Abstract
Background Dopamine agonist-induced cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) rhinorrhea is an uncommon treatment-related complication arising in 6.1% of prolactinoma patients treated with dopamine agonists. Locally invasive prolactinomas may create CSF fistulae through formation of dural and osseous skull base defects. Tumor shrinkage secondary to dopamine agonist therapy unmasks skull base defects, thus inducing CSF rhinorrhea. In these cases, repair of the leak may be achieved through collaborative surgical intervention by rhinologists and neurosurgeons. Multiple variables have been investigated as potential contributors to the risk of CSF rhinorrhea development in medically treated prolactinoma patients, with little consensus. Objective The primary aim of our study was the characterization of risk factors for CSF rhinorrhea development following dopamine agonist treatment. Methods A systematic review of the literature was conducted to identify cases of CSF rhinorrhea following dopamine agonist treatment of prolactinoma. The clinical history, radiographic findings and treatment outcomes are discussed. Results Fifty-four patients with dopamine agonist-induced CSF rhinorrhea were identified across 23 articles published from 1979 to 2019. Description of diagnostic imaging [computed tomography (CT)/magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)] was not provided for 18/54 subjects. For the 36 cases that described prolactinoma appearance on CT or MRI, invasion of the cavernous sinuses was reported in 13 (36.1%) and invasion of the sphenoid sinus was reported in 18 (50%). Conclusion Based on our systematic review, we propose that CT findings of osseous erosion of the sella or the anterior skull base may predict dopamine agonist-induced CSF rhinorrhea. We recommend obtaining a thin-slice CT of the sinuses in cases with MRI evidence of sphenoid involvement.
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