Pituitary Tumours Flashcards

1
Q

Functioning pituitary tumours

A
Acromegaly
Prolactinoma
TSHoma
Gonadotrophinoma
Cushing’s disease (corticotroph adenoma)
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2
Q

Pituitary tumour classification

A
Radiological (MRI)
Size
  Microadenoma <1cm (10mm)
  Macroadenoma >1cm (10mm)
Sellar or suprasellar
Compressing optic chiasm or not
Invading cavernous sinus or not

Function
Excess secretion of a specific pituitary hormone
eg prolactinoma
No excess secretion of pituitary hormone (Non Functioning Adenoma)

Benign or Malignant
Pituitary carcinoma very rare (<0.5% of pituitary tumours)
Mitotic index measured using Ki67 index – benign is <3%
Pituitary adenomas can have benign histology but display malignant behaviour

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3
Q

Kisspeptin

A

Hyperprolactinaemia

Prolactin binds to prolactin receptors on kisspeptin neurons in hypothalamus

Inhibits kisspeptin release

Decreases in downstream GnRH/LH/FSH/T/Oest

Oligo-amenorrhoea/Low libido/Infertility/Osteoporosis

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4
Q

Prolactinomas

A

Commonest functioning pituitary adenoma
Usually serum [prolactin] >5000 mU/L
Serum [prolactin] proportional to tumour size

Presentation
  Menstrual disturbance
  Erectile dysfunction
  Reduced libido
  Galactorrhoea
  Subfertility
Pregnancy/breastfeeding
Stress: exercise, seizure, venepuncture
Nipple/chest wall stimulation
Primary hypothyroidism
Polycystic ovarian syndrome
Chronic renal failure
Antipsychotics
Selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors
Anti-emetics
High dose oestrogen
Opiates
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5
Q

‘true’ elevation in serum prolactin

A

No diurnal variation, not affected by food

Macroprolactin
Majority of circulating prolactin is monomeric & biologically active
Macroprolactin is
‘sticky prolactin’
a polymeric form of prolactin
an antigen–antibody complex of monomeric prolactin and IgG (normally <5% of circulating prolactin)
Recorded on assay as elevation of prolactin – needs alternative method to confirm
Limited bioavailability and bioactivity
Can reassure patient

Stress of venepuncture
Exclude by a cannulated prolactin series
Sequential serum [prolactin] measurement 20 mins apart with an indwelling cannula to minimise venepuncture stress

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6
Q

Investigation of prolactinoma

A

pituitary MRI

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7
Q

Treatment of prolactinoma

A

First-line treatment is medical not surgical

Dopamine receptor agonists mainstay of treatment

Cabergoline (bromocriptine)

Safe in pregnancy

Aim is to normalise serum prolactin & shrink prolactinoma

Microprolactinomas will need smaller doses than macroprolactinomas

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8
Q

How do dopamine receptor agonists work

A

Anterior pituitary lactotrophs contain D2 receptors which inhibit prolactin production
Cabergoline works like dopamine to inhibit prolactin production by binding to D2 receptors

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9
Q

Excess GH

A
Gigantism = children
Acromegaly = adults
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10
Q

Acromegaly

A

Often insidious presentation – mean time to diagnosis from onset of symptoms = 10y

Sweatiness
Headache
Coarsening of facial features
Macroglossia
Prominent nose
Large jaw - prognathism
Increased hand and feet size
Snoring & obstructive sleep apnoea
Hypertension
Impaired glucose tolerance/diabetes mellitus
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11
Q

Mechanisms of growth hormone action

A

Direct effect by binding to growth receptors on bones

Also travel to liver where it tells liver to secret insulin like growth factor 1 and 2

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12
Q

Diagnosis of acromegaly

A

GH pulsatile – so random measurement unhelpful
Elevated serum IGF-1
Failed suppression (‘paradoxical rise’) of GH following oral glucose load – oral glucose tolerance test
Prolactin can be raised – co-secretion of GH & prolactin
Once confirm GH excess, pituitary MRI to visualise pituitary tumour

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13
Q

Treatment of acromegaly

A

Increased cardiovascular risk in untreated acromegaly
First-line treatment is surgical – trans-sphenoidal pituitary surgery
Aim to normalise serum GH and IGF-1
Can use medical treatment prior to surgery to shrink tumour or if surgical resection incomplete
Somatostatin analogues eg octreotide – ‘endocrine cyanide’
Dopamine agonists eg cabergoline (GH secreting pituitary tumours frequently express D2 receptors)
Radiotherapy (slow)

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14
Q

Cushing’s syndrome

A
Fat pads (buffalo hump)
Moon face
Easy bruising
Purple Striae (stretch marks)
Thin skin
Proximal myopathy (muscle weakness)
Poor wound healing
Hypertension and hypokalaemia

Occurs due to an excess of cortisol or other glucocorticoid

Causes of Cushing’s syndrome
Taking steroids by mouth (common) - ACTH independent
Pituitary dependent Cushing’s disease (pituitary adenoma) - ACTH dependent
Ectopic ACTH (lung cancer) - ACTH dependent
adrenal adenoma or carcinoma - ACTH independent

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15
Q

Investigation of Cushing’s disease

A

Elevation of 24h urine free cortisol - increased cortisol secretion

Elevation of late night cortisol – salivary or blood test – loss of diurnal rhythm

Failure to suppress cortisol after oral dexamethasone (exogenous glucocorticoid) – increased cortisol secretion

Once confirmed hypercortisolism, measure ACTH
If ACTH high, pituitary MRI ACTH dependent

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16
Q

Non-Functioning Pituitary Adenomas

A

Don’t secrete any specific hormone
Often present with visual disturbance (bitemporal hemianopia)

Can present with hypopituitarism
Serum prolactin can be raised (dopamine can’t travel down pituitary stalk from hypothalamus)

Trans-sphenoidal surgery needed for larger tumours, particularly if visual disturbance