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MON-294 T2 MRI Signal Analysis of The Pituitary Gland Is Efficient in the Diagnosis of Acromegaly Due to GHRH Ectopic Secretion

Less than 1% of cases of acromegaly are secondary to ectopic secretion of Growth Hormone Releasing Hormone (GHRH), usually from a neuroendocrine tumor. Symptoms of ectopic acromegaly did not differ from classical acromegaly from pituitary origin. GH and IGF 1 values are in the same range. GHRH measu...

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Autores principales: Bonneville, Jean Francois, Potorac, Julia, Rohmer, Vincent, Daly, Adrian F, Beckers, Albert M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7208084/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1051
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author Bonneville, Jean Francois
Potorac, Julia
Rohmer, Vincent
Daly, Adrian F
Beckers, Albert M
author_facet Bonneville, Jean Francois
Potorac, Julia
Rohmer, Vincent
Daly, Adrian F
Beckers, Albert M
author_sort Bonneville, Jean Francois
collection PubMed
description Less than 1% of cases of acromegaly are secondary to ectopic secretion of Growth Hormone Releasing Hormone (GHRH), usually from a neuroendocrine tumor. Symptoms of ectopic acromegaly did not differ from classical acromegaly from pituitary origin. GH and IGF 1 values are in the same range. GHRH measurement only could make the correct diagnosis but is not routinely proposed in acromegaly. MRI of the pituitary gland is considered not very effective in ectopic acromegaly. In the literature (1), different patterns are described: pituitary enlargement (46%), adenoma (30%), empty sella (2%) or normal (20%). But T2MRI signal of the pituitary is never mentioned nor illustrated. Finally, in about 30 % of published cases, pituitary surgery, of course inefficient, was performed. These data enhance the poor contribution of imaging studies in the published cases of ectopic acromegaly. We have been able to obtain and read MRIs and particularly T2WI of 27 acromegalic patients- 20 female, 7 male- due to GHRH hypersecretion from a neuroendocrine tumor –principally bronchial carcinoid and pancreatic NET- which have been published or not. Remarquably, T2 sequences were available in only 27/61 cases we have collected. In all these 27 cases but two, the T2 signal was clearly hypointense if compared with the brain cortex, as it has been described in densely granulomated somatotropinomas (2). In one case with T2 hyperintensity, the pituitary mass presented the same imaging characters as multiple brain metastases from a bronchial carcinoïd. In one case, T2 signal was isointense. In 3 cases, tiny millimetric T2 hyperintense images were disseminated within pituitary hyperplasia. In several cases where pituitary MRI was considered as normal, correlation of the patient’age with pituitary size could make suspect an enlarged gland. In a case labeled empty sella, T2MRI signal of the pituitary remnant was hypointense. When coupling T2 and T1 gadolinium enhanced sequences, no pituitary adenoma was visualized and normal pituitary tissue was never identified along with pituitary hyperplasia. In conclusion, T2 MRI hypointense signal of the pituitary gland is a better hallmark than pituitary hyperplasia for the diagnosis of acromegaly due to GHRH ectopic secretion. Analysis of T2 MR signal in these cases is essential to avoid unnecessary interventions to the pituitary. References 1 Ghazi A Endocrine 2013 2 Potorac J Endocr Relat Cancer 2015
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spelling pubmed-72080842020-05-13 MON-294 T2 MRI Signal Analysis of The Pituitary Gland Is Efficient in the Diagnosis of Acromegaly Due to GHRH Ectopic Secretion Bonneville, Jean Francois Potorac, Julia Rohmer, Vincent Daly, Adrian F Beckers, Albert M J Endocr Soc Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary Less than 1% of cases of acromegaly are secondary to ectopic secretion of Growth Hormone Releasing Hormone (GHRH), usually from a neuroendocrine tumor. Symptoms of ectopic acromegaly did not differ from classical acromegaly from pituitary origin. GH and IGF 1 values are in the same range. GHRH measurement only could make the correct diagnosis but is not routinely proposed in acromegaly. MRI of the pituitary gland is considered not very effective in ectopic acromegaly. In the literature (1), different patterns are described: pituitary enlargement (46%), adenoma (30%), empty sella (2%) or normal (20%). But T2MRI signal of the pituitary is never mentioned nor illustrated. Finally, in about 30 % of published cases, pituitary surgery, of course inefficient, was performed. These data enhance the poor contribution of imaging studies in the published cases of ectopic acromegaly. We have been able to obtain and read MRIs and particularly T2WI of 27 acromegalic patients- 20 female, 7 male- due to GHRH hypersecretion from a neuroendocrine tumor –principally bronchial carcinoid and pancreatic NET- which have been published or not. Remarquably, T2 sequences were available in only 27/61 cases we have collected. In all these 27 cases but two, the T2 signal was clearly hypointense if compared with the brain cortex, as it has been described in densely granulomated somatotropinomas (2). In one case with T2 hyperintensity, the pituitary mass presented the same imaging characters as multiple brain metastases from a bronchial carcinoïd. In one case, T2 signal was isointense. In 3 cases, tiny millimetric T2 hyperintense images were disseminated within pituitary hyperplasia. In several cases where pituitary MRI was considered as normal, correlation of the patient’age with pituitary size could make suspect an enlarged gland. In a case labeled empty sella, T2MRI signal of the pituitary remnant was hypointense. When coupling T2 and T1 gadolinium enhanced sequences, no pituitary adenoma was visualized and normal pituitary tissue was never identified along with pituitary hyperplasia. In conclusion, T2 MRI hypointense signal of the pituitary gland is a better hallmark than pituitary hyperplasia for the diagnosis of acromegaly due to GHRH ectopic secretion. Analysis of T2 MR signal in these cases is essential to avoid unnecessary interventions to the pituitary. References 1 Ghazi A Endocrine 2013 2 Potorac J Endocr Relat Cancer 2015 Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7208084/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1051 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
Bonneville, Jean Francois
Potorac, Julia
Rohmer, Vincent
Daly, Adrian F
Beckers, Albert M
MON-294 T2 MRI Signal Analysis of The Pituitary Gland Is Efficient in the Diagnosis of Acromegaly Due to GHRH Ectopic Secretion
title MON-294 T2 MRI Signal Analysis of The Pituitary Gland Is Efficient in the Diagnosis of Acromegaly Due to GHRH Ectopic Secretion
title_full MON-294 T2 MRI Signal Analysis of The Pituitary Gland Is Efficient in the Diagnosis of Acromegaly Due to GHRH Ectopic Secretion
title_fullStr MON-294 T2 MRI Signal Analysis of The Pituitary Gland Is Efficient in the Diagnosis of Acromegaly Due to GHRH Ectopic Secretion
title_full_unstemmed MON-294 T2 MRI Signal Analysis of The Pituitary Gland Is Efficient in the Diagnosis of Acromegaly Due to GHRH Ectopic Secretion
title_short MON-294 T2 MRI Signal Analysis of The Pituitary Gland Is Efficient in the Diagnosis of Acromegaly Due to GHRH Ectopic Secretion
title_sort mon-294 t2 mri signal analysis of the pituitary gland is efficient in the diagnosis of acromegaly due to ghrh ectopic secretion
topic Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7208084/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1051
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