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Outcomes of neurosurgical treatment of patients with non-visualized adenoma and microadenoma of the pituitary gland and with Cushing’s disease
Author(s) -
Иващенко Оксана Владимировна,
Andrey Grigoriev,
Vilen Azizyan,
Elena Y. Nadezhdina,
O. Yu. Rebrova,
Anastasia Lapshina,
Г С Колесникова
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nejrohirurgiâ
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2587-7569
pISSN - 1683-3295
DOI - 10.17650/1683-3295-2020-22-1-39-48
Subject(s) - medicine , adenoma , cushing's disease , pituitary adenoma , hypopituitarism , transsphenoidal surgery , cavernous sinus , magnetic resonance imaging , surgery , urology , radiology , disease
The study objective is to compare pre- and intraoperative characteristics, and the results of neurosurgical treatment in patients with Cushing’s disease, non-visualized adenoma and microadenoma of the pituitary gland. Materials and methods. The results of transsphenoidal adenomectomy were analyzed in 102 patients with non-visualized corticotropinomas and 360 patients with microcorticotropinomas. The pituitary genesis of endogenous ACTH-dependent hypercorticism in 182 patients was proved by the results of selective blood sampling from inferior petrosal sinus with stimulation desmopressin. The study included 369 women and 93 men aged 16 to 64 years. All patients were operated by transnasal approach using endoscopic techniques. Results. The group with non-visualized adenoma was dominated by men (p = 0.005) and patients with severe hypercorticism (p = 0.021). When comparing intraoperative characteristics in this group, invasive growth was statistically significantly more frequent (53 % vs 39 %) (p = 0.017), which in turn led to more aggressive intraoperative tactics (p <0.001) and more frequent development of hypothyroidism (11 % vs 4 %) (p = 0.028) in the early postoperative period. Early postoperative remission occurred in 73 (72 %) of 102 patients with non-visualized adenoma and in 314 (87 %) of 360 patients with microadenoma (p <0.001). Conclusion. Early results of primary transsphenoidal adenomectomy in patients with non-visualized pituitary adenoma were significantly worse in comparison with patients with microadenoma detected by 1.5 T magnetic resonance imaging, which have more frequently invasive growth, what leads to an increase in the volume of surgery and a possible increase in postoperative hypopituitarism.

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