| Literature DB >> 28458905 |
Dinesh Giri1, Federico Roncaroli2,3, Ajay Sinha4, Mohammed Didi1, Senthil Senniappan1.
Abstract
SUMMARY: Corticotroph adenomas are extremely rare in children and adolescents. We present a 15-year-old boy who was investigated for delayed puberty (A1P2G1, bilateral testicular volumes of 3 mL each). There was no clinical or laboratory evidence suggestive of chronic illness, and the initial clinical impression was constitutional delay in puberty. Subsequently, MRI scan of the brain revealed the presence of a mixed cystic and solid pituitary lesion slightly displacing the optic chiasma. The lesion was removed by transphenoidal surgery and the biopsy confirmed the lesion to be pituitary adenoma. Furthermore, the adenoma cells also had Crooke's hyaline changes and were intensely positive for ACTH. However there was no clinical/biochemical evidence of ACTH excess. There was a spontaneous pubertal progression twelve months after the surgery (A2P4G4, with bilateral testicular volume of 8 mL). Crooke's cell adenoma is an extremely rare and aggressive variant of corticotroph adenoma that can uncommonly present as a silent corticotroph adenoma in adults. We report for the first time Crooke's cell adenoma in an adolescent boy presenting with delayed puberty. LEARNING POINTS: Constitutional delay of growth and puberty (CDGP) is a diagnosis of exclusion; hence a systematic and careful review should be undertaken while assessing boys with delayed puberty.Crooke's cell adenomas are a group of corticotroph adenomas that can rarely present in childhood and adolescence with delayed puberty.Crooke's cell adenomas can be clinically silent but are potentially aggressive tumours that require careful monitoring.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28458905 PMCID: PMC5404707 DOI: 10.1530/EDM-16-0153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocrinol Diabetes Metab Case Rep ISSN: 2052-0573
Baseline endocrine investigations.
| Thyroid function test | |
| FT4 | 11.8 pmol/L |
| TSH | 2.85 pmol/L |
| Prolactin | 100 µ/L (normal <500) |
| IGF1 | 43 nmol/L (normal: 24–102) |
| Cortisol (09:00 h) | 300 nmol/L |
| ACTH (09:00 h) | 4 pmol/L (normal: 2–11) |
| Synacthen test | |
| Peak cortisol response | 505 nmol/L at 60 min |
| LH | 0.8 IU/L |
| FSH | 1.4 IU/L |
| Testosterone | 0.8 nmol/L |
Figure 1MRI pituitary with contrast revealing a cystic lesion in the pituitary fossa (2 × 1.5 × 1.7 cm) slightly displacing the optic chiasma (red arrow). The pituitary gland itself or the posterior pituitary cannot be separated from the mass lesion (A, sagittal post-contrast, T1-weigthed image; B, coronal view showing mixed solid and cystic leison); postoperative MRI showing stable postsurgical changes noted within the sella with no evidence of recurrence of tumour (C, sagittal post-contrast, T1-weigthed image).
Figure 2Tissue fragments contain a pituitary adenoma and compressed normal adenohypophysis (A, haematoxylin–eosin– ×10); neoplastic cells are uniform, show a peripheral rim of basophilic cytoplasm and perinuclear hyalinisation (B, haematoxylin–eosin – ×40); the adenoma shows ubiquitous expression of ACTH (C, ACTH immunoperoxidase – ×10); perinuclear hyaline changes consist of cytokeratin filaments (D, CAM5.2 immunoperoxidase – ×40).
Figure 3A cyst wall lined by flat and cuboidal epithelium on a thick basement membrane is adjacent to the normal adenohypophysis.