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Medical Treatment Achieves Similar Quality of Life to Surgically Treated Acromegaly Patients in Remission: The QuaLAT Study

Background: Quality of life (QOL) in acromegaly has been a subject of interest in several published studies; however, there is no consensus on how QOL in patients who require medical treatment after surgery compares with those who achieve remission by surgery only. Aim: Quality of life after acromeg...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Arshad, Muhammad Fahad, Ogunleye, Oluwafunto, Ross, Richard John M, Debono, Miguel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8090701/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1064
Descripción
Sumario:Background: Quality of life (QOL) in acromegaly has been a subject of interest in several published studies; however, there is no consensus on how QOL in patients who require medical treatment after surgery compares with those who achieve remission by surgery only. Aim: Quality of life after acromegaly treatment (QuaLAT) is a case-control questionnaire-based study with the aim to compare the QOL in those who were treated with surgery only with those who required medical treatment after surgery at a single tertiary centre for acromegaly. Methods: Patients with acromegaly attending endocrinology clinics were identified via our database. These were matched on the duration of disease into those who underwent surgery and went into disease remission biochemically (Group 1), and those who did not achieve biochemical remission after surgery and therefore required further medical treatment to control the disease (Group 2). Participants were then asked to fill three questionnaires to measure their QOL; Acromegaly Quality of Life Questionnaire (ACROQOL), and two generic questionnaires; 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF36) v2, and Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS). Results: 20 patients from each group participated in the study. The mean±SD duration of acromegaly (years) was similar in the two groups (9.8±6.9 vs 9.7±6.9 p=0.653). The majority of patients in the medical group were on somatostatin analogues, either alone or in combination (n=14), with four and two patients on cabergoline and pegvisomant alone respectively. There was no difference in QOL scores between groups 1 & 2, as measured by ACROQOL (mean score±SD 54.4±24.8 vs 55.3±26.1 p=0.765), SF36v2 (Physical component score 40.1± 11.1 vs 45.6±12.0 p=0.235; mental component score 41.7±13.0 vs 43.1±16.4 p=0.601), or FSS (mean score±SD 4.4±2.2 vs 4.5±2.0 p=0.985) questionnaires. There was no difference in ages between both groups and there were 75% females in group 1 and 45% in group 2. When compared with healthy controls as reported in the published literature, all three QOL scores were lower in our cohort [1-3]. Conclusions: Medical treatment achieves similar QOL to surgically treated acromegaly patients in remission in the long term. When compared with healthy controls, QOL remains worse in treated acromegaly patients. References:1. Webb, S.M., et al., Validity and clinical applicability of the acromegaly quality of life questionnaire, AcroQoL: a 6-month prospective study. Eur J Endocrinol, 2006. 155(2): p. 269-77.2. Jenkinson, C., et al., Assessment of the SF-36 version 2 in the United Kingdom. J Epidemiol Community Health, 1999. 53(1): p. 46-50.3. Ongre, S.O., et al., Progression of fatigue in Parkinson’s disease -A nine-year follow-up. Eur J Neurol, 2020.