| Literature DB >> 31847209 |
Irene Samperi1,2,3, Kirstie Lithgow1,2,3, Niki Karavitaki1,2,3.
Abstract
Hyperprolactinaemia is one of the most common problems in clinical endocrinology. It relates with various aetiologies (physiological, pharmacological, pathological), the clarification of which requires careful history taking and clinical assessment. Analytical issues (presence of macroprolactin or of the hook effect) need to be taken into account when interpreting the prolactin values. Medications and sellar/parasellar masses (prolactin secreting or acting through "stalk effect") are the most common causes of pathological hyperprolactinaemia. Hypogonadism and galactorrhoea are well-recognized manifestations of prolactin excess, although its implications on bone health, metabolism and immune system are also expanding. Treatment mainly aims at restoration and maintenance of normal gonadal function/fertility, and prevention of osteoporosis; further specific management strategies depend on the underlying cause. In this review, we provide an update on the diagnostic and management approaches for the patient with hyperprolactinaemia and on the current data looking at the impact of high prolactin on metabolism, cardiovascular and immune systems.Entities:
Keywords: antipsychotics; dopamine agonists; hyperprolactinaemia; hypogonadism; prolactin; prolactinoma
Year: 2019 PMID: 31847209 PMCID: PMC6947286 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8122203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Main Causes of Hyperprolactinaemia.
| Physiological | Pathological | Pharmacological |
|---|---|---|
|
Ovulation Pregnancy Breastfeeding Stress Exercise Nipple stimulation or chest wall injury |
Prolactin-secreting pituitary adenoma “Stalk-effect” from sellar/parasellar lesions Renal Failure Liver Cirrhosis Primary hypothyroidism Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS) Seizures |
Antipsychotics/neuroleptics Antidepressants Antiemetics Opioids Antihypertensives |
Prevalence of hyperprolactinaemia (HPRL) amongst different medications [57,58].
| Drug | No Significant | HPRL in | HPRL in | HPRL in |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Typical antipsychotics |
Loxapine Pimozide |
Butyrophenone Phenothiazines Thioxanthenes | ||
| Atypical antipsychotics |
Aripiprazole Clozapine Ziprasidone |
Olanzapine Quetiapine |
Amisulpride Risperidone Sultopride Sulpiride Tiapride | |
| Tricyclic antidepressants |
Nortriptyline |
Amitriptyline Amoxapine Clomipramine Desipramine Doxepin Imipramine Maprotiline Trimipramine |
Clomipramine | |
| Monoamine oxidase inhibitors |
Clorgiline Pargyline | |||
| Antiemetics |
Alizapride Domperidone Metoclopramide Metopimazine | |||
| Antihypertensives |
Methyldopa Reserpine |
Verapamil |
Hyperprolactinaemia (HPRL) amongst different antipsychotics.
| Drug | Mild HPRL | Moderate HPRL (50–100 µg/L) | Severe HPRL |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aripiprazole * |
(0.36) |
(2.55) | |
| Olanzapine * |
(26.66) |
(11) |
(2) |
| Quetiapine * |
(9.09) |
(9) |
(5) |
| Depot Risperidone * |
(30.76) |
(23.07) |
(30.79) |
| Oral Risperidone * |
(14.58) |
(43.75) |
(22.91) |
| Oral Paliperidone * |
(18.18) |
(45.45) |
(18.18) |
| Depot Paliperidone * |
(13.33) |
(40) |
(40) |
| Phenothiazines ** |
| ||
| Amisulpride *** |
(45%) | ||
| Sulpiride ∞ |
| ||
| Haloperidol † |
|
|
* [56], ** [60], *** [61], ∞ [62], † [63].
Figure 1Proposed algorithm for investigating hyperprolactinaemia.