| Literature DB >> 31817511 |
Krystallenia I Alexandraki1, AshleyB Grossman2,3.
Abstract
: Hypopituitarism includes all clinical conditions that result in partial or complete failure of the anterior and posterior lobe of the pituitary gland's ability to secrete hormones. The aim of management is usually to replace the target-hormone of hypothalamo-pituitary-endocrine gland axis with the exceptions of secondary hypogonadism when fertility is required, and growth hormone deficiency (GHD), and to safely minimise both symptoms and clinical signs. Adrenocorticotropic hormone deficiency replacement is best performed with the immediate-release oral glucocorticoid hydrocortisone (HC) in 2-3 divided doses. However, novel once-daily modified-release HC targets a more physiological exposure of glucocorticoids. GHD is treated currently with daily subcutaneous GH, but current research is focusing on the development of once-weekly administration of recombinant GH. Hypogonadism is targeted with testosterone replacement in men and on estrogen replacement therapy in women; when fertility is wanted, replacement targets secondary or tertiary levels of hormonal settings. Thyroid-stimulating hormone replacement therapy follows the rules of primary thyroid gland failure with L-thyroxine replacement. Central diabetes insipidus is nowadays replaced by desmopressin. Certain clinical scenarios may have to be promptly managed to avoid short-term or long-term sequelae such as pregnancy in patients with hypopituitarism, pituitary apoplexy, adrenal crisis, and pituitary metastases.Entities:
Keywords: adrenal crisis; diabetes insipidus; growth hormone deficiency; hypopituitarism; pituitary apoplexy; pituitary insufficiency; pituitary metastases; secondary adrenal insufficiency; secondary hypogonadism; secondary hypothyroidism
Year: 2019 PMID: 31817511 PMCID: PMC6947162 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8122153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Etiology of hypopituitarism.
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| KAL, DAX-1, GH-1, GnRH, GHRH and TRH receptor mutations |
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| PIT-1, PROP-1, HESX-1, SOX 2 mutations |
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| Pituitary adenoma (Functioning and non-functioning) |
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| Autoimmune (lymphocytic hypophysitis, pituitary and POUF-1 antibodies) |
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| Bacterial |
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| Pituitary apoplexy |
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| Head injury |
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| Opiates (primarily gonadotropins, ACTH, GH) |
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| Surgery |
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Compounds that have been used for the adrenal insufficiency.
| Glucocorticoid | Time of Administration | Usual Doses |
|---|---|---|
| Hydrocortisone | 2–3 times daily; early morning, early afternoon, 6 h away from bedtime | 15–20 mg |
| Prednisolone | Once daily; morning | 3–5mg |
| Modified-release hydrocortisone (Plenadren) | Once daily; early morning | Equal to hydrocortisone or a dose increased at 20% compared with hydrocortisone |
| Modified-release hydrocortisone (Chronocort) | 2 times daily; before bedtime and early morning | 20 mg at 23:00 and 10 mg at 07:00 |
| Oral immediate-release granule formulation of HC (Alkindi) | Once daily; early morning | Equal to hydrocortisone but appropriate dosing for the children |
New compounds in long-acting forms in of growth hormone replacement treatment [64].
| Novel GH Long-Releasing Drug | Characteristics of the Formulations |
|---|---|
| Somapacitan | Reversible albumin-binding GH derivative |
| MOD-4023; GX-H9; LAPSrhGH/HM10560A; ProFuse GH | GH fusion protein |
| TransCon ACP-001 | long-acting sustained-release r-hGH prodrug |
| Jintrolong; BBT-031 | Long-acting PEGylated r-hGH |
| LB03002; CP016 | Depot |
| AG-B1512 | Fab antibody-binding GH molecule |
GH: Growth Homone; PEG-rhGH: Pegylated recombinant human growth hormone; r-hGH: recombinant human growth hormone.
Treatment in combined hormonal deficiencies and doses adjustments [7].
| Hormone Deficiencies | 1st Drug Introduced | 2nd Drug Introduced | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cortisol and TSH | GC | L-T4 | Thyroid hormone accelerates endogenous cortisol clearance |
| Cortisol and GH | GC | GH | Increased cortisol/cortisone metabolite ratio in GHD and GH suppresses cortisone to cortisol conversion |
| AVP and cortisol | GC | DDAVP | GC deficiency induces impaired free renal water clearance covering the polyuria of ADH deficiency |
| Doses adjustments | |||
| Gonadotrophin and TSH or cortisol | Increase in L-T4 or GC after treatment initiation of HRT | Estrogen-dependent liver production of thyroid-binding globulin (TBG) and corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) | |
| GH and TSH | Increase in L-T4 after treatment initiation of GH replacement therapy | 36–47% Euthyroid patients and 16–18% of hypothyroid patients developed low fT4 levels within 3–6 months of GH therapy initiation; IGF-1 levels are reduced in hypothyroid patients and GH stimulation tests may be blunted | |
| GH and oestrogen | Increase in GH doses after treatment initiation of HRT | Oestrogens ↓ circulating IGF-1 levels in GHD (↑ postprandial lipid oxidation and ↓ protein synthesis antagonizing the metabolic actions of GH). | |
| GH and DHEA | DHEA augments the IGF-I response | ↓ GH doses (females) | |
ADH: antidiuretic hormone; DDAVP: desmopressin; IGF: insulin-like growth factor; GC: glucocorticoid; GH: growth hormone; GHD: growth hormone deficiency; HRT: hormone replacement treatment; L-T4: levothyroxine; TSH: thyroid-stimulating hormone.