Cushing's disease has not recurred in any patient with an undetectable serum cortisol (< 50 nmol/l) post-operatively. Serum cortisol should be regarded as a tumour marker in Cushing's disease and the aim of transsphenoidal hypophysectomy for Cushing's disease should be to render the immediate post-operative serum cortisol undetectable.
The 13th Acromegaly Consensus Conference was held in November 2019 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and comprised acromegaly experts including endocrinologists and neurosurgeons who considered optimal approaches for multidisciplinary acromegaly management. Focused discussions reviewed techniques, results, and side effects of surgery, radiotherapy, and medical therapy, and how advances in technology and novel techniques have changed the way these modalities are used alone or in combination. Effects of treatment on patient outcomes were considered, along with strategies for optimizing and personalizing therapeutic approaches.Expert consensus recommendations emphasize how best to implement available treatment options as part of a multidisciplinary approach at Pituitary Tumor Centers of Excellence.
When performed in an experienced endocrine unit with adequate supervision, the insulin tolerance test is a safe procedure. According to the current sample, fewer tests would be performed without detriment to patient care if those with a screening cortisol of greater than 500 nmol/l did not proceed to testing, unless the purpose of the test was also to exclude GH deficiency. A lower limit of 100 nmol/l appears reasonable and need not be revised upwards.
Immunotherapy treatment with checkpoint inhibitors (CPI) (CTLA-4 and PD-1 inhibitors) significantly improves survival in a number of cancers. Treatment can be limited by immune-mediated adverse effects including endocrinopathies such as hypophysitis, adrenalitis, thyroiditis and diabetes mellitus. If endocrinopathies (particularly hypocortisolemia) are not recognized early, they can be fatal. The diagnosis and management of endocrinopathies can be complicated by simultaneous multi-organ immune adverse effects. Here, we present Endocrine Emergency Guidance for the acute management of the endocrine complications of checkpoint inhibitor therapy, the first specialty-specific guidance with Endocrinology, Oncology and Acute Medicine input and endorsed by the Society for Endocrinology Clinical Committee. We present algorithms for management: endocrine assessment and management of patients in the first 24 hours who present life-threateningly unwell (CTCAE grade 3–4) and the appropriate management of mild-moderately unwell patients (CTCAE grade 1–2) presenting with features compatible with an endocrinopathy. Other important considerations in relation to hypohysitis and the maintenance of glucocorticoid therapy are discussed.
In this series of 150 cases, a single in-patient sleeping midnight cortisol above 50 nmol/l had a 100% sensitivity for the diagnosis of Cushing's syndrome, clearly different from normal subjects. In contrast, the low-dose dexamethasone suppression test had a sensitivity of 98% even when the drug was administered as an in-patient. We recommend that a low-dose dexamethasone suppression test should not be used alone for confirmation of Cushing's syndrome since it may miss 2% of cases.
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