Ketoconazole is an effective drug with acceptable side effects. It should be used under close liver enzyme monitoring. Hepatotoxicity is usually mild and resolves after drug withdrawal.
Objective: Few data are published on the long-term follow-up of ipilimumab-induced hypophysitis, a cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 antibody. We characterized hypophysitis in terms of clinical signs, endocrinological profile, and imaging at diagnosis and during a long-term follow-up. Design and patients: Fifteen patients, treated for malignant melanoma and who presented ipilimumab-induced hypophysitis, were observed between June 2006 and August 2012 in Timone Hospital, Marseille. Methods: Symptoms, pituitary function, and pituitary imaging at diagnosis of hypophysitis and during the follow-up were recorded. Results: Of 131 patients treated with ipilimumab or a placebo, 15 patients (10 mg/kg in 11/15) presented with hypophysitis (R11.5%) at 9.5G5.9 weeks (meanGS.D.) after treatment start, occurring in 66% after the third infusion. The main initial symptoms were headache (nZ13) and asthenia (nZ11). All patients but one had at least one hormonal defect: thyrotroph (nZ13), gonadotroph (nZ12), or corticotroph (nZ11) deficiencies. None had diabetes insipidus. Pituitary imaging showed a moderately enlarged gland in 12 patients. Clinical symptoms improved rapidly on high-dose glucocorticoids (nZ11) or physiological replacement doses (nZ4). At the end of follow-up (median 33.6 months, range 7-53.5), corticotroph deficiency remained in 13 patients, 11 recovered thyrotroph and ten gonadotroph functions. Pituitary imaging remained abnormal in 11 patients. Conclusion: Ipilimumab-induced hypophysitis is a common side-effect with frequent hormonal deficiencies at diagnosis. Usually, hormonal deficiencies improved, except for corticotroph function. Patients receiving these immunomodulatory therapies should be closely monitored especially by systematic baseline hormone measurements after the third infusion and remain at a risk of adrenal insufficiency in the long-term.
Context: Although transsphenoidal surgery remains the first-line treatment in Cushing's disease (CD), recurrence is observed in about 20% of cases. Adjunctive treatments each have specific drawbacks. Despite its inhibitory effects on steroidogenesis, the antifungal drug ketoconazole was only evaluated in series with few patients and/or short-term follow-up. Objective: Analysis of long-term hormonal effects and tolerance of ketoconazole in CD. Design: A total of 38 patients were retrospectively studied with a mean follow-up of 23 months (6-72). Setting: All patients were treated at the same Department of Endocrinology in Marseille, France. Patients: The 38 patients with CD, of whom 17 had previous transsphenoidal surgery. Intervention: Ketoconazole was begun at 200-400 mg/day and titrated up to 1200 mg/day until biochemical remission. Main outcome measures: Patients were considered controlled if 24-h urinary free cortisol was normalized. Results: Five patients stopped ketoconazole during the first week because of clinical or biological intolerance. On an intention to treat basis, 45% of the patients were controlled as were 51% of those treated long term. Initial hormonal levels were not statistically different between patients controlled or uncontrolled. Ketoconazole was similarly efficacious as a primary or postoperative treatment. Among 15 patients without visible adenoma at initial evaluation, subsequent follow-up allowed identification of the lesion in five cases. No adrenal insufficiency was observed. Adverse effects were rare in patients treated long term. Conclusions: Ketoconazole is a safe and efficacious treatment in CD, particularly in patients for whom surgery is contraindicated, or delayed because of the absence of image of adenoma on magnetic resonance imaging.European Journal of Endocrinology 158 91-99
Objective: Though transsphenoidal surgery remains the first-line treatment of Cushing's disease, recurrence occurs frequently. Conventional radiotherapy and anticortisolic drugs both have adverse effects. Stereotactic radiosurgery needs to be evaluated more precisely. The aim of this study was to determine long-term hormonal effects and tolerance of gamma knife (GK) radiosurgery in Cushing's disease. Design: Forty patients with Cushing's disease treated by GK were prospectively studied over a decade, with a mean follow-up of 54.7 months. Eleven of them were treated with GK as a primary treatment. Methods: Radiosurgery was performed at the Department of Functional Neurosurgery of Marseille, France, using the Leksell Gamma Unit B and C models. Median margin dose was 29.5 Gy. Patients were considered in remission if they had normalized 24-h free urinary cortisol and suppression of plasma cortisol after low-dose dexamethasone suppression test. Results: Seventeen patients (42.5%) were in remission after a mean of 22 months (range 12-48 months). The two groups did not differ in terms of initial hormonal levels. Target volume was significantly higher in uncured than in remission group (909.8 vs 443 mm 3 , PZ0.038). We found a significant difference between patients who were on or off anticortisolic drugs at the time of GK (20 vs 48% patients in remission respectively, PZ0.02). Conclusion: With 42% of patients in remission after a median follow-up of 54 months, GK stereotactic radiosurgery, especially as an adjunctive treatment to surgery, may represent an alternative to other therapeutic options in view of their adverse effects.European Journal of Endocrinology 156 91-98
Objectives: The French Acromegaly Registry records data of acromegalic patients' since 1992 in French, Belgian (Liège), and Swiss (Lausanne) centers. We studied the prevalence of diabetes in this population looking for risk factors. Patients from one of the centers (Reims) were then analyzed more thoroughly. Methods: This study has been conducted on all the patients recorded from 1999 until 2004 (519 patients). Evolution of cohorts' was reassessed in 2009. Of the different variables recorded in the registry: age, sex, body mass index (BMI), duration of acromegaly, GH, IGF1 and prolactin levels, pituitary tumor size, hormonal deficiencies, presence, duration and treatment of diabetes, hypertension, and rheumatological disease were analyzed. Results: The prevalence of diabetes in the registry was 22.3%. Diabetic patients were older and had a higher BMI. Compared with the data of the French Social Security, acromegalic patients showed a more precocious apparition of diabetes and prevalence was higher in each age group. Compared with non-diabetic acromegalic subjects, diabetic patients had a more prolonged evolution of acromegaly before diagnosis. The levels of GH and IGF1 were not significantly different between the two groups. Only hypertension was significantly more frequent in diabetic patients. Conclusions: In our population, the prevalence of diabetes was estimated to be 22.3%. The GH and IGF1 levels did not appear as predictive factors for the presence of diabetes. On the contrary, age, BMI, and hypertension were significant risk factors as in the general population of type 2 diabetics.
SR is an effective and safe primary or adjunctive treatment in selected patients with secreting pituitary adenomas.
Summary Pituitary carcinomas are rare, accounting for about 0·2% of all pituitary tumours. They represent a challenge to clinical practice in both diagnosis and treatment. They may present initially as typical pituitary adenomas, with a delayed appearance of aggressive signs, or as aggressive tumours from the outset. Predicting the pituitary tumour behaviour remains difficult: increased mitotic, Ki‐67 and P53 indices might be associated with tumour aggression. The treatment of pituitary carcinomas and aggressive pituitary tumours includes surgery, adjuvant medical treatment, external beam radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Until recently, the treatment of pituitary carcinomas was mainly palliative and did not seem to increase overall survival. Recent case reports have detailed the successful use of temozolomide, an orally administered alkylating agent used to treat malignant gliomas, in the management of pituitary carcinomas and aggressive pituitary tumours. The outcome of treatment might depend on the expression of O 6 ‐methylguanine‐DNA methyltransferase (MGMT), a DNA repair enzyme that potentially interferes with drug efficacy. This review describes the clinical presentation and response to temozolomide in 44 patients with pituitary carcinomas or aggressive pituitary tumours reported in the literature. The results suggest that temozolomide should be considered a drug of major importance in the therapeutic algorithm of aggressive pituitary tumours and pituitary carcinomas. Because of the inconsistency of published data, MGMT expression should probably not be taken as a reason to deny these patients the potential benefit of temozolomide treatment, taking into account the paucity of other available treatments.
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