 0, 53, and 47% of control subjects; shrinkage or stabilization was achieved in 58% of enlarging tumors in the RT group, P < 0.0001.Fifteen-year progression-free survival rate was 0.805, 0.24, and 0.04, respectively, for PT, RT, and control groups (P<0.001). About 42% of patients in the control group required additional surgery or radiotherapy, compared with 38 and 13% subjects in the RT and PT groups, respectively (P=0.002). Outcome measures were not related to NFPA D2R abundance. CONCLUSIONS Dopamine agonist therapy in patients with NFPA is associated with decreased prevalence of residual tumor enlargement after transsphenoidal surgical resection.
Clinical Endocrinology | 1998
Yona Greenman; Karen Tordjman; Dalia Somjen; Irith Reider-Groswasser; Fortune Kohen; George Ouaknine; Naftali Stern
Clinically nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas (NFA) are mostly of gonadotroph origin. However, increased levels of circulating hormones or subunits in patients with NFA usually do not cause clinical symptoms, nor are they used as biological tumour markers. In this study we assessed the value of measuring β subunits of gonadotrophin hormones in the post‐operative follow‐up of patients bearing these tumours.
Pituitary | 2009
Andrew A. Kanner; Benjamin W. Corn; Yona Greenman
Transsphenoidal surgery is the treatment of choice for NFPA but is seldom curative. The management of patients in whom residual tumor is detected after surgery is not clear-cut. Radiation therapy is effective in controlling tumor mass in the majority of patients, but is associated with long term complications that call for restriction of its use to patients at high risk for tumor growth. New radiation techniques may prove to be safer while retaining the effectiveness of conventional radiotherapy, however longer follow-up is necessary to confirm this assumption. For now, it appears to be safe to withhold radiation and carefully follow patients with small tumor remnants, whereas large remnants from invasive tumors should be considered for radiotherapy. Nevertheless, there are no prospective controlled studies that support this empirical approach.