Growth hormone tumor histological subtypes predict response to surgical and medical therapy

K Kiseljak-Vassiliades, NE Carlson, MT Borges… - Endocrine, 2015 - Springer
K Kiseljak-Vassiliades, NE Carlson, MT Borges, BK Kleinschmidt-DeMasters, KO Lillehei
Endocrine, 2015Springer
Growth hormone (GH) pituitary tumors are associated with significant morbidity and
mortality. Current treatments, including surgery and medical therapy with somatostatin
analogs (SSA), dopamine agonists and/or a GH receptor antagonist, result in disease
remission in approximately half of patients. Predictors of GH tumor response to different
therapies have been incompletely defined based on histologic subtype, particularly densely
(DG) versus sparsely (SG) granulated adenomas. The aim of this study was to examine our …
Abstract
Growth hormone (GH) pituitary tumors are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Current treatments, including surgery and medical therapy with somatostatin analogs (SSA), dopamine agonists and/or a GH receptor antagonist, result in disease remission in approximately half of patients. Predictors of GH tumor response to different therapies have been incompletely defined based on histologic subtype, particularly densely (DG) versus sparsely (SG) granulated adenomas. The aim of this study was to examine our own institutional experience with GH adenomas and correlate how subtype related to clinical parameters as well as response to surgery and medical therapies. A retrospective chart review of 101 acromegalic patients operated by a single neurosurgeon was performed. Clinical data were correlated with histologic subtype and disease control, as defined by IGF-1 levels, and random growth hormone levels in response to surgery and/or medical therapies. SG tumors, compared to DG, occurred in younger patients (p = 0.0010), were 3-fold larger (p = 0.0030) but showed no differences in tumor-invasion characteristics (p = 0.12). DG tumors had a higher rate of remission in response to surgery compared to SG, 65.7 vs. 14.3 % (p < 0.0001), as well as to medical therapy with SSAs (68.8 % for DG vs. 28.6 % for SG tumors; p = 0.028). SG tumors not controlled with SSAs consistently responded to a switch to, or addition of, a GH receptor antagonist. Histological GH tumor subtyping implicates a different clinical phenotype and biologic behavior, and provides prognostic significance for surgical success and response to medical therapies.
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