Literature DB >> 16868141

Pregnancy in acromegaly: a one-center experience.

Renato Cozzi1, Roberto Attanasio, Michela Barausse.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE AND
DESIGN: The aim of the study was the retrospective evaluation of pregnancy in acromegalic women attending our center. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Six active acromegalic women (30-35-years old, disease duration 5-17 years) underwent seven pregnancies. Four patients had macroadenoma and two microadenoma; four had surgery; and two had been treated primarily with drugs. Before conception, GH and IGF-I were 5.4+/-0.8 and 430+/-58 microg/l respectively. GH (by an assay unable to distinguish pituitary hormone from placental variant), IGF-I, and prolactin (PRL) levels were assessed before conception, every 3 months, and after delivery; visual field and magnetic resonance imaging were performed before delivery in the only patient with macroadenoma not previously operated on and after delivery in all.
RESULTS: All the women conceived normally, after discontinuation of medications in five cases and, while on treatment with depot somatostatin analogs in two (discontinued after confirmation of pregnancy). All patients remained off-treatment throughout pregnancy, had uneventful pregnancies, and term delivery. The babies were healthy and normal in length and weight. Breast-feeding was allowed in four cases. During pregnancy, GH levels showed variable changes; IGF-I, notwithstanding the withdrawal of any GH hypersecretion-suppressive treatment, remained close to normal limits in all subjects and returned to pathological levels after delivery; PRL increased physiologically, returning to baseline level after delivery. In one of the two patients primarily treated with drugs, GH levels increased and the tumor regrew throughout pregnancy, although without visual impairment.
CONCLUSIONS: Pregnancy in acromegalic women has a normal course leading to a normal delivery, and produces normal babies. GH levels show variable changes, but decrease in most patients. IGF-I levels remain normal without medical treatment.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16868141     DOI: 10.1530/eje.1.02215

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Endocrinol        ISSN: 0804-4643            Impact factor:   6.664


  16 in total

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Authors:  Z Karaca; S Yarman; I Ozbas; P Kadioglu; M Akturk; F Kilicli; H S Dokmetas; R Colak; H Atmaca; Z Canturk; Y Altuntas; N Ozbey; N Hatipoglu; F Tanriverdi; K Unluhizarci; F Kelestimur
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2017-06-20       Impact factor: 4.256

2.  Female gonadal functions and ovarian reserve in patients with acromegaly: experience from a single tertiary center.

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Review 5.  Estrogen treatment for acromegaly.

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Review 6.  First-generation somatostatin receptor ligands and pregnancy: lesson from women with acromegaly.

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7.  Acromegaly in pregnancy.

Authors:  T George Koshy; Simon Rajaratnam; Jiji Elizabeth Mathews; Vedantam Rajshekhar
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8.  Decreased IGF-1 concentration during the first trimester of pregnancy in women with normal somatotroph function.

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Review 9.  Pituitary tumors and pregnancy: the interplay between a pathologic condition and a physiologic status.

Authors:  Rosario Pivonello; Maria Cristina De Martino; Renata S Auriemma; Carlo Alviggi; Ludovica F S Grasso; Alessia Cozzolino; Monica De Leo; Giuseppe De Placido; Annamaria Colao; Gaetano Lombardi
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2014-01-16       Impact factor: 4.256

10.  General health status and intelligence scores of children of mothers with acromegaly do not differ from those of healthy mothers.

Authors:  Ozlem Haliloglu; Burak Dogangun; Bahar Ozcabi; Hanife Ugur Kural; Fatma Ela Keskin; Hande Mefkure Ozkaya; Fatma Colkesen Pamukcu; Elif Bektas; Burc Cagri Poyraz; Hakan Buber; Olcay Evliyaoglu; Pinar Kadioglu
Journal:  Pituitary       Date:  2016-08       Impact factor: 4.107

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