Variations of a gene is associated with tumor of the adrenal gland, according to a recent study.

Li Yao, Ph.D., of the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, and colleagues conducted a study to determine the prevalence in pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas of mutations in the gene FP/TMEM127, a recently identified pheochromocytoma susceptibility gene. The researchers sequenced the FP/TMEM127 gene in 990 individuals with pheochromocytomas and/or paragangliomas, including 898 previously unreported cases without mutations in other susceptibility genes from 8 independent worldwide referral centers between January 2009 and June 2010.
The researchers detected a total of 44 distinct FP/TMEM127 variants in 990 samples from pheochromocytoma or paraganglioma patients. "Of these, 19 mutations found in 20 patients were considered of potential pathogenic significance. Thirteen of these variants were novel changes, while the remainder had been previously reported," the authors write. Mutations were detected only in patients with tumors of adrenal localization (pheochromocytomas) but not with paragangliomas.
The average age at development of FP/TMEM127-mutated tumors was 42.8 years and the median (midpoint) age was 41.5 years, with this age at onset similar to the average age of non-mutated cases in this series, 43.2 years (median, 45 years) and to the reported average diagnostic age for sporadic pheochromocytomas (47 years). The most common presentation was that of a single benign adrenal tumor in patients older than 40 years. Malignancy was seen in 1 mutation carrier (5 percent).
"Germline mutations of FP/TMEM127 were associated with pheochromocytoma but not paraganglioma and occurred in an age group frequently excluded from genetic screening algorithms," the authors write. "Future studies should determine quantitative intracellular effects of individual variants."
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