4.7 Article

Approach to the Patient With Treatment-resistant Acromegaly

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 107, Issue 6, Pages 1759-1766

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgac037

Keywords

acromegaly; pituitary; medical treatment; somatostatin analogs; pasireotide; pegvisomant; clinical case; surgery and radiotherapy

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Acromegaly is a chronic disorder caused by GH-producing pituitary adenoma. While surgery and medical therapy are standard treatments, some tumors behave aggressively and are resistant to these therapies. In such cases, multimodal therapeutic strategies should be considered.
Although most tumors in patients with acromegaly are benign and are cured or controlled by surgery and/or first-generation somatostatin receptor ligands therapy, some can behave more aggressively and are resistant to these standard therapies. Acromegaly, if left untreated, is a rare and chronic disorder, commonly caused by a GH-producing pituitary adenoma and is associated with significant comorbidities and an increased mortality. Transsphenoidal surgery is considered the mainstay of acromegaly management, but medical therapy has an increasingly important role. However, disease activity is not fully controlled in a significant number of patients treated with surgery and/or high-dose first-generation somatostatin receptor ligand monotherapy. In these circumstances, therefore, repeated surgery, second-line medical therapy, and radiotherapy, alone or combined as multimodal therapeutic strategies should be considered, in a patient-centered perspective.

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