Title: Hypopituitarism
1Hypopituitarism
2Evolution of anterior pituitary hormone
deficiencies
- GH- FSH/LH vs ACTH TSH Prolactin
-
- if pathology tumour pressure/surgery/radiation
(prolactin ? ) - Implication ignoring genetic defects
- Isolated deficit only seen in case of GH
- If TSH/Prolactin deficient MPHD
- Note meaning if normal TSH/low FT4 on
screening investigation
3Case History
- 50 year old freelance journalist
- Diagnosed as having nasopharyngeal ca
- Surgery XRT Oct 99
- 3000cGy in 15 fractions (2 courses)
4And then?
- Jan 02 - GP found Na 122 - kept under review by
oncologists - Nov 02 - abnormal TFTs - started Thyroxine 50mcg
increased to 100mcg - Feb 03 - patient felt worse - still tired,
feeling cold, aches pains, lightheaded, loss of
balance - May 03 - referred to an endocrinologist
5Results
Jan 02
Feb 02
Mar 02
Nov 02
Nov 02
Na
124
124
127
nmol/L
TSH
4.21
3.24
3.60
3.89
mU/L
T4
59
61
8
9
pmol/L
(50-150)
(50-150)
(9-26)
(9-26)
6What do the TFTs suggest?
- SECONDARY HYPOTHYROIDISM
- What is the patients low sodium
- due to?
- SST - 0 min - Cortisol 57nmol/L - 30 min -
Cortisol 197nmol/L -
- ACTH DEFICIENT
7Why did thyroxine exacerbate his symptoms?
- Thyroxine introduced before hydrocortisone in
cortisol deficiency can lead to acute cortisol
deficiency - POTENTIALLY FATAL
- Consider cortisol deficiency
- in a patient who has received a large dose of
radiation particularly if - sodium ?
- TSH deficient
- symptoms worsen with thyroxine therapy
8Evolution of anterior pituitary hormone
deficiencies
- Isolated deficiencies of anterior pituitary
hormones - due to pathologies other than genetic do exist!
- If present may point to underlying pathology
- Isolated gonadotrophin deficiency-Haemochromatosis
- Isolated ACTH deficiency -Lymphocytic hypophysitis
9Timing of onset of hypopituitarism
- Childhood
- GHD - growth
- FSH/LH puberty
- Adult
- Normal height/secondary sex characteristics
10(No Transcript)
11Diabetes Insipidus
- Implication
- Site of lesion is hypothalamic/ high stalk
- Pathology of lesion much more likely to be
cranopharyngioma vs pituitary adenoma - Presence of DI provides no information about
anterior pituitary function except that ACTH
status must be normal for DI to be manifested
12Hypopituitarism
- Causes
- Pituitary Adenoma
- Functioning
- Non-Functioning
- Pituitary Surgery
- Pituitary Radiotherapy
- Conventional
- Stereotactic
- Medical Therapy
- DA drugs
- Pegvisomant
- Anti-adrenal drugs
13Hypopituitarism
- Non-adenomatous causes
- Intracranial tumours
- Craniopharyngiomas
- Meningioma
- Glioma
- Chordoma
- Metastasis-breast cancer
- Non-pituitary radiotherapy
- Infiltrative disorders
- Sheehans syndrome
- Pituitary apoplexy
- TBI
- Empty Sella syndrome
- Lymphocytic hypophysitis
- Genetic diseases
14Investigation for Hypopituitarism
- Gonadotrophin status
- FSH,LH,T/E2
- GnRH test x
- TSH
- TSH, FT4
- TRH test x
- Prolactin
- Prolactin
15How is ACTH diagnosed?
- UK SoE Survey
- 598 Clinical Members
- 81 Respondents
- ITT 9.00am Cortisol (gt400 nmol/L)
- SST No Tests (NoT)
- Glucagon
Reynolds et al, Clin End (2006)
16Reynolds et al, Clin End (2006)
17SST
- 93.8 - 250 µg
- 4.7 - 1µg
- IV vs IM (50-50)
- Interpretation of Results
- 67 - 30 min cortisol
- 17 - 60 min cortisol
- 7 - increment cortisol
- 9 - combinations
Reynolds et al, Clin End (2006)
18Interpretation of Results
- SST
- Adequate peak cortisol response 250 650 nmol/l
- Peak cortisol gt550nmol/l at 30 min (51)
- ITT
- Adequate peak cortisol response 400 600 nmol/l
- Peak cortisol gt 550nmol/l (47)
Reynolds et al, Clin End (2006)
19Glucorticoid Replacement
- If patients symptomless but had failed chosen
test of HPA axis - 28 - still treated with glucocorticoid
replacement - 38 - retested before treatment
- 24 - recommended glucocorticoid cover when
unwell or stressed - 6 recommend patient carry steroid card
- 4 - individual basis
Reynolds et al, Clin End (2006)
20Glucocorticoid replacement
- Hydrocortisone
- 20mg/day (56)
- 67 - 10/5/5
- Higher doses by 25
- Lower doses by 13
- General Trends
- More SST Less ITT
- Lower replacement doses of HC
Reynolds et al, Clin End (2006)
21Investigation for Hypopituitarism
- ACTH
- Morning Cortisol (lt100 300nmol/l)
- ITT/ Glucagon/Synacthen
- GH Status
- Provocative GH tests, IGF-1
- IGFBP-3/ALSx
22 Severe Adult GHD (ITT)
Toogood et al. Clin. Endocrinol. 1994
23How many tests to diagnose GHD in severe adult
GHD 103 patients - documented or potential
HP disease - normal BMI - ITT AST 35
controls Lissett et al (1999)
24 Pituitary Hormone Deficits
Controls
3
2
1
O
GHD
Patient numbers
35
13
6
15
69
Median Peak GH (mU/l)
- ITT
65
0.5
0.75
2.4
7.5
- AST
32
0.5
1.0
2.4
6.8
Concordance Between tests ()
76.8
100
92.3
83.3
66.6
Lissett et al (1999)
25Magnitude of difference between each individuals
GH response to ITT and AST plotted against mean
GH value
Lissett et al (1999)
26- Implications
- Adults
- GHDO/GHD1 patients require 2 GH
stimulation tests vs only 1 required in
GHD2/GHD3 patients
27Specificity of GH stimulation test The debate
about 2 tests vs. 1 test also assumes that the
information gained from each of the tests is the
same and independent of the nature of the
pathophysiology
28Study Objectives
To investigate the role of the GHRH AST in
the diagnosis of radiation-induced GHD in
comparison with the Gold Standard, the ITT.
(Darzy et al, 2003)
29 Subjects and Methods 58 adult patients (37
males), age 22.9(16-53.7)yr. All received
cranial irradiation for non-pituitary brain
tumour or leukaemia ( age 1.3-49 years ).
Endocrine deficit other than GH present in 11
patients All patients had hormone replacement
optimised before testing
(Darzy et al, 2003)
3033 sex and age matched control group. GHRHAST
and ITT in all normals and patients
Patients were tested 11.8 (1.5 32.8) yr
post irradiation. Tests on two separate
mornings.
(Darzy et al, 2003)
31120
N normal controls
P patients
100
80
N
60
55
Peak GH responses (µg / L).
40
N
P
23.8
20
14.5
P lt 0.05
P
4.8
0
P lt 0.05
-20
GHRHAST ITT GHRHAST ITT
(Darzy et al, 2003)
32The peak GH responses to the ITT and time after
irradiation
60
Normals
n 33
40
Peak GH responses to the ITT (µg / L)
20
0
(Darzy et al, 2003)
Normal lt 6yr 6-12yr 12-18yr gt18yr
33The peak GH responses to the GHRH AST
and time after irradiation
120
Normals
100
lt 6 yr
80
Peak GH responses to the combined
GHRH AST (µg / L)
60
12 - 18
6 - 12
gt 18
40
20
0
Time interval since irradiation (yr)
(Darzy et al, 2003)
34The discordancy ratio and time after irradiation
30
20
(peak GH to the GHRHAST / ITT)
Discordancy Ratio
10
0
Median BED 58.3 58.3 48.82 54.4
lt6yr 6-12yr 12-18yr
gt18yr
Normals
(Darzy et al, 2003)
Time interval since irradiation
35 Patients and Methods
Centrally measured IGF-I data from the KIMS
European database were analysed Patients
with adult onset GHD and 2 or more anterior
pituitary hormone deficits were included
Patients with childhood onset GHD and cured
acromegaly were excluded
36Patients and Methods
Baseline IGF-I measurements from - 376
females (median age 48, range 21 to 77
years) and - 434 males (median age 52, range 21
to 80 years) The cohort was stratified into
six gender based age ranges IGF-I IGF-I
SDS were determined for each group
37Percentage of patients with severe adult-onset
GHD with IGF-I levels within the normal age
related range
Females
38Percentage of patients with severe adult-onset
GHD with IGF-I levels within the normal age
related range
Males
39Box and whisker plots representing IGF-I SDS in
females with AO-GHD
40Box and whisker plots representing IGF-I SDS in
males with AO-GHD
41 Summary
- These data demonstrate
- a large overlap of IGF-I SDS between
normal and severely GHD adults - overlap of IGF-I between normal and severely
GHD adults is predominantly limited to the
lower half of the normal range
42GHD2/GHD3 1 GH Provocative test vs.
IGF-1 GHD0/GHD1 2 GH Provocative
tests vs. 1GH Provocative
test plus IGF-1
43GH stimulation tests
- ITT/Arginine/Glucagon
- Arginine GHRH
- GHRH GHRP
- Clonidine? GHRH? No
- Age
- BMI/Fat Mass
- Availability
44Diabetes Insipidus
- 24 hour urine output gt 3 litres
- 8 hour fluid deprivation test
45Radiology MRI Scan
- Absent PP high signal
- Microadenoma vs Macrodenoma
- Risk of hypopituitarism
- Stalk interruption
- Type and site of lesion
- Evolution
46Pituitary hormone deficiencies
- Treatment
- FSH/LH
- Sex Steriods
- Fertility-Gonadotrophins
- TSH
- T4 (threshold)
- ACTH
- Hydrocortisone (tds)
- Cortisol profiles
- Emergency advice
- DI
- Desmopressin
- GH
- GH
47Partial ACTH - Glucorticoid replacement
- 10 males partial ACTH
- Base line plasma cortisol gt 200nmol/l
- Peak stimulated cortisollt500nmol/l
- 10 matched controls
- Cross-over randomised protocol HC
- 10mgs BD vs 5 mgs BD vs no treatment
Agha et al Clin End.2004
48 Pts, n10 Controls, n10 P-value Age
(years) 43.910.8 38.912.2 0.34 BMI
(kg/m2) 31.14.5 30.84.3 0.88 CBG
(mg/l) 41.77.1 44.94.6 0.25 Baseline
cortisol 273.961.8 357.384.4 0.021 Peak
stimulated cortisol 432.958.9 Results presented
as meanSD. BMI, body mass index CBG,
corticosteroid-binding globulin
Agha et al 2004
49FD
500
HD
NT
Control
400
300
Cortisol
200
100
0
2
4
6
8
10
Time
Agha et al 2004
50Long-acting GH preparation in patients with GHD
- Open-label randomised study
- 135 patents 32 weeks
- Depot GH vs Daily GH vs no treatment
- Dose GH titrated to maintain IGF-1 within
age-adjusted normal range
Hoffman et al (2005)
51Adverse events
- 1- death - Adrenal crisis
- - On Depot GH
- Two other serious and three non-serious cases of
adrenal crisis or insufficiency - 3 cases on daily GH vs 3 cases depot GH
- All had ACTH deficiency and were on
glucocorticoid replacement
Hoffman et al (2002)
52Risk of Cortisol deficiency on GH replacement
- Ignorance glucocorticoid dosage not ? during
- intercurrent illness
- Influence of Gh-IGF-1 axis on II ß HSD driving
cortisol-cortisone shuttle in
favour of cortisone - GH ? Cortisol-B-G
- At Risk
- Steroid card/Emergency Pack
- Borderline ACTH D not receiving glucocorticoid
replacement (Giavoli et al,2004) - Sub-optimal glucocorticoid replacement
53GH replacement and thyroid function in adult GHD
patients
- 66 adult GHD patients
- 17 euthyroid/49 hypothyroid on T4
- 6 month GH replacement study 2 dose regimes
- Normalisation of IGF-1 in 67 patients
independent of GH dose - Significant ?in FT4 and reverse T3 levels
- No change in TSH, FT3, thyroxine BG levels
Porretti et al (2002)
54Porretti et al (2002)
- 8/17 euthyroid subjects and 9/49 central
hypothyroid patients showed FT4 levels below
normal range at end of study despite adequate
substitution at baseline. - Altogether 17/66 patients worsened thyroid
function - Monitor thyroid function carefully