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Clinical profile and early therapeutic response to cabergoline of patients with hyperprolactinemia in a Cameroonian population

Hyperprolactinemia is responsible for 20 to 25% of consultations of secondary amenorrhea and 17% for female infertility. Dopamine agonists are the gold standard treatment of hyperprolactinemia. Although they are associated with various adverse effects, cabergoline is generally preferred due to bette...

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Autores principales: Etoga, Martine Claude Etoa, Sobngwi, Eugène, Ngoune, Pelagie, Doh, Emmanuella, Mekobe, Francine Mendane, Mbango-Ekouta, Noel, Dehayem, Mesmin, Foumane, Pascal, Mbanya, Jean Claude
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The African Field Epidemiology Network 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7026510/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32117518
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2020.35.2.12883
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author Etoga, Martine Claude Etoa
Sobngwi, Eugène
Ngoune, Pelagie
Doh, Emmanuella
Mekobe, Francine Mendane
Mbango-Ekouta, Noel
Dehayem, Mesmin
Foumane, Pascal
Mbanya, Jean Claude
author_facet Etoga, Martine Claude Etoa
Sobngwi, Eugène
Ngoune, Pelagie
Doh, Emmanuella
Mekobe, Francine Mendane
Mbango-Ekouta, Noel
Dehayem, Mesmin
Foumane, Pascal
Mbanya, Jean Claude
author_sort Etoga, Martine Claude Etoa
collection PubMed
description Hyperprolactinemia is responsible for 20 to 25% of consultations of secondary amenorrhea and 17% for female infertility. Dopamine agonists are the gold standard treatment of hyperprolactinemia. Although they are associated with various adverse effects, cabergoline is generally preferred due to better compliance, limited side effects and good therapeutic response. However, bromocriptine is widely and satisfactorily used in a context of limited availability of cabergoline. We sought to describe clinical manifestations of hyperprolactinemia and response to cabergoline in a sub Saharan Africa (SSA) setting. We describe the profile of all patients with a diagnosis of hyperprolactinaemia from 1(st) July 2012 to 15(th) May 2014 at the Endocrinology Department of Yaoundé Central Hospital. Patients with physiological hyperprolactinemia were not considered. All patients were routinely started on cabergoline at 0.5mg/week or at 1mg/week in case of macroprolactinoma or desire to become pregnant. The duration of follow up was 8-16 months. After three months of treatment, 8 of 10 patients with amenorrhea had menses and serum prolactin levels decreased significantly at month 2-3 (p = 0.025). In conclusion, our study suggests that cabergoline yields an excellent therapeutic response in a short period of time and may thus be cost saving in sub Saharan context despite its unit price.
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spelling pubmed-70265102020-02-28 Clinical profile and early therapeutic response to cabergoline of patients with hyperprolactinemia in a Cameroonian population Etoga, Martine Claude Etoa Sobngwi, Eugène Ngoune, Pelagie Doh, Emmanuella Mekobe, Francine Mendane Mbango-Ekouta, Noel Dehayem, Mesmin Foumane, Pascal Mbanya, Jean Claude Pan Afr Med J Case Series Hyperprolactinemia is responsible for 20 to 25% of consultations of secondary amenorrhea and 17% for female infertility. Dopamine agonists are the gold standard treatment of hyperprolactinemia. Although they are associated with various adverse effects, cabergoline is generally preferred due to better compliance, limited side effects and good therapeutic response. However, bromocriptine is widely and satisfactorily used in a context of limited availability of cabergoline. We sought to describe clinical manifestations of hyperprolactinemia and response to cabergoline in a sub Saharan Africa (SSA) setting. We describe the profile of all patients with a diagnosis of hyperprolactinaemia from 1(st) July 2012 to 15(th) May 2014 at the Endocrinology Department of Yaoundé Central Hospital. Patients with physiological hyperprolactinemia were not considered. All patients were routinely started on cabergoline at 0.5mg/week or at 1mg/week in case of macroprolactinoma or desire to become pregnant. The duration of follow up was 8-16 months. After three months of treatment, 8 of 10 patients with amenorrhea had menses and serum prolactin levels decreased significantly at month 2-3 (p = 0.025). In conclusion, our study suggests that cabergoline yields an excellent therapeutic response in a short period of time and may thus be cost saving in sub Saharan context despite its unit price. The African Field Epidemiology Network 2020-01-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7026510/ /pubmed/32117518 http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2020.35.2.12883 Text en © Martine Claude Etoa Etoga et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ The Pan African Medical Journal - ISSN 1937-8688. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Series
Etoga, Martine Claude Etoa
Sobngwi, Eugène
Ngoune, Pelagie
Doh, Emmanuella
Mekobe, Francine Mendane
Mbango-Ekouta, Noel
Dehayem, Mesmin
Foumane, Pascal
Mbanya, Jean Claude
Clinical profile and early therapeutic response to cabergoline of patients with hyperprolactinemia in a Cameroonian population
title Clinical profile and early therapeutic response to cabergoline of patients with hyperprolactinemia in a Cameroonian population
title_full Clinical profile and early therapeutic response to cabergoline of patients with hyperprolactinemia in a Cameroonian population
title_fullStr Clinical profile and early therapeutic response to cabergoline of patients with hyperprolactinemia in a Cameroonian population
title_full_unstemmed Clinical profile and early therapeutic response to cabergoline of patients with hyperprolactinemia in a Cameroonian population
title_short Clinical profile and early therapeutic response to cabergoline of patients with hyperprolactinemia in a Cameroonian population
title_sort clinical profile and early therapeutic response to cabergoline of patients with hyperprolactinemia in a cameroonian population
topic Case Series
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7026510/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32117518
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2020.35.2.12883
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