Abstract

SummarySilent corticotroph adenoma (SCA) is an unusual type of nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma (NFA) that is silent both clinically and biochemically and can only be recognized by positive immunostaining for ACTH. Under rare circumstances, it can transform into hormonally active disease presenting with severe Cushing syndrome. It might often produce diagnostic dilemma with difficult management issue if not thoroughly investigated and subtyped accordingly following surgery. Here, we present a 21-year-old male who initially underwent pituitary adenomectomy for presumed NFA with compressive symptoms. However, he developed recurrent and invasive macroadenoma with severe clinical as well as biochemical hypercortisolism during post-surgical follow-up. Repeat pituitary surgery was carried out urgently as there was significant optic chiasmal compression. Immunohistochemical analysis of the tumor tissue obtained on repeat surgery proved it to be an aggressive corticotroph adenoma. Though not cured, he showed marked clinical and biochemical improvement in the immediate postoperative period. Anticipating recurrence from the residual tumor, we referred him for cyber knife radio surgery.Learning points:Pituitary NFA commonly present with compressive symptoms such as headache and blurred vision.Post-surgical development of Cushing syndrome in such a case could be either drug induced or endogenous.In the presence of recurrent pituitary tumor, ACTH-dependent Cushing syndrome indicates CD.Rarely a SCA presenting initially as NFA can transform into an active corticotroph adenoma.Immunohistochemical marker for ACTH in the resected tumor confirms the diagnosis.

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