Abstract

PurposeTo explore the incidence of double pituitary adenomas in a tertiary center for pituitary surgery and asses their clinical, imaging and histopathological features.MethodsThe medical records of the patients operated on for pituitary tumors at the Department of Neurosurgery of Military Institute of Medicine in Warsaw, Poland between the years 2003 and 2018 were retrospectively analyzed. Among the 3270 treated patients, the diagnosis of double pituitary adenoma was established in 22 patients. Clinical, laboratory, detailed histopathological and diagnostics imaging data were collected and analyzed.ResultsThere were 21 cases of synchronous and one case of asynchronous double pituitary adenoma. The main clinical finding was acromegaly (12/22) followed by Cushing’s disease (3/22). The diagnosis of synchronous double pituitary adenoma was suspected in the preoperative MRI in 11 patients. In the remaining patients the diagnosis of contiguous double pituitary adenoma was confirmed in the histopathological examination. There was no predilection for gender and the mean observation time was 74.2 months. In one case of Cushing’s disease the occurrence of double pituitary adenoma led to the initial failure of achieving hormonal remission. One patient presented with double pituitary adenomas as a manifestation of Carney complex.ConclusionsDouble pituitary adenoma is a rare entity that can pose a significant challenge especially in the setting of Cushing’s disease. Careful inspection of preoperative MRI and diagnostic work-up before transsphenoidal surgery and thorough histopathological microscopic examinations with immunohistochemical staining for all pituitary hormones is essential for establishing the diagnosis of double pituitary adenoma.

Highlights

  • Pituitary adenomas are mostly benign tumors arising from the anterior pituitary gland

  • The aim of this study is to report a case series of double pituitary adenomas in a high volume tertiary pituitary surgical center with special references to diagnostic challenges, treatment pitfalls and endocrinological results

  • The remission of Double and multiple pituitary adenomas are reported in 0.9% of random pituitary autopsy samples [10]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Pituitary adenomas are mostly benign tumors arising from the anterior pituitary gland. They are the third most common intracranial neoplasms after gliomas and meningiomas, accounting for approximately 15% of all intracranial tumors and have been identified with a population prevalence of ~ 80/100,000 [1,2,3]. The aim of this study is to report a case series of double pituitary adenomas in a high volume tertiary pituitary surgical center with special references to diagnostic challenges, treatment pitfalls and endocrinological results

Objectives
Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call