Literature DB >> 10424206

Diagnosis, treatment, and outcome of pituitary tumors and other abnormal intrasellar masses. Retrospective analysis of 353 patients.

J Gsponer1, N De Tribolet, J P Déruaz, R Janzer, A Uské, R O Mirimanoff, M J Reymond, F Rey, E Temler, R C Gaillard, F Gomez.   

Abstract

We reviewed the clinical features, essential laboratory data, pituitary imaging findings (computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging), management, and outcome of 353 consecutive patients with the presumptive diagnosis of pituitary tumor investigated from January 1984 through December 1997 at University Hospital, Lausanne, Switzerland. In 18 cases primary empty sella turcica was diagnosed, and in 13 cases of pseudacromegaly there were no endocrine abnormalities. The remaining 322 patients disclosed abnormal pituitary masses, including 275 pituitary adenomas, 18 craniopharyngiomas, 6 cases of primary pituitary hyperplasia, 6 intrasellar meningiomas, 6 cases of distant metastases, 4 intrasellar cysts, 2 chordomas, 1 primary lymphoma, and 1 astrocytoma. Biologic data and immunohistochemical analysis of the excised tissues demonstrated that prolactinomas and nonsecreting adenomas (NSAs) were the most frequent pituitary tumors (40% and 39%, respectively), followed by somatotropic adenomas with acromegaly (11%) and Cushing disease (6%). In contrast with the vast majority of NSAs, which significantly expressed glycoprotein hormones in tissue without secreting them, there was a small group of glycoprotein hormone-secreting adenomas (2%), which had a more severe clinical course after surgery. Thirty-eight pituitary masses were incidentally discovered, most of them NSAs. The expansion of pituitary adenomas into the right cavernous sinus was twice as frequent as to the left cavernous sinus. For the differential diagnosis of hyperprolactinemia, basal prolactin (PRL) levels above 85 micrograms/L, in the absence of renal failure and PRL-enhancing drugs, and a PRL increment of less than 30% after thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) accurately ruled out functional hyperprolactinemia due to NSA, and were typical of prolactinomas. For screening and follow-up of acromegaly, basal growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) levels, as well as the paradoxical GH response to TRH (present in 2/3 acromegalic patients), could be used as convenient tools, but the most accurate test for diagnosis and prediction of outcome after therapy was GH (lack of) suppression during oral glucose tolerance test. In Cushing disease, single evening plasma cortisol was as good as the overnight dexamethasone suppression test for screening, and a combined dexamethasoneovine corticotropin-releasing hormone (oCRH) test was as accurate as the long dexamethasone suppression test to confirm the diagnosis. Bilateral inferior petrosal sinus catheterization coupled with oCRH test confirmed the pituitary origin of excess adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) in all patients, including those with normal pituitary on magnetic resonance imaging (50% of the cases). However, this procedure failed to predict tumor localization correctly within the pituitary in 21% of patients. Pituitary cysts, meningiomas, and craniopharyngiomas with an intrasellar component were correctly diagnosed based on pituitary imaging in 75%, 67%, and 44% of cases, respectively. The remainder, as well as the cases of pituitary hyperplasia, metastases, and other less frequent pathologies, were initially diagnosed as NSAs or as masses of unknown nature. When surgery was indicated, pituitary adenomas and other intrasellar masses were operated on by the transsphenoidal route, with the exception of 100% of meningiomas, 83% of craniopharyngiomas, and 10% of NSAs, which were operated on by the transcranial route. Favorable late surgical outcome of prolactinomas could be predicted by a restored PRL response to TRH. However, dopamine agonist (DA) therapy, usually resulting in satisfactory control of PRL levels and in tumor shrinkage, progressively displaced surgery as primary treatment for prolactinomas throughout the study period. After full-term pregnancy, the size of prolactinoma decreased in 7 of 9 patients, and PRL was normal in 2. Surgery was the first treatment for NSAs, with a tumor rela

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10424206     DOI: 10.1097/00005792-199907000-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)        ISSN: 0025-7974            Impact factor:   1.889


  36 in total

1.  Functional capacity and body mass index in patients with sellar masses--cross-sectional study on 403 patients diagnosed during childhood and adolescence.

Authors:  Hermann L Müller; Ursel Gebhardt; Andreas Faldum; Angela Emser; Nicole Etavard-Gorris; Reinhard Kolb; Niels Sörensen
Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst       Date:  2005-05-12       Impact factor: 1.475

2.  Pituitary metastasis of colon adenocarcinoma: a rare occurrence.

Authors:  Mehmet Akif Ozturk; Orhan Onder Eren; Basar Sarikaya; Ekrem Aslan; Basak Oyan
Journal:  J Gastrointest Cancer       Date:  2014-12

Review 3.  Pediatric Pituitary Adenoma: Case Series, Review of the Literature, and a Skull Base Treatment Paradigm.

Authors:  Avital Perry; Christopher Salvatore Graffeo; Christopher Marcellino; Bruce E Pollock; Nicholas M Wetjen; Fredric B Meyer
Journal:  J Neurol Surg B Skull Base       Date:  2018-01-24

4.  Clinical and Epidemiological Characteristics of Pituitary Tumours using a Web-based Pituitary Tumour Registry in Oman.

Authors:  Abdullah Al-Futaisi; Al-Yaarubi Saif; Ibrahim Al-Zakwani; Salim Al-Qassabi; Shaden Al-Riyami; Yasser Wali
Journal:  Sultan Qaboos Univ Med J       Date:  2007-04

5.  Rare presentation of Ewing sarcoma metastasis to the sella and suprasellar cistern.

Authors:  Michael T Starc; Marc K Rosenblum; Paul A Meyers; Vaios Hatzoglou
Journal:  Clin Imaging       Date:  2016-10-20       Impact factor: 1.605

6.  Hepatocellular carcinoma metastasis to the brain mimicking primary pituitary tumor around the sella turcica.

Authors:  Tetsuo Tamura; Yusuke Kawamura; Kenji Ikeda; Yuya Seko; Taito Fukushima; Hiromitu Kumada; Shozo Yamada; Yuji Matumaru
Journal:  Clin J Gastroenterol       Date:  2013-07-17

7.  Endoscopic endonasal transsphenoidal hypophysectomy: two hand versus four hand technique: our experience.

Authors:  Satya Prakash Dubey; Vishal Rattan Munjal
Journal:  Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg       Date:  2014-02-04

8.  Non-functioning pituitary carcinoma.

Authors:  Petra Nadja Elsässer Imboden; François-Xavier Borruat; Nicolas De Tribolet; Kathleen Meagher-Villemure; Alesia Pica; Fulgencio Gomez
Journal:  Pituitary       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 4.107

9.  Efficacy of Trans-septal Trans-sphenoidal Surgery in Correcting Visual Symptoms Caused by Hematogenous Metastases to the Sella and Pituitary Gland.

Authors:  Iman Feiz-Erfan; Ganesh Rao; William L White; Ian E McCutcheon
Journal:  Skull Base       Date:  2008-03

Review 10.  Primary sellar lymphoma: intravascular large B-cell lymphoma diagnosed as a double cancer and improved with chemotherapy, and literature review of primary parasellar lymphoma.

Authors:  Mutsuko Yasuda; Nobu Akiyama; Sachio Miyamoto; Masahiro Warabi; Yumiko Takahama; Mari Kitamura; Fumiatsu Yakushiji; Hiroyuki Kinoshita
Journal:  Pituitary       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 4.107

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