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Bulletin
Volume 5, Issue, Fall 1999
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Articles in this
issue:
Acromegaly:
Complications and Therapeutic Update.
Neurocognitive Dysfunction in Patients
with Pituitary Ademomas.
ACROMEGALY:
COMPLICATIONS AND THERAPEUTIC UPDATE
by Laurence Katznelson, M.D.
Acromegaly is characterized by a number
of phenotypic changes including enlargement of the hands and feet,
facial changes such as frontal bossing, enlarged mandible and increased
dental spacing, arthralgias, fatigue, diaphoresis, sleep apnea,
hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Because it is a rare disorder and development of these clinical
features is insidious, patients typically have acromegaly for many
years before the diagnosis is made. Approximately 90% of all somatotroph
tumors, which cause this disorder, are macroadenomas (>1 cm)
at diagnosis. Therefore, these tumors frequently cause local anatomic
compression, resulting in visual field deficits, headaches, hypopituitarism
and cranial nerve palsies.
The pulsatile release of growth hormone
(GH) by normal pituitary somatotroph cells is regulated by growth
hormone releasing hormone (GHRH), which stimulates GH secretion,
and somatostatin, which decreases secretion. At the liver, GH stimulates
secretion of somatomedin C, also known as insulin-like growth factor
I (IGF-I). IGF-I mediates many of the peripheral somatic effects
of GH and feeds back at the level of the hypothalamus and pituitary
resulting in a reduction in GH secretion. Therefore, GH and IGF-I
levels are held in tight balance.
The diagnosis of acromegaly is based
on three key findings: 1) clinical evidence, 2) demonstration of
an elevated IGF-I level, and 3) inability to suppress serum GH to
less than 2 ng/ml following an oral glucose challenge (OGTT) using
a conventional radioimmunoassay or less than 1 ng/ml using an IRMA
or chemiluminescent assay.
Why do we treat? Short term benefits
of therapy include improvement of symptoms such as headaches, which
are often debilitating. In addition, there are long-term complications
of acromegaly that are of concern. There is a 2 to 5 fold increase
in the mortality rate in acromegalic patients and this is largely
due to cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease. In a recent long-term
follow-up of 162 subjects from the Massachusetts General Hospital,
therapy (regardless of modality) of acromegaly with resultant normalization
of IGF-1 was associated with a 3.5 fold reduction in the risk of
mortality compared to patients with active disease. Therefore, successful
management of acromegaly may negate the increased mortality risk.
There are multiple medical complications
associated with acromegaly. In part because of hypertension, there
is cardiac involvement that includes left ventricular hypertrophy
and congestive heart failure. Sleep apnea syndrome (both central
and obstructive) is detected in up to 80% of subjects and may result
in considerable morbidity. Acromegalics may also develop significant
arthropathy that may lead to pain, deformity, and necessitate joint
replacement. Left ventricular mass, sleep apnea syndrome, and arthralgias
may improve with therapy.
Patients with acromegaly may also be
at enhanced risk for cancer, and colon cancer is the most prevalent.
This risk is particularly increased in men over 40 years with a
positive family history of colon cancer and multiple skin tags.
Other malignancies, including breast cancer, have been described.
It is unknown whether successful treatment of acromegaly will reduce
the risk of neoplasia.
The primary mode of therapy for acromegaly
is surgery to reverse the mass effect and attempt biochemical cure.
Surgical cure is dependent on surgical skill and experience as well
as the size of the tumor. Cure, defined as normalization of IGF-1
levels and normalization of the GH response to an OGTT, is demonstrated
in up to 88% of patients with microadenomas (<1cm). In contrast,
up to 50-65% of acromegalic patients with macroadenomas are cured
following transsphenoidal surgery. Residual disease following transsphenoidal
surgery is therefore common, indicating the need for adjuvant therapy.
Radiation therapy is a potential adjuvant therapy for patients with
residual disease, however, there is a delayed effect in that 1/2
to 2/3 of subjects attain GH levels < 5 ng/ml by 10 years and
normalization of IGF-1 is more difficult to achieve. Hypopituitarism
is a significant complication of radiation therapy. Therefore, in
most patients, medical management may be necessary in surgically
non-cured patients in lieu of or in combination with radiation.
Medical management is a highly useful
adjuvant therapy for patients with residual disease or, in selected
subjects, as potential de novo medical therapy. Dopamine agonists,
including bromocriptine (Parlodel) may normalize GH and IGF-1 levels,
but in only 8% of patients. A new longer acting dopamine agonist,
cabergoline (Dostinex) is often better tolerated than bromocriptine.
Cabergoline may have improved efficacy compared to bromocriptine
and should be considered as an oral, therapeutic option in patients
with mild disease.
The most efficacious form of medical
therapy available includes somatostatin analogs, such as octreotide.
Many studies have demonstrated the efficacy of octreotide in the
management of acromegaly. The initial octreotide dose is usually
50 mcg b.i.d., and doses may be increased to 250 or 500 mcg t.i.d.
depending on the response of circulating GH and IGF-1 levels. However,
most studies show 300-900 mcg per day is an effective dose. Octreotide
administration results in a decrease in GH and IGF-1 levels in a
majority of patients with normalization of IGF-1 levels in up to
60% of patients, indicating biochemical remission. Most patients
note a marked improvement in their symptoms of acromegaly very soon
after starting octreotide therapy, including headaches, joint pains
and diaphoresis. The most significant adverse effect of somatostatin
analogs is the development of gallstones, so ultrasounds should
be obtained initially. However, the development of symptomatic gallstones
is very rare and the need for serial ultrasounds is controversial.
Other side effects include gastrointestinal disturbances with nausea,
abdominal pain and diarrhea which often occur after initiation of
therapy but usually resolve within 1 to 2 weeks.
A new approach to management of acromegaly
with somatostatin analogs has been the development of longer acting,
depot formulations of somatostatin analogs. These analogs are administered
intramuscularly at 2 to 4 week intervals. Sandostatin LAR (long
acting release formulation of Sandostatin) was recently approved
for use in the United States. Sandostatin LAR is available in 3
doses: 10 mg, 20 mg, and 30 mg and is administered once a month.
The efficacy and safety of Sandostatin LAR are similar to that of
Sandostatin, but the benefits of this depot preparation on quality
of life and compliance have been clear. Another depot formulation
of the somatostatin analog lanreotide is available in Europe and
is currently under investigation in the United States.
An exciting and novel therapy for acromegaly
currently under development is a growth hormone antagonist (GHA).
This GHA competes with natural GH for binding to its receptor and,
additionally, prevents receptor activation. This leads to lowering
of IGF-1 levels. In a recent study presented as an abstract at the
Endocrine Society, administration of a GHA in a randomized, double
blind placebo controlled trial to 46 acromegalics resulted in normalization
of IGF-1 levels in 92% of subjects. This included patients resistant
to somatostatin analogs. A GHA may have a critical role in the management
of acromegalic patients, particularly in those resistant to or intolerant
of conventional medical therapy.
References
1. Ho KY, Weissberger AJ, Marbach
P, Lazarus MB. Therapeutic efficacy of the somatostatin analog
SMS 201-995 (Octreotide) in acromegaly. Ann Int. Med. 1990; 112:173-81.
2. Serri O, Somma M, Comtois R, Rasio
E, Beauregard H, Jilwan N, Hardy J. Acromegaly: biochemical assessment
of cure after long term follow-up of transsphenoidal selective
adenomectomy. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1985; 61: 1185-9.
3. Bates A.S., Vant Hoff W.,
Jones J.M. Does treatment of acromegaly affect life expectancy?
Metab. 1995;44: 1-5.
4. Swearingen B, Barker FG (II),
Katznelson L, Biller BMK, Grinspoon S, Klibanski, Moayeri N, Peter
McL. Black, Zervas NT. Long-term mortality after transsphenoidal
surgery and adjunctive therapy for acromegaly. J Clin Endocrinol
Metab. 1998; 83: 3419-26.
5. Lancranjan I, Bruns C, Grass P,
et al. Sandostatin̉ LAR̉ : A promising therapeutic tool in the
management of acromegalic patients. Metabolism. 1996; 45, 67-71.
6. Barkan A, Dimeraki E, Besser GM,
et al. Treatment of acromegaly with B2036-PEG, a GH receptor antagonist.
Abstract. 1999 Endocrine Society Meeting.
NEUROCOGNITIVE
DYSFUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH PITUITARY ADENOMAS.
by Wesley P. Fairfield,
M.D.
"It is quite probable that
the psychopathology of everyday life hinges largely upon the effects
of a ductless gland discharge upon the nervous system" Harvey
Cushing, 1913.
Introduction and Overall Concepts
Patients with pituitary adenomas have
a higher prevalence of cognitive dysfunction than found in the general
population. The current literature has evaluated this association
with case control studies and are subject to the many biases inherent
to retrospective analyses. Although pituitary adenomas account for
10-15% of intracranial tumors, their relatively low prevalence makes
systematic prospective evaluation difficult. In addition, clinical
endpoints to evaluate cognitive functioning are often poorly standardized.
It is entirely plausible that pituitary adenomas are linked to cognitive
changes. The pituitary gland is situated in a region of the diencephalon
known to be important for memory processing. Patients who have been
diagnosed and treated for a pituitary adenoma may be exposed to
several factors which contribute to changes in cognition including
mass effect, hormone hypersecretion, hormone hyposecretion, radiation
damage, surgical damage and psychiatric issues related to concomitant
medical illness. Given a 9% prevalence of mood disorders in the
general outpatient population, most of the neurocognitive changes
observed in patients with small non-functioning pituitary adenomas
without surgical or radiation therapy are likely to be coincidental.
The prevalence of cognitive dysfunction in patients with pituitary
tumors and the relative contribution of known variables will be
discussed.
Mass effect
Pituitary tumors can present with raised
intracranial pressure, pituitary dysfunction or visual field compromise.
Other tumors commonly located in the region of the sella turcica
include craniopharyngiomas and suprasellar meningiomas and can present
with similar symptoms. Each of these tumors may produce alteration
in mental status that precedes the aforementioned features. In one
retrospective review of 49 patients with cranio-pharyngiomas, the
initial presenting feature was mental status abnormalities in 19%
of cases. Attribution of cognitive changes directly to mass effect
is confounded by the association of large sellar tumors with hypopituitarism
as well as surgical and radiation therapies employed to treat these
tumors.
Hormone Hypersecretion
Some forms of pituitary tumors may
result in psychiatric disturbance attributable to hormone hypersecretion
by the pituitary adenoma in the absence of mass effect, hypopituitarism,
surgical therapy or radiation therapy. Harvey Cushing in his original
description reported emotional disturbance as a prominent feature
of the syndrome bearing his name. Subsequently many series have
documented a high rate of neuropsychological deficits with endogenous
hypercortisolemia including cognitive changes, affective disorders,
disordered vegetative functions and acute psychoses. In a series
of 209 patients with Cushings, nearly 60% had significant
psychiatric illness and while the severity did not correlate with
degree of hypercortisolemia the depression was alleviated with adrenalectomy.
In a study by Dorn et. al., 33 patients with active Cushings
syndrome (29 with pituitary adenomas) were evaluated before as well
as 3, 6 and 12 months after correction of their hypercortisolism.
At baseline, 67% of patients had significant psychopathology which
persisted in 24% of patients at least 12 months after cure despite
recovery of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis by conventional
criteria. The authors speculate that long-term exposure to high
levels of cortisol may cause persistent psychiatric abnormalities
through dysregulation of hypothalamic CRH production, an area of
active investigation. Psychiatric symptoms attributable to hypercortisolemia
have also been reported in association with adrenal ACTH-independent
hypercortisolemia as well as ectopic ACTH-dependent hypercortisolemia
arguing against any psychiatric effect of the pituitary adenoma
itself, independent of hypercortisolemia in Cushings disease.
In addition, the neurocognitive and behavioral effects of exogenous
glucocorticoids are well described. However, the depression observed
with Cushings syndrome is often contrasted with the mood elevation
observed with exogenously administered therapeutic steroids. These
differences are presumed to be related to either the chronicity
of hypercortisolemia or differing levels of biologically active
steroids centrally and peripherally in the two different scenarios.
In several case reports, hyperprolactinemia
has been reported in association with psychiatric disease independent
of the use of psychotropic medications. It is not clear that an
association exists and in many such reports, it is difficult to
determine which effects may be due to estrogen deficiency or other
gonadal steroid changes versus the effects of hyperprolactinemia
alone.
The psychiatric accompaniments of acromegaly
have not been studied systematically although mood lability, apathy
and lack of initiative have been reported in association with this
disorder. Determination of an independent psychiatric effect of
having a somatotroph adenoma from the physical disfigurement and
symptoms associated with acromegaly is likely to be difficult.
Hormone hyposecretion
Hypopituitarism may result from impairment
of normal pituitary function by a pituitary adenoma. Neuropsychiatric
abnormalities have commonly been reported in association with hypopituitarism
including depression, apathy, and memory impairment. In addition,
cognitive changes are a well described feature of hypogonadism,
hypothyroidism, and adrenal insufficiency. Some studies have reported
neuropsychiatric abnormalities in patients with growth hormone deficiency
which improve with growth hormone therapy. However in a study conducted
at our center, Baum et. al. investigated the effects of growth hormone
on cognitive function in 40 men treated for hypopituitarism (32
had pituitary adenomas), all with untreated growth hormone deficiency.
Patients were randomized to receive either physiologic doses of
growth hormone or placebo in a double-blinded fashion. Patients
with growth hormone deficiency tested normally with respect to cognitive
functioning and IQ though scored relatively lower on tests of memory
and learning when compared with a standardized population. At baseline
and after 18 months of therapy, there were no differences observed
in cognitive function testing, psychometric testing and sense of
well being assessments. Neuropsychiatric abnormalities are subtle
(if present) in patients with adult-onset growth hormone deficiency
and neuropsychiatric function does not appear to improve with growth
hormone replacement therapy. Patients with cognitive defects attributable
to hypogonadism, adrenal insufficiency and hypothyroidism typically
respond to hormone replacement therapy as indicated. However, patients
with long-standing hypopituitarism have been described with persistent
apathy and loss of drive despite the institution of replacement
therapy.
Surgical therapy
The type of surgery used to remove
pituitary tumors has evolved with advances in technology. The transfrontal
route was the most widely used approach until the development of
the intraoperative microscope resulting in faster and easier access
to the pituitary via the transsphenoidal route when performed by
an experienced neurosurgeon. Transsphenoidal surgery is considered
less traumatic to the patient. Transfrontal surgery can still be
used for very large tumors inaccessible via a transsphenoidal route
and it is speculated that retraction of the frontal lobe may damage
small perforating arteries of the internal carotid artery resulting
in focal infarction and vasospasm. Any association observed in retrospective
studies linking surgical therapy and neurocognitive changes will
be confounded by selection bias as many larger tumors are more likely
to be treated surgically, often receive adjunctive radiation therapy,
and are associated with hypopituitarism.
Radiation therapy
Radiation was first used for the treatment
of pituitary tumors in 1909 and remains one of the primary modalities
of therapy for patients particularly with unresectable pituitary
macroadenomas. The existence of long-term neuropsychological changes
directly attributable to previous radiation therapy is debated in
the literature. The incidence of side effects resulting from radiation
therapy in the treatment of a pituitary adenoma is generally considered
to be very low. However, hypopituitarism as a late sequelae in these
patients is increasingly being recognized. Radiation necrosis is
a well-documented complication of radiation therapy often resulting
in severe impairment in cognition but is considered a rare side
effect in patients receiving radiation therapy for pituitary adenomas.
Neurocognitive and Neuropsychologic
Tests
Grattan-Smith et al described the spectrum
of neuropsychological abnormalities in a series of patients with
pituitary tumors. Although their primary interest was in patients
treated with radiotherapy (38 patients), they extended the study
to patients treated medically or surgically (27 patients) as well
as a series of 21 inpatients with chronic disease used as controls.
Specific tests evaluated patients by using eight neuropsychological
tests in three domains: executive functioning, verbal memory, and
visual memory. Both groups of pituitary tumor patients performed
below clinically accepted norms on seven of eight tests, and performed
well below the level of controls on tests of executive functioning,
verbal and visual memory. Performance on the tests did not differ
among pituitary patients treated with radiation versus other therapy.
Although this study provides helpful descriptive data on neuropsychological
abnormalities in these patients, the authors did not report the
overall prevalence of specific deficits, and the study had several
major limitations. The authors did not assess patients for depression,
nor did they adjust for time interval since diagnosis and treatment.
They were not able to adjust for other potentially confounding factors
associated with poorer function including type of tumor, medication
or recent treatment effects, and intercurrent illness. A final critical
point is that since most patients had been treated before the study
began, it was impossible to distinguish effects of the tumor from
treatment effects.
A recent study by Peace et al examined
69 patients with pituitary tumors (23 each having undergone either
transfrontal surgery, transsphenoidal surgery, or medical treatment),
and 23 healthy controls . Some of the patients in both surgical
groups received radiotherapy as well, and all surgeries were performed
at least two years prior to the study. Attention, memory, and executive
function were assessed using seven specific tests, in addition to
a test for overall intelligence. The authors reported deficits in
executive function and memory among patients with tumors, although
patients treated medically had milder memory deficits. Patients
treated with transfrontal surgery had the greatest degree of cognitive
impairment, with 43.5% having three or more test scores below the
10th percentile. Among transsphenoidal patients, 30.4%
scored below the 10th percentile on three or more tests,
compared with 21.7% of medically treated patients, and 5% of controls.
The authors do not report when surgery was performed and may overestimate
the impact of surgical therapy given recent developments of new
neurosurgical techniques resulting in less damage and less frequent
use of anti-seizure medications which can also interfere with cognition.
Radiotherapy treatment did not appear to affect test scores. Since
treatment decisions are necessarily nonrandom, differences between
treatment groups are subject to substantial selection bias and are
not directly comparable. The strength of this study is that it highlights
the high prevalence of cognitive abnormalities among patients with
pituitary tumors, including those treated non-surgically.
In the largest study, Guinan described
neuropsychological testing among 90 patients treated for pituitary
adenoma of any etiology. Treatment groups included transfrontal
surgery, transsphenoidal surgery with or without radiotherapy, radiotherapy
only, and bromocriptine only. The investigators assessed general
intellectual function, memory, executive function, language comprehension,
and speed of mental processing. The authors of this study also found
substantial memory deficits in all treatment groups compared with
healthy controls. Anterograde memory was most substantially affected.
Treatment group did not correlate with degree of impairment in general,
although bromocriptine-treated patients had less impairment on one
test of anterograde memory. Additional analyses showed no association
between cognitive function and tumor type or time elapsed since
treatment. This study was able to control for psychiatric disease
and examine effects of interval since treatment. As with the reports
from Grattan-Smith and Peace, the retrospective design limits evaluation
of treatment effects, since selection bias is expected to strongly
influence treatment choice and outcome. Nonetheless, these reports
suggest that neuropsychological deficits, particularly memory impairment,
are common among patients with pituitary tumors and persist long
after treatment completion.
Summary
Patients with pituitary adenomas appear
to be at risk for the development of neuropsychiatric abnormalities.
Patients with Cushings disease appear to be particularly at
risk for the development of psychiatric abnormalities. The available
literature has not established an independent association between
having a pituitary adenoma and cognitive changes when accounting
for mass effect, hormone hypersecretion, hypopituitarism, surgical
therapy and radiation therapy. Patients who report impaired memory
or other neuropsychiatric symptoms should be evaluated with formal
neuropsychiatric testing and referred appropriately based upon the
results.
References
- Cushing H. Psychic disturbances
associated with disorders of the ductless glands. Am J Insanity
1913; 69:965-990.
- Crane TB, Yee RD, Hepler RS, Hallinan
JM. Clinical manifestations and radiologic findings in craniopharyngiomas
in adults. Am J Ophthalmol 1982; 94:220-8.
- Cushing H. Basophilic adenomas of
the pituitary body and their clinical manifestations. Bull Johns
Hopkins Hosp 1932; 50:137.
- Dorn LD, Burgess ES, Dubbert B,
et al. Psychopathology in patients with endogenous Cushing's syndrome:
'atypical' or melancholic features. Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 1995;
43:433-42.
- Kelly WF. Psychiatric aspects of
Cushing's syndrome. QJM 1996; 89:543-51.
- Dorn LD, Burgess ES, Friedman TC,
Dubbert B, Gold PW, Chrousos GP. The longitudinal course of psychopathology
in Cushing's syndrome after correction of hypercortisolism. J
Clin Endocrinol Metab 1997; 82:912-9.
- Baum HB, Katznelson L, Sherman JC,
et al. Effects of physiological growth hormone (GH) therapy on
cognition and quality of life in patients with adult-onset GH
deficiency. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1998; 83:3184-9.
- Grattan-Smith PJ, Morris JG, Langlands
AO. Delayed radiation necrosis of the central nervous system in
patients irradiated for pituitary tumours. J Neurol Neurosurg
Psychiatry 1992; 55:949-55.
- Peace KA, Orme SM, Padayatty SJ,
Godfrey HP, Belchetz PE. Cognitive dysfunction in patients with
pituitary tumour who have been treated with transfrontal or transsphenoidal
surgery or medication. Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 1998; 49:391-6.
- Guinan EM, Lowy C, Stanhope N, Lewis
PD, Kopelman MD. Cognitive effects of pituitary tumours and their
treatments: two case studies and an investigation of 90 patients.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1998; 65:870-6.
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