13 research outputs found

    Diagnosis and management of pituitary tumours in the elderly: a review based on personal experience and evidence of literature

    No full text
    Abstract An increasing proportion of pituitary adenomas are recognized in the elderly, raising the question of their optimal diagnosis and management. Age-related endocrine changes and associated diseases may significantly modify the clinical presentation and hormonal evaluation of these patients. About 80% of pituitary adenomas in this age group are non-secreting, requiring careful differential diagnosis with non-adenomatous sellar lesions. In this group, visual deterioration and hypopituitarism remain the leading symptoms. Recognized secreting tumours are mainly GH-secreting, most of them intrasellar, followed by prolactinomas, which present as clinically non-secreting and are usually invasive. Cushing's disease appears as a very rare eventuality in the elderly. Optimal therapeutic management should aim to control the disease while preserving or improving patient's quality of life. Transsphenoidal surgery has proved to be an efficient and well-tolerated option for non-secreting adenomas with visual defects and intrasellar GH-secreting adenomas, being able to improve metabolic and cardiovascular complications of acromegaly even in this age group. In contrast, dopamine-agonist drugs can be proposed as a primary therapy for prolactinomas even in the presence of severe neurological complications. Because the use of radiotherapy is hampered by its delay of action and potential neurological side effects, its indications should be better defined in this age group. The clinical importance of hypopituitarism should not be underestimated, and thyroid- and adrenal-replacement therapy are mandatory in the presence of documented hormone deficiency, carefully avoiding overtreatment in order to limit possible side effects on the cardiovascular system and bone mineralization. Indications for GH- and sex steroid-replacement therapy still await age-specific guidelines

    Surgical treatment and clinical outcome of GH-secreting adenomas in elderly patients

    No full text
    Patients older than 65 years represent 3-5% of all acromegalic patients. The old age of the patients and the higher incidence of cardiovascular and metabolic complications related to acromegaly could increase the intra- and peri-operative risk, so that medical treatment is usually recommended as a therapy of choice. The aim of this retrospective study was to investigate the impact of transsphenoidal surgery in a series of 22 elderly patients with active acromegaly,with special regard to anaesthesiological risk, peri-operative complications, and clinical outcome. Despite an increased anesthesiological risk being present in 16/22 patients, no complication occurred during surgery. Similarly, no post-operative mortality or major complications were observed. Biochemical cure, defined at 6 months by glucose-suppressed plasma GH levels below 1 ng/ml and normal age-corrected IGF-I value levels, was achieved in 68% of patients and no recurrence of disease was observed in the subsequent follow-up (mean 5.2 +/- 2.1 years). A significant cardiovascular improvement was observed in cured patients, with a decrease of left ventricular mass index (91.3 +/- 20.1 vs 115.9 +/- 15.0 g/m(2); P < 0.005), as measured by echocardiography, as well as a slight but significant decrease of systolic and diastolic blood pressure values (130.0 +/- 12.1 mmHg vs 137.6 +/- 13.5 mmHg P < 0.05; and 84.2 +/- 6.4 mmHg vs 88.8 +/- 7.5 mmHg P < 0.05, respectively). A significant post-operative improvement of glucose tolerance was also observed in this group. We conclude that transsphenoidal surgery, if well planned and carefully performed, is safe and able to induce a significant cardiovascular and metabolic improvement even in elderly acromegalic patients

    Comparison of six months therapy with octreotide versus lanreotide in acromegalic patients: a retrospective study

    No full text
    OBJECTIVE: We analysed the effects of 6-months' treatment with octreotide s.c. and lanreotide-SR on circulating GH and IGF-I levels in acromegaly. DESIGN: Open retrospective study. PATIENTS: Thirty-eight patients with active acromegaly (plasma IGF-I levels greater than 2 standard deviations for age-matched controls and increased serum GH levels not suppressible by oral glucose load) were studied. All patients received s.c. octreotide at a dose of 150-600 microg/day for six months as first therapy and subsequently, lanreotide i.m., 30-60 mg either at 14 or 10 day intervals, for 6 months. A 3 months' washout was applied before starting lanreotide treatment. MEASUREMENTS: Mean serum GH levels (from three samples), IGF-I, and clinical examination were performed before and 30, 60, 90 and 180 days after octreotide and lanreotide treatments. Safety tests, HbA1c and, thyroid function were evaluated every three months. RESULTS: Circulating GH and IGF-I levels were significantly reduced (P < 0.001) after one, three and six months of both octreotide and lanreotide treatment. The absolute values were lower and the percent decrease in serum GH levels obtained after octreotide treatment was significantly greater, at all scheduled assessments, than after lanreotide (P < 0.01). Serum IGF-I levels during octreotide were significantly lower only after the first month of therapy (P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Our study shows that octreotide s.c. is able to induce an earlier reduction in IGF-I levels and a more marked reduction in GH levels than lanreotide. However, after six months of therapy the number of patients with safe GH levels and normal IGF-I age-matched levels, was similar with both drugs. Therefore we suggest that octreotide treatment be preferentially used in the short-term presurgical treatment, while lanreotide can be used in chronic therapy when better compliance is necessary

    A standardised diagnostic approach to pituitary neuroendocrine tumours (PitNETs): a European Pituitary Pathology Group (EPPG) proposal

    No full text
    The 2017 World Health Organization (WHO) classification proposes to type and subtype primary adenohypophyseal tumours according to their cell lineages with the aim to establish more uniform tumour groups. The definition of atypical adenoma was removed in favour of high-risk adenoma, and the assessment of proliferative activity and invasion was recommended to diagnose aggressive tumours. Recently, the International Pituitary Pathology Club proposed to replace adenoma with the term of pituitary neuroendocrine tumour (PitNET) to better reflect the similarities between adenohypophyseal and neuroendocrine tumours of other organs. The European Pituitary Pathology Group (EPPG) endorses this terminology and develops practical recommendations for standardised reports of PitNETs that are addressed to histo- and neuropathologists. This brief report presents the results of EPPG\u2019s consensus for the reporting of PitNETs and proposes a diagnostic algorithm

    Dopamine D2 receptor gene polymorphisms and response to cabergoline therapy in patients with prolactin-secreting pituitary adenomas

    No full text
    Dopamine-agonist cabergoline (CB) reduces prolactin (PRL) secretion and tumor size in 80% of patients with prolactin-secreting adenomas (PRL-omas) by binding type 2 dopamine receptor (DRD2). The mechanisms responsible for resistance to CB remain largely unknown. To assess the association of DRD2 with sensitivity to CB, TaqI-A1/A2, TaqI-B1/B2, HphI-G/T and NcoI-C/T genotypes were determined in a cross-sectional retrospective study, including 203 patients with PRL-oma. DRD2 alleles frequencies did not differ between patients and 212 healthy subjects. Conversely, NcoI-T allele frequency was higher in resistant rather than responsive patients, considering both PRL normalization (56.6 vs 45.3%, P=0.038) and tumor shrinkage (70.4 vs 41.4%, P=0.006). Finally, [TaqI A1-/TaqI B1-/HphI T-/NcoI T-] haplotype was found in 34.5% of patients normalizing PRL with 643 mg/week of CB vs 11.3% of resistants (P=0.021). In conclusion, resistance to CB was associated with DRD2 NcoI-T+ allele, consistent with evidence suggesting that this variant may lead to reduction and instability of DRD2 mRNA or protein
    corecore