Because administration for 1 week of the GnRH antagonist Nal-Glu GnRH had been shown to decrease FSH secretion from supranormal to normal in men with gonadotroph adenomas, we investigated the effect of prolonged administration of Nal-Glu on the size of gonadotroph adenomas. To quantitate the effect of Nal-Glu GnRH on gonadotroph adenoma size, we first developed a technique for calculating adenoma volume. The technique involved collecting magnetic resonance (MR) imaging data from each adenoma at 1-mm slice intervals in the coronal, axial, and sagittal views and using the Softvu computer program to calculate adenoma volume from the MR data. The precision of this technique, as judged by the coefficients of variation of the calculations of the same view of the same study three times, was 1.7%, 1.0%, and 1.0% for each of three studies. When Nal-Glu GnRH (5 mg, sc, every 12 h) was self-administered for 3-12 months to five men with gonadotroph adenomas and supra-normal serum FSH concentrations, the serum FSH concentrations decreased to normal or below normal for the entire treatment period. Adenoma size, however, did not change during treatment in any of the five men. We conclude that calculating pituitary adenoma volume from MR data using the Softvu computer program is a highly reproducible technique, but that Nal-Glu GnRH is not an effective treatment for reducing gonadotroph adenoma size. The failure of Nal-Glu to reduce adenoma size despite its success in reducing FSH secretion suggests that FSH secretion from gonadotroph adenomas is dependent on endogenous GnRH, but growth of gonadotroph adenomas is not.
Sucrose density-gradient analysis is one method of identifying specific estrogen and progesterone receptors in mammary tumor tissue. Use of the vertical rotor makes this practical for routine applications in the clinical laboratory by increasing the number of samples that can be run at one time and shortening the centrifuge time from 18 to less than 2 h. The separations and reproducibility compare favorably with those obtained with a swinging-bucket rotor.
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