Endocrinology Research and Practice
Original Article

Investigation of the Pituitary Functions of Patients with Acromegaly Treated by Transsphenoidal Route: A Retrospective Analysis of 39 Cases

1.

Trabzon Numune Training and Research Hospital, Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Trabzon, Turkey

2.

Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Nutrition, Istanbul Faculty of Medicine, Capa, 34390, Istanbul, Turkey

3.

University of İstanbul, İstanbul School of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, İstanbul, Turkey

Endocrinol Res Pract 1999; 3: 33-36
Read: 1141 Downloads: 393 Published: 19 March 2022

ABSTRACT
In this study we analyzed the pituitary functions of 39 patients with acromegaly (22 male, 17 female; age (X±SD), 38±11 years; range, 16-64 years) treated by the transsphenoidal route between 1982-1996. Thirty-three patients had macroadenomas and 6 had microadenomas. The mean follow-up after surgery was 35±25 months (range:1-117 months). In 17 (43.6%) patients, there was complete remission after transsphenoidal surgery. Adjunctive radiation therapy was administered to 17 of 22 patients who did not experience a remission after surgery alone. An additional four of these were in remission by the end of the follow-up period. So the ratio of remission after surgery + radiation therapy was 21 in 39 (53.8%). The diagnosis of hypopituitarism was established according to clinical grounds and basal hormone levels in most of the patients. Eighteen of the 39 patients (46.2%) received no replacement therapy. Ten patients with panhypopituitarism received full replacement therapy. The most frequent replacement therapy was that of sex hormones (17 patients - 43.6%), the second one was glucocorticoid (14 patients - 36.8%) and the last one was thyroid hormone replacement therapy (13 patients - 34.2%). Permanent diabetes insipitus was seen in only two patients (5.1%). Relationships between the frequency of the replacement therapy and gender, tumor size, adjuvant radiotherapy, cure ratio, age, preoperative GH and prolactin levels and duration of the follow-up period are evaluated. There was a significant relationship between basal GH levels and frequency of glucocorticoid and thyroid hormone replacement therapy (p<0.05).

 
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