1. Prospective Evaluation of Transsphenoidal Pituitary Surgery in Patients with Cushing's Disease: Delayed Remission and the Role of Postsurgical Cortisol as a Predictive Factor.
- Author
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Saratziotis, Athanasios, Baldovin, Maria, Zanotti, Claudia, Munari, Sara, Cazzador, Diego, Alexandre, Enrico, Denaro, Luca, Hajiioannou, Jiannis, and Emanuelli, Enzo
- Subjects
PITUITARY surgery ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,SPHENOID sinus ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SEX distribution ,HYDROCORTISONE ,DISEASE remission ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,ENDOSCOPIC surgery ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MANN Whitney U Test ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SURGICAL complications ,ADRENOCORTICOTROPIC hormone ,CUSHING'S syndrome ,DISEASE relapse ,POSTOPERATIVE period ,DATA analysis software ,PITUITARY tumors ,ENDOSCOPY ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background. Transsphenoidal surgery is the treatment of choice for Cushing's disease. Successful surgery is associated with subnormal postoperative serum cortisol concentrations and cortisoluria levels, which may guide decisions regarding immediate reoperation. Remission is defined as the biochemical reversal of hypercortisolism with the re-emergence of diurnal circadian rhythm. Methods. A single-center prospective cohort study was conducted among thirty-three patients who underwent transsphenoidal pituitary surgery for Cushing's disease. Postoperative surgical outcomes, daily morning cortisolemia, and 24 h urinary-free cortisol from the first to the fifth morning were evaluated. Results. All patients underwent surgery, with a remission rate of 81.2%. Of the 26 patients who achieved early remission, 92% remained in remission. Two patients (7.7%) showed recurrence of Cushing's disease during a mean follow-up of 81.7 months. Early postoperative hypocortisolism suggests complete removal of the tumor, correlating with high rates of remission (p < 0.001). Also, in 12.5% of patients with early cortisol values >138 nmol/L, there was a gradual late remission. Conclusions. In our cohort of patients, the endoscopic transsphenoidal approach was safe and effective in the treatment of Cushing's disease. We demonstrated that serum and urinary cortisol concentrations did not experience significant fluctuations from the first to the fifth day. This constitutes an accurate predictor of durable remission, comprising a distinctive finding in the intermediate term by our team. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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