| Literature DB >> 25511633 |
Mehtap Evran1, Murat Sert, Tamer Tetiker.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to report the clinical and outcome data from a large cohort of patients diagnosed with acromegaly and treated at our institution over a 20-year period.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25511633 PMCID: PMC4289580 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6823-14-97
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Endocr Disord ISSN: 1472-6823 Impact factor: 2.763
Demographic and clinical characteristics of acromegaly patients at the time of diagnosis
| SE ± mean (Range) | n | (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 46.2 ± 1.4 (18–75) | Number of microadenomas | 8/62 | (13%) |
| Age at the time of diagnosis (years) | 38.2 ± 1.4 (8–65) | Number of macroadenomas | 54/62 | (87%) |
| Time to diagnosis (years) | 4.5 ± 0.3 (1–14) | Hyperprolactinemia | 13/62 | (21%) |
| Follow-up duration | 7.3 ± 0.8 (1–29) | Hypertension | 13/62 | (21%) |
| GH level (ng/ml); (n = 54) | 39.18 (2.1–179) | Diabetes Mellitus | 22/62 | (35%) |
| #IGF-1 level (ng/ml); (n = 41) | 993.5 ± 79 (262–3000) | Carpal Tunnel Syndrome | 2/62 | (3.2%) |
| IGF-1 level (n = 1)* | 1700 ± 0 | Menstrual irregularity | 4/32 | (12.5%) |
| IGF-1 levels (n = 4)** | 1318 ± 788 | Loss of libido | 2/62 | (3.2%) |
| IGF-1 levels (n = 17)*** | 770.5 ± 694 | Galactorrhea | 4/62 | (6.5%) |
| IGF-1 levels (n = 19)**** | 1078 ± 1249 | Headache | 4/62 | (6.5%) |
| Typical facial findings and growth in hands and feet | 55/62 | (92%) |
#IGF-1 levels (based on age and gender).
*Male, for 6–8 years; normal range of IGF-1: 110-565 ng/ml.
**Female and male, for 16–25years; normal range of IGF-1: 182-780 ng/ml.
***Female, for > 25 years; normal range of IGF-1: 123-463 ng/ml.
****Male, for > 25 years; normal range of IGF-1: 123-463 ng/ml.
Figure 1Before and after treatment IGF-1 levels of the patients (normal range is given according to age and gender). # y: years *Male; normal range of IGF-1: 110-565 ng/ml (n = 1), **Female and Male; normal range of IGF-1: 182-780 ng/ml (pretreatment n: 4, posttreatment n:5; remission:3) ***Female; normal range of IGF-1: 123-463 ng/ml (prereatment n:17, posttreatment n:26; remission:21) **** Male; normal range of IGF-1: 123-463 ng/ml (pretreatment n:19, posttreatment n:23; remission:13).
Rate of treatment response for different disease subtypes and treatment strategies in acromegaly patients
| Number of patients | Number of patients responded to treatment | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | (%) | n | (%) | |
| Microadenomas | 8 | (13%) | 4 | (50%) |
| Macroadenomas | 54 | (87%) | 8 | (15%) |
| Transsphenoidal surgery | 31 | (52%) | 4 | (12.9%) |
| Transcranial surgery | 20 | (32.3%) | 2 | (10%) |
| Multiple surgery | 11 | (17.7%) | ||
| Radiotherapy | 20 | (32.2%) | 6 | (30%)* |
| Only drug treatment | 6 | (9.6%) | 3 | (50%)** |
| Octreotide LAR | 52 | (84%) | 32 | (61.5%)** |
| Lanreotide | 5 | (8%) | 2 | (40%)** |
| Conventional radiotherapy + ocreotide LAR | 5 | (8%) | 2 | (40%)** |
| Gamma Knife + ocreotide LAR | 11 | (17.7%) | 7 | (63%)** |
*The number of patients who achieved cure by Gamma Knife and conventional radiotherapy.
**Biochemical remission.
Figure 2According to pharmacotherapy remission rates of the patients.
Frequency of pituitary hormone deficiency in the postoperative period by disease subtype
| Deficient hormones | Microadenomas (n) | Macroadenomas (n) |
|---|---|---|
| TSH | 8 | |
| ACTH | 2 | |
| TSH + ACTH | 6 | |
| FSH + LH | 3 | |
| TSH + ACTH + FSH + LH | 6 | |
| TSH + FSH + LH | 1 | 2 |
| ADH | 1 | |
| Total* | 4 | 25 |
*Transsphenoidal: Anterior pituitary hormone deficiency in 10 patients, and DI in one patient.
TSH deficiency in one patient who underwent transcranial surgery after transsphenoidal surgery.
Transcranial: Anterior pituitary hormone deficiency in 17 patients.