I
believe that this text came from Harvard.
A printable version of this page is available Here
Acromegaly
is a hormonal disorder that results when the pituitary gland produces
excess growth hormone (GH). It most commonly affects middle-aged
adults and can result in serious illness and premature death. Once
recognized, Acromegaly is treatable in most patients, but because
of its slow and often insidious onset, it frequently is not diagnosed
correctly.
The name Acromegaly comes from the
Greek words for "extremities" and "enlargement" and reflects one
of its most common symptoms, the abnormal growth of the hands and
feet. Soft tissue swelling of the hands and feet is often an early
feature, with patients noticing a change in ring or shoe size. Gradually,
bony changes alter the patient's facial features: the brow and lower
jaw protrude, the nasal bone enlarges, and spacing of the teeth
increases.
Overgrowth
of bone and cartilage often leads to arthritis. When tissue thickens,
it may trap nerves, causing carpal tunnel syndrome, characterized
by numbness and weakness of the hands. Other symptoms of Acromegaly
include thick, coarse, oily skin; skin tags; enlarged lips, nose
and tongue; deepening of the voice due to enlarged sinuses and vocal
cords; snoring due to upper airway obstruction; excessive sweating
and skin odor; fatigue and weakness; headaches; impaired vision;
abnormalities of the menstrual cycle and sometimes breast discharge
in women; and impotence in men. There may be enlargement of body
organs, including the liver, spleen, kidneys and heart.
The most serious health consequences
of Acromegaly are diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and increased
risk of cardiovascular disease. Patients with Acromegaly are also
at increased risk for polyps of the colon that can develop into
cancer.
When GH-producing tumors occur in
childhood, the disease that results is called gigantism rather than
Acromegaly. Fusion of the growth plates of the long bones occurs
after puberty so that development of excessive GH production in
adults does not result in increased height. Prolonged exposure to
excess GH before fusion of the growth plates causes increased growth
of the long bones and increased height.
What Causes Acromegaly?
Acromegaly is caused by prolonged
overproduction of GH by the pituitary gland. The pituitary is a
small gland at the base of the brain that produces several important
hormones to control body functions such as growth and development,
reproduction, and metabolism. GH is part of a cascade of hormones
that, as the name implies, regulates the physical growth of the
body. This cascade begins in a part of the brain called the hypothalamus,
which makes hormones that regulate the pituitary. One of these,
growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH), stimulates the pituitary
gland to produce GH. Another hypothalamic hormone, Somatostatin,
inhibits GH production and release. Secretion of GH by the pituitary
into the bloodstream causes the production of another hormone, called
insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1), in the liver. IGF-1 is the
factor that actually causes the growth of bones and other tissues
of the body. IGF-1, in turn, signals the pituitary to reduce GH
production. GHRH, Somatostatin, GH, and IGF-1 levels in the body
are tightly regulated by each other and by sleep, exercise, stress,
food intake and blood sugar levels. If the pituitary continues to
make GH independent of the normal regulatory mechanisms, the level
of IGF-1 continues to rise, leading to bone growth and organ enlargement.
The excess GH also causes changes in sugar and lipid metabolism
and can cause diabetes.
Pituitary
tumors
In over 90 percent of Acromegaly patients, the overproduction
of GH is caused by a benign tumor of the pituitary gland, called
an adenoma. These tumors produce excess GH and, as they expand,
compress surrounding brain tissues, such as the optic nerves. This
expansion causes the headaches and visual disturbances that are
often symptoms of Acromegaly. In addition, compression of the surrounding
normal pituitary tissue can alter production of other hormones,
leading to changes in menstruation and breast discharge in women
and impotence in men.
There
is a marked variation in rates of GH production and the aggressiveness
of the tumor. Some adenomas grow slowly and symptoms of GH excess
are often not noticed for many years. Other adenomas grow rapidly
and invade surrounding brain areas or the sinuses, which are located
near the pituitary. In general, younger patients tend to have more
aggressive tumors.
Most pituitary tumors arise spontaneously
and are not genetically inherited. Many pituitary tumors arise from
a genetic alteration in a single pituitary cell which leads to increased
cell division and tumor formation. This genetic change, or mutation,
is not present at birth, but is acquired during life. The mutation
occurs in a gene that regulates the transmission of chemical signals
within pituitary cells; it permanently switches on the signal that
tells the cell to divide and secrete GH. The events within the cell
that cause disordered pituitary cell growth and GH oversecretion
currently are the subject of intensive research.
Non-pituitary
tumors
In a few patients, Acromegaly is caused not by pituitary tumors
but by tumors of the pancreas, lungs, and adrenal glands. These
tumors also lead to an excess of GH, either because they produce
GH themselves or, more frequently, because they produce GHRH, the
hormone that stimulates the pituitary to make GH. In these patients,
the excess GHRH can be measured in the blood and establishes that
the cause of the Acromegaly is not due to a pituitary defect. When
these non-pituitary tumors are surgically removed, GH levels fall
and the symptoms of Acromegaly improve.
In patients with GHRH-producing,
non-pituitary tumors, the pituitary still may be enlarged and may
be mistaken for a tumor. Therefore, it is important that physicians
carefully analyze all "pituitary tumors" removed from patients with
Acromegaly in order not to overlook the possibility that a tumor
elsewhere in the body is causing the disorder.
How Common is Acromegaly?
Small
pituitary adenomas are common. During autopsies, they are found
in up to 25 percent of the US population. However, these tumors
rarely cause symptoms or produce excessive GH or other pituitary
hormones. Scientists estimate that about 3 out of every million
people develop Acromegaly each year and that 40 to 60 out of every
million people suffer from the disease at any time. However, because
the clinical diagnosis of Acromegaly often is missed, these numbers
probably underestimate the frequency of the disease.
How is Acromegaly Diagnosed?
If a doctor suspects Acromegaly,
he or she can measure the GH level in the blood after a patient
has fasted overnight to determine if it is elevated. However, a
single measurement of an elevated blood GH level is not enough to
diagnose Acromegaly, because GH is secreted by the pituitary in
spurts and its concentration in the blood can vary widely from minute
to minute. At a given moment, a patient with Acromegaly may have
a normal GH level, whereas a GH level in a healthy person may be
five times higher.
Because of these problems, more accurate
information can be obtained when GH is measured under conditions
in which GH secretion is normally suppressed. Physicians often use
the oral glucose tolerance test to diagnose Acromegaly, because
ingestion of 75 g of the sugar glucose lowers blood GH levels less
than 2 ng/ml in healthy people. In patients with GH overproduction,
this reduction does not occur. The glucose tolerance test is the
most reliable method of confirming a diagnosis of Acromegaly.
Physicians also can measure IGF-1
levels in patients with suspected Acromegaly. As mentioned earlier,
elevated GH levels increase IGF-1 blood levels. Because IGF-1 levels
are much more stable over the course of the day, they are often
a more practical and reliable measure than GH levels. Elevated IGF-1
levels almost always indicate Acromegaly. However, a pregnant woman's
IGF-1 levels are two to three times higher than normal. In addition,
physicians must be aware that IGF-1 levels decline in aging people
and may be abnormally low in patients with poorly controlled diabetes
mellitus. After
Acromegaly has been diagnosed by measuring GH or IGF-1, imaging
techniques, such as computed tomography (CT) scans or magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) scans of the pituitary are used to locate the tumor
that causes the GH overproduction. Both techniques are excellent
tools to visualize a tumor without surgery. If scans fail to detect
a pituitary tumor, the physician should look for non-pituitary tumors
in the chest, abdomen, or pelvis as the cause for excess GH. The
presence of such tumors usually can be diagnosed by measuring GHRH
in the blood and by a CT scan of possible tumor sites.
How
is Acromegaly Treated?
The goals of treatment are to reduce
GH production to normal levels, to relieve the pressure that the
growing pituitary tumor exerts on the surrounding brain areas, to
preserve normal pituitary function, and to reverse or ameliorate
the symptoms of Acromegaly. Currently, treatment options include
surgical removal of the tumor, drug therapy, and radiation therapy
of the pituitary.
Surgery
Surgery is a rapid and effective treatment. The surgeon reaches
the pituitary through an incision in the nose and, with special
tools, removes the tumor tissue in a procedure called transsphenoidal
surgery. This procedure promptly relieves the pressure on the surrounding
brain regions and leads to a lowering of GH levels. If the surgery
is successful, facial appearance and soft tissue swelling improve
within a few days. Surgery is most successful in patients with blood
GH levels below 40 ng/ml before the operation and with pituitary
tumors no larger than 10 mm in diameter. Success depends on the
skill and experience of the surgeon. The success rate also depends
on what level of GH is defined as a cure. The best measure of surgical
success is normalization of GH and IGF-1 levels. Ideally, GH should
be less than 2 ng/ml after an oral glucose load. A review of GH
levels in 1,360 patients worldwide immediately after surgery revealed
that 60 percent had random GH levels below 5 ng/ml. Complications
of surgery may include cerebrospinal fluid leaks, meningitis, or
damage to the surrounding normal pituitary tissue, requiring lifelong
pituitary hormone replacement.
Even
when surgery is successful and hormone levels return to normal,
patients must be carefully monitored for years for possible recurrence.
More commonly, hormone levels may improve, but not return completely
to normal. These patients may then require additional treatment,
usually with medications.
Drug
Therapy
Two medications currently are used to treat Acromegaly. These drugs
reduce both GH secretion and tumor size. Medical
therapy is sometimes used to shrink large tumors before surgery.
Bromocriptine (Parlodel®) in divided doses of about 20 mg daily
reduces GH secretion from some pituitary tumors. Side effects include
gastrointestinal upset, nausea, vomiting, lightheadedness when standing,
and nasal congestion. These side effects can be reduced or eliminated
if medication is started at a very low dose at bedtime, taken with
food, and gradually increased to the full therapeutic dose.
Because Bromocriptine can be taken
orally, it is an attractive choice as primary drug or in combination
with other treatments. However, Bromocriptine lowers GH and IGF-1
levels and reduces tumor size in less than half of patients with
Acromegaly. Some patients report improvement in their symptoms although
their GH and IGF-1 levels still are elevated.
The second medication used to treat
Acromegaly is octreotide (Sandostatin®). Octreotide is a synthetic
form of a brain hormone, Somatostatin, that stops GH production.
This drug must be injected under the skin every 8 hours for effective
treatment. Most patients with Acromegaly respond to this medication.
In many patients, GH levels fall within one hour and headaches improve
within minutes after the injection. Several studies have shown that
octreotide is effective for long-term treatment. Octreotide also
has been used successfully to treat patients with Acromegaly caused
by non-pituitary tumors.
Because octreotide inhibits gastrointestinal
and pancreatic function, long-term use causes digestive problems
such as loose stools, nausea, and gas in one third of patients.
In addition, approximately 25 percent of patients develop gallstones,
which are usually asymptomatic. In rare cases, octreotide treatment
can cause diabetes. On the other hand, scientists have found that
in some Acromegaly patients who already have diabetes, octreotide
can reduce the need for insulin and improve blood sugar control.
Radiation
Therapy
Radiation
therapy has been used both as a primary treatment and combined with
surgery or drugs. It is usually reserved for patients who have tumor
remaining after surgery. These patients often also receive medication
to lower GH levels. Radiation therapy is given in divided doses
over four to six weeks. This treatment lowers GH levels by about
50 percent over 2 to 5 years. Patients monitored for more than 5
years show significant further improvement. Radiation therapy causes
a gradual loss of production of other pituitary hormones with time.
Loss of vision and brain injury, which have been reported, are very
rare complications of radiation treatments.
No single treatment is effective
for all patients. Treatment should be individualized depending on
patient characteristics, such as age and tumor size. If the tumor
has not yet invaded surrounding brain tissues, removal of the pituitary
adenoma by an experienced neurosurgeon is usually the first choice.
After surgery, a patient must be monitored for a long time for increasing
GH levels. If surgery does not normalize hormone levels or a relapse
occurs, a doctor will usually begin additional drug therapy. The
first choice should be Bromocriptine because it is easy to administer;
octreotide is the second alternative. With both medications, long-term
therapy is necessary because their withdrawal can lead to rising
GH levels and tumor re-expansion. Radiation therapy is generally
used for patients whose tumors are not completely removed by surgery;
for patients who are not good candidates for surgery because of
other health problems; and for patients who do not respond adequately
to surgery and medication.
To the MGH
Pituitary Tumor Center Homepage for links to more information
on
Acromegaly
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