| Literature DB >> 19551516 |
Maria Koutourousiou1, George Kontogeorgos, Pieter Wesseling, Andre J Grotenhuis, Andreas Seretis.
Abstract
The concomitant presence of a pituitary adenoma with a second sellar lesion in patients operated upon for pituitary adenoma is an uncommon entity. Although rare, quite a great variety of lesions have been indentified coexisting with pituitary adenomas. In fact, most combinations have been described before, but an overview with information on the frequency of combined pathologies in a large series has not been published. We present a series of eight collision sellar lesions indentified among 548 transsphenoidally resected pituitary adenomas in two Neurosurgical Departments. The histological studies confirmed a case of sarcoidosis within a non-functioning pituitary adenoma, a case of intrasellar schwannoma coexisting with growth hormone (GH) secreting adenoma, two Rathke's cleft cysts combined with pituitary adenomas, three gangliocytomas associated with GH-secreting adenomas, and a case of a double pituitary adenoma. The pertinent literature is discussed with emphasis on pathogenetic theories of dual sellar lesions. Although there is no direct evidence to confirm the pathogenetic relationship of collision sellar lesions, the number of cases presented in literature makes the theory of an incidental occurrence rather doubtful. Suggested hypotheses about a common embryonic origin or a potential interaction between pituitary adenomas and the immune system are presented.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19551516 PMCID: PMC2807600 DOI: 10.1007/s11102-009-0190-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pituitary ISSN: 1386-341X Impact factor: 4.107
Histological studies defining the concomitant of a pituitary adenoma with a second sellar lesion
| No. | Pituitary adenoma | 2nd sellar lesion | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Basophilic ACTH immunoreactive | PAS-positive mucin, cystic wall with columnar epithelium | ACTH-secreting pituitary adenoma coexisting with RCC |
| 2 | Chromophobic immunonegative (null cell) adenoma | Granoulomas formation without necrosis possibly secondary to sarcoidosis | Neurosarcoidosis within a null cell pituitary adenomaa |
| 3 | Chromophobic sparsely granulated GH immunoreactive, locally immunopositive for PRL, immunoreactive for NFP | Ganglion cells within a fibrillary substrate | Gangliocytoma combined with a GH-secreting pituitary adenoma |
| 4 | Chromophobic sparsely granulated GH immunoreactive | Well-circumscribed schwannoma Antoni A type with parallel-organised spindle-shaped cells around hypocellular areas (“Verocay bodies”) | GH-secreting pituitary adenoma coexisting with an intrasellar schwannoma |
| 5 | Chromophobic sparsely granulated GH immunoreactive, locally immunopositive for PRL and α-SU, immunoreactive for NFP | Large ganglion cells embedded in a dense neuropil substrate | Gangliocytoma combined with a GH-secreting pituitary adenoma |
| 6 | Chromophobic, GH immunoreactive, locally immunopositive for α-SU | Chromophobic PRL immunoreactive pituitary adenoma | Double adenoma consisting of a GH- and a PRL-secreting pituitary adenoma |
| 7 | Chromophobic, immunoreactive mainly for β-LH and locally for β-FSH | Cystic formation of Rathke’s cleft with a diameter of 0.1 cm, PAS-negative | Gonadotroph pituitary adenoma coexisting with RCC |
| 8 | Chromophobic sparsely granulated GH immunoreactive, locally immunopositive for PRL, immunoreactive for NFP | Ganglion cells embedded in a fibrillary substrate | Gangliocytoma combined with a GH-secreting pituitary adenoma |
α-SU α-subunit of glycoprotein hormones, β-FSH β-follicle stimulating hormone, β-LH β-luteinizing hormone, ACTH adrenocorticotropic hormone, GH growth hormone, NFP neurofilament protein, PAS periodic acid-Shiff, PRL prolactin, RCC Rathke’s cleft cyst
aThe final diagnosis of neurosarcoidosis was determined 3 years after surgery when the pulmonary disease was verified
Fig. 1Patient No. 2. Pituitary null cell adenoma combined with granulomatous inflammation due to neurosarcoidosis. The pituitary adenoma consists of highly vascularized tissue (asterisks in some vessel lumina) and a monomorphous population of epitheloid tumor cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm; in the upper right hand corner a non-necrotizing granuloma is present consisting of histiocytes, some multinucleate giant cells (example indicated by arrow) and collections of small lymphocytes (arrowheads). Hematoxylin & Eosin staining ×100
Fig. 2Patient No. 5. Gangliocytoma coexisting with sparsely granulated somatotroph adenoma. The adenoma part consists of small chromophobic cells with typical cytoplasmic fibrous bodies (arrows). The gangliocytic component comprises large, polyhedral, mature ganglion cells with abundant cytoplasm and spheroid nuclei. Hematoxylin & Eosin staining ×20
Fig. 3Patient No. 8. Ganglion cells admixed with acidophil cells of a densely granulated somatotroph adenoma. Note the presence of prominent nucleoli in ganglion cell and the fibrillary neuropil in the stroma. Hematoxylin & Eosin staining ×20
Fig. 4Patient No. 6. Left: Tissue fragment of chromophobic adenoma with focal immunoreactivity for GH, typical for the sparsely granulated variant of somatotroph adenomas. Avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method ×20. Right: Another fragment from the same specimen immunopositive for PRL, with the characteristic paranuclear, dot-like localization of chromogen. Avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method ×20
Fig. 5Patient No. 7. Rathke’s cleft cyst with single cell lining immunoreactive for keratin 8. The lumen contains colloidal material. The surrounded tissue corresponds to chromophobic pituitary adenoma. Avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method ×10
Summary of clinical presentation, pre op medical treatment, imaging findings, histology, outcome and follow up of eight patients with collision sellar lesions operated transsphenoidally
| No. | Sex/age | Clinical presentation | Pre op treatment | MRI findings | Histology | Surgical results | Adjuvant management | Follow up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F/42 | Cushing disease | 12 mm, is | ACTH adenoma + RCC | Remission of disease Hypocortisolism → substitution therapy | 55 | ||
| 2 | M/60 | Hypogonadism, ↑ PRL | 20 mm, is, ss | NFPA + sarcoidosis | Persisted hypogonadism Recurrence after 35 months → | Reoperation (TSS) | 54 | |
| 3 | F/47 | Acromegaly, hypopituitarism | T4 + HC | 19 mm, is, ss, ps | GH adenoma + gangliocytoma | Remission of acromegaly Persisted hypopituitarism → substitution therapy | 45 | |
| 4 | M/38 | Acromegaly, headache, decreased libido | Somatostatin analogs | 19 mm, is, ss | GH adenoma + schwannoma | Remission of acromegaly Resolved headache Restored libido | 40 | |
| 5 | F/52 | Acromegaly | Somatostatin analogs | 16 mm, is, ss | GH adenoma + gangliocytoma | Remission of disease Recurrence after 15 months → | Somatostatin analogs + radiotherapy | 37 |
| 6 | F/49 | Acromegaly, ↑ PRL, amenorrhea | Dopamine agonists | 13 mm, is, ss | GH adenoma + PRL adenoma | Remission of acromegaly, persisted hyperprolactinemia → | Dopamine agonists | 27 |
| 7 | M/76 | Hypopituitarism | T4 + HC | 25 mm, is, ss, ps | NFPA + RCC | Persisted hypopituitarism → substitution therapy | 27 | |
| 8 | F/46 | Acromegaly, Headache | 11 mm, is | GH adenoma + gangliocytoma | Remission of disease Resolved headache | 18 |
is Intrasellar, mo months, ps parasellar, ss suprasellar, ACTH adrenocorticotropic hormone, GH growth hormone, HC hydrocortisone, NFPA non-functioning pituitary adenoma, PRL prolactin, RCC Rathke’s cleft cyst, T4 thyroxine
Fig. 6Patient No. 2. Preoperative coronal T1-weighted MRI showing a sellar lesion of 20 mm with suprasellar extension suggesting a preoperative diagnosis of a non-functioning pituitary adenoma
Fig. 7Patient No. 8. Preoperative coronal T1-weighted MRI demonstrating a sellar lesion attached to the left cavernous sinus, stretching the pituitary gland to the right and slightly deviating the pituitary stalk. Given the clinical presentation, the lesion was considered to be a GH-secreting pituitary adenoma