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Recovery of hypopituitarism after neurosurgical treatment of pituitary adenomas

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TLDR
Patients with hypopituitarism after neurosurgery should be reassessed after surgery without substitution therapy, because practically half the preoperative pituitary hormone deficiencies recover postoperatively, eliminating the need for life-long substitution therapy.
Abstract
Surgery is the treatment of choice for many pituitary tumors; pituitary function may suffer after operation, but relief of pressure on the normal pituitary may also favor postoperative recovery of hypopituitarism. The aim of this study was to investigate the frequency of new appearance and recovery of hypopituitarism after neurosurgery and try to identify features associated with it. Pre- and postoperative anterior pituitary functions were investigated in 234 patients with pituitary adenomas (56 nonfunctioning, 71 PRL-secreting, 66 GH-secreting, 39 ACTH-secreting, 1 LH/FSH-secreting, and 1 TSH-secreting tumors). Eighty-eight new postoperative pituitary hypofunctions appeared in 52 patients (12 NF, 14 PRL-secreting, 15 GH-secreting, 10 ACTH-secreting, and 1 LH/FSH-secreting adenomas). They corresponded to 27% ACTH deficiencies (in 29 of the 107 patients with normal preoperative ACTH in whom postoperative evaluation was complete), 14.5% (15 of 103) new GH deficiencies, 10.5% (15 of 143; P < 0.0005, significantly less than ACTH deficiency) new TSH deficiencies, 16.5% (20 of 121) new gonadotropin deficiencies, and 13% (9 of 71) new PRL deficiencies. Preoperatively, 93 were deficient in at least 1 pituitary hormone; after surgery, 45 (48%) recovered between 1 and 3 hormones. The 2 patients with LH/FSH- and TSH-secreting macroadenomas did not recover pituitary function. Factors associated with a higher probability of postoperative pituitary function recovery were: no tumor rests on postoperative pituitary imaging (P = 0.001) and no neurosurgical (P = 0.001) or pathological evidence (P = 0.049) of an invasive nature. Tumor size did not differ significantly between those who did and those who did not recover pituitary function after surgery. Even if clear hypofunction is observed at initial work-up, patients should be reassessed after surgery without substitution therapy, because practically half the preoperative pituitary hormone deficiencies recover postoperatively, eliminating the need for life-long substitution therapy.

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ICAR: endoscopic skull-base surgery.

TL;DR: To consolidate and critically appraise the available literature, experts in skull‐base surgery have produced the International Consensus Statement on Endoscopic Skull‐Base Surgery (ICAR:ESBS).
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Non-functioning pituitary adenomas.

TL;DR: The management of patients with postoperative residual tumours is still a matter of debate and may include observation alone, the use of dopamine agonists or radiation therapy, and there are no controlled or comparative studies of the available therapeutic options; therefore, recommendations are not evidence based.
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A prospective study of nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas: presentation, management, and clinical outcome

TL;DR: With appropriate perioperative management of abnormal fluid, electrolyte, and endocrinological function, TSS was associated with minimum morbidity and was well tolerated by patients regardless of age, however, close screening of pituitary function and adequate neuroradiological follow-up should be performed after surgery for detection of tumor recurrence or regrowth.
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High Incidence of Neuroendocrine Dysfunction in Long-Term Survivors of Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

TL;DR: Long-term survivors of aneurysmal SAH frequently exhibit endocrine changes, with growth hormone and gonadal deficiencies predominating, and screening of pituitary function is recommended in patients surviving SAH.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dopamine agonists and pituitary tumor shrinkage

TL;DR: Preliminary evidence suggests that dopamine agonists may restrain the growth of some functionless tumors; most of these tumors, however, can be satisfactorily debulked using transsphenoidal surgery, although the number of tumors studied is small.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypopituitarism following external radiotherapy for pituitary tumours in adults.

TL;DR: There is a high incidence of anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies in patients treated surgically forpituitary tumours and the incidence increases after external radiotherapy and endocrine testing is recommended on an annual basis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reversible Hypopituitarism in Patients with Large Nonfunctioning Pituitary Adenomas

TL;DR: It is suggested that compression of the portal circulation is a possible mechanism for hypopituitarism in this setting and significant improvement in pituitsary function may occur after surgical adenomectomy for nonsecreting pituitary tumors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The clinical and endocrine outcome to trans-sphenoidal microsurgery of nonsecreting pituitary adenomas

TL;DR: Data indicate that trans‐sphenoidal microsurgery is an effective and safe initial treatment for patients with nonsecreting pituitary adenoma and may reverse hypopituitarism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outcome of transsphenoidal surgery for acromegaly using strict criteria for surgical cure

TL;DR: The results of transsphenoidal pituitary surgery for acromegaly were analyzed to assess the longer‐term outcome for patients not offered further treatment when post‐operative levels of GH < 5 mU/l were achieved.
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