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Efficacy and tolerability of gamma knife radiosurgery in acromegaly: a 10‐year follow‐up study
Author(s) -
Ronchi Cristina L.,
Attanasio Roberto,
Verrua Elisa,
Cozzi Renato,
Ferrante Emanuele,
Loli Paola,
Montefusco Laura,
Motti Enrico,
Ferrari Daniela I.,
Giugni Enrico,
BeckPeccoz Paolo,
Arosio Maura
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
clinical endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.055
H-Index - 147
eISSN - 1365-2265
pISSN - 0300-0664
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2265.2009.03589.x
Subject(s) - medicine , acromegaly , tolerability , radiosurgery , hypopituitarism , retrospective cohort study , surgery , radiation therapy , urology , gastroenterology , growth hormone , hormone , adverse effect
Summary Objective  The long‐term efficacy and safety of stereotactic radiosurgery by gamma knife (GK) still remain unknown. The aim of the study was to investigate the long‐term efficacy and tolerability of GK in acromegalic patients. Design and patients  Retrospective analysis for a median follow‐up of 10 years. Thirty‐five acromegalic patients from two referral centres in Milan submitted to GK (median margin dose: 20 Gy, median % isodose: 50) between 1995 and 2004. Main outcome measures  GH/IGF‐I secretion, anterior pituitary function, radiological imaging and ophthalmological data. Results  Cure rate improved over time (up to 46% at 10 years), as did the proportion of patients achieving control on somatostatin analogues (from 12·5% at baseline to 50% at 10 years). Normal IGF‐I values were observed in 82% of patients at their last visit. No visual impairment, disease recurrence, tumour growth or secondary cerebral tumour occurred. Half of the patients developed one or more new deficiencies, while two patients normalized their prior failures. In particular, new onset of clinical or subclinical hypoadrenalism occurred in 12/30 patients (40%), hypothyroidism in 3/28 (11%), hypogonadism in 2/15 (13%) and GH deficiency in 2/35 (6%). GH value at the time of GK was the best negative predictor of cure and margin dose was the best positive predictor of new hypopituitarism. Conclusions  Over a 10‐year period after GK radiosurgery, an increasing percentage of patients achieve cure, or adequate control of the disease on pharmacological therapy, at the expense of increasing novel pituitary deficiencies.

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