| Literature DB >> 21904912 |
Nieke E Kokshoorn1, Johannes A Romijn, Ferdinand Roelfsema, Anna H J H Rambach, Johannes W A Smit, Nienke R Biermasz, Alberto M Pereira.
Abstract
Transsphenoidal surgery (TS) is the treatment of choice for many pituitary tumors. Because TS may cause pituitary insufficiency in some of these patients, early postoperative assessment of pituitary function is essential for appropriate endocrine management. The aim of our study was to evaluate the clinical relevance of the CRH-stimulation test in assessing postoperative pituitary-adrenal function. We performed a retrospective analysis of 144 patients treated by TS between January 1990 and November 2009, in whom a CRH-test and a second stimulation test was performed to assess adrenal function during follow-up. Patients with Cushing's disease were excluded. Hydrocortisone substitution was started if peak cortisol levels were <550 nmol/L. The cortisol response was insufficient in 42(29%) and sufficient in 102 patients at the postoperative CRH-test. Thirteen of 42(30%) demonstrated a normal cortisol response during a second cortisol stimulation test. In 75 of the 102 patients with a sufficient response to CRH repeat testing revealed an insufficient cortisol response in 14 patients (14%). All but one had concomitant pituitary hormone deficits. There were no cases of adrenal crises during follow-up. Additional pituitary insufficiency was significantly more present (P < 0.001) in the group of patients with an abnormal response to CRH directly after surgery. In this study a substitution strategy of hydrocortisone guided by the postoperative cortisol response to CRH appeared safe and did not result in any case of adrenal crises. However, the early postoperative CRH-test does not reliably predict adrenal function after TS for pituitary adenomas in all patients and retesting is mandatory.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 21904912 PMCID: PMC3443358 DOI: 10.1007/s11102-011-0344-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pituitary ISSN: 1386-341X Impact factor: 4.107
Fig. 1Flow-chart of patient selection and follow-up. AI = adrenal insufficiency. *pre-existent panhypopituitarism before or immediately after surgery (n = 12), pre-existent isolated severe adrenal insufficiency before surgery (n = 4) or very low basal serum cortisol concentrations (mean 10 nmol/L) during follow-up after surgery (n = 4). **basal serum cortisol levels > 550 nmol/L (n=12), normal urine cortisol levels (n=3), short follow-up between repeated surgery or additional radiotherapy (n = 2), and follow-up <1 year (n = 2) or unspecified reasons (n = 7), basal serum cortisol <110 nmol/L (n = 1)
Baseline characteristics
| Baseline characteristics | Number of patients |
|---|---|
| (n = 144) | |
| Gender (M/F) | 71/73 |
| Age (years) | 50 (15–83) |
| Diagnosis (n) | |
| NFA | 70 |
| Acromegaly | 63 |
| Prolactinoma | 6 |
| Other pituitary tumors | 5 |
| Time between CRH test and confirmation test (months) | 25.5 (2 daysa-219 months) |
| Confirmation test (n = 97) | |
| ITT | 55 |
| CRH | 16 |
| ACTH stimulation test | 21 |
| Metyrapone test | 5 |
aBasal serum cortisol was low, however CRH test peak cortisol 0.61 therefore 2 days after CRH test a metyrapone test was performed
Patients incorrectly diagnosed with adrenal insufficiency based on the CRH test directly after surgery
| Gender | Age at time of surgery (years) | Diagnosis | CHR test peak cortisol (nmol/L) | HC after surgery (y/n) | Follow-up (years) | Confirmation test | Peak cortisol (nmol/L) | Other deficiencies | Follow-up | Clinical event (y/n) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | 53 | NFA | 410 | y | 3 months | ACTH | 890 | LH/FSH, GHD | No optimal reaction CRH test, HC discontinued before confirmation test. After 3 years ITT peak cortisol 860 nmol/L | n |
| 2 | M | 48 | Acromegaly | 540 | n | 3.8 | CRH | 790 | None | After CRH-test HPA-axis defined as normal, no HC | n |
| 3 | M | 23 | Acromegaly | 480 | n | 4.9 | ITT | 780 | None | After CRH test another CRH test and 24 h urine still not sufficient.; ITT after 4 years insufficient | n |
| 4 | F | 26 | Prolactinoma | 480 | y | 8.9 | ITT | 750 | DI | HC until next outpatient appointment; 5 years loss to follow-up; recurrence of prolactinoma treatment with Dostinex. Did not use HC. Eight years after surgery two sufficient ACTH tests and 1 year later normal ITT | n |
| 5 | M | 53 | NFA | 440 | y | 1 month | CRH | 710 | GHD | HC discontinued after CRH test (9 years after surgery RT) | n |
| 6 | F | 62 | NFA | 469 | y | 7 months | ITT | 696 | GHD | After 4 months ACTH peak cortisol 580 therefore stop HC. Three months later ITT | n |
| 7 | M | 59 | NFA | 457 | y | 7 months | ACTH | 672 | TSH, LH/FSH, GHD | HC discontinued; after 5 months ACTH test insufficient peak cortisol 445 nmol/L. Followed by three more ACTH tests (7–9 months after surgery) all normal cortisol response. ITT 1 year after surgery however nadir 2.3 mmol/L; cortisol peak 574 nmol/L. | n |
| 8 | F | 72 | Acromegaly | 543 | n | 1.2 | CRH | 665 | None | HPA-axis defined as normal, no HC | n |
| 9 | F | 56 | NFA | 520 | y | 3.9 | ITT | 657 | Panhypopit | After 6 months ACTH test normal; 1 month later ITT peak cortisol 550 nmol; HC lowered to 10 mg/day. 10 months later ITT normal response cortisol; stop HC. Two years later another ITT | n |
| 10 | M | 38 | Acromegaly | 340 | y | 10.3 | ITT | 634 | None | Received HC before surgery, discontinued after surgery followed by CRH test after 3 months; peak cortisol 560 nmol/L. Ten years after surgery ACTH test followed by ITT both normal cortisol responses. | n |
| 11 | M | 42 | Acromegaly | 530 | If neccessary | 11.6 | ACTH | 618 | None | Based on CRH only HC if necessary. Shortly after CRH test ACTH test with normal cortisol response; no HC necessary. 11 yrs later another ACTH test | n |
| 12 | F | 42 | NFA | 482 | y | 1.3 | CRH | 606 | None | Six months after surgery 1st ACTH test; insufficient cortisol response; followed by four ACTH tests within 6 months. All insufficient cortisol response. Followed by a CRH tests with a sufficient response. | n |
| 13 | F | 39 | Acromegaly | 500 | y | 4.1 | ITT | 570 | None | Four months after surgery 2nd CRH test still insufficient cortisol response; continue HC. 1 year later ITT; peak cortisol 520 nmol/L. 3 years later 2nd ITT sufficient stop HC | n |
M male, F female, NFA non functioning adenoma; n no, y yes, DI diabetes insipidus, ITT insulin tolerance test, CRH corticotropin releasing hormone, HC hydrocortisone, GHD growth hormone deficiency
Patients who appeared to be adrenal insufficient based on a second test or basal serum cortisol concentration during follow-up
| Gender | Age at time of surgery (years) | Diagnosis | CHR test peak cortisol (nmol/L) | HC after surgery (y/n) | Follow-up (years) | Confirmation test | Peak cortisol (nmol/L) | Other deficiencies | Follow-up | Clinical event (y/n) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | 55 | NFA | 750 | n | 2 months | ITT | 512 | Panhypopit | Before surgery panhypopituitarism; ITT after 2 months insufficiënt | n |
| 2 | M | 50 | NFA | 690 | n | 1.7 | ITT | 510 | Panhypopit | Not all results known when patient left hospital. Appeared to be TSH- and GH deficient. Outpatient follow-up 1st ITT sufficient; 2nd ITT insufficient | n |
| 3 | M | 19 | NFA | 780 | n | 6.5 | ITT | 480 | Panhypopit | After surgery gonadotrophic deficiency; ITT 2002 sufficient; ITT insufficiënt; corticotrope and GH deficiency; start suppletion | n |
| 4 | F | 50 | NFA | 640 | y | 1.8 | ITT | 410 | Panhypopit | After surgery HC; follow-up after 1 year Metyrapone test insufficient; 1 yr later ITT still insufficient | n |
| 5 | F | 53 | NFA | 1100 | y | 2 months | Metyrapone test | 90 | TSH, GHD | Before surgery TSH deficiency and hypocortisolism; Start HC after surgery; 2 months after surgery ACTH and Metyrapone test both insufficient | n |
| 6 | M | 60 | NFA | 600 | y | 6 months | ITT | 200 | Panhypopit | Received HC before surgery; continued after surgery; follow-up after 6 months | n |
| 7 | F | 57 | NFA | 670 | n | 3.4 | Metyrapone test | 190 | Panhypopit | One year after surgery new CRH test sufficient. Complaints of tiredness. Two years later metyrapone insufficiënt | n |
| 159 | |||||||||||
| 8 | M | 54 | NFA | 670 | n | 4.3 | ACTH 1 ug | 170 | Panhypopit | After surgery gonadotropic and GH deficiency. After 3 years start rGH; 2 years later low cortisol 24 h urine and hypothyroidism. Euthyreotic state ACTH test insufficiënt start HC | n |
| 9 | F | 78 | NFA | 620 | n | 3 months | Metyrapone test | 120 | None | Cardial problems; follow-up in outpatient clinic | n |
| 84.9 | |||||||||||
| 10 | F | 77 | NFA | 610 | y | 2 days | Metyrapone test | 90 | TSH, DI | Based on low basal serum cortisol levels start HC; 2 days after CRH metyrapone test insufficient | n |
| 79.5 | |||||||||||
| 11 | F | 50 | NFA | 770 | n | 7 | Metyrapone test | 90 | Gonadotrope, GHD | Several years no complaints no insufficiency; 2002 ITT GHD followed by therapy; 2004 metyrapone insufficient | n |
| 107 | |||||||||||
| 12 | F | 67 | NFA | 600 | y | 1.4 | ITT | 4 | Panhypopit | Directly post surgery probably panhypopit because of lesion/rupture pituitary stalk. No basal ACTH production with stimulation after CRH; Start HC | n |
| 13 | M | 38 | NFA | 797 | n | 3 months | Basal serum cortisol | 90 | Panhypopit | Before surgery panhypopit; CRH test normal. Three months after surgery complaints with low basal serum cortisol. Start HC | n |
| 14 | M | 39 | NFA | 660 | y | 5 months | ACTH-test | 300 | GHD, gonadotrope, DI | Before surgery panhypopituitarism. Probably HC during CRH test after surgery | n |
M male, F female, NFA non functioning adenoma, n no, y yes, DI diabetes insipidus, ITT insulin tolerance test, CRH corticotropin releasing hormone, HC hydrocortisone, GHD growth hormone deficiency
Fig. 2Proposed algorithm for the postoperative follow-up of adrenal function in non ACTH dependent pituitary disease (HC hydrocortisone)