Abstract

Hypophysitis can clinically and radiologically mimic other nonfunctioning masses of the sella turcica, complicating preoperative diagnosis. While sellar masses may be treated surgically, hypophysitis is often treated medically, so differentiating between them facilitates optimal management. The objective of our study was to develop a scoring system for the preoperative diagnosis of hypophysitis. A thorough literature review identified published hypophysitis cases, which were compared to a retrospective group of non-functioning pituitary adenomas (NFA) from our institution. A preoperative hypophysitis scoring system was developed and internally validated. Fifty-six pathologically confirmed hypophysitis cases were identified in the literature. After excluding individual cases with missing values, 18 hypophysitis cases were compared to an age- and sex-matched control group of 56 NFAs. Diabetes insipidus (DI) (p < 0.001), infundibular thickening (p < 0.001), absence of cavernous sinus invasion (CSI) (p < 0.001), relation to pregnancy (p = 0.002), and absence of visual symptoms (p = 0.007) were significantly associated with hypophysitis. Stepwise logistic regression identified DI and infundibular thickening as positive predictors of hypophysitis. CSI and visual symptoms were negative predictors. A 6-point hypophysitis-risk scoring system was derived: + 2 for DI, + 2 for absence of CSI, + 1 for infundibular thickening, + 1 for absence of visual symptoms. Scores ≥ 3 supported a diagnosis of hypophysitis (AUC 0.96, sensitivity 100%, specificity 75%). The scoring system identified 100% of hypophysitis cases at our institution with an estimated 24.7% false-positive rate. The proposed scoring system may aid preoperative diagnosis of hypophysitis, preventing unnecessary surgery in these patients.

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