Biochemical Predictors of Outcome of Pituitary Surgery for Cushing's Disease

RA Alwani, W.W. de Herder, MO van Aken, Jan Berge, Ernst Delwel, Alof Dallenga, Frank Jong, SWJ Lamberts, Aart Jan Lelij, R.A. Feelders

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

58 Citations (Scopus)
12 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Objective: Transsphenoidal surgery (TS) is the primary therapy for Cushing's disease (CD). The aims of this retrospective study were twofold: (i) investigate early and late results of TS for CD, and (ii) evaluate various postoperative tests in order to predict the outcome of TS. Methods: We reviewed the long-term outcome in 79 patients with CD who underwent TS (median follow-up 84 months, range 6-197). Within 2 weeks after surgery, morning serum cortisol concentrations were obtained (n = 78) and corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) (n = 53) and metyrapone tests (n = 72) were performed. Three groups of outcome were identified: sustained remission, early failure (persistent CD), and late relapse. Results: Immediate postoperative remission was achieved in 51 patients (65%), whereas 28 patients (35%) had persistent CD after TS. Ten patients developed recurrent CD after initial remission (20%). Morning cortisol: all relapses but one recorded serum cortisol 1 50 nmol/l. A cortisol threshold value of 200 nmol/l has a positive predictive value of 79% for immediate surgical failure (negative predictive failure [NPV] 97%). CRH test: CRH-stimulated peak cortisol >= 600 nmol/l predicted early failure in 78% (NPV 100%). All relapses recorded CRH-stimulated peak cortisol >= 485 nmol/l. Metyrapone test: 11-deoxycortisol >= 345 nmol/l predicted an early failure in 86% of cases (NPV 94%). Conclusion: Predictive factors of surgical failure are morning cortisol >= 200 nmol/l, 11-deoxycortisol >= 345 nmol/l after metyrapone and CRH-stimulated cortisol >= 600 nmol/l. CRH and/or metyrapone testing are not superior to morning cortisol concentration in the prediction of outcome of TS. Careful long-term follow-up remains necessary independent of the outcome of biochemical testing. Copyright (C) 2009 S. Karger AG, Basel
Original languageUndefined/Unknown
Pages (from-to)169-178
Number of pages10
JournalNeuroendocrinology
Volume91
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2010

Research programs

  • EMC MM-01-39-01
  • EMC MM-01-39-04

Cite this