|
|
||||||||
CLINICAL STUDY |
1 Pituitary Centre Nijmegen, Department of Endocrinology 2 Department of Neurosurgery and 3 Department of Chemical Endocrinology, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Geert Grooteplein 8, 6500 HB, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
(Correspondence should be addressed to Romana T Netea-Maier; Email: R.Netea-Maier{at}endo.umcn.nl)
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Methods: Remission was defined as suppression of plasma cortisol (
50 nmol/L) after 1 mg dexamethasone overnight determined in the first 3 months after surgery and disappearance of clinical signs and symptoms of hypercortisolism. The patients were followed for an average of 27 months (range 4 to 81 months, median 20 months).
Results: Pituitary MRI showed a macroadenoma in 6 patients, a microadenoma in 17 patients and no adenoma in 12 patients. After the initial surgery 27 patients (77%) were in remission. None of the patients had a relapse during follow-up. In the remaining 8 patients hypercortisolemia persisted after surgery. Three of them had a second endoscopic pituitary surgery resulting in remission in two patients. In one patient a second endoscopic pituitary surgery will soon follow. The remaining four patients were treated with radiotherapy postoperatively. Two of them were at the time of data collection in remission. One patient from the remission group had a serious epistaxis and three patients had cerebrospinal fluid leakage, one requiring an external lumbar drain, shortly after surgery. No complications were recorded in the failure group. Postoperatively 34% of all patients required substitution with levothyroxine, 40% required substitution with glucocorticoids, 17% received estrogens or testosterone and 6% still required desmopressin.
Conclusions: Endoscopic transsphenoidal pituitary surgery resulted in our series of patients with Cushings disease in an excellent postoperative remission rate. A randomized clinical trial, comparing endoscopic and conventional pituitary surgery in patients with Cushings disease, is needed to determine the pros and cons of both techniques.
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The endoscopic technique has been recently introduced in the field of pituitary surgery (1823). Traditional surgical approaches to pituitary tumors are based on transseptal or sublabial transsphenoidal access to the sella turcica (20). The endoscopic endonasal approach avoids transseptal dissection, thus reducing patient discomfort and postoperative pain. The endoscope has increasingly been used in pituitary surgery since the mid 1990s either in conjunction with the microscopic technique (24) or as a pure endoscopic procedure (18, 25, 26). Especially the better panoramic visualization of sellar, supra- and parasellar anatomy with increased illumination and magnification are recognized as major advantages offered by the endoscopic technique (21, 25, 27). Some concerns have been raised regarding the lack of stereoscopic view with the endoscope and the lack of maneuverability as surgeons can only manipulate tools with one hand unless a holder is used, which in turn may crowd the operative field (19, 27, 28). These disadvantages can, however, be reduced by using more refined instrumentation (19, 27). Initial reports showed a decrease in postoperative discomfort and hospitalization time as well as a quick recovery in patients operated by the endoscopic technique in comparison with the conventional microscopic technique (25, 2931). Decreased operative time and decreased blood loss as compared with open transsphenoidal surgery have also been reported (3133). The endoscopic approach is safe, all authors reporting low complication rates (25, 26, 3035). It is minimally traumatic and permits easier reoperations (1821, 23). This makes the endoscopic pituitary approach attractive for patients with Cushings disease in an attempt to avoid bleeding complications that are particularly feared because of the hypercortisolemic status.
To our knowledge, there are no specific studies on the results of endoscopic pituitary surgery in patients with Cushings disease. Endoscopic pituitary surgery was introduced in our hospital in 1997 and it has been applied in all patients with Cushings disease treated in our centre since 1998. The aim of our study was to analyze retrospectively the results of pituitary surgery in the 35 consecutive patients with Cushings disease who have been operated in our hospital after the introduction of the endoscopic technique (19982004).
| Patients and methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The medical records of the 35 consecutive patients with Cushings disease undergoing endoscopic pituitary surgery in our hospital between 1998 and 2004 were analyzed. There were 25 females and 10 males, age at the time of diagnosis was 41.0±14.8 years and BMI was 28.7±5.3 kg/m2. We collected data on the preoperative and the early postoperative evaluation, on complications that occurred during the operation or in the early postoperative period and on the last evaluation at the most recent follow-up visit.
Preoperative evaluation
Diagnosis of hypercortisolism was based on clinical grounds and biochemical tests including repeated 24-h urinary free cortisol (UFC) measurements, assessment of the circadian rhythm of plasma cortisol with midnight plasma cortisol measurement and determination of plasma cortisol after overnight low dose dexamethasone (1 mg at 2300 h) (36). Pituitary imaging by MRI with i.v. contrast (gadolineum) was performed in all patients. Six of the 35 patients had a macroadenoma (defined as
1 cm in diameter) on the preoperative MRI. In the other patients the MRI showed either a tumor <1 cm (17 patients) or no evidence of a tumor (12 patients). In addition, the results of the CRH test (100 µg human CRH i.v.) (37), and the high-dose dexamethasone test (7 mg dexamethasone in 7 hours i.v.) (38) were used to demonstrate the pituitary origin of the hypercortisolism. In 12 patients bilateral catheterisation of the inferior petrosal sinuses was performed with blood sampling before and after i.v. stimulation with 100 µg human CRH (39), to confirm the pituitary origin of the hypercortisolism in all 12 patients.
Treatment with cortisol lowering agents before surgery and with glucocorticoids in the perioperative period
Treatment with cortisol lowering agents, metyrapone and/or ketoconazole, was given in 30 patients for a period of 4 months preoperatively. On the day of surgery, administration of glucocorticoids i.v. was started (prednisolone, 25 mg every 8 h i.v. for two days) with the first dose one hour before the start of the operation. Thereafter, the dose of glucocorticoids was decreased rapidly (prednisolone orally 50 mg on day 2, 25 mg on day 3 and 4) during the next days so that the patients received the last dose of glucocorticoids as 10 mg prednisolone orally on the fifth day postoperatively. Thereafter, no further glucocorticoids were administered until the seventh day postoperatively, after blood sampling for the first endocrine evaluation. The interval between the last dose of glucocorticoids and the first postoperative measurement of fasting plasma cortisol was at least 48 h.
Surgical technique
Our technique is based on the pioneering work of Jho et al. (22, 23) and Cappabianca et al. (18, 19). However, we (EJvL and JAG) modified the technique by using a binostril, transsphenoidal, endoscopic approach to the sella turcica with a handheld endoscope.
The optic instrument used was a 5° lensscope with a diameter of 4 mm and a separate shaft around it for irrigation and suction to clear the front lens. This instrument allows by its pistol grip an easy and comfortable handling (Richard Wolf GmbH, Knittlingen, Germany). The maximal outer diameter of the oval-shaped shaft is 6.3 mm. A 25° optic is available for use in specific situations.
The camera used is the StereositeTM (Vista Medical Technologies Inc., Carlsbad, California, USA). This camera system incorporates a Head-Mounted Display (HMD) that is worn by the surgeon during all phases of the operation. The endoscopic picture is projected on LCD-screens from the HMD with a resolution of 640 * 480 pixels. The instruments used are principally the same as those used during a conventional microsurgical procedure.
In cases where the tumor is identified by MRI or during the operation, selective adenomectomy is performed. In case of negative MRI investigations and a negative pituitary exploration, a hemihypophysectomy is performed, preferentially based on lateralization of ACTH levels during inferior petrosal sinus sampling. Only in cases of persisting hypercortisolism after surgery, a total adenohypophysectomy is performed in a second surgical procedure.
Postoperative evaluation
The early postoperative biochemical evaluation consisted of measuring the fasting (0800 h) plasma levels of ACTH and cortisol on the seventh day after surgery (48 h after the last dose of glucocorticoids). In patients with a basal plasma cortisol concentration below 200 nmol/L substitution therapy with hydrocortisone, 30 mg once daily, or cortisone acetate, 37.5 mg once daily, was prescribed. Patients were re-evaluated every 24 weeks during the first 3 months and thereafter at 23 months intervals during the first year after surgery and at least yearly thereafter. At each visit the fasting plasma cortisol concentration was measured after withdrawal of glucocorticoid substitution for 24 h. In addition, a low dose dexamethasone suppression test (1 mg overnight) was performed at 1 and 3 months after surgery. In every patient in whom glucocorticoid substitution was started after surgery, we tried to reduce the dose of oral glucocorticoids starting 3 months after surgery and to stop glucocorticoid substitution within 12 months after surgery. After stopping glucocorticoid substitution the integrity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis was assessed in these patients by the insulin-hypoglycemia test (40). In all patients who were in remission of hypercortisolism after pituitary surgery, low dose dexamethasone suppression tests (1 mg overnight) were performed yearly and of course earlier when there was a clinical suspicion of recurrence of the hypercortisolism.
Assessment of the thyrotropic, gonadotropic and somatotropic axis was performed at regular intervals by measuring the serum concentrations of thyrotropin (TSH), free thyroxine (FT4), gonadotropins (LH and FSH), testosterone, estradiol and insulin-like growth factor- 1 (IGF-1). In case of clinical suspicion of growth hormone (GH) deficiency a GH stimulation test (preferably an insulin-hypoglycemia test) was performed.
Criteria for remission and relapse
Remission was defined as adequate suppression of plasma cortisol (
50 nmol/L) after 1 mg dexamethasone overnight determined in the first 3 months after surgery and disappearance of clinical signs and symptoms of hypercortisolism.
Relapse was defined as development of inadequate suppression of plasma cortisol after 1 mg dexamethasone overnight in a patient who was postoperatively in remission according to the above-mentioned criteria.
Assays
ACTH was measured in EDTA plasma by a two-step immunoradiometric assay (IRMA, Dynotest BRAHMS, Berlin, Germany). Within and between assay coeficients of variations (CV) were 5.8% and 7.4% at a level of 2.4 pmol/L and 4.7% and 4.0% at a level of 29.9 pmol/L. A functional detection limit of 0.8 pmol/L was established. The reference range is 2.213.2 pmol/L.
Plasma cortisol was measured by radioimmunoassay. In patients who were treated with metyrapone and/or ketoconazole the radioimmunoassay was done after previous extraction and paper chromatography (41). To summarize briefly, before extraction 3H-cortisol was added to correct for procedural losses. After chromatography, the location of the cortisol zone was identified by radiochromatogram scanning, the zone was cut out and soaked in buffer. The recovered radioactivity was measured by liquid scintillation counting of an aliquot from the eluate. Subsequently, cortisol tracer and antiserum were added and after incubation, free and bound tracers were separated by means of dextran coated charcoal. The antibody bound radioactivity was assessed by liquid scintillation counting of the supernatant. The calculations were performed by special software designed for correction of the mass and radioactive contribution of the recovery tracer in the RIA. Using a sample volume of 0.05 ml, the detection limit was 1.4 nmol/L. The between-assay CV was 5.9% at a level of 320 nmol/L. Accuracy was assessed over a longer period of time by measurement of QC samples in which the cortisol levels had been established by GC/MS, which resulted in 100.7±2.4% (n= 40) of the target value.
The reference range is 190500 nmol/L (at 0800 h).
Statistics
Chi-square tests were used to test for differences in the proportion of patients with macroadenomas, histological confirmation of the ACTH producing adenoma and use of cortisol lowering medication between the remission and failure groups. Statistical significance was considered when P < 0.05 (two-tailed).
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
When comparing the groups of patients with successful and unsuccessful initial pituitary surgery, a macroadenoma was present in 25% of the patients with unsuccessful and in 14% of the patients with successful surgery (P = 0.37), whilst the percentage of patients that were treated preoperatively with cortisol lowering agents was the same (85.5% in both groups). The percentage of patients in whom the presence of an ACTH producing adenoma was confirmed histologically was 81% in the succesfully compared to 50% in the unsuccesfully operated patients (P = 0.061).
Ten of the 27 patients who had a successful initial surgery had complications perioperatively. Two patients had mild epistaxis controlled with nasal tampons (patients 12 and 25). In one patient (patient 13), a bleeding originating in the sphenopalatinal artery occurred postoperatively. This required a second exploration with successful coagulation of the artery. In this patient bleeding was not present at the end of the first surgery, most likely due to vasoconstriction by injection of epinephrine around the sphenoid ostium. The patient recovered within a few days after the second operation without other complications. Three patients had mild cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage that resolved spontaneously in two of them within a few days (patients 3 and 23) and in the third patient CSF drainage was performed using a lumbal external drain (patient 22). There were two episodes of sudden drop in blood pressure that occurred one week after surgery (patients 23 and 32) caused by glucocorticoid deficiency as both patients were at that time 48 h after withdrawal of glucocorticoids and they both recovered shortly after administration of glucocorticoids. Three additional patients received transiently desmopressin due to polyuria that resumed after the first days postoperatively. One patient developed mild hyponatremia two weeks after surgery, probably due to a combination of inappropriate ADH secretion and concomitant use of thiazide diuretics. This resolved within two days after the diuretics were discontinued and after starting water restriction. There has been no complication in the failure group.
According to the last follow-up data, 22 (17 from the remission group and 5 from the failure group) of the 35 patients received substitution therapy for deficiency of one or more hormones. These data are summarized in Table 1
. Of all patients, 34% required substitution with levothyroxine, 40% required substitution with glucocorticoids, 17% received estrogens or testosterone and 5.7% still required desmopressin. Six of the 14 patients still using glucocorticoids had a follow-up of less than 18 months with glucocorticoid dosages still being tapered, so a definitive statement of their adrenal function cannot yet be made.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Due to its recent introduction, there are only few reports describing larger series of patients with pituitary tumors operated via the endoscopic technique (25, 29, 35). It seems that the endocrine outcomes of the patients reported in these initial series are similar to those achieved by the conventional microscopic technique. Cappabianca et al.(29) reported on 87 patients with various pituitary adenomas, including 8 patients with Cushings disease, that were treated with endoscopic endonasal transsphenoidal pituitary surgery between 1997 and 1999. As remission criterion for patients with Cushings disease the authors adopted a restoration of the circadian rhythm of cortisol together with the normalization of urinary cortisol levels. Three of these 8 patients had a macroadenoma, one of whom showed parasellar extension with incomplete third cranial nerve palsy. Among the patients with a microadenoma, one underwent a second operation one day after the first surgery because of residual tumor detected on the MRI. Only one patient (having a microadenoma) of this series remained hypercortisolemic after the pituitary operation and was treated additionally by bilateral adrenalectomy. The authors reported no complications during or after surgery in the patients with Cushings disease. Jho et al. (25) reported in a series of 128 patients with pituitary adenomas operated by endoscopic transsphenoidal surgery, including 16 patients with Cushings disease, that 70% of the patients with Cushings disease had a (sub-)normal postoperative cortisol level. Although these results seem promising, the number of patients with Cushings disease in these series was too small and postoperative biochemical evaluation was not extensive.
The short follow-up of the patients in our series, due to the recent introduction of the endoscopic technique in the field of pituitary surgery, does not allow us to make any comments on the long-term remission rates of our patients. As previously shown in other series of patients with Cushings disease, recurrences may develop many years after apparently successful surgical treatment (13, 5, 710, 1215). However, our early postoperative results of endoscopic pituitary surgery in a large number of patients with Cushings disease are in line with the previous studies, reporting on smaller number of patients (25, 29, 35) and with the results of other large single center series of patients operated by traditional transsphenoidal pituitary microsurgery previously reported (Table 2
). Early postoperative cure rates ranging from 68.5 to 87% have been reported in those large series (13, 5, 710, 1215). These differences in remission rates can be at least, in part explained by the different remission criteria used in those studies. Based on the principle that high preoperative plasma cortisol levels suppress normal corticotroph cell function and that complete removal of a corticotroph adenoma will render the patient ACTH deficient with low to undetectable cortisol levels postoperatively, some authors have adopted as criterion for remission a postoperative plasma cortisol value of <50 nmol/L (3, 12, 42). However Yap et al. (3) showed that even a cortisol level <50 nmol/l early after surgery does not always predict the long-term remission of Cushings disease. Interestingly, Pereira et al. (1) recently found that a fasting cortisol level <138 nmol/L measured 3 months after the operation is a stronger predictor for long-term relapse than a plasma cortisol level <50 nmol/L measured early postoperatively. As most of our patients were treated preoperatively with cortisol lowering medication, that renders them less prone to hypocortisolism early postoperatively, we adopted as biochemical remission criterion in these patients suppression of the plasma cortisol level to 1 mg dexamethasone overnight.
|
In our series there were only few serious surgical complications postoperatively. One serious bleeding requiring a reoperation took place and only one patient had CSF leakage requiring a lumbal external drain, which is similar to the experience of Hammer et al. (5) in their series of 289 patients with Cushing disease treated by conventional microscopic transsphenoidal surgery, in which 13 patients required a drain or surgical repairment for CSF leakage (5). An important aspect that needs to be stressed when comparing the frequency of complications reported in various studies (13, 5, 710, 1215) is that, in these studies, different definitions are used for each complication. Moreover, as all of these studies report retrospective results, one must be careful in interpreting and comparing these results that basically rely on the accuracy by which the complications were recorded in each individual patient.
We cannot make a statement on whether applying the endoscopic technique can modify the postoperative hospitalization time. The protocol used in our hospital, both before and after the introduction of endoscopic pituitary surgery, is that all patients treated for Cushings disease remain under clinical observation for 7 days until the early postoperative endocrine evaluation has taken place. In this way we ensured a uniform and objective early postoperative observation and registration of postoperative events.
In our series the surgery was as selective as possible in order to avoid damaging of normal pituitary tissue. Nevertheless, 63% of the patients required hormonal substitution therapy with one or more preparations at the time of last follow-up, including those requiring temporary glucocorticoid substitution. When patients requiring only glucocorticoid replacement therapy were excluded, hypopituitarism, defined as proven deficiency of at least one of the pituitary hormones, was present in 48% of the patients. However, 6 of the 14 patients who received substitution therapy with glucocorticoids at the time of data collection were in the process of decreasing their glucocorticoid substitution. In addition 5 of the patients who were receiving substitution therapy at the time of the last follow-up had a failure of the first pituitary surgery and were treated subsequently with more extensive surgery or additional radiotherapy. Furthermore, there seemed to be more combined hormone deficiencies in the patients operated in the early years (19982001). Our data on postoperative pituitary insufficiency are in keeping with results of previously reported series of patients operated by the conventional microscopic technique (2, 3, 8, 12, 15, 42). The rate of hypopituitarism defined as at least one deficient pituitary hormone axis after pituitary surgery ranges from 1462% in these previous reports and seems to be related to more extensive surgical approaches.
In our study, inferior petrosal sinuses sampling was not performed in order to identify the side of the pituitary where the adenoma is located, but to confirm the pituitary origin of the hypercortisolism in patients with equivocal results of initial endocrine function tests, regardless the findings on MRI. Only in case of negative MRI investigations and a negative pituitary exploration, a hemihypophysectomy was performed, based on results of ACTH levels at the right and at the left side during inferior petrosal sinus sampling, if available. The same strategy has been previously used in other reported series (5).
In conclusion, endoscopic transsphenoidal pituitary surgery, in the hands of experienced surgeons, resulted in our series of patients with Cushings disease in an excellent early postoperative remission rate which was as good as those previously reported by experienced centres using conventional microscopic techniques. Surgical complications and discomfort for the patients were minimal. The question that remains to be answered is whether endoscopic pituitary surgery will also result in a favourable long-term outcome of patients with Cushings disease. Furthermore, a randomized clinical trial, comparing endoscopic and conventional pituitary surgery in patients with Cushings disease, is needed to determine the pros and cons of both techniques.
| Acknowledgements |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |