4.7 Article

Risk Factors, Radiological and Clinical Outcomes in Subclinical and Clinical Pituitary Apoplexy

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11247288

Keywords

pituitary apoplexy; pituitary adenoma; hemorrhage; necrosis; neurosurgery; emergency; subclinical apoplexy

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This study describes the clinical characteristics and evolution of patients with APA compared to SPA. The results show that APA is more frequent in larger NFPAs and this subset of patients has a higher risk of surgery. Hypopituitarism is quite frequent even in patients with SPA, and therefore long-term follow-up is necessary.
Background: Pituitary apoplexy (PA) can be symptomatic, namely acute apoplexy (APA), or asymptomatic or subclinical (SPA). Objective: To describe the clinical characteristics and evolution of the patients with APA compared to SPA Patients and methods: Retrospective, longitudinal database analysis. Results: We identified 58 patients with PA, and 37 accomplished the inclusion criteria (17 men, median age 47.7 years). A total of 29 (78.4%) had APA (17 underwent surgery, and 12 were conservatively managed), and 8 (21.6%) had SPA. The presence of non-functioning pituitary adenoma (NFPA) odds ratio (OR): 29.36 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.86-462.36) and the largest size OR 1.10 (95% CI: 1.01-1.2) elevated the risk of having surgery. Hypopituitarism developed in 35.1% without significant differences between APA and SPA. In non-surgical patients, adenoma volume shrunk spontaneously at one year magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), without statistical differences between the conservatively treated and SPA group. Conclusions: APA is more frequent in larger NFPAs, and this subset of patients has a higher risk of surgery. Hypopituitarism is quite frequent even in patients with SPA, and, therefore, long-term follow-up is mandatory. In the non-surgical group, the pituitary tumour shrinkage is clinically relevant after one year of PA. Consequently, surgery indication in NFPA should be delayed and reassessed if patients remain asymptomatic.

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