A frameshift mutation with the STOP codon of the MEN1 gene significantly increases the risk of PA. Further studies with a larger cohort of patients are needed to fully describe the Polish population and improve diagnosis and management of the syndrome.
Intriguingly, those neuroendocrine tissues affected in Cdk4(-/-) mice are the primary targets of tumorigenesis in the syndrome of multiple endocrine neoplasia type-1 (MEN1).
We reviewed recorded medical data from 1975 to 2001 on patients with MEN 1 and compared specific types and locations of MEN1 gene mutations with manifestations of the syndrome.
In this family the syndrome is related to a novel MEN 1 gene mutation (deletion of A) at nucleotide 1021 of codon 304 resulting in frame shift and downstream protein truncation at codon 320.
Analysis of the MEN1 gene decreases the total number of subjects who need to undergo repeated clinical and biochemical studies, but genetic mutations are not detected in all families with MEN I. Hyperparathyroidism is the most common manifestation of the syndrome, but the presence of adrenal adenomas has probably been underestimated.