1. Post-operative surveillance for somatotroph, lactotroph and non-functional pituitary adenomas after curative resection: a systematic review
- Author
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Caulley, Lisa, Whelan, Jonathan, Khoury, Michel, Mavedatnia, Dorsa, Sahlollbey, Nick, Amrani, Lisa, Eid, Anas, Doyle, Mary Anne, Malcolm, Janine, Alkherayf, Fahad, Ramsay, Tim, Moher, David, Johnson-Obaseki, Stephanie, Schramm, David, Hunink, Myriam G.M., Kilty, Shaun J., Epidemiology, and Radiology & Nuclear Medicine
- Subjects
Endocrinology ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism - Abstract
Context: Pituitary tumors are the third most common brain tumor and yet there is no standardization of the surveillance schedule and assessment modalities after transsphenoidal surgery. Evidence acquisition: OVID, EMBASE and the Cochrane Library databases were systematically screened from database inception to March 5, 2020. Inclusion and exclusion criteria were designed to capture studies examining detection of pituitary adenoma recurrence in patients 18 years of age and older following surgical resection with curative intent. Evidence synthesis: A total of 7936 abstracts were screened, with 812 articles reviewed in full text and 77 meeting inclusion criteria for data extraction. A pooled analysis demonstrated recurrence rates at 1 year, 5 years and 10 years for non-functioning pituitary adenomas (NFPA; N = 3533 participants) were 1%, 17%, and 33%, for prolactin-secreting adenomas (PSPA; N = 1295) were 6%, 21%, and 28%, and for growth-hormone pituitary adenomas (GHPA; N = 1257) were 3%, 8% and 13%, respectively. Rates of recurrence prior to 1 year were 0% for NFPA, 1–2% for PSPA and 0% for GHPA. The mean time to disease recurrence for NFPA, PSPA and GHPA were 4.25, 2.52 and 4.18 years, respectively. Conclusions: This comprehensive review of the literature quantified the recurrence rates for commonly observed pituitary adenomas after transsphenoidal surgical resection with curative intent. Our findings suggest that surveillance within 1 year may be of low yield. Further clinical trials and cohort studies investigating cost-effectiveness of surveillance schedules and impact on quality of life of patients under surveillance will provide further insight to optimize follow-up.
- Published
- 2022