I just realized 2 days ago that my email software had placed all the alert messages from the Dr. Pheo blog in a strange new folder. You can see that obviously I am not very savvy on software stuff. I have been wondering lately why readers do not ask questions any more. At one time, I entertained thoughts that perhaps I had answered most questions so that readers wouldn't ask any more. Then 2 days ago, I tried to see the content of a strange folder in my email software and saw 30 questions from this blog.
I have since dutifully answered all of them but the answers are quite untimely. I apologize. The lesson learned is that if I do not see questions from this blog, I should check all the email folders.
Dr. pheo
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Another "dopamine-producing" pheo
Some days ago, I got a
call from a physician asking me for suggestions on how to proceed with a “dopamine-producing”
pheo. The patient was an elderly man with labile blood pressure and varying
heart rate. Pheo was suspected. Urine dopamine levels were >5000 mcg/24
hours (normal reference range: 60-450). But was it a pheo?
I usually get 1 or 2
calls on potential "dopamine-producing" pheo every year. True
dopamine-producing pheos are extremely rare and do not cause clear symptoms. These
tumors are usually localized outside the adrenal glands and may present as
metastatic tumors. They are usually clinically silent until they grow very big
and causing abdominal discomfort. Specifically they do not cause hypertension
per se. Only about half of the patients have high dopamine only and the other
half have high dopamine and high epinephrine or norepinephrine as well.
In any given situation,
the most common cause of very high urine or plasma dopamine is the medication
Carbidopa-Levodopa (Sinemet) for Parkinson disease. These patients usually have
every high dopamine but normal or slightly elevated epinephrine or
norepinephrine. Levodopa is presumably converted into dopamine which is then
detected by the catecholamine measurement. Parkinson disease and related conditions
such as multiple system atrophy often cause sympathetic instability in the forms
of fluctuating blood pressure and heart rate, orthostatic hypotension, and
syncope, all of which resemble pheo symptoms.
I therefore asked the
physician if the patient had Parkinson disease. He was reasonably surprised and
told me the patient did have Parkinson. I then asked if the patient took
Sinemet. He checked the medication list but Sinemet was not on the list. I was
not swayed. Many patients think Parkinson is a disease of old age and Sinemet
some kind of food supplement so they do not tell their doctor they are taking
it. Luckily the patient was still in the clinic. The physician told me he would
ask the patient about Sinemet and call me back. He didn't call me back. I
assumed the patient was taking Sinemet, as all of the patients I had been asked
about are.
Dr. Pheo
P.S. I have not written
about pheo for 7 months for various reasons. My job is more demanding, to be
sure. Also, there has not been a major advancement in the pheo field in the
last 7 months, in my opinion.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Pheo and heart II
I first wrote
about pheo and heart 4 years ago (April 2009). At that time, my instinct was
that heart damage is a key issue for pheo. Over the years, after seeing more
patients with heart complications caused by pheo and discussing with colleagues
about the issue, I increasingly appreciate the intricacies of pheo-induced
cardiomyopathy.
Pheo-induced
cardiomyopathy is not a new finding. The first two cases of pheo known to medicine
were both about pheo-induced cardiovascular collapse in modern terms. The
correlation of pheo and cardiomyopathy was clearly and convincingly reported in
the 1960s. Hundreds of case reports of pheo-induced cardiomyopathy have been
published in the last 50 years. The problem is that pheo is very rare and
pheo-induced cardiomyopathy is even rarer. Many cardiologists and
endocrinologists simply are not aware of the concept of pheo-induced
cardiomyopathy. Part of the reason why pheo-induced cardiomyopathy is not well
known is that there are few, if any, systemic studies on pheo-induced
cardiomyopathy.
In the last year,
two very similar systemic studies were published on pheo-induced
cardiomyopathy. Both studies were retrospective review of experience of a large
single medical center (in Prague and Los Angeles, respectively). In both
studies, the authors focused on patients without known history of
pheochromocytoma but presenting with cardiovascular complications such as
arrhythmia, heart attack, heart failure, or stroke. Their results were
strikingly similar as well. The Prague study included 145 patients, 28 of them
(19%) presented with cardiovascular complications. The Los Angeles study was
about half the size with 76 patients, but still 9 of them (12%) presented with
heart complications. Because both medical centers are large tertiary referral
centers and tend to see sicker patients, the incidence of cardiovascular
complications may be overestimated but the 12-19% incidence is at least true in
large hospitals. Both studies showed that there are no good predictors on which
patients will get cardiovascular complications. Specifically, most patients
with cardiovascular complications do not have hypertension. There may be a
higher risk for cardiovascular complications if the pheo is biochemically very active
and large. I have mentioned in a previous post that pheos smaller than 3 cm do
not cause cardiovascular complications. Both studies showed that once correctly
diagnosed and managed, the pheo-induced cardiomyopathy is reversible. The moral
of the studies is that if a patient presents with cardiovascular complications,
pheo is a possibility, even if the patient has no history of hypertension. It
is also reassuring that the cardiomyopathy is reversible after pheo removal.
Dr. Pheo
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Alternative medicine and pheo
Happy holidays!
This is a long
overdue topic suggested by a reader. I’ve been thinking about it for months.
The reason for the long thinking process is mostly because I want to give alternative
medicine in pheo management a fair and clear evaluation. Here are my opinions
on alternative medicine.
Luckily, most
patients with pheo do not need alternative medicine. For the majority of
patients, preoperative preparation and surgical removal are sufficient and
definitive management of pheo. We don’t have to invoke alternative medicine for
them.
Patients may be
interested in ways to prevent pheo recurrence if they have had pheo, or ways to
prevent pheo emergence if they are carriers of mutations or have family members
with pheo. As the exact molecular pathogenesis of pheo has not been worked out
yet, there is no reliable knowledge on specific ways to prevent pheo recurrence
or emergence. Patients and their family members should follow a healthy life
style and appropriate surveillance.
Patients with
metastatic pheo may have hard-to-control symptoms, develop adverse effects from
treatment, or be resistant to therapies. For those patients, alternative
medicine may have a role but the patients and their mainstream physicians need
to be very cautious and act on good common sense. Alternative medicine won’t
shrink the tumors or magically make the tumors disappear but it may make the
patients feel somewhat better. The patients should let their mainstream doctors
know that they are seeking alternative medicine or under alternative medicine
treatment. The exact alternative medicine treatment should be known to the
mainstream doctors and should not be outrageous or dangerous. The alternative
medicine practitioner should not make grandiose claims about the regimen,
should have a good reputation, and should know when to stop the regimen. I
frankly don’t recommend alternative medicine to my patients in most situations.
Dr. Pheo
Friday, September 7, 2012
The story of Para and Poly: Are they related?
Polycythemia
(Poly), a pathological increase of red blood cell count, is a well-recognized
paraneoplastic syndrome. Many types of tumors are associated with polycythemia.
The mechanism for the connection is generally thought to be tumor-elaborated
erythropoietin (EPO), which stimulates red blood cell generation. Pheo and paraganglioma
(Para) are both known to be associated with polycythemia. The polycythemia
usually resolves after pheo or para resection. In some cases, the polycythemia
can persist even after tumor resection, and in some others, polycythemia occurs
long before pheo/para is diagnosed, suggesting that the polycythemia may not be
necessarily caused by the pheo or para but they may have a common cause. Indeed,
it was reported in 2009 that an inherited mutation in the gene PHD2 is associated with paraganglioma
and polycythemia.
In this week’s
New England Journal of Medicine, researchers at the National Institute of
Health (NIH) reported two patients with paraganglioma and polycythemia who do
not have PHD2 mutations. Both patients are female, 30- and 18-year-old
respectively. The older patient also has somatostatinomas (duodenal or
pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors secreting somatostatin). Through biochemical
analysis, the NIH researchers found that the two patients have enhanced signaling
of HIF2A (hypoxia-induced factor 2alpha, regulated by PHD2) in their
paragangliomas. The researchers sequenced the tumor HIF2A gene and found 2 heterozygous
mutations in it. Interestingly the two mutations are very closely spaced on the
gene. Both mutations are activating; that is, the normal HIF2A function is
heightened by the mutations. The patients’ parents do not have the mutations so
the mutations are “somatic” (which occur by chance after the patients were
conceived).
So now a novel
cause of the syndrome of pheo/para and polycythemia has been discovered. And
yes, Para and Poly are related. It is somewhat intriguing that inherited HIF2A
mutations have not been found in patients with pheos in the past. It is also
not clear how frequent the HIF2A somatic mutations are in the pheo/para tumors
of all comers. From a practical point of view, we should screen for PHD2 and
HIF2A mutations in patients with both pheo/para and polycythemia, especially if
the polycythemia does not resolve after pheo/para resection, or is diagnosed
long before the pheo/para is found. Novel treatment of these two disorders may
now be possible. Keep tuned.
Dr. Pheo
P.S. Both Para and Poly are girl names. Para means "supreme". I don't know the origin of Poly. If you know girls named Poly, please ask them what it means. Thanks.
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Small and very small pheos
As the readers
may have guessed, I have been extremely busy (due to increased workload) in the
last few months. That’s why I haven’t written anything in the last 4 months. I found
some time at the Memorial Day weekend to write this post.
An interesting
study was published in May about small pheos. Small pheos are more commonly
seen in these days. In the last year alone, at least 5 physician colleagues discussed
with me about small pheos. There is no official definition of a “small” pheo
but the authors call anything less than 3 cm in diameter as small. I actually
agree with the authors in the 3 cm cutoff. In the past, I reviewed the
literature on pheo-induced cardiomyopathy and noted all the tumors that cause
cardiomyopathy are equal or larger than 3 cm. An inquisitive reader may wonder
why doctors only use one dimension in describing tumor size. On one hand,
doctors are lazy and one dimension is easier to remember; on the other hand,
most pheos are nice and round. I have yet to see an odd-shaped pheo, say one
resembling the shape of a cucumber. Of course you never know.
There are 3 main
findings in the paper. First, about 1/3 of all pheos in the last 15 years are “small”
(<3 cm). Second, small pheos do not usually cause hypertension or other
classical pheo symptoms but some small pheos ironically cause hypertensive
crisis during an unrelated surgical procedure. So if one has a small pheo and
hypertension, the hypertension unlikely gets better after pheo removal. I
recently had a patient with small pheo whose blood pressure actually got worse
after pheo removal. Third, small pheos have typical appearance on CT/MRI but
the biochemical test results can be borderline or in the cases of very small
pheos (i.e. <1 cm), even normal. In my earlier posts, I emphasized that most
borderline test results are false positive. That statement is still correct but
I need to add some qualifications now. If an adrenal tumor is small but has typical
pheo appearance on CT/MRI, and the test results are borderline, it has a good
chance to be a real (small) pheo!
Pheo is a humbling tumor. The more I know about it, the more careful I become when I
make a diagnosis. I begin to question myself whether I was absolutely right
when I told my patients with normal biochemical test results “You don’t have
pheo.” They might still have a very small pheo. Now I use a buzz phrase “clinically
significant pheo.” I tell my patients if they likely or unlikely have a “clinically
significant pheo” rather than if they have pheo or not. Nobody can say for sure
whether a patient has a very small pheo. The good news is that very small pheos
are clinically insignificant.
Dr. Pheo
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
A presidential tumor
I hope everyone has had a great holiday season. As the presidential campaign is gaining more steam, it is interesting to point out that pheo is a very presidential tumor.
President Dwight Eisenhower had severe, labile hypertension and multiple heart attacks and strokes. He died of congestive heart failure in 1969. Autopsy unexpectedly identified a 1.5-cm left adrenal pheo. Some notable physicians believe that the president’s pheo might have even contributed to his heart attack in 1955. The president had one of the best cardiologists (Dr. Paul Dudley White) as his personal physician and pheo was already well known as a cause of hypertension in the 1950’s. One may wonder why pheo was not thought of by the president’s medical team. Having seen quite a few patients with small pheos, I actually do not think the president’s pheo was clinically significant. Had the pheo been found and resected before his death, the president’s clinical course would not have been much different.
Steven Kubby sought to become the Libertarian Party’s nominee for president in 2008. Mr. Kubby is well known for his support of medical marijuana use. He has malignant pheo. He also had one of the best cardiologists (Dr. Vincent DeQuattro) as his doctor. Mr. Kubby received conventional treatment for malignant pheo, then he found marijuana. He claimed that marijuana solely controls his pheo symptoms and tumor growth. There is no medical literature on marijuana and pheo. Although marijuana can be used to increase quality of life in patients with severe malignant pheo, I am not aware of any mainstream doctors who prescribe it as the only treatment of malignant pheo.
All the information about the above two patients with pheo was gathered from public sources available to all.
Happy New Year!
Dr. Pheo
President Dwight Eisenhower had severe, labile hypertension and multiple heart attacks and strokes. He died of congestive heart failure in 1969. Autopsy unexpectedly identified a 1.5-cm left adrenal pheo. Some notable physicians believe that the president’s pheo might have even contributed to his heart attack in 1955. The president had one of the best cardiologists (Dr. Paul Dudley White) as his personal physician and pheo was already well known as a cause of hypertension in the 1950’s. One may wonder why pheo was not thought of by the president’s medical team. Having seen quite a few patients with small pheos, I actually do not think the president’s pheo was clinically significant. Had the pheo been found and resected before his death, the president’s clinical course would not have been much different.
Steven Kubby sought to become the Libertarian Party’s nominee for president in 2008. Mr. Kubby is well known for his support of medical marijuana use. He has malignant pheo. He also had one of the best cardiologists (Dr. Vincent DeQuattro) as his doctor. Mr. Kubby received conventional treatment for malignant pheo, then he found marijuana. He claimed that marijuana solely controls his pheo symptoms and tumor growth. There is no medical literature on marijuana and pheo. Although marijuana can be used to increase quality of life in patients with severe malignant pheo, I am not aware of any mainstream doctors who prescribe it as the only treatment of malignant pheo.
All the information about the above two patients with pheo was gathered from public sources available to all.
Happy New Year!
Dr. Pheo
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)