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MON-326 Non Functioning Pituitary Adenomas (NFPA): Sex Related Differences in Presentation, Clinical Features and Outcomes

INTRODUCTION: NFPA are characterized as tumors without a typical hormonal hypersecretion syndrome. They are frequently diagnosed in the sixth decade, by visual field defects, hypopituitarism or incidentally. PATIENTS AND METHODS: retrospective and observational study that included 103 patients with...

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Autores principales: Rosmino, Josefina, Tkatch, Julieta, Guitelman, Mirtha Adriana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207969/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1795
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author Rosmino, Josefina
Tkatch, Julieta
Guitelman, Mirtha Adriana
author_facet Rosmino, Josefina
Tkatch, Julieta
Guitelman, Mirtha Adriana
author_sort Rosmino, Josefina
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: NFPA are characterized as tumors without a typical hormonal hypersecretion syndrome. They are frequently diagnosed in the sixth decade, by visual field defects, hypopituitarism or incidentally. PATIENTS AND METHODS: retrospective and observational study that included 103 patients with NFPA (60 females) who were seen between 1999 and 2019 in our hospital. We compared and analyzed patients characteristics by sex: reason for consultation, hormonal status at diagnosis, invasiveness of the tumor through MRI, treatments and outcomeRESULTS: out of 103 patients, 58,2% were women (W). Men (M) were significantly older than women (56 vs. 45 yold. p=0,002). The presence of a macroadenoma was similar in both sexes (93%W vs. 94,7% M), however tumor invasiveness was more frequent in men (50% vs. 24,6%). Most men consulted for incidental finding (47,4% vs. 29,8%); most women consulted for symptoms related to the tumor(70% vs 52%): hypogonadism 31,6% W, 13% M; galactorrhea 17% W; visual field defects 21,7% W, 23,7%M, pituitary apoplexy 11,6% M. At baseline hormonal assessment hyperprolactinemia was more frequent (50,9% vs 42%) and higher in women (mean PRL levels 75 ng/ml vs. 37 ng/ml). Hypogonadism was more frequent in men (54% vs 42%) as well as hypopituitarism (15% vs. 10,5%). Surgery was the most used therapy in both sexes (69% M vs. 73%W) but males required more frequently second surgery and radiotherapy than females (15% vs. 5% and 10% vs. 5% respectively). Gonadotropin secreting adenoma was diagnosed in 62% of men and 37,5% by tumor immunohistochemistry, in the 45% of women who presented negative immunostaining the presence of a gonadotrophic lineage is not ruled out, median Ki-67 labeling was low in both sexes (2%). After surgery 66% of men and 37% of women showed tumor remnant > 1cm (p=0,001), tumor regrowth was seen in 38,4% men and 10,4% women (p=0,03). Hypogonadism was greater in men than in women (56% vs 39%). Ninety two percent of men and 60,9% of women developed some degree of pituitary deficiency after surgery (P<0,001). Men showed a higher degree of complete hypopituitarism compared to women (pretreatment 15% vs 10,5%, post treatment 32% vs 13%). CONCLUSION: NFPA in men are usually diagnosed incidentally at an older age, are more invasive at presentation with a higher incidence of pituitary dysfunction. Moreover, they presented with greater rate of tumor regrowth and hypopituitarism after surgery. NFPA in women are diagnosed earlier due to endocrine symptoms, had lower degree of invasiveness with better outcomes after treatment. Sex related differences in NFPA may be associated with the delay in diagnosis, although a more aggressive biology cannot be discarded.
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spelling pubmed-72079692020-05-13 MON-326 Non Functioning Pituitary Adenomas (NFPA): Sex Related Differences in Presentation, Clinical Features and Outcomes Rosmino, Josefina Tkatch, Julieta Guitelman, Mirtha Adriana J Endocr Soc Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary INTRODUCTION: NFPA are characterized as tumors without a typical hormonal hypersecretion syndrome. They are frequently diagnosed in the sixth decade, by visual field defects, hypopituitarism or incidentally. PATIENTS AND METHODS: retrospective and observational study that included 103 patients with NFPA (60 females) who were seen between 1999 and 2019 in our hospital. We compared and analyzed patients characteristics by sex: reason for consultation, hormonal status at diagnosis, invasiveness of the tumor through MRI, treatments and outcomeRESULTS: out of 103 patients, 58,2% were women (W). Men (M) were significantly older than women (56 vs. 45 yold. p=0,002). The presence of a macroadenoma was similar in both sexes (93%W vs. 94,7% M), however tumor invasiveness was more frequent in men (50% vs. 24,6%). Most men consulted for incidental finding (47,4% vs. 29,8%); most women consulted for symptoms related to the tumor(70% vs 52%): hypogonadism 31,6% W, 13% M; galactorrhea 17% W; visual field defects 21,7% W, 23,7%M, pituitary apoplexy 11,6% M. At baseline hormonal assessment hyperprolactinemia was more frequent (50,9% vs 42%) and higher in women (mean PRL levels 75 ng/ml vs. 37 ng/ml). Hypogonadism was more frequent in men (54% vs 42%) as well as hypopituitarism (15% vs. 10,5%). Surgery was the most used therapy in both sexes (69% M vs. 73%W) but males required more frequently second surgery and radiotherapy than females (15% vs. 5% and 10% vs. 5% respectively). Gonadotropin secreting adenoma was diagnosed in 62% of men and 37,5% by tumor immunohistochemistry, in the 45% of women who presented negative immunostaining the presence of a gonadotrophic lineage is not ruled out, median Ki-67 labeling was low in both sexes (2%). After surgery 66% of men and 37% of women showed tumor remnant > 1cm (p=0,001), tumor regrowth was seen in 38,4% men and 10,4% women (p=0,03). Hypogonadism was greater in men than in women (56% vs 39%). Ninety two percent of men and 60,9% of women developed some degree of pituitary deficiency after surgery (P<0,001). Men showed a higher degree of complete hypopituitarism compared to women (pretreatment 15% vs 10,5%, post treatment 32% vs 13%). CONCLUSION: NFPA in men are usually diagnosed incidentally at an older age, are more invasive at presentation with a higher incidence of pituitary dysfunction. Moreover, they presented with greater rate of tumor regrowth and hypopituitarism after surgery. NFPA in women are diagnosed earlier due to endocrine symptoms, had lower degree of invasiveness with better outcomes after treatment. Sex related differences in NFPA may be associated with the delay in diagnosis, although a more aggressive biology cannot be discarded. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7207969/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1795 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
Rosmino, Josefina
Tkatch, Julieta
Guitelman, Mirtha Adriana
MON-326 Non Functioning Pituitary Adenomas (NFPA): Sex Related Differences in Presentation, Clinical Features and Outcomes
title MON-326 Non Functioning Pituitary Adenomas (NFPA): Sex Related Differences in Presentation, Clinical Features and Outcomes
title_full MON-326 Non Functioning Pituitary Adenomas (NFPA): Sex Related Differences in Presentation, Clinical Features and Outcomes
title_fullStr MON-326 Non Functioning Pituitary Adenomas (NFPA): Sex Related Differences in Presentation, Clinical Features and Outcomes
title_full_unstemmed MON-326 Non Functioning Pituitary Adenomas (NFPA): Sex Related Differences in Presentation, Clinical Features and Outcomes
title_short MON-326 Non Functioning Pituitary Adenomas (NFPA): Sex Related Differences in Presentation, Clinical Features and Outcomes
title_sort mon-326 non functioning pituitary adenomas (nfpa): sex related differences in presentation, clinical features and outcomes
topic Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207969/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1795
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